Blood Crescent

By TruDevine

61 15 29

A missing mother. A magical birthright. Can she uncover the secrets of her family legacy before the bloodline... More

Do You Want to Be a Vampire?
Run Away
It's Your Funeral

Life Bites

10 2 7
By TruDevine

"Hmm." I looked up, everything seemed more fuzzy than usual. Reaching out for the corner of the front desk, I used it for stability as my vision returned to normal.

I hovered over the receptionist's computer waiting for my brain to kick start again, before moving dance lessons off myself to the open time slots on Ryan's and Monica's schedule.

Aislin was the manager; she hired enough dance instructors to take care of things on their own, and convinced me in the last week that I needed to focus on school work. She didn't let me get away with not at least getting my G.E.D. online. Though I seemed to be spending more time sleeping than anything else, thankfully I never remembered the dreams anymore.

I'd been passing out, nearly standing up with my eyes open, a pizza pocket in my hand and the other on the doorknob. Aislin noticed, demanding I take care of myself, or lessons from my work schedule wouldn't be the only thing lost.

With how much work was needed it made me wary of spending my time hanging out at one of the many Pennsylvania State Parks to watch locals, tourists, and the changing shrubs and flowers revolving around the weather, while Aislin toiled away to keep mac n' cheese in the cupboards.

I didn't know how much time I'd have to be "taking it easy" per Aislin's orders. And who takes it easy on their birthday anyway?

"Miss." The bell dinged from the reception desk and I looked at a finely tailored suit, this guy was so tall I stared directly at his pocket square. Who wore pocket squares anymore?

"Miss," he repeated himself.

"Uh," was all that I could say after I met his eyes. I was jealous of his thick lashes, girls would die to have those for themselves. Though it was equally odd to see such silvery eyes, that nearly changed color in the light from the window, for a moment I thought they were purple.

"How can I help you?" I finally caught my own tongue again.

"Would you deliver this missive to the owner of this establishment?" He offered a rather official looking letter to me and my hands automatically reached for it without thinking.

"Sure." I traced the gold lettering on the envelope, and wondered what Aislin had gotten us mixed up in. "And who should I say it's from?" He gave me a sly smirk, tipped his hat at me and turned to leave.

I pressed my lips into a tight line as the jingle of the door made me imagine that the glass smacked him on his ass on the way out. Didn't even say who he was, rude.

My dad would usually buy me a lemon cupcake with a candle in it from my favorite bakery today, but all I got was weird uppity man who refused to say his name, and a strange letter.

One candle was all I needed, my dad would say, I smiled despite my recent guest, you don't need multiple flames to burn away the years, one should last you a lifetime. He used the same candle every year. I no longer had that candle—one was not enough. All of a sudden my smile faded.

After that day in the park with Victor I couldn't stop myself from wondering who my dad was talking about, who would be after me? I couldn't get this nagging feeling out of my head that he'd told me why before, and now it was gone. I didn't remember why I left Seattle, why my mom was gone, or why I felt so scared all of sudden. But I wasn't going to leave, not again.

Nobody is after me, nobody is after me. I'm not insane, there is no conspiracy theory. The mantra repeated itself in my head to prevent me from fleeing at dawn. I couldn't decide whether I was lying to myself, or if I was just trying to keep hold of my sanity. I couldn't even remember yesterday.

"Crystal?"

"Yes?" I blinked a couple times to realize I was staring at the screen like a cog waiting for its turn to click into place.

"I think your four o' clock is here. Let's get together later, okay?" It was like Victor was finishing a conversation I didn't even know we had. Where did he come from? Last thing I remembered was seeing that asshat pocket-square man walk out of here. I didn't remember making up with him about before, to remove the awkwardness. But there he was, casually standing there, and talking as if nothing had happened. As if he didn't suggest running away with me, or sending me a letter about a secret he didn't revealed to me, or about how I made him wait in the rain for days.

Before I had a chance to even say anything in return, he was wiping his chin with his sleeve, raspberry donut jelly disappearing into the black long-sleeve shirt, then opening the door to leave. His blond-brown waves fluttered in the uptake of wind and I tried to remember if we'd hung out earlier, or if somehow I'd warped into a different dimension where I accepted a reality of going back to before things were awkward between us.

