Little Extras YTEEN[COMPLETE]

Finished stories that feature the characters from the show, but there are no aliens. All fics completed on the main AU without Aliens board will eventually be moved here.

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blake
Addicted Roswellian
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Joined: Mon Nov 26, 2001 3:00 pm
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Post by blake »

Little Werewolf

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banner by BeccaBehr

One

Michael glared at the stupid campfire and tugged his thin blanket tighter around his shoulders. The other children were running around playing flashlight tag in Frazier Woods. Michael didn’t own a flashlight.

The parent volunteers were setting up the kids’ tents. Girls on one side of the camp and boys on the other. Ms. DeLuca, that crazy Maria’s mother, was arguing with the Sheriff about the proper way to push the poles into the ground. Mr. Parker was patiently fixing up after Mr. Whitman’s mistakes, and his wife, Mrs. Parker, was laying out the children’s bedding.

There were a few teachers, most of which were in the woods refereeing the game. But Mr. Trevors, the Vice-Principal of Roswell Elementary, was glaring over his scraggly moustache at Michael.

He glared back, jabbing a stick into the ground violently. If there was one thing Michael Guerin hated more than people pitying him, were people like Mr. Trevors who were always willing to believe the worse of the welfare, foster child.

Mr. Trevors started walking toward him and Michael steeled himself for a verbal beating, something he sometimes thought was worse than Hank’s fist, but it never came. The woods opened up and the fifth-grade class came streaming out, laughing. Michael scowled.

Soon enough, a few of his classmates had gathered around his fire. Kyle Valenti was bragging about some Jr. Rifle Competition to Liz Parker, the school smarty, who Michael thought was putting up a valiant effort to look interested. The Whitman twins were consulting as seriously as eleven-year-olds were able over an old guitar. And Maria DeLuca, with her sparkling green eyes and long blonde hair, was annoying him.

“How come your dad didn’t come?” she asked, sitting down on the log next to him and blinking her large eyes coyly. Michael grunted. “How come?” she pressed.

“Home come your dad didn’t come?” he retorted angrily.

She leaned away, taken aback by his tone. “I don’t got a dad.”

“Neither do I,” he said.

“Then who’s the guy who picks you up from detention?”

He glowered. “That’s Hank.”

“Isn’t he your dad?”

“No.” He stood up, throwing his stick at random. Alarmed, he saw it heading straight for Kyle’s head, the other boy not even noticing. He opened his mouth to yell in warning, but a small hand shot out and caught it.

Amazed, he saw Liz toss it into the fire, not taking her attention from Kyle. He shook his head, not quite believing what he had seen. He looked up, trying to rationalize sweet, studious Liz Parker with that feat of speed, and couldn’t. But he wasn’t the only one who had seen. Sheriff Valenti was staring at the girl sitting with his son, a very thoughtful expression on his face.

“Spaceboy?” The perky voice sounded in his ear and a little arm slid into his. Surprised, he jerked out of Maria’s hold.

“What did you call me?” he demanded.

“You were spaced out, I thought it was a cute nickname,” she replied innocently.

“You are so weird,” he informed her, “Now go bother someone else.” And he started walking away.

“Where are you going, Michael Guerin?” she shouted after him.

“Away from you!” he hollered back, and continued stomping into the woods.

After a while, he realized how stupid this action had been. For starters, he had never been to Frazier Woods, and did not know his way around. He was lost. Secondly, he couldn’t pick up any sign of human life. No burning campfire in the distance, no high-pitched voices, nothing but woods as far as he could tell. Finally, and most importantly, he couldn’t see.

Tripping yet again, Michael cursed his lack of flashlight and tattered, untie-able sneakers from Family Services. Then he double cursed Hank just for being a bastard. And concluded with triple cursing the stupid forest, because the tree branches were blocking the light of the full moon and preventing him from finding the path he had somehow wandered off of.

“Stupid bubble-headed girls,” he muttered, kicking a branch. They probably wouldn’t notice he was missing until morning, he thought, maybe not even until they got back to school. Unless Maria Stupid DeLuca blabbed her big fat mouth off to someone.

Well, that was fine with him. He could make it back on his own. He was a survivor. If he hadn’t been, Hank would’ve broken him a long time ago.

Determined now, Michael set off in what he deemed was north, and after five minutes nearly walked into a tree. “Darn it!” he exclaimed.

And then the growl came.

Eyes widening, Michael spun around. All was still for a moment, and then it came again, low and dangerous. It sounded like a really big animal. Panic started making his heart beat faster.

The rustling of the bushes was the only warning Michael had before the large, hairy creature burst from them. Luckily, it was enough. Michael managed to scramble up the tree he had nearly brained himself on, earning himself only a small gash on the ankle.

It burned. He ignored it as he climbed higher, panic making him move faster. When he had climbed as high as he could go without the branches breaking on him, he looked down.

The thing, it looked almost like a dog, but bigger and more humanoid, was circling the base of his tree, growling up at him. He stayed frozen on his branch. Please don’t let it climb trees, he pleaded with the Powers That Be. Michael didn’t believe in God, but there had to be something up there, right?

Another shifting of bushes below and Michael whimpered, afraid of another killer canine joining the first, but what stepped out of the bushes wasn’t a monster.

At least not in the usual sense.

