Bitten
Prologue
I have to.
I’ve been fighting it all night. I’m going to lose. My battle is as
futile as a woman feeling the first pangs of labor and deciding it’s an
inconvenient time to give birth. Nature wins out. It always does.
It’s nearly two AM, too late for this foolishness and I need my
sleep. Four nights spent cramming to meet a deadline have left me
exhausted. It doesn’t matter. Patches of skin behind my knees and elbows
have been tingling and now begin to burn. My heart beats so fast I have
to gulp air. I clench my eyes shut, willing the sensations to stop but
they don’t.
Philip is sleeping beside me. He’s another reason why I can’t leave,
sneaking out in the middle of the night again and returning with a
torrent of lame excuses. He’s working late tomorrow. If I can just wait
one more day. My temples begin to throb. The burning sensation in my
skin spreads down my arms and legs. The rage forms a tight ball in my
gut and threatens to explode.
I’ve got to get out of here—I don’t have a lot of time left.
Philip doesn’t stir when I slip from the bed. There’s a pile of
clothing tucked underneath my dresser so I won’t have to risk the
squeaks and groans of opening drawers and closets. I pick up my keys,
clasping my fist around them so they don’t jangle, ease open the door
and creep into the hallway.
Everything’s quiet. The lights seem dimmed, as if overpowered by the
emptiness. When I push the elevator button, it creaks out a complaint at
being disturbed at so ungodly an hour. The first floor and lobby are
equally empty. People who can afford the rent this close to downtown
Toronto are comfortably asleep right now.
My legs now itch as well as hurt and I curl my toes to see if the
itching stops. It doesn’t. I look down at the car keys in my hand. It’s
too late to drive to a safe place now—the itching has crystallized into
a sharp burn. Keys in my pocket, I stride out onto the streets, looking
for a quiet place to Change. As I walk, I monitor the sensation in my
legs, tracing its passage to my arms and the back of my neck. Soon.
Soon. When my scalp starts to tingle, I know I have walked as far as I
can so I search for an alley. The first one I find has been claimed by
two men squeezed together inside a tattered big-screen TV box but the
next one is empty. I hurry to the end and undress quickly behind a
barricade of trash bins, hide the clothes under an old newspaper. Then I
start the Change.
My skin stretches. The sensation deepens and I try to block the pain.
Pain. What a trivial word—agony is better. One doesn’t call the
sensation of being flayed alive ‘painful’. I inhale deeply and focus my
attention on the Change, dropping to the ground before I’m doubled over
and forced down. It’s never easy—perhaps I’m still too human. In the
struggle to keep my thoughts straight, I try to anticipate each phase
and move my body into position—head down, arms and legs pulled in and
held straight out at the joints, feet and hands flexed, and back arched.
My leg muscles knot and convulse. I gasp and strain to relax. Sweat
breaks out, pouring off me in streams, but the muscles finally relent
and untwist themselves. Next comes the ten seconds of pure hell that
used to make me swear I would rather die than endure this again. Then
it’s over.
Changed.
I stretch and blink. When I look around, the world has mutated to an
array of colors unknown to the human eye, blacks and browns and grays
with subtle shadings that my brain still converts to blues and greens
and reds. I lift my nose and inhale. I pick up scents of fresh asphalt
and rotting tomatoes and window-pot mums and day-old sweat and a million
other things, mixing together in an odor so overwhelming I cough and
shake my head. As I turn, I catch distorted fragments of my reflection
in a dented trash can. My eyes stare back at me. I curl my lips back and
snarl at myself. White fangs flash in the metal.
I am a wolf, a hundred and thirty-pound wolf with pale blonde fur.
The only part of me that remains are my eyes, sparking with a cold
intelligence and a simmering ferocity that could never be mistaken for
anything but human.
I look around, inhaling the scents of the city again. I’m nervous
here. It’s too close, too confined, it reeks of human spoor. I must be
careful. If I’m seen, I’ll be mistaken for a dog, a large mixed breed,
perhaps a husky and yellow Labrador mix. But even a dog my size is cause
for alarm when it’s running loose. I head for the back of the laneway
and seek a path through the underbelly of the city.
