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her feet on the no-slip guard and ready to try to support Stefan’s lanky
weight. But they could not be playful now.
The shower’s spray had been very helpful, too—at concealing the
teardrops that kept flowing down Elena’s cheeks. She could—oh, dear
heaven—count and feel each one of his ribs. He was just bones and skin,
her beautiful Stefan, but his green eyes were alive, sparkling and
dancing in his pale face.
After they were dressed in nightclothes they simply sat on the bed
for a little while. Sitting together, both breathing—Stefan had got into
the habit from being around humans so much and, recently, from trying
to eke out the small amount of nutrition he received—in synchronicity,
and both feeling the other’s warm body beside them…it was almost too
much. Then, almost tentatively, Stefan groped for Elena’s hand, and
catching it, held it in both of his, turning it over wonderingly.
Elena was swallowing and swallowing, trying to make a start in a
conversation, felt herself practically radiating bliss. Oh, I never want
anything more, she thought, although she knew that soon enough she
would want to talk, and to hold, and to kiss, and to feed Stefan. But if
someone had asked her if she would have accepted just this, sitting
together, communicating by touch and love alone, she would have
accepted it.
Before she knew it, she was talking, words that came like bubbles
out of molasses, only these were bubbles from her soul. “I thought that
somehow I might lose this time. That I’d won so many times, and that
this time something would teach me a lesson and you…wouldn’t make
it.”
Stefan was still wondering over her hand, bending industriously to
kiss each separate finger. “You call ‘winning’ dying in pain and sunlight
to save my worthless life—and my even more worthless brother’s?”
“I call this a better kind of winning,” Elena admitted. “Any time
we get to be together is winning. Any moment—even in that
dungeon…”
Stefan winced, but Elena had to finish her thought. “Even there, to
look in your eyes, to touch your hand, to know that you were looking at
me and touching me—and that you were happy—well, that’s winning, in
my book.”
Stefan lifted his eyes to hers. In the dim light, the green looked
suddenly dark and mysterious. “And one more thing,” he whispered.
“Because I am what I am…and because your crowning glory isn’t that
glorious golden cloud of hair, but an aura that is…ineffable.
Indescribable. Beyond any words…”
Elena had thought they would sit and simply gaze at each other,
drowning in each other’s eyes, but that wasn’t happening. Stefan’s
expression had slipped and Elena realized how close to bloodlust—and
to death—he still really was.
Hurriedly, Elena pulled her damp hair to one side of her neck, and
then she leaned back, knowing Stefan would catch her.
He did this, but although Elena tilted her chin back, he tilted it
down in his two hands to look at her.
“Do you know how much I love you?” he asked.
His entire face was masked now, enigmatic and strangely thrilling.
“I don’t think you do,” he whispered. “I’ve watched and watched how
you were willing to do anything, anything to save me…but I don’t think
you know how much that love has been building up, Elena….”
Delicious shivers were going down Elena’s spine.
“Then you’d better show me,” she whispered. “Or I might not
believe that you mean it—”
“I’ll show you what I mean,” Stefan whispered back. But when he
bent down it was to kiss her softly. The feelings inside Elena—that this
starving creature wanted to kiss her instead of going at once for her
throat, reached a peak that she could not explain in thoughts or words,
but only by drawing Stefan’s head so that his mouth rested on her neck.
“Please,” she said. “Oh, Stefan, please. ”
Then she felt the quick sacrificial pains, and then Stefan was
drinking her blood, and her mind, which had been fluttering around like
a bird in a lighted room, now saw its nest and its mate and swooped up
and up and up to at last reach unity with its best-beloved.
After that there was no need for clumsy things like words. They
communicated in thoughts as pure and clear as shimmering gems, and
Elena rejoiced because all of Stefan’s mind was open to her, and none of
it was walled off or dark and there were no boulders of secrets or
chained and weeping children…
What! she heard Stefan exclaim voicelessly. A child in chains? A
mountain-sized boulder? Who could have that in their mind—?
Stefan broke off, knowing the answer, even before Elena’s
lightning-swift thought could tell him. Elena felt the clear green wave of
his pity, spiced by the natural anger of a young man who has gone
through the depths of hell, but untainted by the terrible black poison of
hatred of brother for brother.
When Elena had finished explaining all she knew about Damon’s
mental processes, she said, And I don’t know what to do! I’ve done
everything I could, Stefan, I’ve—I’ve even loved him. I gave him
everything that wasn’t yours alone. But I don’t know if it’s made even
the slightest difference.
He called Matt “Matt” instead of Mutt, Stefan interrupted.
Yes. I…noticed that. I’d kept asking him to, but it never seemed to
matter.
It mattered this way: you managed to change him. Not many
people can.
