The Fury

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The Fury Page 4

by L. J. Smith


  Alaric stood there for some time, apparently staring into space. At last he nodded once and went out the front door himself.

  Elena slowly trailed back up the stairs.

  Now what had all that been about? She felt confused, as if she were floating loose in time and space. She needed to know what day it was, why she was here, and why she felt so frightened. Why she felt so intensely that no one must see her or hear her or notice her at all.

  Looking around the attic, she saw nothing that would give her any help. Where she had been lying there were only the mattress and the oilcloth—and a little blue book.

  Her diary! Eagerly, she snatched it up and opened it, skipping through the entries. They stopped with October 17; they were no help to discovering today’s date. But as she looked at the writing, images formed in her mind, stringing up like pearls to make memories. Fascinated, she slowly sat down on the mattress. She leafed back to the beginning and began to read about the life of Elena Gilbert.

  When she finished, she was weak with fear and horror. Bright spots danced and shimmered before her eyes. There was so much pain in these pages. So many schemes, so many secrets, so much need. It was the story of a girl who’d felt lost in her own hometown, in her own family. Who’d been looking for … something, something she could never quite reach. But that wasn’t what caused this throbbing panic in her chest that drained all the energy from her body. That wasn’t why she felt as if she were falling even when she sat as still as she could get. What caused the panic was that she remembered.

  She remembered everything now.

  The bridge, the rushing water. The terror as the air left her lungs and there was nothing but liquid to breathe. The way it had hurt. And the final instant when it had stopped hurting, when everything had stopped. When everything … stopped.

  Oh, Stefan, I was so frightened, she thought. And the same fear was inside her now. In the woods, how could she have behaved like that to Stefan? How could she have forgotten him, everything he meant to her? What had made her act that way?

  But she knew. At the center of her consciousness, she knew. Nobody got up and walked away from a drowning like that. Nobody got up and walked away alive.

  Slowly, she rose and went to look at the shuttered window. The darkened pane of glass acted as a mirror, throwing her reflection back at her.

  It was not the reflection she’d seen in her dream, where she had run down a hall of mirrors that seemed to have a life of their own. There was nothing sly or cruel about this face. Just the same, it was subtly different from what she was used to seeing. There was a pale glow to her skin and a telling hollowness about the eyes. Elena touched fingertips to her neck, on either side. This was where Stefan and Damon had each taken her blood. Had it really been enough times, and had she really taken enough of theirs in return?

  It must have been. And now, for the rest of her life, for the rest of her existence, she would have to feed as Stefan did. She would have to …

  She sank to her knees, pressing her forehead against the bare wood of a wall. I can’t, she thought. Oh, please, I can’t; I can’t.

  She had never been very religious. But from that deep place inside, her terror was welling up, and every particle of her being joined in the cry for aid. Oh, please, she thought. Oh, please, please, help me. She didn’t ask for anything specific; she couldn’t gather her thoughts that far. Only: Oh, please help me, oh, please, please.

  After a while she got up again.

  Her face was still pale but eerily beautiful, like fine porcelain lit from within. Her eyes were still smudged with shadows. But there was a resolve in them.

  She had to find Stefan. If there was any help for her, he would know of it. And if there wasn’t … well, she needed him all the more. There was nowhere else she wanted to be except with him.

  She shut the door of the attic carefully behind her as she went out. Alaric Saltzman mustn’t discover her hiding place. On the wall, she saw a calendar with the days up to December 4 crossed off. Four days since last Saturday night. She’d slept for four days.

  When she reached the front door, she cringed from the daylight outside. It hurt. Even though the sky was so overcast that rain or snow looked imminent, it hurt her eyes. She had to force herself to leave the safety of the house, and then she felt a gnawing paranoia about being out in the open. She slunk along beside fences, staying close to trees, ready to melt into the shadows. She felt like a shadow herself—or a ghost, in Honoria Fell’s long white gown. She would frighten the wits out of anyone who saw her.

