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Never Cry Werewolf

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by Heather Davis




  Heather Davis

  Never Cry Werewolf

  For my father, John-Carl, who taught me to believe,

  and for my mother, Jude, who taught me to howl

  Contents

  One

  Moonlight has special powers. Even in Beverly Hills, where everything…

  Two

  The last weeks of school went by, the senior prom…

  Three

  Come back!” Guitar Lady shrieked, running after Austin. “You come…

  Four

  The sight of Camp Crescent brought camp life flooding back…

  Five

  Claaaannnnnggg! Someone’s alarm clock really needed to die. I sat…

  Six

  Shelby, you missed all the fun!” squealed Jenna, sliding into…

  Seven

  That night, sparks from Camp Crescent’s bonfire flew up toward…

  Eight

  The next morning the girls’ group session focused on just…

  Nine

  As if the square dancing the night before had been…

  Ten

  The next morning I was finishing up another weedy flower…

  Eleven

  Take the raffia and simply twist it into bird wings…

  Twelve

  When I got to girls’ group the next morning, most…

  Thirteen

  Don’t fret. We’ll get you back through the fence. Somehow.”

  Fourteen

  I had only walked up the hill a little ways…

  Fifteen

  Shelby?”

  Sixteen

  Move it, move it, M-OOO-VE IT!” Sergeant Scabwell, his face…

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  ONE

  Moonlight has special powers. Even in Beverly Hills, where everything sparkles whether it’s real or fake, there’s something magic about that big full moon. It can make you act crazy, take a risk you’d never consider in the daylight, or even fall completely head over heels. Moonlight can totally change your life. And it all starts so simply.

  You. Him. The moon. You’re toast.

  Take a moonlit night last April, for example. The garden practically glowed with moon magic. I felt it all around me, closing in.

  The boy of the moment was Josh Tilton, the senior from my fourth-period art class, looking oh-so-delicious in Levi’s and a gray T. Fully under the moon’s spell himself, Josh paused by one of our prize rosebushes and plucked a perfect white bud. “For you, Shelby,” he said, his voice barely above a whisper.

  It was way more romantic than him sharing his popcorn with me at the Cineplex earlier that night. In fact, it was, like, the most perfect moment ever, so I didn’t tell him my stepmother was going to freak when she noticed the bloom clipped. Instead, I sniffed the rose while I watched Josh’s blue eyes shimmering in the moonlight. The swoony feeling in my stomach intensified. Pure magic.

  “So,” he whispered, “do you want to go to the prom?”

  Um, you’re super cute—Duh! I sucked in a breath and said, “That would be so—”

  Suddenly, the sprinklers whooshed on.

  “Crap!” I shrieked. Like a dork, I stood there blindly trying to bat away the water until Josh pulled me and my face out of the tick-tick-tick of the spray, and we took cover under the orange tree that separated the garden from the lawn.

  Cold water from my hair dripped down my back, but I was so embarrassed by my sprinkler dance, I pretended not to mind. “Well, that was refreshing,” I said with a forced giggle. My heart hammered in my chest, but I didn’t know if it was from the humiliation or from the nearness of Josh.

  “Your gardener has perfect timing,” he said, brushing his thumb against my cheek, wiping away water. Little drops sparkled on his eyelashes as he gazed down at my lips. Oh, man. He wanted to kiss me. “So, do you wanna?”

  I knew he was talking about the prom, but I was focused on his lips. “Duh. I mean, yeah,” I mumbled.

  And then he did it. He leaned in for a kiss. A kiss I’d been praying for ever since the first day of spring. A kiss I knew was going to be the most romantic ever…

  “Can’t you take a hint?” My stepmother’s voice sawed through the magical moonlight. “Or do I need to get the hose?”

  Lights blazed to life all around us, causing Josh to jump back a good foot. And my stepmother, Priscilla, who my dad called Honey Bun, marched toward us across the soaking lawn. She didn’t seem to care that the water would wreck her suede stilettos.

