CHAPTER 11
Newolves
They flew back under cover of darkness the day
after Christmas, all three of them in a line—her grandfather, her
father, and herself. She was looking forward to spending time as a
dragon with her father—the bad feelings between them on that cold
October morning had passed over time, and this last Christmas
present had sealed the deal.
Said present was currently clinging to her horn
with ferocious nonchalance. Jennifer had expressed worry that
Geddy, being cold-blooded, would freeze to death, but the others
had assured her he would be fine. Her mother agreed, with something
approaching disdain, to bring up the tank and supplies in the
minivan in a few days. In the meantime, the lizard would have the
run of the cabin.
“We’ll have to find you a cricket or two from the
barn,” she whispered to him as his spoon-shaped tongue hung out of
his mouth a tiny bit. “Or maybe you’ll brave one of Grandpa’s
hornet nests. They’re a bit more sluggish in winter, you
know.”
Thick clouds hid the moon as they streamed through
the night, a distance off the highway. The scent of snow was on the
air at least ten minutes before the first soft flakes sprinkled
their wings. By the time they reached the cabin, an inch of powder
covered the driveway.
“I’d better go check in with the newolves,” Grandpa
called out as he veered over the eastern pastures. “Jon, you and
Jennifer get set up, and let Joseph know we’re back. Maybe he’s got
a bit of leftover mutton in the fridge? Don’t eat it all! I could
use a snack.”
“Newolves?” Jennifer asked as her grandfather’s
dark shape disappeared quickly into the twilight. “I’ve heard that
word before. What are they?”
“I doubt you’ll see much of them,” Jonathan told
her. “Normally they stay in Crescent Valley. But your grandfather
thought it would be a wise precaution to keep a few near the farm,
given some of the rumors we’re hearing. They’re excellent guards,
and fiercely loyal to our kind.”
“Loving father. I can’t help but notice that you
haven’t answered my question at all.”
“Yes, well . . . just don’t go out looking for
them. They’ll smell you well before you see them, and they’re not
easy to get to know.”
Jennifer sighed as they landed on the northern
porch. Joseph was waiting for them, and as luck had it, there was
indeed leftover mutton, but not a lot of it.
“So what are we going to do tomorrow?” she asked
her father as they hurried to finish off the meat before Crawford
got back.
“Well, I don’t suppose you want me looking over
your shoulder during your lessons. I’ll probably just stay out of
your way during the day, and join you and your grandfather for
breakfast and dinner.”
“Do you think we could do a little ice fishing?”
The lake had frozen over well before Christmas this year.
“Sure.” He laughed. “You’ll see how nice it is not
to have to drill through the ice. Though plunging your head into
the icy water may get old after a few times. You may wish you were
spending more time with your tutors instead!”
When she didn’t smile at that, he leaned in close.
“Hey, I didn’t mean anything by that. Grandpa tells me you’re
absolutely amazing, at everything you do.”
“Not everything.” She pouted. “I still can’t summon
a darned decent lizard.”
“What, you’re still worried about that? Don’t fret,
sport. You’ll be calling brontosaurs by Valentine’s Day.”
“They’re called apatosaurs now, Dad.”
“Dumbest name in the world. Makes ’em sound half as
big, with bunny shoes. Some things just shouldn’t change.”
Winter passed quickly by the lake, and friendships deepened. Catherine, Patrick, and Joseph all made a point of keeping meals with Jennifer, even when her grandfather or father didn’t join them for a story or history lesson. At first this made Jennifer feel awkward since she was younger than the other three, but as Catherine put it, “In dragon years, we’re all newborns.”
She actually didn’t see much of her father after
the first couple of weeks back—just an occasional drop-in here and
there, though he was always careful to call if more than two or
three days went by. He would often take over a camouflage lesson
for her and Joseph, sending their surly tutor off to disappear
smoothly in the forest somewhere. In this formal setting, Jennifer
found his lectures more tolerable. In fact, he seemed to make a
point of keeping his words short and sweet.
As for her mother, beyond the briefest of stays on
New Year’s Eve (to drop off Geddy’s tank and supplies), she barely
came by. The cabin seemed to make the doctor uncomfortable, and
Jennifer noticed that Crawford never asked his daughter-in-law to
stay for long, even when there weren’t other dragons about. When
Jennifer asked him about this, he was rather terse.
“It’s a matter for your mother and me,” he told
her. “Best leave it alone, Niffer.”
So Jennifer spent most days during crescent moons
playing sheep hunts with the other dragons, or creeping up on deer
in camouflage, or zapping the pine cones off of pine trees with her
tail as she whipped by. She kept up with her friends back home
(mainly Susan and Skip) by phone, and did the occasional school
project as time allowed. Her dragon friends followed a similar
schedule, keeping up with their own studies as best they could
while also helping Jennifer with her schoolwork so she wouldn’t
fall behind.
Joseph was the only one of the three she ever saw
in human form. He was pale, of Norwegian lineage, with a blond crew
cut and a quiet but easy smile. Because he was staying at Grandpa’s
cabin he naturally spent the most time with her. At seventeen he
was an apprentice electrician, so he was able to help Jennifer with
science and mathematics. Patrick was a history buff, and so during
his crescent moon visits to the cabin, he would check her history
and writing work.
Catherine was actually already taking a
college-level course in sociology and anthropology. Jennifer wasn’t
sure what this was, but she nodded politely when her friend
pronounced it so seriously. She became a whole lot more interested
when she found out what Catherine studied in her spare time.