The gunshot echoed through the forest, but Michael made not a sound. He watched as Mr. Trevors, the bane of his existence, put down the rifle and moved toward the thing that had attacked the boy.

No longer a gray dog, but a naked human.

It was a long while after Mr. Trevors left, dragging the body with him, that Michael came down. He walked aimlessly, limping from the laceration that still burned, thinking hard on what he had seen.

The song registered on a subconscious level. It wasn’t until he came upon Maria DeLuca sitting on a boulder on the edge of the woods that he realized he had been following sound of her voice to get back to camp. He stared at her as she finished the hypnotic melody.

“Maria!” The two children turned. Ms. DeLuca looked furious. It was the first and last time Michael ever saw Amy upset with her darling daughter. “What are you doing, young lady?” she demanded, tight-lipped.

“Michael was lost, Mom,” she responded softly.

Ms. DeLuca looked at him, and her expression relaxed. “It’s bed-time. Michael, you’re sharing a tent with Kyle and Alex. Maria, you’re with Liz and Isabel.”

“Aw, Mom, I hate Isabel!”

“Hush your mouth,” Amy scolded, but she was smiling.

Michael ignored the kooky pair and trudged off to find his tent. The other two boys were already asleep when he settled down. Their chaperones, the Sheriff and Mr. Whitman were still outside, chatting with a newly returned Mr. Trevors. Michael had made sure to avoid the vice-principal’s gaze, unnerved at the incident in the woods, and still unable to figure out what had really happened.

As he slowly slipped into a deep sleep, his hand reached down to scratch the cut, which had started itching.

Two

It was a month later when things began happening.

He had noticed, in the days that followed the bizarre incident in Frazier Woods, that he could smell and hear better. When Hank came home drunk, the smell of alcohol and sweat made him sick. Luckily, the better hearing let him know when Hank was nearby, so he could run and hide. But sometimes his foster father still caught him.

Michael had been healing faster too. The bruises and cuts the beating left on him were gone in a few hours to a day depending on the severity of the damage. It was nice. He no longer had to miss school, his only escape, because he was too hurt to move.

Though school wasn’t that great. Michael now had a great fear of Vice Principal Trevors that clashed with his despisal of the man. The sight of Mr. Trevors’ stupid comb-over from above as he dragged that dead man, who had been a large animal just seconds before, was something that would stick with Michael for life.

And he was noticing small things about his classmates too. Kyle Valenti always had gunpowder clinging to him that made Michael sneeze. Alex and Isabel Whitman had an electricity that sparked between them that gave him a shock on occasion if he got too close. Liz Parker, quiet and shy, had a feel of power to her that left Michael a little in awe of her. And Maria DeLuca, the stupid bubble-girl herself, smelt like the sea. She left a salty wind taste on his tongue if he breathed around her.

Then there was lunch. The portion of the day he was beginning to dread. Before he had always felt bad when he came with cracker to eat, or when Mr. Trevors announced loudly that the cafeteria didn’t accept food stamps, or when he didn’t have anything to eat at all, and he had to sit and watch the rest of the kids eat their lovingly prepared lunches for half an hour. Now, he could smell each and every item of food a kid had in their lunchbox, and it took every ounce of what little self-control he had not to pounce when he sniffed out a ham sandwich or a slice of chocolate cake.

As it closer to the next full moon, he found himself fantasizing about raw meat, and tearing Hank’s throat out, or ripping Mr. Trevors a new one. Or biting into Maria’s soft, tender white flesh…

They scared him, these thoughts, but he couldn’t stop them.

The day of the full moon, Michael stayed home from school. He felt so hot he thought he’d burn up any minute, and the cramps in every muscle made it impossible to move. He spent the day curled up in a fetal position on his tattered bed, a mattress with broken springs and a ripped sheet, whimpering in pain.

Michael heard when Hank returned from work. The truck door slamming nearly deafened him, and he tried to curl up into himself more.

“Boy!” came the shout from the TV area of the trailer, “Get your lazy ass out here!”

He shifted, every move agony, but Hank would just come after him if he didn’t get up. He shuffled into the kitchen/living room, trying not to cry out with the pain. A football game was on the television, and Hank’s feet were up on the recliner footstool. “What?” Michael croaked.

His foster father didn’t even look at him. “Get me a beer and heat up a dinner.”

He managed to get a TV dinner into the microwave, but his arm spasmed as he removed a beer from the refrigerator. Night had finally fallen. The bottle fell to the floor and broke, pieces of glass cut Michael’s bare feet and the overwhelming smell of alcohol made him go to his knees and retch.

“What the hell?” Hank had gotten up, rage in his every ugly feature. He grabbed Michael’s arm and shook him. “Clean that up, you lazy ungrateful bastard!” Michael looked up at him, the smell of meat overriding his fear, and Hank dropped his arm, staring in horror.

The boy, unaware that his warm brown eyes had become cold gray, filled with hunger, watched him. More spasms moved across his muscles, and hair started sprouting along his arms and face and legs. And still, he tracked every move his foster father made with eyes that resembled a wolf’s.

“You’re a freak,” Hank accused, staring in horror as the boy’s entire body began to transform. Frenzied, he grabbed the shotgun off the wall and fired. The bullet hit the little monster in the shoulder.

The wolf felt the impact and smelled the blood. A growl escaped between enlarged incisors and he moved in a flash of gray fur. The second shot went wild and the man was down, screaming. Teeth gleamed and the scream cut off as the man’s throat was torn out.

