Artur Al'Rand
12-11-09, 06:38 PM
first chapter of a novel I am writing, enjoy
Chapter 1
I was walking through a large cedar forest in what appeared to be the New England hills. I heard a wolf howl in the distance, causing me to shudder. Fog slowly rolled out of the surrounding trees, obscuring the underbrush. A shape began to form in the treeline, solidifying from pure fog, slowly coalescing into the form of a wolf. I watched, as the wolf began to walk towards me, meeting my eyes directly. As it neared me, the fear that had been slowly creeping up my spine evaporated, and a feeling of recognition and peace flooded over me. The wolf opened its mouth and began to speak. “Artherige, you must remember me. You must. It is of the utmost importance.”
“What, no, who are you?” I asked, rather surprised that the wolf could speak. That was it, no fear, no confusion. Just surprise.
“I can not tell you what you already know. You must remember by yourself.”
“Can’t you at least tell me something? Something to help me remember,” I asked, pleading.
“You must remember by yourself. I can not help.” As it said this, the mist that formed it began to break up and disappear.
“Wait,” I called, “Come back.”
The wolf looked at me through slowly dematerializing eyes, and mouthed the word “What?”
“Who the hell are you?!”
“Mrs. Morkura, is there any reason at all that you would want to insult me twice in a row?” That was Mr. Fredreich, my economics instructor. He was standing over me, apparently having just been trying to wake me up. He absolutely hated me, and the feelings were mutual. He saw me as a delinquent who had no respect for authority, no sense of responsibility, and above all, no morals. I saw him as an overbearing, officious jerk. And we got along like oil and water.
“What?” I asked, still somewhat dazed from my unsettling dream.
“First, you fell asleep in my class, and then you had the audacity to swear at me when I go to wake you up. So, how will you explain yourself?” He was slowly turning purple as he said this. This seemed to happen a lot. Not me falling asleep, but his getting angry at or because of me. Most of the time, it wasn’t my fault, he just seemed to have a vendetta against me.
“Sorry,” I said, still somewhat groggily. “I was up with a family emergency all last night, and I really like my sleep.” I looked at him and smiled. That seemed to do the trick, as he went from deep purple to bright red. I silently congratulated myself. I had just managed to get a free pass out of class. I tried to do this as little as possible, but I really needed the time to organize my thoughts and try to figure this out. This dream had been coming to me every night for the past three weeks, ever since my eighteenth birthday.
“Get out of my class now,” he enunciated slowly, obviously trying to keep his anger in check. I got up, and as I exited the room, I turned around and saluted him. I couldn’t leave him there without a final parting jab.
About an hour later, Sasha intercepted me in the east hallway, and we headed to our lockers to put up our books and get the stuff we needed for the homework that night. Sasha and I had been friends for as long as I could remember, and she had lived next door to me for almost three quarters of that time. We were inseparable, and were so close that we almost thought as one. She led me to the doors, and as soon as we came out the front entrance, turned me left, walking down the street toward the Sonic at the corner.
“So, what are you doing tonight?” Sasha asked, smiling at a guy in our physics class.
“Well, besides the obvious homework, I’m planning on catching the new episode of Mythbusters, and possibly a Deadliest Warrior episode. Why?”
“Because I was wondering if you wanted to come over to my house tonight, maybe have a sleepover.”
“I would, but after what happened today in class, I probably shouldn’t.”
“And why did you want to piss of the economics teacher?” she cocked an eyebrow at me, and twitched a smile.
“I didn’t. It just kinda happened that way.” I grimaced at the thought of having detention because of it, and as I shook my head, I noticed that there seemed to be someone following us.
He probably wouldn’t have caught my eye normally, but there was just something about him that set off alarm bells in my head. He was dressed normally, nothing out of the ordinary, and was about average height, average build, blonde hair, and a tanned-by-the-sun appearance. Then I realized what it was. He was in just about every class that I was in. I couldn’t remember his name, but I recognized him. I dismissed it for the time being. I mean, we were on the main street from the school. Just about everybody that walked home took this road.
We ordered burgers at the Sonic, planned what we were going to do this weekend, just a day away, and talked about some of the new movies that were out, in case we wanted to go to the theater this weekend.
“So, what was the dream about this time?” Sasha inquired, with a knowing look in her eye.
