The Twilight Saga Collection

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The Twilight Saga Collection Page 111

by Stephenie Meyer


  “We’ll have to coordinate,” Jacob said. “It won’t be easy for us. Still, this is our job more than yours.”

  “I wouldn’t go that far, but we need the help. We aren’t going to be picky.”

  “Wait, wait, wait, wait,” I interrupted them.

  Alice was on her toes, Jacob leaning down toward her, both of their faces lit up with excitement, both of their noses wrinkled against the smell. They looked at me impatiently.

  “Coordinate?” I repeated through my teeth.

  “You didn’t honestly think you were going to keep us out of this?” Jacob asked.

  “You are staying out of this!”

  “Your psychic doesn’t think so.”

  “Alice — tell them no!” I insisted. “They’ll get killed!”

  Jacob, Quil, and Embry all laughed out loud.

  “Bella,” Alice said, her voice soothing, placating, “separately we all could get killed. Together —”

  “It’ll be no problem,” Jacob finished her sentence. Quil laughed again.

  “How many?” Quil asked eagerly.

  “No!” I shouted.

  Alice didn’t even look at me. “It changes — twenty-one today, but the numbers are going down.”

  “Why?” Jacob asked, curious.

  “Long story,” Alice said, suddenly looking around the room. “And this isn’t the place for it.”

  “Later tonight?” Jacob pushed.

  “Yes,” Jasper answered him. “We were already planning a . . . strategic meeting. If you’re going to fight with us, you’ll need some instruction.”

  The wolves all made a disgruntled face at the last part.

  “No!” I moaned.

  “This will be odd,” Jasper said thoughtfully. “I never considered working together. This has to be a first.”

  “No doubt about that,” Jacob agreed. He was in a hurry now. “We’ve got to get back to Sam. What time?”

  “What’s too late for you?”

  All three rolled their eyes. “What time?” Jacob repeated.

  “Three o’clock?”

  “Where?”

  “About ten miles due north of the Hoh Forest ranger station. Come at it from the west and you’ll be able to follow our scent in.”

  “We’ll be there.”

  They turned to leave.

  “Wait, Jake!” I called after him. “Please! Don’t do this!”

  He paused, turning back to grin at me, while Quil and Embry headed impatiently for the door. “Don’t be ridiculous, Bells. You’re giving me a much better gift than the one I gave you.”

  “No!” I shouted again. The sound of an electric guitar drowned my cry.

  He didn’t respond; he hurried to catch up with his friends, who were already gone. I watched helplessly as Jacob disappeared.

  18. INSTRUCTION

  “THAT HAD TO BE THE LONGEST PARTY IN THE HISTORY of the world,” I complained on the way home.

  Edward didn’t seem to disagree. “It’s over now,” he said, rubbing my arm soothingly.

  Because I was the only one who needed soothing. Edward was fine now — all the Cullens were fine.

  They’d all reassured me; Alice reaching up to pat my head as I left, eyeing Jasper meaningfully until a flood of peace swirled around me, Esme kissing my forehead and promising me everything was all right, Emmett laughing boisterously and asking why I was the only one who was allowed to fight with werewolves. . . . Jacob’s solution had them all relaxed, almost euphoric after the long weeks of stress. Doubt had been replaced with confidence. The party had ended on a note of true celebration.

  Not for me.

  Bad enough — horrible — that the Cullens would fight for me. It was already too much that I would have to allow that. It already felt like more than I could bear.

  Not Jacob, too. Not his foolish, eager brothers — most of them even younger than I was. They were just oversized, over-muscled children, and they looked forward to this like it was picnic on the beach. I could not have them in danger, too. My nerves felt frayed and exposed. I didn’t know how much longer I could restrain the urge to scream out loud.

  I whispered now, to keep my voice under control. “You’re taking me with you tonight.”

  “Bella, you’re worn out.”

  “You think I could sleep?”

  He frowned. “This is an experiment. I’m not sure if it will be possible for us all to . . . cooperate. I don’t want you in the middle of that.”

