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Lux
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Текст книги "Lux"


Автор книги: Courtney Cole



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Chapter Five


Whitley Estate

Sussex, England

I dream that I can’t breathe, that something something something is strangling me. I struggle and struggle to take a breath, to move, and I simply can’t. I startle awake to find Castor lying across me, with every ounce of his two-hundred pounds crushing me.

“Ugh, Castor, move,” I mumble because his dog breath is rancid and his slobber is dripping down my neck. He pants harder, and doesn’t budge.

I manage to roll out from under him and I fight hard to remember the little ball of fur that he used to be only one year ago.

“You’re enormous,” I tell him lovingly, patting his giant head. We’d only arrived yesterday and Castor and Pollux seemed to remember us, as though we’d never left. “I didn’t even know a dog could get so big.”

He seems as big as a small horse and his paws are bigger than my hands. I know that for a fact. I compared. He’s as heavy as Finn and I put together, maybe more, and I love him. I love him as much as last year, as much as I ever did. Maybe even more. He’s so big that I know he’d never let anything happen to me. Not ever. For some reason, that feels important.

“Let’s go get some breakfast, boy.” Castor pants at my heels as we wind our way through the halls, and his nails click on the stone. He sounds like a moose walking behind me. Nothing about him is subtle.

I pause at Finn’s bedroom and peer in, and I smile when I see Finn and Pollux sprawled together in the sheets. Pollux is every bit as large as Castor, and he makes the giant bed seem small. He perks his ears when he sees me, but doesn’t move.

“Shh, boy,” I tell him. He closes his eyes as though he understands that I want my brother to sleep. We’re jetlagged and down seems like up right now.

When I get to the kitchens, there is no one there. It’s unusual, but it’s far earlier than everyone else gets up on a normal day. Stupid jetlag. I grab a roll from the cabinet, pour some food for Castor, and eat my breakfast.

When I’m finished, I’m still alone in the kitchen.

So Castor and I head outside, stepping along the foggy paths as we explore.

I immediately wish I’d worn a sweater. It’s chilly outside with the morning breeze and the sun only just now coming up. Goosebumps form everywhere on my body and scrape together on my legs as I walk, like prickly miniscule anthills.

The horizon is laced with purples and pinks and reds as the sun begins to tip over the edge. It seems abnormally huge, but it is because Whitley’s grounds are so large, so vast. I’m marveling in the beauty of it when I hear a noise.

A rock tumbling along the path, maybe. A skidding sound, something that interrupts the stillness of morning.

I pause, but Castor bounds ahead without me, his giant body barreling down the path toward the stables, intent on finding the source of the noise.

“Castor!” I call, but he doesn’t listen, and doesn’t even look back.

“Castor!” A male voice barks through the stillness, and Castor skids to a stop at Dare’s feet. “Sit!”

Castor sits obediently and immediately, poised in front of Dare.

I stare at him in awe.

“How did you do that?”

Dare looks up at me and I decide that he must be…. eleven? His hair is a bit shaggy, almost touching his shoulders even. But his eyes… his eyes haven’t changed.

Dark

Dark

Dark as night.

“You have to be firm,” he tells me, his voice clipped and British. “You have to be the boss. They’ve been trained this year, but they’re still puppies. You have to control him.”

I’m hesitant, because Castor is twice, maybe three times my size. Why would he listen to me?

“Call him,” Dare tells me. “Do it firmly. Say, Castor come.”

I do it, trying to mimic the sternness of Dare’s voice.”

Castor looks at me without moving, and Dare snickers.

“You’ve got to call him with authority, little mouse.”

My head snaps up. “Don’t call me that. I’m not a mouse.”

He laughs. “Then don’t act like one. Call him with purpose.”

My lip curls and I snap, “Castor, come.”

Castor gets to his feet and comes straight to me. He stands in front of me, waiting for my command. “Sit.”

He sits.

Like magic.

Dare smiles, and his teeth are very white. “See? He’s been trained. And I’m sure he remembers you. They were both trained with your scents.”

“Our scents?”