  “Step away from the boy!” she said.

  “You’ve got to be kidding,” I fired back. “I’m helping Josh with his posters for the charity car wash.”

  “In the dark?” Priscilla’s frown deepened.

  “Well, we’re not making the posters now, obviously,” I said.

  Josh stepped toward her. “Let me explain,” he began.

  Priscilla smiled thinly at Josh. “That’s not necessary. I see exactly what’s going on here. Romeo, you can hit the road. And Shelby, you’re coming with me.”

  In sixty seconds flat, Priscilla had me up to the house and sweating under a crystal chandelier that now reminded me of a naked lightbulb in a police station. In the too-tight black dress she’d worn out to dinner with my dad, Priscilla circled the dining room table like a seasoned interrogator. “Your father will be very disappointed,” she began. “This is a clear violation of the house rules.”

  I raised my head, listening. Yep. Dad’s uneven snores floated down from the master suite upstairs. My guess was that Priscilla had volunteered for guard duty. After all, she’d had her eye on me since the moment she married Dad last year. And the more she watched, the more I tried to give her something to watch.

  “This is the final straw,” she said, pointing at me with one of her daggerlike red fingernails. “Your father distinctly told you no dating. Period. A justifiable rule after the latest incident with that Sawyer boy.”

  Yes. The latest incident. Wes Sawyer. She didn’t need to remind me. Dad’s two-hour lecture on trusting the wrong people had been enough. And, seriously, how was I to know the Porsche belonged to Wes’s vacationing neighbor? Wes had picked me up to help him study for his biology final because he was on the verge of failing the class. But apparently that didn’t count for anything after our stop to get snacks at the In-N-Out Burger stand. The cops hadn’t liked the steamed-up windows of the Porsche. Neither had Dad.

  I leaned back in the dining room chair and gave Priscilla my best bring-it-on look. “Yeah. Thanks for that. Wes loves that military academy. Apparently, he’s up for honor cadet this month.”

  Priscilla’s heavily made-up eyes narrowed. “Very funny, but I doubt you’ll ever go joyriding again.”

  “It’s too early to tell.” I gave her my best evil eye—but she, being a complete pro, returned one twice as ugly. The evil-eye contest only ended when we both noticed my father, in his bathrobe and slippers, yawning in the doorway.

  “What’s going on?” he asked. “Shelby, are you just getting in? What time is it?”

  “It’s twelve thirty,” Priscilla answered quickly.

  “You’re an hour late?” Dad scratched at his hair, which stuck up at all angles like a crazy scientist’s hair should. Typically, Dad never remembered the ordinary things—like brushing his hair, buying milk, gassing up the car, or feeding goldfish. But, since his big chemical discovery, we could pay people to do those chores on a daily basis. Well, except for the hair brushing.

  “Hey, Dad,” I said, mentally preparing my defense. “Technically, I’ve been home for an hour. I was out in the garden, but I was home.”

  Pri
scilla shook her head. “With a boy.”

  “You see, Dad—”

  “In the moonlight,” she added, throwing him a knowing look.

  Dad sighed loud and long. “Shelby, we’ve had this talk.”

  I held up a hand. “Before you go there, he’s nothing like Wes. Josh is responsible, I swear. And he really needed my help tonight.”

  “Shelby, you don’t have to save the world at the expense of yourself,” said Dad. “Your heart is in the right place, but sometimes your first impressions about these boys aren’t reliable.” He pulled a chair out from the dining room table and sat down across from me.

  “What are you talking about? I have excellent people instincts.” I gestured toward Priscilla with my head to say hello-didn’t-I-warn-you-about-her, but Dad ignored me.

  “You can’t keep jumping in with both feet and forget to consider the consequences. You have to be responsible.” He was giving me his scientist face. The one that always makes me feel like some kind of lab rat. “You were supposed to be working on weighing the pros and cons of your choices.”

  “I did, Dad. Josh needed some help making the posters for the charity car wash next weekend. We’re going to raise money for an animal shelter.”

