Lucy POV
Georgetown, North America, 2000. Here, in my quiet room, I glanced through the window made of woods and watched the dried yellow leaves dropping like snow from the oak beside the quiet streets. A cool breeze darted inside as I opened the window wide and a dried leaf flew inside on the breeze’s wings. Looking at the leaf as it dropped on my new typewriter, I felt that the tree moans that she lost a child. And here, I picked the leaf and gazed at it for a while, hoping it feel my feelings, too. For now, I and the dried leaf were in the same category, feeling the same feeling of losing a mother. I remembered I was sobbing behind the closing door last night while my granny walked in with tiredness on her face. That night I observed she tired of consoling me, but I wished she understand I tired of her consoling me, too. She should at least leave me in the room for weeks to let me cry. I hated her for coming in without knocking and I hate myself for not locking the door. She hugged me and she smelt of tuna, woods, and witch’s scent. “Lucy,” she had said then, “it wasn’t your fault that your mother died.” Her voice, half-mourning, broke off for a length of time in silence, and then it returned like a slow wind dancing out of boiling water. “It was my fault for telling you the truth. It was my entire fault for telling you that my daughter had died.” Yeah, I had lived for eighteen years believing a lie that my mother traveled to Los Angeles for business stuff and granny promised me that my mother would come back for me when I clock eighteen years old. And the joy of clocking eighteen years old danced in me last morning, but it turned to sorrow after my granny knocked at my door that morning and surprised me with her sweet voice, singing a happy birthday song to my ears. I remembered I can’t wait to ask for my mother while she was singing and then she asked me to close my eyes till she returned. Puzzled, I closed my eyes, thinking; she wants to surprise me as she walked out; half-expecting that my mother would enter my room with her. Opening my eyes to her commands, I saw a picture glistening on a new typewriter. I picked it up and stared at it for a while, a woman in white beaming beside a man in black. The woman’s pretty face resembled granny’s. “Granny,” I had said back then, “Is this you?” I looked at her face, but she looked down, staring at her feet. After all, I wasn’t expecting this and then I felt uneasy. The uneasy wasn’t because of the typewriter, or the couple's picture, but of granny’s eyes dripping tears. I took my handkerchief from the rocking chair, but she nodded and motioned me to drop it. “Lucy,” she said amid her tears, “your mother asked me to buy a typewriter for you when you reach eighteen years old.” She wiped her tears off as I remained silent in confusion, but the more she wiped the tears off, the more it rains. “Granny, it’s okay.” I thought she was shedding the tears of joy of fulfilling the request of my mother. “No, my dear, this is not a tear of joy.” She had read my thoughts, as she often does with her witch power. I felt my heart probing against my chest. I hold my chest from pounding but failed, and I felt the fear behind the words dropping from my mouth. “You are scaring me.” “I’m sorry for not saving for your father before bloody jackals kill him” “It’s nothing anymore granny. You once told me that and I had already forgiven you. It wasn’t your fault, anyway.” “Can you find a place in your heart to forgive me for telling you a lie about your mom?” “A lie?” I asked “Your mother died after giving birth to you.” Her voices stunned my heart and left it in pieces. Since then I hadn’t forgiven her, and it seemed I won’t forever. Alone in the room now, I realized my tears had dropped on the dried leaf on my palm, and then my tears burned it to asses. That is why my granny doesn’t want me to cry. My tears can burn anything when am in great pain. Yes, my tears can burn anything except the human being. I swiftly cleaned my tears before they dropped on the typewriter and the picture. The tears filled my eyes, and I felt like burning everything in my room, but the fear of regretting later held me back. Not long after the night had covered the sky, several voices woke me in my quiet bed. I felt a tingling in my tummy as a voice mentioned my name outside. It sounds strange, and it wasn’t my granny’s voice. I stood, walked to the door, and paused, listening. The voice seemed to come from the backyard and, to my astonishment; I found the backyard door opened. Only my granny got the key to that door, and she had never opened it before, or she might have, but not in my presence. Slowly, I tiptoed to the backyard door, and I hide behind the back door as the voice echoed again. Did that strange person see me? I closed my eyes for a moment, waiting for the person to show up and point fingers at me. But nothing happened. No one came. Thanks to goodness, I was saved by the darkness. “Lucy would need your help.” Granny’s voice was saying now. I raised my eyebrows, and millions of questions passed through my mind. Who’s she speaking to? Why did I need a stranger’s help? I paused my thoughts after I realized my Granny might know my thoughts through her witch power. And then, after a few minutes, the stranger’s voice came again. “I would be happy to help her since she was part of me.” The stranger’s words dropped like a stone to my ears. How could I be part of someone I don’t know? Besides, the stranger was a girl. This is strange, but she sounds like me. “I’m glad to hear that,” Granny said, and coughed. “She hadn’t known that she had you, and I don’t want her to know yet. I don’t want any bad thing to happen to her in the city. She was gifted with a lot of