by Kate Brian
Krista bit her bottom lip. “Looks that way,” she said. “I’m really sorry.”
The door behind her opened, and Joaquin’s “grandmother,” Ursula, stuck her head out. “Krista, hon? You got orders up.”
“I gotta go,” Krista said apologetically. Then she paused as she held the door. “You’ll be okay. I mean…right?”
“Sure,” I said, nodding absently. “I’ll be fine.”
She squeezed my hand once before turning in a swirl of gingham and lace and heading back inside. Ursula, however, stayed.
“Can I get ya anything, hon?” she asked sympathetically, her leather bracelet clinging to her thick wrist.
I tried to smile. “No, thanks. I’m good,” I lied.
As soon as she was gone, I sank to the sidewalk, sitting with my back against the wall of the building as the crows cawed and screeched. My insides were hollow, numb.
Aaron was leaving. Before I knew it, he’d be out of my life for good. And I was going to be the one to make him go.
“Do you think Darcy will come out and join us?” Aaron asked me that night, folding both arms behind his head.
We were both on lounge chairs on the back deck, staring up at the stars. My pulse pitter-patted nervously. In the pocket of my jeans, Aaron’s coin pressed heavily against my thigh.
We’d spent all day together, and as much as I wanted to focus on enjoying the time I had left with him, the same thoughts kept hovering in the back of my mind: When? When was it going to happen? How would I know it was time? I felt constantly on edge, like at any second a bomb was about to go off.
“Probably not. She has a date with Fisher,” I said.
Aaron lifted his head, intrigued. “Really?”
I sighed. “Second one in two days.”
“You don’t approve?” Aaron joked, narrowing his eyes.
“It’s not that,” I said, only half lying, picking at my fingernails. Overhead, a cloud of gnats hovered around the outdoor light. “It’s just…I miss her, I guess. I’d rather she spend time with me.”
“Aw! That’s so sweet!” Aaron said, nudging me with one hand. “So tell her!”
I scoffed. “Yeah, right.”
Aaron pushed himself up on one arm and rolled to face me. “No. I’m serious. You should. Just be honest about how you feel. That’s what I’d do if I could talk to my dad.”
His eyelids fluttered down for a second, and I could sense his whole body tightening at the thought of his father.
“What happened with you two?” I asked gently, somehow speaking past the lump in my throat. “You never said.”
“I know,” Aaron responded. When he opened his eyes again, they were full of tears. “It’s because I’m embarrassed. He was just trying to look out for me, and I—”
Out of nowhere, Aaron started to sob, a silent, racking kind of sobbing. He rolled over onto his back again and placed his hand over his eyes. I sat up and placed my feet on the ground, twisting my leather bracelet around my finger.
“Oh…god. I’m so sorry, Aaron. I didn’t mean to upset you.” Suddenly I felt hot all over, and I was grateful for the cool ocean breeze on my back. “You don’t have to talk about it if you don’t want to.”
“No, I do.” He took a deep breath through his nose and sat up, pulling his knees up to his chest. “I do,” he repeated in a calmer voice. “I was going out with this guy,” he said with a sniffle. “Charles. My dad never approved of him. Said he was disrespectful and immature. I thought it was just that he didn’t want me with any guy, so I ignored him. I liked Charlie because he seemed dangerous. I thought it was exciting that he drove a motorbike and lived in this tiny shack by the water. I thought it was cool.” He said the last word with venom in it.
I inched forward on my seat, leaning toward him and placing my hand on his back. The second I did, all of his anguish, all of his sorrow and self-doubt and anger, rushed through me so fast the pain was almost too much to take.
And just like that, I knew. It was time. Aaron was getting ready to move on, and this was how I was supposed to help him. I was supposed to listen, to be here for him, to let him confess everything.
“So what happened?” I asked quietly.