  As if that didn’t make me all the more anxious to go. “If you won’t take me, then I’ll call Jacob.”

  His eyes tightened. That was a low blow, and I knew it. But there was no way I was being left behind.

  He didn’t answer; we were at Charlie’s house now. The front light was on.

  “See you upstairs,” I muttered.

  I tiptoed in the front door. Charlie was asleep in the living room, overflowing the too-small sofa, and snoring so loudly I could have ripped a chainsaw to life and it wouldn’t have wakened him.

  I shook his shoulder vigorously.

  “Dad! Charlie!”

  He grumbled, eyes still closed.

  “I’m home now — you’re going to hurt your back sleeping like that. C’mon, time to move.”

  It took a few more shakes, and his eyes never did open all the way, but I managed to get him off the couch. I helped him up to his bed, where he collapsed on top of the covers, fully dressed, and started snoring again.

  He wasn’t going to be looking for me anytime soon.

  Edward waited in my room while I washed my face and changed into jeans and a flannel shirt. He watched me unhappily from the rocking chair as I hung the outfit Alice had given me in my closet.

  “Come here,” I said, taking his hand and pulling him to my bed.

  I pushed him down on the bed and then curled up against his chest. Maybe he was right and I was tired enough to sleep. I wasn’t going to let him sneak off without me.

  He tucked my quilt in around me, and then held me close.

  “Please relax.”

  “Sure.”

  “This is going to work, Bella. I can feel it.”

  My teeth locked together.

  He was still radiating relief. Nobody but me cared if Jacob and his friends got hurt. Not even Jacob and his friends. Especially not them.

  He could tell I was about to lose it. “Listen to me, Bella. This is going to be easy. The newborns will be completely taken by surprise. They’ll have no more idea that werewolves even exist than you did. I’ve seen how they act in a group, the way Jasper remembers. I truly believe that the wolves’ hunting techniques will work flawlessly against them. And with them divided and confused, there won’t be enough for the rest of us to do. Someone may have to sit out,” he teased.

  “Piece of cake,” I mumbled tonelessly against his chest.

  “Shhh,” he stroked my cheek. “You’ll see. Don’t worry now.”

  He started humming my lullaby, but, for once, it didn’t calm me.

  People — well, vampires and werewolves really, but still — people I loved were going to get hurt. Hurt because of me. Again. I wished my bad luck would focus a little more carefully. I felt like yelling up at the empty sky: It’s me you want — over here! Just me!

  I tried to think of a way that I could do exactly that — force my bad luck to focus on me. It wouldn’t be easy. I would have to wait, bide my time. . . .

  I did not fall asleep. The minutes passed quickly, to my surprise, and I was still alert and tense when Edward pulled us both up into a sitting position.

  “Are you sure you don’t want to stay and sleep?”

  I gave him a sour look.

  He sighed, and scooped me up in his arms before he jumped from my window.

  He raced through the black, quiet forest with me on his back, and even in his run I could feel the elation. He ran the way he did when it was just us, just for enjoyment, just for the feel of the wind in his hair. It was the kind o
f thing that, during less anxious times, would have made me happy.

  When we got to the big open field, his family was there, talking casually, relaxed. Emmett’s booming laugh echoed through the wide space now and then. Edward set me down and we walked hand in hand toward them.

  It took me a minute, because it was so dark with the moon hidden behind the clouds, but I realized that we were in the baseball clearing. It was the same place where, more than a year ago, that first lighthearted evening with the Cullens had been interrupted by James and his coven. It felt strange to be here again — as if this gathering wouldn’t be complete until James and Laurent and Victoria joined us. But James and Laurent were never coming back. That pattern wouldn’t be repeated. Maybe all the patterns were broken.

  Yes, someone had broken out of their pattern. Was it possible that the Volturi were the flexible ones in this equation?

  I doubted it.

  Victoria had always seemed like a force of nature to me — like a hurricane moving toward the coast in a straight line — unavoidable, implacable, but predictable. Maybe it was wrong to limit her that way. She had to be capable of adaptation.

