15
I DIDN’T SEE MY DAD FOR DAYS, BUT I DIDN’T CARE if I ever saw him again. Mom had told him her decision, and he was supposed to be gone soon anyway. Already I could sense her growing relief at the prospect of him leaving, but every moment he was home, she was stiff with fear. I couldn’t stand seeing my mom so afraid. I knew my dad was physically powerless against me, the Preliator, but the pain he inflicted on my heart was crippling. I was more than ready to move on from him.
On Wednesday after school, I sat at the kitchen table with my English lit book out while I worked on a paper. During my grounding, I tried to focus my time on schoolwork so at least some good would come out of all this.
“Hey, Ell,” Mom called as she sauntered into the kitchen with a knowing grin on her face. “You got something in the mail today.”
I raised an eyebrow at her. “Why are you smiling like that?” I set down my notebook and got up. My mom had something white and narrow in her hand, and when I got close, I saw that it was an envelope.
“You sure you want to see it?” she said with a laugh. “It’s from Michigan Sta—”
“Give it,” I ordered, and snatched at it.
She yanked it out of my reach and high over her head. My mom, even when she was wearing flip-flops, towered over my petite height. “I thought you didn’t want it, Ell.”
“Not cool,” I grumbled as I hopped up to grab the letter. “You cheat!”
She laughed. “Oh, you’re no fun.”
She dropped her arm, and I grabbed it out of her hand. “My kind of fun just doesn’t include making fun of vertically challenged people.”
The letter in my hand was thick and addressed to me from Michigan State University. I let out a long breath, then tore open the top. I fumbled with the papers inside, surprised at the butterflies filling up my belly. This was my future, after all—if I even had a future.
I stared at the top page in shock. “Oh, my God.”
“What?” Mom peeked over my shoulder.
“I got in.” My voice was barely audible, but my shock spun into excitement. “I got in!”
My mom scooped me into a hug and squeezed me as tightly as she could, crying out unintelligible things as she kissed my cheek and hair. “I’m so happy for you!” she cried as legit tears ran down her cheeks. Was she really that surprised that I got into college? “We should do something special and fun for dinner. How about pancakes? This is a good pancakes day.”
I beamed up at her. “Thanks, Mom. I’m dying for pancakes.” I said cheerfully. “I’m so excited. Hey, do you think I could get a little time off and run around the mall this weekend with Kate and stretch my legs?”
“Sure,” she replied. “You’ve been doing so well lately, and I think it would do you some good.”
I’d gotten into college and I was going to get a relaxing day at the mall. I’d never looked so forward to anything before.
The next Saturday, Kate and I wandered around the mall, dipping in and out of stores just to look. I didn’t have any money to buy anything, but the stale mall air and the absence of Will made the brief freedom so much sweeter.
“I can’t wait for fall,” Kate said as she munched on her french fries across the table from me in the food court. “We’ll be roomies and go to class and party … it will be amazing!”
I laughed. “Will you be saving time for Marcus, too?”
She flashed me a sly grin. “I might. If I keep him around long enough.”
“Dumping him already?” I took a sip of my Orange Julius.
“We aren’t official,” she said. “Just … hanging out. He’s a lot of fun, but my options are open.”
“Probably a good idea,” I said vaguely. I hoped she would move on quickly so I wouldn’t have to worry about her getting mixed up in the world of reapers by dating one.
“Kate!” called an unfamiliar voice.
I turned my head and saw two really cute guys approaching. They looked older than us—and I was very sure they weren’t in high school.
“What’s up, ladies?” The first boy flipped his longish, grungy hair out of his eyes and grinned.
Kate flashed him a languorous smile. “Hey, Jay. Back in town for the weekend?”
He slid up to her, rested a hand on the back of her chair, and kissed her on the cheek. “Only to see you, babe.”
“Yeah, right.” She laughed and nudged his chest.
He laughed. “We’re just here for the afternoon. How have you been?”
“Peachy.” She grinned.
The second boy was even cuter and had short, spiky hair. His gaze fell on me, and he gave me a very obvious examination that almost made me blush. “Who’s your friend?” he asked with a smile.
“That’s Ellie,” Kate said with an edge to her voice. “She’s my best, which means she’s very cool.”
