8. ADRENALINE "OKAY, WHERE'S YOUR CLUTCH?"
I pointed to the lever on my left handlebar. Letting go of the grip was a
mistake. The heavy bike wobbled underneath me, threatening to knock me
sidewise. I grabbed the handle again, trying to hold it straight.
"Jacob, it won't stay up," I complained.
"It will when you're moving," he promised. "Now where's your brake?"
"Behind my right foot."
"Wrong."
He grabbed my right hand and curled my fingers around the lever over the
throttle.
"But you said—"
"This is the brake you want. Don't use the back brake now, that's for
later, when you know what you're doing."
"That doesn't sound right," I said suspiciously. "Aren't both brakes kind
of important?"
"Forget the back brake, okay? Here—" He wrapped his hand around mine and
made me squeeze the lever down. "That is how you brake. Don't forget." He
squeezed my hand another time.
"Fine," I agreed.
"Throttle?"
I twisted the right grip.
"Gearshift?"
I nudged it with my left calf.
"Very good. I think you've got all the parts down. Now you just have to
get it moving."
"Uh-huh," I muttered, afraid to say more. My stomach was contorting
strangely and I thought my voice might crack. I was terrified. I tried to
tell myself that the fear was pointless. I'd already lived through the
worst thing possible. In comparison with that, why should anything
frighten me now? I should be able to look death in the face and laugh.
My stomach wasn't buying it.
I stared down the long stretch of dirt road, bordered by thick misty
green on every side. The road was sandy and damp. Better than mud.
"I want you to hold down the clutch," Jacob instructed.
I wrapped my fingers around the clutch.
"Now this is crucial, Bella," Jacob stressed. "Don't let go of that,
okay? I want you to pretend that I've handed you a live grenade. The pin
is out and you are holding down the spoon."
I squeezed tighter.
"Good. Do you think you can kick-start it?"
"If I move my foot, I will fall over," I told him through gritted teeth,
my fingers tight around my live grenade.
"Okay, I'll do it. Don't let go of the clutch."
He took a step back, and then suddenly slammed his foot down on the
pedal. There was a short ripping noise, and the force of his thrust
rocked the bike. I started to fall sideways, but Jake caught the bike
before it knocked me to the ground.
"Steady there," he encouraged. "Do you still have the clutch?"
"Yes," I gasped.
"Plant your feet—I'm going to try again." But he put his hand on the back
of the seat, too, just to be safe.
It took four more kicks before the ignition caught. I could feel the bike
rumbling beneath me like an angry animal. I gripped the clutch until my
fingers ached.
"Try out the throttle," he suggested. "Very lightly. And don't let go of
the clutch."
Hesitantly, I twisted the right handle. Though the movement was tiny, the
bike snarled beneath me. It sounded angry and hungry now. Jacob smiled in
deep satisfaction.
"Do you remember how to put it into first gear?" he asked.
"Yes."
"Well, go ahead and do it."
"Okay."
He waited for a few seconds.
"Left foot," he prompted.
"I know," I said, taking a deep breath.
"Are you sure you want to do this?" Jacob asked. "You look scared."
"I'm fine," I snapped. I kicked the gearshift down one notch.
"Very good," he praised me. "Now, very gently, ease up on the clutch."
He took a step away from the bike.
"You want me to let go of the grenade?" I asked in disbelief. No wonder
he was moving back.
"That's how you move, Bella. Just do it little by little."
As I began to loosen my grip, I was shocked to be interrupted by a voice
that did not belong to the boy standing next to me.
"This is reckless and childish and idiotic, Bella," the velvet voice
fumed.
"Oh!" I gasped, and my hand fell off the clutch.
The bike bucked under me, yanking me forward and then collapsing to the
ground half on top of me. The growling engine choked to a stop.
"Bella?" Jacob jerked the heavy bike off me with ease. "Are you hurt?"
But I wasn't listening.
"I told you so," the perfect voice murmured, crystal clear.
"Bella?" Jacob shook my shoulder.
"I'm fine," I mumbled, dazed.
More than fine. The voice in my head was back. It still rang in my
ears—soft, velvety echoes.
My mind ran swiftly through the possibilities. There was no familiarity
here—on a road I'd never seen, doing something I'd never done before—no
deja vu So the hallucinations must be triggered by something else… I felt
the adrenaline coursing through my veins again, and I thought I had the
answer. Some combination of adrenaline and danger, or maybe just
stupidity.
Jacob was pulling me to my feet.
"Did you hit your head?" he asked.
"I don't think so." I shook it back and forth, checking. "I didn't hurt
the bike, did I?" This thought worried me. I was anxious to try again,
right away. Being reckless was paying off better than I'd thought. Forget
cheating. Maybe I'd found a way to generate the hallucinations—that was
much more important.
"No. You just stalled the engine," Jacob said, interrupting my quick
speculations. "You let go of the clutch too fast."
I nodded. "Let's try again."
"Are you sure?" Jacob asked.
"Positive."
This time I tried to get the kick-start myself. It was complicated; I had
to jump a little to slam down on the pedal with enough force, and every
time I did that, the bike tried to knock me over. Jacob's hand hovered
over the handlebars, ready to catch me if I needed him.
It took several good tries, and even more poor tries, before the engine
caught and roared to life under me. Remembering to hold on to the
grenade, I revved the throttle experimentally. It snarled at the
slightest touch. My smile mirrored Jacob's now.
"Easy on the clutch," he reminded me.
"Do you want to kill yourself, then? Is that what this is about?" the
other voice spoke again, his tone severe.
I smiled tightly—it was still working—and ignored the questions. Jacob
wasn't going to let anything serious happen to me.
"Go home to Charlie," the voice ordered. The sheer beauty of it amazed
me. I couldn't allow my memory to lose it, no matter the price.
"Ease off slowly," Jacob encouraged me.
"I will," I said. It bothered me a bit when I realized I was answering
both of them.
The voice in my head growled against the roar of the motorcycle.
Trying to focus this time, to not let the voice startle me again, I
relaxed my hand by tiny degrees. Suddenly, the gear caught and wrenched
me forward.
And I was flying.
There was wind that wasn't there before, blowing my skin against my skull
and flinging my hair back behind me with enough force that it felt like
someone was tugging on it. I'd left my stomach back at the starting
point; the adrenaline coursed through my body, tingling in my veins. The
trees raced past me, blurring into a wall of green.
But this was only first gear. My foot itched toward the gearshift as I
twisted for more gas.
"No, Bella!" the angry, honey-sweet voice ordered in my ear. "Watch what
you're doing!"
It distracted me enough from the speed to realize that the road was
starting a slow curve to the left, and I was still going straight. Jacob
hadn't told me how to turn.
"Brakes, brakes," I muttered to myself, and I instinctively slammed down
with my right foot, like I would in my truck.
The bike was suddenly unstable underneath me, shivering first to one side
and then the other. It was dragging me toward the green wall, and I was
going too fast. I tried to turn the handlebar the other direction, and
the sudden shift of my weight pushed the bike toward the ground, still
spinning toward the trees.
The motorcycle landed on top of me again, roaring loudly, pulling me
across the wet sand until it hit something stationary. I couldn't see. My
face was mashed into the moss. I tried to lift my head, but there was
something in the way.
I was dizzy and confused. It sounded like there were three things
snarling—the bike over me, the voice in my head, and something else…
"Bella!" Jacob yelled, and I heard the roar of the other bike cut off.
The motorcycle no longer pinned me to the ground, and I rolled over to
breathe. All the growling went silent.
"Wow," I murmured. I was thrilled. This had to be it, the recipe for a
hallucination—adrenaline plus clanger plus stupidity. Something close to
that, anyway.
"Bella!" Jacob was crouching over me anxiously. "Bella, are you alive?"
"I'm great!" I enthused. I flexed my arms and legs. Everything seemed to
be working correctly. "Let's do it again."
"I don't think so." Jacob still sounded worried. "I think I'd better
drive you to the hospital first."
"I'm fine."
"Um, Bella? You've got a huge cut on your forehead, and it's gushing
blood," he informed me.
I clapped my hand over my head. Sure enough, it was wet and sticky. I
could smell nothing but the damp moss on my face, and that held off the
nausea.
"Oh, I'm so sorry, Jacob." I pushed hard against the gash, as if I could
force the blood back inside my head.
"Why are you apologizing for bleeding?" he wondered as he wrapped a long
arm around my waist and pulled me to my feet. "Let's go. I'll drive." He
held out his hand for the keys.
"What about the bikes?" I asked, handing them over.
He thought for a second. "Wait here. And take this." He pulled off his
T-shirt, already spotted with blood, and threw it to me. I wadded it up
and held it tightly to my forehead. I was starting to smell the blood; I
breathed deeply through my mouth and tried to concentrate on something
else.
Jacob jumped on the black motorcycle, kicked it to a start in one try,
and raced back down the road, spraying sand and pebbles behind him. He
looked athletic and professional as he leaned over the handlebars, head
low, face forward, his shiny hair whipping against the russet skin of his
back. My eyes narrowed enviously. I was sure I hadn't looked like that on
my motorcycle.
I was surprised at how far I'd gone. I could barely see Jacob in the
distance when he finally got to the truck. He threw the bike into the bed
and sprinted to the driver's side.
I really didn't feel bad at all as he coaxed my truck to a deafening roar
in his hurry to get back to me. My head stung a little, and my stomach
was uneasy, but the cut wasn't serious. Head wounds just bled more than
most. His urgency wasn't necessary.
Jacob left the truck running as he raced back to me, wrapping his arm
around my waist again.
"Okay, let's get you in the truck."
"I'm honestly fine," I assured him as he helped me in. "Don't get worked
up. It's just a little blood."
"Just a lot of blood," I heard him mutter as he went back for my bike.
"Now, let's think about this for a second," I began when he got back in.
"If you take me to the ER like this, Charlie is sure to hear about it." I
glanced down at the sand and dirt caked into my jeans.
"Bella, I think you need stitches. I'm not going to let you bleed to
death."
"I won't," I promised. "Let's just take the bikes back first, and then
we'll make a stop at my house so I can dispose of the evidence before we
go to the hospital."
"What about Charlie?"
"He said he had to work today."
"Are you really sure?"
"Trust me. I'm an easy bleeder. It's not nearly as dire as it looks."
Jacob wasn't happy—his full mouth turned down in an uncharacteristic
frown—but he didn't want to get me in trouble. I stared out the window,
holding his ruined shirt to my head, while he drove me to Forks.
The motorcycle was better than I'd dreamed. It had served its original
purpose. I'd cheated—broken my promise. I'd been needlessly reckless. I
felt a little less pathetic now that the promises had been broken on both
sides.
And then to discover the key to the hallucinations! At least, I hoped I
had. I was going to test the theory as soon as possible. Maybe they'd get
through with me quickly in the ER, and I could try again tonight.
Racing down the road like that had been amazing. The feel of the wind in
my face, the speed and the freedom… it reminded me of a past life, flying
through the thick forest without a road, piggyback while he ran—I stopped
thinking right there, letting the memory break off in the sudden agony. I
flinched.
"You still okay?" Jacob checked.
"Yeah." I tried to sound as convincing as before.
"By the way," he added. "I'm going to disconnect your foot brake tonight."
At home, I went to look at myself in the mirror first thing; it was
pretty gruesome. Blood was drying in thick streaks across my cheek and
neck, matting in my muddy hair. I examined myself clinically, pretending
the blood was paint so it wouldn't upset my stomach. I breathed through
my mouth, and was fine.
I washed up as well as I could. Then I hid my dirty, bloody clothes in
the bottom of my laundry basket, putting on new jeans and a button-up
shirt (that I didn't have to pull over my head) as carefully as I could.
I managed to do this one-handed and keep both garments blood-free.
"Hurry up," Jacob called.
"Okay, okay," I shouted back. After making sure I left nothing
incriminating behind me, I headed downstairs.
"How do I look?" I asked him.
"Better," he admitted.
"But do I look like I tripped in your garage and hit my head on a hammer?"
"Sure, I guess so."
"Let's go then."
Jacob hurried me out the door, and insisted on driving again. We were
halfway to the hospital when I realized he was still shirtless.
I frowned guiltily. "We should have grabbed you a jacket."
"That would have given us away," he teased. "Besides, it's not cold."
"Are you kidding?" I shivered and reached out to turn the heat on.
I watched Jacob to see if he was just playing tough so I wouldn't worry,
but he looked comfortable enough. He had one arm over the back of my
seat, though I was huddled up to keep warm.
Jacob really did look older than sixteen—not quite forty, but maybe older
than me. Quil didn't have too much on him in the muscle department, for
all that Jacob claimed to be a skeleton. The muscles were the long wiry
kind, but they were definitely there under the smooth skin. His skin was
such a pretty color, it made me jealous.
Jacob noticed my scrutiny.
"What?" he asked, suddenly self-conscious.
"Nothing. I just hadn't realized before. Did you know, you're sort of
beautiful?"
Once the words slipped out, I worried that he might take my impulsive
observation the wrong way.
But Jacob just rolled his eyes. "You hit your head pretty hard, didn't
you?"
"I'm serious."
"Well, then, thanks. Sort of."
I grinned. "You're sort of welcome."
I had to have seven stitches to c lose the cut on my forehead. After the
sting of the local anesthetic, there was no pain in the procedure. Jacob
held my hand while Dr. Snow was sewing, and I tried not to think about
why that was ironic.
We were at the hospital forever. By the time I was done, I had to drop
Jacob off at his home and hurry back to cook dinner for Charlie. Charlie
seemed to buy my story about falling in Jacob's garage. After all, it
wasn't like I hadn't been able to land myself in the ER before with no
more help than my own feet.
This night was not as bad as that first night, after I'd heard the
perfect voice in Port Angeles. The hole came back, the way it always did
when I was away from Jacob, but it didn't throb so badly around the
edges. I was already planning ahead, looking forward to more delusions,
and that was a distraction. Also, I knew I would feel better tomorrow
when I was with Jacob again. That made the empty hole and the familiar
pain easier to bear; relief was in sight. The nightmare, too, had lost a
little of its potency. I was horrified by the nothingness, as always, but
I was also strangely impatient as I waited for the moment that would send
me screaming into consciousness. I knew the nightmare had to end.
