登陆注册
10782200000001

第1章

Foreighteen years Ween Gray has been the model daughter, which in her family means all As, zero boyfriends, and early acceptance into a pre-med program. But as high school graduation nears, so does an uncomfortable realization. Pleasing her parents once overlapped with pleasing herself, but now… not so much. Wren needs to honor her own desires, but how can she if she doesn't even know what they are?

Charlie Parker, on the other hand, knows exactly what he wants. A gentle boy with a troubled past, Charlie has loved Wren since the day he first saw her. But a girl like Wren would never fall for a guy like Charlie—at least not the sort of guy Charlie believes himself to be.

And yet certain things are written in the stars. In the summer after high school, Wren's and Charlie's souls will collide. But souls are complicated, as are the bodies that house them…

With all the sweetness—and steaminess—of first romance, this gorgeous novel, from one of young adult literature's most distinctive voices, explores that time between high school and college when life seems to be just beginning, and everything—including true love—is possible.

For Jekome and Ginger

itwas all ending: high school.

It was all beginning: everything that came next.

This was true for every senior at Atlanta's Southview High School, not just Wren. And every senior would be setting off on his or her own path, and every senior's path would be different, so there were no earth-shattering surprises there, either. Still, Wren's situation was unusual, or at least she suspected it was.

She didn't always trust her own opinions, however, probably because her parents were so invested in doing her thinking for her. "Of course you like grapefruit juice," her mom said to her just this morning, drawing back in dismay after Wren said she'd prefer coffee, please. "You've always liked grapefruit juice. It's your favorite. I got it especially for you, fresh-squeezed, as a treat for the last day of school."

Wren drank the juice, ashamed of herself for complaining. Except Wren hadn't actually complained, had she? She'd just said, "No thanks. I don't really like grapefruit juice." Because she didn't—did she?

Her dad stayed out of the grapefruit juice discussion, but he had plenty to say on other topics, such as her plans for the future. Particularly her plans for the future. Wren's body felt heavy, and she wished that her friend Tessa, who was giving Wren a ride to school, would keep driving and never turn back.

But that was a fantasy. Tessa couldn't solve Wren's problems for her. If Wren wanted to change her life, then she was the one who'd have to make it happen.

Tessa pulled into the seniors' parking lot and turned off the engine. She finger-combed her long blond hair, swiped a coat of shiny lip gloss over her lips, and grinned at her reflection in the visor mirror. She slapped the visor shut.

"You ready?" she said to Wren.

"Sure," Wren said. Her gut clenched. "No—wait."

Tessa stopped smiling. She'd been Wren's best friend since second grade, so she knew a bit about the ins and outs of Wren's home life. "What's up? Everything okay?"

"No, yeah, everything's fine," Wren said. "It's just… my mom made a special breakfast this morning. Bacon, eggs, and biscuits."

Tessa tilted her head.

"The biscuits were made from scratch. She used a heart-shaped cookie cutter."

"Ah," Tessa said.

"Oh, and grapefruit juice, because that's my favorite."

"What? You hate grapefruit juice."

"I know," Wren said, feeling a wash of relief.

Tessa searched Wren's expression. Occasionally, over the years, kids had teased Wren about what an "only" Wren was. Meaning an only child. Meaning that Wren, as an only child, seemed more sheltered than most kids. She was a people pleaser, a do-gooder, a worrier. She was too much of a watcher, not enough of a doer. Those were Wren's offenses.

Tessa had been to Wren's house, though. She knew Wren's mom and dad, so she knew that Wren's behavior was a product of more than being an only child.

"They think you're part of them," Tessa once said about Wren's parents. "Like a leg, or a spare arm. It's weird."

"I know," Wren said. "But they love me."

Tessa, who had two older brothers and lived with a rush-about mom, had muttered, "A little too much, if you ask me."

Now, sitting in the high school parking lot, Tessa said, "You haven't told them?"

Wren shook her head. Way back in January, she'd been admitted early decision to Emory, the prestigious university where her mom worked. Then, in March, she found out she'd been awarded a merit scholarship. Her parents were over the moon.