“Newolves?” It was an early spring evening. Pale
buds were forming on the tips of the deciduous trees, but the
crescent moon was still visible through their stark branches.
“You’ve seen them? What are they?”
The scales around Catherine’s lips curled in a
mysterious smile. “Now, you have to promise not to tell anyone
about this. Grandma told me not to go poking around the forest, but
I couldn’t help myself. The past few weeks have been so
fascinating! The potential advances in anthropological methodology
alone are—”
“Yeah, yeah, yeah, that’s great, what are
they?”
“They’re reverse werewolves,” the older dragon
explained. “Usually, they’re just very intelligent, very large
wolves. But every couple of days, they take human form. After I
pestered Grandma for a bit, she told me they shift every fifty
hours or so. But I want to do my own observations. So since early
February, I’ve been slowly introducing myself to the dozen or so
your grandfather has across the refuge.”
“Wow, so you can talk to them now? Share meals with
them? Play primitive games?”
“Um, not really. But when I fly overhead, they
don’t scatter anymore.”
“That’s quite the doctoral thesis you’ve got going
there.”
“Hey, it’s progress. You wanna come along
someday?”
“Thanks, no. If I want to chase animals around,
I’ll go after sheep. At least I can eat those.”
Despite her skepticism, Jennifer found herself
looking forward to Catherine’s ongoing daily reports on the herd:
what the youngest newolf cub had eaten, who appeared to be the
alpha male, how a new mating pair was getting along. It became an
elaborate secret that the two of them shared.
The spring mornings came earlier and grew warmer.
During one late April sunset, when the latest crescent had almost
finished waning in the sky and only one or two dragons were left at
the farm, Jennifer decided to ask her friend if she could go along
on a visit. Catherine’s red eyes immediately lit up.
“Oh, yes, that would be great, Jennifer! The pack
just settled into a new grove a bit west of where they had been
before. I think it’s a territorial push. They’ve acclimated to my
regular visits, and I think they’re ready for additional exposure
to a monitoring agent. Just think of what we can learn about how
they respond to observing our own unique social
relationships!”
“Um, yeah, I guess. I just wanna see ’em. We’d
better hurry, though—my dad’s flying in later tonight before the
crescent moon ends, and he’ll get suspicious if I’m not
around.”
It had been raining all day and the early evening
skies were still overcast. The oaks, walnuts, and maples now gave
good cover to anything on the ground, and Catherine couldn’t fly
too well anyway, so it took some time for her to spot the right
landmarks and lead them to where she was sure they would find the
newolf pack.
“Here!” she finally called out from the ground, as
Jennifer nervously skimmed the branches above and felt a few
lingering raindrops flick her scales. “Come on down and
look!”
Expecting to witness an exquisite gathering of
primeval man-beasts, Jennifer cleared her throat, gently came down
through the trees (being careful not to make any sudden moves), and
gazed upon . . . a huge puddle of mud.
“What, is there a newolf taking a mud bath in
there?”
“No, look! Right in the middle!”
Jennifer peered more closely at the puddle and saw,
a bit left of center, an indistinct impression in the mud. Her
father and grandfather had taught her a bit about tracks when they
hunted deer, and this one looked strange. It might have been the
print of a newolf. Or it might have been the print of a drunken
timberwolf. Or it might have been a crater left by a small,
bouncing stone . . .
“Um, Catherine . . .”
“They can’t be too far! Come on, this way!”
Half-dragging her younger friend, Catherine pushed
through the brush, making quite a racket and (Jennifer was certain)
scaring anything outside of a cement bunker away. After a few
moments, just as the last few rays of sunlight drifted through the
wet leaves around them, she gave an incredibly loud hushing sound
and pointed.
“Oh, Jennifer, look! Over there!”
Jennifer would never be able to put into words the
sight that met her eyes as she followed her friend’s finger. This
was largely because she didn’t see much.
“That was a fox, wasn’t it?”
“No, no, no. Behind the fox.”
“Oh for—Catherine, tell the truth. Have you
actually ever seen a newolf?”
“Of course I have!” The older girl seemed hurt by
the implication. “Plenty of times. I just think they’re being shy
around you.”
“No, the missing link is shy. These guys are
positively antisocial.”
“It’s getting late.” Catherine sighed. “The
crescent moon’s only got a couple hours left in it. I’d like to get
back home before then—it’d suck to morph halfway there and then
have to walk in the rain.”
“Okay. Well, thanks for the nature stroll.”
With a sour glance, the trampler turned and lifted
herself off the ground a bit, before whomping her way through the
forest. Jennifer glided up above the trees and headed back for the
cabin.
When she returned, Joseph was waiting on the porch
for her. He had already morphed back, and had a suspicious look on
his pale face.
“Where have you been?”
“Out in the forest.”
“Doing what?”
Jennifer decided the truth would do. “Absolutely
nothing. Since when is this any business of yours?”
“Your grandfather’s out looking for you. He’s
worried. Your mom called.”
“What did she say?”
“She says your dad left for here this morning. He
should have been here hours ago.”
Just then, the phone rang inside. Jennifer pushed
Joseph aside, lumbered over to the phone, saw the incoming number,
and knocked the receiver off with one claw as the other clumsily
pressed the speakerphone button. “Mom?”
Her mother’s voice was very faint.
“Your dad’s in trouble, honey.”
“Mom, what’s going on?”
“Come home, sweetheart. Please. Right now.”