The next Wednesday, before I could get home from the ER, Dr. Gerandy
called to warn my father that I might possibly have a concussion and
advised him to wake me up every two hours through the night to make sure
it wasn't serious. Charlie's eyes narrowed suspiciously at my weak
explanation about tripping again.
"Maybe you should just stay out of the garage altogether, Bella," he
suggested that night during dinner.
I panicked, worried that Charlie was about to lay down some kind of edict
that would prohibit La Push, and consequently my motorcycle. And I wasn't
giving it up—I'd had the most amazing hallucination today. My
velvet-voiced delusion had yelled at me for almost five minutes before
I'd hit the brake too abruptly and launched myself into the tree. I'd
take whatever pain that would cause me tonight without complaint.
"This didn't happen in the garage," I protested quickly. "We were hiking,
and I tripped over a rock."
"Since when do you hike?" Charlie asked skeptically.
"Working at Newton's was bound to rub off sometime," I pointed out.
"Spend every day selling all the virtues of the outdoors, eventually you
get curious."
Charlie glared at me, unconvinced.
"I'll be more careful," I promised, surreptitiously crossing my fingers
under the table.
"I don't mind you hiking right there around La Push, but keep close to
town, okay?"
"Why?"
"Well, we've been getting a lot of wildlife complaints lately. The
forestry department is going to check into it, but for the time being…"
"Oh, the big bear," I said with sudden comprehension. "Yeah, some of the
hikers coming through Newton's have seen it. Do you think there's really
some giant mutated grizzly out there?"
His forehead creased. "There's something. Keep it close to town, okay?"
"Sure, sure," I said quickly. He didn't look completely appeased.
"Charlie's getting nosy," I complained to Jacob when I picked him up
after school Friday.
"Maybe we should cool it with the bikes." He saw my objecting expression
and added, "At least for a week or so. You could stay out of the hospital
for a week, right?"
"What are we going to do?" I griped.
He smiled cheerfully. "What ever you want."
I thought about that for a minute—about what I wanted.
I hated the idea of losing even my brief seconds of closeness with the
memories that didn't hurt—the ones that came on their own, without me
thinking of them consciously. If I couldn't have the bikes, I was going
to have to find some other avenue to the danger and the adrenaline, and
that was going to take serious thought and creativity. Doing nothing in
the meantime was not appealing. Suppose I got depressed again, even with
Jake? I had to keep occupied.
Maybe there was some other way, some other recipe… some other place.
The house had been a mistake, certainly. But his presence must be stamped
somewhere, somewhere other than inside me. There had to be a place where
he seemed more real than among all the familiar landmarks that were
crowded with other human memories.
I could think of one place where that might hold true. One place that
would always belong to him and no one else. A magic place, full of light.
The beautiful meadow I'd seen only once in my life, lit by sunshine and
the sparkle of his skin.
This idea had a huge potential for backfiring—it might be dangerously
painful. My chest ached with emptiness even to think of it. It was hard
to hold myself upright, to not give myself away. But surely, there of all
places, I could hear his voice. And I'd already told Charlie I was hiking…
"What are you thinking about so hard?" Jacob asked.
"Well…" I began slowly. "I found this place in the forest once—I came
across it when I was, um, hiking. A little meadow, the most beautiful
place. I don't know if I could track it down again on my own. It would
definitely take a few tries…"
"We could use a compass and a grid pattern," Jacob said with confident
helpfulness. "Do you know where you started from?"
"Yes, just below the trailhead where the one-ten ends. I was going mostly
south, I think."
"Cool. We'll find it." As always, Jacob was game for anything I wanted.
No matter how strange it was.
So, Saturday afternoon, I tied on my new hiking boots—purchased that
morning using my twenty-per-cent-off employee discount for the first
time—grabbed my new topographical map of the Olympic Peninsula, and drove
to La Push.
We didn't get started immediately; first, Jacob sprawled across the
living room floor—taking up the whole room—and, for a full twenty
minutes, drew a complicated web across the key section of the map while I
perched on a kitchen chair and talked to Billy. Billy didn't seem at all
concerned about our proposed hiking trip. I was surprised that Jacob had
told him where we were going, given the fuss people were making about the
bear sightings. I wanted to ask Billy not to say anything about this to
Charlie, but I was afraid that making the request would cause the
opposite result.
"Maybe we'll see the super bear," Jacob joked, eyes on his design.
I glanced at Billy swiftly, fearing a Charlie-style reaction.
But Billy just laughed at his son. "Maybe you should take a jar of honey,
just in case."
Jake chuckled. "Hope your new boots are fast, Bella. One little jar isn't
going to keep a hungry bear occupied for long."
"I only have to be faster than you."
"Good luck with that!" Jacob said, rolling his eyes as he refolded the
map. "Let's go."
"Have fun," Billy rumbled, wheeling himself toward the refrigerator.
Charlie was not a hard person to live with, but it looked to me like
Jacob had it even easier than I did.
I drove to the very end of the dirt road, stopping near the sign that
marked the beginning of the trailhead. It had been a long time since I'd
been here, and my stomach reacted nervously. This might be a very bad
thing. But it would be worth it, if I got to hear him.
I got out and looked at the dense wall of green.
"I went this way," I murmured, pointing straight ahead.
"Hmm," Jake muttered.
"What?"
He looked at the direction I'd pointed, then at the clearly marked trail,
and back.
"I would have figured you for a trail kind of girl."
"Not me." I smiled bleakly. "I'm a rebel."
He laughed, and then pulled out our map.
"Give me a second." He held the compass in a skilled way, twisting the
map around till it angled the way he wanted.
"Okay—first line on the grid. Let's do it."
I could tell that I was slowing Jacob up, but he didn't complain. I tried
not to dwell on my last trip through this part of the forest, with a very
different companion. Normal memories were still cangerous. If I let
myself slip up, I'd end up with my arms clutching my chest to hold it
together, gasping for air, and how would I explain that to Jacob?
It wasn't as hard as I would have thought to keep focused on the present.
The forest looked a lot like any other part of the peninsula, and Jacob
set a vastly different mood.
He whistled cheerfully, an unfamiliar tune, swinging his arms and moving
easily through the rough undergrowth. The shadows didn't seem as dark as
usual. Not with my personal sun along.
Jacob checked the compass every few minutes, keeping us in a straight
line with one of the radiating spokes of his grid. He really looked like
he knew what he was doing. I was going to compliment him, but I caught
myself. No doubt he'd add another few years to his inflated age.
My mind wandered as I walked, and I grew curious. I hadn't forgotten the
conversation we'd had by the sea cliffs—I'd been waiting for him to bring
it up again, but it didn't look like that was going to happen.
"Hey… Jake?" I asked hesitantly.
"Yeah?"
"How are things… with Embry? Is he back to normal yet?"
Jacob was silent for a minute, still moving forward with long paces. When
he was about ten feet ahead, he stopped to wait for me.
"No. He's not back to normal," Jacob said when I reached him, his mouth
pulling down at the corners. He didn't start walking again. I immediately
regretted bringing it up.
"Still with Sam."
"Yup."
He put his arm around my shoulder, and he looked so troubled that I
didn't playfully shake it off, as I might have otherwise.
"Are they still looking at you funny?" I half-whispered.
Jacob stared through the trees. "Sometimes."
"And Billy?"
"As helpful as ever," he said in a sour, angry voice that disturbed me.
"Our couch is always open," I offered.
He laughed, breaking out of the unnatural gloom. "But think of the
position that would put Charlie in—when Billy calls the police to report
my kidnapping."
I laughed too, glad to have Jacob back to normal.
We stopped when Jacob said we'd gone six miles, cut west for a short
time, and headed back along another line of his grid. Everything looked
exactly the same as the way in, and I had a feeling that my silly quest
was pretty much doomed. I admitted as much when it started to get darker,
the sunless day fading toward a starless night, but Jacob was more
confident.
"As long as you're sure we're starting from the right place…" He glanced
down at me.
"Yes, I'm sure."
"Then we'll find it," he promised, grabbing my hand and pulling me
through a mass of ferns. On the other side was the truck. He gestured
toward it proudly. "Trust me."
"You're good," I admitted. "Next time we bring flashlights, though."
"We'll save hiking for Sundays from now on. I didn't know you were that
slow."
I yanked my hand back and stomped around to the driver's side while he
chuckled at my reaction.
"So you up for another try tomorrow.'" he asked, sliding into the
passenger seat.
"Sure. Unless you want to go without me so I don't tie you down to my
gimpy pace."
"I'll survive," he assured me. "If we're hiking again, though, you might
want to pick up some moleskin. I bet you can feel those new boots right
now."
"A little," I confessed. It felt like I had more blisters than I had
space to fit them.
"I hope we see the bear tomorrow. I'm sort of disappointed about that."
"Yes, me, too," I agreed sarcastically. "Maybe we'll get lucky tomorrow
and something will eat us!"
"Bears don't want to eat people. We don't taste that good." He grinned at
me in the dark cab. "Of course, you might be an exception. I bet you'd
taste good."
"Thanks so much," I said, looking away. He wasn't the first person to
tell me that.
===========================================================================
9. THIRD WHEEL TIME BEGAN TO TRIP ALONG MUCH MORE QUICKLY than before. School, work, and
Jacob—though not necessarily in that order—created a neat and effortless
pattern to follow. And Charlie got his wish: I wasn't miserable anymore.
Of course, I couldn't fool myself completely. When I stopped to take
stock of my life, which I tried not to do too often, I couldn't ignore
the implications of my behavior.
I was like a lost moon—my planet destroyed in some cataclysmic,
disaster-movie scenario of desolation—that continued, nevertheless, to
circle in a tight little orbit around the empty space left behind,
ignoring the laws of gravity.
I was getting better with my bike, which meant fewer bandages to worry
Charlie. But it also meant that the voice in my head began to fade, until
I heard it no more. Quietly, I panicked. I threw myself into the search
for the meadow with slightly frenzied intensity. I racked my brain for
other adrenaline-producing activities.
I didn't keep track of the days :hat passed—there was no reason, as I
tried to live as much in the present as possible, no past fading, no
future impending. So I was surprised by the date when Jacob brought it up
on one of our homework days. He was waiting when I pulled up in front of
his house.
"Happy Valentine's Day," Jacob said, smiling, but ducking his head as he
greeted me.
He held out a small, pink box, balancing it on his palm. Conversation
hearts.
"Well, I feel like a schmuck," I mumbled. "Is today Valentine's Day?"
Jacob shook his head with mock sadness. "You can be so out of it
sometimes. Yes, it is the fourteenth day of February. So are you going to
be my Valentine? Since you didn't get me a fifty-cent box of candy, it's
the least you can do."
I started to feel uncomfortable. The words were teasing, but only on the
surface.
"What exactly does that entail?" I hedged.
"The usual—slave for life, that kind of thing."
"Oh, well, if that's all…" I took the candy. But I was trying to think of
some way to make the boundaries clear. Again. They seemed to get blurred
a lot with Jacob.
"So, what are we doing tomorrow? Hiking, or the ER?"
"Hiking," I decided. "You're not the only one who can be obsessive. I'm
starting to think I imagined that place…" I frowned into space.
"We'll find it," he assured me. "Bikes Friday?" he offered.
I saw a chance and took it without taking time to think it through.
"I'm going to a movie Friday. I've been promising my cafeteria crowd that
I would go out forever." Mike would be pleased.
But Jacob's face fell. I caught the expression in his dark eyes before he
dropped them to look at the ground.
"You'll come too, right?" I added quickly. "Or will it be too much of a
drag with a bunch of boring seniors?" So much for my chance to put some
distance between us. I couldn't stand hurting Jacob; we seemed to be
connected in an odd way, and his pain set off little stabs of my own.
Also, the idea of having his company for the ordeal—I had promised Mike,
but really didn't feel any enthusiasm at the thought of following
through—was just too tempting.
"You'd like me to come, with your friends there?"
"Yes," I admitted honestly, knowing as I continued that I was probably
shooting myself in the foot with my words. "I'll have a lot more fun if
you're there. Bring Quil, and we'll make it a party."
"Quil's gonna freak. Senior girls." He chortled and rolled his eyes. I
didn't mention Embry, and neither did he. I laughed, too. "I'll try to
get hin a good selection."
I broached the subject with Mike in English.
"Hey, Mike," I said when class was over. "Are you free Friday night?"
He looked up, his blue eyes instantly hopeful. "Yeah, I am. You want to
go out?"
I worded my reply carefully. "I was thinking about getting a group"—I
emphasized the word—"together to go see Crosshairs." I'd done my homework
this time—even reading the movie spoilers to be sure I wouldn't be caught
off guard. This movie was supposed to be a bloodbath from start to
finish. I wasn't so recovered that I could stand to sit through a
romance. "Does that sound like fun?"
"Sure," he agreed, visibly less eager.
"Cool."
After a second, he perked back up to near his former excitement level.
"How about we get Angela and Ben? Or Eric and Katie?"
He was determined to make this some kind of double date, apparently.
"How about both?" I suggested "And Jessica, too, of course. And Tyler and
Conner, and maybe Lauren," I tacked on grudgingly. I had promised Quil
variety.
"Okay," Mike muttered, foiled.
"And," I continued, "I've got a couple of friends from La Push I'm
inviting. So it sounds like we'll need your Suburban if everyone comes."
Mike's eyes narrowed in suspicion.
"These are the friends you spend all your time studying with now?"
"Yep, the very ones," I answered cheerfully. "Though you could look at it
as tutoring—they're only sophomores."
"Oh," Mike said, surprised. After a second of thought, he smiled.
In the end, though, the Suburban wasn't necessary.