My brain is dulled, disoriented not by my change of form but by the
unnaturalness of my surroundings. I can’t get my bearings and the first
alley I go down turns out to be the one I had encountered in human form,
the one with the two men in the faded Sony box. One of them is awake
now. He’s tugging the remnants of a filth-encrusted blanket between his
fingers as if he can stretch it large enough to cover himself against
the cold October night. He looks up and sees me and his eyes widen. He
starts to shrink back, then stops himself. He says something. His voice
is crooning, the musical, exaggerated tones people use with infants and
animals. If I concentrated, I could make out the words, but there’s no
point. I know what he’s saying, some variation of ‘nice doggy’, repeated
over and over in a variety of inflections. His hands are outstretched,
palms out to ward me off, the physical language contradicting the vocal.
Stay back—nice doggy—stay back. And people wonder why animals don’t
understand them.
I can smell the neglect and waste rising from his body. It smells
like weakness, like an aged deer driven to the fringe of the herd, prime
pickings for predators. If I were hungry, he would smell like dinner.
Fortunately, I am not hungry yet, so I don’t have to deal with the
temptation, the conflict, the revulsion. I snort, condensation
trumpeting from my nostrils, then turn and lope back up the alley.
There’s a Vietnamese restaurant further down. The smell of food is
embedded in the very wood frame of the building. On a rear addition, an
exhaust fan turns slowly, clicking with each revolution as one blade
catches the metal screen casing. Below the fan a window is open. Faded
sunflower print curtains billow out in the night breeze. I can hear
people inside, a room full of people, grunting and whistling in sleep. I
want to see them. I want to stick my muzzle in the open window and look
inside. A werewolf can have a lot of fun with a roomful of unprotected
people.
I start to creep forward but a sudden crackle and hiss stops me. The
hiss softens, then is drowned out by a man’s voice, sharp, his words
snapped off like icicles. I turn my head each way, radar searching for
the source. He is further down the street. I abandon the restaurant and
go to him. We are curious by nature.
He’s standing in a three-car parking lot wedged at the end of a
narrow passage between buildings. He holds a walkie-talkie to his ear
and leans one elbow against a brick building, casual but not resting.
His shoulders are relaxed. His gaze goes nowhere. He is confident in his
place, that he has a right to be here and little to fear from the night.
The gun dangling from his belt probably helps. He stops talking, jabs a
button and slams the walkie-talkie into its holster. His eyes scan the
parking lot once, taking inventory and seeing nothing requiring his
attention. Then he heads deeper into the alley maze. This could be
amusing. I follow quietly.
My nails click against the pavement. He doesn’t seem to notice. I
pick up speed, darting around trash bags and empty boxes. Finally I’m
close enough. He hears the steady clicking behind him and stops. I duck
behind a dumpster, peer out around the corner. He turns and squints into
the darkness. After a second he starts forward. I let him get a few
steps away, then resume the pursuit. This time when he stops, I wait one
extra second before diving for cover. He lets out a muffled oath. He’s
seen something—a flash of motion, a shadow flickering, something. His
right hand slips to his gun, caressing the metal, then pulling back, as
if the reassurance is enough. He hesitates, then looks up and down the
alley, realizing he is alone and uncertain what to do about it. He
mutters something, then starts forward, a bit quicker this time.
As he walks, his eyes flick from side to side, wariness treading the
border of alarm. I inhale deeply, picking up only wisps of fear, enough
to make my heart pound, but not enough to send my brain spinning out of
control. He’s safe quarry for a stalking game. He won’t run. I can
suppress most of my instincts. I can stalk him without killing him. I
can suffer the first pangs of hunger without killing him. I can watch
him pull his gun without killing him. Yet, if he runs, I won’t be able
to stop myself. That’s a temptation I can’t fight. If he runs, I will
chase. If I chase, either he’ll kill me or I’ll kill him.
As he turns the corner down a connecting alley, he starts to relax.