  But all her circumspection seemed to be wasted. There was no one on the streets to see her; the town might have been abandoned. She went by seemingly deserted houses, forsaken yards, closed stores. Presently she saw parked cars lining the street, but they were empty, too.

  And then she saw a shape against the sky that stopped her in her tracks. A steeple, white against the thick dark clouds. Elena’s legs trembled as she made herself creep closer to the building. She’d known this church all her life; she’d seen the cross inscribed on that wall a thousand times. But now she edged toward it as if it were a caged animal that might break loose and bite her. She pressed one hand to the stone wall and slid it nearer and nearer to the carved symbol.

  When her outspread fingers touched the arm of the cross, her eyes filled and her throat ached. She let her hand glide along it until it gently covered the engraving. Then she leaned against the wall and let the tears come.

  I’m not evil, she thought. I did things I shouldn’t have. I thought about myself too much; I never thanked Matt and Bonnie and Meredith for all they did for me. I should have played more with Margaret and been nicer to Aunt Judith. But I’m not evil. I’m not damned.

  When she could see again, she looked up at the building. Mr. Newcastle had said something about the church. Was it this one he meant?

  She avoided the front of the church and the main doorway. There was a side door that led to the choir loft, and she slipped up the stairs noiselessly and looked down from the gallery.

  She saw at once why the streets had been so empty. It seemed as if everyone in Fell’s Church was here, every seat in every pew filled, and the back of the church packed solid with people standing. Staring at the front rows, Elena realized that she recognized every face; they were members of the senior class, and neighbors, and friends of Aunt Judith. Aunt Judith was there, too, wearing the black dress she’d worn to Elena’s parents’ funeral.

  Oh, my God, Elena thought. Her fingers gripped the railing. Until now she’d been too busy looking to listen, but the quiet monotone of Reverend Bethea’s voice suddenly resolved into words.

  “… share our remembrances of this very special girl,” he said, and he moved aside.

  Elena watched what happened after with the unearthly feeling that she had a loge seat at a play. She was not at all involved in the events down there on stage; she was only a spectator, but it was her life she was watching.

  Mr. Carson, Sue Carson’s father, came up and talked about her. The Carsons had known her since she was born, and he talked about the days she and Sue had played in their front yard in the summer. He talked about the beautiful and accomplished young lady she had become. He got a frog in his throat and had to stop and take off his glasses.

  Sue Carson went up. She and Elena hadn’t been close friends since elementary school, but they’d remained on good terms. Sue had been one of the few girls who’d stayed on Elena’s side after Stefan had come under suspicion for Mr. Tanner’s murder. But now Sue was crying as if she’d lost a sister.

  “A lot of people weren’t nice to Elena after Halloween,” she said, wiping her eyes and going on. “And I know that hurt her. But Elena was strong. She never changed just to conform to what other people thought she should be. And I respected her for that, so much …” Sue’s voice wobbled. “When I was up for Homecoming Queen, I wanted to be chosen, but I knew I wouldn’t be and that was all right. Because if Robert E. Lee ever had a que
en, it was Elena. And I think she always will be now, because that’s how we’ll all remember her. And I think that for years to come the girls who will go to our school might remember her and think about how she stuck by what she thought was right. …” This time Sue couldn’t steady her voice and the reverend helped her back to her seat.

  The girls in the senior class, even the ones that had been nastiest and most spiteful, were crying and holding hands. Girls Elena knew for a fact hated her were sniffling. Suddenly she was everybody’s best friend.

  There were boys crying, too. Shocked, Elena huddled closer to the railing. She couldn’t stop watching, even though it was the most horrible thing she had ever seen.

  Frances Decatur got up, her plain face plainer than ever with grief. “She went out of her way to be nice to me,” she said huskily. “She let me eat lunch with her.” Rubbish, Elena thought. I only spoke to you in the first place because you were useful in finding out information about Stefan. But it was the same with each person who went up to the pulpit; no one could find enough words to praise Elena.

