I wish I could rewind to that moment. I’d tell Sol what he means to me. I may not have felt exactly for him what he felt for me, but it was somewhere close. He was my friend. I loved him. And now he’s gone.
If I could change everything, I would. I’d go back to the beginning. I’d trade places with Sol and Carrie, whatever it would take to bring them both back here as they’re meant to be.
Scarlett draws in a sharp breath, catching my attention. I glance up to see Craig pushing a sewing needle into her skin. He’s stitching up her wound. There’s no anaesthetic except for the large glass of whiskey he gave her which she downed the moment her fingers curled around it.
We’re in the living room at home, Scarlett, Craig and I. Scarlett and Craig are sitting on the sofa while he stitches her up. I’m perched on the edge of the chair at the other side of the room, keeping a safe distance from them both, well a safe distance from Scarlett’s blood. The smell is intense. And my hunger, for the moment it seems, isn’t ready to wane.
Craig has suggested I go upstairs, take a break, while he stitches Scarlett up. I declined. I don’t think he trusts me around her. So far, I’d say she is the only thing he can trust me with. I was locked in a room with Scarlett and I didn’t touch her or her blood once.
I need to be here. I need to remind myself human blood is off limits, no matter what. If I hide from it, it will only weaken me to future exposure. The more exposure the better until I have dulled this ache into indifference.
And, really, I don’t want to be any further away from Nathan or Sol than necessary. I’m not ready. Not yet.
Nathan’s in the kitchen with Jack and Cal. Sol’s body is resting on the table.
Nothing feels real anymore. My head hurts. It’s filled with too much noise. Thoughts are whizzing past but I have no wish to pin any of them down. And I can feel Nathan’s grief and anger emanating through the wall that separates us as clear as if we were in the same room.
Craig’s finished with Scarlett. I see her arm is now covered up with a bandage and she sits quietly staring off into space. I feel a powerful wave of sympathy for her. She’s just a young girl thrown into a situation she didn’t ask to be in. We’re not so dissimilar in that respect.
Craig is tidying up around her. None of us is speaking. There’s nothing to be said. But the silence is blistering, almost as blistering as the heat that poured from the mansion when Craig threw the match that lit it up like an inferno. I only wish I’d been there to see it burn down to the ground.
I look at Scarlett again. She’s so weak and vulnerable. I feel like she’s my responsibility now but, honestly, I can’t even look after myself let alone a severely distressed, potentially damaged-for-life teenage girl. I don’t think I can take on that responsibility.
I hear movement in the kitchen. My whole body tenses. I grip the chair edge with my hands. The door opens and Nathan comes into the living room. I catch sight of Jack sitting beside Sol’s body. The sight will haunt me forever.
Nathan quietly pushes the door to a close. His hair hanging across his face, he wraps his arms around his chest. The longing I feel for him is unbearable.
“We’re going to bury Sol here,” he says quietly, not addressing any of us in particular, “out back in the forest. He loved it there so … ” His voice breaks. He rubs both hands over his face roughly, pressing his palms into his eyes and blows out a breath.
Without thinking, I get to my feet, wanting to go to him, but stop, holding myself in check.
Nathan drops his hands by his sides and clears his throat, almost self-consciously, like he’s embarrassed to have shown emotion in front of us. “I’m going to dig a grave now.” His voice is suddenly business-like, hard, and he starts backing away, heading for the door.
I feel a rush of panic. I don’t want him to go. I want to fix this. Fix him.
“No, mate, you don’t want to be doing that,” Craig says, stopping Nathan in his tracks. “I’ll do it.”
Nathan looks at him, gratefully. “You’re sure?”
Craig nods.
“There’s a big oak tree just up the front of the forest. It’s got an open clearing right behind it. That’s where Dad wants it.”
“I know where you mean. I got it, mate.” Craig pats him on the shoulder as he passes by, leaving the room.
I expect Nathan to follow but he stays put, his eyes fixed firmly on the floor.