Jessica and Lauren claimed to be busy as soon as Mike let it slip that I
was involved in the planning. Eric and Katie already had plans—it was
their three-week anniversary or something. Lauren got to Tyler and Conner
before Mike could, so those two were also busy. Even Quil was
out—grounded for fighting at school. In the end, only Angela and Ben,
and, of course Jacob, were able to go.
The diminished numbers didn't dampen Mike's anticipation, though. It was
all he could talk about Friday.
"Are you sure you don't want to see Tomorrow and Forever instead?" he
asked at lunch, naming the current romantic comedy that was ruling the
box office. "Rotten Tomatoes gave it a better review."
"I want to see Crosshairs" I insisted. "I'm in the mood for action. Bring
on the blood and guts!"
"Okay." Mike turned away, but not before I saw his
maybe-she's-crazy-after-all expression.
When I got home from school, a very familiar car was parked in front of
my house. Jacob was leaning against the hood, a huge grin lighting up his
face.
"No way!" I shouted as I jumped out of the truck. "You're done! I can't
believe it! You finished the Rabbit!"
He beamed. "Just last night. This is the maiden voyage."
"Incredible." I held my hand up for a high five.
He smacked his hand against mine, but left it there, twisting his fingers
through mine. "So do I get to drive tonight?"
"Definitely," I said, and then I sighed.
"What's wrong?"
"I'm giving up—I can't top this one. So you win. You're oldest."
He shrugged, unsurprised by my capitulation. "Of course I am."
Mike's Suburban chugged around the corner. I pulled my hand out of
Jacob's, and he nude a face that I wasn't meant to see.
"I remember this guy," he said in a low voice as Mike parked across the
street. "The one who thought you were his girlfriend. Is he still
confused?"
I raised one eyebrow. "Some people are hard to discourage."
"Then again," Jacob said thoughtfully, "sometimes persistence pays off."
"Most of the time it's just annoying, though."
Mike got out of his car and crossed the road.
"Hey, Bella," he greeted me, and then his eyes turned wary as he looked
up at Jacob. I glanced briefly at Jacob, too, trying to be objective. He
really didn't look like a sophomore at all. He was just so big—Mike's
head barely cleared Jacob's shoulder; I didn't even want to think where I
measured next to him—and then his face was older-looking than it used to
be, even a month ago.
"Hey, Mike! Do you remember Jacob Black?"
"Not really." Mike held out his hand.
"Old family friend," Jacob introduced himself, shaking hands. They locked
hands with more force than necessary. When their grip broke, Mike flexed
his fingers.
I heard the phone ringing from the kitchen.
"I'd better get that—it might be Charlie," I told them, and dashed inside.
It was Ben. Angela was sick with the stomach flu, and he didn't feel like
coming without her. He apologized for bailing on us.
I walked slowly back to the waiting boys, shaking my head. I really hoped
Angela would feel better soon, but I had to admit that I was selfishly
upset by this development. Just the three of us, Mike and Jacob and me,
together for the evening—this had worked out brilliantly, I thought with
grim sarcasm.
It didn't seem like Jake and Mike had made any progress towards
friendship in my absence. They were several yards apart, facing away from
each other as they waited for me; Mike's expression was sullen, though
Jacob's was cheerful as always.
"Ang is sick," I told them glumly. "She and Ben aren't coming."
"I guess the flu is making another round. Austin and Conner were out
today, too. Maybe we should do this another time," Mike suggested.
Before I could agree, Jacob spoke.
"I'm still up for it. But if you'd rather to stay behind, Mike—"
"No, I'm coming," Mike interrupted. "I was just thinking of Angela and
Ben. Let's go." He started toward his Suburban.
"Hey, do you mind if Jacob drives?" I asked. "I told him he could—he just
finished his car. He built it from scratch, all by himself," I bragged,
proud as a PTA mom with a student on the principal's list.
"Fine," Mike snapped.
"All right, then," Jacob said, as if that settled everything. He seemed
more comfortable than anyone else.
Mike climbed in the backseat of the Rabbit with a disgusted expression.
Jacob was his normal sunny self, chattering away until I'd all but
forgotten Mike sulking silently in the back.
And then Mike changed his strategy. He leaned forward, resting his chin
on the shoulder of my seat; his cheek almost touched mine. I shifted
away, turning my back toward the window.
"Doesn't the radio work in this thing?" Mike asked with a hint of
petulance, interrupting Jacob mid-sentence.
"Yes," Jacob answered. "But Bella doesn't like music."
I stared at Jacob, surprised. I'd never told him that.
"Bella?" Mike asked, annoyed.
"He's right," I mumbled, still looking at Jacob's serene profile.
"How can you not like music?" Mike demanded.
I shrugged. "I don't know. It just irritates me."
"Hmph." Mike leaned away.
When we got to the theater, Jacob handed me a ten-dollar bill.
"What's this?" I objected.
"I'm not old enough to get into this one," he reminded me.
I laughed out loud. "So much for relative ages. Is Billy going to kill me
if I sneak you in?"
"No. I told him you were planning to corrupt my youthful innocence."
I snickered, and Mike quickened his pace to keep up with us.
I almost wished that Mike had decided to bow out. He was still sullen—not
much of an addition to the party. But I didn't want to end up on a date
alone with Jacob, either. That wouldn't help anything.
The movie was exactly what it professed to be. In just the opening
credits, four people got blown up and one got beheaded. The girl in front
of me put her hands over her eyes and turned her face into her date's
chest. He patted her shoulder, and winced occasionally, too. Mike didn't
look like he was watching. His face was stiff as he glared toward the
fringe of curtain above the screen.
I settled in to endure the two hours, watching the colors and the
movement on the screen rather than seeing the shapes of people and cars
and houses. But then Jacob started sniggering.
"What?" I whispered.
"Oh, c'mon!" he hissed back. "The blood squirted twenty feet out of that
guy. How fake can you get?"
He chuckled again, as a flagpole speared another man into a concrete wall.
After that, I really watched the show, laughing with him as the mayhem
got more and more ridiculous. How was I ever going to fight the blurring
lines in our relationship when I enjoyed being with him so much?
Both Jacob and Mike had claimed the armrests on either side of me. Both
of their hands rested lightly, palms up, in an unnatural looking
position. Like steel bear traps, open and ready. Jacob was in the habit
of taking my hand whenever the opportunity presented itself, but here in
the darkened movie theater, with Mike watching, it would have a different
significance—and I was sure he knew that. I couldn't believe that Mike
was thinking the same thing, but his hand was placed exactly like Jacob's.
I folded my arms tightly across my chest and hoped that both their hands
fell asleep.
Mike gave up first. About halfway through the movie, he pulled his arm
back, and leaned forward to put his head in his hands. At first I thought
he was reacting to something on the screen, but then he moaned.
"Mike, are you okay?" I whispered.
The couple in front of us turned to look at him as he groaned again.
I could see the sheen of sweat across his face in the light from the
screen.
Mike groaned again, and bolted for the door. I got up to follow him, and
Jacob copied me immediately.
"No, stay," I whispered. "I'll make sure he's okay."
Jacob came with me anyway.
"You don't have to come. Get your eight bucks worth of carnage," I
insisted as we walked up the aisle.
"That's okay. You sure can pick them, Bella. This movie really sucks."
His voice rose from a whisper to its normal pitch as we walked out of the
theater.
There was no sign of Mike in the hallway, and I was glad then that Jacob
had come with me—he ducked into the men's bathroom to check for him there.
Jacob was back in a few seconds.
"Oh, he's in there, all right," he said, rolling his eyes. "What a
marshmallow. You should hold out for someone with a stronger stomach.
Someone who laughs at the gore that makes weaker men vomit."
"I'll keep my eyes open for someone like that."
We were all alone in the hallway. Both theaters were halfway through the
movie, and it was deserted—quiet enough for us to hear the popcorn
popping at the concession counter in the lobby.
Jacob went to sit on the velveteen-upholstered bench against the wall,
patting the space beside him.
"He sounded like he was going to be in there for a while," he said,
stretching his long legs out in front of him as he settled in to wait.
I joined him with a sigh. He looked like he was thinking about blurring
more lines. Sure enough, as soon as I sat down, he shifted over to put
his arm around my shoulders.
"Jake," I protested, leaning away. He dropped his arm, not looking
bothered at all by the minor rejection. He reached out and took my hand
firmly, wrapping his other hand around my wrist when I tried to pull away
again. Where did he get the confidence from?
"Now, just hold on a minute, Bella," he said in a calm voice. "Tell me
something."
I grimaced. I didn't want to do this. Not just not now, but not ever.
There was nothing lett in my life at this point that was more important
than Jacob Black. But he seemed determined to ruin everything.
"What?" I muttered sourly.
"You like me, right?"
"You know I do."
"Better than that joker puking his guts out in there?" He gestured toward
the bathroom door.
"Yes," I sighed.
"Better than any of the other guys you know?" He was calm, serene—as if
my answer didn't matter, or he already knew what it was.
"Better than the girls, too," I pointed out.
"But that's all," he said, and it wasn't a question.
It was hard to answer, to say the word. Would he get hurt and avoid me?
How would I stand that?
"Yes," I whispered.
He grinned down at me. "That's okay, you know. As long as you like me the
best. And you think I'm good-looking—sort of. I'm prepared to be
annoyingly persistent."
"I'm not going to change," I said, and though I tried to keep my voice
normal, I could hear the sadness in it.
His face was thoughtful, no longer teasing. "It's still the other one,
isn't it?"
I cringed. Funny how he seemed to know not to say the name—just like
before in the car with the music. He picked up on so much about me that I
never said.
"You don't have to talk about it," he told me.
I nodded, grateful.
"But don't get mad at me for hanging around, okay?" Jacob patted the back
of my hand. "Because I'm not giving up. I've got loads of time."
I sighed. "You shouldn't waste it on me," I said, though I wanted him to.
Especially if he was willing to accept me the way I was—damaged goods, as
is.
"It's what I want to do, as long as you still like to be with me."
"I can't imagine how I could not like being with you," I told him
honestly.
Jacob beamed. "I can live with that."
"Just don't expect more," I warned him, trying to pull my hand away. He
held onto it obstinately.
"This doesn't really bother you, does it?" he demanded, squeezing my
fingers.
"No," I sighed. Truthfully, it felt nice. His hand was so much warmer
than mine; I always felt too cold these days.
"And you don't care what he thinks." Jacob jerked his thumb toward the
bathroom.
"I guess not."
"So what's the problem?"
"The problem," I said, "is, that it means something different to me than
it does to you."
"Well." He tightened his hand around mine "That's my problem, isn't it?"
"Fine," I grumbled. "Don't forget it, though."
"I won't. The pin's out of the grenade for me, now, eh?" He poked me in
the ribs.
I rolled my eyes. I guess if he felt like making a joke out of it, he was
entitled.
He chuckled quietly for a minute while his pinky finger absently traced
designs against the side of my hand.
"That's a funny scar you've got there," he suddenly said, twisting my
hand to examine it. "How did that happen?"
The index finger of his free hand followed the line of the long silvery
crescent that was barely visible against my pale skin.
I scowled. "Do you honestly expect me to remember where all my scars come
from?"
I waited for the memory to hit—to open the gaping hole. But, as it so
often did, Jacob's presence kept me whole.
"It's cold," he murmured, pressing lightly against the place where James
had cut me with his teeth.
And then Mike stumbled out of the bathroom, his face ashen and covered in
sweat. He looked horrible.
"Oh, Mike," I gasped.
"Do you mind leaving early?" he whispered.
"No, of course not." I pulled my hand free and went to help Mike walk. He
looked unsteady.
"Movie too much for you?" Jacob asked heartlessly.
Mike's glare was malevolent. "I didn't actually see any of it," he
mumbled. "I was nauseated before the lights went down."
"Why didn't you say something?" I scolded as we staggered toward the exit.
"I was hoping it would pass," he said.
"Just a sec," Jacob said as we reached the door. He walked quickly back
to the concession stand.
"Could I have an empty popcorn bucket?" he asked the salesgirl. She
looked at Mike once, and then thrust a bucket at Jacob.
"Get him outside, please," she begged. She was obviously the one who
would have to clean the floor.
I towed Mike out into the cool, wet air. He inhaled deeply. Jacob was
right behind us. He helped me get Mike into the back of the car, and
handed him the bucket with a serious gaze.
"Please," was all Jacob said.
We rolled down the windows, letting the icy night air blow through the
car, hoping it would help Mike. I curled my arms around my legs to keep
warm.
"Cold, again?" Jacob asked, putting his arm around me before I could
answer.
"You're not?"
He shook his head.
"You must have a fever or something," I grumbled. It was freezing. I
touched my fingers to his forehead, and his head was hot.
"Whoa, Jake—you're burning up!"
"I feel fine." He shrugged. "Fit as a fiddle."
I frowned and touched his head again. His skin blazed under my fingers.
"Your hands are like ice," he complained.
"Maybe it's me," I allowed.
Mike groaned in the backseat, and threw up in the bucket. I grimaced,
hoping my own stomach could stand the sound and smell. Jacob checked
anxiously over his shoulder to make sure his car wasn't defiled.
The road felt longer on the way back.
Jacob was quiet, thoughtful. He left his arm around me, and it was so
warm that the cold wind felt good.
I stared out the windshield, consumed with guilt.
It was so wrong to encourage Jacob. Pure selfishness. It didn't matter
that I'd tried to make my position clear. If he felt any hope at all that
this could turn into something other than friendship, then I hadn't been
clear enough.
How could I explain so that he would understand? I was an empty shell.
Like a vacant house—condemned—for months I'd been utterly uninhabitable.
Now I was a little improved. The front room was in better repair. But
that was all—just the one small piece. He deserved better than
that—better than a one-room, falling-down fixer-upper. No amount of
investment on his part could put me back in working order.
Yet I knew that I wouldn't send him away, regardless. I needed him too
much, and I was selfish. Maybe I could make my side more clear, so that
he would know to leave me. The thought made me shudder, and Jacob
tightened his arm around me.