Dare nods. “Yeah, yours and your brother’s. Sabine kept a few of your shirts to use for them. It worked, didn’t it? He knew you?”

I nod and I can’t argue. He did know me. But it feels weird to know that my scent was being used without my knowledge this year, even though that’s dumb. My scent doesn’t belong to me. Not really. I put it out into the world, and once it’s released, it never comes back.

Dare walks to me, a little bit skinny, a little bit gawky, but he seems so sophisticated to me, so worldly. He’s three years older after all. The eleven-year olds at school won’t even look twice at me. Well, unless it’s to call me Funeral Home Girl. I cringe at the memory and Dare looks at me curiously.

“What?”

I swallow because I’ll never tell him of that particular shame. “Nothing. What are you doing out so early?”

He’s the one who seems to cringe now, but then he hides it. “It’s the only time I can come,” he shrugs, without explaining. “Don’t tell Sabine, ok?”

That seems like a dumb thing to ask because we aren’t doing anything wrong, but I agree. “Ok. What are you doing out here?”

Dare shrugs. “Nothing. Just walking around.”

He’s smart because he has a jacket on.

“Can I come with you? I don’t know my way.”

Dare hesitates, but finally nods. “Fine. But you have to be quiet. We don’t want to wake anyone up.”

“This place is so huge,” I answer. “No one will hear us out here.”

“There are eyes everywhere,” he tells me. “Don’t doubt it.”

“Ok,” I answer, because he wants me to agree. But I think he’s being paranoid.

We walk along the path toward the grounds, far away from the house, and Castor stays a few feet in front of us. Every once in a while, he lifts his giant nose to the breeze, checking checking checking for something.

“What’s he watching for?” I ask Dare curiously.

“Anything,” Dare guesses. “Everything. Who knows? Newfoundlands are known for their hero instincts. He’d probably die to protect you.”

“And you?” I ask quietly. Dare glances at me.

“Probably. But he’s not mine. He’s yours.”

I’m dying to ask why Dare couldn’t have a dog, because he so obviously loves Castor. But I don’t. Because I have a strange sense that it would offend him, that it would hurt his feelings, and I don’t want to do that. I have a strange fascination with this boy and his dark eyes.

Dare pauses on the path, and he seems to be trying to catch his breath. I suddenly notice that he’s pale, paler than the last time I’d seen him. I touch his elbow.

“Are you ok?” I ask quickly, and he yanks away in annoyance.

“Of course,” he snaps. “Why wouldn’t I be?”

Because you can’t breathe.

I don’t say that though because obviously he doesn’t want me to notice. So I wait quietly with him, patiently. Finally, after minutes and minutes, he continues on his way, although his steps are slower this time. Castor slows too, determined to stay near us.

A boy in my class at school has something called asthma. He has to carry an inhaler, and oftentimes during recess, he has to stop playing so that he can breathe. I decide that Dare must have that too, although it’s stupid to me that he wants to hide it. Having asthma is nothing to be embarrassed about.

Dare points to a stone building in the distance.

“There’s the mausoleum. Every Savage has been buried there. You will be too.”

How depressing.

“And will you be?”

The question comes out before I can stop it.

Dare laughs, but there is no humor in it. “Doubtful, and I don’t want to be. My father was French, and I’ll be buried in France. They can’t keep me here.”

There is as much distaste in his voice now as there is in Eleanor’s when she speaks of him. Bad blood, my father would say. But why?

“You don’t like it here?” I ask, hopeful that he’ll tell me something, anything, to help everything make sense.

Dare is silent though, his dark eyes trained on the horizon.

“Please tell me,” I add. “I don’t like it here, either.”

“Why don’t you?” Dare glances at me and he seems almost interested.

“Because I miss my dad. I miss my room. I live in a funeral home. Do you remember that?”

Dare nods.

“I don’t like that part because the kids at school tease me, but I miss home. I miss the ocean. Whitley is too big. It’s scary here because it’s dark and everyone is quiet. It feels like everyone hides things from each other, but I don’t know what.”

“You don’t know the half of it,” Dare mutters and I look at him sharply. He looks away.

“Tell me about living in a funeral home,” he says, redirecting my attention.

