Read Bound by the Moon (The Ancients Series Book 4) Online

Authors: Christine M. Butler

Tags: #paranormal fantasy, #paranormal romance

Bound by the Moon (The Ancients Series Book 4) (19 page)

BOOK: Bound by the Moon (The Ancients Series Book 4)
4.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

I knew we wouldn’t find the end of our hardships this night, but I vowed to the stars and moon above, and to whatever greater beings there were beyond us, that my people would find peace. We would know a calm for a time, because we had earned it. We earned it through hardship, and flexibility, through tolerance of others, and the ability to come together under the worst of circumstances and see ourselves through to the other side.

My vow to my people, spoken under the stars, would stick. I knew it would, and I stopped mid-run and sealed it with a determined howl that was echoed back by the wolves of my pack. They would rally under Mikael, just as the rest of our kind would rally under me. I swore that I heard my father’s voice calling back in that cacophony of sound, and maybe I did. I was sure he was enjoying this one last run with us, even if we couldn’t see him there.

 

EPILOGUE

 

 

17 years later…

 

“Willow, I need you to come somewhere with me tonight.”

“But, mom, it’s the full moon, and I told Drea I would run with her.” When she saw that I wasn’t going to budge she threw in, “But, it’s her first full moon run since she shifted.” As if I didn’t already know that.

“I have it on good authority that Asi and Ashley plan on running with Drea this time. She’ll be fine.”

“Seriously, mom?” Willow rolled her eyes at me in typical teen fashion. She turned her back to me as she looked through her things for the tiny little piece of electronics she called a cell phone. “You would think it’s cool to make your first run with your parents, but it’s totally not! Remember when I first shifted? I had you on one side, dad on the other, and freaking glow-in-the-dark Uncle Jack bringing up the rear. I’m lucky I have any friends at all.” Her velvety brown hair was currently hanging down to the middle of her back, with slight waves to it today. I could tell she had been a little wind-whipped out on the lake earlier with her friends. Luckily, the winds were dying down, and were supposed to be non-existent by the time the full moon reached its apex tonight.

I couldn’t help myself as I started laughing. Willow was the only child I had. The coldness I felt in my bones never did leave me permanently. My body temperature was down well below what a normal werewolf was. I actually ran a little on the low side for a human now too. Needless to say, that low of a body temperature wasn’t enough to ever sustain a werewolf pregnancy again. Mikael and I had resigned ourselves to only having Willow to dote on, but that wasn’t entirely true either. We also had Jack Jr., and Ashley and Asi’s kids to spoil. We were living very fulfilled lives, but we were all probably a little too over-protective of Willow because she was our one and only. Thanks to the obligation Jack had as our Wraith Guardian, he was just as overbearing as having a third parent who couldn’t let go.

“Drea will be fine. I’m sure Luke will see to it that she gets some space from them, and Jack Jr. will too.”

“Being rescued by her brother and cousin from her parents…” Willow huffed out her indignation. “Drea’s going to hate me.” She started whining which only made me want to laugh again. “I promised!” Now, I totally understood the drama I always put off on my own mom.

“Willow, I promise you that she won’t hate you. Ashley is going to explain things to her, but you and I have somewhere to go, and it’s important.”

“Ugh, fine!” Willow stomped off out of her room, and I went to my own to get everything prepared for the night. Since the future white wolves would be cut off from our ancestors, I took it upon myself to write down their histories. Serena aided me in writing their stories all the way back to the very first white wolf, Aislynn. To my surprise, they weren’t all rosy stories full of optimism and wonderment. Not all the white wolves had been good people. Of the ones that more closely resembled myself, most met with a quick end. Serena and I had finished up with the last white wolf that came before me weeks ago. Since then, I continued to add my own story, including how I found out that I was a white wolf.

During the writing of the book, I had shoed Willow away more times than I could count, telling her she wasn’t ready to read it yet. I knew a time would come when she’d want to know the complete history. Sadly, there would come a time when she would have to know it. I suppose that’s why it took me so long to write it. I knew when that time came, it would be because my baby girl was about to transition into a woman, a white wolf in her own right.

I had been feeling the change coming on for months now. She was going to go through her final transition soon, and when she did, she would need all the knowledge she could grasp at her fingertips. I didn’t want her to be as blind to her powers coming into play as I had been.