“Same thing as the past few weeks, the wolf in the woods trying to get me to remember something.” I replied absently, as I finished an equation on my physics homework.
“My mom knows an Indian medicine man that might be able to tell you what the dreams mean. I can ask him if you want me to,” she told me.
“Sure,” I said, thinking that it couldn’t hurt my situation.
The boy from school was still following us as we left Sonic, definitely following, not just taking the same rout home, but I didn’t really think about it much, until I reached my house and wondered what he was following us for. I mean, it was creepy, but there was nothing overtly dangerous about him. I completely forgot about him as soon as I started my physics homework, though.
The next day was just about as miserable as the previous. Mr. Fredreich was still ticked off at me, so that class seemed to drag on forever. At last, the final bell rang, and Sasha came jogging up to me, apparently bursting with news. I had to admit, I was pretty interested in what she had to say.
“What’d you find?” I asked her.
“He said that the wolf in your dream symbolized your spirit totem, something like a soul. The pure essence of what and who you are. According to him, the dream symbolizes some event lost in your past that you forgot.”
“Interesting,” I said, getting ready to place my order at Sonic. “But obvious. Could he tell you anything else?”
“He told me of a story his tribe used to tell, about a race of people that lived peacefully with his tribe. His people called them wolffriends because they could become a wolf at will. I decided to do some research, and found that your dream is very similar to the dreams that they would have just before their first change. Usually about their second birthday. Do you think they actually existed?”
“That would be cool if they did. Did he tell you anything else?”
“No, nothing else. After he answered the question, he tried to change the subject, like it was a sore spot for him. I dropped it after that.” My interest was certainly piqued, but I didn’t know where to go from there.
We planned for her to come over later tonight to spend the weekend at my house. We were going to go to see a movie the next day. We split at the mouth of my driveway, and I got my mind in gear for the pre-cal homework I had to finish.
I got in the house, and was almost instantly charged by a large yellow lab. My yellow lab, Elwood. I fought him off, and went up to my room to do my homework. I was pretty engrossed in it, so I didn’t hear the knock on the door, but I did hear my mom scream downstairs. I dropped the homework, ran out of my room, down the stairs, and into the hallway. I caught sight of my mom, sprawled on the ground, and a man in a movers uniform. Then, I blacked out.
About two minutes later I realized that I wasn’t completely unconscious. I looked around, moving my head as little as possible, and saw that I was in my mom’s bedroom. She had a pretty bad knock on the head. I hoped that she didn’t have a concussion. I climbed laboriously to my feet, and walked dizzily over to her. The scent of blood was wafting strongly off of a cut on her head. It seemed to stir an anger in me that rapidly dissolved into burning pain throughout my body. My teeth and jaws began to ache, and my tongue felt as if it were being pulled in all directions. A fire lit in my fingertips, and as I watched, the fingernails split and cracked, revealing claws pushing their way out from underneath. I felt a searing pain shoot down my spine, as it seemed to stretch too long for my body. I felt my hands begin to stiffen, the bones in my fingers changing shape and length, the structure of my hand completely reforming. I saw the skin on the palms and tips of my fingers thickening, starting to resemble the pads of a dog’s foot. I felt my canines pushing out of my gums, lengthening and sharpening. My eyesight sharpened drastically, causing me to gasp as I saw details that I would have needed to get up close to see.
And all the while, I fought the anger that was welling up inside me.
I felt my rib cage expand, ripping my shirt, and causing me to collapse, panting, to the ground. I struggled to my feet, my legs feeling too weak to hold my weight. They began to burn, pulsing and growing, becoming longer, stronger, and thicker. My pants became too tight for me, the seams beginning to split, and they fell off. The pain in my spine focused on a single point at its base, and seemed to pulse outward. Something seemed to grow out of my underwear, causing them to shred as well. As I cried out, my shoes burst, my feet growing larger inside them. I felt what could only be described as the bones in my feet breaking and reforming, while at the same moment, a pain flared in my ears, and they began to pulse and twitch. I felt them push outward, and as they grew, so did their sensitivity. Suddenly, I felt as if I had been hit in the face with a bat, as my jaws and nose pushed out of my face. My tongue seemed to stretch, all of my teeth grinding and shifting, becoming more suitable for a predator. And still I fought. I felt a prickling feeling over my entire body, the pain slowly dissolving, leaving only a burning anger in me. I crawled to my feet, staggering over to the dresser along the wall. I looked in the mirror and gasped. Memories flooded into my head. I knew what the wolf in my dream had wanted me to remember, and what I had now become. I was a werewolf. The strongest and most formidable predator on the planet. The anger began to subside, and then surged through me anew. I could use it, and my newfound tail twitched in anticipation of what was to come. I took a deep breath, and howled, a long, loud hunting cry.
