The Fury

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The Fury Page 9

by L. J. Smith


  “Whew,” said Meredith, as she got up to turn on the lights. Elena stood, too.

  “Well, at least we know we can beat it,” she said, tugging up the leggings, which were too long for her. She caught a glimpse of herself in Meredith’s mirror. She certainly didn’t look like Elena Gilbert the high school fashion plate anymore. Dressed all in black like this, she looked pale and dangerous, like a sheathed sword. Her hair fell haphazardly around her shoulders.

  “They wouldn’t know me at school,” she murmured, with a pang. It was strange that she should care about going to school, but she did. It was because she couldn’t go, she guessed. And because she’d been queen there so long, she’d run things for so long, that it was almost unbelievable that she could never set foot there again.

  “You could go somewhere else,” Bonnie suggested. “I mean, after this is all over, you could finish the school year someplace where nobody knows you. Like Stefan did.”

  “No, I don’t think so.” Elena was in a strange mood tonight, after spending the day alone in the barn watching the snow. “Bonnie,” she said abruptly, “would you look at my palm again? I want you to tell my future, my personal future.”

  “I don’t even know if I remember all the stuff my grandmother taught me … but, all right, I’ll try,” Bonnie relented. “There’d just better be no more dark strangers on the way, that’s all. You’ve already got all you can handle.” She giggled as she took Elena’s outstretched hand. “Remember when Caroline asked what you could do with two? I guess you’re finding out now, huh?”

  “Just read my palm, will you?”

  “All right, this is your life line—” Bonnie’s stream of patter broke off almost before it was started. She stared at Elena’s hand, fear and apprehension in her face. “It should go all the way down to here,” she said. “But it’s cut off so short….”

  She and Elena looked at each other without speaking for a moment, while Elena felt that same apprehension solidify inside herself. Then Meredith broke in.

  “Well, naturally it’s short,” she said. “It just means what happened already, when Elena drowned.”

  “Yes, of course, that must be it,” Bonnie murmured. She let go of Elena’s hand and Elena slowly drew back. “That’s it, all right,” Bonnie said in a stronger voice.

  Elena was gazing into the mirror again. The girl who gazed back was beautiful, but there was a sad wisdom about her eyes that the old Elena Gilbert had never had. She realized that Bonnie and Meredith were looking at her.

  “That must be it,” she said lightly, but her smile didn’t touch her eyes.

  9

  “Well, at least I didn’t get taken over,” Bonnie said. “But I’m sick of this psychic stuff anyway; I’m tired of the whole thing. That was the last time, absolutely the last.”

  “All right,” said Elena, turning away from the mirror, “let’s talk about something else. Did you find anything out today?”

  “I talked with Alaric, and he’s having another get-together next week,” Bonnie replied. “He asked Caroline and Vickie and me if we wanted to be hypnotized to help us deal with what’s been happening. But I’m sure he isn’t the Other Power, Elena. He’s too nice.”

  Elena nodded. She’d had second thoughts about her suspicions of Alaric herself. Not because he was nice, but because she had spent four days in his attic asleep. Would the Other Power really have let her stay there unharmed? Of course, Damon had said he’d influenced Alaric to forget that she was up there, but would the Other Power have succumbed to Damon’s influence? Shouldn’t it be far too strong?

  Unless its Powers had temporarily burned out, she thought suddenly. The way Stefan’s were burning out now. Or unless it had only been pretending to be influenced.

  “Well, we won’t cross him off the list just yet,” she said. “We’ve got to be careful. What about Mrs. Flowers? Did you find out anything about her?”

  “No luck,” said Meredith. “We went to the boardinghouse this morning, but she didn’t answer the door. Stefan said he’d try to track her down in the afternoon.”

  “If somebody would only invite me in there, I could watch her, too,” Elena said. “I feel like I’m the only one not doing anything. I think …” She paused a moment, considering, and then said, “I think I’ll go by home—by Aunt Judith’s, I mean. Maybe I’ll find Robert hanging around in the bushes or something.”

  “we’ll go with you,” Meredith said.

  “No, it’s better for me to do it alone. Really, it is. I can be very inconspicuous these days.”