spiritual power she hadn’t realized she had, and those jackals, vampires, werewolves, witches, and walkers would envy her.” “Why would she live in the city?” The stranger asked. I felt satisfied with that question because that’s what I want to decipher out. “Your mother came to me last night and reminded me to buy the typewriter for Lucy. She pleads I should allow Lucy to go to college even if she doesn’t want to,” Granny said, and I was confused again. She’s talking about my mother. Why should my mother be the mother of a stranger girl? Besides, she told me my mother had died. How could she come to her? “I hadn’t gotten over the pain of losing my mother.” The stranger-girl voices carried a poignant sorrowful tone out of her heart. “Well, it seems Lucy won’t forgive me for telling her the truth yesterday. I left her room when I tired of consoling her this morning. She doesn’t eat before she slept this night.” A few minutes passed in silence, which makes me feel uneasy to think they had caught me. “Sheena.” Granny’s voice broke the silence, and it raised my fear. “Please do everything in your power to protect her from every attack.” Here, I waited for Sheena to speak, but she didn’t. I saw a hole in the door; I didn’t hesitate to peep through it with one eye. Sheena was in a red gown was staring at her feet. I widened my eyes so that I could see her face, but I couldn’t. Then suddenly, a fire danced on Sheena’s hand, but she was still staring at her feet. “You don’t worry, Lucy is mine. I will do anything to save what’s mine.” I raised my eyebrows as Sheena raised her head. Now, I could see her face vividly through the door’s hole. I felt pangs of fear dancing like fire in my chest as Sheena’s face stunned me. This is strange, unbelievable. How could this be? I dropped my jaw, thirsting for a lot of answers. I want to run inside, but Oh, that Sheena’s face. Swiftly, I peeped again through the other eye to be sure what I saw. Could this be real? The fire glows, and I raised my eyebrows as she smiled at my Granny. The face I saw was my own.Leslie POV Maidstone, North America, 2000. What the hell is this scent? Swiftly the light went off, then darkness and stillness possessed the room. I dropped the Shakespeare’s Othello book on the stool and shifted the part of my head into the wolf’s head and let out a silent growled. The room was still nothing amiss. Michael was snoring on the bed, and I was glad he was, for I don’t want anybody to know about my identity as a wolf. Glancing about the room, I smelt the scent more. It smelt of blood, animal hair, and woods. The light switched on by itself as I hurried to the door. I shifted back into a human, opened the door, and look at Michael if he noticed nothing. Thank god, he was still snoring. Who knows, he might dream of girls because he loves college girls too much. He wasn’t like me, the shy boy of all time.
Leslie POV Call her a witch, call her a ghost. A strange being brushed against us amid the fight and I fell beside the girl. I rose and growled, but something stunned me, for the strange being was fighting against the Jackals. It seemed the being was a girl in red clothes, defending me. I thought she was the girl that helped me in her house until I looked at my side once more and saw her looking at me with a worried face. And then I looked towards the Jackals battling with this strange girl. But who was this another strange girl, who smelt of the witch, and why was she attacking the jackals on my behalf? I couldn’t tell, but I want to know. The two jackals jumped out of the window and dashed away, and the witch girl turned to me. She smiled; her smile was like a ripped orange juice. And then, like a ghost, a cloud of circles covered her, and she disappeared. I shifted back into human form and c
Lucy POV Anna accompanied me to my room, and we had a great conversation until we heard the chirping of the night. I felt the nervousness beneath every sound, every word she spilled to my startled ears. And this night, she told me the professors had stopped tutoring and the college board had closed the school for a while because of bullying jackals. “So, the school board won’t open the school until the jackals stop the bullying?” I had asked her then. “It seemed so,” Anna had replied with a face filled with woebegone look. “What can we do to stop the jackals in their tracks?” “Many humans had lost their lives when trying to stop them.” Anna sighed, and whispered in my ear, “Only werewolves can
Lucy POV Here on the sofa, I watched Leslie’s tummy rising and falling rhythmically on my bed. My bedsheets was filled with the blood he poured out when Anna was treating him. Anna told me the Jackals poisoned Leslie’s body with their claws, and she promised he would get well because he spilled the damned dark as raven poisonous blood out. After Anna had gone out to buy drugs; after I sat here on the sofa for hours, I noticed a strange thing happening on my bed. It begins with his wounds; I suspect his wounds heal so fast. Looking at his closed eyes, I wondered who Leslie was and what he knew about me. Why on earth did Sheena save him even before I met him? Did he know my Sheena, too? I don’t know, but I want to know and hold the neck of the hidden truth behind this whole dark situation. Questions bubble in my mind like rain dropping inside buckets half-filled with water. I can&rsquo