I smile because he doesn’t sound mean or judgy. He just sounds interested.

“It’s ok. It smells like flowers all of the time. The smell gets into my hair and my clothes.”

“Do dead people look like they’re sleeping?”

I snort. “No. They look dead.”

Dare nods. “I figured.”

We’re quiet now, and we walk, and Castor pants. The tiny pebbles tumble under my shoes and I once again wish I were home, on the cliffs of Oregon. But then again, Dare isn’t there, and he interests me.

The wind blows my hair and I raise my hand to shove it behind my ear, and as I do, something moves in the corner of my eye.

I turn, and what I see is the stuff of nightmares.

I see Castor and Pollux, broken and bloody, dragging themselves along the path, their legs broken, blood pouring from their eyes and their noses. Blood trails behind them, it fills the pads of their paws and leaves crimson prints on the ground. There is so much blood that I can smell it, I can taste it.

I scream and try to run to them, but my feet won’t move. They feel like they’ve been glued to the ground and I’m frozen frozen frozen. My heart pounds and pounds, the blood racing through my veins and I can’t move I can’t move I can’t move.

“Castor,” I whimper.

Castor tries to pick his head up, he tries to come to me because he’s obedient, he’s been trained, but his bones his bones his bones are splintered. He can’t walk and he falls to the ground with a loud boom, so loud and hard that it shakes the ground under my feet.

I scream

And scream,

My hands over my mouth.

Dare turns to me calmly, his eyes like lifeless pools, and it’s him, but it’s not him.

“You did this,” he says, his voice dead like a corpse. I try to breathe but I can’t

I can’t

I can’t.

I squeeze my eyes closed and fall to my heels, rocking on the path.

“Calla! Calla! Open your eyes! Shh! Everything is fine, it’s fine. What’s wrong?”

A voice is desperate and anxious and I focus on it, trying to come back to my body, trying to hear it.

“Calla!”

I focus on those two syllables, on the voice.

It’s Dare’s and it’s full of life this time, not like before.

I open my eyes and his face is in mine, his dark eyes panicked.

“What’s wrong?” he asks me, his hands closed around my arms. “Are you ok?”

I think he’d been shaking me, trying to get me to focus. But I don’t know.

I shake my head. “What happened to the dogs? Oh my God. What happened?”

Dare cocks his head, quizzical. “What do you mean?”

From behind him, Castor whimpers and I startle, sitting up so I can see.

Castor is sitting a few feet away, staring at me with canine concern, whimpering because I’ve unnerved him, wagging his tail hopefully. His bones are fine. There is no blood.

He’s fine

He’s fine

He’s fine.

I suck in a breath. It wasn’t real. Was it real?

“I thought… Castor was…” my voice trails off, because this is exactly what happened when I thought my brother had died. It wasn’t real.

It clearly wasn’t real.

“I need Finn,” I say finally.

Because Finn will help me understand. Finn is the only one who can know.

“Are you crazy?” Dare asks me as he helps me to my feet. “My step-father said you were.”

“No!” I snap. But I’m not sure. I probably am. “That’s a mean thing to say.”

“My step-father is mean,” Dare answers without apology.

From behind him, my mother rushes down the path, in a robe and her hair standing on end.

“What’s wrong, what’s happened?” she asks as she reaches me, pulling me into her arms. “I heard you scream.”

Finn is behind her, and Sabine. They are all watching me, because they know what I won’t admit.

I’m crazy.

“Nothing,” I tell them all. “I thought I saw something and I didn’t.” Clearly I didn’t. Pollux is with Finn and he’s fine.

Sabine looks at Dare. “You know you aren’t supposed to be out here,” she tells him. “You know there will be consequences.” He nods seriously and Sabine looks at me.

“You shouldn’t be out here, either,” she announces. “You shouldn’t invite trouble, little one.” She’s stern and I feel like I’m in trouble and I don’t know why. If anyone should be mad at me, it’s my mother. But mom doesn’t say a word, she just holds me in her arms.

“It’s my fault,” Dare interjects quickly before I can respond to Sabine. “She heard me and followed. It’s my fault.”

