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Chapter no 23 – GOODBYES

Midnight Sun (The Twilight Saga, Book 5)

THAT WAS THE LAST THING ANYONE SAID AS WE RACED BACK TO FORKS. Of

course the way would seem much shorter when I was terrified of arriving. All too soon we were pulling up to Bellaโ€™s home, the lights shining from every window, both upstairs and down. The sounds of a college basketball game drifted from the front room. I strained to hear anything not human in the vicinity, but the tracker didnโ€™t seem to have arrived yet. And Alice still could see no future in which this stop turned into an attack.

Maybe we should just stay. Let Bella return to her normal life while the rest of us became perpetual sentries. I could count on Emmett, Alice, Carlisle, Esmeโ€”and I was fairly certain Jasper, as wellโ€”to join me in such a vigil. The tracker would find it impossible to get to her with so many eyes

โ€”and mindsโ€”watching. Was unified strength the safer option than dividing into thirds?

But as I considered this, Alice saw how the tracker would wait, how he would adapt. How he would, after the boredom set in, begin a war of attrition. Bellaโ€™s friends disappearing in the night. Favorite teachers. Charlieโ€™s coworkers. Random humans who had no connection to her. The numbers would add up to the point where the resulting scrutiny would force us to disappear, regardless. And I could guess how Bella would feel about all those innocents paying with their lives for her continued safety.

So the original plan would have to be enough.

It was hard to process the strange physical sensation that accompanied this realization. I knew that an actual pit had not opened in the center of my torso, but the impression was unnervingly realistic. I wondered if it was some long-forgotten human response that Iโ€™d never felt in my immortal life because Iโ€™d never had a reason to panic quite like this.

We needed to move. Though I knew the point was to give the tracker something to follow, I still wanted to have Bella long gone before he could

arrive.

โ€œHeโ€™s not here,โ€ I told Emmett. Alice already knew. โ€œLetโ€™s go.โ€

Alice and I slid silently from the Jeep, minds ranging through distance and time. Alice saw the tracker showing up while we were still inside. The sound of my teeth grinding seemed extra loud.

โ€œDonโ€™t worry, Bella,โ€ Emmett was sayingโ€”in a voice I found much too upbeatโ€”while he loosed her from the harness. โ€œWeโ€™ll take care of things here quickly.โ€

โ€œAlice,โ€ I hissed.

She darted to the truck, then dropped to the ground and slid under the running boards. In a fraction of a second, sheโ€™d pulled herself against the undercarriage, totally invisible, even to a vampire.

โ€œEmmett.โ€

He was already moving, scaling the tree in the front yard. His weight bent the pine noticeably, but he moved on quickly to the next tree over. He would keep moving while we were inside. This was a lot more obvious than Aliceโ€™s hidden spot, but heโ€™d see anything coming and would be a solid deterrent, if nothing else.

Bella waited for me to open her door. She looked frozen in place with terror, the only movement the slow crawl of tears down her cheeks. She came to life when I reached for her, letting me help her gently from the car. I was surprised by how difficult it was to touch her now, knowing that I was going to leave her. The heat of her skin burned in a new, painful way. Ignoring this unfamiliar ache, I wrapped my arm around her, hoping my body would shield her, and hurried her to the house.

โ€œFifteen minutes,โ€ I reminded her. It was too much time. I longed to be far away from this targeted place.

โ€œI can do this,โ€ she replied in a stronger voice than I expected. There was steel in the set of her jaw.

As we gained the porch, she pulled back against my forward progress. I stopped automatically, though my muscles screamed at the delay.

Her dark eyes were intense as she stared into mine. She reached up to press her palms against either side of my face.

โ€œI love you,โ€ she said, her voice a whisper that strained like a scream. โ€œI will always love you, no matter what happens now.โ€

The pit in my stomach yawned open as if it would rip me in half.

โ€œNothing is going to happen to you, Bella,โ€ I snarled.

โ€œJust follow the plan, okay?โ€ she insisted. โ€œKeep Charlie safe for me. Heโ€™s not going to like me very much after this, and I want to have the chance to apologize later.โ€

I didnโ€™t know what she meant. My brain was too chaotic with panic to try to decipher her obscure thought processes now.

โ€œGet inside, Bella,โ€ I urged. โ€œWe have to hurry.โ€

โ€œOne more thingโ€”donโ€™t listen to another word I say tonight!โ€

Before I could make any progress in understanding either cryptic request, Bella pushed up onto her toes and crushed her lips against mine with what might be bruising forceโ€”for her. More force than I would have ever dared to use with her myself.

Red washed across her cheeks and forehead as she spun away from me. Her tears, which had slowed for our brief and incomprehensible conversation, were flowing freely. I couldnโ€™t fathom why she was raising one leg until she kicked violently against the front doorโ€”it flew open.

โ€œGo away, Edward!โ€ she screeched at top volume. Even over the sound of the TV, there was no way Charlie would miss a word.

She slammed the door shut in my face. โ€œBella?โ€ Charlie called out, alarmed.

โ€œLeave me alone!โ€ she shrieked back. I heard her footsteps pound up the stairs, and another slamming door.

Obviously her frozen silence in the Jeep had not been terrified petrification, but rather preparation. She had a script. My role was to be invisible and silent, I guessed.

Charlie ran up the stairs after her, his footsteps lurching and unsteady. I imagined he was only halfway awake.

I scaled the side of the house, waiting beside her window to see if Charlie would follow her into the room. I couldnโ€™t see Bella at first, which caused me a spasm of fresh panic, but then she was climbing to her feet beside her bed holding a duffel bag and some kind of small knitted sack.

