home » Young-Adult » J.A. Redmerski » The Ballad of Aramei (The Darkwoods Trilogy #3) » The Ballad of Aramei (The Darkwoods Trilogy #3) Page 60

The Ballad of Aramei (The Darkwoods Trilogy #3) Page 60
Author: J.A. Redmerski

Alright…so maybe there’s a little time to spare before we leave for Providence.

ADRIA

Chapter 37

I JUST FINISHED PACKING the last of my stuff from my room at Aunt Bev and Uncle Carl’s house. It’s going to be hard saying goodbye, but I’m entering the next chapter in my life and chapters are never easy in the beginning.

Hearing Isaac’s Jeep pulling into the drive, I head down the stairs with a duffle bag over one shoulder.

Aunt Bev and Uncle Carl are standing at the foot of the stairs waiting for me. Yes, I did say that Uncle Carl was standing. About seven months ago, he started moving his legs on his own and they pushed his physical therapy sessions into double-time. He took his first new steps five months ago and is making progress every day. He’ll never walk like he used to and he’ll always have an obvious limp on his left side, but to Uncle Carl, a limp is a miracle. He smiles a lot now and has taken to talking so much these days that it’s scary. When I first moved here, he hardly ever said anything at all. Now, Aunt Bev can’t get him to shut up!

“We’re going to miss you!” Beverlee says reaching her arms out wide to me as I come off the last step.

I hug her tight and she kisses me on the temple. Uncle Carl smiles like a dopey little boy and he pulls me into a hug. I work my way carefully between his crutches, trying to avoid knocking him off balance.

“You’ll call us at least once a week?” Uncle Carl asks with some innocent demand tossed in there.

“Of course I will; twice a week.”

“And whatever you need,” Beverlee says, “money, food…a ride back.”

I smile at her, knowing what she really means by a ‘ride back’.

“This will always be my number one home,” I say, “You know that.”

Beverlee beams proudly and I notice her eyes watering up.

Isaac knocks on the front door and then let’s himself inside; this is just as much his home as is it mine. Aunt Bev hugs him the moment he steps up, jangling his keys in his hand.

“Isaac, I know you’re responsible,” Beverlee says, looking slightly worried, as usual, “but I just wanted to make sure you checked all your tires, got an oil change; y’know, the basics.”

She always asks this when we drive anywhere more than an hour from home.

Isaac smiles and nods. “Yes ma’am. She’ll be perfectly safe with me on the drive down.”

Uncle Carl and Beverlee exchange glances.

“That, I do believe seeing as how you’re a…, well, you know.” Beverlee swallows the word ‘werewolf’ down. She and Uncle Carl still aren’t used to saying it out loud.

Isaac grins.

They know everything now. It was kind of hard to lie about what happened that night Nataša and her pack held my aunt and uncle hostage. I’m really kind of glad that I wasn’t here to witness it myself, but there was no hiding the fact that my boyfriend and just about everyone I know and hang out with, aren’t exactly human. I could’ve asked Harry to help with letting them ‘forget’, but he did explain that a mind can only take so much manipulation and that his power wouldn’t last forever. Eventually, they would start to remember bits and pieces. Genna helped erase their minds of the time I had disappeared when I was going through my transformation and that was enough messing around with their heads. So, I figured why not just tell them the truth about everything?

And so after that night, Isaac and I sat down with them and pretty much turned their quaint little life as humans upside-down with the information. But we spared overwhelming them with anything other than werewolves. They still think Harry is as human as they are and it’s probably better that way.

The story throughout the rest of the town was that a huge gang had come in from somewhere—there’s a lot of rumors flying around about what happened that night—and fights broke out all over the place. Thankfully, no one, not even Nataša’s pack, let themselves Turn in front of the humans. The fighting going on in the streets and in people’s front yards and even on their roofs, was blamed on gang violence. Some of Hallowell’s residents claim they saw some of these ‘gang members’ actually jump onto second-story roofs and others say they saw men leaping from one building to another. A group of students from Hall-Dale—including bitchy Tori and Cecilia, who became best friends, believe it or not—have started rumors about there being ‘vampires’ in Hallowell (because of the black eyes and claws we have when in our mediate form). Of course, no one really believes that, or they’re just not openly admitting it. Harry found Cecilia shortly after the night we trapped Zia and definitely had to use his Praverian powers to manipulate her memories.

But she’s crazy by default and so whatever she says is almost always brushed off as mental illness, anyway.

It could’ve been worse that night Bev and Uncle Carl got the shock of their lives; this whole town could be one big werewolf infection on the map.

“Call as soon as you get there,” Beverlee says, taking me into yet another hug and I’m starting to think she’s going to cave and try to hold me hostage inside the house.

“I’ll call you even before I get there, I promise!”

Still smiling as brightly as ever, a few tears finally roll down Beverlee’s rose-colored cheeks. She lets go of me and I say goodbye for now. I’ll be back sometime on break.

Six hours later and Isaac is helping me carry my bags up to the third floor to my college dorm room in Hudson Valley. I didn’t have to fill out paperwork and I got to bypass all the basics of getting in. It was like one night Isaac asked me if I wanted to go to college and when I said yes, everything was prepared for me in just a few days’ time. All I had to do was show up today.

