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Raised by Wolves Chapter 25 28%
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Chapter 25

CHAPTER 25

BACK AT SCHOOL on Monday, I can’t stop thinking about that missing girl. Julissa. When did she disappear? And why?

Her mother seems to think that sixteen years is old enough to leave. If you ask me, she’s probably right. Hell, a wolf might leave its pack when it’s two.

But the chief seems pretty worried. Like maybe something bad happened to her. I wonder if Julissa’s okay, and if she knows people are wanting her back home. Maybe she thinks that no one’s even noticed she’s gone.

Did anyone notice when Holo and I disappeared? I don’t know. All I know is that it’s a lonely thing to wonder.

I must’ve had a weird look on my face, because suddenly Waylon plops down next to me in the cafeteria and says, “Look, I know you prefer growling to talking, but you’ve obviously got something on your mind.” He leans closer and says confidentially, “I have to warn you, I don’t speak Wolf. But I get straight As in English and solid Bs in Spanish.”

I’m so surprised that he snuck up on me that I just stare at him. How could I let my guard down like that? But his body language says friend, not foe . Okay, fine, good—but what am I supposed to say back? The woods taught me a lot of things, but the art of conversation wasn’t one of them.

“Hi,” Waylon says, holding out his hand for me to shake. “ Again. Do you remember me this time?”

Just play along , I think. Try to act like a normal teenager.

Whatever that is.

I cock my head to the side and look thoughtful. It’d be too much to take his hand. “I’m not sure,” I say, squinting at him. “You seem vaguely familiar.”

His grin’s brighter than electric light. “Well, I’m part of your criminal past. So I can understand why you’d want to forget,” he says. “I’m Waylon Eugene Meloy. Nice to meet you. Again. ”

“I’m Kai,” I say. “Just Kai.”

“Trust me, I remember your name,” Waylon Eugene Meloy says. He scooches closer to me. “So, what’s on your mind? Are you still trying to figure out what it was you just ate? Cafeteria food is never fantastic, but today’s lunch was especially… mysterious .”

“‘Mysterious’ is a nice way to put it. I’ve had slugs that tasted better than that.”

“You’ve had what ?” Waylon says.

“Never mind,” I say quickly. It’s time to change the subject. And maybe it’s time to be honest, too. “I was thinking about a girl named Julissa,” I admit. “Do you know her?”

“Yeah, she’s in my math class.”

“Have you seen her at school lately?”

Waylon ponders this for a second. “No.”

“Her mother doesn’t know where she is. And she doesn’t seem to care, either.”

“I’m jealous,” Waylon says. “If only my mom didn’t care.”

“I don’t know a lot about parents,” I admit, “but isn’t caring a main part of their job?”

Waylon looks intently at me. He seems like he’s going to say something. Ask something. But then he gives his head a little shake and says, “Julissa. Right. You should talk to her friends. See if she’s been in touch with them. Look, they’re right over there.”

I turn to where he’s pointing. There’s a corner table of girls looking at something on a phone and giggling. They have shiny ponytails and painted lips and they’re clustered tightly together. A pack .

“Do I just go over there and ask them?”

“Yeah,” Waylon says. “Girls love being approached by people they don’t know.”

Girls are different than wolves then, I guess.

And so I walk over and I take a deep breath, and I ask them if they’ve seen Julissa lately. They don’t seem to hear me, so I ask it again.

One by one, they lift their heads. And they just stare. They don’t say a single word. They look at me like I’m a foreign species. An invader.

“Julissa?” I repeat. “Do you know where she is?”

My answer is just dead-eyed silence.

I walk back to Waylon. “That didn’t work,” I tell him.

He laughs. “Of course it didn’t!”

“Then why did you tell me to do it?” I cry.

He brushes his bangs away from his face. “Maybe I was getting back at you for not remembering me. Or maybe I thought you should learn something important about high school, which is that a lot of people in it are assholes.”

“The Hardys already taught me that, thanks,” I say.

“Gotta love those guys,” Waylon says. “They’re champion assholes. They take their duties very seriously.” He stands up; the bell’s about to ring. “I do have a real idea, though,” he adds. “About Julissa.”

“I don’t believe you.”

“I’m telling the truth this time. I think we can find her.”

“Where?”

“Meet me in the parking lot after school,” he says.

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