The Vampire Diaries: The Return: Nightfall
Page 13
But she already had, hadn’t she?
She’d died.
Not simply Changed as she had when she’d become a vampire, but died the true death that no one came back from. In her own personal philosophy, she ought to have disintegrated into nameless atoms, or gone straight to hell.
Instead she hadn’t really gone anywhere. She’d had some dreams about fatherly or motherly people giving her advice—and of wanting very much to help people, who were suddenly much easier to understand. School bully? She had watched sadly as his drunken father took his own outrages out on him night after night. That girl who never got her homework done? She was expected to raise three younger sisters and brothers while her mother lay in bed all day. Just getting the baby fed and cleaned took all the time she had. There was always a reason behind any behavior, and now she could see it.
She had even communicated with people through their dreams. And then one of the Old Ones had arrived in Fell’s Church, and it was all she could do to stand his interference in the dreams and not run away. He caused the humans to call for Stefan’s help—and Damon had accidentally been summoned, too. And Elena had helped them all she could even when it had been almost unbearable, because Old Ones knew about love and which buttons to push and how to make your enemies run in all the right directions. But they had fought him—and they had won. And Elena, in trying to heal Stefan’s mortal wounds, had somehow ended up mortal again herself: naked, lying on the ground of the Old Wood, with Damon’s jacket over her, while Damon himself had disappeared without waiting for thanks.
And that awakening had been of basic things: things of the senses: touch, taste, hearing, sight—and of the heart, but not of the head. Stefan had been so good to her.
“And now, what am I?” Elena said aloud, staring as she turned her hands over and over, marveling at the solid, mortal flesh that obeyed the laws of gravity. She had said that she’d give up flying for him. Someone had taken her at her word.
“You’re beautiful,” Stefan answered absently, not moving. Then suddenly he rocketed up. “You’re talking!”
“I know I am.”
“And making sense!”
“Thank you kindly.”
“And in sentences!”
“I’ve noticed.”
“Go on, then, and say something long—please,” Stefan said as if he didn’t believe it.
“You’ve been hanging out too much with my friends,” Elena said. “That sentence has Bonnie’s impudence, Matt’s courtesy, and Meredith’s insistence on the facts.”
“Elena, it’s you!”
Instead of keeping up the silly dialogue with “Stefan, it is me!” Elena stopped to think. Then, carefully she got out of bed and took a step. Stefan hastily looked away, handing her a robe. Stefan? Stefan?
Silence.
When Stefan turned around after a decent interval, he saw Elena kneeling in the sunlight holding the robe.
“Elena?” She knew that to him, she looked like a very young angel in meditation.
“Stefan.”
“But you’re crying.”
“I’m human again, Stefan.” She lifted a hand, let it fall into the clutches of gravity. “I’m human again. No more, no less. I guess it just took me a few days to get fully back on track.”
She looked into his eyes. They were always such green green eyes. Like green crystal with some offside light behind them. Like a summer leaf held up before the sun.
I can read your mind.
“But I can’t read yours, Stefan. I can only get a general sense, and even that may be going…we can’t count on anything.”
Elena, I have all I want in this room. He patted the bed. Sit by me and I can say “all I want is on this bed.”
Instead she got up and threw herself at him, arms around his neck, legs tangled with his. “I’m still very young,” she whispered, holding him tightly. “And if you count it in days, we haven’t had many days together like this, but—”
“I’m still far too old for you. But to be able to look at you and see you looking back at me—”
“Tell me you’ll love me forever.”
“I’ll love you forever.”
“No matter what happens.”
“Elena, Elena—I’ve loved you as mortal, as vampire, as pure spirit, as spiritual child—and now as human again.”
“Promise we’ll be together.”
“We’ll be together.”
“No. Stefan, this is me.” She pointed to her head as if to emphasize that behind her gold-flecked blue eyes there was a bright active mind spinning in overdrive. “I know you. Even if I can’t read your mind I can read your face. All the old fears—they’re back, aren’t they?”
He looked away. “I will never leave you.”