“It’s no one’s fault…” I start to say, but Sabine is already nodding.

“Don’t misguide her, boy,” she says. “Richard will hear about this, if he hasn’t already.”

Dare’s face pales and he’s silent, but it didn’t stop him from trying to save me from trouble. He stood up for me. I grab his hand, but he pulls it away without looking at me.

“Let’s go inside,” Finn tells me, guiding my elbow with his hand. My mother rustles us to the house and back to our rooms, and I don’t see Dare for the rest of the day.

Sabine comes to my room mid-morning and sets a tray down on my desk.

“Your mother sent me,” she tells me, handing me a cup of steaming liquid. “Drink this and tell me what you saw this morning.”

I take the tea and sip at it, and it’s bitter and I hate it. I try to hand it back, but she shakes her head.

“Drink.” Her voice is firm.

I drink, but I don’t speak. I don’t tell her that I saw the dogs broken and bloody. Because why would I have imagined such a thing? I must be a monster. Only a monster would do that.

She waits and I’m silent and finally she sighs.

“I know about you,” she says, her hand on my thigh, her fingernails biting into my flesh. “You don’t have to hide it. I told you to trust me.”

I want to answer that you can’t just tell someone to trust, that trust has to be earned. That’s something my dad has always said and he’s right. My dad is smart. But I keep my mouth shut about that.

“What do you know about me?” I ask instead.

“You know what,” she answers. “I know what no one else does. I know all about you, child.”

I shake my head though, because there’s no way. I haven’t told anyone what I saw. I sure won’t be telling her.

She clucks and shakes her head. “I can’t help you until you’re honest,” she tells me as she picks up the tray and starts for the door. She pauses though, and turns to me.

“You should stay away from Dare, though,” she tells me. “Someday, he’ll be your downfall.”

“My downfall?” I can’t help but ask. She smiles and it’s grim as she nods.

“Your downfall. It will be one for one for one, Calla.”

“What does that mean?” I’m confused but she’s gone, the door closing behind her with a heavy creak.

Castor lies at my feet and I’m so happy that he’s healthy that I hug his neck, breathing in his dog smell, and feeling his fluffy hair on my cheek. “I love you, Castor.”

He pants in reply and lies with me as the room swirls around me, my vision foggy. I don’t know what’s happening, but I can’t keep my eyes open. My eyelids are heavy

Heavy

Heavy.

My hands are hot, my legs are cold and everything is swirling into blackness. As I close my eyes, I see something on the edge of my periphery, in the shadows of my room.

A boy in a hood, a boy with black black eyes. He watches me, waits for me, and he seems so utterly familiar.

But it’s not real. He can’t be real. It’s just like the bloody dogs.

I want to open my eyes to check, but my eyelids are so so so heavy.

So

Heavy.

Everything ceases to matter and I can’t trust myself anymore.

I’m crazy.

As I drift into sleep, into oblivion, I think about Dare. The boy who risked trouble to keep me out of it. “It’s my fault,” he’d said.

But it wasn’t his fault.

He’d lied to try and keep me safe.

No one has ever done that before.







Chapter Six


Whitley Estate

“I love him.”

My whisper is small in my large room, but it is heard by my brother. Because Finn has sneaked in like he does every night. Whitley is much too large for us to stay in our own rooms alone. There are far too many shadows, far too many things to fear. Our dogs lie at the foot of my bed, protecting us as we sleep. They are sentinels and it is comforting.

Finn pokes his head out of his covers, his light brown curls unruly.

“You’re dumb,” he announces. “You can’t love Dare. He’s our cousin. And I heard mom talking to Uncle Richard. Dare is a lost cause, Cal.”

Rage almost blinds me, red and hot, billowing from the corners of my eyes like ink.

“Don’t say that! It’s not true. He’s not lost. And Uncle Richard is a monster,” I tell him. “You know that. Plus, Dare is only our step-cousin. We’re not really related.”

“Close enough,” Finn answers. “You can’t love him. It wouldn’t be right.”

“Why does it have to be right?” I sniff. “Who decides what is right and not right, anyway?”