“I’m Brian,” he said. “Nice to meet you.”
I turned on the charm. “Likewise.” I took another sip and smiled. He was really cute. Really cute.
“Jay and Brian go to State,” Kate explained. “How’s sophomore year treating you boys?”
Jay shrugged. “It’s good.”
“Four-day weekends aren’t bad,” Brian said. “Four hours of classes a day Monday through Thursday, and then the fun begins. What are you girls doing tonight?”
Kate’s brow flickered. “I’m not doing anything—yet. What’ve you got planned?”
“We’re having a party at our house,” Jay said. “The one we’re renting this year. You two should come along.”
“Ellie?” Kate bumped her knee into mine. “You game?”
It was tempting. I wouldn’t drag Will along or even let him come if he wanted to. I had to get out and get away from him, and I didn’t need him to protect me. If I could take a centuries-old reaper, then I could take a bunch of drunk college boys.
“I’m in,” I said.
Kate let out a squeal of approval. “That’s my girl. I’ll give you a call, okay, Jay?”
“You’d better.” He winked at her.
Brian grinned at me. “See you again?”
“Yeah.” I smiled right back at him.
I knocked on my mom’s office door and entered. She was hard at work on a new design for a website, peering down her nose at the monitor through her computer glasses.
“Hey, baby.” She greeted me with a warm glance as I sat down in the chair across from her desk. “How was the mall?”
“Good,” I replied. “I forgot to give you something earlier.” There were family photos organized neatly around her computer, but today I noticed the photos including my dad were gone. One more step to freedom from him, I supposed. I brushed the thought away and set a stack of stapled papers on the desk in front of my mom.
“What’s this?” she asked, examining the stack. Her eyes went wide.
“An eighty-seven percent,” I said, “on this week’s lit paper.”
She smiled. “I’ll have to stick this one next to the ninety-two on the fridge.”
“You really don’t have to put my good grades on the fridge anymore,” I assured her. “Honestly, I’d be happy with just a gold star and a dollar for every A.”
She laughed. “Is that all it takes for you to get good grades?”
“Plus a lot of studying and no-nonsense brain power.”
Mom sat back in her chair, her smile growing. “I’m proud of the difference in you the last two weeks. Your grades have improved already, and you seem more focused. Should I just keep you grounded all the time?”
I huffed. “No, that’s okay, really. I did want to ask you, though … can I take a break from my grounding?”
Her smile became suspicious. “Didn’t you get a break today while you and Kate were at the mall?”
I nodded slowly and took a deep breath to prepare my lie. “I did … and it was great. Kate and I were thinking of doing a girls’ thing tonight. Just us, at her house. Can I sleep over there? Please?”
“Is Will going to be there?” she asked.
“No,” I said. “He won’t be around, I promise.”
“He hasn’t been around much in the last few days,” she noted. “Did something happen again?”
I shrugged. “I realized I need to spend less time with him if I want to concentrate on school.”
“I just don’t want you to make another poor decision,” she said gently.
“It won’t happen again.”
She smiled. “I know. You’re a smart girl, Ellie. You’re just trying to figure your life out.”
That was all too true. “Tell me about it.”
She loosed a long, low breath. “Well, I suppose I should say no and be firm about this month of grounding, but one night over at Kate’s might be good for you. You’ve been doing really well in school, so yes. You can stay at Kate’s tonight. On Monday, your grounding can resume.”
I brightened, not even bothering to hide my smile. “Really?”
“Really,” Mom said. “One night out, then it’s all business again. You leaving now?”
I shot to my feet. “Yeah. Thanks, Mom. You’re amazing.”
She shrugged. “I know. Love you.”
“Love you too. See you tomorrow!” I called as I buzzed from her office and leaped up the stairs to my room to pack an overnight bag. But when I walked through my door, I stopped at the sight of Will sitting on my bed.
He looked up at me. “We should go patrolling tonight.”
I sighed and dug my duffel bag out from under the bed, tossed it beside him, and yanked it open. “We’ve gone every night this week. Can I get just one day off?” I pulled open my dresser drawer and pulled out a couple pairs of underwear and knee-high socks and threw them into the bag. Ever the gentleman, he looked away from my undergarments.