With my enhanced senses, I could hear the faint heartbeat of my mother, the shuffling of someone moving the TV downstairs, and someone on the phone. I could smell the fear that my howl had elicited, a salty, slightly stale smell, and I could also smell a person coming up the stairs, being extremely quiet, because I couldn’t hear his footfalls. I crouched, preparing to leap at him as soon as the door was opened. He came closer, paused at the door, obviously listening for any activity, and then tentatively began to open it. I tensed, as the moment drew closer, the door inching open as the man behind it slowly checked the room. Lucky for me, I was out of his line of sight until it was too late, and he had already committed to coming in the room. I leapt, and he had just enough reaction time to turn to face me, presenting a better target for my lunge. Time seemed to slow, as a shot of adrenaline began to course through my veins. I hit him like a freight train, driving him to the ground. This was less a function of speed as size, I realized, dispassionately. I easily towered a foot over him. I seemed to hang in the air for what seemed an eternity, until finally I was on him.
I slashed at him, letting the stench of blood fill my nostrils, letting my rage fill me and control my actions. His scent mingled with that of my mothers blood, and I could tell this was the man that had attacked my mom. I snarled, a guttural sound, similar to the revving of a chainsaw. He thrashed around, trying to break my grip on him, but to no avail. I shoved him to the ground, gripping him harder all the time. I bared my teeth, preparing to rip out his jugular, but managed to stop myself just inches from his throat. Instead of killing him, I swiped a massive paw, battering his head into the ground, and forcing him into unconsciousness.
I got to my feet, and as silently as my bulk would allow, crept to the stairway. The stench of fear was stronger now, and I could smell their worry as well. I paused to listen and learn, and counted three burglars. Then I noticed a fourth person, coming up to the house, and realized the scent was somewhat familiar. I couldn’t quite place it though, which seemed to be a recurring theme in my life. Once I knew what to expect, though, I charged down the stairs, snarling and snapping as I came down. I leapt at the man trying to haul our TV outside, positioned right at the base of the stairs, aiming to rip his arm off. I clamped down on it, but lost my grip as my teeth sheared through his arm. I came around with a paw and knocked him to the ground. He was obviously dazed, so I came around for a final blow. A kick to the base of the neck was sufficient to end it, and with that kick, I propelled myself toward the next burglar in my range. I pounced on top of him, knocking him to the ground and slamming his head into the floor, knocking him into unconsciousness almost immediately. I pounded his face, just in case. The final burglar was in the living room, and was pulling a pistol, trying to shoot me. I bounded off of the door frame, dodging his first shot, bounced off the wall, and hit him directly in the chest, knocking him into the wall behind. I grabbed his throat, holding him a foot off the ground, as he suffocated.
He struggled with all his might, but he couldn’t break my grip. With every motion he made, I just gripped his throat tighter. His flailing began to slow, as he began slipping into unconsciousness.
“Alpha, stop!” The voice came from the doorway. I spun around, dropping the man I had pinned up against the wall. Snarling, I prepared for this new threat, realizing as I did this that this was the fourth person that had been coming up to the house as I went to attack the burglars. That’s where I realized why his scent was so familiar. It was similar to mine, a mingling of dog and human, with its own unique notes.
He kept eye contact with me as he began to kneel down. When he was on his knee, he bowed his head, and almost immediately, I no longer perceived him as a threat. The anger that had been fueling me seemed to flood out of me, and I staggered. The boy/wolf rushed over to me, supporting me on his shoulder, saying, “Definitely her first change.”
“Ya think,” I growled, slightly surprised that I could even speak. He helped me over to the couch, where I collapsed, exhausted.
As my vision began to fade to black, and I fought to stay awake, I heard him say, “I’ll take care of this mess, you need sleep.” Strangely, this reassured me more than anything else he could have said, and I let myself slip into blessed unconsciousness.