Finn rolls his eyes before he covers his head back up with his covers. “Mom does. Besides, you have me. I’m all you need, Calla.”

I can’t argue with that.

So I drop it. Soon I hear Finn’s even breaths, signaling me that he’s asleep.

I lie still, watching the shadows move across the ceiling. I’m not scared when Finn is here, which probably really is dumb. I heard Jones telling Sabine that Finn couldn’t beat his way out of a wet paper bag, but that’s only because he hasn’t hit a growth spurt yet. Regardless, I know he’d die trying to protect me. Somehow, that’s comforting and morbid at the same time.

I close my eyes.

And when I do, all I can see is Dare’s face.

Dark hair, dark eyes, stubborn glare.

I love him.

He’s mine.

Or he’ll be mine someday. I know it in my heart, as sure as I know my name is Calla Elizabeth Price.

I sleep to the sounds of the moors…the wind, the dark, the silence, the growls. The moors here at Whitley growl, although no one else seems to notice. At first I thought it was Castor, but it’s not. He’d never growl at me. But the moors do.

After the morning sun wakes me up, I pull some clothes on and dash down to the kitchens, hoping to see him before breakfast.

“Is Dare here?” I ask as Castor and I skid around the corner. Sabine eyes me from beneath her scarf as she hands me a croissant.

“Shh, child. I think I saw him slip outdoors.”

She’s quiet so that no one will overhear her. I tell her thank you over my shoulder and head for the grounds, because that’s where Dare likes to be. He hates the house, and he hates most of the people inside.

But he doesn’t hate me.

Even though I’m only eight and he’s eleven. I know this because he told me.

I race down the paths, over the cobbles and between the gates of the secret garden with my dog on my heels. I watch for Dare above the flowers, beneath the massive angel statues, and I finally see him sitting on the edge of a pond, his dark eyes thoughtful as he skips a rock across the glassy surface.

“You’re not supposed to be out here,” I tell him tentatively as I approach. He barely glances up.

“So go tell Eleanor.”

His tone is sullen as he mentions my grandmother, but I’m used to that.

My mother said his lot in life has left him grumpy, that I’m to be patient.

I’m more than patient.

I live for every word out of his mouth.

I sit next to him, and even though I try, none of my rocks skip. They just fall heavily into the water.

Wordlessly, Dare reaches over and adjusts my hand, making me flick my wrist as I toss the stone. I watch it skip once, twice, three times before it sinks.

I smile.

“What does ‘lot in life’ mean?” I ask him curiously.

His eyes narrow.

“Why do you ask?”

“Because my mom said you’re grumpy because of your lot in life. But I don’t know what that means.”

Dare seems to turn pale, and he looks away and I think I’ve made him mad.

“It’s not your business,” he snaps. “You’re supposed to be learning how to be a good Savage. And a good Savage doesn’t pry.”

I gulp, because Lord knows I’ve heard Grandmother Eleanor say that a million times.

“But what does it mean?” I ask after a few minutes, ever persistent.

Dare sighs heavily and gets to his feet. He stares into the distance for a minute before he answers.

“It means your place in the world,” his words are heavy. “And mine sort of sucks.”

“So change it,” I tell him simply, because it seems simple enough to me.

Dare snorts. “You don’t know anything,” he tells me wisely. “You’re just a kid.”

“So are you.”

“But I’m older.”

I can’t argue with that.

“Can I hold your hand?” I ask him as we make our way out of the gardens. “I forgot my shoes and I don’t want to fall on the stones.”

I’m lying. I just want to hold his hand.

He’s hesitant and he seems a bit repelled, but he glances up toward the house, then reluctantly lets me cling to his fingers.

“You’ve got to be more responsible, Calla,” he advises me with a sidelong look toward my bare feet. But he lets me hold his hand as we slowly make our way back to the house. He shakes off my fingers before we open the doors.

“See you at dinner.”

I watch the house swallow him up before I follow him in.

As I walk down the hallway, I can’t help but glance over my shoulder every once in a while because even the sunshine can’t keep the shadows away at Whitley. Something always seems to be watching me, hovering around me.

Always.