All has been silent behind him. I creep forward now, shifting my weight
to the back of my foot-pads to muffle the sound of my nails. Soon I am
only a few feet behind him. I can smell his after-shave, almost masking
the natural scent of a long day’s work. I can see his white socks
appearing and disappearing between his shoes and pant-legs. I can hear
his breathing, the slight elevation in tempo betraying the fact that he
is walking faster than usual. I ease forward, coming close enough that I
could lunge if I want to and knock him to the ground before he even
thought to reach for his gun. His head jerks up. He knows I’m there. He
knows something is there. I wonder if he will turn. Does he dare
to look, to face something he can’t see or hear, but can only sense? His
hand slips to his gun, but he doesn’t turn. He walks faster. Then he
swings back to the safety of the street
I follow him to the end and observe from the darkness. He strides
forward, keys in hand to a parked cruiser, unlocks it and hops inside.
The car roars and squeals out from the curb. I watch the receding
taillights and sigh. Game over. I won.
That was nice but it wasn’t nearly enough to satisfy me. These city
backstreets are too confining. My heart is thudding with unspent
excitement. My legs are aching with built-up energy. I must run.
A wind gusts from the south, bringing the sharp tang of Lake Ontario
with it. I think of heading to the beach, imagining running along the
stretch of sand, feeling the icy water slapping against my paws but it’s
not safe. If I want to run, I must go to the ravine. It’s a long way,
but I have little choice unless I plan to skulk around human-smelling
alleyways for the rest of the night. I swing to the northwest and begin
the journey.
Nearly a half-hour later, I’m standing at the crest of a hill. My
nose twitches, picking up the vestiges of an illegal leaf fire
smoldering in a nearby yard. The wind bristles through my fur, chill,
nearly cold, invigorating. Above me, traffic thunders across the
overpass. Below me is sanctuary, a perfect oasis in the middle of the
city. I leap forward, throwing myself off. At last I’m running.
My legs pick up the rhythm before I’m halfway down the ravine. I
close my eyes for a second and feel the wind slice across my muzzle. As
my paws thump against the hard earth, tiny darts of pain shoot up my
legs, but they make me feel alive, like jolting awake after an overlong
sleep. The muscles contract and extend in perfect harmony. With each
stretch comes an ache and a burst of physical joy. My body is thanking
me for the exercise, rewarding me with jolts of near-narcotic
adrenaline. The more I run, the lighter I feel, the pain falling free as
if my paws are no longer striking the ground. Even as I race along the
bottom of the ravine, I feel like I’m still running downhill, gaining
energy instead of expending it. I want to run until all the tension in
my body flies away, leaving nothing but the sensations of the moment. I
couldn’t stop if I wanted to. And I don’t want to.
Dead leaves crackle under my paws. Somewhere in the forest an owl
hoots softly. It has finished its hunting and rests contented, not
caring who knows it’s around. A rabbit bolts out of a thicket and
halfway across my path, then realizes its mistake and zooms back into
the undergrowth. I keep running. My heart is pounding now. Against my
rising body heat, the air feels ice cold, stinging as it storms through
my nostrils and into my lungs. I inhale deeply, savoring the shock of it
hitting my insides. I’m running too fast to smell anything. Bits of
scents flutter through my brain in a jumbled montage that smells of
freedom. Unable to resist, I finally skid to a halt, throw my head back
and howl. The music pours up from my chest in a tangible evocation of
pure joy. It echoes through the ravine and soars to the moonless sky,
letting them all know I’m here. I own this place! When I’m done, I drop
my head, panting with exertion. I am standing there, staring down into a
scattering of yellow and red maple leaves when a sound finally pierces
my self-absorption. It’s a growl, a soft menacing growl. There’s a
pretender to my throne.
I look up to see a brownish yellow dog standing a few meters away.
No, not a dog. My brain takes a second, but it finally recognizes the
animal. A coyote. The recognition takes a second because it’s
unexpected. I’ve heard there are coyotes in the city, but have never
encountered one. The coyote is equally confused by me. Animals don’t
know what to make of me. They smell human, but see wolf and, just when
they decide their nose is tricking them, they look into my eyes and see
human. When I encounter dogs, they either turn tail and run or attack
immediately. The coyote does neither. It lifts its muzzle and sniffs the
air, then bristles and pulls its lips back in a drawn-out growl. It’s
half my size, scarcely worth my notice. I let it know this with a lazy
‘get-lost’ growl and a shake of my head. The coyote doesn’t move. I
stare at it for a moment. It breaks the gaze-lock first.