Chapter 1
I was walking through a large cedar forest in what appeared to be the New England hills. I heard a wolf howl in the distance, causing me to shudder. Fog slowly rolled out of the surrounding trees, obscuring the underbrush. A shape began to form in the treeline, solidifying from pure fog, slowly coalescing into the form of a wolf. I watched, as the wolf began to walk towards me, meeting my eyes directly. As it neared me, the fear that had been slowly creeping up my spine evaporated, and a feeling of recognition and peace flooded over me. The wolf opened its mouth and began to speak. “Artherige, you must remember me. You must. It is of the utmost importance.”
“What, no, who are you?” I asked, rather surprised that the wolf could speak. That was it, no fear, no confusion. Just surprise.
“I can not tell you what you already know. You must remember by yourself.”
“Can’t you at least tell me something? Something to help me remember,” I asked, pleading.
“You must remember by yourself. I can not help.” As it said this, the mist that formed it began to break up and disappear.
“Wait,” I called, “Come back.”
The wolf looked at me through slowly dematerializing eyes, and mouthed the word “What?”
“Who the hell are you?!”
“Mrs. Morkura, is there any reason at all that you would want to insult me twice in a row?” That was Mr. Fredreich, my economics instructor. He was standing over me, apparently having just been trying to wake me up. He absolutely hated me, and the feelings were mutual. He saw me as a delinquent who had no respect for authority, no sense of responsibility, and above all, no morals. I saw him as an overbearing, officious jerk. And we got along like oil and water.
“What?” I asked, still somewhat dazed from my unsettling dream.
“First, you fell asleep in my class, and then you had the audacity to swear at me when I go to wake you up. So, how will you explain yourself?” He was slowly turning purple as he said this. This seemed to happen a lot. Not me falling asleep, but his getting angry at or because of me. Most of the time, it wasn’t my fault, he just seemed to have a vendetta against me.
“Sorry,” I said, still somewhat groggily. “I was up with a family emergency all last night, and I really like my sleep.” I looked at him and smiled. That seemed to do the trick, as he went from deep purple to bright red. I silently congratulated myself. I had just managed to get a free pass out of class. I tried to do this as little as possible, but I really needed the time to organize my thoughts and try to figure this out. This dream had been coming to me every night for the past three weeks, ever since my eighteenth birthday.
“Get out of my class now,” he enunciated slowly, obviously trying to keep his anger in check. I got up, and as I exited the room, I turned around and saluted him. I couldn’t leave him there without a final parting jab.
About an hour later, Sasha intercepted me in the east hallway, and we headed to our lockers to put up our books and get the stuff we needed for the homework that night. Sasha and I had been friends for as long as I could remember, and she had lived next door to me for almost three quarters of that time. We were inseparable, and were so close that we almost thought as one. She led me to the doors, and as soon as we came out the front entrance, turned me left, walking down the street toward the Sonic at the corner.
“So, what are you doing tonight?” Sasha asked, smiling at a guy in our physics class.
“Well, besides the obvious homework, I’m planning on catching the new episode of Mythbusters, and possibly a Deadliest Warrior episode. Why?”
“Because I was wondering if you wanted to come over to my house tonight, maybe have a sleepover.”
“I would, but after what happened today in class, I probably shouldn’t.”
“And why did you want to piss of the economics teacher?” she cocked an eyebrow at me, and twitched a smile.
“I didn’t. It just kinda happened that way.” I grimaced at the thought of having detention because of it, and as I shook my head, I noticed that there seemed to be someone following us.
He probably wouldn’t have caught my eye normally, but there was just something about him that set off alarm bells in my head. He was dressed normally, nothing out of the ordinary, and was about average height, average build, blonde hair, and a tanned-by-the-sun appearance. Then I realized what it was. He was in just about every class that I was in. I couldn’t remember his name, but I recognized him. I dismissed it for the time being. I mean, we were on the main street from the school. Just about everybody that walked home took this road.
We ordered burgers at the Sonic, planned what we were going to do this weekend, just a day away, and talked about some of the new movies that were out, in case we wanted to go to the theater this weekend.
“So, what was the dream about this time?” Sasha inquired, with a knowing look in her eye.