I drove Mike home in his Suburban, while Jacob followed behind us to take
me home. Jacob was quiet all the way back to my house, and I wondered if
he were thinking the same things that I was. Maybe he was changing his
mind.
"I would invite myself in, since we're early," he said as we pulled up
next to my truck. "But I think you might be right about the fever. I'm
starting to feel a little… strange."
"Oh no, not you, too! Do you want me to drive you home?"
"No." He shook his head, his eyebrows pulling together. "I don't feel
sick yet. Just… wrong. If I have to, I'll pull over."
"Will you call me as soon as you get in?" I asked anxiously.
"Sure, sure." He frowned, staring ahead into the darkness and biting his
lip.
I opened my door to get out, but he grabbed my wrist lightly and held me
there. I noticed again how hot his skin felt on mine.
"What is it, Jake?" I asked.
"There's something I want to tell you, Bella… but I think it's going to
sound kind of corny."
I sighed. This would be more of the same from the theater. "Go ahead."
"It's just that, I know how you're unhappy a lot. And, maybe it doesn't
help anything, but I wanted you to know that I'm always here. I won't
ever let you down—I promise that you can always count on me. Wow, that
does sound corny. But you know that, right? That I would never, ever hurt
you?"
"Yeah, Jake. I know that. And I already do count on you, probably more
than you know."
The smile broke across his face the way the sunrise set the clouds on
fire, and I wanted to cut my tongue out. I hadn't said one word that was
a lie, but I should have lied. The truth was wrong, it would hurt him. I
would let him down.
A strange look crossed his face. "I really think I'd better go home now,"
he said.
I got out quickly.
"Call me!" I yelled as he pulled away.
I watched him go, and he seemed to be in control of the car, at least. I
stared at the empty street when he was gone, feeling a little sick
myself, but not for any physical reason.
How much I wished that Jacob Black had been born my brother, my flesh-and
-blood brother, so that I would have some legitimate claim on him that
still left me free of any blame now. Heaven knows I had never wanted to
use Jacob, but I couldn't help but interpret the guilt I felt now to mean
that I had.
Even more, I had never meant to love him. One thing I truly knew—knew it
in the pit of my stomach, in the center of my bones, knew it from the
crown of my head to the soles of my feet, knew it deep in my empty
chest—was how love gave someone the power to break you.
I'd been broken beyond repair.
But I needed Jacob now, needed him like a drug. I'd used him as a crutch
for too long, and I was in deeper than I'd planned to go with anyone
again. Now I couldn't bear for him to be hurt, and I couldn't keep from
hurting him, either. He thought time and patience would change me, and,
though I knew he was dead wrong, I also knew that I would let him try.
He was my best friend. I would always love him, and it would never, ever
be enough.
I went inside to sit by the phone and bite my nails.
"Movie over already?" Charlie asked in surprise when I came in. He was on
the floor, just a foot from the TV. Must be an exciting game.
"Mike got sick," I explained. "Some kind of stomach flu."
"You okay?"
"I feel fine now," I said doubtfully. Clearly, I'd been exposed.
I leaned against the kitchen counter, my hand inches from the phone, and
tried to wait patiently. I thought of the strange look on Jacob's face
before he drove away, and my fingers started drumming against the
counter. I should have insisted on driving him home.
I watched the clock as the minutes ticked by Ten. Fifteen. Even when I
was driving, it took only fifteen minutes, and Jacob drove faster than I
did. Eighteen minutes. I picked up the phone and dialed.
It rang and rang. Maybe Billy was asleep. Maybe I'd dialed wrong. I tried
again.
On the eighth ring, just as I was about to hang up, Billy answered.
"Hello?" he asked. His voice was wary, like he was expecting bad news.
"Billy, it's me, Bella—did Jake make it home yet? He left here about
twenty minutes ago."
"He's here," Billy said tonelessly.
"He was supposed to call me." I was a little irritated. "He was getting
sick when he left, and I was worried."
"He was… too sick to call. He's not feeling well right now." Billy
sounded distant. I realized he must want to be with Jacob.
"Let me know if you need any help," I offered. "I could come down." I
thought of Billy, stuck in his chair, and Jake fending for himself…
"No, no," Billy said quickly. "We're fine. Stay at your place."
The way he said it was almost rude.
"Okay," I agreed.
"Bye, Bella."
The line disconnected.
"Bye," I muttered.
Well, at least he'd made it home. Oddly, I didn't feel less worried. I
trudged up the stairs, fretting. Maybe I would go down before work
tomorrow to check on him. I could take soup—we had to have a can of
Campbell's around here somewhere.
I realized all such plans were canceled when I woke up early—my clock
said four thirty—and sprinted to the bathroom. Charlie found me there a
half hour later, lying on the floor, my cheek pressed against the cold
edge of the bathtub.
He looked at me for a long moment.
"Stomach flu," he finally said.
"Yes," I moaned.
"You need something?" he asked.
"Call the Newtons for me, please," I instructed hoarsely. "Tell them I
have what Mike has, and that I can't make it in today. Tell them I'm
sorry."
"Sure, no problem," Charlie assured me.
I spent the rest of the day on the bathroom floor, sleeping for a few
hours with my head on a crumpled up towel. Charlie claimed that he had to
work, but I suspected that he just wanted access to a bathroom. He left a
glass of water on the floor beside me to keep me hydrated.
It woke me up when he came back home. I could see that it was dark in my
room—after nightfall. He clumped up the stairs to check on me.
"Still alive?"
"Sort of," I said.
"Do you want anything?"
"No, thanks."
He hesitated, clearly out of his element. "Okay, then," he said, and then
he went back down to the kitchen.
I heard the phone ring a few minutes later. Charlie spoke to someone in a
low voice for a moment, and then hung up.
"Mike feels better," he called up to me.
Well, that was encouraging. He'd only gotten sick eight hours or so
before me. Eight more hours. The thought made my stomach turn, and I
pulled myself up to lean over the toilet.
I fell asleep on the towel again, but when I woke up I was in my bed and
it was light outside my window. I didn't remember moving; Charlie must
have carried me to my room—he'd also put the glass of water on my bedside
table. I felt parched. I chugged it down, though it tasted funny from
sitting stagnant all night.
I got up slowly, trying not to trigger the nausea again. I was weak, and
my mouth tasted horrible, but my stomach felt fine. I looked at my clock.
My twenty-four hours were up.
I didn't push it, eating nothing but saltine crackers for breakfast.
Charlie looked relieved to see me recovered.
As soon as I was sure that I wasn't going to have to spend the day on the
bathroom floor again, I called Jacob.
Jacob was the one who answered, but when I heard his greeting I knew he
wasn't over it.
"Hello?" His voice was broken, cracking.
"Oh, Jake," I groaned sympathetically. "You sound horrible."
"I feel horrible," he whispered.
"I'm so sorry I made you go out with me. This sucks."
"I'm glad I went." His voice was still a whisper. "Don't blame yourself.
This isn't your fault."
"You'll get better soon," I promised. "I woke up this morning, and I was
fine."
"You were sick?" he asked dully.
"Yes, I got it, too. But I'm fine now."
"That's good." His voice was dead.
"So you'll probably be better in a few hours," I encouraged.
I could barely hear his answer. "I don't think I have the same thing you
did."
"Don't you have the stomach flu?" I asked, confused.
"No. This is something else."
"What's wrong with you?"
"Everything," he whispered. "Every part of me hurts."
The pain in his voice was nearly tangible.
"What can I do, Jake? What can I bring you?"
"Nothing. You can't come here." He was abrupt. It reminded me of Billy
the other night.
"I've already been exposed to whatever you have," I pointed out.
He ignored me. "I'll call you when I can. I'll let you know when you can
come down again."
"Jacob—"
"I've got to go," he said with sudden urgency.
"Call me when you feel better."
"Right," he agreed, and his voice had a strange, bitter edge.
He was silent for a moment. I was waiting for him to say goodbye, but he
waited too.
"I'll see you soon," I finally said. "Wait for me to call," he said
again. "Okay… Bye, Jacob."
"Bella," he whispered my name, and then hung up the phone.
===========================================================================
10. THE MEADOW JACOB DIDN'T CALL.
The first time I called, Billy answered and told me that Jacob was still
in bed. I got nosy, checking to make sure that Billy had taken him to a
doctor. Billy said he had, but, for some reason I couldn't nail down, I
didn't really believe him. I called again, several times a day, for the
next two days, but no one was ever there.
Saturday, I decided to go see him, invitation be damned. But the little
red house was empty. This frightened me—was Jacob so sick that he'd
needed to go to the hospital? I stopped by the hospital on the way back
home, but the nurse at the front desk told me neither Jacob or Billy had
been in.
I made Charlie call Harry Clearwater as soon as he got home from work. I
waited, anxious, while Charlie chatted with his old friend; the
conversation seemed to go on forever without Jacob even being mentioned.
It seemed that Harry had been in the hospital . . some kind of tests for
his heart. Charlie's forehead got all pinched together, but Harry joked
with him, blowing it off, until Charlie was laughing again. Only then did
Charlie ask about Jacob, and now his side of the conversation didn't give
me much to work with, just a lot of hmms and yeahs. I drummed my fingers
against the counter beside him until he put a hand over mine to stop me.
Finally, Charlie hung up the phone and turned to me.
"Harry says there's been some trouble with the phone lines, and that's
why you haven't been able to get through. Billy took Jake to the doc down
there, and it looks like he has mono. He's real tired, and Billy said no
visitors," he reported.
"No visitors?" I demanded in disbelief.
Charlie raised one eyebrow. "Now don't you go making a pest of yourself,
Bells. Billy knows what's best for Jake. He'll be up and around soon
enough. Be patient."
I didn't push it. Charlie was too worried about Harry. That was clearly
the more important issue—it wouldn't be right to bug him with my lesser
concerns. Instead, I went straight upstairs and turned on my computer. I
found a medical site online and typed "mononucleosis" into the search box.
All I knew about mono was that you were supposed to get it from kissing,
which was clearly not the case with Jake. I read through the symptoms
quickly—the fever he definitely had, but what about the rest of it? No
horrible sore throat, no exhaustion, no headaches, at least not before
he'd gone home from the movie; he'd said he felt "fit as a fiddle." Did
it really come on so fast? The article made it sound like the sore stuff
showed up first.
I glared at the computer screen and wondered why, exactly, I was doing
this. Why did I feel so… so suspicious, like I didn't believe Billy's
story? Why would Billy lie to Harry?
I was being silly, probably. I was just worried, and, to be honest, I was
afraid of not being allowed to see Jacob—that made me nervous.
I skimmed through the rest of the article, looking for more information.
I stopped when I got to the part about how mono could last more than a
month.
A month? My mouth fell open.
But Billy couldn't enforce the no-visitors thing that long. Of course
not. Jake would go crazy stuck in bed that long without anyone to talk to.
What was Billy afraid of, anyway? The article said that a person with
mono needed to avoid physical activity, but there was nothing about
visitors. The disease wasn't very infectious.
I'd give Billy a week, I decided, before I got pushy. A week was generous.
A week was long. By Wednesday, I was sure I wasn't going to live till
Saturday.
When I'd decided to leave Billy and Jacob alone for a week, I hadn't
really believed that Jacob would go along with Billy's rule. Every day
when I got home from school, I ran to the phone to check for messages.
There never were any.
I cheated three times by trying to call him, but the phone lines still
weren't working.
I was in the house much too much, and much too alone. Without Jacob, and
my adrenaline and my distractions, everything I'd been repressing started
creeping up on me. The dreams got hard again. I could no longer see the
end coming. Just the horrible nothingness—half the time in the forest,
half the time in the empty fern sea where the white house no longer
existed. Sometimes Sam Uley was there in the forest, watching me again. I
paid him no attention—there was no comfort in his presence; it made me
feel no less alone. It didn't stop me from screaming myself awake, night
after night.
The hole in my chest was worse than ever. I'd thought that I'd been
getting it under control, but I found myself hunched over, day after day,
clutching my sides together and gasping for air.
I wasn't handling alone well.
I was relieved beyond measure the morning I woke up—screaming, of
course—and remembered that it was Saturday. Today I could call Jacob. And
if the phone lines still weren't working, then I was going to La Push.
One way or another, today would be better than the last lonely week.
I dialed, and then waited without high expectations.
It caught me off guard when Billy answered on the second ring.
"Hello?"
"Oh, hey, the phone is working again! Hi, Billy. It's Bella. I was just
calling to see how Jacob is doing. Is he up for visitors yet? I was
thinking about dropping by—"
"I'm sorry, Bella," Billy interrupted, and I wondered if he were watching
TV; he sounded distracted. "He's not in."
"Oh." It took me a second. "So he's feeling better then?"
"Yeah," Billy hesitated for an instant too long. "Turns out it wasn't
mono after all. Just some other virus."
"Oh. So… where is he?"
"He's giving some friends a ride up to Port Angeles—I think they were
going to catch a double feature or something. He's gone for the whole
day."
"Well, that's a relief. I've been so worried. I'm glad he felt good
enough to get out." My voice sounded horribly phony as I babbled on.
Jacob was better, but not well enough to call me. He was out with
friends. I was sitting home, missing him more every hour. I was lonely,
worried, bored… perforated—and now also desolate as I realized that the
week apart had not had the same effect on him.
"Is there anything in particular you wanted?" Billy asked politely.
"No, not really."
"Well, I'll tell him that you called," Billy promised. "Bye, Bella."
"Bye," I replied, but he'd already hung up.
I stood for a moment with the phone still in my hand.
Jacob must have changed his mind, just like I'd feared. He was going to
take my advice and not waste any more time on someone who couldn't return
his feelings. I felt the blood run out of my face.
"Something wrong?" Charlie asked as he came down the stairs.
"No," I lied, hanging up the phone. "Billy says Jacob is feeling better.
It wasn't mono. So that's good."
"Is he coming here, or are you going there?" Charlie asked absentmindedly
as he started poking through the fridge.
"Neither," I admitted. "He's going out with some other friends."
