Native Dawn Series Book 22
After Dawn
What Came Next
Prologue
Twenty-five years is a long time when measured in terms of a human life span. Twenty-five years to a vampire or a wolf is nothing but a drop in a very deep well. Time passed and kept passing. It moved inexorably forward with each swing of the pendulum and the tick of the clock. The town changed with the times. New families set down roots while old ones pulled up stakes and moved on. New houses were built to take the place of outdated homesteads that had stood for generations long since forgotten.
The city much like the town had changed. People hustled and bustled about their daily routines thinking nothing much about the changes going on around them. Such is the way of it for human beings with their limited life spans and the busyness that comes with the work of desperately trying to achieve some measure of immortality in the few short years that are the sum of their lives. Buildings of brick and mortar fell to dust and ruin only to be replaced by glimmering towers of steel and glass stretching high up into the sky. Highways and interstates sprung up and older, slower roadways stretched into the distance traveling to places no one in their haste cared to visit anymore.
Life changed. Technology blazed amazing trails forward always reaching ahead for the future. Pen and paper were novelties of a forgotten era. Everything existed in the surreal world of cyberspace. Money was no longer tangible in coin and dollar. Rather, while real and as important as ever, currency was more of a theory, a concept of cost, receipt for payment, and exchange for services rendered. Commerce took place in the netherworld of the Internet. Anything a person wanted, no matter how trivial or critical it seemed, could arrive neatly packaged in recyclable boxes on a doorstep within hours of a simple point and click selection.
Cars were safer. Travel faster. Houses bigger. Families smaller. Yet, the population flourished in greater numbers than it ever had before. Medical science made amazing advances. There seemed to be nothing that couldnât be cured by swallowing an innocuous little pill. People lived longer and better lives. Aging and the ailments that came along with it had become a thing of the past. The world was a cleaner, brighter, and safer place. Regrettably, it was also a busier and noisier, and much, much smaller as a consequence.
There were people who remembered the things the rest of the world had seemed to forget in its haste to push forward into the future. Constantly battered, uprooted by the surge, and forced upstream by the relentless flow, the ones who lived through the past and remembered the time before were like rocks in a rushing current.
The compound was full of life and activity. Peace had made the brothers reluctant to recall the times of strife and pain and of blood. They trained to fight an enemy nobody was certain still existed. Black leather gear that hadnât been worn in decades hung in distant corners of closets growing dusty with the passing of time and soft with age. Nobody wanted to forget the price that was paid for the peace they so enjoyed. But, nobody necessarily wanted to remember it either.
The world was filled with understanding, except for the things it could not accept. Vampires remained hidden from the light of day as they always had, preferring the shadows to the sun. Their secrets were more difficult to protect and the past had a way of finding them no matter how hard they tried to erase it. In this world of progress they were as they had always been, the silent watchers and guardians of the dark.
The clandestine world of the wolf was much as it had always been. Brighter than their dark cousins they walked a dangerous precipice with one foot in the land of the living and one in the mystic universe of the unseen.
Change wasnât easy for the old ones. Progress was an enticement to the young that had grown up on nothing but stories from a time long since lived. The young were the essence of the current pressing against the solid rock of tradition, trying always to force the rocks upstream.
Chapter 1
Marianne eased a sigh through her pursed lips and tried like hell not to fidget on the stool. Her hair fell in a waterfall of black velvet to pile up on the floor at her feet. Loose tendrils of hair efficiently snipped free by the scissors in Evanâs careful grip tickled the nape of her neck. She rested her palms on her knees and breathed in and out, trying not to think about what was coming with the dawn. She glanced up to meet his guarded expression in the mirror. He smiled at her and bowed his head down to resume his work. Although he tried very hard to hide it from her notice, concern for her flickered in his brown eyes.
The pack had grown substantially from its first few dozen members that had traveled north from the Nevada desert to initially call this place home. In the beginning changes were rapid and not without their share of trials and tribulations. Eloiseâs pack had joined theirs, and then Torrâs ragtag pack, and afterwards a myriad trickle of strangers. Lost Children who had finally found their way home.