My eyes search over Nathan with utter desperation. You could hear a pin drop in here. The air is thick with unsaid words, mainly mine. I’m afraid to speak and say the wrong thing. If I do, I could push him even further away than he already is.
Scarlett clears her throat. I’ve forgotten she is here. “Sorry, but I erm … I need to use the bathroom.”
“Upstairs, second on your left,” Nathan says flatly.
Scarlett stops by the door. “I’m real sorry about your brother.”
He looks up at her, and nods.
Scarlett has just said the one thing I’ve been terrified of saying for the last two hours. I’m sorry. Just as easy as that. But then she stands to lose nothing.
And now it’s just me and Nathan, and a thick wall of silence.
My whole body is shaking with nerves. “Nathan … ” my voice breaks. He brings cold eyes to meet mine. I wrap my arms around myself, trying to hold off the chill. “I’m so sorry,” A tear trickles down my face. I wipe it away with my wrist. “I wish more than anything it was me in there and not…”
“Pack your stuff,” he cuts me off, voice emotionless. “We’re leaving straight after the funeral.” He slams the door so hard it rattles everything in here, including me.
I stay still for a long moment then I hear Erin arrive. Her cries ring painfully in my ears.
With wretchedness crushing my chest, I force myself to move. I go upstairs, into my bedroom for the last time, and begin packing my things.
* * *
It’s dawn and a fog is laid thin over the ground like rising ghosts. I’m stood at the edge of Sol’s open grave with the others. My throat is thick and I’m striving to fight the tears, not feeling I have the right to cry.
Jack clears his rough throat. “Do not stand at my grave and weep.” His voice is as still as a break in the breeze. “I am not there. I do not sleep. I am a thousand winds that blow. I am the diamond glints on snow. I am the sunlight on ripened grain. I am the gentle autumn rain. When you awaken in the morning's hush, I am the swift uplifting rush of quiet birds in circled flight. I am the soft stars that shine at night. Do not stand at my grave and cry. I am not there. I did not die.”
Unable to hold the tears back anymore, I let them go. Then I sense Nathan’s stare on me. Looking up through my damp eyes, I let them meet with his.
His stare slices into me, through flesh and bone, straight to my heart. I hold myself still as the pain rolls in sharp waves over my skin, covering every inch of me. I see the resentment clear in his eyes and know unequivocally he wishes it was me down there in that grave.
And I can’t say I disagree with him.
Chapter 24
The Unknown
That was the second funeral I’ve ever been to. I don’t intend to go to another.
I’ve put my things into Nathan’s Range Rover and I am standing outside it waiting for him. He’s still with Jack and Cal at Sol’s grave, saying their final goodbyes. Craig and Erin are inside the house.
When I first arrived back, I went in to collect my things and to check on Scarlett. She was sleeping. After I had cleared my room out, I put her in my bed to sleep. She was exhausted and I guess for as long as she’s staying here, it should be her room. I no longer need it.
I hear the back door open and look up to see Craig coming over to me.
“You okay?” he asks.
“Yeah.” I twist my hands together in front of me.
“Do you know where you’re going?”
“No.” I shake my head.
It’s only me and Nathan leaving. Everyone else is s
taying put. Craig told me. He thought I already knew. I pretended to, but I know he could see right through me. I’d just assumed we would all be leaving. It was dumb of me. They don’t need to leave. The Originals aren’t looking for them. They’re looking for me. The Originals know nothing of their involvement. Anyone who could have led them here is dead. But still, it’s not safe for them if I stay. If I leave, they’re all safe.
Nathan’s only coming with me because he feels I’m his responsibility. And I’m letting him because I’m weak. I’m well aware I’m no longer his preferred travelling partner. He just wants to get me as far away as possible from what’s left of his family. He’s right. He’s doing what I should have done a long time ago. And I assume once Nathan has me settled somewhere, he’ll come back home and get on with his life. But I can’t think about that, not yet.
