Chapter 105
Chapter 105
-Dorothy-
I found Ignatius further down the beach, walking along the rock pools with his hands shoved in the
pockets of his coat. It was the same navy bhie coat he had worn on the day we met. It was the same
coat he draped over my shoulders every time I shivered. Angie once joked that we should have two
extra arms attached to it, so that both Ignatius and I could wear it at the same time. A raincoat with four
sleeves, a single entity.
But Ignaties felt like a stranger in that moment. He stood out against the gray sea and charcoal
smudged sky, like a piece of driftwood lost on the shore. I wasn’t sure how to reach him anymore.
I swallowed my unease and called to him, the wind doing its best to whip my words away. “Ignatius?”
He swiveled his head and I almost stepped back in real fear. My mate looked the same as he always
did, if a little paler and much more tense. But his eyes were what unnerved me. Pinprick pupils lost in
startling blue. An unbreachable wall of ice. It was lonely in my head without his familiar presence there.
Not only had he locked me out of his, but he refused to enter mine either, drawing away entirely.
I wasn’t sure how to help him. But that would have to wait for the time being. We needed to get to the
bottom of Elliot’s story. We had to find the person who had preserved the journal. Their scent was
heavy in the small cavern where it had been hidden. Whoever had rescued the journal from flames had
intended to come back for it some day. We had to find out who it
I pulled the journal out from under my own coat and lifted it for Ignatius to see. My mate, a creature of
the rocks and the rearing ocean stared back at me, unmoving.
“We can’t ignore this, Ignatius, I said forcefully. “We have to find out the whole truth.”
I thought he might just ignore me and go on wandering around the rocks. But he started forward to
meet me, until our chests were almost touching. He folded his arms around me, lowering over me as
he breathed in my scent. I slipped my arms into his coat, our coat, and closed my eyes.
“I caught a scent. I murmured against his neck. “I think I can track down whoever hid the journal.”
Ignatius was quiet for a while and the wind whipped around us like it was determined to swipe us from
the sandy shore.
“Alright, Ignatius whispered. “Let’s go find this guy”
I tracked the scent to an unassuming house on the edge of Bielke territory. Igantius grew more and
more uneasy the further we went. Seeing as his initial family home was nearby, one he hadn’t returned
to since his father had set it alight, I couldn’t really blame him for feeling skittish
“I think this is it?” I wasn’t quite sure of myself as we stood in front of the disheveled house. The yard
was filled with various rusting car parts, tossed among the overgrown grass. The windows were shut
and bedraggled curtains hid the interior from view. The place could have been abandoned, if not for the
sounds of a blaring television coming from somewhere inside.
I considered turning back and retracing my steps, but Ignatius had other ideas. He strode forward onto
the property, all the way up to the peeling front door and rapped his knuckles sharply on the wood.
1 hurned after ham, taking care not to trip over the junk in the yard. “Ignatius, wait!”:
By the time reached his side, the door had swung open, and a grouchy bearded shufter stood frowning
at Ignatius.
The man looked us up and down, brows rising when he noted Ignatius’s stark white hair. “Elliot’s boy,
hmm What brings you here, site?
Ignatius reached into my coat and pulled out the journal, holding at inches from the man’s sub nose.
“What do you know
nave Trand] to toust it, by the looks of in The man looked bored, and he brushed Ignatius’s hand and
the journal
G
out of his face. “You haven’t explained yourself Mr Armoundt. What are you doing here?”
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Ignatius waved the journal, scowling at the man so fiercely I wanted to warn him to run. “Your scent is
all over this thing. I need you to tell me what you know about it. I don’t need to explain myself.”
“What
mate is trying to say, I interrupted suddenly, putting calming hand on Ingatius’s arm, “is that we’d like
your help in this matter. We’re just trying to find out where this journal came from and why it was saved.
We tracked the scent and it led us here. So please, if you know anything at all, we would really
appreciate it”
The man looked from me to Ignatius and back again. Eventually he sighed and scratched at his neck,
gesturing for Ignatious to hand over the journal. At a stern glance from me. Ignatius handed it over and
we watched while he sniffed at the pages, wrinkling his nose in disgust,
“You thought this was my scent? G od, do 1 smell that bad?”
“We traced it here. Ignatious growled. “It has to be yours.”
“Not mine,” the man sighed and handed the journal over to me. That’s my father’s scent. The late
Jacob Yung.”
“Jacob Ignatius’s eyes widened. “Of course, I didn’t recognize his scent.”
“Whos Jacob
“My fathers old assistant, a real nastly piece of work, Ignatius replied and then glanced at the man
guitlilly. “My apologies.”
The man didn’t seem too bothered about the insult. He shrugged and stepped aside to let us in. “No
problem. You’re right. My father was a right as sh ole.”
Inside, we sat on a stained sofa while the man, Enoc, explained the details of his father’s passing.
Apparently, Jacob had served under Elliot for years. He had been an unsavory character, cruel to his
children and strangers alike, but he had been fiercely loyal to Elliot until his untimely death back when
Ignatius was twelve.
Why would Jacob have Elliot’s notebook?
Enoc sighed and reached across the cluttered coffee table to retrieve one of the many open beer
bottles. “I don’t kn But I have an idea of what that journal might contain. Is there any mention of a dark-
haired woman?”