"You can come home every weekend," her mom exclaimed. "Or we can come to you. Weekdays, too, if you feel like a home-cooked meal. Whatever you want, sweetheart."

But a week ago, Wren withdrew her acceptance agreement. She didn't know where she'd found the courage, but it felt good. Forget that, it felt great. Only, she kind of hadn't shared the news with her parents yet—the part about Emory or the bit about what she planned to do instead.

"My stomach hurts," Wren told Tessa. She frowned, trying to figure out what other emotions she might be feeling. "I am excited, though."

"About finally being free?" Tessa said. "You should be excited. God, you deserve to be." A friend of Tessa's rapped on the hood of Tessa's car, and Tessa waved. Kids streamed past them, laughing and talking. "Go with that, okay?"

"Okay," Wren said, glad when her voice stayed steady. "Thanks, Tesseract. Although you do know that there's no such thing as a tesseract."

Tessa laughed at Wren's slightly mangled version of the quote, which was from Wren's favorite novel, A Wrinkle in Time. A tesseract was a four-dimensional cube, which, by definition, couldn't exist in the three-dimensional world. In the novel, a tesseract was used as a shortcut through time, which, by definition, also couldn't exist in the real world.

Wren liked impossible things, though. Wren thought that Tessa, who flitted through life like a hummingbird, was an impossible thing. Tessa came across as go-go-go and all toe-bouncing high energy, but underneath her party-girl exterior, she had a wise and loyal heart. She came as close to knowing the real Wren as anyone ever had.

"No such thing as me?" Tessa said, gesturing like a game-show hostess at the physical proof of her existence. She looked adorable in a pink cami and cutoffs. "I think you're mistaken. So, shall we go greet our adoring fans?"

Wren smiled. "Your adoring fans? Let's do it."

They joined the throng of kids strolling toward the building. The warm spring air tickled Wren's legs, bare beneath her white skirt, which grazed the tops of her knees. The pressure in her lungs loosened.

"Can you believe it?" said Delaney, a drama club friend who was off to New York in the fall. "Can you believe we're seriously done?!"

"Hells no," Tessa replied. "And yet here we are!"

Shaniqua Stewart bounded over and draped her arm over Wren's shoulders. "Hey, girl. You psyched about Emory?"

Wren smiled self-consciously. Shaniqua was one of her honors-track buddies. "Are you psyched about Princeton?" she shot back. "You're probably packed already, huh?"

Shaniqua laughed. To Tessa, she said, "And you. Don't go too crazy at Georgia—except, what am I saying? Of course you will."

Tessa blew her a kiss. At the end of August, Tessa would head to the University of Georgia with almost half their senior class.

"Tessa! Wren!" Owen Bussell shouted, making a megaphone out of his hands. Owen was the class valedictorian. On Saturday, at their graduation, he'd be giving a speech. "You're looking fine, ladies!"

"Right back atcha, O," Tessa called. "Don't bore us on Saturday!"

"I'll do my best," he said.

A group of girls spread the news about a party P.G. Barbee was hosting on Saturday night. "Y'all know P.G., right?" one of them said, and Tessa, with significant innuendo, replied, "Oh, we know P.G."

Wren rolled her eyes, because they didn't, really, and Wren had little interest in doing anything to change that. Right now Wren could see P.G. chatting up a freshman girl, who giggled at everything he said. The girl leaned against the wall of the main building, and P.G. stood in front of her, his forearms resting on either side of her like a cage.

P.G. was too slick for Wren's tastes, but he was Tessa's current crush, so it wasn't surprising when Tessa announced, "Hells yeah, we'll be there."

"Excellent," one of the party girls said. "It's going to be epic." She palmed Tessa's hand, and Tessa's feather earrings swayed.

While Tessa chatted with some of her cheerleader friends, Paige Johnson jogged over and said hi to Wren. Paige and Wren had been friends once, way back in elementary school, but they'd gone their own ways long ago. Paige gave Wren a bear hug and whispered, "I want to tell you something, but it might sound strange."

"What is it?" Wren said.