“Not for a day? Not for an hour?”
He hesitated and then looked up at her. If that’s what you really want. I won’t leave you, even for an hour. Now he was projecting, she knew, for she could hear him.
“I release you from all your promises.”
“But, Elena, I mean them.”
“I know. But when you do go, I don’t want you to have the guilt of breaking them looming over you as well.”
Even without telepathy, she could tell what he was thinking to the tiniest shade of a nuance: Humor her. After all, she’d just woken up. She was probably a little confused. And she wasn’t interested in becoming less confused, or in making him less confused. That must be why she was nipping his chin gently. And kissing him. Certainly, Elena thought, one of the two of them was confused….
Time seemed to stretch and then stop around them. And then nothing was confusing at all. Elena knew that Stefan knew what she wanted, and he wanted whatever she wanted him to do.
Bonnie stared at the numbers on her phone, concerned. Stefan was calling. Then she ran a hasty hand through her hair, fluffing the curls out, and took the video call.
But instead of Stefan it was Elena. Bonnie started to giggle, started to tell her not to play with Stefan’s grown-up toys—and then she stared.
“Elena?”
“Am I going to get this every time? Or only from my sister-witch?”
“Elena?”
“Awake and good as new,” Stefan said, getting in the picture. “We called as soon as we woke up—”
“Ele—but it’s noon!” Bonnie blurted out.
“We’ve been occupied with this and that,” Elena cut in smoothly, and oh, wasn’t it good to hear Elena talk that way! Half innocent and wholly smug about it, making you want to shake her and beg her for every wicked detail.
“Elena,” Bonnie gasped, using the nearest wall for support, and then sliding down it, and allowing an armload of socks, shirts, pajamas, and underwear to shower down onto the carpet, while tears began to leak out of her eyes. “Elena, they said you’d have to leave Fell’s Church—will you?”
Elena bridled. “They said what?”
“That you and Stefan would have to leave for your own good.”
“Never in this world!”
“Little lovely lo—” began Stefan, and then abruptly he stopped, opening and shutting his mouth.
Bonnie stared. It had happened at the bottom of the screen, out of sight, but she could almost swear that Stefan’s little lovely love had just elbowed him in the stomach. “Ground zero, two o’clock?” Elena was asking.
Bonnie snapped back to reality. Elena never gave you time for reflection. “I’ll be there!” she cried.
“Elena,” Meredith breathed. And then “Elena!” like a half-chocked sob. “Elena!”
“Meredith. Oh, don’t make me cry, this blouse is pure silk!”
“It’s pure silk because it’s my pure silk sari blouse, that’s why!”
Elena suddenly looked as innocent as an angel. “You know, Meredith, I seem to have grown much taller lately—”
“If the end of that sentence is ‘so it really fits me better’”—Meredith’s voice was threatening—“then I’m warning you, Ele
na Gilbert…” She broke off, and both girls began to laugh and then to cry. “You can have it! Oh, you can have it!”
“Stefan?” Matt waved his phone—first cautiously, then banging it into the wall of the garage. “I can’t see—” He stopped, swallowed. “E-le-na?” The word came out slowly, with a pause between each syllable.
“Yes, Matt. I’m back. Even up here.” She pointed to her forehead. “Will you meet with us?”
Matt, leaning on his newly purchased, almost-running car, was muttering, “Thank God, thank God,” over and over.
“Matt? I can’t see you. Are you okay?” Shuffling sounds. “I think he fainted.”
Stefan’s voice: “Matt? She really wants to see you.”
“Yeah, yeah.” Matt lifted his head up, blinking at the phone. “Elena, Elena…”
“I’m so sorry, Matt. You don’t have to come—”
Matt laughed shortly. “Are you sure you’re Elena?”
Elena smiled the smile that had broken a thousand hearts. “In that case—Matt Honeycutt, I insist that you come and meet with us at Ground Zero at two o’clock. Is that more like it?”