In the midst of the feeding, the blood and carnage, the neighbors locked their doors and shut their blinds.

The wolf raised a red-soaked muzzle into the air and howled.
Last edited by blake on Fri Mar 12, 2004 1:21 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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blake
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Post by blake »

Three

Michael sat on an uncomfortable plastic chair outside the Sheriff’s office. He kept watching the officers walking back and forth; some were filing things, others were bringing in some high school kids, and still others were around the water cooler eating doughnuts.

He turned his attention back to the partially opened door. He could see Sheriff Valenti’s Stetson and mirrored sunglasses on the corner of his desk, but the room’s occupants were out of sight. Though not out of Michael’s new range of hearing.

“It was a wild dog attack, Mr. Trevors,” Valenti said calmly.

“That’s bull, Valenti, and you know it!” The Vice-Principal lowered his voice even further, “It was a werewolf.”

A werewolf. One of those creatures Michael sometimes saw in those old horror films when he snuck into the drive-in on a Halloween weekend. He was a werewolf. Huh, that was weird.

But it made sense. Michael couldn’t remember what had happened last night. He recalled the pain he had been feeling all day, and then the increase in intensity when Hank got home, but nothing else until Deputy Hanson had woken him up this morning.

Apparently the neighbors had finally taken their heads out of their arses and called the police to report a domestic disturbance in the Whitmore/Guerin trailer. Unfortunately, it had been too late for Michael’s abusive foster father.

Hanson had tried his best to shield the boy from the blood splattered walls, but Michael had seen enough. He had allowed the deputy to lead him away, a blanket covering his nakedness, and he had somehow known that Hank’s demise had been at his own hands. It left him with an unexpected sense of loss, but also with a measure of justice.

They had found him clothes and he had been taken to the police station in the front seat of the Sheriff’s SUV. He’d been sitting in the plastic chair ever since. They’d offered him food, but he was surprisingly full for the first time in a long time, and declined.

“I’d be careful what of what I say in this town, Mr. Trevors,” the Sheriff drawled, not sounding amused, “Your position is sensitive.”

Michael could practically see Trevors’ lips curling under his scraggly facial hair. “Goddamn it, Valenti, the boy’s a danger to society. He needs to be put down now before he can kill again!”

The exclamation froze the boy sitting outside. He hadn’t thought of it like that. Sure, Hank was dead, but he was a waste of space, what if in the future he attacked someone who mattered? He swallowed, his mind going back to those dreams he’d been having of Maria. What if he hurt the bubble-headed girl?

He hunched over himself in the chair, keeping his eyes on the floor. Mr. Trevors was right. He was dangerous. He was a freak, and he needed to leave. He needed to get out of Roswell and away from the people he semi-cared about.

But where would he go? And what could he do? He’d never survive out there, waiting for the next full moon, scared to go near other humans for fear of eating one of them! A surge of hysteria went through him and he shot up out of the chair. It was better to go now. He’d rather sacrifice himself then hurt somebody else.

“Michael?”

His head whipped around. The air smelled like the ocean and he expected to see Maria standing behind him, green eyes curious, but instead he was staring up at Ms. DeLuca. He sniffed again and sneezed. Maria smelled a lot like her mother, but Amy left a brinier taste in the back of his mouth. “Ms. DeLuca?” he asked, meeting her blue eyes and sniffing hesitantly. She had had a cruller for breakfast. Michael loved crullers.

Maria’s mother smiled at him gently, but he thought she looked a little said. “What are you doing here, Michael?” she inquired, crouching down as he sat back in the chair. They were on equal eye level now.

“Hank’s dead,” he told her bluntly.

The sea blue eyes widened. “Oh,” she breathed, “What happened?”

Michael shrugged and looked towards the Sheriff’s office, which Valenti was now showing Mr. Trevors out of, both wearing stormy expressions. The Sheriff’s smoothed over when he caught sight of the woman with the boy waiting down the hall. “Amy, just the person I needed to see.” Ms. DeLuca rose, patted Michael on the head, and walked toward Jim. Valenti nodded in dismissal toward Mr. Trevors as he ushered Ms. DeLuca into the office, “Vice-Principal.”

“Sheriff,” Mr. Trevors bit out as the door shut in his face. Michael made a concentrated effort not to look up from the floor as his vice-principal started walking toward him with slow, measured steps. His effort seemed in vain, however, when the shiny black shoes stopped in his line of sight and stayed there. Michael could feel the man’s eyes on the back of his neck. “Little punk,” Trevors whispered.

Michael’s head jerked up with an angry snarl, and he glared at the man, wanting to kick his balls up into his throat or chomp on him or something. The bastard.

A nasty smile curved the man’s face as he took in the feral-looking little boy. “Just as I thought.” He leaned down so that Michael could smell his rancid breath and moved his suit jacket ever so slightly. Caught by light reflecting off of something metal, the eleven-year old saw the gun tucked into the waistband of his slacks. “I know what you are, punk,” Trevors hissed, spittle getting on Michael’s face.

Michael wiped it off defiantly and glared harder, “So?”

“You know what I do with monsters like you, Guerin?”

Michael went pale as he thought back to that night in Frazier Woods. “Yes,” he said softly.