"It's just, I've always looked up to you," Paige said, pulling back and searching Wren's eyes. Her breath smelled like caramels. "Not in a stalker way. I just wanted to tell you that you've always been my role model, kind of."

"Your role model?" Wren said. "Why?"

Paige's eyes widened. "Um… you know. Because you have such a sense of purpose. You know yourself."

"I do?"

"You do, yes." And the moon tugs on the earth, and that's how tides are formed, her tone suggested. The earth circles the sun, and that's why we have night and day, and, yes, you know yourself. Are you playing with me?

Wren didn't understand. Paige was awkward but smart. In fifth grade, she and Wren had done an after-school activity together called Odyssey of the Mind, and for their final competition, they'd put on a skit. Something about pirates? Part of the skit had involved remote-controlled boats and cars, and one of the cars hit a tunnel, but Paige calmly repositioned it and tried again. Their team won first place. It was one of Wren's early tastes of how fun excelling could be.

"Oh," Wren said. "Um, thanks."

Paige pulled her long sleeves over her hands, nodding as she backed away. "Okay, well, I just wanted to tell you that. Anyway. Bye!"

Paige darted off, leaving Wren feeling like a phony. Once upon a time Wren might have been certain of herself, like maybe back in fifth grade, but now she went one way and then another when it came to what she wanted to do with her life. First she was going to go to Emory, then she decided not to go to Emory. She wanted to please her parents, but she was sick of pleasing her parents. She yearned to be her own person, not an extension of her mom and dad, and she longed to do something brave, something that mattered, something that helped others in an immediate and tangible way.

Her desire to escape her color-within-the-lines life was as strong as the pull of the moon, even if the lines themselves were muzzy. Was that what Paige saw as her sense of purpose?

She stood there, lost in her thoughts, until a boy from her AP biology class gave her a tentative half wave from across the parking lot, bringing her back to the here and now. A breeze batted at her skirt, flipping it high, and her cheeks grew hot as she clamped it down. Not only because the boy—his name was Charlie—had no doubt glimpsed more of Wren than either he or she expected, but because she realized that in her zoned-out state, she'd been randomly staring at him, possibly for quite a while.

Embarrassment coursed through her. Wren liked Charlie, but she didn't know him that well. He was in a couple of her honors classes. He had a lean, muscular frame, and Wren, on occasion, had caught herself enjoying the play of muscles beneath his shirt. His fingernails were often rimmed with oil, or maybe paint. He rarely talked, and some kids thought he was arrogant. But Wren had watched him interact with his small group of friends, and around them he seemed looser. More relaxed.

Once, Wren had spotted Charlie helping a freshman with his locker. The freshman was scrawny, one of those unfortunate boys who wouldn't hit his growth spurt for another year or two, if ever. He'd looked close to tears. Charlie hadn't made eye contact with the kid but had twisted the combination lock with deft, sure movements, banged the metal door, and nodded with satisfaction when it sprang open.

Now, yards away in the senior parking lot, Charlie dropped his hand. Now he was the self-conscious one.

She waved back at him and smiled, and relief rippled across his features. Immediately he smoothed his expression, but she'd seen, for a second, what he really felt. She had the strangest urge to go to him and say, No. Please. Sometimes the things we hide—aren't they the parts of us that matter most?

Tessa called out to her, and Wren blinked. She started walking, slowly at first, and then faster. She reached Tessa, who hip-bumped her.

"I saw you wave at Charlie," Tessa teased. "Were you two having a moment, nudge-nudge, wink-wink?"

"Yeah, right," Wren said.

"Sweet!" Tessa said. "Is that a yes?"

Tessa had suggested on several occasions that Charlie had a thing for Wren, and she wondered if maybe he did. Her heart beat a little faster.

But no, she was being stupid. Wren was pretty sure Charlie had a girlfriend, and plus… whatever. It was impossible, and not in the good sort of way.

"Let's talk about something more interesting," Wren said. "Don't you think you should go steal P.G. from that freshman—or save that freshman from P.G.?"