I sense Nathan and look over to see him coming toward us with purpose in his stride.
“Time for me to go.” I offer a weak smile to Craig.
“Did you get your cooler bag with your blood in?” Craig asks.
“Oh, no, I forgot.”
“I’ll go get you it.” He smiles.
“Thanks,” I say after him.
Without a word or a glance, Nathan walks straight past me and goes into the house. Getting his things, I assume.
I hear the back door open and look up, expecting to see Craig, but instead seeing Erin.
She comes over to me, not meeting my eye. I’m not sure what to expect. We haven’t spoken once since she arrived. She knows everything that happened. Cal told her. I guess he had no choice.
Without a word, she wraps her arms around me, hugging me to her. I have to choke back a sob.
“I’ll miss you.” Her words are muffled by my hair. “And I’m so sorry about Cal, about everything he did, I wish ... I … ” She stops, her voice breaking.
I lean away from her so I can see her face. Her eyes are so wide and sombre it’s a punch in the gut to see them. “You have nothing to be sorry for. Everything that happened, happened because of me, because of what I am.” My voice wavers, all my pain and regret bubbling up to the surface.
“That is not true and you know it.” Her brown eyes turn serious on me.
The back door bangs. Nathan and Craig are coming toward us.
“Take good care of Nate for me.” She kisses my cheek and lets me go, heading straight for Nathan.
He stops, putting his bags down at her approach. Craig picks them up and continues to the car, heading for the boot.
I look away and turn my hearing off as Erin hugs Nathan. They’ve probably got things to say that I don’t want to hear.
I go to the back of the car just as Craig is shutting the boot closed. I have a favour to ask him. “Craig, I need to ask something … ” He gives me a curious look. “Would you mind ... helping Scarlett? I know I should be the one to help her but … ” I shake my head disconsolately., “I can’t stay. And I can’t take her with me, and she’s just a kid … ”
“I got it.” He cuts me off, giving me a small smile. “I’ll be staying here for a while anyway. I’ll make sure she’s okay.”
I smile gratefully at him. “Thank you.”
He reaches in his back pocket, pulls out a business card and hands it to me. “If you or Nate get into any trouble, ring me straight away on that number.”
I take a quick glance at the card.
‘Craig Brigham, Criminal Lawyer, Bennetts, Hamble & Parsons. Criminal Defence Lawyers.’
He’s a lawyer? I look at him surprised. This huge guy who was in the army and happens to turn into a wolf a few nights a month is a lawyer? He really doesn’t look like a lawyer, not that I know many lawyers to know how one should look, but you know what I mean.
“Don’t look so surprised.” He chides, chucking.
“Sorry I just … ”
“Don’t worry, you’re not the first, won’t be the last.” He waves me away with a smile. “I qualified before I joined the forces. After I got injured in the blast, I came back home and wallowed in self pity for a while. It didn’t really fit so I decided to finally put my degree to good use.” He leans close and whispers conspiratorially, “I deal with ... special clients.” He winks. “It was one of them who helped me find you.” His tone leaves me wondering whether I should be feeling gratitude or a little fear.
Nathan climbs into the car, slams the door shut and switches the engine on.
“My cue,” I say.
I make my way down the side of the car and climb into the passenger side. Craig shuts the door behind me. I wind the window down.
“Stay safe,” Craig says to Nate.
Nathan gives him a nod and slowly pulls the car forward. Craig steps back, moving out the way. Erin waves from where she stands. I force a smile and wave to her. Then I realise I haven’t said goodbye to Honor and Hope. I open my mouth to say as much to Nathan, desperately wanting to go back and see them one last time, but think better of it. So, instead, I just wind the window up and steal a quick glance at the house before it disappears out of my sight.
* * *
We’ve been driving for thirty minutes in absolute silence, not even the radio for company, and it’s taken me this long to finally pluck up the courage to speak.
“Where are we going?” I edge out tentatively, fiddling with the metal button on my denim jacket.
“Scotland.”