“Same thing as the past few weeks, the wolf in the woods trying to get me to remember something.” I replied absently, as I finished an equation on my physics homework.
“My mom knows an Indian medicine man that might be able to tell you what the dreams mean. I can ask him if you want me to,” she told me.
“Sure,” I said, thinking that it couldn’t hurt my situation.
The boy from school was still following us as we left Sonic, definitely following, not just taking the same rout home, but I didn’t really think about it much, until I reached my house and wondered what he was following us for. I mean, it was creepy, but there was nothing overtly dangerous about him. I completely forgot about him as soon as I started my physics homework, though.
The next day was just about as miserable as the previous. Mr. Fredreich was still ticked off at me, so that class seemed to drag on forever. At last, the final bell rang, and Sasha came jogging up to me, apparently bursting with news. I had to admit, I was pretty interested in what she had to say.
“What’d you find?” I asked her.
“He said that the wolf in your dream symbolized your spirit totem, something like a soul. The pure essence of what and who you are. According to him, the dream symbolizes some event lost in your past that you forgot.”
“Interesting,” I said, getting ready to place my order at Sonic. “But obvious. Could he tell you anything else?”
“He told me of a story his tribe used to tell, about a race of people that lived peacefully with his tribe. His people called them wolffriends because they could become a wolf at will. I decided to do some research, and found that your dream is very similar to the dreams that they would have just before their first change. Usually about their second birthday. Do you think they actually existed?”
“That would be cool if they did. Did he tell you anything else?”
“No, nothing else. After he answered the question, he tried to change the subject, like it was a sore spot for him. I dropped it after that.” My interest was certainly piqued, but I didn’t know where to go from there.
We planned for her to come over later tonight to spend the weekend at my house. We were going to go to see a movie the next day. We split at the mouth of my driveway, and I got my mind in gear for the pre-cal homework I had to finish.
I got in the house, and was almost instantly charged by a large yellow lab. My yellow lab, Elwood. I fought him off, and went up to my room to do my homework. I was pretty engrossed in it, so I didn’t hear the knock on the door, but I did hear my mom scream downstairs. I dropped the homework, ran out of my room, down the stairs, and into the hallway. I caught sight of my mom, sprawled on the ground, and a man in a movers uniform. Then, I blacked out.
About two minutes later I realized that I wasn’t completely unconscious. I looked around, moving my head as little as possible, and saw that I was in my mom’s bedroom. She had a pretty bad knock on the head. I hoped that she didn’t have a concussion. I climbed laboriously to my feet, and walked dizzily over to her. The scent of blood was wafting strongly off of a cut on her head. It seemed to stir an anger in me that rapidly dissolved into burning pain throughout my body. My teeth and jaws began to ache, and my tongue felt as if it were being pulled in all directions. A fire lit in my fingertips, and as I watched, the fingernails split and cracked, revealing claws pushing their way out from underneath. I felt a searing pain shoot down my spine, as it seemed to stretch too long for my body. I felt my hands begin to stiffen, the bones in my fingers changing shape and length, the structure of my hand completely reforming. I saw the skin on the palms and tips of my fingers thickening, starting to resemble the pads of a dog’s foot. I felt my canines pushing out of my gums, lengthening and sharpening. My eyesight sharpened drastically, causing me to gasp as I saw details that I would have needed to get up close to see.
And all the while, I fought the anger that was welling up inside me.
I felt my rib cage expand, ripping my shirt, and causing me to collapse, panting, to the ground. I struggled to my feet, my legs feeling too weak to hold my weight. They began to burn, pulsing and growing, becoming longer, stronger, and thicker. My pants became too tight for me, the seams beginning to split, and they fell off. The pain in my spine focused on a single point at its base, and seemed to pulse outward. Something seemed to grow out of my underwear, causing them to shred as well. As I cried out, my shoes burst, my feet growing larger inside them. I felt what could only be described as the bones in my feet breaking and reforming, while at the same moment, a pain flared in my ears, and they began to pulse and twitch. I felt them push outward, and as they grew, so did their sensitivity. Suddenly, I felt as if I had been hit in the face with a bat, as my jaws and nose pushed out of my face. My tongue seemed to stretch, all of my teeth grinding and shifting, becoming more suitable for a predator. And still I fought. I felt a prickling feeling over my entire body, the pain slowly dissolving, leaving only a burning anger in me. I crawled to my feet, staggering over to the dresser along the wall. I looked in the mirror and gasped. Memories flooded into my head. I knew what the wolf in my dream had wanted me to remember, and what I had now become. I was a werewolf. The strongest and most formidable predator on the planet. The anger began to subside, and then surged through me anew. I could use it, and my newfound tail twitched in anticipation of what was to come. I took a deep breath, and howled, a long, loud hunting cry.