  “I always admired her. …”

  “She was a role model to me. …

  “One of my favorite students …”

  When Meredith rose, Elena’s whole body stiffened. She didn’t know if she could deal with this. But the dark-haired girl was one of the few people in the church who wasn’t crying, although her face had a grave, sad look that reminded Elena of Honoria Fell as she looked on her tomb.

  “When I think about Elena, I think about the good times we had together,” she said, speaking quietly and with her customary self-control. “Elena always had ideas, and she could make the most boring work into fun. I never told her that, and now I wish I had. I wish that I could talk to her one more time, just so she would know. And if Elena could hear me now”—Meredith looked around the church and drew a long breath, apparently to calm herself—”if she could hear me now, I would tell her how much those good times meant to me, and how much I wish that we could still have them. Like the Thursday nights we used to sit together in her room, practicing for the debate team. I wish we could do that just once more like we used to.” Meredith took another long breath and shook her head. “But I know we can’t, and that hurts.”

  What are you talking about? Elena thought, her misery interrupted by bewilderment. We used to practice for the debate team on Wednesday nights, not Thursdays. And it wasn’t in my bedroom; it was in yours. And it was no fun at all; in fact, we ended up quitting because we both hated it. …

  Suddenly, watching Meredith’s carefully composed face, so calm on the outside to conceal the tension within, Elena felt her heart begin to pound.

  Meredith was sending a message, a message only Elena could be expected to understand. Which meant that Meredith expected Elena to be able to hear it.

  Meredith knew.

  Had Stefan told her? Elena scanned the rows of mourners below, realizing for the first time that Stefan wasn’t among them. Neither was Matt. No, it didn’t seem likely that Stefan would have told Meredith, or that Meredith would choose this way of getting a message to her if he had. Then Elena remembered the way Meredith had looked at her the night they had rescued Stefan from the well, when Elena had asked to be left alone with Stefan. She remembered those keen dark eyes studying her face more than once in the last months, and the way Meredith had seemed to grow quieter and more thoughtful each time Elena came up with some odd request.

  Meredith had guessed then. Elena wondered just how much of the truth she’d put together.

  Bonnie was coming up now, crying in earnest. That was surprising; if Meredith knew, why hadn’t she told Bonnie? But maybe Meredith had only a suspicion, something she didn’t want to share with Bonnie in case it turned out to be a false hope.

  Bonnie’s speech was as emotional as Meredith’s had been collected. Her voice kept breaking and she kept having to brush tears off her cheeks. Finally Reverend Bethea crossed over and gave her something white, a handkerchief or some tissue.

  “Thank you,” Bonnie said, wiping her streaming eyes. She tilted her head back to look at the ceiling, either to regain her poise or to get inspiration. As she did, Elena saw something that no one else could see: she saw Bonnie’s face drain of color and of expression, not like somebody about to faint, but in a way that was all too familiar.

  A chill crawled up Elena’s backbone. Not here. Oh, God, of all times and places, not here.

  But it was already happening. Bonnie’s chin had lowered; she was looking at the congregation again. Except that this time she didn’t seem to see them at all, and the voice that came from Bonnie’s throat was not Bonnie’s voice.

  “No one is what they appear. Remember that. No one is what they appear.” Then she just stood there, unmoving, staring straight ahead with blank eyes.

  People began to shuffle and look at one another. There was a murmur of worry.

  “Remember that—remember—no one is what they seem …” Bonnie swayed suddenly, and Reverend Bethea ran to her while another man hastened up from the other side. The second man had a bald head that was now shining with sweat—Mr. Newcastle, Elena realized. And there at the back of the church, striding up the nave, was Alaric Saltzman. He reached Bonnie just as she fainted, and Elena heard a step behind her on the stair.

  5

  Dr. Feinberg, Elena thought wildly, trying to twist around to look and simultaneously press herself into the shadows. But it wasn’t the small, hawk-nosed visage of the doctor that met her eyes. It was a face with features as fine as those on a Roman coin or medallion, and haunted green eyes. Time caught for a moment, and then Elena was in his arms.