“Good.” Trevors straightened. Michael heard the soft creak of the door and the light footsteps, but he didn’t turn his head. He didn’t want to warn Trevors. “I’ll be watching you, punk,” he informed him, “And when next month rolls around, you better watch your back.” He lowered his voice, “Because it’ll be my bullet in it.”

“Mr. Trevors,” Sheriff Valenti boomed from a few feet away. Trevors whirled around, eyes narrowed. “I warned you,” Jim said, voice icy, “Deputy Hanson!”

“Yes, Sheriff?” Hanson asked as he skidded around the corner at Valenti’s yell.

“Please escort Mr. Trevors here to a cell.” The VP’s eyes widened in outrage.

“Charge?” Hanson asked as he took out a pair of handcuffs.

“Threatening a minor,” Valenti responded.

Ms. DeLuca, who had come out of the office at this point, gasped and hurried over to Michael. She took his hand, shot Mr. Trevors a dirty look and tugged Michael away from the men. Trevors was having a fit of apoplexy and Michael wanted to see it if his head exploded. “Michael,” Amy said sharply, and started walking a little faster. She was just shutting the door when the shouting started.

Disappointed, he looked a Maria’s mother. “What is it, Ms. DeLuca?”

“Michael.” She was speaking gently again. “You know I own a shop, right?”

“With the stupid alien crap,” he prompted.

She gave him a sour look, “Yes. But I also work for Child Services.”

He blinked in surprise. “Like the people who come to check up on me every month?”

Amy nodded. “With your foster father gone, Michael, we’re going to have to put you back into our custody.”

Four

“This is the third time in three months, Michael,” Amy DeLuca sighed, “What are you trying to do to me?”

Michael kept his head bowed, not wanting to look into the frustrated blue eyes. “I’m sorry,” he said gruffly, kicking at a dust mote on the floor.

“Michael, look at me.” He raised his head, black eye visible. The older woman reached out and touched it gently, he winced. “How did this happen?” she asked, sighing.

“Fell down,” he replied shortly, thankful that she couldn’t see the rest of the damage he had done to himself last night. Sheriff Valenti had picked him up when he was walking back from the desert. It was routine now. For the past five years Michael had spent the day after the full moon in the police station, waiting for either his foster parents or Mrs. DeLuca to pick him up.

He had decided it was safer this way. He skipped school if it was a weekday and walked out to the desert, getting himself lost so that when the change happened the wolf would be confused and far enough away from people not to inflict any damage.

It had worked so far. Though when morning hit, he found himself naked and on a direct path into town. He had taken to stashing an extra set of clothing in one of the rock formations so that the Sheriff would stop looking at him pityingly when he trudged home in tatters.

The foster family was always upset. He had been in and out of homes since he was eleven, but none of them had stuck. In the beginning, when he was younger, they had been more tolerant. He had been abused, he was frightened- they made some excuse for his running away. But after a few months, they always got sick of it and he wound up in the orphanage again.

Maria’s mom kept an eye out for him; she even took him into her home for a couple weeks last time he had been returned. He bit his lip in anger, they treated him like a toy and when they found out he was defective, back to the store he went so they could get a newer, shinier one. Amy wasn’t like that, but she was a single mom, and Maria was a handful. Michael never expected her to keep him, he was just thankful she was there.

“I’ve already got you things from the Crawford’s. You’ll be crashing with me and Maria until we find another family.” She patted him on the shoulder, signaling an end to their conversation, and he shuffled his way out the door.

He couldn’t say that he wasn’t expecting it. Ida and Walt had been okay to him. They were an older couple, their daughter Vanessa had disappeared a few years ago, and they had just decided to foster. Michael was their first foster son. He had been there a month when Cameron Winger came, the tall redhead fit into the Crawford’s family immediately, and she got along with Michael as well. But he had begun to feel left out.

The first time he had run away he had gotten a stern lecture, the second a warning. This time, he wasn’t returning. And that was good, he assured himself, this way Cameron, Ida, and Walt wouldn’t be in harm’s way. They’d be safe. That was the important part.

After all, he had never had a real family. He knew how to survive without one.

It took half and hour to walk from Amy’s office to the DeLuca home. Along the way it had started to rain, so now he was soaked and his shoes were muddy. Michael grabbed the spare key hidden under the little alien welcome mat and let himself in.

Maria was in the shower, he could hear the water running and the sound of her voice above it as she sung along with the radio. Everything about Bubble-head rubbed him the wrong way, except her voice. It was really pretty, and extremely soothing to his sensitive ears. The water shut off as Michael headed to the kitchen.

Coconut pie. He grinned and pulled out the dessert. It wasn’t as good as Ms. D’s Men in Blackberry pie, but it was still a little bit of heaven. Setting the pie tin on the counter he listened as Maria continued singing and pulled out the silverware drawer, snatching up a fork. She was coming closer. He kept his back turned, a grin pulling at his lips as he anticipated her reaction.

“God Guerin, you’re back again!” she shrieked.

He turned and leaned casually against the counter, “You know you miss me, DeLuca.”

She rolled her green eyes, “As if.” She moved into the kitchen, tightening the towel around her body and glaring at him.

He studied her as she opened the fridge and pulled out a milk carton. She had cut her blond curls awhile ago into a short, straight do, and Michael liked the change. He also thought she smelled nice, the eucalyptus and rose oils she mixed blended well with the underlying sea scent that always clung to her. She stood, the pink towel gaping a little to show a smooth white thigh. He stared, transfixed at the tantalizing sight, and it wasn’t just the wolf in him.