  Dad furrowed his brows at me. “And did you make the posters?”

  “Earlier, yeah. I didn’t think it was a big deal.”

  “So this wasn’t like the time you helped that boy Sam with his Mark Twain paper?”

  I shook my head. “Dad, seriously. Not Mark Twain. Jane Austen.”

  Dad sighed. “What I mean is, you weren’t at Josh’s house unsupervised? His parents were home?”

  “Uh…well—”

  Priscilla shook her head. “Let’s get to the real issue. You lied, Shelby. You told us you were making posters with your friends and then you were going to the movies with Lauren.”

  “She was there. It was a group of us, Dad. And besides, I didn’t even get to tell you the best part—Josh wants me to go to the prom with him. Josh Tilton! He’s like the smartest boy in school. Going to Harvard or something, I swear.”

  “Shelby,” Dad said, punctuating it with a long sigh and a glance toward Honey Bun. “You’re not going to the prom. I’m afraid I can’t allow it. Not after tonight’s shenanigans.”

  “Shenanigans? Making posters for homeless dogs is not shenanigans.”

  Dad gave me a doubtful look.

  “It’s not like the other times, okay? Please don’t take the prom away from me. I found this great dress at Fred Segal. It’d be so perfect.” I pictured me in the dress. Petal pink and floor length, it totally camouflaged my storklike legs and made my chest seem fuller, which was huge for me. When you’re built like a stick figure, a dress that good isn’t easy to find.

  “Shelby, you’re only a sophomore. There will be other proms.” Priscilla shrugged. “And while we’re on the subject of clothing, that outfit isn’t appropriate at your age.”

  My mouth dropped open. I was wearing a cami with a lace shrug and a mini. It was so not slutty compared to Priscilla’s wardrobe. I mean, if I’d wanted to go all hoochie, I would have borrowed her low-cut wrap dress like I did the time I sneaked into that club on Sunset.

  As it was, I dressed like my friends at school. We weren’t super smart or anything. We definitely weren’t drama or band kids. Some of us played on the soccer team, but mostly we shopped and we dated. Well, mostly my friends shopped and I dated. We were on the edge of popularity, the edge that money always provides. On that particular edge you have to be fashion conscious, but I wasn’t going to turn into a Beverly Hills stereotype. The fact that I was still a brunette totally proved that. But I guess Priscilla thought I should dress like a nun or something.

  Priscilla hopped all over my stunned silence. “You ought to be presenting yourself as a lady and—”

  “Why don’t you sit down, Honey Bun,” Dad said, finally shutting Priscilla up.

  She reluctantly sank into one of the fancy upholstered chairs.

  “Shelby,” Dad said, “we trusted you to be where you said you were going to be, and with who you said you were going to be with. Trust is a fragile thing.”

  “May I say something?” Priscilla gritted her bleached teeth, which against the bloodred color of her lipstick made her look like a vampire ready to feed. “This whole situation is very disappointing. I can’t believe you’re manipulating your father like this, Shelby.”

  Manipulating? That was interesting coming from her. Priscilla was the one who’d thrown herself at Dad at the plastic surgeons’ convention where he was unveiling his miracle drug and then manipulated our whole lives.

  My dad’s really a simple guy, so maybe he was too dazzled by Priscilla’s boob job and her flashy clothes to see what she really was. Since my mom had died three years ago, Dad had been seriously lacking in the dating department. He was ripe for the gold digging and Priscilla knew it.

  Less than four months after they had met, just as stock in Dad’s company split, making him the first multimillionaire in our Milwaukee neighborhood, Priscilla had convinced him to marry her in a tacky, huge wedding fit for the E! channel. But her best work was talking Dad into moving us away from my life and friends to this fortress in Beverly Hills. When I asked why we had to leave, Dad told me it was because we needed a fresh start. But I always thought it was because Priscilla would be closer to her plastic surgeon.

