ROSALIE HESITATED IN THE DOORWAY, HER BREATHTAKing face unsure.
โOf course,โ I replied, my voice an octave high with surprise. โCome on in.โ
I sat up, sliding to the end of the sofa to make room. My stomach twisted nervously as the one Cullen who did not like me moved silently to sit down in the open space. I tried to come up with a reason why she would want to see me, but my mind was a blank on that point.
โDo you mind talking to me for a few minutes?โ she asked. โI didnโt wake you or anything, did I?โ Her eyes shifted to the stripped bed and back to my couch.
โNo, I was awake. Sure, we can talk.โ I wondered if she could hear the alarm in my voice as clearly as I could.
She laughed lightly, and it sounded like a chorus of bells. โHe so rarely leaves you alone,โ she said. โI figured Iโd better make the best of this opportunity.โ
What did she want to say that couldnโt be said in front of Edward? My hands twisted and untwisted around the edge of the comforter.
โPlease donโt think Iโm horribly interfering,โ Rosalie said, her voice gentle and almost pleading. She folded her hands in her lap and looked down at them as she spoke. โIโm sure Iโve hurt your feelings enough in the past, and I donโt want to do that again.โ
โDonโt worry about it, Rosalie. My feelings are great. What is it?โ
She laughed again, sounding oddly embarrassed. โIโm going to try to tell you why I think you should stay human โ why I would stay human if I were you.โ
โOh.โ
She smiled at the shocked tone of my voice, and then she sighed.
โDid Edward ever tell you what led to this?โ she asked, gesturing to her glorious immortal body.
I nodded slowly, suddenly somber. โHe said it was close to what happened to me that time in Port Angeles, only no one was there to saveย you.โ I shuddered at the memory.
โIs that really all he told you?โ she asked.
โYes,โ I said, my voice blank with confusion. โWas there more?โ
She looked up at me and smiled; it was a harsh, bitter โ but still stunning โ expression.
โYes,โ she said. โThere was more.โ
I waited while she stared out the window. She seemed to be trying to calm herself.
โWould you like to hear my story, Bella? It doesnโt have a happy ending โ but which of ours does? If we had happy endings, weโd all be under gravestones now.โ
I nodded, though I was frightened by the edge in her voice.
โI lived in a different world than you do, Bella. My human world was a much simpler place. It was nineteen thirty-three. I was eighteen, and I was beautiful. My life was perfect.โ
She stared out the window at the silver clouds, her expression far away.
โMy parents were thoroughly middle class. My father had a stable job in a bank, something I realize now that he was smug about โ he saw his prosperity as a reward for talent and hard work, rather than acknowledging the luck involved. I took it all for granted then; in my home, it was as if the Great Depression was only a troublesome rumor. Of course I saw the poor people, the ones who werenโt as lucky. My father left me with the impression that theyโd brought their troubles on themselves.
โIt was my motherโs job to keep our house โ and myself and my two younger brothers โ in spotless order. It was clear that I was both her first priority and her favorite. I didnโt fully understand at the time, but I was always vaguely aware that my parents werenโt satisfied with what they had, even if it was so much more than most. They wanted more. They had social aspirations โ social climbers, I suppose you could call them. My beauty was like a gift to them. They saw so much more potential in it than I did.
โThey werenโt satisfied, butย Iย was. I was thrilled to be me, to be Rosalie Hale. Pleased that menโs eyes watched me everywhere I went, from the year I turned twelve. Delighted that my girlfriends sighed with envy when they touched my hair. Happy that my mother was proud of me and that my father liked to buy me pretty dresses.
โI knew what I wanted out of life, and there didnโt seem to be any way that I wouldnโt get exactly what I wanted. I wanted to be loved, to be adored. I wanted to have a huge, flowery wedding, where everyone in town would watch me walk down the aisle on my fatherโs arm and think I was the most beautiful thing theyโd ever seen. Admiration was like air to me, Bella. I was silly and shallow, but I was content.โ She smiled, amused at her own evaluation.