The tone of my voice finally caught Charlie's attention. He looked up at
me with sudden alarm, his hands frozen around a package of cheese slices.
"Isn't it a little early for lunch?" I asked as lightly as I could
manage, trying to distract him.
"No, I'm just packing something to take out to the river…"
"Oh, fishing today?"
"Well, Harry called… and it's not raining." He was creating a stack of
food on the counter as he spoke. Suddenly he looked up again as if he'd
just realized something. "Say, did you want me to stay with you, since
Jake's out?"
"That's okay, Dad," I said, working to sound indifferent. "The fish bite
better when the weather's nice."
He stared at me, indecision clear on his face. I knew that he was
worrying, afraid to leave me alone, in case I got "mopey" again.
"Seriously, Dad. I think I'll call Jessica," I fibbed quickly. I'd rather
be alone than have him watching me all day. "We have a Calculus test to
study for. I could use her help." That part was true. But I'd have to
make do without it.
"That's a good idea. You've been spending so much time with Jacob, your
other friends are going to think you've forgotten them."
I smiled and nodded as if I cared what my other friends thought.
Charlie started to turn, but then spun back with a worried expression.
"Hey, you'll study here or at Jess's, right?"
"Sure, where else?"
"Well, it's just that I want you to be careful to stay out of the woods,
like I told you before."
It took me a minute to understand, distracted as I was. "More bear
trouble?"
Charlie nodded, frowning. "We've got a missing hiker—the rangers found
his camp early this morning, but no sign of him. There were some really
big animal prints… of course those could have come later, smelling the
food… Anyway, they're setting traps for it now."
"Oh," I said vaguely. I wasn't really listening to his warnings; I was
much more upset by the situation with Jacob than by the possibility of
being eaten by a bear.
I was glad that Charlie was in a hurry. He didn't wait for me to call
Jessica, so I didn't have to put on that charade. I went through the
motions of gathering my school-books on the kitchen table to pack them in
my bag; that was probably too much, and if he hadn't been eager to hit
the holes, it might have made him suspicious.
I was so busy looking busy that the ferociously empty day ahead didn't
really crash down on me until after I'd watched him drive away. It only
took about two minutes of staring at the silent kitchen phone to decide
that I wasn't staying home today. I considered my options.
I wasn't going to call Jessica. As far as I could tell, Jessica had
crossed over to the dark side.
I could drive to La Push and get my motorcycle—an appealing thought but
for one minor problem: who was going to drive me to the emergency room if
I needed it afterward?
Or… I already had our map and compass in the truck. I was pretty sure I
understood the process well enough by now that I wouldn't get lost. Maybe
I could eliminate two lines today, putting us ahead of schedule for
whenever Jacob decided to honor me with his presence again. I refused to
think about how long that might be. Or if it was going to be never.
I felt a brief twinge of guilt as I realized how Charlie would feel about
this, but I ignored it. I just couldn't stay in the house again today.
A few minutes later I was on the familiar dirt road that led to nowhere
in particular. I had the windows rolled down and I drove as fast as was
healthy for my truck, trying to enjoy the wind against my face. It was
cloudy, but almost dry—a very nice day, for Forks.
Getting started took me longer than it would have taken Jacob. After I
parked in the usual spot, I had to spend a good fifteen minutes studying
the little needle on the compass face and the markings on the now worn
map. When I was reasonably certain that I was following the right line of
the web, I set off into the woods.
The forest was full of life today, all the little creatures enjoying the
momentary dryness. Somehow, though, even with the birds chirping and
cawing, the insects buzzing noisily around my head, and the occasional
scurry of the field mice through the shrubs, the forest seemed creepier
today; it reminded me of my most recent nightmare. I knew it was just
because I was alone, missing Jacob's carefree whistle and the sound of
another pair of feet squishing across the damp ground.
The sense of unease grew stronger the deeper I got into the trees.
Breathing started to get more difficult—not because of exertion, but
because I was having trouble with the stupid hole in my chest again. I
kept my arms tight around my torso and tried to banish the ache from my
thoughts. I almost turned around, but I hated to waste the effort I'd
already expended.
The rhythm of my footsteps started to numb my mind and my pain as I
trudged on. My breathing evened out eventually, and I was glad I hadn't
quit. I was getting better at this bushwhacking thing; I could tell I was
faster.
I didn't realize quite how much more efficiently I was moving. I thought
I'd covered maybe four miles, and I wasn't even starting to look around
for it yet. And then, with an abruptness that disoriented me, I stepped
through a low arch made by two vine maples—pushing past the chest-high
ferns—into the meadow.
It was the same place, of that I was instantly sure. I'd never seen
another clearing so symmetrical. It was as perfectly round as if someone
had intentionally created the flawless circle, tearing out the trees but
leaving no evidence of that violence in the waving grass. To the east, I
could hear the stream bubbling quietly.
The place wasn't nearly so stunning without the sunlight, but it was
still very beautiful and serene. It was the wrong season for wildflowers;
the ground was thick with tall grass that swayed in the light breeze like
ripples across a lake.
It was the same place… but it didn't hold what I had been searching for.
The disappointment was nearly as instantaneous as the recognition. I sank
down right where I was, kneeling there at the edge of the clearing,
beginning to gasp.
What was the point of going any farther? Nothing lingered here. Nothing
more than the memories that I could have called back whenever I wanted
to, if I was ever willing to endure the corresponding pain—the pain that
had me now, had me cold. There was nothing special about this place
without him. I wasn't exactly sure what I'd hoped to feel here, but the
meadow was empty of atmosphere, empty of everything, just like everywhere
else. Just like my nightmares. My head swirled dizzily.
At least I'd come alone. I felt a rush of thankfulness as I realized
that. If I'd discovered the meadow with Jacob… well, there was no way I
could have disguised the abyss I was plunging into now. How could I have
explained the way I was fracturing into pieces, the way I had to curl
into a ball to keep the empty hole from tearing me apart? It was so much
better that I didn't have an audience.
And I wouldn't have to explain to anyone why I was in such a hurry to
leave, either. Jacob would have assumed, after going to so much trouble
to locate the stupid place, I would want to spend more than a few seconds
here. But I was already trying to find the strength to get to my feet
again, forcing myself out of the ball so that I could escape. There was
too much pain in this empty place to bear—I would crawl away if I had to.
How lucky that I was alone!
Alone. I repeated the word with grim satisfaction as I wrenched myself to
my feet despite the pain. At precisely that moment, a figure stepped out
from the trees to the north, some thirty paces away.
A dizzying array of emotions shot through me in a second. The first was
surprise; I was far from any trail here, and I didn't expect company.
Then, as my eyes focused on the motionless figure, seeing the utter
stillness, the pallid skin, a rush of piercing hope rocked through me. I
suppressed it viciously, fighting against the equally sharp lash of agony
as my eyes continued to the face beneath the black hair, the face that
wasn't the one I wanted to see. Next was fear; this was not the face I
grieved for, but it was close enough for me to know that the man facing
me was no stray hiker.
And finally, in the end, recognition.
"Laurent!" I cried in surprised pleasure.
It was an irrational response. I probably should have stopped at fear.
Laurent had been one of James's coven when we'd first met. He hadn't been
involved with the hunt that followed—the hunt where I was the quarry—but
that was only because he was afraid; I was protected by a bigger coven
than his own. It would have been different if that wasn't the case—he'd
had no compunctions, at the time, against making a meal of me. Of course,
he must have changed, because he'd gone to Alaska to live with the other
civilized coven there, the other family that refused to drink human blood
for ethical reasons. The other family like… but I couldn't let myself
think the name.
Yes, fear would have made more sense, but all I felt was an overwhelming
satisfaction. The meadow was a magic place again. A darker magic than I'd
expected, to be sure, but magic all the same. Here was the connection I'd
sought. The proof, however remote, that—somewhere in the same world where
I lived—he did exist.
It was impossible how exactly the same Laurent looked. I suppose it was
very silly and human to expect some kind of change in the last year. But
there was something… I couldn't quite put my finger on it.
"Bella?" he asked, looking more astonished than I felt.
"You remember." I smiled. It was ridiculous that I should be so elated
because a vampire knew my name.
He grinned. "I didn't expect to see you here." He strolled toward me, his
expression bemused.
"Isn't it the other way around? I do live here. I thought you'd gone to
Alaska."
He stopped about ten paces away, cocking his head to the side. His face
was the most beautiful face I'd seen in what felt like an eternity. I
studied his features with a strangely greedy sense of release. Here was
someone I didn't have to pretend for—someone who already knew everything
I could never say.
"You're right," he agreed. "I did go to Alaska. Still, I didn't expect…
When I found the Cullen place empty, I thought they'd moved on."
"Oh." I bit my lip as the name set the raw edges of my wound throbbing.
It took me a second to compose myself. Laurent waited with curious eyes.
"They did move on," I finally managed to tell him.
"Hmm," he murmured. "I'm surprised they left you behind. Weren't you sort
of a pet of theirs?" His eyes were innocent of any intended offense.
I smiled wryly. "Something like that."
"Hmm," he said, thoughtful again.
At that precise moment, I realized why he looked the same—too much the
same. After Carlisle told us that Laurent had stayed with Tanya's family,
I'd begun to picture him, on the rare occasions that I thought of him at
all, with the same golden eyes that the… Cullens—I forced the name out,
wincing—had. That all good vampires had.
I took an involuntary step back, and his curious, dark red eyes followed
the movement.
"Do they visit often?" he asked, still casual, but his weight shifted
toward me.
"Lie," the beautiful velvet voice whispered anxiously from my memory.
I started at the sound of his voice, but it should not have surprised me.
Was I nor in the worst danger imaginable? The motorcycle was safe as
kittens next to this.
I did what the voice said to do.
"Now and again." I tried to make my voice light, relaxed. "The time seems
longer to me, I imagine. You know how they get distracted…" I was
beginning to babble. I had to work to shut myself up.
"Hmm," he said again. "The house smelled like it had been vacant for a
while…"
"You must lie better than that, Bella," the voice urged.
I tried. "I'll have to mention to Carlisle that you stopped by. He'll be
sorry they missed your visit." I pretended to deliberate for a second.
"But I probably shouldn't mention it to… Edward, I suppose—" I barely
managed to say his name, and it twisted my expression on the way out,
ruining my bluff "—he has such a temper… well, I'm sure you remember.
He's still touchy about the whole James thing." I rolled my eyes and
waved one hand dismissively, like it was all ancient history, but there
was an edge of hysteria to my voice. I wondered if he would recognize
what it was.
"Is he really?" Laurent asked pleasantly… skeptically.
I kept my reply short, so that my voice wouldn't betray my panic.
"Mm-hmm."
Laurent took a casual step to the side, gazing around at the little
meadow. I didn't miss that the step brought him closer to me. In my head,
the voice responded with a low snarl.
"So how are things working out in Denali? Carlisle said you were staying
with Tanya?" My voice was too high.
The question made him pause. "I like Tanya very much," he mused. "And her
sister Irina even more… I've never stayed in one place for so long
before, and I enjoy the advantages, the novelty of it. But, the
restrictions are difficult… I'm surprised that any of them can keep it up
for long." He smiled at me conspiratorially. "Sometimes I cheat."
I couldn't swallow. My foot started to ease back, but I froze when his
red eyes flickered down to catch the movement.
"Oh," I said in a faint voice. "Jasper has problems with that, too."
"Don't move," the voice whispered. I tried to do what he instructed. It
was hard; the instinct to take flight was nearly uncontrollable.
"Really?" Laurent seemed interested. "Is that why they left?"
"No," I answered honestly. "Jasper is more careful at home."
"Yes," Laurent agreed. "I am, too."
The step forward he took now was quite deliberate.
"Did Victoria ever find you?" I asked, breathless, desperate to distract
him. It was the first question that popped into my head, and I regretted
it as soon as the words were spoken. Victoria—who had hunted me with
James, and then disappeared—was not someone I wanted to think of at this
particular moment.
But the question did stop him.
"Yes," he said, hesitating on that step. "I actually came here as a favor
to her." He made a face. "She won't be happy about this."
"About what?" I said eagerly, inviting him to continue. He was glaring
into the trees, away from me. I took advantage of his diversion, taking a
furtive step back.
He looked back at me and smiled—the expression made him look like a
black-haired angel.
"About me killing you," he answered in a seductive purr.
I staggered back another step. The frantic growling in my head made it
hard to hear.
"She wanted to save that part for herself," he went on blithely. "She's
sort of… put out with you, Bella."
"Me?" I squeaked.
He shook his head and chuckled. "I know, it seems a little backward to
me, too. But James was her mate, and your Edward killed him."
Even here, on the point of death, his name tore against my unhealed
wounds like a serrated edge.
Laurent was oblivious to my reaction. "She thought it more appropriate to
kill you than Edward—fair turnabout, mate for mate. She asked me to get
the lay of the land for her, so to speak. I didn't imagine you would be
so easy to get to. So maybe her plan was flawed—apparently it wouldn't be
the revenge she imagined, since you must not mean very much to him if he
left you here unprotected."
Another blow, another tear through my chest.
Laurent's weight shifted slightly, and I stumbled another step back.
He frowned. "I suppose she'll be angry, all the same."
"Then why not wait for her?" I choked out.
A mischievous grin rearranged his features. "Well, you've caught me at a
bad time, Bella. I didn't come to this place on Victoria's mission—I was
hunting. I'm quite thirsty, and you do smell… simply mouthwatering."
Laurent looked at me with approval, as if he meant it as a compliment.
"Threaten him," the beautiful delusion ordered, his voice distorted with
dread.
"He'll know it was you," I whispered obediently. "You won't get away with
this."
"And why not?" Laurent's smile widened. He gazed around the small opening
in the trees. "The scent will wash away with the next rain. No one will
find your body—you'll simply go missing, like so many, many other humans.
There's no reason for Edward to think of me, if he cares enough to
investigate. This is nothing personal, let me assure you, Bella. Just
thirst."
"Beg," my hallucination begged.
"Please," I gasped.