“Tonight is the night, then?” Serena had come for a visit a few days ago, and I let her read the last part of the book, my part. She chastised me for seeing the hero in most of the other wolves, and not so much in myself.

“Yes, I’ve been feeling her final transition coming for a while now. It’s time.” I smiled at Serena. “It must be odd for you to be able to be a part of all this after so many generations of having to watch your lineage from the shadows.”

“It is both strange, and wonderful, my dear.” Serena smiled, as she touched the book we wrote together.

“I find it odd that my mother sought redemption the way she did too.” When I finally found a moment alone with Serena all those years ago, I was able to tell her the message that Kezia had sent back with me. ‘I was wrong, and this girl, finally one to be worthy of our line, proved it to me. Do what you must.’ I still wasn’t entirely sure what it meant, but Serena seemed to know, and ever since that day a burden had lifted from her shoulders. The change was evident to everyone who knew her. It was good to see Serena happy. After all, she had saved my life in more ways than one.

“I found Kezia to be odd all around. Who’s to say she was even trying to redeem herself?” I asked.

“I don’t know. Her words brought me untold peace, surely that amounted to something on her end.” Serena moved away from the book again, to look out my bedroom window.

“Serena, will it always be like this for our line from now on? Or do you think the reign of two will end with Willow and I?”

“I wish I knew what the future held for all of us, but in this, my guess would be as good as yours. It’s possible that you two will be the only time in history, or in the future, that we will see two white wolves together. It’s also possible that each one born in the line will become something more from here on out.” She shrugged. “That wasn’t very much help, was it?”

“Not really, but I didn’t think I was going to get a different answer. I guess I just wanted someone to reassure me that everything would be alright in the end.”

“My sweet girl, you’ve raised your daughter well. I have all the confidence in the world that between the two of you, our people-both yours and mine-will know peace for a long while to come.”

“Thank you, Serena.”

“Being able to share this with you is thanks enough, Jessica. I wanted you to know, I spelled the book. It will never run out of space. For each new white wolf born, new pages will be added. Let your history, my history, be passed through each generation, so that they may always know, and learn from their ancestors.”

 

~*~

 

“Okay, enough with the suspense already, why on earth are we here?” I remembered sharing that same impatience when I was Willow’s age. It gave me hope that she’d one day outgrow a little of it too.

“I don’t know if you can feel the change coming, but I have, for months.” Willow just looked at me like I had lost my mind, so I assumed she indeed had not felt the changes starting. “I brought you here, under the full moon, to show you your legacy.”

I took the book out of the bag I’d carried to the cliff face. The silver gilding caught the moonlight perfectly, casting it’s own spell of beauty around the book. The air was crisp that night, and I could still hear the rustling of the leaves in the forest below us as the pack ran by. I longed to stretch my legs and run with them. I was actually chilled to the bone up here on the cliff like this, and to be honest, I wished for the warmth of my fur, but this moment was far more important than anything else I could be doing or comfort I wished to seek. Jack stood, a ways back from us, in his ethereal wolf form. It would never fail to awe me, seeing him like that. He was magnificent. He had also learned valuable lessons about distance, and the difference between excitement and emergency. One more thing he learned was that in wolf form, all he had to do was think of one or the other of us, and he would be transported there in the blink of an eye. No barriers could withstand him. I had often wondered how Jack was supposed to watch over so many of us at once, but the answer came with his abilities.

He didn’t stand back there alone. I noticed that just a little ways past him, Jack Jr. stood. His wolf form was a light gray shot through lighter hints of that electric blue. His blue markings didn’t shift and move with him as Jack’s did, but it was clear that our trip to the other side had left his mark on him as well. Jack Jr. was also lucky enough to receive what we all dubbed as lighting speed. He couldn’t quite flash to one of us, but his run, when he needed to be somewhere, wasn’t much slower.

Willow was still standing there, looking up wistfully at the moon. She had not noticed the book I held in my hands yet. I moved then, to get her attention, and once she saw what I had in my hand she remained silent for a heartbeat or two, stunned by the fact that I was finally giving her the book she’d begging me to look at since she learned to talk. “This is the history of the white wolves!” She finally trilled out excitedly.