I snort, toss my head again and slowly turn away. I’m halfway turned
when I see a flash of brown fur leaping at my shoulder. Diving to the
side, I roll out of the way, then scramble to my feet. The coyote is
watching me and snarling. I give a serious growl, a canine ‘now you’re
pissing me off’. The coyote stands its ground. It wants a fight. Good.
My fur rises until it stands on end, my tail bushing out behind me. I
lower my head between my shoulder bones and lay my ears flat. My lips
pull back and I feel the snarl tickling up through my throat then
reverberating into the night. The coyote does not back down. I crouch
and I am about to lunge when something hits me hard in the shoulder,
throwing me off balance. Pain stabs through my shoulder. I stumble, then
twist to face my attacker. A second coyote, gray-brown, hangs from my
shoulder, fangs sunk to the bone. With a roar of rage and pain, I buck
up and throw my weight to the side.
As the second coyote flies free, the first launches itself straight
at my face. Ducking my head, I catch it in the throat, but my teeth
clamp down on fur instead of flesh and it squirms away. It tries to back
off for a second lunge, but I leap at it, backing it into a tree. It
rears up, trying to get out of my way. I slash my head down, aiming for
the throat. This time I get my grip. Blood spurts in my mouth, salty and
thick. The coyote’s mate lands on my back. My legs buckle. Teeth sink
into the loose skin beneath my skull. Fresh pain arcs through me.
Concentrating hard, I keep my grip on the first coyote’s throat. I
steady myself, then release it for a split second, just long enough to
make the fatal slash and tear. As I pull back, blood sprays in my eyes,
blinding me. I close my eyes and swing my head hard, ripping out the
coyote’s throat. Once I feel it go limp, I toss it aside, then throw
myself on the ground and roll over. The coyote on my back yips in
surprise and releases its hold. I jump up and turn in the same motion,
ready to take this other animal out of the game but it scrambles up and
dives into the brush. With a flash of a wire-brush tail, it’s gone. I
look over at the dead coyote. Blood streams from its throat, eagerly
lapped up by the dry earth below. A tremor runs through me, like the
final shudder of sated lust. I close my eyes and shiver. Not my fault.
They attacked me first. The ravine has gone quiet, echoing the calm that
floods through me. Not so much as a cricket chirps. The world is dark
and silent and sleeping.
I try to examine and clean my wounds, but they are out of reach. I
stretch and assess the pain. Two deep cuts, both bleeding only enough to
mat my fur. I’ll live. I turn and start the trip out of the ravine and
back to the city.
Back in the alley I Change then quickly pull my clothes on and scurry
out to the sidewalk like a junkie caught shooting up in the shadows.
Frustration fills me. It shouldn’t end like this, dirty and furtive,
amidst the garbage and filth of the city. It should end in a clearing in
the forest, clothing abandoned in some thicket, stretched out naked,
feeling the coolness of the earth beneath me and the night breeze
tickling my bare skin. I should be falling asleep in the grass,
exhausted beyond all thought, with only the miasma of contentedness
floating through my mind. And I should not be alone. In my mind, I can
see the others, lying around me in the grass. I can hear the familiar
snores, the occasional whisper and laugh. I can feel warm skin against
mine, a bare foot hooked over my calf, twitching in a dream of running.
I can smell them, their sweat, their breath, mingling with the scent of
blood, smears from a deer killed in the chase. The image shatters and I
am staring into a shop window, seeing nothing but myself reflecting back
at me. My chest tightens in a loneliness so deep and so complete I can’t
breathe.
I turn quickly and lash out at the nearest object. A street-lamp
quavers and rings with the blow. Pain sears down my arm. Welcome to
reality—changing in alleyways and creeping back to my apartment. I am
cursed to live between worlds. On the one hand there is normalcy. On the
other, there is a place where I can be what I am with no fear of
reprisals, where I can commit murder itself and scarcely raise the
eyebrows of those around me, where I am even encouraged to do so to
protect the sanctity of that world. But I left.
As I stride back to the apartment, I can feel my anger blistering the
pavement with every step. A woman curled up under a pile of dirty
blankets peers out as I pass and instinctively shrinks back into her
nest. As I round the corner, two men step out and size up my prospects
as prey. I resist the urge to snarl at them, but just barely. I walk
faster and they seem to decide I am not worth chasing. I shouldn’t be
here. I should be home in bed, not prowling downtown Toronto at four AM.