That did the trick. Tessa looked where Wren was indicating and scowled at P.G. and the freshman girl. Wren couldn't see P.G.'s face, just the back of his pale blue button-down. He leaned closer to the freshman—his cheek almost brushing hers—and said something that made her turn bright red.

"Really?" Tessa muttered.

The freshman squeaked out another giggle, and P.G. eased back. He turned and saw Tessa and Wren, and his face broke into a grin.

He strode toward them, owning the courtyard. Owning everything. Reeking of entitlement and cologne, which, thanks to his Facebook page, Wren knew was called Czar.

"Tessa Haviland," he said, stretching out her name. "You. Look. Hot."

"Why, thank you," Tessa said. She practically curtsied.

Wren snorted, and P.G. glanced at her. Whoops. He gave her a much quicker once-over than Tessa and nodded. "You look good, too. I approve."

"Oh," Wren said. "Then I guess I can die in peace?"

Tessa hip-bumped her. "Wren."

"And I'll leave you to it," Wren said, stepping back to let Tessa loop her arm through P.G.'s. They led the way toward the school, bantering easily, and Wren followed.

When they reached the set of double doors at the building's entrance, Wren paused to fish a Coke out of her backpack for Mr. Cameron, a math teacher who'd been stuck with foot-traffic control all semester. Mr. Cameron was a big guy, and he sweated profusely even when it was chilly out, so one day Wren offered him her drink. She'd planned on having it during her free period, but she could get another.

"Bless you, you are an angel, you have my permission to ditch your classes and go to the movies," Mr. Cameron had said, and a tradition had been born. Every morning, instead of skipping school, Wren tossed Mr. Cameron a Coke, and every morning, Mr. Cameron caught the can neatly and popped it open.

"Thanks," he said now. He took a swig. "I assume you'll swing by tomorrow and Friday? Keep your old buddy caffeinated?"

The underclassmen had to finish up the school week, but not the seniors. After today, the seniors wouldn't return until the graduation ceremony on Saturday.

"Ooh, sorry," Wren said, hating to disappoint him even though she knew he was teasing.

He clasped his free hand to his chest. "So this is it? This is how it ends?"

She winced. "Sorry!"

She was halfway through the doors when he called her name. She turned back.

"Hey," he said. "You're a great kid, Wren Gray. You're going to do great things with your life. Understood?"

There were so many people in the world. Some were jerks, but most were kind. Wren had to clear her throat before she could speak. "Understood."

Ahead of her in the crowded hallway, Tessa bounced from friend to friend. She truly was like a hummingbird, all bright flashes and quick movements. Wren moved to join her, then changed her mind and retreated, leaning against the glass-paned wall of the front office. She closed her eyes. She focused on breathing.

All kinds of big things waited for her right around the corner, all kinds of chances and risks and huge, crazy changes. She was supposed to let the thrill of it all sweep her away. But she was scared.

What happened with Charlie—what passed between them when their guards were down—that scared her, too. The idea of a person's hidden parts mattering most, when she was the one keeping a secret.

In AP English, she'd read a myth about the vastness of the universe. In it, an old woman told her grandson that the world rested on the back of a giant turtle. "It does? Well, what does the turtle rest on?" the grandson asked, and Wren had read faster, na?vely hoping she was about to be given the answer to life.

But no. The old woman laughed and said, "That's the best part. It's turtles all the way down!"

同类推荐
  • Agnes Grey(III) 艾格妮丝·格雷(英文版)
  • Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque(III) 怪诞蔓藤花纹的传
  • Collected Poems 1909-1962

    Collected Poems 1909-1962

    'Each year Eliot's presence reasserts itself at a deeper level, to an audience that is surprised to find itself more chastened, more astonished, more humble.' Ted Hughes Poet, dramatist, critic and editor, T. S. Eliot was one of the defining figures of twentieth-century poetry. This edition of Collected Poems 1909-1962 includes his verse from Prufrock and Other Observations (1917) to Four Quartets (1943), and includes such literary landmarks as The Waste Land and Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats.
  • Fish (Sheila Lukins Short eCookbooks)

    Fish (Sheila Lukins Short eCookbooks)