  “You know what I think?” I asked Edward.

  He laughed. “No.”

  I almost smiled.

  “What do you think?”

  “I think it’s all connected. Not just the two, but all three.”

  “You’ve lost me.”

  “Three bad things have happened since you came back.” I ticked them off on my fingers. “The newborns in Seattle. The stranger in my room. And — first of all — Victoria came to look for me.”

  His eyes narrowed as he thought about it. “Why do you think so?”

  “Because I agree with Jasper — the Volturi love their rules. They would probably do a better job anyway.” And I’d be dead if they wanted me dead, I added mentally. “Remember when you were tracking Victoria last year?”

  “Yes.” He frowned. “I wasn’t very good at it.”

  “Alice said you were in Texas. Did you follow her there?”

  His eyebrows pulled together. “Yes. Hmm . . .”

  “See — she could have gotten the idea there. But she doesn’t know what she’s doing, so the newborns are all out of control.”

  He started shaking his head. “Only Aro knows exactly how Alice’s visions work.”

  “Aro would know best, but wouldn’t Tanya and Irina and the rest of your friends in Denali know enough? Laurent lived with them for so long. And if he was still friendly enough with Victoria to be doing favors for her, why wouldn’t he also tell her everything he knew?”

  Edward frowned. “It wasn’t Victoria in your room.”

  “She can’t make new friends? Think about it, Edward. If it is Victoria doing this in Seattle, she’s made a lot of new friends. She’s created them.”

  He considered it, his forehead creased in concentration.

  “Hmm,” he finally said. “It’s possible. I still think the Volturi are most likely . . . But your theory — there’s something there. Victoria’s personality. Your theory suits her personality perfectly. She’s shown a remarkable gift for self-preservation from the start — maybe it’s a talent of hers. In any case, this plot would put her in no danger at all from us, if she sits safely behind and lets the newborns wreak their havoc here. And maybe little danger from the Volturi, either. Perhaps she’s counting on us to win, in the end, though certainly not without heavy casualties of our own. But no survivors from her little army to bear witness against her. In fact,” he continued, thinking it through, “if there were survivors, I’d bet she’d be planning to destroy them herself. . . . Hmm. Still, she’d have to have at least one friend who was a bit more mature. No fresh-made newborn left your father alive. . . .”

  He frowned into space for a long moment, and then suddenly smiled at me, coming back from his reverie. “Definitely possible. Regardless, we’ve got to be prepared for anything until we know for sure. You’re very perceptive today,” he added. “It’s impressive.”

  I sighed. “Maybe I’m just reacting to this place. It makes me feel like she’s close by . . . like she sees me now.”

  His jaw muscles tensed at the idea. “She’ll never touch you, Bella,” he said.

  In spite of his words, his eyes swept carefully across the dark trees. While he searched their shadows, the strangest expression crossed his face. His lips pulled back over his teeth and his eyes shone with an odd light — a wild, fierce kind of hope.

  “Yet, what I wouldn’t give to have her that close,” he murmured. “Victoria, and anyone else who’s ever thought of hurting you. To have the chance to end this myself. To finish it with my own hands this time.”

  I shuddered at the ferocious longing in his voice, and clenched his fingers more tightly with mine, wishing I was strong enough to lock our hands together permanently.

  We were almost to his family, and I noticed for the first time that Alice did not look as optimistic as the others. She stood a little aside, watching Jasper stretching his arms as if he were warming up to exercise, her lips pushed out in a pout.

  “Is something wrong with Alice?” I whispered.

  Edward chuckled, himself again. “The werewolves are on their way, so she can’t see anything that will happen now. It makes her uncomfortable to be blind.”

  Alice, though the farthest from us, heard his low voice. She looked up and stuck her tongue out at him. He laughed again.

  “Hey, Edward,” Emmett greeted him. “Hey, Bella. Is he going to let you practice, too?”

  Edward groaned at his brother. “Please, Emmett, don’t give her any ideas.”