“Spaceboy!” Michael jerked at the loud voice in his ear and clapped his hands over them. She had snuck up on him the little bubble-head.

“What the hell?” he yelled back, angrily digging his fork into the pie.

“Why don't you ever pay attention?" she sighed, "Did you track mud on the carpet?” she asked, eyes snapping. She grabbed the fork out of his hand before he could take a bite. He grabbed it back in defiance.

“No,” he said primly, and made to scoop up another piece.

“Mom made that for Valenti,” she informed him.

Michael made a face and tossed the fork in the sink. “Way to defile a pie,” he muttered and headed toward the living room to watch television. There was supposed to be a hockey game on tonight.

“Hey!” Maria exclaimed, following him, “This isn’t your house! Why don’t you go home?” He scowled at her, but she stood there in nothing but a pink towel and glowered right back. “Don’t tell me you got booted out again, Guerin?” she said mockingly.

His scowl intensified. “Go away,” he told her, “You bother me.” She huffed out of the room and down the hall, the slamming of her bedroom door resounded through the small house. “Finally!” he yelled down the hall, “Some peace and quiet!”

Her scream of frustration was muffled by the distance, but Michael heard it just the same. He smiled, glad he could bring a little bit of joy into someone’s life, even if it was his own.

She stalked back out ten minutes later dressed in jeans and some teal tank top. “Your bra’s showing,” he said, not taking his eyes off the game. The scrap of red silk had just entered his peripheral vision.

She ignored him. “I’m going to Liz’s to study for Chemistry, we have a test Monday.” She gave him a pointed glare, reminding him that he was in the same class and that he had missed two days of it. “Tell Mom I’ll eat at the Crashdown.” Michael grunted and she left. He could hear her putting on her coat. “And stay out of my room!” she ordered just before the back door shut.

Michael rolled his eyes. Why would he want to go in her stupid room anyway? It smelled all girly and Maria-like. Why she would think he liked the way she smelled was beyond him. It wasn’t like he had let that fact escape him. Well, he had told Cameron, but since she went to a different school, he didn’t see how that would be a problem.

It wasn’t like he had any friends. Not like Maria, who was friends with popular Isabel Whitman, whiz kid Alex Whitman, captain jock Kyle Valenti, and perfect Liz Parker. His reputation wasn’t the kind that made people want to hang around him. He was the school bad boy, mainly due to the facts that he spent some time in the police station and his foster child status. And he skipped a lot, a byproduct of turning furry once a month. Michael turned off the television. Oh yeah, he was a rebel all right.

The house was quiet, but it was pouring outside. He got up and headed for Maria’s bedroom. The lights were off, but he could still see. He was, after all, a creature of the night. There were posters and magazine cut outs taped to her walls, picture frames cluttered available surfaces, a French/English dictionary was sitting on her nightstand. It was definitely a stupid girly room.

He loved going in it whenever he was over, Maria’s reactions were highly entertaining. Tonight though, he settled himself on the bed, breathing in her scent. He had puzzled over her innate fragrance for years, wondering where she would have picked up the tang of the ocean in Roswell. He had yet to figure it out, but he suspected that she and her mother weren’t all they appeared to be. Like him.

He yawned, last night had tired him out. Stripping his jeans and over shirt off, both still a little wet, he burrowed under the covers in his gray tank and boxers. He pulled the covers up, letting warmth seep into his skin and to his soul. Michael closed his eyes as lightning flashed, illuminating the room. He’d stay here for awhile, knowing Amy wouldn’t wake him up. She found her daughter’s reactions to Michael’s presence in her bed just as amusing as he did.

It was the smell of breakfast cooking that woke him up. Michael sniffed hungrily and turned over, then stopped, surprised to find Maria spooned against him. She was still wearing her outfit from last night, sans pants. Her underwear matched her bra. Michael grinned, ready to wake her with a disparaging comment, when he heard Mrs. DeLuca coming down the hall.

From there it was all a blur. There were a lot of ‘Oh my God!’s, ‘MOM!’s, ‘Get out of that bed!’s, and he got hit with a newspaper several times. All in all, it was not a pleasant morning. Especially when Amy, blue eyes blazing, pointed out the door and with deadly calm ordered them both to the kitchen.

Five

The apartment was pretty bare. Michael was glad to have it though. He was happy Philip was compassionate enough to help him petition for emancipation. He had liked living with Diane and Philip, they were good people.

Diane was the kind of mother who made breakfast frittatas and had a plate of warm cookies on the table when Michael came home from school. She liked doing laundry and crafts, and loved the color yellow. It was a crime against nature that she couldn’t have children of her own.

Philip was an intimidating man at first. He laid down rules and he expected them to be obeyed. But he was also the kind of guy Michael could ask advice from, who took his foster son fishing on a Sunday, and who liked beating everyone’s pants at Monopoly ™. He was also a damn good lawyer.

Ms. DeLuca, after banning Michael from spending the night ever again in the most loving and endearing way, had placed him with the older couple. It had worked out well for several months. Philip had given him an old ’87 Cadillac which helped him escape further on the day of the full moon, and he was no longer required to rely on Valenti for a ride back into town.