    For over twenty years, PARADE food editor, writer, and chef Sheila Lukins has inspired would-be chefs across the country with her accessible and easy-to-prepare Simply Delicious recipes. This e-cookbook is a compilation of Sheila's favorite chicken recipes from her time at PARADE, written with the busy home cook in mind.In addition to dozens of creative and succulent chicken recipes, this book provides an easy tutorial on how to roast the perfect chicken and carve poultry at the table. Readers get plenty of delicious and fun ideas for jazzing up a weeknight chicken dinner or creating the perfect special-occasion meal—that are sure to delight the entire family.
  • My Name is Red

    My Name is Red

    In the late 1590s, the Sultan secretly commissions a great book: a celebration of his life and his empire, to be illuminated by the best artists of the day - in the European manner. At a time of violent fundamentalism, however, this is a dangerous proposition. Even the illustrious circle of artists are not allowed to know for whom they are working. But when one of the miniaturists is murdered, their Master has to seek outside help. Did the dead painter fall victim to professional rivalry, romantic jealousy or religious terror?With the Sultan demanding an answer within three days, perhaps the clue lies somewhere in the half-finished pictures … Orhan Pamuk is one of the world's leading contemporary novelists and in My Name is Red, he fashioned an unforgettable tale of suspense, and an artful meditation on love and deception.
热门推荐
  • 毒宠药妾

    毒宠药妾

    “啊…”痛哭伴随着凌厉的惨叫回响着,未经呵护的领地很快染上了赫红的血……她哪里又知道,这是男人对她最后的考验,是她成为药人的最后一环,那便是…能承受他致命的毒。……朦胧间,睨见男人清冷的眼,是平静无波的残忍,仿佛,是他在操控欲望,占有她,不为情欲,只为占有而占有。她穿越而来,为他所救,禁锢她的人,掠夺她的身,撕裂她的心…而那双眼,从头至尾,寂静冷漠…是啊,在他眼中的自己只是一味药,一味药啊…………(本文小虐,慢热不小白,女主以柔克刚)————初初的新文推荐——————红伶的故事《媚行天下》故事简介:穿越并不可怕,可怕的这具破败的身体,竟然坑爹的染上了毒瘾,但这又岂能难倒她虞红伶。不幸的是她惹到小人,被人当眼中钉追杀…所以,才会遇见了他………她站在高位,俯瞰刑场的他,冷寂的问:你爱过我吗?他,一双黑眸澄清如镜,仿佛映出了她的丑陋和狰狞。一日夫妻百日恩,到底是谁在自作自受,呵呵呵…她凄然一笑,亲手扔出手中的斩立决。“斩!!”罢了,她真的放手了,放了他,也放过自己。………虚尘:“别碰他!”虚尘拧紧了眉头,一脸冷酷的正气,捉着她的手臂没有半点怜香惜玉,估计应该青紫一片了。红伶怒火丛生,反而嫣然一笑,衣衫半解使出混身解数……勾引他、诱惑他,硬是要击破他的面具,诱他堕落红尘俗世……路星辰:她的倔强、她的聪慧、她的歌声无不令他迷醉,只一眼,便爱上了这个绝美的女子。‘在下一定会高中状元,回来帮你赎身,娶你做我的娘子。’这是他的保证,也是日后的魔咒和枷锁,即便如此,他也心甘情愿……玄王:他邪魅地俯下身,白晰如玉的修长手指轻轻勾起她小巧的下颚,一双狭长的凤眸带着邪气,狂妄地诱惑着:“做本王的王妃,你要什么本王都可以给你。”红伶毫不躲避的正视着他的眼,流光四射,火花四溅,她气吐如兰,妖饶的笑道:“呵呵,如果我要的是天下,你给得起么?”元煞:他因她一次相救卖命十年,他冷漠无心,杀人如麻,却唯独对她千依百顺……为她,他可以成佛,为她,亦可以成魔。十年,也许对他来说,太短了……皇上:他懒洋洋的半倚在龙床上让人伺候着,半响,凭空飘来一句:“当朕的虞妃,荣华富贵享之不尽。”红伶微愣,随即回过神来,笑得妩媚娇俏,“可以,但我要天下皇权!!”……(注:女主聪明强势有主见,本文有点小强,有点小虐,亲亲若喜欢赶紧收藏+存文吧……)
  • 紫气乾坤