  “When will our guests arrive?” Carlisle asked Edward.

  Edward concentrated for a moment, and then sighed. “A minute and a half. But I’m going to have to translate. They don’t trust us enough to use their human forms.”

  Carlisle nodded. “This is hard for them. I’m grateful they’re coming at all.”

  I stared at Edward, my eyes stretched wide. “They’re coming as wolves?”

  He nodded, cautious of my reaction. I swallowed once, remembering the two times I’d seen Jacob in his wolf form — the first time in the meadow with Laurent, the second time on the forest lane where Paul had gotten angry at me. . . . They were both memories of terror.

  A strange gleam came into Edward’s eyes, as though something had just occurred to him, something that was not altogether unpleasant. He turned away quickly, before I could see any more, back to Carlisle and the others.

  “Prepare yourselves — they’ve been holding out on us.”

  “What do you mean?” Alice demanded.

  “Shh,” he cautioned, and stared past her into the darkness.

  The Cullens’ informal circle suddenly widened out into a loose line with Jasper and Emmett at the spear point. From the way Edward leaned forward next to me, I could tell that he wished he was standing beside them. I tightened my hand around his.

  I squinted toward the forest, seeing nothing.

  “Damn,” Emmett muttered under his breath. “Did you ever see anything like it?”

  Esme and Rosalie exchanged a wide-eyed glance.

  “What is it?” I whispered as quietly as I could. “I can’t see.”

  “The pack has grown,” Edward murmured into my ear.

  Hadn’t I told him that Quil had joined the pack? I strained to see the six wolves in the gloom. Finally, something glittered in the blackness — their eyes, higher up than they should be. I’d forgotten how very tall the wolves were. Like horses, only thick with muscle and fur — and teeth like knives, impossible to overlook.

  I could only see the eyes. And as I scanned, straining to see more, it occurred to me that there were more than six pairs facing us. One, two, three . . . I counted the pairs swiftly in my head. Twice.

  There were ten of them.

  “Fascinating,” Edward murmured almost silently.

  Carlisle took a slow, deliberate step forward. It
was a careful movement, designed to reassure.

  “Welcome,” he greeted the invisible wolves.

  “Thank you,” Edward responded in a strange, flat tone, and I realized at once that the words came from Sam. I looked to the eyes shining in the center of the line, the highest up, the tallest of them all. It was impossible to separate the shape of the big black wolf from the darkness.

  Edward spoke again in the same detached voice, speaking Sam’s words. “We will watch and listen, but no more. That is the most we can ask of our self-control.”

  “That is more than enough,” Carlisle answered. “My son Jasper” — he gestured to where Jasper stood, tensed and ready — “has experience in this area. He will teach us how they fight, how they are to be defeated. I’m sure you can apply this to your own hunting style.”

  “They are different from you?” Edward asked for Sam.

  Carlisle nodded. “They are all very new — only months old to this life. Children, in a way. They will have no skill or strategy, only brute strength. Tonight their numbers stand at twenty. Ten for us, ten for you — it shouldn’t be difficult. The numbers may go down. The new ones fight amongst themselves.”

  A rumble passed down the shadowy line of wolves, a low growling mutter that somehow managed to sound enthusiastic.

  “We are willing to take more than our share, if necessary,” Edward translated, his tone less indifferent now.

  Carlisle smiled. “We’ll see how it plays out.”

  “Do you know when and how they’ll arrive?”

  “They’ll come across the mountains in four days, in the late morning. As they approach, Alice will help us intercept their path.”

  “Thank you for the information. We will watch.”

  With a sighing sound, the eyes sank closer to the ground one set at a time.

  It was silent for two heartbeats, and then Jasper took a step into the empty space between the vampires and the wolves. It wasn’t hard for me to see him — his skin was as bright against the darkness as the wolves’ eyes. Jasper threw a wary glance toward Edward, who nodded, and then Jasper turned his back to the werewolves. He sighed, clearly uncomfortable.

 

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