โMy parentsโ influence had been such that I also wanted the material things of life. I wanted a big house with elegant furnishings that someone else would clean and a modern kitchen that someone else would cook in. As I said, shallow. Young and very shallow. And I didnโt see any reason why I wouldnโt get these things.
โThere were a few things I wanted that were more meaningful. One thing in particular. My very closest friend was a girl named Vera. She married young, just seventeen. She married a man my parents would never have considered for me โ a carpenter. A year later she had a son, a beautiful little boy with dimples and curly black hair. It was the first time Iโd ever felt truly jealous of anyone else in my entire life.โ
She looked at me with unfathomable eyes. โIt was a different time. I was the same age as you, but I was ready for it all. I yearned for my own little baby. I wanted my own house and a husband who would kiss me when he got home from work โ just like Vera. Only I had a very different kind of house in mind. โ
It was hard for me to imagine the world that Rosalie had known. Her story sounded more like a fairy tale than history to me. With a slight shock, I realized that this was very close to the world that Edward would have experienced when he was human, the world he had grown up in. I wondered
โ while Rosalie sat silent for a moment โ if my world seemed as baffling to him as Rosalieโs did to me?
Rosalie sighed, and when she spoke again her voice was different, the wistfulness gone.
โIn Rochester, there was one royal family โ the Kings, ironically enough. Royce King owned the bank my father worked at, and nearly every other really profitable business in town. Thatโs how his son, Royce King the Secondโ โ her mouth twisted around the name, it came out through her teeth โ โsaw me the first time. He was going to take over at the bank, and so he began overseeing the different positions. Two days later, my mother conveniently forgot to send my fatherโs lunch to work with him. I remember being confused when she insisted that I wear my white organza and roll my hair up just to run over to the bank.โ Rosalie laughed without humor.
โI didnโt notice Royce watching me particularly. Everyone watched me. But that night the first of the roses came. Every night of our courtship, he sent a bouquet of roses to me. My room was always overflowing with them. It got to the point that I would smell like roses when I left the house.
โRoyce was handsome, too. He had lighter hair than I did, and pale blue eyes. He said my eyes were like violets, and then those started showing up alongside the roses.
โMy parents approved โ thatโs putting it mildly. This was everything theyโd dreamed of. And Royce seemed to be everythingย Iโdย dreamed of. The fairy tale prince, come to make me a princess. Everything I wanted, yet it was still no more than I expected. We were engaged before Iโd known him for two months.
โWe didnโt spend a great deal of time alone with each other. Royce told me he had many responsibilities at work, and, when we were together, he liked people to look at us, to see me on his arm. I liked that, too. There were lots of parties, dancing, and pretty dresses. When you were a King, every door was open for you, every red carpet rolled out to greet you.
โIt wasnโt a long engagement. Plans went ahead for the most lavish wedding. It was going to be everything Iโd ever wanted. I was completely happy. When I called at Veraโs, I no longer felt jealous. I pictured my fair- haired children playing on the huge lawns of the Kingsโ estate, and I pitied her.โ
Rosalie broke off suddenly, clenching her teeth together. It pulled me out of her story, and I realized that the horror was not far off. There would be no happy ending, as sheโd promised. I wondered if this was why she had
so much more bitterness in her than the rest of them โ because sheโd been within reach of everything sheโd wanted when her human life was cut short. โI was at Veraโs that night,โ Rosalie whispered. Her face was smooth
as marble, and as hard. โHer little Henry really was adorable, all smiles and dimples โ he was just sitting up on his own. Vera walked me to the door as I was leaving, her baby in her arms and her husband at her side, his arm around her waist. He kissed her on the cheek when he thought I wasnโt looking. That bothered me. When Royce kissed me, it wasnโt quite the same
โ not so sweet somehow. . . . I shoved that thought aside. Royce was my prince. Someday, I would be queen.โ
It was hard to tell in the moonlight, but it looked like her bone white face got paler.
โIt was dark in the streets, the lamps already on. I hadnโt realized how late it was.โ She continued to whisper almost inaudibly. โIt was cold, too. Very cold for late April. The wedding was only a week away, and I was worrying about the weather as I hurried home โ I can remember that clearly. I remember every detail about that night. I clung to it so hard . . . in the beginning. I thought of nothing else. And so I remember this, when so many pleasant memories have faded away completely โ
She sighed, and began whispering again. โYes, I was worrying about the weather. . . . I didnโt want to have to move the wedding indoors. . . .