    紫气乾坤

    众生为蝼蚁,天命不可违,这是一个关于逆天改命的故事……
  • 造物主的星球文明

    造物主的星球文明

    开局一颗星球,后面自己创造。在一颗荒凉的星球上创建自己理想的世界,并促使自己创造的文明向前。星球发展,文明变迁,在其背后是一位神秘的造物主。(幕后黑手流、多马甲、星球文明变迁)
  • 春山行

    春山行

    【江湖】【养成】这是一个女主杜韵女扮男装闯荡江湖,捡到个漂亮小少年,最后养成自己的亲亲奶狗相公的故事。这是个女主可颜可甜,偶尔神经大条一不小心撩到冷面男二的故事。文艺版简介:江湖远,与谁相遇,赔上了谁的一生相思。杜韵想十三岁那年发生了许多事,除了捡到未来相公,还有那个戴着白玉面具的黑衣少年,一牵扯便是多年,一思量便会疼痛。..............
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 唐门毒手

    唐门毒手

    毒,毒,毒,药十,毒三,天下万物皆为两面,一面是善一面是恶。毒从心起,人是施毒之手,明末清初天下大乱四川人惨遭毒手屠杀,皆因怨,即为情,皆为权而起毒心。侠士出川查找真凶毒手,报血海深仇,向川人诉说屠川内幕·····!
  • 木叶的白眼公主

    木叶的白眼公主

    穿越到木叶的豪门日向一族,成为雏田大小姐。雏田立志不再当废材,一定要好好的享受豪门大小姐应有的待遇。斑:你也想起舞吗?雏田:我还想蹦迪!ps:偏日常搞笑书名:《我的影子是十尾人柱力》作者:就是我本人啦!求各位大佬支持一下,点击一下收藏,新书需要各种营养才能成长。
  • 百鬼夜行长篇系列:魍魉之匣(全集)

    百鬼夜行长篇系列:魍魉之匣(全集)

    被电车撞击而身受重伤的少女,被送往医学研究所之后,在众人环视下从病床上消失。与此同时,相模湖分尸杀人案衍生了一连串支解杀人事件。魍魉,是否潜伏在暗处窥伺?两个美貌且彷佛不食人间烟火的少女,相偕在夜里去湖边欣赏月光,其中一名少女却意外落车而身受重伤。无意间搭同一班车下班的刑警木场修在强忍疲惫下接手处理案件,却意外发现身受重伤少女的亲人,是他暗恋了许多年的女演员。木场一面强自按捺内心情感浮动,一面却也深陷难缠案件。身受重伤的少女在送到一栋盒状的建筑物后,在众目睽睽之下居然凭空消失了……作家关口偶尔为之取材写作的三流杂志《月刊实录犯罪》,正在追查相模湖发生的分尸杀人案,编辑鸟口和关口联袂前往现场追查,却在路途中迷路而误入一栋奇怪的盒状建筑物……在病床上消失的少女、相模湖分尸杀人案、追查案件的木场和关口、盒子般奇怪的建筑物,到底是什么将他们联系在一起?魍魉,真的只存在人心吗?
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 龙与仙草覆灭记

    龙与仙草覆灭记

    龙王一族与百花仙子结怨已久,原因为何谁都不清楚,只知道龙族最老的龙王瑞康提起百花仙子就气不打一出来,为此几次差点往生,便不再有人在龙族内部提起百花仙子,也就没人知道二族之间为何结怨。千年之后,百花仙子迎来万年大劫,在一个月圆之日香消玉殒,旗下各类花神为此反应万千,一个秘密在她们中间传来,即便是龙族也知晓了这个消息。那就是,百花仙子居然有一个儿子!龙族与花族之间的恩怨到底是为何而起,百花仙子的儿子小仙草又该何去何从,他能否使两大仙族重归于好呢?