“Perhaps, Ignatious said guardedly. “What of it?”
Enoc ch ugged the beer, slamming it down on the table before reaching for another. “Jacob once
mentioned a woman in Elliot’s life, a woman who came after your mother,” he paused at that and
looked at Ignatius with genuine sorrow in his eyes. “I’m sorry about what happened to Moirah. I knew Nôvel(D)rama.Org's content.
what was going on, hell, everyone did. I was young, but I should have done something to help her.”
Ignatius only nodded in response, eager to move away from the topic that still caused him pain.
Enor shrugged and leaned back in his seat.
prophecy
“Jacob was angry with the woman, raved about how she was corrupting Elliot, filling his mind with
fantasies of a Elliot offered the woman asylum on Bielke territory, he insisted on keeping it a secret
from everyone. Until one day he suddenly banished her, and left that journal to burn with his secrets,
Jacob saved the journal, he must have. I remember him coming home one day with badly burned
hands. He wouldn’t tell us what happened, only that something deeply disturbing had occurred on
Bielke territory and we were to guard ourselves against beautiful women”
“My brother and I didn’t need the warning” Enoc chuckled. “No beautiful woman ever bothered to
approach us.”
Ignatius stroked his chin. “Why would Jacob have kept the journal? Did he intend to blackmail my
father?”
“I doubt it,” Enot responded, staring down at his beer. “Jacoli was dedicated to Elliot to the very end. My
guess is that he was spo oked by whatever happened between those two. He probably wanted to keep
some kind of recond in case we’d need it someday?
G
“She was a vampire, that woman. Ignatius whispered. “She had to be. Nob*dy else would be able to
convince Elliot to grant them asylum out of nowhere. Vampires prey on people’s weaknesses, and Elliot
had many.”
“If that’s true,” I started hesitantly, “then it’s very likely that Elliot spawned a hybrid child. Both vampire
and wolf.”
I looked over at Ignatius. “Your half sibling”
“There’s a chance that child is already dead,” Ignatius said stiltedly. “I wouldn’t put it past Elliot to go
that far to cover up his mistakes. But if he didn’t, and the woman left with the baby
He straightened up and held out his hand to me. his expression jense. “I’m sorry, Dorothy. I should be
keeping my emotions in check. For you and for the entire Bielke pack. I should be a better leader”
“You’re already a great leader.” I touched my hand to his cheek and he flinched slightly, like the
tenderness was too much. “And you don’t have to do this alone”
“Look.” Enoc interrupted us, “This looks like a tender moment, but do you mind taking your affections
elsewhere? There’s a
“My apologies, Ignatius turned to the rough older man, his expression warmer than it had been when
we arrived. “Thank you, Enoc. You’ve helped us a lot. We’re more than happy to compensate you for
your troubles
Enoc snorted and waved a hand in dismissal. “Don’t worry about that. I have no need for riches. You
sort out this vampire problem and we can call it even
We stood to leave and Enoc lifted his beer in farewell,
-Plato-
“G od this is hopeless,” I growled, crouched once again outside the guarded Khall territory. “What are
they hiding that’s so g ddam n important?”
1 had been crouched there for hours, waising and watching for any break in the Khall’s line of defense,
to no av
“Perhaps they’re not hiding anything at all, Ren, who had been oddly silent over the past hour,
suddenly spoke guards are terrified of something in the forest. Maybe they’re not trying to hide
something, maybe they’re trying something out.”
What are you saying?” I began, but Ren hushed me. There was something happening, the guards were
running towa Someb*dy had set one of the guard tents alight, and a few of the guards had abandoned
their post to help douse the fire
“How convenient.” I muttered, seeing an opening to get in. “Let’s go, while they’re distracted”
“No.” Ren halted me, hissing sharply. “Look, to the left of the guard tent, in the shadows.”
I peered through Ren’s eyes, into the darkness beyond the blazing fire. Two figures were creeping out
of Khall territory, slinking away into the night
“The Khall aren’t hiding anything in there,” I whispered as it finally dawned on me. “They’re trying to
prevent their own people from leaving. There’s something out there in the woods, and those two are
probably heading right for it.”
Ren and I moved swiftly through the woods, trailing the two Khall shifters at a safe distance. After a
while of slinking through the shadows, voices could be heard in the distance. After a few more minutes,
we spotted lights blinking through the trees. Not lights, large pillars of fire burning in a clearing under
the starless sky.
Dozens of shifters crowded around the lures, chanting and murmuring among themselves, I stepped
closer, blending into the crowd without a second thought
The two shifters we had been trailing were also present, welcomed by their allies. Everyone had a
glazed look in their eyes and I had a faint memory of the Tally shifters that had once chased me
through the streets under the cloak of night.
Up ahead asked figure stepped up onto a makeshift platform. The man removed his hood, looking out
into the crowd.
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My gasp was audible, and pet with a few suspicious glances from shifters around me. Dread settled
heavy in my belly, and bile crept up my throat.
I was rooted to the spot, reeling, when a man in front of me looked over his shoulder with crazed eyes,
flecks of saliva flying as he spoke, “Amazing isn’t it? Wait until you hear what he has to say!”