โI was a few streets from my house when I heard them. A cluster of men under a broken streetlamp, laughing too loud. Drunk. I wished Iโd called my father to escort me home, but the way was so short, it seemed silly. And then he called my name.
โโRose!โ he yelled, and the others laughed stupidly.
โI hadnโt realized the drunks were so well dressed. It was Royce and some of his friends, sons of other rich men.
โโHereโs my Rose!โ Royce shouted, laughing with them, sounding just as stupid. โYouโre late. Weโre cold, youโve kept us waiting so long.โโ
โIโd never seen him drink before. A toast, now and then, at a party. Heโd told me he didnโt like champagne. I hadnโt realized that he preferred something much stronger.
โHe had a new friend โ the friend of a friend, come up from Atlanta. โโWhat did I tell you, John,โ Royce crowed, grabbing my arm and
pulling me closer. โIsnโt she lovelier than all your Georgia peaches?โ
โThe man named John was dark-haired and suntanned. He looked me over like I was a horse he was buying.
โโItโs hard to tell,โ he drawled slowly. โSheโs all covered up.โ โThey laughed, Royce like the rest.
โSuddenly, Royce ripped my jacket from my shoulders โ it was a gift from him โ popping the brass buttons off. They scattered all over the street.
โโShow him what you look like, Rose!โ He laughed again and then he tore my hat out of my hair. The pins wrenched my hair from the roots, and I cried out in pain. They seemed to enjoy that โ the sound of my pain. โ
Rosalie looked at me suddenly, as if sheโd forgotten I was there. I was sure my face was as white as hers. Unless it was green.
โI wonโt make you listen to the rest,โ she said quietly. โThey left me in the street, still laughing as they stumbled away. They thought I was dead. They were teasing Royce that he would have to find a new bride. He laughed and said heโd have to learn some patience first.
โI waited in the road to die. It was cold, though there was so much pain that I was surprised it bothered me. It started to snow, and I wondered why I wasnโt dying. I was impatient for death to come, to end the pain. It was taking so long. . . .
โCarlisle found me then. Heโd smelled the blood, and come to investigate. I remember being vaguely irritated as he worked over me, trying to save my life. Iโd never liked Dr. Cullen or his wife and her brother
โ as Edward pretended to be then. It had upset me that they were all more beautiful than I was, especially that the men were. But they didnโt mingle in society, so Iโd only seen them once or twice.
โI thought Iโd died when he pulled me from the ground and ran with me โ because of the speed โ it felt like I was flying. I remembered being horrified that the pain didnโt stop. . . .
โThen I was in a bright room, and it was warm. I was slipping away, and I was grateful as the pain began to dull. But suddenly something sharp was cutting me, my throat, my wrists, my ankles. I screamed in shock, thinking heโd brought me there to hurt me more. Then fire started burning through me, and I didnโt care about anything else. I begged him to kill me. When Esme and Edward returned home, I begged them to kill me, too. Carlisle sat with me. He held my hand and said that he was so sorry,
promising that it would end. He told me everything, and sometimes I listened. He told me what he was, what I was becoming. I didnโt believe him. He apologized each time I screamed.
โEdward wasnโt happy. I remember hearing them discuss me. I stopped screaming sometimes. It did no good to scream.
โโWhat were you thinking, Carlisle?โ Edward said. โRosalie Hale?โโ Rosalie imitated Edwardโs irritated tone to perfection. โI didnโt like the way he said my name, like there was something wrong with me.
โโI couldnโt just let her die,โ Carlisle said quietly. โIt was too much โ too horrible, too much waste.โ
โโI know,โ Edward said, and I thought he sounded dismissive. It angered me. I didnโt know then that he really could see exactly what Carlisle had seen.
โโIt was too much waste. I couldnโt leave her,โ Carlisle repeated in a whisper.
โโOf course you couldnโt,โ Esme agreed.