But he had felt the wolf in him becoming wilder, chafing at the restraints a family put on him. He had nearly snapped one afternoon when Philip had asked him into his home office the day after a full moon. He had been irritable, and imagining grisly deaths on his foster father, when the awfulness of his thoughts struck him.

Michael had wrestled with the decision to ask for independent status. He was only sixteen after all, and he didn’t want to hurt his foster family. But sometimes emotional injury was better than physical destruction.

They hadn’t fully understood his reasons, but they had supported him all the same. Diane had talked to her good friend Nancy and got him a job on the grill at the Crashdown Café. Philip had filed his petition and got him before a judge in an expedient amount of time. They had helped him pick out his apartment and helped him with basic furnishings. Michael had bought the Caddy for $100 after his second paycheck. He still did Sunday night dinners at their house.

School was same old, same old. He had no friends; most were taken aback by his black and gray attire and menacing scowls. Maria either ignored him or made sly jibes. He enjoyed their witty banter though, not like he’d tell her that, it made him feel semi-normal.

But he was still a freak. He could feel the wolf growing in him everyday. He could feel the power increasing with each full moon.

He wasn’t the only freak in town though, even he could sense that. They came out a night mostly; he smelt them near the cemeteries giving off the stench of death and decay. He never tried to find out what other night creatures roamed, it didn’t seem to him to be a very prudent way of living.

Liz Parker was the only person in town he couldn’t peg besides Maria and her mother. The brainy waitress, who bustled about the café with an ever present smile, had an aura about her that seemed almost magnetic. He had sensed it growing up, knew there was something about her, but he had never known what.

Recently, the pull had gotten stronger. It had happened gradually, but it had set his fur standing up. Something big was going on in the supernatural world he refused to be a part of, and unfortunately, it seemed to be all coming down on Liz Parker’s slender shoulders.

The change had happened overnight.

Starting his shift one night he had felt the blaze of power. Liz had paused for one brief instant, a glazed expression in her eyes, and then it was as if she had awoken from a dream.

He could tell her senses had sharpened as she jerked around at every little thing. He had long ago learned to control and filter what he was hearing and seeing and smelling. She would learn in time. Maria had yelled at him them, calling him by that stupid nickname she had made up in fifth grade, and he had gotten back to work, letting his mind wander on its own.

Michael was lying quietly in his bed that night when he came to the startling realization that whatever had happened to Liz that night would affect him. He remembered the piercing glance she had given him when he checked out for the night. She knew he was different.

“Michael, can I talk to you?”

He looked up at Liz. She seemed nervous, but determined. It was amusing. He had watched her trying to puzzle him out over the past couple of weeks. Watched her as she became more confident and coordinated, more aware. The potential for power within her was amazing.

“Sure,” he agreed easily, standing, “But let’s not talk about this here.”

He met her in the eraser room after fourth period. It had been tense at first, the admittance of their equal freakiness, but it soon evolved into a serious discussion of how to control her new powers, and how insane everything was in her life now.

Michael understood what she was going through. He was probably the only one in Roswell who did. It had been the start of an interesting and lasting friendship. He was a werewolf, she was a Slayer. They were the different ones. They weren’t normal. But…

What was so great about normal?

End
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blake
Addicted Roswellian
Posts: 122
Joined: Mon Nov 26, 2001 3:00 pm
Location: In Wonderland

Post by blake »

Little Chosen One

If you looked up normal in the dictionary, there would be a picture of Liz Parker next to the definition. She considered herself the epitome of normal. The proverbial small town girl. She was pretty, she was just slightly under average height, her weight was proportionate to her body type, she had good friends, she was a good daughter, she did well in school, and she was considered Roswell’s sweetheart.

She hated being normal.

Liz wanted something to happen. She wanted a little excitement. She didn’t want to be stuck in a small town for the rest of her life as nothing but a waitress in an alien tourist trap.

Her father had big plans for her; he talked constantly about Harvard and molecular biology. But Liz knew better. It was true that she had the highest GPA at West Roswell High, and it was true that she did more volunteer work at the Desert Inn retirement community than any other person in the town, but they didn’t have the money to send her to an Ivy League school.

It was just a few months after her sixteenth birthday when things started seeming not so normal after all.

When Liz dreamed, it was ordinarily about day to day things, like working in the Crashdown or being late for school. And then there were the ones that made her blush, and the ones that made her cry, and the ones that left her feeling content when she woke in the morning.

But tonight, she dreamed of blood.

Liz woke up gasping, her head filled with grotesque images of death. She had seen a battlefield, with men lying slain around her feet. She had seen blood-drenched blond hair surrounding a contorted face with a hideous red smile.

And then she had dreamed of a ball room full of people dressed in silks and satin, all wearing masks. The weight of the golden cross at her breast made it hard for her to breath. The clock struck midnight, and half of the guests stripped off their masks, revealing even more grisly ones in their place as they descended upon their unknowing dance partners. The feel of wood slick in her hand was there for an instant before she was pulled back by strong arms and detained. Panic pervaded her being as she could not break free, and she met ice blue eyes filled with promises of death.

She was bleeding. The prison walls were gray and cold, and she was dying. The knife was hard to pull out, it had lodged itself in her sternum at an angle, but she used all of her strength to remove it and held it at the ready. Her attackers surrounded her, jeering and cracking knuckles. The guards turned their heads. And her dark heart blood flowed free.