Elena wrapped him in a tight embrace, stopped, worried that it was
too tight, and glanced at him. He smiled and shook his head. He was
already looking like a person rather than a death camp survivor.
You should keep using it, Stefan said voicelessly. Your influence
over him is strongest.
I will—without any artificial Wings, Elena promised. Then she
worried that Stefan would think her too presumptuous—or too attached.
But one look at Stefan was enough to assure her that she was doing
the right thing.
They clung to each other.
It wasn’t as hard as Elena had imagined it would be—handing
Stefan over to other humans to be bled. Stefan had a clean pair of
pajamas on, and the first thing he said to all three donors was, “If you
get frightened or change your mind, just say so. I can hear perfectly
well, and I’m not in bloodlust. And anyway, I’ll probably sense it if
you’re not enjoying it before you do, and I’ll stop. And finally—thank
you—thank you all. I’ve decided to break my oath tonight because
there’s still some little chance that if I slept I wouldn’t wake up
tomorrow without you.”
Bonnie was horrified and indignant and furious. “You mean you
couldn’t sleep all that time because you were afraid to—to…?”
“I did fall asleep from time to time, but thank fortune—thank
God —I always woke up again. There were times when I didn’t dare
move to conserve energy, but somehow Elena kept finding ways to
come to me, and every single time she came, she brought me some kind
of sustenance.” He gave Elena a look that sent her heart spinning out of
her chest and high into the stratosphere.
And then she set up a schedule, with Stefan being fed every hour
on the hour, and then she and the others left the first volunteer, Bonnie,
alone, so as to be more comfortable.
It was the next morning. Damon had already been out to visit
Leigh, the antiques-seller’s niece, who had seemed very glad to see him.
And now he was back, to look with scorn at the slug-a-beds who were
distributed all around the boardinghouse.
That was when he saw the bouquet.
It was heavily sealed down with wards—amulets to help get it
through the dimensional gap. There was something powerful in there.
Damon cocked his head to one side.
Hmm…I wonder what?
Dear Diary,
I don’t know what to say. We’re home.
Last night we each had a long bath…and I was half-disappointed,
because my favorite long-handled back-scrubbing brush wasn’t there,
and there was no star ball to make dreamy music for Stefan—and the
water was LUKEWARM! And Stefan went to see if the water heater was
turned on all the way and met Damon going to do the same thing! Only,
they couldn’t because we’re home again.
But I woke up a couple of hours ago for a few minutes to see the
most beautiful sight in the world…a sunrise. Pale pink and eerie green
in the east, with nighttime still full dark in the west. Then deeper rose in
the sky, and the trees all wreathed in dew clouds. Then a shiny glory
from the edge of the horizon and dark rose, cream, and even a green
melon color in the sky, Finally, a line of fire and in an instant all the
colors change. The line becomes an arc, the western sky is deepest
deepest blue, and then up comes the sun bringing warmth and light and
color to the green trees and the sky begins to become celestial
blue—celestial just means heavenly, although somehow, I have a
delicious shivery feeling when I say it. The sky becomes a gemlike,
celestial, cerulean blue and the golden sun begins to pour energy, love,
light, and every good thing onto the world.
Who could not be happy to watch this while Stefan held her?
We who are so lucky as to be born into the light—who see it every
day and never think about it, we’re blessed. We could have been born
shadow souls who live and die in crimson darkness, never even knowing
that somewhere there is something better.
E lena was wakened by shouting. She’d already once awakened to
unbelievable bliss. Now she was awake again—but surely that was
Damon’s voice. Shouting? Damon didn’t shout!
Throwing on a robe, she went dashing out the door and downstairs.
Raised voices—confusion. Damon was kneeling on the floor. His
face was blue-white. There wasn’t a plant in the room that could be
strangling him.
Poisoned, was the next thing Elena thought and immediately her
eyes darted around the room to see a spilled drink, a dropped plate, any
sign that poison had done this. There was nothing.
Sage was clapping Damon on the back. Oh, God, could he have
choked? But that was idiocy. Vampires didn’t breathe, except for talking
and building Power.
But then what was happening?
“You have to breathe,” Sage was shouting in Damon’s ear. “Take a
breath, as if you were going to speak, but then hold on to it, as if for
raising your Power. Think about your insides. Get those lungs working!”
The words only confused Elena.
“There!” cried Sage. “You see?”
“But it only lasts an instant. Then I need to do it again.”
“But, yes, that is the point!”
“I tell you I’m dying and you laugh at me?” a disheveled Damon
shouted. “I’m blind, deaf, my senses are haywire—and you laugh!”
Disheveled, thought Elena, bothered by something.