A normal woman wouldn’t be here. It’s yet another reminder that I’m not
normal. Not normal. I look down the darkened street and I can read a
billet on a telephone post fifty feet off. Not normal. I catch a whiff
of fresh bread from a bakery starting production miles away. Not normal.
I stop by a storefront, grab a bar over the windows and flex my biceps.
The metal groans in my hand. Not normal. Not normal. I chant the words
in my head, flagellating myself with them. The anger only grows.
Outside my apartment door, I stop and inhale deeply. I mustn’t wake
Philip. And, if I do, I mustn’t let him see me like this. I don’t need a
mirror to know what I look like, skin taut, color high, eyes
incandescent with the rage that always seems to follow a Change now.
Definitely not normal.
When I finally enter the apartment, I can hear his measured breathing
from the bedroom. Still asleep. I am nearly to the bathroom when his
breathing catches.
"Elena?" his voice is a sleep-stuffed croak.
"Just going to the washroom."
I try to slip past the doorway, but he’s sitting up now, peering
nearsightedly at me.
He frowns.
"Fully dressed?" he says.
"I went out."
A moment of silence. He runs a hand through his dark hair and sighs.
"It’s not safe. Damn it, Elena. We’ve discussed this. Wake me up and
I’ll go with you."
"I need to be alone. To think."
"It’s not safe."
"I know. I’m sorry."
I creep into the bathroom, spending longer than necessary. I pretend
to use the toilet, wash my hands with enough water to fill a Jacuzzi,
then find a fingernail that needs elaborate filing attention. When I
finally decide Philip has fallen back asleep, I head for the bedroom.
The bedside lamp is on. He’s propped on his pillow, glasses in place. I
hesitate in the doorway. I can’t bring myself to cross the threshold, to
go and crawl into bed with him. I hate myself for it, but I can’t do it.
The memory of the night lingers and I feel out of place here.
When I don’t move, Philip shifts his legs over the side of the bed
and sits up.
"I didn’t mean to snap," he says. "I worry. I know you need your
freedom and I’m trying—"
He stops and rubs his hand across his mouth. His words slice through
me. I know he doesn’t mean them as a reprimand, but they are, a reminder
that I’m screwing this up, that I’m fortunate to have found someone as
patient and understanding as Philip, but I’m wearing through that
patience at breakneck speed and all I seem capable of doing is standing
back and waiting for the final crash.
"I know you need your freedom," he says again. "But there has to be
some other way. Maybe you could go out in the morning, early. If you
prefer night, maybe we could drive down to the lake. You could walk
around. I could sit in the car and keep an eye on you. Maybe I could
walk with you. Stay twenty paces behind or something." He manages a wry
smile. "Or maybe not. I’d probably get picked up by the cops, the
middle-aged guy stalking the beautiful young blonde."
He pauses, then leans forward. "That’s your cue, Elena. You’re
supposed to remind me that forty-one is far from middle-aged."
"We’ll work something out," I say.
We can’t, of course. I have to run under the cover of night and I
have to do it alone. There is no compromise.
As he sits on the edge of the bed, watching me, I know we’re doomed.
My only hope is to make this relationship so otherwise perfect that
Philip might come to overlook our one insurmountable problem. To do
that, my first step should be to go to him, crawl in bed, hold him and
kiss him and tell him I love him. But I can’t. Not tonight. Tonight I’m
something else, something he doesn’t know and couldn’t understand. I
don’t want to go to him like this.
"I’m not tired" I say. "I might as well stay up. Do you want
breakfast?"
He looks at me. Something in his expression falters and I know I’ve
failed—again. But he doesn’t say anything. He pulls his smile back in
place. "Let’s go out. Someplace in this city has to be open this early.
We’ll drive around until we find it. Drink five cups of coffee and watch
the sun come up. Okay?"
I nod, not trusting myself to speak.
"Shower first?" he says. "Or flip for it?"
"You go ahead."
He kisses my cheek as he passes. I wait until I hear the shower
running, then head for the kitchen.
Sometimes I get so hungry. |