kissed-by-moonlight by Rakhibul hasan (best chinese ebook reader .TXT) đ
- Author: Rakhibul hasan
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âThis is a great opportunity to raise awareness of the relationship between man and beast. I hate being considered a villain, but society needs one. No one ever sheds a tear for the wolf. Not anymore. In a world filled with sheep, of course youâd see me as a monster.â
âDo I believe humans and my kind can coexist? No. If you live among wolves you canât just act like a wolf. You must be one. If youâre not another predator, then youâre just prey.â
âHow have I changed since becoming a Were? Well my priorities are different. My beliefs. The moon is my god now. I dance for it, I pine for it, and if it asked, I would kill for it.â
And on and on it went.
My breath escaped in an explosive sigh of disbelief.
âSweet, buttery baby Jesus,â I said, âdonât you guys have like a public service announcement you can release or something? Whereâs your publicist? Your agent? Anyone who can juggle the shitstorm this is turning out to be.â
Werewolves giving interviews. It would have been brilliant if any one of them had been coached on how not to make their race come across as mindless, cannibalistic monsters. And former housewives.
âI can only do so much,â Gabriel told me, staring unblinking at the computer screen. âThe wolves you saw were not from my pack. I donât know them. If Iâd been able to stop them before they went on air, I would have. Though,â and here his voice grew cold, âif I hadnât been betrayed, this would never have been an issue.â
Holding up my hands, I backtracked in a very literal sense.
âHold on there, Fido. Before you start pushing Timmy down any wells, how about you let me explain?â
He looked like he didnât know whether to laugh at me or strangle me.
âYou have five minutes,â he decided finally, and I blew out the breath Iâd been holding.
âItâs true that I went there to snoop,â I admitted and winced when he huffed angrily.
âBut,â I continued loudly, âI never got anything good enough to build a story off of. Thatâs why I went back to the office that night, to see what sort of dirt I could dig up.â
âI suppose I ought to offer congratulations then. Once you admit to shooting the video, theyâll be tripping over themselves to hear your story. This is front page stuff, Miss Conners. I bet the rights for the movie will be worth millions.â
I disliked hearing him call me âMiss Connersâ about as much as I disliked the undercurrent of hurt I heard beneath the heavy sarcasm. Knowing that he thought Iâd betrayed him, and that the thought caused him pain did awful things to my blood pressure and I found myself scowling at him for no good reason.
âI didnât release that tape.â
His eyes narrowed. âAre you lying?â he asked doubtfully.
Snorting, I came to sit beside him at the counter. âIf I were, I would have started a hell of a lot sooner.â
He seemed to accept this, if the way he relaxed in his seat was any indication.
âLook,â I continued, âone of your guys took the camera off of me that night. I wouldnât have been able to leak the footage, because I didnât even have it.â
I was about to say that I wouldnât have done something like that anyway, but since I wasnât so sure, I didnât bother. If anything, Gabriel seemed to buy the idea that I would have, but couldnât more than if Iâd said I could have, but didnât. Go figure. I guess he knew me better than Iâd thought.
Closing the laptop, he moved it away and put his elbows on the counter, face resting in his hands as if his head were aching. I sympathized.
âWho would have done something like this?â he asked, quietly broken at the thought of one of his own turning traitor. âWho would have revealed us to the humans? Why? What would they have gained from it?â
I almost said it. Almost put his name out there. But Gabriel raised a good point. It was one thing for Marcus to work for the Huntsmen. It was a completely different thing to reveal the presence of werewolves to the unsuspecting public. What could he possibly gain from revealing the fact that werewolves existed when he was, in fact, a werewolf?
Or was he?
It had been a man whoâd snatched my necklace that night. A man. I hadnât been attacked by a wolf. At the time Iâd assumed that he hadnât shifted into a wolf because he hadnât wanted to. But what if it had been because he couldnât?
âThe task force,â I began carefully, âAre all of them Weres? Are all of them a part of your Pack?â
âYes and no,â Gabriel answered. âTheyâre members of the pack, but not all pack members can shift. Some have lost the ability. Why?â
Partial truth couldnât hurt. âI was just thinking. The man who took my hidden camera wasnât in wolf form. I was wondering if that had been done by choice.â
Slowly, Gabriel lifted his head and turned to me. He looked flushed, almost happy, and I realized it was because Iâd given him something he hadnât had before. A lead.
âNo. The full moon forces the change. Only the Alpha can fight the pull of something like that. If the man who did this could change, he would have.â His grin was very wolfy. âWhich will make him considerably easier to find.â
âWhen the Alpha callsâŠyou come. Itâs that simple, and that complicated.â
âGeoffrey Giggs
Chapter Eleven
Gabriel wanted to go hunting for the traitor right then and there, and he wanted me to come with him.
I said no (insert expletive) way.
He laughed at the refusal, however, and simply carted me along anyway. According to him I was still his personal assistant, and if I wanted to earn my more than generous paycheck, then I had better start assisting.
I found myself sitting in the passenger seat of his car, arms crossed over my chest, and staring out the window as he sped down first one street and then another, a smile widening across his face with every speed limit he broke.