“Well.” Sage seemed to be at least trying not to laugh. “Perhaps,
mon petit chou, you should not have opened something that was not
addressed to you?”
“I put wards all around me before I did it. The house was safe.”
“But you were not— breathe! Breathe, Damon!”
“It looked completely harmless—and admit it—we were all
going—to open it last night—when we got too tired—!”
“But to do it alone, to open a present from a kitsune…that was
foolish, yes?”
A choking Damon snapped, “Don’t lecture me. Help me. Why am
I muffled in cotton wool? Why can’t I see? Or hear? Or
smell—anything? I’m telling you I can’t smell a thing!”
“You are fit and sharp as any human could be. You could probably
defeat most vampires if you fought with one right now. But human
senses are very few and very dull.”
Words were swimming in Elena’s head…opening things not
addressed to you…bouquet from a kitsune…human…
Oh, my God!
Apparently, the same words were going through the mind of
someone else, because suddenly a figure dashed in from the kitchen
area. Stefan.
“You stole my bouquet? From the kitsune?”
“I was very careful—”
“Do you realize what you’ve done?” Stefan shook Damon.
“Ow. That hurts! Do you want to break my neck?”
“ That hurts? Damon, you’re in for a world of hurt! Do you
understand? I talked to that kitsune. Told him the whole story of my life.
Elena came to visit and he saw her practically…well, never mind—he
saw her crying over me! Do…you…realize…what…you…have…
done?”
It was as if Stefan had started climbing a series of steps, and that
each one lifted him to a higher level of fury than the last. And here, at
the top…
“I’ll KILL YOU!” Stefan shouted. “You took it—my humanity!
He gave it to me— and you took it!”
“You’ll kill me? I’ll kill you, you—you bastard! There was one
flower in the middle. A black rose, bigger than I have ever seen. And it
smelled…heavenly…”
“It’s gone!” Matt reported, producing the bouquet. He displayed it.
There was a gaping hole in the center of the mixed flower arrangement.
Despite the hole, Stefan ran to it, and stuck his face into the
bouquet, sucking in great heaving breaths of air. He kept coming up and
snapping his fingers and each time lightning flared between his
fingertips.
“Sorry, bud,” Matt said. “I think it’s gone.”
Elena could see it all now. That kitsune…he was one of the good
ones, like the stories Meredith had told them about. Or at least good
enough to sympathize with Stefan’s plight. And so, when he had gotten
free, he had made up a bouquet—kitsune could do anything with plants,
although surely this was a great feat, something like finding the secret of
eternal youth…to turn vampires into humans. And after Stefan had
endured and endured and endured and should have finally gotten his
reward…right now…
“I’m going back,” Stefan shouted. “I’m going to find him!”
Meredith said quietly, “With or without Elena?”
Stefan stopped. He looked up at the stairway, and his eyes met
Elena’s.
Elena…
We’ll go together.
“No,” Stefan shouted. “I would never put you through that. I’m not
going after all. I’m just going to murder you!” He swung back on his
brother.
“Been there, done that. Besides, I’m the one that’s going to kill
you, you bastard! You took my world away from me! I am a vampire!
I’m not a”—some creative cursing—“human!”
“Well you are now,” Matt said. He was just barely not laughing out
loud. “So I’d say you’d better get used to it.”
Damon leaped at Stefan. Stefan didn’t step aside. In an instant
there was a ball of thrashing, kicking, and punching, and cursing in
Italian that made it sound as if there were at least four vampires fighting
five or six humans.
Elena sat down helplessly.
Damon…a human?
How were they going to deal with this?
Elena looked up to see that Bonnie had carefully made up a tray of
all sorts of things that tasted good to humans, and that she’d undoubtedly
done it for Damon before he had worked his way into hysteria.
“Bonnie,” Elena said quietly, “don’t give it to him yet. He’ll just
throw it at you. But perhaps later…”
“Later he won’t throw it?”
Elena winced.
“How is Damon going to deal with being human?” she asked
herself aloud.
Bonnie looked at the cursing, spitting ball of vampire/human fury.
“I’d say…kicking and screaming the whole way.”
Just then Mrs. Flowers came out of the kitchen. She had a huge
mound of fluffy waffles stacked on several plates on a tray. She saw the
rolling, swearing, snarling ball that was Stefan and Damon.
“Oh, my,” she said. “Did something go wrong?”
Elena looked at Bonnie. Bonnie looked at Meredith. Meredith
looked at Elena.
“You…could say so,” gasped Elena.
And then the three of them gave way to it. Gales and gales of
helpless laughter.
You’ve lost a powerful ally, said a voice in Elena’s mind. Do you
know that? Can you foresee the consequences? Today, when you have
just come back from a world of Shinichis?
We’ll win, Elena thought. We have to.
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