I let me eyes slide sideways to look at Nathan. He’s focussed on the road ahead, frown lines etched deep into his forehead. “Any particular reason ... Scotland?”
He takes his eyes off the road for a moment to give me a hard stare. The disdain in them is like razor blades against my skin. He looks back out through the windscreen. I practically sigh with relief when he does. “You need to get as far away from here as possible. The Originals are in the UK and they are looking for you.” His voice is cold. A shiver of absolute terror runs down my spine. “And as you can’t currently leave the country, Scotland is as good an option as any. It’s big and we should be able to move around pretty much unnoticed.”
He reaches over to my side, opens up the glove box and pulls out a baseball cap. He drops it onto my lap. “Put this on,” he orders. “I need to make a stop in the next village.”
I pick the baseball cap up and run my finger over the motif. It’s the cap he was wearing the day he came to see me when I was cleaning out Honor’s stable with Sol, the day which started the change of everything between us.
Feeling a lump in my throat, I gather up my long blonde hair and twist it up to sit on the top of my head, and pull the cap on.
We enter the village a few minutes later. It’s quiet. There’s not a soul around.
Nathan parks the car up on the roadside by the local shop. “Keep your head down. I’ll only be a few minutes,” he says, switching off the engine and getting out of the car.
I slouch down in my seat, hiding my face under the peak of the cap. I watch him go into the shop. He comes out less than a minute later and walks a bit further down the street and goes into what looks to be a chemist. I wonder what he’s buying.
The sky suddenly rolls in dark, and from out of nowhere the heavens open. The rain beats down hard on the car. Moving forward, I peer out through the windscreen just in time to see a blue flash of lightening. Keeping my face close to the windscreen, I count out loud, my breath fogging up the glass, “One Mississippi ... two Mississippi ... three … ”
The thunder crack is so loud that I nearly jump out of my skin even though I am expecting it. Wrapping my thin jacket around me, I shrink back into my seat.
A minute later, through the haze of rain, I see Nathan jogging quickly down the street toward the car. He’s getting soaked. His leather jacket is doing little to keep him dry. And suddenly, from out of nowhere, I feel a longing for him inside so strong that it nearly chokes me.
He climbs into the car, bringing the damp in with him. His face is glistening from the rain. He runs a hand over his ha
ir, freeing the settled raindrops, unknowingly showering me with a fine mist. I say nothing. He turns the engine on, cranking the air con up to hot, unzips his coat and pulls out from inside it a small plastic carrier bag. He hands it to me without a word.
Taking it curiously, I open it up and peer inside. There’s a pair of scissors and a dark brown hair dye.
I look from the bag to him, a sudden sense of dread filling me. “Hair dye?” I question in a tight voice.
He pulls off his wet coat and throws it onto the back seat. “You need to change your appearance. It’ll help us move around a lot easier if you’re not so easily recognisable to people. It’s not gonna help with the Originals knowing you exist, but if Joe Public recognise you from your picture in the paper, we’re basically fucked.” He shifts the car into gear and drives forward.
“And the scissors, what are they for?” It’s a stupid question, I know. But still, I have to ask.
“What do you think they’re for?” His tone is hard.
“You want to cut my hair?” I swallow.
“No, Alex, I want you to cut your hair.”
“But I don’t want to cut my hair.” I shy away, putting a protective hand to my head.
“I don’t give a fuck what you want!” he suddenly roars, slamming the breaks on. I jolt forward. The bag flies out of my hand. The seat belt tightens, digging me hard in the ribs, knocking the wind out of me.
Easing the seatbelt off, I put a shaky hand to my sore ribs, trying to catch my breath. From out of the corner of my eye I can see Nathan’s shoulders rising and falling with each angry breath he takes, his hands gripping the steering wheel.
A second later, without another word, he shifts the car into drive and pulls forward.
Tears have formed in my eyes. I blink them back and turn away, looking out of the window as Nathan drives us into the unknown.
Chapter 25
Ipseity