“One night my family went out to dinner, and we came home early because my sister had taken ill. We found the door to our house was open,” he said, giving me this knowing look, as if he expected me to see where this was going. “My father told everyone to wait outside, and he went in on his own. Two seconds later we hear shouting, and all of a sudden Charlie comes running out of the house and tears off down the street. We heard the motorbike getting away before my father even made it back down the stairs. Charlie had known we were going to be out all night and had used the opportunity to try to rob us.”
My heart gave a horrible, sick thump. “Oh my gosh. Aaron, that’s—”
“Awful. I know,” Aaron said. He swung his legs over the side of the lounge chair and faced me, which forced me to pull my hand back. “But the worst part is, I defended him.”
With that, Aaron buried his face in his hands and cried. I covered my mouth, unsure of what to say. All I knew was I didn’t want to interrupt him. He needed to get this out of his system, and I was going to let him. After a few minutes, he wiped his nose with the back of his hand and sighed.
“I’m sorry.”
“No, it’s fine,” I told him. “Go on.”
“Well, I told my father that he deserved it. That he was such a closed-minded prig it was no wonder Charlie felt the need to punish him,” Aaron said. “I accused him of shoving our wealth in Charlie’s face all the time, of practically tempting him into doing it. Then I told him I was going to run away with Charlie and I wasn’t coming back.”
“Wow,” I breathed, staring at Aaron’s blotchy face. “What happened?”
His eyes took on a distant blankness, as if he wanted to hold himself apart from whatever he was going to say next. I reached out and took his hand, entwining my fingers with his. My fingers instantly began to throb with the strength of his regret.
“When I got to Charlie’s, he was gone. The place was wiped out,” Aaron said, looking down at our hands. “He just bailed. And when I tried to call him, his number had been changed. No explanation, no apology, not even a breakup e-mail. He just left.” He breathed in shakily and let it out. “So I came to America to stay with my uncle and get away for a while. It was a chat with him that made me realize how wrong I was, actually. But then the fire happened, and I haven’t had a chance to call my father since.”
The fire. The fire that had taken Aaron’s life. And because of that, he would never have a chance to call his father.
“I’m just so sorry, you know?” Aaron said, his lower lip trembling as he looked me in the eye, squeezing my hand so tightly it hurt. “I just want him to forgive me. I just want him to forgive me for being such an ass.”
I let go of his hand, sat down next to him, and wrapped my arms around him. Aaron buried his face against my shoulder, holding one hand over his eyes as he cried. I felt all of his sadness and regret crash through me again, and this time it was so overwhelming that tears welled up behind my own eyes. I blinked them back, but it was no use. Before long, his striped shirt was dotted with tears.
“It’s okay,” I told him, my voice wet. “He forgives you. I know he does. He loves you. He knows everyone makes mistakes, and he forgives you.”
“You think so?” he asked wearily.
“I know he does,” I replied.
Slowly, Aaron’s sorrow began to subside. The ache in my heart ebbed, replaced by a distinct, comforting, warmth. Aaron pulled away and looked me in the eye. He seemed a different person suddenly. Like he was calmer, gratified, maybe even happy. And I had made him feel that way. Confessing to me, hearing me say his father forgave him, had given him peace.
I let out a shaky breath and smiled. But it wasn’t until Aaron smiled back in a relieved sort of way that I realized, suddenly, how naive I’d be
en. Being a Lifer wasn’t about Tristan. This wasn’t even about me. This was about Aaron. It was about helping him let go of all this awfulness and move on. It was about leading him through the biggest transition he’d ever make.
This was a true purpose.
Something tugged gently at my hair, and when I looked down, the fog had already engulfed Aaron’s feet. It rolled in over the deck floor, colliding with the glass door and surrounding the planters. But this time, something was different. I could see a clear path through the fog, leading away from the chairs and toward the beach. There was a creak on the stairs, and I turned around. Tristan climbed up to meet us.
“Hey, man,” he said.
“Hey,” Aaron replied.
Tristan stepped toward me. I stared at the Tevas on his feet. “You ready?”
“Yeah,” I said quietly. “I think we are.”