โโPeople die all the time,โ Edward reminded him in a hard voice. โDonโt you think sheโs just a little recognizable, though? The Kings will have to put up a huge search โ not that anyone suspects the fiend,โ he growled.
โIt pleased me that they seemed to know that Royce was guilty.
โI didnโt realize that it was almost over โ that I was getting stronger and that was why I was able to concentrate on what they were saying. The pain was beginning to fade from my fingertips.
โโWhat are we going to do with her?โ Edward said disgustedly โ or thatโs how it sounded to me, at least.
โCarlisle sighed. โThatโs up to her, of course. She may want to go her own way.โ
โIโd believed enough of what heโd told me that his words terrified me. I knew that my life was ended, and there was no going back for me. I couldnโt stand the thought of being alone. . . .
โThe pain finally ended and they explained to me again what I was. This time I believed. I felt the thirst, my hard skin; I saw my brilliant red eyes.
โShallow as I was, I felt better when I saw my reflection in the mirror the first time. Despite the eyes, I was the most beautiful thing Iโd ever
seen.โ She laughed at herself for a moment. โIt took some time before I began to blame the beauty for what had happened to me โ for me to see the curse of it. To wish that I had been . . . well, not ugly, but normal. Like Vera. So I could have been allowed to marry someone who lovedย me,ย and have pretty babies. Thatโs what Iโd really wanted, all along. It still doesnโt seem like too much to have asked for.โ
She was thoughtful for a moment, and I wondered if sheโd forgotten my presence again. But then she smiled at me, her expression suddenly triumphant.
โYou know, my record is almost as clean as Carlisleโs,โ she told me. โBetter than Esme. A thousand times better than Edward. Iโve never tasted human blood,โ she announced proudly.
She understood my puzzled expression as I wondered why her record was onlyย almostย as clean.
โI did murder five humans,โ she told me in a complacent tone. โIf you can really call themย human. But I was very careful not to spill their blood
โ I knew I wouldnโt be able to resist that, and I didnโt want any part of themย inย me, you see.
โI saved Royce for last. I hoped that he would hear of his friendsโ deaths and understand, know what was coming for him. I hoped the fear would make the end worse for him. I think it worked. He was hiding inside a windowless room behind a door as thick as a bank vaultโs, guarded outside by armed men, when I caught up with him. Oops โ seven murders,โ she corrected herself. โI forgot about his guards. They only took a second.โ
โI was overly theatrical. It was kind of childish, really. I wore a wedding dress Iโd stolen for the occasion. He screamed when he saw me. He screamed a lot that night. Saving him for last was a good idea โ it made it easier for me to control myself, to make it slower โโ
She broke off suddenly, and she glanced down at me. โIโm sorry,โ she said in a chagrined voice. โIโm frightening you, arenโt I?โ
โIโm fine,โ I lied.
โI got carried away.โ โDonโt worry about it.โ
โIโm surprised Edward didnโt tell you more about it.โ
โHe doesnโt like to tell other peopleโs stories โ he feels like heโs betraying confidences, because he hears so much more than just the parts they mean for him to hear.โ
She smiled and shook her head. โI probably ought to give him more credit. Heโs really quite decent, isnโt he?โ
โIย think so.โ
โI can tell.โ Then she sighed. โI havenโt been fair to you, either, Bella.
Did he tell you why? Or was that too confidential?โ
โHe said it was because I was human. He said it was harder for you to have someone on the outside who knew.โ
Rosalieโs musical laughter interrupted me. โNow I really feel guilty. Heโs been much, much kinder to me than I deserve.โ She seemed warmer as she laughed, like sheโd let down some guard that had never been absent in my presence before. โWhat a liar that boy is.โ She laughed again.
โHe was lying?โ I asked, suddenly wary.
โWell, thatโs probably putting it too strongly. He just didnโt tell you the whole story. What he told you was true, even truer now than it was before. However, at the time . . .โ She broke off, chuckling nervously. โItโs embarrassing. You see, at first, I was mostly jealous because he wantedย youย and not me.โ
Her words sent a thrill of fear through me. Sitting there in the silver light, she was more beautiful than anything else I could imagine. I could not compete with Rosalie.