  “Then take your own advice and be careful. It’s still snowing hard.”

  Elena nodded and dropped over the windowsill.

  As she approached her house, she saw that a car was just pulling out of the driveway. She melted into the shadows and watched. The headlights illuminated an eerie winter sight: the neighbors’ black locust tree, like a bare-branched silhouette, with a white owl sitting in it.

  As the car roared past, Elena recognized it. Robert’s blue Oldsmobile.

  Now, that was interesting. She had an urge to follow him, but a stronger urge to check the house, make sure everything was all right. She circled it stealthily, examining windows.

  The yellow chintz curtains at the kitchen window were looped back, revealing a bright section of kitchen inside. Aunt Judith was closing the dishwasher. Had Robert come to dinner? Elena wondered.

  Aunt Judith moved toward the front hallway and Elena moved with her, circling the house again. She found a slit in the living room curtains and cautiously applied her eye to the thick, wavery old glass of the window. She heard the front door open and shut, and then lock, and then Aunt Judith came into the living room and sat on the couch. She switched on the TV and began flipping through channels idly.

  Elena wished she could see more than just her aunt’s profile in the flickering light of the TV. It gave her a strange feeling to look at this room, knowing that she could only look and not go in. How long had it been since she realized what a nice room it was? The old mahogany whatnot, crowded with china and glassware, the Tiffany lamp on the table next to Aunt Judith, the needlepoint pillows on the couch, all seemed precious to her now. Standing outside, feeling the feathery caress of the snow on the back of her neck, she wished she could go in just for a moment, just for a little while.

  Aunt Judith’s head was tilting back, her eyes shutting. Elena leaned her forehead against the window, then slowly turned away.

  She climbed the quince tree outside her own bedroom, but to her disappointment the curtains were shut tight. The maple tree outside Margaret’s room was fragile and harder to climb, but once she got up she had a good view; these curtains were wide open. Margaret was asleep with the bedcovers drawn up to her chin, her mouth open, her pale hair spread out like a fan on the pillow.

  Hello, baby, Elena thought and swallowed back tears. It was such a sweetly innocent scene: the nightlight, the little girl in bed, the stuffed animals on the shelves keeping watch over her. And here came a little white kitten padding through the open door to complete the picture, Elena thought.

  Snowball jumped onto Margaret’s bed. The kitten yawned, showing a tiny pink tongue, and stretched, displaying miniature claws. Then it walked daintily over to stand on Margaret’s chest.

  Something tingled at the roots of Elena’s hair.

  She didn’t know if it was some new hunter’s sense or sheer intuition, but suddenly she was afraid. There was danger in that room. Margaret was in danger.

  The kitten was still standing there, tail swishing back and forth. And all at once Elena realized what it looked like. The dogs. It looked the way Chelsea had looked at Doug Carson before she lunged at him. Oh, God, the town had quarantined the dogs, but nobody had thought about the cats.

  Elena’s mind was working at top speed, but it wasn’t helping her. It was only flashing pictures of what a cat could do with curved claws and needle-sharp teeth. And Margaret just lay there breathing softly, oblivious t
o any danger.

  The fur on Snowball’s back was rising, her tail swelling like a bottle brush. Her ears flattened and she opened her mouth in a silent hiss. Her eyes were fixed on Margaret’s face just the way Chelsea’s had been on Doug Carson’s.

  “No!” Elena looked around desperately for something to throw at the window, something to make noise. She couldn’t get any closer; the outer branches of the tree wouldn’t support her weight. “Margaret, wake up!”

  But the snow, settling like a blanket around her, seemed to deaden the words into nothingness. A low, discordant wail was started in Snowball’s throat as it flicked its eyes toward the window and then back to Margaret’s face.

  “Margaret, wake up!” Elena shouted. Then, just as the kitten pulled back a curved paw, she threw herself at the window.

  She never knew, later, how she managed to hang on. There was no room to kneel on the sill, but her fingernails sank into the soft old wood of the casing, and the toe of one boot jammed into a foothold below. She banged against the window with her body weight, shouting.