With my enhanced senses, I could hear the faint heartbeat of my mother, the shuffling of someone moving the TV downstairs, and someone on the phone. I could smell the fear that my howl had elicited, a salty, slightly stale smell, and I could also smell a person coming up the stairs, being extremely quiet, because I couldn’t hear his footfalls. I crouched, preparing to leap at him as soon as the door was opened. He came closer, paused at the door, obviously listening for any activity, and then tentatively began to open it. I tensed, as the moment drew closer, the door inching open as the man behind it slowly checked the room. Lucky for me, I was out of his line of sight until it was too late, and he had already committed to coming in the room. I leapt, and he had just enough reaction time to turn to face me, presenting a better target for my lunge. Time seemed to slow, as a shot of adrenaline began to course through my veins. I hit him like a freight train, driving him to the ground. This was less a function of speed as size, I realized, dispassionately. I easily towered a foot over him. I seemed to hang in the air for what seemed an eternity, until finally I was on him.
I slashed at him, letting the stench of blood fill my nostrils, letting my rage fill me and control my actions. His scent mingled with that of my mothers blood, and I could tell this was the man that had attacked my mom. I snarled, a guttural sound, similar to the revving of a chainsaw. He thrashed around, trying to break my grip on him, but to no avail. I shoved him to the ground, gripping him harder all the time. I bared my teeth, preparing to rip out his jugular, but managed to stop myself just inches from his throat. Instead of killing him, I swiped a massive paw, battering his head into the ground, and forcing him into unconsciousness.
I got to my feet, and as silently as my bulk would allow, crept to the stairway. The stench of fear was stronger now, and I could smell their worry as well. I paused to listen and learn, and counted three burglars. Then I noticed a fourth person, coming up to the house, and realized the scent was somewhat familiar. I couldn’t quite place it though, which seemed to be a recurring theme in my life. Once I knew what to expect, though, I charged down the stairs, snarling and snapping as I came down. I leapt at the man trying to haul our TV outside, positioned right at the base of the stairs, aiming to rip his arm off. I clamped down on it, but lost my grip as my teeth sheared through his arm. I came around with a paw and knocked him to the ground. He was obviously dazed, so I came around for a final blow. A kick to the base of the neck was sufficient to end it, and with that kick, I propelled myself toward the next burglar in my range. I pounced on top of him, knocking him to the ground and slamming his head into the floor, knocking him into unconsciousness almost immediately. I pounded his face, just in case. The final burglar was in the living room, and was pulling a pistol, trying to shoot me. I bounded off of the door frame, dodging his first shot, bounced off the wall, and hit him directly in the chest, knocking him into the wall behind. I grabbed his throat, holding him a foot off the ground, as he suffocated.
He struggled with all his might, but he couldn’t break my grip. With every motion he made, I just gripped his throat tighter. His flailing began to slow, as he began slipping into unconsciousness.
“Alpha, stop!” The voice came from the doorway. I spun around, dropping the man I had pinned up against the wall. Snarling, I prepared for this new threat, realizing as I did this that this was the fourth person that had been coming up to the house as I went to attack the burglars. That’s where I realized why his scent was so familiar. It was similar to mine, a mingling of dog and human, with its own unique notes.
He kept eye contact with me as he began to kneel down. When he was on his knee, he bowed his head, and almost immediately, I no longer perceived him as a threat. The anger that had been fueling me seemed to flood out of me, and I staggered. The boy/wolf rushed over to me, supporting me on his shoulder, saying, “Definitely her first change.”
“Ya think,” I growled, slightly surprised that I could even speak. He helped me over to the couch, where I collapsed, exhausted.
As my vision began to fade to black, and I fought to stay awake, I heard him say, “I’ll take care of this mess, you need sleep.” Strangely, this reassured me more than anything else he could have said, and I let myself slip into blessed unconsciousness.