Lucy POV What the hell, I slapped his face thrice and pulled him down from the bed, he coughed and Anna darted in. Her knuckle pressed to her mouth as she raised her eyebrows, saying, “What happened?” I walked out and hurried to the bathroom, anger was boiling in me like the fire of hell. I feel like going back to him with a knife, and here, I wash my face with water and rubbed my long black hair to the back. This was my first kiss, and I hated that it was taken away forcefully. I hated myself for cleaning the blood on his forehead, and I hated him for asking me for help. I don’t know what they were discussing in my room, but I could sense uneasiness beneath Anna’s voice as she knock on the bathroom door saying, “What happened Lucy, please open the door.” I sat on the floor, leaning my back to the wall, and watching the knob of the door turning up and down. Anna surrendered forcing me to open the door and then became silent, at first; I thought she had gone back until
Lucy POV What the hell, I slapped his face thrice and pulled him down from the bed, he coughed and Anna darted in. Her knuckle pressed to her mouth as she raised her eyebrows, saying, “What happened?” I walked out and hurried to the bathroom, anger was boiling in me like the fire of hell. I feel like going back to him with a knife, and here, I wash my face with water and rubbed my long black hair to the back. This was my first kiss, and I hated that it was taken away forcefully. I hated myself for cleaning the blood on his forehead, and I hated him for asking me for help. I don’t know what they were discussing in my room, but I could sense uneasiness beneath Anna’s voice as she knock on the bathroom door saying, “What happened Lucy, please open the door.” I sat on the floor, leaning my back to the wall, and watching the knob of the door turning up and down. Anna surrendered forcing me to open the door and then became silent, at first; I thought she had gone back until
Lucy POV Here on the sofa, I watched Leslie’s tummy rising and falling rhythmically on my bed. My bedsheets was filled with the blood he poured out when Anna was treating him. Anna told me the Jackals poisoned Leslie’s body with their claws, and she promised he would get well because he spilled the damned dark as raven poisonous blood out. After Anna had gone out to buy drugs; after I sat here on the sofa for hours, I noticed a strange thing happening on my bed. It begins with his wounds; I suspect his wounds heal so fast. Looking at his closed eyes, I wondered who Leslie was and what he knew about me. Why on earth did Sheena save him even before I met him? Did he know my Sheena, too? I don’t know, but I want to know and hold the neck of the hidden truth behind this whole dark situation. Questions bubble in my mind like rain dropping inside buckets half-filled with water. I can&rsquo
Lucy POV Anna accompanied me to my room, and we had a great conversation until we heard the chirping of the night. I felt the nervousness beneath every sound, every word she spilled to my startled ears. And this night, she told me the professors had stopped tutoring and the college board had closed the school for a while because of bullying jackals. “So, the school board won’t open the school until the jackals stop the bullying?” I had asked her then. “It seemed so,” Anna had replied with a face filled with woebegone look. “What can we do to stop the jackals in their tracks?” “Many humans had lost their lives when trying to stop them.” Anna sighed, and whispered in my ear, “Only werewolves can
Leslie POV Call her a witch, call her a ghost. A strange being brushed against us amid the fight and I fell beside the girl. I rose and growled, but something stunned me, for the strange being was fighting against the Jackals. It seemed the being was a girl in red clothes, defending me. I thought she was the girl that helped me in her house until I looked at my side once more and saw her looking at me with a worried face. And then I looked towards the Jackals battling with this strange girl. But who was this another strange girl, who smelt of the witch, and why was she attacking the jackals on my behalf? I couldn’t tell, but I want to know. The two jackals jumped out of the window and dashed away, and the witch girl turned to me. She smiled; her smile was like a ripped orange juice. And then, like a ghost, a cloud of circles covered her, and she disappeared. I shifted back into human form and c
Leslie POV Maidstone, North America, 2000. What the hell is this scent? Swiftly the light went off, then darkness and stillness possessed the room. I dropped the Shakespeare’s Othello book on the stool and shifted the part of my head into the wolf’s head and let out a silent growled. The room was still nothing amiss. Michael was snoring on the bed, and I was glad he was, for I don’t want anybody to know about my identity as a wolf. Glancing about the room, I smelt the scent more. It smelt of blood, animal hair, and woods. The light switched on by itself as I hurried to the door. I shifted back into a human, opened the door, and look at Michael if he noticed nothing. Thank god, he was still snoring. Who knows, he might dream of girls because he loves college girls too much. He wasn’t like me, the shy boy of all time.
Lucy POV Georgetown, North America, 2000. Here, in my quiet room, I glanced through the window made of woods and watched the dried yellow leaves dropping like snow from the oak beside the quiet streets. A cool breeze darted inside as I opened the window wide and a dried leaf flew inside on the breeze’s wings. Looking at the leaf as it dropped on my new typewriter, I felt that the tree moans that she lost a child. And here, I picked the leaf and gazed at it for a while, hoping it feel my feelings, too. For now, I and the dried leaf were in the same category, feeling the same feeling of losing a mother. I remembered I was sobbing behind the closing door last night while my granny walked in with tiredness on her face. That night I observed she tired of consoling me, but I wished she understand I tired of her consoling me, too. She shoul