  “Get away from her! Wake up, Margaret!”

  Margaret’s eyes flew open and she sat up, throwing Snowball backward. The kitten’s claws caught in the eyelet bedspread as it scrambled to right itself. Elena shouted again.

  “Margaret, get off the bed! Open the window, quick!”

  Margaret’s four-year-old face was full of sleepy surprise, but no fear. She got up and stumbled toward the window while Elena gritted her teeth.

  “That’s it. Good girl … now say, ‘Come in.’ Quick, say it!”

  “Come in,” Margaret said obediently, blinking and stepping back.

  The kitten sprang out as Elena fell in. She made a grab for it, but it was too fast. Once outside it glided across the maple branches with taunting ease and leaped down into the snow, disappearing.

  A small hand was tugging at Elena’s sweater. “You came back!” Margaret said, hugging Elena’s hips. “I missed you.”

  “Oh, Margaret, I missed you—” Elena began, and then froze. Aunt Judith’s voice sounded from the top of the stairs.

  “Margaret, are you awake? What’s going on in there?”

  Elena had only an instant to make her decision. “Don’t tell her I’m here,” she whispered, dropping to her knees. “It’s a secret; do you understand? Say you let the kitty out, but don’t tell her I’m here.” There wasn’t time for any more; Elena dived under the bed and prayed.

  From under the dust ruffle, she watched Aunt Judith’s stocking feet come into the room. She pressed her face into the floorboards, not breathing.

  “Margaret! What are you doing up? Come on, let’s get you back in bed,” Aunt Judith’s voice said, and then the bed creaked with Margaret’s weight and Elena heard the noises of Aunt Judith’s fussing with the covers. “Your hands are freezing. What on earth is the window doing open?”

  “I opened it and Snowball went out,” Margaret said. Elena let out her breath.

  “And now there’s snow all over the floor. I can’t believe this. … Don’t you open it up again, do you hear me?” A little more bustling and the stocking feet went out again. The door shut.

  Elena squirmed out.

  “Good girl,” she whispered as Margaret sat up. “I’m proud of you. Now tomorrow you tell Aunt Judith that you have to give your kitty away. Tell her it scared you. I know you don’t want to”—she put up a hand to stop the wail that was gathering on Margaret’s lips—“but you have to. Because I’m telling you that kitty will hurt you if you keep it. You don’t want to get hurt, do you?”

  “No,” said Margaret, her blue eyes filling. “But—”

  “And you don’t want the kitty to hurt Aunt Judith, either, do you? You tell Aunt Judith you can’t have a kitten or a puppy or even a bird until—well, for a while. Don’t tell her that I said so; that’s still our secret. Tell her you’re scared because of what happened with the dogs at church.” It was better, Elena reasoned grimly, to give the little girl nightmares than to have a nightmare play out in this bedroom.

  Margaret’s mouth drooped sadly. “Okay.”

  “I’m sorry, sweetie.” Elena sat down and hugged her. “But that’s the way it has to be.”

  “You’re cold,” Margaret said. Then she looked up into Elena’s face. “Are you an angel?”

  “Uh … not exactly.” Just the opposite, Elena thought ironically.

  “Aunt Judith said you went to be with Mommy and Daddy. Did you see them yet?”

  “I—it’s sort of hard to explain, Margaret. I haven’t seen them yet, no. And I’m not an angel, but I’m going to be like your guardian angel anyway, all right? I’ll watch over you, even when you can’t see me. Okay?”

  “Okay.” Margaret played with her fingers. “Does that mean you can’t live here anymore?”

  Elena looked around the pink-and-white bedroom, at the stuffed animals on the shelves and the little writing desk and the rocking horse that had once been hers in the corner. “That’s what it means,” she said softly.

  “When they said you went to be with Mommy and Daddy, I said I wanted to go, too.”

  Elena blinked hard. “Oh, baby. It’s not time for you to go, so you can’t. And Aunt Judith loves you very much, and she’d be lonely without you.”

  Margaret nodded, her eyelids drooping. But as Elena eased her down and pulled the bedspread over her, Margaret asked one more question. “But don’t you love me?”