“I know, I helped write it.” I smiled at her, knowing I would have been just as excited to receive such a thing had it been available to me.

“I’ve been begging you to show me for years. Why now?”

“Because now, you are ready.”

Willow plopped down on the smooth, cool, rock surface of the cliff and opened the book to the first page. Her earlier arguments about wanting to run with Ashley’s daughter, Drea, were lost to her then. I stood there, watching her for a moment, seeing her dark chocolate locks bounce freely over her shoulders and rain down her back as she skimmed the pages of the book. Each of her movements, as she flipped the pages, making the curls in her hair ripple like lake water on a breezy day. Her emerald eyes found mine then as she offered up her thanks to me.

I sat down beside my daughter then, and put my arms around her shoulders as I spoke. “You’re going to transition soon. You should know everything before then. There is no need to thank me, sweetheart. I wish someone had passed something like this on to me, it sure would have made things a whole lot easier.” Willow sat the book down in her lap, so that her hands were now free to return the hug.

“Will we both be white wolves once I transition?” She asked.

“Yes, we will be the first pair of white wolves to ever live at the same time.” I smiled at her. “That makes up epically awesome, my dear!” I said to her, channeling a bit of my younger self and a bit of Serena, who always seemed far older and wiser than I could ever understand being.

“I’m glad I get to do this with you, mom. I can’t imagine how scary it must have been for you, not knowing your own history. Thank you for not keeping me in the dark the way your parents did.”

“My parents had their reasons for hiding things from me. They meant well. I chose to do things differently, and hopefully, that will mean it works out better for you.” I laughed then. “Not that it worked out horrible for me, though. My mate was the talk of the packs, everyone wanted him.” I winked at my daughter. “And not to mention, I got a pretty great daughter from the whole ordeal. One who has had a bit magic in her since birth, I might add.”

“Well, we can thank Aunt Natalia for that one.”

“Yes, her blessing certainly did come in handy a few times.”

Willow’s cheeks turned red, because one of those times, she had been making out with her crush, a boy two years older than her, who was a complete jerk, not to mention a total moron for even thinking he would get away with trying to deflower the White Wolf Ruler’s daughter and walk away. In thinking I would understand, he forgot about her father, who totally didn’t. When everything got a little too hot and heavy, Mikael was there, having seen what we called Willow’s anxiety glow, from the bushes behind the house. “Let’s not bring that up ever again, okay?” Willow asked, humiliation still straining her voice to this day when she talked about it.

“Let’s not mention what?” I teased.

“Exactly. There’s nothing to mention, except this book…” And just like, my little girl was almost lost to the pages of our history again. Then she noticed Jack’s movement out of the corner of her eye, as he shifted into a different position. “We owe him a lot, don’t we?”

“We do, and our entire line will as well.”

“I owe him more than the others ever will.” She said, turning back to me.

“Why is that?”

“He is the reason you came back to us. What would I have done without you here?”

“Well, your father would probably have you under lock and key 24/7 so I see your point. You do owe Jack a great deal.” We both laughed at that, especially when we heard Jack’s wolf snort. He had, of course, heard our entire exchange, and would no doubt torment us relentlessly over the next few days about how we owed him, but I wouldn’t have it any other way.

I sat with Willow on the cliff’s edge for a while, giving her time to read through everything when I heard footsteps approaching from just beyond where Jack was positioned.

Jack Jr. had long since run off to join the pack, and Jack’s demeanor never changed, so I knew I didn’t have anything to fear. Mikael stepped into the clearing then, looking just as handsome as he had on our first official date together, the one that changed my mind about him in the first place. He still had a scruffy five o’clock shadow covering his jawline, and his eyes shown like two jewels in the moonlight as he closed the distance between us. “I came to see if the two of you were going to join us on the rest of the run.”

BOOK: Bound by the Moon (The Ancients Series Book 4)
4.65Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Far Side of the Sky by Daniel Kalla
The Perfect Retreat by Forster, Kate
Doctor at Villa Ronda by Iris Danbury
Until We Burn by Courtney Cole
The Darkest Prison by Gena Showalter
Breaking Hollywood by Shari King
The Tanglewood Terror by Kurtis Scaletta
Southern Romance by Smith, Crystal
Where Love Dwells by Delia Parr