“I think you’ve almost got it down. The old Elena Imperial Manner.” He coughed theatrically, sniffed, and said, “Sorry—I’ve got a little cold; or allergies, maybe.”
“Don’t be silly, Matt. You’re bawling like a baby and so am I,” Elena said. “And so were Bonnie and Meredith, when I called them. So I’ve been crying nearly all day—and at this rate I’ll have to scramble to get a picnic ready and be on time. Meredith’s planning to pick you up. Bring something to drink or eat. Love ya!”
Elena put down the phone, breathing hard.
“Now that was tough.”
“He still loves you.”
“He’d rather that I stayed a baby all my life?”
“Maybe he liked the way you used to say ‘hello’ and ‘good-bye.’”
“Now you’re teasing me.” Elena quivered her chin.
“Never in this world,” Stefan said softly. Then, suddenly, he grabbed her hand. “Come on—we’re going shopping for a picnic and a car, too,” he said, pulling her up.
Elena startled both of them by flying up so quickly that Stefan had to grab her by the waist to keep her from shooting toward the ceiling.
“I thought you had gravity!”
“So did I! What do I do?”
“Think heavy thoughts!”
“What if it doesn’t work?”
“We’ll buy you an anchor!”
At two o’clock Stefan and Elena arrived at the Fell’s Church graveyard in a brand-new red Jaguar; Elena was wearing dark glasses under a scarf with all her hair pinned up under it, a muffler around her lower face, and black lace mitts borrowed from Mrs. Flowers’ younger days, which she admitted she didn’t know why she was wearing. She made quite a picture, Meredith said, with the violet sari top and jeans. Bonnie and Meredith had already spread a cloth for a picnic, and the ants were sampling sandwiches and grapes and low-fat pasta salad.
Elena told the story of how she had woken up this morning, and then there was more hugging and kissing and crying than the males could stand.
“You want to see the woods around here? Check if those malach things are around?” Matt said to Stefan.
“They’d better not be,” Stefan said. “If the trees this far from where you had your accident are infested—”
“Not good?”
“Serious trouble.”
They were about to go when Elena called them back.
“You can stop looking all male and superior,” she added. “Suppressing your emotions is bad for you. Expressing them keeps you well balanced.”
“Listen, you’re tougher than I thought,” Stefan said. “Having picnics at a cemetery?”
“We used to find Elena here all the time,” Bonnie said, pointing to a nearby headstone with a celery stick.
“It’s my parents’ gravesite,” Elena explained simply. “After the accident—I always felt closer to them here than anywhere. I would come here when things got bad, or when I needed to have a question answered.”
“Did you ever get any answers?” Matt asked, taking a home-preserved cucumber pickle from a glass jar and passing the jar on.
“I’m not sure, even now,” Elena said. She had taken off the dark glasses, muffler, headscarf, and mitts. “But it always made me feel better. Why? Do you have a question?”
“Well—yeah,” Matt said unexpectedly. Then he flushed as he suddenly found himself the center of attention. Bonnie rolled over to stare at him, the stalk of celery at her lips, Meredith scooted in, Elena sat up. Stefan, who had been leaning against an elaborate headstone with unconscious vampire grace, sat down.
“What is it, Matt?”
“I was going to say, you don’t look right today,” Bonnie said anxiously.
“Thank you,” Matt snapped.
Tears pooled in Bonnie’s brown eyes. “I didn’t mean—”
But she didn’t get to finish. Meredith and Elena drew in protectively around her in the solid phalanx of what they called “velociraptor sisterhood.” It meant that anybody messing with one of them was messing with them all.
“Sarcasm instead of chivalry? That’s hardly the Matt I know.” Meredith spoke with one eyebrow raised.
“She was only trying to be sympathetic,” Elena pointed out quietly. “And that was a cheap comeback.”
“Okay, okay! I’m sorry—really sorry, Bonnie”—he turned toward her, looking ashamed—“It was a nasty thing to say and I know you were only trying to be nice. I just—I don’t really know what I’m doing or saying. Anyway, do you want to hear the thing,” he finished, looking defensive, “or not?”