I guess it helped too that Isaac is who he is; I’m sure that sped things up a lot. This isn’t your average college; at least not our section of it anyway. There is only one requirement: you can’t be 100% human. Of course, there are humans in this school, but they’re oblivious to what we are.

Isaac and I walk down a short stretch of hallway toward my dorm room and already I feel eyes at my back. It feels a lot like it did when I first stepped foot inside the Mayfair house as the new girl, except there’s something more comforting about this.

A blond-haired girl wearing a pair of black skinny jeans and bright red lipstick walks up barefooted and smiles mesmerizingly at Isaac. She bows awkwardly, first and then says, “Ooooh my God…you’re the Sovereign.” She looks exactly like an obsessed fan-girl of any new lame boy band, minus the grabby hands, tears and screaming: I love you!

Isaac nods, but doesn’t give her any more attention than that for fear of instigating her.

She eyes me now and her giddy smile turns into a scary, hopeful look that I’m already beginning to recoil from.

“And you must be Adria,” she says, hardly able to contain herself.

We keep shuffling down the hallway toward my room, but she keeps up pace right beside me. By now, more heads are poking out of the doorways as we pass. Most of them wearing the same awed faces as the blond girl.

“Yes, I’m Adria,” I say, “And your name is?”

She looks blankly at me for a second as though so awestruck by us that she didn’t understand the question. I notice she can’t seem to stop sneaking a drooling glimpse at Isaac, too.

“Oh!” she says, finally realizing, “I’m Nora Cunningham, your roommate.”

My face falls, but I suppress the full strength of it before she notices and takes offense. I roll my shoulder so that my duffle bag strap will slide back in place and then I stop to reach out my hand. Nora shakes it vigorously, still smiling.

“Next room up,” she says pointing and then she moves out ahead of us to escort us the rest of the way.

“Oh my God,” she hisses a whisper to a girl standing in the doorway of the room next to ours. “It’s Isaac Mayfair. I’m roomin’ with his mate!” She jerks her head back around to face us, her cheeks flared up with color and she can’t seem to stand still.

Why couldn’t I get the typical bitchy roommate that could care less who I was and only wanted to be sure I never touched her stuff?

We slip inside the spacious room and I see that the rest of my stuff is already here—we shipped it ahead.

“I’ll uhhh…leave you two alone for a minute,” she says with a carnal grin spread across her tanned face. She ducks out and slips out the door, shutting it behind her.

Isaac drops the two suitcases he carried up and stands in the center of the room checking out the place, his hands buried in his pockets.

I immediately start to unpack.

“I’m glad you’re doing this, babe.”

I reach into a box sitting on the floor beside my twin bed and start to pull out a few of my favorite things which always help me feel more at home no matter where I happen to be living.

“Me too,” I say, looking over at him once. “And it’ll be good for me to be here learning what I can about all this werewolf stuff—.” I point at him momentarily. “—I don’t just want to be ‘the girl with the Sovereign’, Isaac. I want to earn my place and learn everything about the politics and…whatever else.”

I catch a faint smile tug one corner of his delicious mouth.

Diving back into the box, I tug out my small cork bulletin board I like to tack photos to and move toward my desk to mount it to the wall.

“You’re already more than just the girl with the Sovereign,” he says. “And you don’t have anything to earn or to prove. You know that, right?”

I push the tack in with my thumb and lean away from the wall, turning at the waist to smile across at him.

“Yeah, I know, but just the same, I want to learn everything because it will make me feel better to know.”

I go back to the box and as I reach into it to pull out my roll of posters, I feel Isaac come up behind me and he slips his hands around my waist. I lean up and take in the scent of him, closing my eyes and savoring the moment…because it’ll be the last for a little while.

“You’re avoiding me,” he says, frowning, but he knows the reason why.

I stop what I’m doing and step up to him. “I don’t know if I can go without seeing you for three months. I’ve been dreading this day, to be honest.”

I feel the tears trying to push their way to the surface, but I hold them down the best I can. Gah! I hate this!

Isaac pulls me toward him with his hands on my hips. He leans over and presses his forehead to mine. “I’ve been dreading it, too, but the first place I’ll visit when I get back from Romania will be here with you.”

I smile and a tear escapes down my cheek. He wipes it away with the pad of his thumb and smiles in at me. “And you’ve already made a friend,” he says, grinning.

I pull away and scrunch my nose playfully at him, sniffling away my tears. “Yeah, I guess you’re right,” I say, focusing on the positive things about our separation. And then I turn back around to my posters and start unrolling them.

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J.A. Redmerski's Novels
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» The Moment of Letting Go
» The Edge of Always (The Edge of Never #2)
» The Black Wolf (In the Company of Killers #5)
» The Edge of Never (The Edge of Never #1)
» Reviving Izabel (In the Company of Killers #2)
» Killing Sarai (In the Company of Killers #1)
» The Ballad of Aramei (The Darkwoods Trilogy #3)
» Kindred (The Darkwoods Trilogy #2)
» The Mayfair Moon (The Darkwoods Trilogy #1)