Moon Child
Soon.
I continued stroking his hair. He seemed to be getting hotter by the second. He also shifted toward my touch, moving toward me imperceptibly, making a small, mewing sound.
The rain picked up, drumming now on the window.
My heart was racing, and for me that’s saying something. I continued standing by his side, knowing that this was my one chance to turn away. To not do this thing. I had been advised that he had fulfilled his life’s mission, and that it was time for him to move on. I had been advised by a very powerful entity that my son was meant to die. That it had been ordained so, or some such bullshit.
Well, fuck that.
I was his mother. I carried him in me for nine months, I stayed up with him countless nights, bathed him, fed him and worried about him daily. I loved him so much that it hurt. I loved him so much that I would kill for him. I loved him so much that….
I would give my life, my soul, my eternity for him.
I was his mother, and I was ordaining – declaring, dammit – that he would live. And lord help anyone who tried to stop me.
I knew I could be damning him forever. I knew this, understood this, but I also knew there was a glimmer of hope. The medallion. Reputed to reverse vampirism. I had always figured I would seek its answers for myself.
But not anymore.
Now I would seek its answers for him. At all costs. I would devote my life to finding a way to turn him mortal again, to give him back his normal life.
And in the meantime, how would I explain to him what I had done to him? I didn’t know, but I would think of something.
Later.
For now, though, time was wasting. My son was growing dangerously hot. I reached down and touched his narrow shoulder.
"Anthony," I whispered, leaning down, speaking directly into his ear. "Wake up, baby. Mommy’s here…and everything’s going to be okay."
Chapter Five
It took a few more tries to awaken him, but I finally succeeded.
He emerged slowly from wherever he’d been. I suspected that place was the blackest of depths. Then again, perhaps not. Perhaps he’d been in heaven. Perhaps he’d been playing on streets paved with gold. Or, more likely, playing Xbox with Jesus.
Only to return here, with me, sick as hell in a hospital and ready to die. Perhaps had I let him be, he wouldn’t have suffered. Perhaps he would have slipped out of this world and into the next with ease and little pain.
Perhaps.
He awakened slowly. As he did, a part of me screamed to let him sleep. If a nurse came in now, she would have been mortified.
What am I doing?
"Mommy?" He squirmed under my arm.
"Hi, baby."
"What’s happening, Mommy?"
I’m saving your life, I thought. I’m saving it the only way I know how.
"How would you like to feel a little better, baby?" I whispered, and it was all I could do to keep my voice steady, to keep it from cracking with fear and uncertainty.
Anthony turned his sweating face toward me; his eyes focused on me for the first time. As they did so, I was surprised by their strength and ferocity. Despite the darkness, he seemed to look deeply into me.
It was hard to imagine that this strong-looking boy was dying, but the black halo hadn’t retreated; indeed, it was thicker than ever, and I saw his impending death as surely as I was seeing him now.
"They’re waiting for me, Mommy."
I started shaking my head. "No, don’t say that."
"It’s okay, Mommy. I’ll always be with you. Forever and ever."
"No, baby, please don’t say that."
"I’m supposed to go soon, Mommy. They’re waiting for me."
I was still shaking my head, crying, whimpering, rocking, holding him tightly. Too tightly. "Stop talking like that, baby. We’re going to get you better. I have some medicine for you."
His eyes narrowed, studying me in the darkness. He then turned his head and looked to the right. I looked, too, and saw something I wasn’t prepared to see. The light energy near the window seemed somehow brighter, more frenetic, more alive. Something was there, something had materialized, but I couldn’t see what. At least, not clearly. Whatever it was, it wasn’t a human spirit, that much I knew. It was somehow brighter and it radiated a warmth that I could feel from across the room.
"He wants me to tell you something, Mommy."
I was crying now. I couldn’t stop my emotions. I wanted to be strong for my son, but I couldn’t. I just couldn’t. This was too much for me.
"Who, honey?"
"The man in the light."
I tried to speak but I couldn’t. Sobs burst from my throat. Finally, I said, "What…what does he want to say?"
But I knew what he was going to say, didn’t I? That my son was only here on earth for a brief time. That he was meant to pass on at a young age, a death that was meant to help others grow. That he was here to fulfill some cosmic karma bullshit. I didn’t want to hear it. What mother wanted to hear that?
My son was quiet for a moment, cocking his head slightly, listening. Then he smiled broadly. "He says that he loves you, Mommy. That he has loved you from the beginning of time, and will always love you. Forever and ever." He paused, smiling at me serenely, and now I saw now a golden light around his face. The light shone through even the blanketing darkness. My son looked beautiful, angelic. He cocked his head again, and listened some more. "He wants me to be strong for you." My son’s face turned somber, and now he was nodding…a very sad and solemn nod. "He says you are making the best choice you can. He wants you not to be so hard on yourself."
"I don’t," I gasped, my words strangled, "I don’t understand what’s happening."
My son reached out, took my hand. I could barely see him through the blur of tears. He said, "Mommy, sometimes it’s okay not to understand."
The words came from my little boy, but they were not his own. They were from someone older and wiser, and I felt again that I was speaking directly to his soul.
"But I don’t want to lose you, baby. I can’t bear the thought. I couldn’t live. I wouldn’t know how to live. But I can help you. I know how to help you. You can stay here with me. Is that what you want, honey?"
He squeezed my hand, and now he stroked my hair gently, his little fingers running through my matted locks before they gently turned my face toward him. "Of course, Mommy."
I sensed that he was making a great sacrifice. I sensed that he was postponing heaven to be here with me now.
"He’s telling me there are many paths a life can take, Mommy. There are many alternate routes to the main road – " Hearing my little boy say alternate was just surreal – "We are going to head down an alternate route, a longer route. But we’ll still get there, Mommy, eventually."