Aaron’s expression was confused, but not scared. I, however, was terrified. I was about to say good-bye to him, forever. I was about to send him into the beyond.
Tristan held a hand out to me, then quickly thought better of it and shoved it into his back pocket. “It’s time.”
As we stood at the end of the bridge with the fog swirling around our ankles, Aaron looked from me to Tristan with innocent bemusement, kind of like a little kid standing outside on the playground on his first day of school, wondering if his parents really were going to leave him there alone.
“What are we doing here?” he asked.
Tristan looked down at my hand. I felt the cold weight of the coin cupped inside my palm. I cleared my throat, and my eyes welled up.
“We’re here to say good-bye,” I said.
Tristan dipped his head and took a step back on the sandy, rocky road, giving us space.
Aaron looked at me quizzically. “Are you going somewhere?”
“No,” I said sadly. “You are.”
I handed him the coin, and he held it up between his thumb and forefinger, studying it. “Where am I going?”
“Someplace amazing,” I told him, my heart aching like crazy. “Someplace where you’ll be happy and…at peace.”
That was how I imagined the Light would be. The way I hoped it would be.
Aaron smiled. “That sounds fairly awesome.”
I grinned, struggling to hold back the tears, and put my hand on his back, turning him toward the bridge. “All you have to do is hold on to that and walk across the bridge,” I told him. “You’ll be there before you know it.”
Aaron took one step, then looked back at me. “I wish you could come.”
“Me, too.” I reached out and hugged him as tightly as I could, trying to solidify the feeling of him, his clean scent, in my memory. “It’s been so nice knowing you,” I whispered.
“You, too,” he told me. “Thanks for everything. I mean it, Rory. You’ve been a really good friend.”
I looked over at Tristan. It was almost as if Aaron knew where he was going. Maybe some small part of him did.
“Good-bye,” Aaron said to Tristan rather formally.
Tristan lifted a hand in a wave, and Aaron strode into the fog surrounding the bridge. The second he was gone, I dropped my face into my hands and cried, feeling guilty and selfish for it. Aaron was going to be fine. He was going to the Light. It was me I was crying for.
Suddenly I felt Tristan’s warm hand slide up my back and clasp my shoulder. “Rory,” he said, his voice full of anguish and grief and comfort and hope.
I turned toward him, knowing my face was covered in tears, knowing my nose was swollen and my eyes were red and my lips were dry and puffy. Knowing and not caring.
Tristan reached up and ran his thumb over my cheek, tilting my face so I had to look him in the eye.
“Rory,” he said again.
“I’m sorry,” I blubbered. “I just…I didn’t want…I didn’t want him to go.”
“I know,” he said, drying one cheek with the pad of his thumb. “I know.”
He took in a sharp breath, and then before I could realize what was happening, he kissed me. He kissed me so hard that I staggered backward until he tightened his grip on me to hold me up. I slid my hands up his broad back and tangled my fingers up in the soft, thick hair at the nape of his neck. Tristan kissed me like a guy who’d never kissed anyone before. Like a person who was so starved to be kissed he’d never stop. Not that I ever wanted him to. It didn’t even matter that my skin was smeared with tears. I’d never experienced a kiss so perfect. I’d never experienced anything so perfect.
When he finally pulled away, his hands gripped the back of my T-shirt and we were standing so close I couldn’t tell whose legs were whose. We both gasped for breath, our exhalations mingling between us.
“I thought you said—”
“Forget what I said,” he interjected. “I’m just sick of it.”
“Sick of what?” I asked, my brow creasing.
“Sick of trying to keep away from you,” Tristan said with a sigh. He held the back of my neck with one hand. “I’ve only been doing it for ten days, and it feels like an eternity.”
He kissed me again, and I smiled beneath his lips. He’d been counting the days, struggling all along to keep from wanting me, and now he was breaking the rules for me—breaking his own rules. Everything felt lighter suddenly. It was as if some chokehold on my heart had loosened and now it could really breathe.