Liz awoke with a gasp, dread paralyzing her in her bed. What had that been? What kind of dreams were those? She had dreamed of her own death. She had dreamed three different deaths, each more unpleasant than the last. What had she eaten last night?

“Liz!” her mother called. Liz shot out of bed, crouching instinctively into a fighting position. After a moment, she straightened, a bit frightened at her response, and opened her bedroom door. Her mom was standing there in her nightshirt and robe. “Breakfast will be ready in half and hour,” Nancy said, “Hurry up and get dressed.”

Liz nodded and shut her door. “Morning to you too Mom,” she muttered as she headed for the bathroom. The shower water was warm, and she let it flow over her, putting her disturbing dreams to the back of her mind. When she had finished preparing for school, she felt almost normal again.

There were waffles on the table, with maple syrup and whipped butter. She smiled and set her backpack by the kitchen entryway and sat next to her mother at the small table. Nancy poured her a glass of milk, kissed her daughter on the forehead, and then settled back down to sip at her coffee and listen to the news.

A prison riot in Los Angeles leaves fifty injured, two dead, and one inmate in critical condition.

“Isn’t that horrible,” Nancy commented.

Liz looked up from her waffles to become fixated on the screen. There was a girl, not much older than Liz herself, being wheeled on a gurney to a waiting ambulance. The reporter at the scene turned back to the camera.

A knife punctured through her heart at an unnatural angle and became embedded in the inmate’s sternum. The knife was recovered, impaling one of the deceased straight through the heart and out the other side on a work-out bench in the yard.

Liz stopped listening as the reporter continued to list off the horrendous things that had occurred that morning in the prison. She touched her own heart, remembering her dream, and felt like she was going to throw up.

“Liz, sweetie, are you all right?”

She looked at her mother and nodded, even though she felt pale and clammy. “I’m just…I’m not that hungry,” she said, pushing her plate away.

Nancy pursed her lips and took Liz’s plate, bringing it to the sink, which was still full of dishes from last night’s dinner. She emptied the uneaten waffles into the garbage, rinsed off the plate and started loading everything into the dishwasher. Liz rose, feeling guilty, and walked over to her. “Mom-“

“Ow!” Nancy shrieked, a well of blood coating one finger, “Liz, watch out!” But her daughter had already caught the offending object. “Ohmigod, Liz are you all right? Are you cut?” Nancy demanded, reaching out for her baby girl’s hand.

Dazed, Liz held out the steak knife, her hand wrapped firmly around the handle, and dropped it back in the sink. The reaction had been faster than she had been able to think. She had caught the knife before her brain comprehended that something had fallen. “I’m okay,” she informed her mother faintly.

A loud honking drifted through the kitchen window, and Liz shook her head. “I have to go now,” she said, and headed for the apartment door, picking up her bag on the way and leaving Nancy staring confusedly after her.

“Heya chica, what’s up?” Maria asked as her best friend climbed into the Jetta.

Liz mustered a smile. “I just had a weird night.” The blond shrugged and peeled out of the parking lot, heading toward school. The radio, as per usual, was nearly deafening, and Maria was singing along happily, bouncing in her seat when they stopped at a red light. The awareness started slowly, but the more she concentrated, the more she realized the tug that Maria’s voice produced. It was suggestive, like she was calling something to her.

Liz shook her head and reached over, turning the radio off. Maria’s singing stopped, and she looked questioningly at her friend. “I’m sorry,” Liz offered weakly, “I have a headache.”

Maria shrugged, “That’s cool, we’re almost to the torture chamber now anyways.” Liz smiled briefly and leaned her head against the cool glass of the window, praying for whatever had skewed her neat and ordered world to stop. Maybe she had been a little hasty in hating normal. Maybe, normal was actually a good thing.

It was stepping into school that she thought maybe she had overreacted. After a few deep, calming breaths, she felt some semblance of her old life return to her. School was her place, nothing could mess up this sanctuary for her. She stepped down the stairs and started toward her locker, and then her world spun on it’s axis.

“Watch it, Guerin!” Maria yelled angrily. Michael Guerin turned and smirked at them before continuing on his way. “What a freak,” Maria muttered before turning to Liz. “Are you okay?”

“Fine,” Liz replied absently, staring after Michael. It had felt like a big dog has just brushed against her. She traced his path with her eyes, noticing the almost visible trail her left behind him. Her hand came up of its own accord, caressing the aura of power he had left in his wake.

“Ooh! There’s Alex,” Maria exclaimed. Liz came abruptly back into herself, realizing she was acting weird and hoping no one had noticed. “I have to talk to him about the direction he’s taking the Whits in.” Green eyes regarded the blushing girl. “I’ll see you in second period.” Liz nodded in agreement.

‘There you are.”

The voice behind her made her stiffen, and then she turned and relaxed. Her quasi-boyfriend Kyle Valenti was normal. “Hi!” she said in a chipper voice.

Smiling, he made to wrap his arms around her, but then he stopped and stepped back, eyes widening. “Shit,” he breathed, and started backing away.

“Kyle?” she inquired, bewildered.

“I have to, um, go…do something,” he stammered, “Something important. I’ll see you later, okay, Liz?” And he was gone without waiting for her reply. Liz stood in the hallway, feeling lost, until the five-minute warning bell rang, and then she ran to geometry class.