When I find Finn in the library, I tell him that.

He shakes his head, annoyed, yet clearly concerned. Like always.

“Have you taken your pills today, Calla?”

“Yes.” If I don’t, I see monsters.

I see red-eyed demons and black-eyed serpents.

I see fire,

I see blood,

I see terrible

Terrible

Things.

Finn stares at me dubiously.

“Are you sure?”

I pause.

Then I grudgingly pull the two colorful pills out of my pocket.

He glares at me. “Take them. Right now or I’m telling mom.”

When I don’t rush to do it, he adds, “Or I’ll tell Grandmother.”

That threat bears weight, and he knows it. I hurry to get a drink of water, and I swallow the pills while he watches.

“You know better, Calla,” he chides me, sounding more like a parent than a brother.

I nod. Because I do.

“They taste bad,” I offer by way of explanation.

“That’s no excuse.”

“What isn’t?”

Our mother breezes into the library, red-headed and beautiful, slim and glamorous. If I’m lucky, I’ll look just like her some day.

“Nothing,” I hurry and tell her.

She seems suspicious, but she’s in too much of a hurry to ask again.

“Have you seen Adair?” she asks us both. “Your uncle is looking for him.”

We both shake our heads, but Finn is the only one telling the truth. I’d rather die than tell that monster where Dare is.

“What does uncle Dickie want with Dare?” I ask her as she turns to leave.

She pauses, her face drawn and tight. “It’s grown-up stuff, Calla Lily. Don’t fret about it.”

But of course I do.

Because every time Uncle Richard finds Dare, I hear screaming.

And even though you’d think that was the worst part, it’s not.

The worst part is when the screaming stops.

Because silence hides an abundance of sins.

That’s what my mom says.

And she’s always right.

At least, that’s what my dad says.

At dinner, I mention my dad.

“I miss him,” I tell my mom. “Why doesn’t he ever come with us in the summers?”

She sighs and pats my hand before picking up her shrimp fork.

“He does, Calla. You know that. He’ll be here for the last couple of weeks, just like he always is.”

“But why do we come here every year?” I ask again, and I feel stupid, but it’s a good question. Every summer, year after year. Dad has to stay home in Oregon to work, but we get to come here because mom’s family is rich.

“Because Whitley is also our home, and we have to,” my mom says tiredly. “And because of the Savage name, you have opportunities. The best doctors, the best of everything. But we have to spend summers here to get that. You already know all of this, Calla. I have to make sacrifices for you, Calla. Just appreciate that.”

I do.

I do appreciate that. I don’t understand it, but I appreciate it.

What I don’t want to tell her is that sometimes, what I know blends with what I don’t. It twists and turns and bends, turning into shapes that I can’t recognize. Facts blend with dreams, and dreams blend with memories, and then reality isn’t real.

I always feel too silly to ask anyone but Finn what is real and what is not.

They’d think I’m crazy.

I’m not.

Dare kicks me lightly beneath the table and I glance at him quickly.

He grins, his familiar, ornery grin and I love it. Because it always seems like he’s daring me when he smiles.

Daring me to…what?

He leans over.

“I’m going to the garden tonight after dark. Wanna come?”

I hesitate.

It’s dark out there. And the moors. And at night, they growl.

Dare notices my hesitation.

“Are you scared?” he whispers mockingly.

No, of course not. I shake my head. Accusing someone of being scared is the worst insult possible, I think.

He smiles again.

“Then sneak out and meet me at midnight. You know Finn will be surrounding himself with his Latin books. I know you won’t want to join that.”

No, of course I don’t. Latin annoys me, but Finn has developed a fascination for it, and spends every free second studying it.

“You know you want to,” Dare adds.

“Fine,” I agree, trying to sound grudging, but chills run up and down my arms in anticipation, because what does he want to do out there in the dark?

He’s so… rebellious. It’s hard to say.

True to my word, I sneak out of my bedroom and slip out of the house at midnight. I run as fast as I can down the paths because I swear there’s something chasing me.

Something dark,

Something scary.

But when I glance over my shoulder,

There’s never anything there.