Everyone did.
“Okay, here it is. I went to visit Jim Bryce this morning—you remember him?”
“Sure. I went out with him. Captain of the basketball team. Nice guy. A little bit young, but…” Meredith shrugged.
“Jim’s okay.” Matt swallowed. “Well, it’s just—I don’t want to gossip or anything, but—”
“Gossip!” the three girls commanded him in unison, like a Greek chorus.
Matt quailed. “Okay, okay! Well—I was supposed to be over there at ten o’clock, but I got there a little early, and—well, Caroline was there. She was leaving.”
There were three little shocked gasps and a sharp look from Stefan.
“You mean you think she spent the night with him?”
“Stefan!” Bonnie began. “This isn’t how proper gossip goes. You never just outright say what you think—”
“No,” Elena said evenly. “Let Matt answer. I can remember enough from before I could talk to be worried about Caroline.”
“More than worried,” Stefan said.
Meredith nodded. “It’s not gossip; it’s necessary information,” she said.
“Okay, then.” Matt gulped. “Well, yeah, that was what I thought. He said she’d come early to see his little sister, but Tamra is only about fifteen. And he turned bright red when he said it.”
There were sober glances between the others.
“Caroline’s always been…well, sleazy…” began Bonnie.
“But I’ve never heard that she even gave Jim a second glance,” finished Meredith.
They looked to Elena for an answer. Elena slowly shook her head. “I certainly can’t see any earthly reason for her visiting Tamra. And besides”—she looked up quickly at Matt—“you’re holding out on us somehow. What else happened?”
“Something more happened? Did Caroline flash her lingerie?” Bonnie was laughing until she saw Matt’s red face. “Hey—c’mon, Matt. This is us. You can tell us anything.”
Matt drew in a deep breath and shut his eyes.
“Okay, well—as she was going out, I think—I think Caroline…propositioned me.”
“She did what?”
“She would never—”
“How, Matt?” Elena asked.
“Well—Jim th
ought she’d left, and he went to the garage to get his basketball, and I turned around and suddenly Caroline was back again, and she said—well, it doesn’t matter what she said. But it was about her liking football better than basketball and did I want to be a sport.”
“And what did you say?” Bonnie breathed, fascinated.
“I didn’t say anything. I just stared at her.”
“And then Jim came back?” Meredith suggested.
“No! And then Caroline left—she gave me this look, you know, that made things pretty clear as to what she meant—and then Tami came in.” Matt’s honest face was flaming by now. “And then—I don’t know how to say it. Maybe Caroline said something about me to make her do it to me, because she—she…”
“Matt.” Stefan had scarcely spoken until this point; now he leaned forward and spoke quietly. “We’re not asking just because we want to gossip. We’re trying to find out if there’s something seriously wrong happening in Fell’s Church. So—please—just tell us what happened.”
15
Matt nodded, but he was blushing to the fair roots of his hair. “Tami…pressed herself against me.”
There was a long pause.
Meredith said levelly, “Matt, do you mean she hugged you? Like a biiiiiig hug? Or that she…” She stopped, because Matt was already shaking his head vehemently.
“It was no innocent biiiiiig hug. We were alone, in the doorway there, and she just…well, I couldn’t believe it. She’s only fifteen, but she acted like an adult woman. I mean…not that I’ve ever had an adult woman do that to me.”
Looking embarrassed but relieved at having got this off his chest, Matt’s gaze went from face to face. “So what do you think? Was it just a coincidence that Caroline was there? Or did she…say something to Tamra?”
“No coincidence,” Elena said simply. “It’d be too much of a coincidence: Caroline coming on to you and then Tamra acting like that. I know—I used to know Tami Bryce. She’s a nice little girl—or she used to be.”
“She still is,” Meredith said. “I told you, I went out with Jim a few times. She’s a very nice girl, and not at all mature for her age. I don’t think she would normally do anything inappropriate, unless…” She stopped, looking into the middle distance, and then shrugged without finishing her sentence.