The idea of dating him didn't seem to repulse me, it rather made my knees feel weak, but half of me was still trying to remember why I was so evasive with him to begin with. My thoughts distracted by the firmness of his butt as it walked away in those ripped jeans, pops of blue boxer briefs peeking from the stressed threads.

Internal struggle writhed between, around, and through me about thinking that very thought, or pushing it deep down in the dark crevasses of my being, never to think in the light of consciousness ever again. But there he was walking away, wearing those jeans on purpose, no doubt to change my mind about things.

My only question surrounding that struggle was why? It was all so fuzzy, inhibition sent to the grave—I smiled at the thought and let it live. The appointment he referred to was sitting on the bench, their names were in the computer, but all I could think about was Victor. I shook my head and tried to concentrate.

"You've got a fine boy there; you should hug him back next time, no need to be shy around us." The woman winked back at me. It took me a moment before I realized she meant Victor. I nodded at her politely and walked toward the dance floor, confusion muddling my mind.

I tried to take my thoughts off of a hug I didn't even remember receiving, and all the while, sounding out the beats for them.

It wasn't long before they got the beat down packed, all that muscle memory playing its role, then Ryan rushed up to us to take over the lesson. No one swore. No one laughed. It was too routine. Aislin had the whole studio in on her plans to sabotage my work schedule. Wouldn't even let me finish a full lesson without someone swooping in to take over.

This time I was thankful for it. I couldn't focus...my eyes kept drifting. Staring off beyond the feet, beyond the smiling faces...even the music seemed to fade in and out of my ears like a monotone hum.

I waved to them, and as I took my leave from the floor narrowly avoiding a collision with a Viennese waltz couple plowing around the line of dance. I didn't even notice they were there.

I wasn't sure if it was the thought of broken toes or the ridiculous tie that one of my co-workers was wearing to work, but I felt like the floor was moving around me. Having people moving around you was pretty natural in a dance studio, but the floor seemed a bit like being on a boat...a small one, against a slew of waves.

Not only was my vision a kaleidoscope, but all the sounds I might have heard, and had come to expect on a regular basis here, were gone...jammed, it was like falling down a psychotropic tunnel. I saw the receptionist's mouth moving as she zigzagged toward me. Or maybe she was rushing on a straight line, but none of that was something I had any authority to judge right then. I couldn't hear the music behind me, but that was the least of my concerns.

I needed to concentrate to figure out what the receptionist was saying so that I could escape the lobby and analyze the situation in private. I just needed to get away. I couldn't see anyone but her through my tunnel vision, but I knew...I could feel that people were staring. And even her...I was supposed to know her...I saw her nearly every day. But what was her name?

Concentrating, I tried to study her moving lips as her head bobbed from one visual field to another. Looked like a "you" with a "what," along with an exceedingly fast transition of movements that blurred past recognition as she stood next to me with a look of anxiety washed across her face.

Looking down at the spinning floor I noticed that someone else was grabbing me as I leaned over an arm. I didn't feel anyone touch me. I was experiencing a sensory shut down as if my battery life was on empty, and I was placed on automatic standby for energy conservation.

Next thing I knew I was in the manager's office slumped in a rolling office chair. Not necessarily a good choice when everything seemed like it was moving already without the help of a chair on wheels. I continued to blink repeatedly as if to reboot my visual field, just in case things would stop moving once I opened my lids the next time.

Soon I heard my own heartbeat, one beat, then another, but it seemed slow. Slow like coagulating honey oozing through a sieve, and all I could feel was the pressure in my arteries working like a ripe pig going for a piece of corn while coming out of sedation. In a situation like this, one would assume my heart should be racing, but it seemed to be at rest or maybe slower than resting. I closed my eyes and tried to think about the beating of my heart, the only sound vibrating through my ears.

Bump...bump...bump bump...

Any normal person would be getting a shot of uppers to activate the survival mode, but even that backup system seemed out of order. I tried to look around, as if there was a repair person just around the corner. There could've been—who says repair people don't buy ballroom dance lessons?