It wasnât long before I realized that we werenât heading to L.C. In fact we werenât even staying within the city limits.
âWhere are we going?â
I wasnât very good at silently fuming, and my curiosity got the better of me sooner rather than later.
âI have to call the pack together. But with all tourists in town looking for werewolves, it isnât safe to bring them to LumiĂšre anymore.â
âHmm,â I murmured. I tried the silence thing for another few minutes, and then gave in to something that had been nagging at me for a while now.
âAre you a werewolf?â
âWhat?â he laughed, sparing me a quick look before turning back to the road.
âThat night? I said you were a werewolf and you said âI guess you could call it thatâ. What did you mean?â
âOfficially I am a Were.â
âAnd technically?â
âTechnically, Iâm what youâd call a Hell Hound. Which is a werewolf. Only, evolved. Like a PokĂ©mon.â
Dum, dum, dum.
I had two options. I could handle this like an adult, or I could open the door and roll out of a moving car. My arm gave a warning twinge, and I decided to go along with it.
âO-Kay.â I began, âWhatâs a Hell Hound?â
Silence filled the interior as he considered his next words.
âLong ago, the Seelie and Unseelie courts of Fae brought together their greatest warriors to form a hunting party. Nobody knows who the first victim of the hunt was, or what theyâd done to offend the Sidhe. All anyone knows is that once these Sidhe tasted blood, they liked it too much to stop the hunt. From then on they went after the guilty, the innocent, men, women, children, and everyone and everything else in between. Their favorite prey, however, were other supernaturals. The problem was that hunting supernaturals was a lot harder than running down some poor human farmhand.â
Taking a deep breath, he drummed his fingers on the steering wheel before continuing.
âThey caught the first Hounds while they were wondering the shores of the River Styx. The others they made by cursing some of the men and women theyâd caught when there were more Hunters than Hounds.â
He considered that for a moment, and smiled slightly, âWhen you think about it, I guess those were the first Werewolves. Anyway, when the Seelie and the Unseelie courts went to war, they found that they couldnât recall their warriors home.
âTheyâd broken ties with the Fae living within the Sithins and became a law unto themselves. For centuries the Wild Hunt was a story people told to frighten their children. Eventually the Hunt grew to such strength that whenever they rode, the call of the Hounds could drag the spirits of the dead from their graves. Until the people caught between the Hunt and their intended victims couldnât tell whether the Riders were men, Fae, beast, or Specter.â
Specters. I shivered, massaging my aching arm and huddling a little deeper in my seat.
âSo you were one of these Hounds? You helped lead the Wild Hunt?â
He nodded and his gaze looked far away, older somehow as if heâd aged when I hadnât been paying attention. âEventually, the Masters of the Hunt were driven mad and we deserted them.
They canât ride without us, and theyâve sent Specters to search during the full moon ever since.â He scowled. âIt makes hosting Pack events awkward.â
âThere are more of you. More Hounds.â My voice was flat.
âYup. Twelve at last count. All Alphas of our respective packs. Weres seem to like us.â He shrugged and threw me a smile, dimples flashing. âProbably because of all this rippling sex appeal.â
I rolled my eyes and he laughed.
* * * *
âThis is dumb.â
âYour opinion has been noted.â
âAnd ignored.â
âVigorously ignored.â
I sighed, loudly, and looked up in time to see him shake his head. We were trekking through the underbrush of Briarcliff National Park and had barely gone a mile before I started breathing hard and sweating like a weighty streetwalker in June.
âAre we there yet?â I groaned.
âAlmost.â
âHow long?â
âAnother hour.â
I spit in the dirt and started cursing in every language I knew and a few I didnât.
âFive minutes,â he amended with a laugh, and fuming, I fell silent.
As promised, five minutes later we stepped into a clearing. I collapsed in a heap at its edge and watched as Gabriel walked into the center and turned a slow circle.
He seemed calmer, more content out here in the woods than I had ever seen him in a boardroom. Wearing a white t-shirt and a faded pair of jeans, hair like golden fire in the sunlight and eyes closing in bliss, I wanted toâŠI donât know.
I wanted to consume him, pull every part of him into me. It wasnât that I loved him, or even that I was obsessed with him. It was more as if I knew, on a cellular level that we should be together.
In Platoâs dialogue, The Symposium, Aristophanes tells how some human beings were originally born with four arms, four legs, and a head made of two faces. They had wanted to conquer the Gods and Zeus tore them in half as punishment. Ever since, humans have lived in agony, constantly searching for the other half of themselves.
Their soul mates.
I wasnât such a romantic that I believed Gabriel and I were soul mates. Iâd outgrown such thoughts a long time ago. But it was either that, or I was beginning to seriously consider cannibalism. If given the choice between the two? Iâd hope for the cannibalism. It would be less complicated.
His head fell back, his lips parted, and taking a deep breath, he howled.
Music.
Thatâs what it was.
It was nothing like the howl Iâd heard before. This was more of an invitation than a threat. A ballad of loneliness instead of a show of strength and dominance. It silenced the creatures in the woods around us and marched to the sky. Sailing, sailing, beyond and away.
The howls
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