  “Oh, Stefan. Stefan …”

  She felt his body go still with shock. He was holding her mechanically, lightly, as if she were a stranger who’d mistaken him for someone else.

  “Stefan,” she said desperately, burrowing her face into his shoulder, trying to get some response. She couldn’t bear it if he rejected her; if he hated her now she would die. …

  With a moan, she tried to get even closer to him, wanting to merge with him completely, to disappear inside him. Oh, please, she thought, oh, please, oh, please. …

  “Elena. Elena, it’s all right; I’ve got you.” He went on talking to her, repeating silly nonsense meant to soothe, stroking her hair. And she could feel the change as his arms tightened around her. He knew who he was holding now. For the first time since she’d awakened that day, she felt safe. Still, it was a long while before she could relax her grip on him even slightly. She wasn’t crying; she was gasping in panic.

  At last she felt the world start to settle into place around her. She didn’t let go, though, not yet. She simply stood for endless minutes with her head on his shoulder, drinking in the comfort and security of his nearness.

  Then she raised her head to look into his eyes.

  When she’d thought of Stefan earlier that day, she’d thought of how he might help her. She’d meant to ask him, to beg him, to save her from this nightmare, to make her the way she had been before. But now, as she looked at him, she felt a strange despairing resignation flow through her.

  “There’s nothing to be done about it, is there?” she said very softly.

  He didn’t pretend to misunderstand. “No,” he said, equally soft.

  Elena felt as if she had taken some final step over an invisible line and that there was no returning. When she could speak again, she said, “I’m sorry for the way I acted toward you in the woods. I don’t know why I did those things. I remember doing them, but I can’t remember why.”

  “You’re sorry?” His voice shook. “Elena, after all I’ve done to you, all that’s happened to you because of me …” He couldn’t finish, and they clung to each other.

  “Very touching,” said a voice from the stairway. “Do you want me to imitate a violins?”

  Elena’s calm shattered, and fear snaked through her bloodstream. She’d forgotten Damon’s hypnotic intensity and his
burning dark eyes.

  “How did you get here?” said Stefan.

  “The same way you did, I presume. Attracted by the blazing beacon of the fair Elena’s distress.” Damon was really angry; Elena could tell. Not just annoyed or discommoded but in a white heat of rage and hostility.

  But he’d been decent to her when she’d been confused and irrational. He’d taken her to shelter; he’d kept her safe. And he hadn’t kissed her while she’d been in that horrifyingly vulnerable state. He’d been … kind to her.

  “Incidentally, there’s something going on down there,” Damon said.

  “I know; it’s Bonnie again,” said Elena, releasing Stefan and moving back.

  “That’s not what I meant. This is outside.”

  Startled, Elena followed him down to the first bend in the stairs, where there was a window overlooking the parking lot. She felt Stefan behind her as she looked down at the scene below.

  A crowd of people had come out of the church, but they were standing in a solid phalanx at the edge of the lot, not going any farther. Opposite them, in the parking lot itself, was an equally large assembly of dogs.

  It looked like two armies facing each other. What was eerie, though, was that both groups were absolutely motionless. The people seemed to be paralyzed by uneasiness, and the dogs seemed to be waiting for something.

  Elena saw the dogs first as different breeds. There were small dogs like sharp-faced corgis and brown-and-black silky terriers and a Lhasa apso with long golden hair. There were medium-sized dogs like springer spaniels and Airedales and one beautiful snow white Samoyed. And there were the big dogs: a barrel-chested rottweiler with a cropped tail, a panting gray wolfhound, and a giant schnauzer, pure black. Then Elena began to recognize individuals.

  “That’s Mr. Grunbaum’s boxer and the Sullivans’ German shepherd. But what’s going on with them?”

  The people, originally uneasy, now looked frightened. They stood shoulder to shoulder, no one wanting to break out of the front line and move any closer to the animals.

 

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