A wrench there, screw that back on, take that piece out, and glue it all back together. With my luck they might use the crazy glue and place a nerve in the wrong spot. Maybe I would laugh when someone poked my eye and cry when someone touched my hand.

"Let me hold your hand?"

A flash of Victor's face with that raspberry jelly oozing down his chin startled me. It seemed so real and his grin was mischievous, revealing several razor-sharp teeth like a shark. I flinched then heard the voice again.

A voice?

It was so soft; I could barely make out the words.

But the words themselves meant nothing, just the articulation of noise formed to relay a message. It was the music behind them that was heard clear as a cloudless sky. Like the pleasant rustling of leaves lifted by the serene whistle of the wind carrying the sound to my mind as it blew my hair in to caress my face.

"Let me hold you."

It was not the music behind the words. The music was within the words, a part of them. I didn't remember the last time I felt this connection. Opening my eyes, I saw nothingness, just dark.

"Let me..."

Let you what? I thought. Hands. I saw my own blurred in front of my face; I turned them back and forth like they weren't even mine.

I saw it then as I closed my eyes—I saw me. Ghostly holding out her hand to me and her mouth moving like she was trying to speak with me, but her voice was beyond her control. She looked older, those eyes deep and thoughtful, and sad.

I grabbed her hand, and felt a flood of feelings I didn't know I had. I had to find her, I didn't know how I knew, but she needed me to find her. Trapped, in a realm only I could find...

My mother.

And I laughed at how ridiculous that sounded to my own ears. What did that even mean? A realm only I could get to, my brain throbbed trying to remember. I knew something, and it was gone.

The connection I felt grew distant. The soft whispered voice gone, the residual feeling of sweet music from the words faded, but the calm, almost eerie docile feeling dripped out from its container like an experiment gone wrong. One of those test tubes filled with water as your lab partner spills it over the counter before you add the next ingredient.

I felt like when the words stopped, so did I.

I felt my heart skip, and my blood ran hot.

I gasped remembering the pull to find something. What was I supposed to find again? The memory was fleeting, and all I could think of was the pain searing through my veins.

Blinking again, I saw the movement of feet between the shade of fingers. A slow step forward then two quick steps to the side and suddenly it made sense. I blinked again and my visual parameter increased to see two sets of feet. Blinking once again, the picture expanded, and I looked into the steamy faces of two people staring into each other's eyes.

As a small forced giggle escaped the lady's mouth the noise of the music then flooded into my ears. Like heavy metal music when you're trying to sleep, the rumba agitated my ear drums. My lips twitched momentarily, and I expertly transitioned it into a smile. Can't let go of my defenses yet. There were so many questions to avoid. As the music changed to a waltz, my ears adjusted and the ringing from the sudden sound faded.

A hand cupped my cheek and turned me to face them. His face was familiar. I focused on a strange spot on his eyebrow where his hair didn't grow and smiled to myself.

And thus ends the sample amount I'm allowed to post without pissing off Amazon. Did you enjoy what you read? Want to read more?

Chapter Four continues... read the rest on Kindle Unlimited today! https://amzn.to/37QMjua

Want to read more from me for freesies? I've got a WATTPAD exclusive My Digital Romance! https://my.w.tt/d4vTymEzg4 See you there! Look forward to chatting with you!

I'm most active on my Facebook Page, and regularly update and chat with people on my Newsletter. See you around!

Sign up through my website: https://steviemarie.com


Continue Reading

You'll Also Like

264 25 12
A young boy who's spent his life a lie soon finds out the truth. He explores the forest and learns its secrets and sees interesting creatures and mak...
42.6K 3.7K 57
After regaining her memories, Nora outed the prankster and stripped the Larkin family of their abilities. She thinks that ticking off her problems fr...
1.4K 45 22
After his dad's death, a young boy gets dragged into a new world that always existed within our world, a dark dangerous world. He enters a war that h...
128 31 7
She was lost. Couldn't remember a thing except her name, and so, she was sent to the orphanage as no one claimed a missing child. Years pass, Luna le...