I burst through the garden gates, and Dare is already here.

He smiles, and his teeth are pearls in the night.

“Hey,” he greets me casually, like it’s not midnight and we’re not breaking rules.

“You’re not supposed to leave the house,” I remind him.

He shrugs. Because he’s Dare and he’s a rule-breaker. “So?”

It’s a challenge and I don’t address it. Mainly because I don’t have a good answer.

I don’t know why he’s not supposed to leave the house. It’s never made any sense to me. It’s not fair. But then again, Uncle Richard has never been fair to Dare.

“You and I are alike, Calla,” Dare tells me, and the night is quiet and his voice is soft. “I’m in prison here, and you’re in prison in your mind.”

“No, I’m not,” I protest stoutly. “I’m medicated. I’m fine.”

Dare shakes his head and looks away. “But you know what it feels like.”

I do. I have to admit that I do.

“No one knows what it’s like to be me,” I whisper. “Not even Finn. It’s lonely.”

I know what it’s like,” Dare finally answers. “You’ll never have to explain it to me. You’re not alone.”

While we sit and examine the stars, our shoulders bump into each other and absorb each other’s warmth, and I think that might actually be true.

Dare and I are the same. When I’m with him, I’m not alone.

“Why are you a prisoner?” I ask after a few minutes, broaching a forbidden topic, hesitant and afraid that he’ll snap at me. But he doesn’t.

His shoulders slump and he closes his eyes and he lifts his face to the moon.

“It’s not anything you should worry about,” he says with tired words. “They don’t want you to know.”

“But why?”

“Because.”

“Because isn’t an answer.”

“It is right now,” Dare tells me. “Someday, you’ll probably know. But for now? All that matters is this. We’re breathing, and there are stars, and we had chocolate cake for dinner.”

He’s right. It was a good dinner.

And it’s a good night.

I’m alone with Dare in the garden.

We’re breaking rules,

And that feels good.

Water creeps up around me, over me, drowning me. I twist and turn, fighting to break the liquid bonds encircling my hands and feet. I can’t move, I can’t breathe, and there are black eyes staring at me from the surface.

I see them, peer into them, fear them, as they blur then disappear.

Down,

Down,

Down I go.

Away from him.

My savior.

My anti-Christ.

“It’s your fault,” I whisper, and the words are swallowed by the water, stuck in my throat. Am I talking to him or to me? It doesn’t matter. My lungs fill and fill and fill, and there isn’t any air. There is only a void where my heart should be.

“This isn’t real, Calla.” I hear Finn’s voice, but I know he’s not here. No one is, I’m submerged and the water is murky and dark. My fingers clutch at something, at nothing, at everything.

Focus.

I narrow my eyes and I breathe, a deep breath like they taught me. I fill my body with air like I’m filling a chalice, starting at my belly, then my diaphragm, then my throat, then my mouth. I exhale slowly, like I’m blowing through a straw, I push it at out, expelling it until there’s nothing left, just me and my withered empty lungs.

I do it again.

And again.

And when I’m done, I can see again. I’m in the hospital, and I’m not a little girl anymore. I’m Calla Price, and Finn is gone, Dare is gone and I’m alone.

I close my eyes because this is not a reality I want.

The darkness behind my eyelids flickers and wavers and moves, and I know that I’m not in a hospital at all. I’m in a box, a casket. I’m alone and there is a satin sheet pulled up to my waist and there are calla lilies in my hands. White ones. They smell like they’re wilted because they are. Dying flowers smell the sweetest.

I release them and push my lifeless hands against the pleated silk lid, pushing with all of my strength. It doesn’t budge. I hit it, over and over and over, but to no avail. I’m locked in. I’m stuck, I’m stuck, I’m stuck.

I’m buried alive, I’m alone, I’m cold, I’m dead.

Images flash around me, in front of my eyes, in my eyes, behind my eyes.

Tires squealing in the rain, screaming, metal.

Water.

Drowning.

Me.

Finn.

Dare.

Everyone.

Are we all dead?

My eyes startle open and I am in the hospital.

The walls are white, my hands are warm, I’m alone,

And I must be

Crazy


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