Tristan broke off the kiss and wrapped his arms around me. For a long time we just stood there, folded against each other. My eyelashes were still wet, my heart brimming.
I leaned back to look him in the eye again, but then Tristan’s expression suddenly darkened. I glanced over my shoulder to see what had caught his attention. Along the side of the road, a swath of the green reeds had dried out and turned brown, bending toward the road. Some of them were broken, sticking out at violent angles, like bony fingers reaching up from a grave.
“What is it?” I asked.
“Nothing,” he said, forcing a smile. “It’s nothing.” He entwined his fingers with mine. “Let’s walk back.”
“What about your car?” I asked, glancing over at his Range Rover, parked near the foot of the bridge.
“I’ll get it later,” he told me. “Right now, I’m in the mood for a nice, long stroll. With you.”
I grinned. “I like that plan.”
Our hands swinging between us, we walked down the hill toward town. Tristan pointed out various landmarks to me—a tree he used to climb when he first arrived on the island, trying to see across the ocean; a steep hill he and Joaquin had once raced down on bikes before crashing into each other at the bottom; the spot in the park where he and Krista had picnicked when she’d first learned the truth about Juniper Landing and her role here. I sensed how much Tristan loved this place—not just his mission, but this island.
Downtown Juniper Landing was bustling, full of people headed to the docks for dinner or strolling through the park with ice-cream cones. The trilling music of a flute wafted out through an open window somewhere as screen doors squeaked and people laughed. Everything seemed so peaceful, and the grass beneath our feet glimmered from the moisture left behind by the fog.
“And this is where I was standing the first time I saw you,” Tristan said, pausing in front of the general store.
“You remember that?” I asked with a blush.
“I’ll never forget it,” he said, sounding nostalgic.
I laughed suddenly.
“What?” he asked, squeezing my hand.
“I still can’t believe you kissed me,” I said.
He took a deep breath and blushed. “I just finally decided…”
“What?” I asked, biting my bottom lip. “You decided what?”
He lifted one shoulder and looked me in the eye. “I decided that you’re more important.”
For a second I couldn’t breathe, but in a good way. There was so much meaning in that one sentence, so much surrender and trust, it actually took my breath awa
y.
I was just rising up on my toes to kiss him when his eyes flicked past me and he tensed. I turned to see that Nadia had just walked out of the general store and now stood rooted to the sidewalk, a stunned expression on her face. My mouth went dry as her eyes slowly trailed down to our hands, still clasped between us.
“Nadia,” Tristan said.
Her dark eyes were like daggers. “Unbelievable,” she said, stepping off the sidewalk. “So much for the rules, huh, Tristan?” she yelled, throwing her hands wide as she walked backward across the street.
She grabbed a dirt bike that had been tossed on the grass in the park and quickly pedaled away, heading down toward the beach. Tristan sighed.
“I’m guessing that’s not good,” I said quietly.
“No, probably not,” he replied.
I was about to ask him about Nadia, about what exactly had happened between them and what she had meant the other night when she’d confronted me—when I glimpsed the weather vane from the corner of my eye.
Instantly, all the activity around me faded to black. All I could see was the golden swan, sitting up there fat and proud atop its arrow. The arrow that was pointing south.
My vision grayed. I grasped his arm, the dizziness hitting me so hard I thought I might go down. “Tristan,” I gasped.
He turned to look, and his jaw went slack.
“It…it can’t…” I stuttered. “It can’t be. That doesn’t mean…Aaron didn’t go to the Shadowlands.”
A line of concern formed between Tristan’s eyes. He seemed to be weighing his response. Weighing it for far too long.
“Tristan!” I shouted. A couple who was sitting at a table nearby turned to gape.
“Come here.” Tristan pulled me gently but firmly around the corner at the end of the block, away from the prying, curious eyes of the visitors. I pressed back against the shingled outer wall of the general store, my heart pounding desperately inside my chest.
“This isn’t happening. It can’t be happening,” I told him.
“I’m sorry,” he said firmly. “But it is.”