“Why do I get the feeling you aren’t just staying the night over at Kate’s?” he asked, finally looking back at me.
“Do you have a problem with it?” I asked. I tried to keep my voice cool.
“No,” he replied. “But if you’re going somewhere at night, I should be by your side. I’m your Guar—”
“Yeah, yeah,” I grumbled. “You’re my Guardian. Don’t you want a night off from bodyguard duty?”
He looked entirely perplexed by my question. “It’s not a job, Ellie. I can’t take a night off.”
“Well, I don’t really want you to come with me.”
His lips parted and his eyes widened, the pain on his face making it so hard to tell him this. “But I have to,” he said.
“No, you don’t,” I said firmly. “And I don’t want you to. I’m going up to State to a party with Kate.” I turned from him and went into my closet to pick out an outfit for tonight.
“What am I supposed to do?”
“I don’t know. Hang out with Nathaniel. Go kill stuff.”
“Ellie, I’m serious.”
I left the closet with an armful of clothes and almost stopped when I saw the lost look on his face. I clenched my teeth together and walked over to the bed and stuffed my duffel bag until it was full. “I’m serious, too,” I said. “Can’t I have one night? I need to feel like myself again.”
He took my arm, stopping me. My eyes followed his hand up to his face. His skin was warm against mine, almost electric. “But I know you. This is you. This has always been you.”
I took my arm back and looked away from him. “Maybe that’s not me anymore.”
He hesitated, and the silence was aching. “You being around other people is dangerous. For them. You saw what happened with the fight against Orek.”
“I’m not going to be a hermit.”
“You’re a target,” he said. “That makes your friends and family targets as well. I don’t want them to get hurt either.”
“What are you saying? I can’t just abandon them.”
“You may have to.”
Our gazes locked. I drew in a long breath as anger churned deep within me. “I can’t do that. Being around them makes me feel human. If I lose them, I’ll lose myself and be alone.”
His shoulders slumped. “You’ll have me.”
“You aren’t all I need, Will. I need my family and friends, too.”
“A long time ago,” he began, “you understood how treacherous it was to drag ordinary humans into this world. You kept them away to protect them.”
“That’s not me anymore,” I told him coldly. “That me has died a thousand times before.”
“It is you. I understand that you love these people and you need them in your life, and I know you understand how dangerous your world is for them.”
“This wasn’t my world before you came along!”
“I have known you for five hundred years,” he said, touching my cheek and threading his fingers through my hair. “I know you better than anyone, and I know once you truly remember yourself, once you wake up, you’ll understand.”
“I do understand what you’re saying,” I said, and pulled away from him. “But I can’t give up my life and the people I love.”
“Even if you endanger them?”
“I’ll protect them,” I said defiantly.
“Ellie, please don’t be foolish …”
I held up a hand. “Not today. Please. I need to spend less time with you.”
He blinked, taken aback. “But I’m your Guardian.”
“You’re not my shadow.” My voice was sharper than I’d intended. “Or my babysitter. Lately I’ve realized that I need to get out of my old routine and into a new one. I need a break.”
His lips parted as he stared at me in disbelief, his green eyes wide. “We don’t have time for a break. Just days ago, a nycterid reaper picked a fight with us above a busy street full of humans. It’s been all over the news. There are video clips of this all over the internet. The world is on the brink of either changing or ending.”
“This is what I need right now,” I said quietly. “I need to think. I know I’m supposed to be this fearless warrior who kicks ass and never bothers with names, but I don’t feel like it. Trust me when I say I need this.”
“This is a terrible idea.”
I threw my duffel bag over my shoulder and picked my purse up off my dresser before turning to him one last time. “Maybe it is, maybe it isn’t. I don’t want you to follow me tonight. I don’t need you there. If you come, I will be really angry.”
“Please don’t do this. Don’t go without me.”
“Good-bye, Will,” I said. “I’ll see you tomorrow. We’ll patrol then, okay?”
His mouth tightened into a line before he got up and his form vanished into the Grim. After he was gone, I stood there for a moment, second-guessing myself. But I had already made up my mind. I left my house, climbed into my car, and drove to Kate’s without him.
Wings of the Wicked
Courtney Allison Moulton's books
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