โBut you love Emmett . . . ,โ I mumbled.
She shook her head back and forth, amused. โI donโt want Edward that way, Bella. I never did โ I love him as a brother, but heโs irritated me from the first moment I heard him speak. You have to understand, though . . . I was so used to people wantingย me. And Edward wasnโt the least bit interested. It frustrated me, even offended me in the beginning. But he never wanted anyone, so it didnโt bother me long. Even when we first met Tanyaโs clan in Denali โ all those females! โ Edward never showed the slightest preference. And then he met you.โ She looked at me with confused eyes. I was only half paying attention. I was thinking about Edward and Tanya andย all those females,ย and my lips pressed together in a hard line.
โNot that you arenโt pretty, Bella,โ she said, misreading my expression. โBut it just meant that he found you more attractive than me. Iโm vain
enough that I minded.โ
โBut you said โat first.โ That doesnโt still . . . bother you, does it? I mean, we both know youโre the most beautiful person on the planet.โ
I laughed at having to say the words โ it was so obvious. How odd that Rosalie should need such reassurances.
Rosalie laughed, too. โThanks, Bella. And no, it doesnโt really bother me anymore. Edward has always been a little strange.โ She laughed again.
โBut you still donโt like me,โ I whispered. Her smile faded. โIโm sorry about that.โ
We sat in silence for a moment, and she didnโt seem inclined to go on. โWould you tell me why? Did I do something . . . ?โ Was she angry
that Iโd put her family โ her Emmett โ in danger? Time and time again. James, and now Victoria . . .
โNo, you havenโt done anything,โ she murmured. โNot yet.โ I stared at her, perplexed.
โDonโt you see, Bella?โ Her voice was suddenly more passionate than before, even while sheโd told her unhappy story. โYou already haveย everything. You have a whole life ahead of you โ everything I want. And youโre going to justย throw it away. Canโt you see that Iโd trade everything I have to be you? You have the choice that I didnโt have, and youโre choosingย wrong!โ
I flinched back from her fierce expression. I realized my mouth had fallen open and I snapped it shut.
She stared at me for a long moment and, slowly, the fervor in her eyes dimmed. Abruptly, she was abashed.
โAnd I was so sure that I could do this calmly.โ She shook her head, seeming a little dazed by the flood of emotion. โItโs just that itโs harder now than it was then, when it was no more than vanity.โ
She stared at the moon in silence. It was a few moments before I was brave enough to break into her reverie.
โWould you like me better if I chose to stay human?โ
She turned back to me, her lips twitching into a hint of a smile. โMaybe.โ
โYou did get some of your happy ending, though,โ I reminded her. โYou got Emmett.โ
โI got half.โ She grinned. โYou know that I saved Emmett from a bear that was mauling him, and carried him home to Carlisle. But can you guess why I stopped the bear from eating him?โ
I shook my head.
โWith the dark curls . . . the dimples that showed even while he was grimacing in pain . . . the strange innocence that seemed so out of place on a grown manโs face . . . he reminded me of Veraโs little Henry. I didnโt want him to die โ so much that, even though I hated this life, I was selfish enough to ask Carlisle to change him for me.
โI got luckier than I deserved. Emmett is everything I would have asked for if Iโd known myself well enough to know what to ask for. Heโs exactly the kind of person someone like me needs. And, oddly enough, he needs me, too. That part worked out better than I could have hoped. But there will never be more than the two of us. And Iโll never sit on a porch somewhere, with him gray-haired by my side, surrounded by our grandchildren.โ
Her smile was kind now. โThat sounds quite bizarre to you, doesnโt it? In some ways, you are much more mature than I was at eighteen. But in other ways . . . there are many things youโve probably never thought about seriously. Youโre too young to know what youโll want in ten years, fifteen years โ and too young to give it all up without thinking it through. You donโt want to be rash about permanent things, Bella.โ She patted my head, but the gesture didnโt feel condescending.
I sighed.