The rest of the day she was on edge. Maria had gone back to normal, but Kyle was still a little jumpy around her, and being around Michael made her want to pet him. Not to mention, it felt like something was expanding inside of her. It felt, she realized, like she imagined power felt.

It exploded during biology class.

As did every single test tube and beaker they were using in lab.

Chaos reigned as students struggled to put out fires caused by the Bunsen burners, and mop up liquid spilled from the broken test tubes. Liz quietly slid off of her stool and headed toward the girl’s bathroom to collect herself.

She managed to perform admirably for the last few periods of school. She answered questions by rote, laughed at appropriate intervals, and chatted mindlessly with Maria about who Pam Troy was giving an STI to now. But inside she felt in control and out of control at the same time. Liz didn’t know what was happening to her.

By the time school got out, she was on the brink of screaming at everyone and everything, but she kept her cool. Perfect Liz Parker did not raise her voice. Perfect Liz Parker was as normal as normal could be.

Kyle’s arm around her shoulders steadied her a bit. He had lost that nervousness from before, and reverted back to the laid-back guy she was used to. They walked towards the parking lot, Maria blabbering on beside them, and then the police cruiser pulled up.

Sheriff Jim Valenti got out, complete with Stetson and mirrored sunglasses. “Ms. Parker, I’d like a word,” he said, opening the passenger side door for her. “Kyle, I expect you home in half an hour.”

“Yes sir,” Kyle replied, removing his arm from her shoulders. Liz looked at him, but he shrugged. “Don’t worry, Liz, I’m sure it’s nothing.”

She nodded and then turned to Maria, “I’ll see you later.” Her friend nodded and she and Kyle headed toward their respective vehicles. Liz meekly got into the SUV, her mind racing. “Are my parents okay?” she inquired as soon as he had started the car.

The Sheriff looked at her, “They’re fine Ms. Parker, this is about you.”

“Me?” she echoed, “What did I do?”

He glanced at her, but she couldn’t read his expression through his sunglasses. “Kyle called me, told me what happened earlier today.”

Kyle… She looked at him, confused. “What happened?”

He didn’t answer right away. “You hear about what happened in L.A.?”

“The prison riot?”

He nodded, and made a left at a stop sign. Liz watched the landscape go by. They were heading toward the homestead and not the Sheriff’s station. “You see the girl who got taken to the hospital?”

Liz’s hand involuntarily went to her throat. “Yes.”

“She died in the ER.”

“Sheriff,” Liz started, “It’s really very sad, but what does that have to do with me?”

“Her name was Faith, and she was a Slayer.” He turned to her as they stopped at a red light.

“Is that some sort of gang?” she asked, still not understanding his line of questioning.

“No, Liz,” he said as the light turned green, “It was her duty. And when a Slayer passes on, another is Chosen.” He slid her another glance. “Now you’ve been a Potential since you were eleven Liz, and from what Kyle told me, you’re the one who has been Chosen.”

Liz stared at him in disbelief. This was some elaborate practical joke. She decided to go along with it, just to see where he was headed. “Why me?”

“That’s hard to say. There are Potentials all around the world Liz, but when one is Chosen, it is more than likely that that is where the danger lies. For example, there’s a Hellmouth is Sunnydale, California. Buffy Summers, this generation’s original Slayer, lives there. When Buffy died, another was called, and when she died, Faith was called. Now that Faith is gone, you are the Chosen One.”

She narrowed her eyes. “You said ‘lives’ as in present tense.”

A grin tugged his lips, “You caught that, huh?” She nodded. “Buffy is an anomaly. Normally, a Slayer works only with her Watcher, that’s me, but Buffy has a group of friends who take it upon themselves to fight with her. One of them saved her life, but she had already died, thereby creating a paradox.”

She was staring now. His usual good ol’ boy tone had taken on a British accent. “Fight what?”

They were at the Valenti homestead. He parked and got out. She followed, hesitant, but fascinated in spite of herself. The Sheriff led her down into the basement, a place Kyle had explained was forbidden to anyone but he and his father. When she stepped off the last stair, she could see why.

Weapons lined the walls, there was a collection of books in one corner, and the entire floor was covered with a tumbling mat. There was various training equipment set at certain intervals along the mat. Liz stood in the middle of it all, and she started to think he wasn’t joking. Valenti was skimming through the books. “What is this place?”

“Our training ground,” he informed her, taking two books from the shelf, “As your Watcher, it is my duty to prepare you for your battles.”

“What battles?” she demanded. He didn’t reply, merely handed her the slim book. “The Slayer Handbook," she read aloud, “In every generation there is a Chosen One. She alone will stand against the vampires, the demons and the forces of darkness. She is the Slayer.” She looked up at the Sheriff and then opened it, reading the table of contents and then turning to the page denoted ‘Purpose’.

Into each generation a Slayer is born, one girl in all the world, a Chosen One, one born with the strength and skill to hunt the vampires, to stop the spread of their evil…

She snapped the book closed and stared at him. “You really are serious, aren’t you?”

“Deadly serious, Ms. Parker,” he assured her.

“But, but…” She looked around and waved the book at him. “Vampires?”

He handed her the second book, it was a thick, musty old thing with Vampyr written on it in gold lettering. “You are the Chosen One. It is your destiny.”

End
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