  “It’s late,” Dad said, scratching at his crazy hair again. “You should get to bed, Shelby. We all should.”

  I shrugged.

  “Yes. Let’s continue this discussion in the morning. Remember, dear, we have some options,” Priscilla said, giving Dad a knowing glance. Before I could ask what that was all about, she whisked him up the staircase to bed.

  I was left wondering what she meant by options. Unfortunately, it wouldn’t be long before I found out.

  I slept terribly that night. Peeking through my window, the face of the full moon kept me awake like a giant lighted clock dial. Over and over, I thought about what Priscilla must be planning. I mean, they’d already taken the prom away. What else could they do?

  It wasn’t like I was a bad kid. Sure, I stayed out late sometimes, but that was only because I couldn’t stand being around Priscilla, especially when she was draping herself all over Dad. And they didn’t need to keep harping at me about hanging out with boys. I got good grades, so it wasn’t my fault that guys from school wanted help and that sometimes meant I got distracted and lost track of time. I didn’t think there was anything wrong with helping someone out, especially a cute guy.

  For the record, I was trying to be more responsible lately. I now knew that sneaking out of the house to help with a last-minute history project could turn into joyriding. I’d figured out that tutoring a running back from the football team sometimes led to getting caught making out in the reference section of the library. I totally got it. And now that I was trying to follow the rules, a simple walk in the moonlight had ruined everything.

  And what about Josh Tilton? I doubted he was in any kind of trouble. I was the one taking the fall for a boy who dared to push the rules and make me break my curfew. Life was so unfair.

  Priscilla and Dad were on the stone patio eating breakfast when I finally went downstairs the next morning. Against the velvet green of the lawn behind them, they looked like a picture-perfect couple, right down to their fancy tennis clothes. I hadn’t even brushed my hair.

  I padded up to the table and plunked down into one of the white iron chairs.

  “There’s my sleepyhead,” Dad said.

  I gave him a half smile. He hadn’t called me “sleepyhead” in a long time.

  “Here you go,” he said, handing me a glass of the fresh-squeezed orange juice he’d poured from the crystal pitcher on the table.

  Priscilla lowered her fashion magazine and gave me a perfunctory smile. “Good morning, Shelby.”

  “Hi.” I took a swig of the juice and reached for a piece o
f toast.

  Dad passed the strawberry jam without me even asking. I slathered my toast with it, and then paused. It was too quiet. And everyone was being too nice. It was weird.

  “Okay. What’s going on?” I said, setting down my toast and knife.

  Dad cleared his throat. “Honey Bun and I feel like you need a break.”

  “Summer’s almost here, Dad. I’ll get a two-month break.”

  “No,” Priscilla said, tucking a strand of her black hair behind an ear. “What your father means is a break from us.”

  “I will be having a break. My friends and I were talking about a trip to Cabo.”

  “No.” Priscilla placed a hand on one of my father’s. “I’m afraid not. Mike?”

  “Ah…we’ve been talking it over,” Dad said, “and we feel that perhaps some time away with counseling and fresh air would be ideal.”

  My heart started to pound. “Counseling?”

  Dad nodded. “Some time to spend working on yourself.”

  “Yes,” said Priscilla in a silky tone. “At a top-notch teen program at an exclusive facility.”

  Oh, crap. She meant brat camp. I remembered the stories from school about the kids who were sent away to hike in the mountains for the summer at one of those “top-notch” programs. They came back all brainwashed, like totally different people. I’m sure that was just what Priscilla was hoping.

  While I stewed, Priscilla calmly reached into her Coach tote and pulled out a stack of slick brochures. She fanned them out on the table in front of my father and me. “My favorite of these is Red Canyon Ranch, a personal skill-building institute in the Utah desert.”

  “Wait. Dad, you actually think I should go to a brat camp?” I couldn’t keep the anger from my voice. No one had ever called me a brat. Certainly not my dad, who, up until Priscilla had hypnotized him, had been semi-reasonable.

 

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