Laurent shook his head, his face kind. "Look at it this way, Bella.
You're very lucky I was the one to find you."
"Am I?" I mouthed, faltering another step back.
Laurent followed, lithe and graceful.
"Yes," he assured me. "I'll be very quick. You won't feel a thing, I
promise. Oh, I'll lie to Victoria about that later, naturally, just to
placate her. But if you knew what she had planned for you, Bella…" He
shook his head with a slow movement, almost as if in disgust. "I swear
you'd be thanking me for this."
I stared at him in horror.
He sniffed at the breeze that blew threads of my hair in his direction.
"Mouthwatering," he repeated, inhaling deeply.
I tensed for the spring, my eyes squinting as I cringed away, and the
sound of Edward's furious roar echoed distantly in the back of my head.
His name burst through all the walls I'd built to contain it. Edward,
Edward, Edward. I was going to die. It shouldn't matter if I thought of
him now. Edward, I love you.
Through my narrowed eyes, I watched as Laurent paused in the act of
inhaling and whipped his head abruptly to the left. I was afraid to look
away from him, to follow his glance, though he hardly needed a
distraction or any other trick to overpower me. I was too amazed to feel
relief when he started slowly backing away from me.
"I don't believe it," he said, his voice so low that I barely heard it.
I had to look then. My eyes scanned the meadow, searching for the
interruption that had extended my life by a few seconds. At first I saw
nothing, and my gaze flickered back to Laurent. He was retreating more
quickly now, his eyes boring into the forest.
Then I saw it; a huge black shape eased out of the trees, quiet as a
shadow, and stalked deliberately toward the vampire. It was enormous—as
tall as a horse, but thicker, much more muscular. The long muzzle
grimaced, revealing a line of dagger-like incisors. A grisly snarl rolled
out from between the teeth, rumbling across the clearing like a prolonged
crack of thunder.
The bear. Only, it wasn't a bear at all. Still, this gigantic black
monster had to be the creature causing all the alarm. From a distance,
anyone would assume it was a bear. What else could be so vast, so
powerfully built?
I wished I were lucky enough to see it from a distance. Instead, it
padded silently through the grass a mere ten feet from where I stood.
"Don't move an inch," Edward's voice whispered.
I stared at the monstrous creature, my mind boggling as I tried to put a
name to it. There was a distinctly canine cast to the shape of it, the
way it moved. I could only think of one possibility, locked in horror as
I was. Yet I'd never imagined that a wolf could get so big.
Another growl rumbled in its throat, and I shuddered away from the sound.
Laurent was backing toward the edge of the trees, and, under the freezing
terror, confusion swept through me. Why was Laurent retreating? Granted,
the wolf was monstrous in size, but it was just an animal. What reason
would a vampire have for fearing an animal? And Laurent was afraid. His
eyes were wide with horror, just like mine.
As if in answer to my question, suddenly the mammoth wolf was not alone.
Flanking it on either side, another two gigantic beasts prowled silently
into the meadow. One was a deep gray, the other brown, neither one quite
as tall as the first. The gray wolf came through the trees only a few
feet from me, its eyes locked on Laurent.
Before I could even react, two more wolves followed, lined up in a V,
like geese flying south. Which meant that the rusty brown monster that
shrugged through the brush last was close enough for me to touch.
I gave an involuntary gasp and jumped back—which was the stupidest thing
I could have done. I froze again, waiting for the wolves to turn on me,
the much weaker of the available prey. I wished briefly that Laurent
would get on with it and crush the wolf pack—it should be so simple for
him. I guessed that, between the two choices before me, being eaten by
wolves was almost certainly the worse option.
The wolf closest to me, the reddish brown one, turned its head slightly
at the sound of my gasp.
The wolf's eyes were dark, nearly black. It gazed at me for a fraction of
a second, the deep eyes seeming too intelligent for a wild animal.
As it stared at me, I suddenly thought of Jacob—again, with gratitude. At
least I'd come here alone, to this fairytale meadow filled with dark
monsters. At least Jacob wasn't going to die, too. At least I wouldn't
have his death on my hands.
Then another low growl from the leader caused the russet wolf to whip his
head around, back toward Laurent.
Laurent was staring at the pack of monster wolves with unconcealed shock
and fear. The first I could understand. But I was stunned when, without
warning, he spun and disappeared into the trees.
He ran away.
The wolves were after him in a second, sprinting across the open grass
with a few powerful bounds, snarling and snapping so loudly that my hands
flew up instinctively to cover my ears. The sound faded with surprising
swiftness once they disappeared into the woods.
And then I was alone again.
My knees buckled under me, and I fell onto my hands, sobs building in my
throat.
I knew I needed to leave, and leave now. How long would the wolves chase
Laurent before they doubled back for me? Or would Laurent turn on them?
Would he be the one that came looking?
I couldn't move at first, though; my arms and legs were shaking, and I
didn't know how to get back to my feet.
My mind couldn't move past the fear, the horror or the confusion. I
didn't understand what I'd just witnessed.
A vampire should not have run from overgrown dogs like that. What good
would their teeth be against his granite skin?
And the wolves should have given Laurent a wide berth. Even if their
extraordinary size had taught them to fear nothing, it still made no
sense that they would pursue him. I doubted his icy marble skin would
smell anything like food. Why would they pass up something warmblooded
and weak like me to chase after Laurent?
I couldn't make it add up.
A cold breeze whipped through the meadow, swaying the grass like
something was moving through it.
I scrambled to my feet, backing away even though the wind brushed
harmlessly past me. Stumbling in panic, I turned and ran headlong into
the trees.
The next few hours were agony. It took me three times as long to escape
the trees as it had to get to the meadow.
At first I paid no attention to where I was headed, focused only on what
I was running from By the time I collected myself enough to remember the
compass, I was deep in the unfamiliar and menacing forest. My hands were
shaking so violently that I had to set the compass on the muddy ground to
be able to read it. Every few minutes I would stop to put the compass
dowr and check that I was still heading northwest, hearing—when the
sounds weren't hidden behind the frantic squelching of my footsteps—the
quiet whisper of unseen things moving in the leaves.
The call of a jaybird made me leap back and fall into a thick stand of
young spruce, scraping up my arms and tangling my hair with sap. The
sudden rush of a squirrel up a hemlock made me scream so loud it hurt my
own ears.
At last there was a break in the trees ahead. I came out onto the empty
road a mile or so south of where I'd left the truck. Exhausted as I was,
I jogged up the lane until I found it. By the time I pulled myself into
the cab, I was sobbing again. I fiercely shoved down both stiff locks
before I dug my keys out of my pocket. The roar of the engine was
comforting and sane. It helped me control the tears as I sped as fast as
my truck would allow toward the main highway.
I was calmer, but still a mess when I got home. Charlie's cruiser was in
the driveway—I hadn't realized how late it was. The sky was already dusky.
"Bella?" Charlie asked when I slammed the front door behind me and
hastily turned the locks.
"Yeah, it's me." My voice was unsteady.
"Where have you been?" he thundered, appearing through the kitchen
doorway with an ominous expression.
I hesitated. He'd probably called the Stanleys. I'd better stick to the
truth.
"I was hiking," I admitted.
His eyes were tight. "What happened to going to Jessica's?"
"I didn't feel like Calculus today."
Charlie folded his arms across his chest. "I thought I asked you to stay
out of the forest."
"Yeah, I know. Don't worry, I won't do it again." I shuddered.
Charlie seemed to really look at me for the first time. I remembered that
I had spent some time on the forest floor today; I must be a mess.
"What happened?" Charlie demanded.
Again, I decided that the truth, or part of it anyway, was the best
option. I was too shaken to pretend that I'd spent an uneventful day with
the flora and fauna.
"I saw the bear." I tried to say it calmly, but my voice was high and
shaky. "It's not a bear, though—it's some kind of wolf. And there are
five of them. A big black one, and gray, and reddish-brown…"
Charlie's eyes grew round with horror. He strode quickly to me and
grabbed the tops of my arms.
"Are you okay?"
My head bobbed in a weak nod.
"Tell me what happened."
"They didn't pay any attention to me. But aftet they were gone, I ran
away and I fell down a lot."
He let go of my shoulders and wrapped his arms around me. For a long
moment, he didn't say anything.
"Wolves," he murmured.
"What?"
"The rangers said the tracks were wrong for a bear—but wolves just don't
get that big…"
"These were huge."
"How many did you say you saw?"
"Five."
Charlie shook his head, frowning with anxiety, He finally spoke in a tone
that allowed no argument. "No more hiking."
"No problem," I promised fervently.
Charlie called the station to report what I'd seen. I fudged a little bit
about where exactly I'd seen the wolves—claiming I'd been on the trail
that led to the north. I didn't want my dad to know how deep I'd gone
into the forest against his wishes, and, more importantly, I didn't want
anyone wandering near where Laurent might be searching for me. The
thought of it made me feel sick.
"Are you hungry?" he asked me when he hung up the phone.
I shook my head, though I must have been starving. I hadn't eaten all day.
"Just tired," I told him. I turned for the stairs.
"Hey," Charlie said, his voice suddenly suspicious again. "Didn't you say
Jacob was gone for the day?"
"That's what Billy said," I told him, confused by his question.
He studied my expression for a minute, and seemed satisfied with what he
saw there.
"Huh."
"Why?" I demanded. It sounded like he was implying that I'd been lying to
him this morning. About something besides studying with Jessica.
"Well, it's just that when I went to pick up Harry, I saw Jacob out in
front of the store down there with some of his friends. I waved hi, but
he… well, I guess I don't know if he saw me. I think maybe he was arguing
with his friends. He looked strange, like he was upset about something.
And… different. It's like you can watch that kid growing! He gets bigger
every time I see him."
"Billy said Jake and his friends were going up to Port Angeles to see
some movies. They were probably just waiting for someone to meet them."
"Oh." Charlie nodded and headed for the kitchen.
I stood in the hall, thinking about Jacob arguing with his friends. I
wondered if he had confronted Embry about the situation with Sam. Maybe
that was the reason he'd ditched me today—if it meant he could sort
things out with Embry, I was glad he had.
I paused to check the locks again before I went to my room. It was a
silly thing to do. What difference would a lock make to any of the
monsters I'd seen this afternoon? I assumed the handle alone would stymie
the wolves, not having opposable thumbs. And if Laurent came here…
Or… Victoria.
I lay down on my bed, but I was shaking too hard to hope for sleep. I
curled into a cramped ball under my quilt, and faced the horrifying facts.
There was nothing I could do. There were no precautions I could take.
There was no place I could hide. There was no one who could help me.
I realized, with a nauseous roll of my stomach, that the situation was
worse than even that. Because all those facts applied to Charlie, too. My
father, sleeping one room away from me, was just a hairsbreadth off the
heart of the target that was centered on me. My scent would lead them
here, whether I was here or not.
The tremors rocked me until my teeth chattered.
To calm myself, I fantasized the impossible: I imagined the big wolves
catching up to Laurent in the woods and massacring the indestructible
immortal the way they would any normal person. Despite the absurdity of
such a vision, the idea comforted me. If the wolves got him, then he
couldn't tell Victoria I was here all alone. If he didn't return, maybe
she'd think the Cullens were still protecting me. If only the wolves
could win such a fight…
My good vampires were never coming back; how soothing it was to imagine
that the other kind could also disappear.
I squeezed my eyes tight together and waited for unconsciousness—almost
eager for my nightmare to start. Better that than the pale, beautiful
face that smiled at me now from behind my lids.
In my imagination, Victoria's eyes were black with thirst, bright with
anticipation, and her lips curled back from her gleaming teeth in
pleasure. Her red hair was brilliant as fire; it blew chaotically around
her wild face.
Laurent's words repeated in my head. If you knew what she had planned for
you …
I pressed my fist against my mouth to keep from screaming.
===========================================================================
11. CULT EACH TIME THAT I OPENED MY EYES TO THE MORNING light and realized I'd
lived through another night was a surprise to me. After the surprise wore
off, my heart would start to race and my palms would sweat; I couldn't
really breathe again until I'd gotten up and ascertained that Charlie had
survived as well.
I could tell he was worried—watching me jump at any loud sound, or my
face suddenly go white for no reason that he could see. From the
questions he asked now and then, he seemed to blame the change on Jacob's
continued absence.
The terror that was always foremost in my thoughts usually distracted me
from the fact that another week had passed, and Jacob still hadn't called
me. But when I was able to concentrate on my normal life—if my life was
really ever normal—this upset me.
I missed him horribly.
It had been bad enough to be alone before I was scared silly. Now, more
than ever, I yearned for his carefree laugh and his infectious grin. I
needed the safe sanity of his homemade garage and his warm hand around my
cold fingers.
I'd half expected him to call on Monday. If there had been some progress
with Embry, wouldn't he want to report it? I wanted to believe that it
was worry for his friend that was occupying all his time, not that he was
just giving up on me.
I called him Tuesday, but no one answered. Were the phone lines still
having problems? Or had Billy invested in caller I.D.?
On Wednesday I called every half hour until after eleven at night,
desperate to hear the warmth of Jacob's voice.
Thursday I sat in my truck in front of my house—with the locks pushed
down—keys in hand, for a solid hour. I was arguing with myself, trying to
justify a quick trip to La Push, but I couldn't do it.
I knew that Laurent had gone back to Victoria by now. If I went to La
Push, I took the chance of leading one of them there. What if they caught
up to me when Jake was nearby? As much as it hurt me, I knew it was
better for Jacob that he was avoiding me. Safer for him.
It was bad enough that I couldn't figure out a way to keep Charlie safe.
Nighttime was the most likely time that they would come looking ior me,
and what could I say to get Charlie out of the house? If I told him the
truth, he'd have me locked up in a rubber room somewhere. I would have
endured that—welcomed it, even—if it could have kept him safe. But
Victoria would still come to his house first, looking for me. Maybe, if
she found me here, that would be enough for her. Maybe she would just
leave when she was done with me.