โJust think about it a little. Once itโs done, it canโt be undone. Esmeโs made do with us as substitutes . . . and Alice doesnโt remember anything human so she canโt miss it. You will remember, though. Itโs a lot to give
up.โ
But more to get in return,ย I didnโt say aloud. โThanks, Rosalie. Itโs nice to understand . . . to know you better.โ
โI apologize for being such a monster.โ She grinned. โIโll try to behave myself from now on.โ
I grinned back at her.
We werenโt friends yet, but I was pretty sure she wouldnโt always hate me so much.
โIโll let you sleep now.โ Rosalieโs eyes flickered to the bed, and her lips twitched. โI know youโre frustrated that heโs keeping you locked up like this, but donโt give him too bad a time when he gets back. He loves you more than you know. It terrifies him to be away from you.โ She got up silently and ghosted to the door. โGoodnight, Bella,โ she whispered as she shut it behind herself.
โGoodnight, Rosalie,โ I murmured a second too late. It took me a long time to fall asleep after that.
When I did sleep, I had a nightmare. I was crawling across the dark, cold stones of an unfamiliar street, under lightly falling snow, leaving a trail of blood smeared behind me. A shadowy angel in a long white dress watched my progress with resentful eyes.
The next morning, Alice drove me to school while I stared grumpily out the windshield. I was feeling sleep-deprived, and it made the irritation of my imprisonment that much stronger.
โTonight weโll go out to Olympia or something,โ she promised. โThat would be fun, right?โ
โWhy donโt you just lock me in the basement,โ I suggested, โand forget the sugar coating?โ
Alice frowned. โHeโs going to take the Porsche back. Iโm not doing a very good job. Youโre supposed to be having fun.โ
โItโs not your fault,โ I muttered. I couldnโt believe I actually felt guilty. โIโll see you at lunch.โ
I trudged off to English. Without Edward, the day was guaranteed to be unbearable. I sulked through my first class, well aware that my attitude wasnโt helping anything.
When the bell rang, I got up without much enthusiasm. Mike was there at the door, holding it open for me.
โEdward hiking this weekend?โ he asked sociably as we walked out into the light rain.
โYeah.โ
โYou want to do something tonight?โ How could he still sound hopeful?
โCanโt. Iโve got a slumber party,โ I grumbled. He gave me a strange look as he processed my mood.
โWho are you โโ
Mikeโs question was cut short as a loud, growling roar erupted from behind us in the parking lot. Everyone on the sidewalk turned to look, staring in disbelief as the noisy black motorcycle screeched to a stop on the edge of the concrete, the engine still snarling.
Jacob waved to me urgently.
โRun, Bella!โ he yelled over the engineโs roar. I was frozen for a second before I understood.
I looked at Mike quickly. I knew I only had seconds. How far would Alice go to restrain me in public?
โI got really sick and went home, okay?โ I said to Mike, my voice filled with sudden excitement.
โFine,โ he muttered.
I pecked Mike swiftly on the cheek. โThanks, Mike. I owe you one!โ I called as I sprinted away.
Jacob revved his engine, grinning. I jumped on the back of his seat, wrapping my arms tightly around his waist.
I caught sight of Alice, frozen at the edge of the cafeteria, her eyes sparking with fury, her lip curled back over her teeth.
I shot her one pleading glance.
Then we were racing across the blacktop so fast that my stomach got lost somewhere behind me.
โHold on,โ Jacob shouted.
I hid my face in his back as he sped down the highway. I knew he would slow down when we hit the Quileute border. I just had to hold on till then. I prayed silently and fervently that Alice wouldnโt follow, and that Charlie wouldnโt happen to see me. . . .
It was obvious when we had reached the safe zone. The bike slowed, and Jacob straightened up and howled with laughter. I opened my eyes.
โWe made it,โ he shouted. โNot bad for a prison break, eh?โ โGood thinking, Jake.โ
โI remembered what you said about the psychic leech not being about to predict whatย Iโmย going to do. Iโm gladย youย didnโt think of this โ she wouldnโt have let you go to school.โ
โThatโs why I didnโt consider it.โ
He laughed triumphantly. โWhat do you want to do today?โ โAnything!โ I laughed back. It felt great to be free.