  “Oh, of course I do. I love you so much—I never even knew how much until now. But I’ll be all right, and Aunt Judith needs you more. And …” Elena had to take a breath to steady herself, and when she looked down she saw Margaret’s eyes were shut, her breathing regular. She was asleep.

  Oh, stupid, stupid, Elena thought, forging through the banked snow to the other side of Maple Street. She’d missed her chance to ask Margaret whether Robert had been at dinner.

  It was too late now.

  Robert. Her eyes narrowed suddenly. At the church, Robert had been outside and then the dogs had gone mad. And tonight Margaret’s kitten had gone feral—just a little while after Robert’s car had pulled out of the driveway.

  Robert has a lot to answer for, she thought.

  But melancholy was pulling at her, tugging her thoughts away. Her mind kept returning to the bright house she’d just left, going over the things she’d never see again. All her clothes and knickknacks and jewelry—what would Aunt Judith do with them? I don’t own anything anymore, she thought. I’m a pauper.

  Elena?

  With relief, Elena recognized the mental voice and the distinctive shadow at the end of the street. She hurried toward Stefan, who took his hands out of his jacket pockets and held hers to warm them.

  “Meredith told me where you’d gone.”

  “I went home,” Elena said. That was all she could say, but as she leaned against him for comfort, she knew that he understood.

  “Let’s find someplace we can sit down,” he said, and stopped in frustration. All the places they used to go were either too dangerous or closed to Elena. The police still had Stefan’s car.

  Eventually they just went to the high school where they could sit under the overhang of a roof and watch the snow sift down. Elena told him what had happened in Margaret’s room.

  “I’m going to have Meredith and Bonnie spread it around town that cats can attack, too. People should know that. And I think somebody ought to be watching Robert,” she concluded.

  “we’ll tail him,” Stefan said, and she couldn’t help smiling.

  “It’s funny how much more American you’ve gotten,” she said. “I hadn’t thought about it in a long time, but when you first came you were a lot more foreign. Now nobody would know you hadn’t lived here all your life.”

  “We adapt quickly. We have to,” Stefan said. “There are always new countries, new decades, new situations. You’ll adapt, too.”

  “Will I?” Elena’s eyes remained on the glitter of falling snow
flakes. “I don’t know. …”

  “You’ll learn, in time. If there is anything … good … about what we are, it’s time. We have plenty of it, as much as we want. Forever.”

  ‘“Joyous companions forever.’ Isn’t that what Katherine said to you and Damon?” Elena murmured.

  She could feel Stefan’s stiffening, his withdrawal. “She was talking about all three of us,” he said. “I wasn’t.”

  “Oh, Stefan, please don’t, not now. I wasn’t even thinking about Damon, only about forever. It scares me. Everything about this scares me, and sometimes I think I just want to go to sleep and never wake up again. …”

  In the shelter of his arms she felt safer, and she found her new senses were just as amazing close up as they were at a distance. She could hear each separate pulse of Stefan’s heart, and the rush of blood through his veins. And she could smell his own distinctive scent mingled with the scent of his jacket, and the snow, and the wool of his clothes.

  “Please trust me,” she whispered. “I know you’re angry with Damon, but try to give him a chance. I think there’s more to him than there seems to be. And I want his help in finding the Other Power, and that’s all I want from him.”

  At that moment it was completely true. Elena wanted nothing to do with the hunter’s life tonight; the darkness held no appeal for her. She wished she could be at home sitting in front of a fire.

  But it was sweet just to be held like this, even if she and Stefan had to sit in the snow to do it. Stefan’s breath was warm as he kissed the back of her neck, and she sensed no further withdrawal in Stefan’s body.

  No hunger, either, or at least not the kind she was used to sensing when they were close like this. Now that she was a hunter like he, the need was different, a need for togetherness rather than for sustenance. It didn’t matter. They had lost something, but they had gained something, too. She understood Stefan in a way she never had before. And her understanding brought them closer, until their minds were touching, almost meshing with each other’s. It wasn’t the noisy chatter of mental voices; it was a deep and wordless communion. As if their spirits were united.

 

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