So I couldn't run away. Even if I could, where would I go? To Renee? I
shuddered at the thought of dragging my lethal shadows into my mother's
safe, sunny world. I would never endanger her that way.
The worry was eating a hole in my stomach. Soon I would have matching
punctures.
That night, Charlie did me another favor and called Harry again to see if
the Blacks were out of town. Harry reported that Billy had attended the
council meeting Wednesday night, and never mentioned anything about
leaving. Charlie warned me not to make a nuisance of myself—Jacob would
call when he got around to it.
Friday afternoon, as I drove home from school, it hit me out of the blue.
I wasn't paying attention to the familiar road, letting the sound of the
engine deaden my brain and silence the worries, when my subconscious
delivered a verdict it must have been working on for some time without my
knowledge.
As soon as I thought of it, I felt really stupid for not seeing it
sooner. Sure. I'd had a lot on my mind—revenue-obsessed vampires, giant
mutant wolves, a ragged hole in the center of my chest—but when I laid
the evidence out, it was embarrassingly obvious.
Jacob avoiding me. Charlie saying he looked strange, upset. . . . Billy's
vague, unhelpful answers.
Holy crow, I knew exactly what was going on with Jacob.
It was Sam Uley. Even my nightmares had been trying to tell me that. Sam
had gotten to Jacob. Whatever was happening to the other boys on the
reservation had reached out and stolen my friend. He'd been sucked into
Sam's cult.
He hadn't given up on me at all, I realized with a rush of feeling.
I let my truck idle in front of my house. What should I do? I weighed the
dangers against each other.
If I went looking for Jacob, I risked the chance of Victoria or Laurent
finding me with him.
If I didn't go after him, Sam would pull him deeper into his frightening,
compulsory gang. Maybe it would be too late if I didn't act soon.
It had been a week, and no vampires had come for me yet. A week was more
than enough time for them to have returned, so I must not be a priority.
Most likely, as I'd decided before, they would come for me at night. The
chances of them following me to La Push were much lower than the chance
of losing Jacob to Sam.
It was worth the danger of the secluded forest road. This was no idle
visit to see what was going on. I knew what was going on. This was a
rescue mission. I was going to talk to Jacob—kidnap him if I had to. I'd
once seen a PBS show on deprogramming the brainwashed. There had to be
some kind of cure.
I decided I'd better call Charlie first. Maybe whatever was going on down
in La Push was something the police should be involved in. I dashed
inside, in a hurry to be on my way.
Charlie answered the phone it the station himself.
"Chief Swan."
"Dad, it's Bella."
"What's wrong?'"
I couldn't argue with his doomsday assumption this time. My voice was
shaking.
"I'm worried about Jacob."
"Why?" he asked, surprised by the unexpected topic.
"I think… I think something weird is going on down at the reservation.
Jacob told me about some strange stuff happening with the other boys his
age. Now he's acting the same way and I'm scared."
"What kind of stuff?" He used his professional, police business voice.
That was good; he was taking me seriously.
"First he was scared, and then he was avoiding me, and now… I'm afraid
he's part of that bizarre gang down there, Sam's gang. Sam Uley's gang."
"Sam Uley?" Charlie repeated, surprised again.
"Yes."
Charlie's voice was more relaxed when he answered. "I think you've got it
wrong, Bells. Sam Uley is a great kid. Well, he's a man now. A good son.
You should hear Billy talk about him. He's really doing wonders with the
youth on the reservation. He's the one who—" Charlie broke off
mid-sentence, and I guessed that he had been about to make a reference to
the night I'd gotten lost in the woods. I moved on quickly.
"Dad, it's not like that. Jacob was scared of him."
"Did you talk to Billy about this?" He was trying to soothe me now. I'd
lost him as soon as I'd mentioned Sam.
"Billy's not concerned."
"Well, Bella, then I'm sure it's okay. Jacob's a kid; he was probably
just messing around. I'm sure he's fine. He can't spend every waking
minute with you, after all."
"This isn't about me," I insisted, but the battle was lost.
"I don't think you need to worry about this. Let Billy take care of
Jacob."
"Charlie…" My voice was starting to sound whiney.
"Bells, I got a lot on my plate right now. Two tourists have gone missing
off a trail outside crescent lake." There was an anxious edge to his
voice. "This wolf problem is getting out of hand."
I was momentarily distracted—stunned, really—by his news. There was no
way the wolves could have survived a match-up with Laurent…
"Are you sure that's what happened to them?" I asked.
"Afraid so, honey. There was—" He hesitated. "There were tracks again,
and… some blood this time."
"Oh!" It must not have come to a confrontation, then. Laurent must have
simply outrun the wolves, but why? What I'd seen in the meadow just got
stranger and stranger—more impossible to understand.
"Look, I really have to go. Don't worry about Jake, Bella. I'm sure it's
nothing."
"Fine," I said curtly, frustrated as his words reminded me of the more
urgent crisis at hand. "Bye." I hang up.
I stared at the phone for a long minute. What the hell, I decided.
Billy answered after two rings.
"Hello?"
"Hey, Billy," I almost growled. I tried to sound more friendly as I
continued. "Can I talk to Jacob, please?"
"Jake's not here."
What a shock. "Do you know where he is?"
"He's out with his friends." Billy's voice was careful.
"Oh yeah? Anyone I know? Quil?" I could tell the words didn't come across
as casually as I'd meant them to.
"No," Billy said slowly. "I don't think he's with Quil today."
I knew better than to mention Sam's name.
"Embry?" I asked.
Billy seemed happier to answer this one. "Yeah, he's with Embry."
That was enough for me. Embry was one of them.
"Well, have him call me when he gets in, all right?"
"Sure, sure. No problem." Click.
"See you soon, Billy," I muttered into the dead phone.
I drove to La Push determined to wait. I'd sit out front of his house all
night if I had to. I'd miss school. The boy was going to have to come
home sometime, and when he did, he was going to have to talk to me.
My mind was so preoccupied that the trip I'd been terrified of making
seemed to take only a few seconds. Before I was expecting it, the forest
began to thin, and I knew I would soon be able to see the first little
houses of the reservation.
Walking away, along the left side of the road, was a tall boy with a
baseball cap.
My breath caught for just a moment in my throat, hopeful that luck was
with me for once, and I'd srumbled across Jacob without hardly trying.
But this boy was too wide, and the hair was short under the hat. Even
from behind, I was sure it was Quil, though he looked bigger than the
last time I'd seen him. What was with these Quileute boys? Were they
feeding them experimental growth hormones?
I crossed over to the wrong side of the road to stop next to him. He
looked up when the roar of my truck approached.
Quil's expression frightened me more than it surprised me. His face was
bleak, brooding, his forehead creased with worry.
"Oh, hey, Bella," he greeted me dully.
"Hi, Quil… Are you okay?"
He stared at me morosely. "Fine."
"Can I give you a ride somewhere?" I offered.
"Sure, I guess," he mumbled. He shuffled around the front of the truck
and opened the passenger door to climb in.
"Where to?"
"My house is on the north side, back behind the store," he told me.
"Have you seen Jacob today." The question burst from me almost before
he'd finished speaking.
I looked at Quil eagerly, waiting for his answer. He stared out the
windshield for a second before he spoke. "From a distance," he finally
said.
"A distance?" I echoed.
"I tried to follow them—he was with Embry." His voice was low, hard to
hear over the engine. I leaned closer. "I know they saw me. But they
turned and just disappeared into the trees. I don't think they were
alone—I think Sam and his crew might have been with them.
"I've been stumbling around in the forest for an hour, yelling for them.
I just barely found the road again when you drove up."
"So Sam did get to him." The words were a little distorted—my teeth were
gritted together.
Quil stared at me. "You know about that.?"
I nodded. "Jake told me… before."
"Before," Quil repeated, and sighed.
"Jacob's just as bad as the others now?"
"Never leaves Sam's side." Quil turned his head and spit out the open
window.
"And before that—did he avoid everyone? Was he acting upset?"
His voice was low and rough. "Not for as long as the others. Maybe one
day. Then Sam caught up with him."
"What do you think it is? Drugs or something?"
"I can't see Jacob or Embry getting into anything like that… but what do
I know? What else could it be? And why aren't the old people worried?" He
shook his head, and the fear showed in his eyes now. "Jacob didn't want
to be a part of this… cult. I don't understand what could change him." He
stared at me, his face frightened. "I don't want to be next."
My eyes mirrored his fear. That was the second time I'd heard it
described as a cult. I shivered. "Are your parents any help?"
He grimaced. "Right. My grandfather's on the council with Jacob's dad.
Sam Uley is the best thing that ever happened to this place, as far as
he's concerned."
We stared at each other for a prolonged moment. We were in La Push now,
and my truck was barely crawling along the empty road. I could see the
village's only store not too far ahead.
"I'll get out now," Quil said. "My house is right over there." He
gestured toward the small wooden rectangle behind the store. I pulled
over to the shoulder, and he jumped out.
"I'm going to go wait for Jacob," I told him in a hard voice.
"Good luck." He slammed the door and shuffled forward along the road, his
head bent forward, his shoulders slumped.
Quil's face haunted me as I made a wide U-turn and headed back toward the
Blacks'. He was terrified of being next. What was happening here?
I stopped in front of Jacob's house, killing the motor and rolling down
the windows. It was stuffy today, no breeze. I put my feet up on the
dashboard and settled in to wait.
A movement flashed in my peripheral vision—I turned and spotted Billy
looking at me through the front window with a confused expression. I
waved once and smiled a tight smile, but stayed where I was.
His eyes narrowed; he let the curtain fall across the glass.
I was prepared to stay as long as it took, but I wished I had something
to do. I dug up a pen out of the bottom of my backpack, and an old test.
I started to doodle on the back of the scrap.
I'd only had time to scrawl one row of diamonds when there was a sharp
tap against my door.
I jumped, looking up, expecting Billy.
"What are you doing here, Bella.'" Jacob growled.
I stared at him in blank astonishment.
Jacob had changed radically in the last weeks since I'd seen him. The
first thing I noticed was his hair—his beautiful hair was all gone,
cropped quite short, covering his head with an inky gloss like black
satin. The planes of his face seemed to have hardened subtly, tightened…
aged. His neck and his shoulders were different, too, thicker somehow.
His hands, where they gripped the window frame, looked enormous, with the
tendons and veins more prominent under the russet skin. But the physical
changes were insignificant.
It was his expression that made him almost completely unrecognizable. The
open, friendly smile was gone like the hair, the warmth in his dark eyes
altered to a brooding resentment that was instantly disturbing. There was
a darkness in Jacob now. Like my sun had imploded.
"Jacob?" I whispered.
He just stared at me, his eyes tense and angry.
I realized we weren't alone. Behind him stood four others; all tall and
russet-skinned, black hair chopped short just like Jacob's. They could
have been brothers—I couldn't even pick Embry out of the group. The
resemblance was only intensified by the strikingly similar hostility in
every pair of eyes.
Every pair but one. The oldest by several years, Sam stood in the very
back, his face serene and sure. I had to swallow back the bile that rose
in my throat. I wanted to take a swing at him. No, I wanted to do more
than that. More than anything, I wanted to be fierce and deadly, someone
no one would dare mess with. Someone who would scare Sam Uley silly.
I wanted to be a vampire.
The violent desire caught me off guard and knocked the wind out of me. It
was the most forbidden of all wishes—even when I only wished it for a
malicious reason like this, to gain an advantage over an enemy—because it
was the most painful. That future was lost to me forever, had never
really been within my grasp. I scrambled to gain control of myself while
the hole in my chest ached hollowly.
"What do you want?" Jacob demanded, his expression growing more resentful
as he watched the play of emotion across my face.
"I want to talk to you," I said in a weak voice. I tried to focus, but I
was still reeling against the escape of my taboo dream.
"Go ahead," he hissed through his teeth. His glare was vicious. I'd never
seen him look at anyone like that, least of all me. It hurt with a
surprising intensity—a physical pain, a stabbing in my head.
"Alone!" I hissed, and my voice was stronger.
He looked behind him, and I knew where his eyes would go. Every one of
them was turned for Sam's reaction.
Sam nodded once, his face unperturbed. He made a brief comment in an
unfamiliar, liquid language—I could only be positive that it wasn't
French or Spanish, but I guessed that it was Quileute. He turned and
walked into Jacob's house. The others, Paul, Jared, and Embry, I assumed,
followed him in.
"Okay." Jacob seemed a bit less furious when the others were gone. His
face was a little calmer, but also more hopeless. His mouth seemed
permanently pulled down at the corners.
I took a deep breath. "You know what I want to know."
He didn't answer. He just stared at me bitterly.
I stared back and the silence stretched on. The pain in his face unnerved
me. I felt a lump beginning to build in my throat.
"Can we walk?" I asked while I could still speak.
He didn't respond in any way; his face didn't change.
I got out of the car, feeling unseen eyes behind the windows on me, and
started walking toward the trees to the north. My feet squished in the
damp grass and mud beside the road, and, as that was the only sound, at
first I thought he wasn't following me. But when I glanced around, he was
right beside me, his feet having somehow found a less noisy path than
mine.
I felt better in the fringe of trees, where Sam couldn't possibly be
watching. As we walked, I struggled for the right thing to say, but
nothing came. I just got more and more angry that Jacob had gotten sucked
in… that Billy had allowed this… that Sam was able to stand there so
assured and calm…
Jacob suddenly picked up the pace, striding ahead of me easily with his
long legs, and then swinging around to face me, planting himself in my
path so I would have to stop too.
I was distracted by the overt grace of his movement. Jacob had been
nearly as klutzy as me with his never-ending growth spurt. When did that
changed?
But Jacob didn't give me time to think about it.
"Let's get this over with," he said in a hard, husky voice.
I waited. He knew what I wanted.
"It's not what you think." His voice was abruptly weary. "It's not what I
thought—I was way off."
"So what is it, then?"
He studied my face for a long moment, speculating. The anger never
completely left his eyes. "I can't tell you," he finally said.
My jaw tightened, and I spoke through my teeth. "I thought we were
friends."
"We were." There was a slight emphasis on the past tense.
"But you don't need friends anymore," I said sourly. "You have Sam. Isn't
that nice—you've always looked up to him so much."
"I didn't understand him before."
"And now you've seen the light. Hallelujah."
"It wasn't like I thought it was. This isn't Sam's fault. He's helping me
as much as he can." His voice turned brittle and he looked over my head,
past me, rage burning out from his eyes.
"He's helping you," I repeated dubiously. "Naturally."
But Jacob didn't seem to be listening. He was taking deep, deliberate
breaths, trying to calm himself. He was so mad that his hands were
shaking.
"Jacob, please," I whispered "Won't you tell me what happened? Maybe I
can help."
"No one can help me now." The words were a low moan; his voice broke.
"What did he do to you?" I demanded, tears collecting in my eyes. I
reached out to him, as I had once before, stepping forward with my arms
wide.
This time he cringed away, holding his hands up defensively. "Don't touch
me," he whispered.
"Is Sam catching?" I mumbled. The stupid tears had escaped the corners of
my eyes. I wiped them away with the back of my hand, and folded my arms
across my chest.
"Stop blaming Sam." The words came out fast, like a reflex. His hands
reached up to twist around the hair that was no longer there, and then
fell limply at his sides.
"Then who should I blame?" I retorted.
He halfway smiled; it was a bleak, twisted thing.
"You don't want to hear that."
"The hell I don't!" I snapped. "I want to know, and I want to know now."
"You're wrong," he snapped back.
"Don't you dare tell me I'm wrong—I'm not the one who got brainwashed!
Tell me now whose fault this all is, if it's not your precious Sam!"
"You asked for it," he growled at me, eyes glinting hard. "If you want to
blame someone, why don't you point your finger at those filthy, reeking
bloodsuckers that you love so much?"
My mouth fell open and my breath came out with a whooshing sound. I was
frozen in place, stabbed through with his double-edged words. The pain
twisted in familiar patterns through my body, the jagged hole ripping me
open from the inside out, but it was second place, background music to
the chaos of my thoughts. I couldn't believe that I'd heard him
correctly. There was no trace of indecision in his face. Only fury.
My mouth still hung wide.
"I told you that you didn't want to hear it," he said.
"I don't understand who you mean," I whispered.
He raised one eyebrow in disbelief. "I think you understand exactly who I
mean. You're not going to make me say it, are you? I don't like hurting
you."
"I don't understand who you mean," I repeated mechanically.
"The Cullens," he said slowly, drawing out the word, scrutinizing my face
as he spoke it. "I saw that—I can see in your eyes what it does to you
when I say their name."
I shook my head back and forth in denial, trying to clear it at the same
time. How did he know this? And how did it have anything to do with Sam's
cult? Was it a gang of vampire-haters? What was the point of forming such
a society when no vampires lived in Forks anymore? Why would Jacob start
believing the stories about the Cullens now, when the evidence of them
was long gone, never to return?
It took me too long to come up with the correct response. "Don't tell me
you're listening to Billy's superstitious nonsense now," I said with a
feeble attempt at mockery.
"He knows more than I gave him credit for."
"Be serious, Jacob."
He glared at me, his eyes critical.
"Superstitions aside," I said quickly. "I still don't see what you're
accusing the... Cullens"—wince—"of. They left more than half a year ago.
How can you blame them for what Sam is doing now?"
"Sam isn't doing anything, Bella. And I know they're gone. But sometimes…
things are set in motion, and then it's too late."
"What's set in motion? What's too late? What are you blaming them for?"
He was suddenly right in my face, his fury glowing in his eyes. "For
existing," he hissed.
I was surprised and distracted as the warning words came in Edward's
voice again, when I wasn't even scared.
"Quiet now, Bella. Don't push him," Edward cautioned in my ear.
Ever since Edward's name had broken through the careful walls I'd buried
it behind, I'd been unable to lock it up again. It didn't hurt now—not
during the precious seconds when I could hear his voice.
Jacob was fuming in front of me, quivering with anger.
I didn't understand why the Edward delusion was unexpectedly in my mind.
Jacob was livid, but he was Jacob. There was no adrenaline, no danger.
"Give him a chance to calm down," Edward's voice insisted.
I shook my head in confusion. "You're being ridiculous," I told them both.
"Fine," Jacob answered, breathing deeply again. "I won't argue it with
you. It doesn't matter anyway, the damage is done."
"What damage?"
He didn't flinch as I shouted the words in his face.
"Let's head back. There's nothing more to say."
I gaped. "There's everything more to say! You haven't said anything yet!"
He walked past me, striding back toward the house.
"I ran into Quil today," I yelled after him.
He paused midstep, but didn't turn.
"You remember your friend, Quil? Yeah, he's terrified."
Jacob whirled to face me. His expression was pained. "Quil" was all he
said.
"He's worried about you, too. He's freaked out."
Jacob stared past me with desperate eyes.
I goaded him further. "He's frightened that he's next."
Jacob clutched at a tree for support, his face turning a strange shade of
green under the red-brown surface. "He won't be next," Jacob muttered to
himself. "He can't be. It's over now. This shouldn't still be happening.
Why? Why?" His fist slammed against the tree. It wasn't a big tree,
slender and only a few feet taller than Jacob. But it still surprised me
when tht trunk gave way and snapped off loudly under his blows.
Jacob stared at the sharp, broken point with shock that quickly turned to
horror.
"I have to get back." He whirled and stalked away so swiftly that I had
to jog to keep up.
"Back to Sam!"
"That's one way of looking at it," it sounded like he said. He was
mumbling and facing away.
I chased him back to the truck. "Wait!" I called as he turned toward the
house.
He spun around to face me, and I saw that his hands were shaking again.
"Go home, Bella. I can't hang out with you anymore."
The silly, inconsequential hurt was incredibly potent. The tears welled
up again. "Are you… breaking up with me?" The words were all wrong, but
they were the best way I could think to phrase what I was asking. After
all, what Jake and I had was more than any schoolyard romance. Stronger.
He barked out a bitter laugh. "Hardly. If that were the case, I'd say
'Let's stay friends.' I can't even say that."
"Jacob… why? Sam won't let you have other friends? Please, Jake. You
promised. I need you!" The blank emptiness of my life before—before Jacob
brought some semblance of reason back into it—reared up and confronted
me. Loneliness choked in my throat.
"I'm sorry, Bella," Jacob said each word distinctly in a cold voice that
didn't seem to belong to him.
I didn't believe that this was really what Jacob wanted to say. It seemed
like there was something else trying to be said through his angry eyes,
but I couldn't understand the message.
Maybe this wasn't about Sam at all. Maybe this had nothing to do with the
Cullens. Maybe he was just trying to pull himself out of a hopeless
situation. Maybe I should let him do that, if that's what was best for
him. I should do that. It would be right.
But I heard my voice escaping in a whisper.
"I'm sorry that I couldn't… before… I wish I could change how I feel
about you, Jacob." I was desperate, reaching, stretching the truth so far
that it curved nearly into the shape of a lie. "Maybe… maybe I would
change," I whispered. "Maybe, if you gave me some time… just don't quit
on me now, Jake. I can't take it."
His face went from anger to agony in a second. One shaking hand reached
out toward me.
"No. Don't think like that, Bella, please. Don't blame yourself, don't
think this is your fault. This one is all me. I swear, it's not about
you."
"It's not you, it's me," I whispered. "There's a new one."
"I mean it, Bella. I'm not…" he struggled, his voice going even huskier
as he fought to control his emotion. His eyes were tortured. "I'm not
good enough to be your friend anymore, or anything else. I'm not what I
was before. I'm not good."
"What?" I stared at him, confused and appalled. "What are you saying?
You're much better than I am, Jake. You are good! Who told you that you
aren't? Sam? It's a vicious lie, Jacob! Don't let him tell you that!" I
was suddenly yelling again.
Jacob's face went hard and flat. "No one had to tell me anything. I know
what I am."
"You're my friend, that's what you are! Jake—don't!"
He was backing away from me.
"I'm sorry, Bella," he said again; this time it was a broken mumble. He
turned and almost ran into the house.
I was unable to move from where I stood. I stared at the little house; it
looked too small to hold four large boys and two larger men. There was no
reaction inside. No flutter at the edge of the curtain, no sound of
voices or movement. It faced me vacantly.
The rain started to drizzle, stinging here and there against my skin. I
couldn't take my eyes off the house. Jacob would come back. He had to.
The rain picked up, and so did the wind. The drops were no longer falling
from above; they slanted at an angle from the west. I could smell the
brine from the ocean. My hair whipped in my face, sticking to the wet
places and tangling in my lashes. I waited.
Finally the door opened, and I took a step forward in relief.
Billy rolled his chair into the door frame. I could see no one behind him.
"Charlie just called, Bella. I told him you were on your way home." His
eyes were full of pity.
The pity made it final somehow. I didn't comment. I just turned
robotically and climbed in my truck. I'd left the windows open and the
seats were slick and wet. It didn't matter. I was already soaked.
Not as bad! Not as bad! my mind tried to comfort me. It was true. This
wasn't as bad. This wasn't the end of the world, not again. This was just
the end of what little peace there was left behind. That was all.
Not as bad, I agreed, then added, but bad enough.
I'd thought Jake had been healing the hole in me—or at least plugging it
up, keeping it from hurting me so much. I'd been wrong. He'd just been
carving out his own hole, so that I was now riddled through like Swiss
cheese. I wondered why I didn't crumble into pieces.
Charlie was waiting on the porch. As I rolled to a stop, he walked out to
meet me.
"Billy called. He said you got in fight with Jake—said you were pretty
upset," he explained as he opened my door for me.
Then he looked at my face. A kind of horrified recognition registered in
his expression. I tried to feel my face from the inside out, to know what
he was seeing. My face felt empty and cold, and I realized what it would
remind him of.
"That's not exactly how it happened," I muttered.
Charlie put his arm around me and helped me out of the car. He didn't
comment on my sodden clothes.
"Then what did happen'" he asked when we were inside. He pulled the
afghan off the back of the sofa as he spoke and wrapped it around my
shoulders. I realized I was shivering still.
My voice was lifeless. "Sam Uley says Jacob can't be my friend anymore."
Charlie shot me a strange look. "Who told you that?"
"Jacob," I stated, though that wasn't exactly what he'd said. It was
still true.
Charlie's eyebrows pulled together. "You really think there's something
wrong with the Uley kid?"
"I know there is. Jacob wouldn't tell me what, though." I could hear the
water from my clothes dripping to the floor and splashing on the
linoleum. "I'm going to go change."
Charlie was lost in thought. "Okay," he said absently.
I decided to take a shower because I was so cold, but the hot water
didn't seem to affect the temperature of my skin. I was still freezing
when I gave up and shut the water off. In the sudden quiet, I could hear
Charlie talking to someone downstairs. I wrapped a towel around me, and
cracked the bathroom door.
Charlie's voice was angry. "I'm not buying that. It doesn't make any
sense."
It was quiet then, and I realized he was on the phone. A minute passed.
"Don't you put this on Bella!" Charlie suddenly shouted.
I jumped. When he spoke again, his voice was careful and lower. "Bella's
made it very clear all along that she and Jacob were just friends… Well,
if that was it, then why didn't you say so at first? No, Billy, I think
she's right about this… Because I know my daughter, and if she says Jacob
was scared before—" He was cut off mid-sentence, and when he answered he
was almost shouting again.
"What do you mean I don't know my daughter as well as I think I do!" He
listened for a brief second, and his response was almost too low for me
to hear. "If you think I'm going to remind her about that, then you had
better think again. She's only just starting to get over it, and mostly
because of Jacob, I think. If whatever Jacob has going on with this Sam
character sends her back into that depression, then Jacob is going to
have to answer to me. You're my friend, Billy, but this is hurting my
family."
There was another break for Billy to respond.
"You got that right—those boys set one toe out of line and I'm going to
know about it. We'll be keeping an eye on the situation, you can be sure
of that." He was no longer Charlie; he was Chief Swan now.
"Fine. Yeah. Goodbye." The phone slammed into the cradle.
I tiptoed quickly across the hall into my room. Charlie was muttering
angrily in the kitchen.
So Billy was going to blame me. I was leading Jacob on and he'd finally
had enough.
It was strange, for I'd feared that myself, but after the last thing
Jacob had said this afternoon, I didn't believe it anymore. There was
much more to this than an unrequited crush, and it surprised me that
Billy would stoop to claiming that. It made me think that whatever secret
they were keeping was bigger than I'd been imagining. At least Charlie
was on my side now.
I put my pajamas on and crawled into bed. Life seemed dark enough at the
moment chat I let myself cheat. The hole—holes now—were already aching,
so why not? I pulled out the memory—nor a real memory that would hurt too
much, but the false memory of Edward's voice in my mind this
afternoon—and played it over and over in my head until I fell asleep with
the tears still streaming calmly down my empty face.
It was a new dream tonight. Rain was falling and Jacob was walking
soundlessly beside me, though beneath my feet the ground crunched like
dry gravel. But he wasn't my Jacob; he was the new, bitter, graceful
Jacob. The smooth suppleness of his walk reminded me of someone else,
and, as I watched, his features started to change. The russet color of
his skin leached away, leaving his face pale white like bone. His eyes
turned gold, and then crimson, and then back to gold again. His shorn
hair twisted in the breeze, turning bronze where the wind touched it. And
his face became so beautiful that it shattered my heart. I reached for
him, but he took a step away, raising his hands like a shield. And then
Edward vanished.
I wasn't sure, when I woke in the dark, if I'd just begun crying, or if
my tears had run while I slept and simply continued now. I stared at my
dark ceiling. I could feel that it was the middle of the night—I was
still half-asleep, maybe more than half. I closed my eyes wearily and
prayed for a dreamless sleep.
That's when I heard the noise that must have wakened me in the first
place. Something sharp scraped along the length of my window with a
high-pitched squeal, like fingernails against the glass.
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