Charlieโ€™s fist hammered against her door. The doorknob rattledโ€”sheโ€™d taken the time to lock itโ€”and then the hammering started up again.

โ€œBella, are you okay? Whatโ€™s going on?โ€

I slid the window open and ducked inside while Bella yelled, โ€œIโ€™m going home!โ€ in response.

โ€œDid he hurt you?โ€ Charlie demanded through the door, and I winced while I ran to the dresser to help her pack. Charlie wasnโ€™t wrong.

Despite that, Bella screamed, โ€œNO!โ€ She joined me at the dresser, seeming to expect to find me there. She held open the duffel bag and I tossed clothes into it, trying to get a variety of items. It wouldnโ€™t help her blend in if she only had t-shirts.

The keys to her truck were on the dresser top. I pocketed them.

โ€œDid he break up with you?โ€ Charlie asked in a moderated tone. This question didnโ€™t sting.

But Bellaโ€™s answer was a surprise.

โ€œNo!โ€ she yelled again, though I thought maybe thisโ€”a breakupโ€”was the easiest excuse. I wondered where the script would lead.

Charlie battered against the door again, the rhythm impatient. โ€œWhat happened, Bella?โ€

She yanked futilely on the zipper of the now full duffel bag. โ€œI broke up with him!โ€ she shouted.

I moved her fingers out of the way and fastened the zipper, then weighed the bag in my hand. Was it too heavy for her? She reached for it, impatient, and I put the strap carefully over her shoulder.

I rested my forehead against hers for one precious second.

โ€œIโ€™ll be in the truck.โ€ My whisper did nothing to hide the desperation in my voice. โ€œGo!โ€

I urged her toward the door, then dove back out the window so I would be in place when she exited.

Emmett was on the ground, waiting for me. He jerked his chin toward the east.

I cast my mind in that direction, and sure enough, the tracker was little more than half a mile out.

The big one is playing watchman tonight. Patience.

So heโ€™d seen Emmett in the trees, but he couldnโ€™t see either of us now. Would he assume I was here, or would he be watching for an ambush? I wished we had Jasper with us now. If we could come at him from three sidesโ€ฆ

Edward, Alice cautioned from her hiding place. She thought of the possibilities spinning off from my train of thought. The tracker was slippery. We would leave Bella vulnerable.

โ€œWhat happened? I thought you liked him,โ€ Charlie was demanding. He was back downstairs now.

I made a firm decision about what would happen next.

On it, Alice responded. She slithered out from under the truck and ducked into the Jeep. Once she had it in neutral, she pushed it silently out of the driveway, one hand on the doorframe, the other reaching up as high as she could to move the steering wheel with two fingers. I didnโ€™t want the sudden roar of the Jeepโ€™s engine to distract Charlie from Bellaโ€™s performance. It was better if he thought I was already gone.

Emmett watched Alice for half a second, then raised his eyebrows at me.

Do I help her?

I shook my head. Charlie, I mouthed back at him. Follow on foot.

He nodded, then leaped up into the tree, where he would be visible again. It would make the tracker keep his distance. He didnโ€™t retreat, however, even when he caught sight of Emmett; he was fascinated with the scene playing out and confident he could outrun any sudden pursuit. It made me want to prove him wrong. But I couldnโ€™t risk falling into a trap with Bella so near.

โ€œI do like him,โ€ Bella was explaining, her words muffled and breaking. She was crying freely now, and I knew that she wasnโ€™t a good enough actress to fake these tears. The pain in her voice was palpable. The chasm in my stomach twisted in answering agony. She shouldnโ€™t have to do this. She was paying for my mistake. My foolishness.

โ€œThatโ€™s the problem,โ€ she railed. โ€œI canโ€™t do this anymore! I canโ€™t put down any more roots here! I donโ€™t want to end up trapped in this stupid, boring town like Mom! Iโ€™m not going to make the same dumb mistake she did. I hate itโ€”I canโ€™t stay here another minute!โ€

Charlieโ€™s mental response was deeper, more searing than I would have expected.

Bellaโ€™s weighed-down footsteps moved toward the front door. I climbed silently into the cab of her truck and shoved the key into place, then ducked down. Emmett was close to the front door of the house now, in the shadows. Still, the distance from the door to the truck seemed long. I concentrated on the tracker. He hadnโ€™t moved, listening intently to the drama unfolding inside the house.

What would he hear? This much: Bella preparing to escape, to run. Not

planning to return in the near future.

He would know that Emmett had seen him. He would have to assume that Bella knew he could hear. Or would he?

โ€œBells, you canโ€™t leave now,โ€ Charlie said quietly, urgently. โ€œItโ€™s nighttime.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ll sleep in the truck if I get tired.โ€

Charlie imagined his daughter unconscious in the dark cab of the truck, on the side of a freeway in the middle of nowhere, while all around her, dark, amorphous shapes crept closer and closer. It wasnโ€™t an entirely coherent nightmare, but my own panic, savage and irrational, echoed his own.

โ€œJust wait another week,โ€ he begged. โ€œRenรฉe will be back by then.โ€

Bellaโ€™s footsteps stuttered to a halt. There was a low soundโ€”her shoe squeaking as she turned around to face him?

โ€œWhat?โ€

I slid back out of the truck, and hesitated in the middle of the front yard. What would I do if his words confused her, delayed her? Did she realize the tracker was near?

โ€œShe called while you were out.โ€ Charlie was tripping over his words, rushing to get them out. โ€œThings arenโ€™t going so well in Florida, and if Phil doesnโ€™t get signed by the end of the week, theyโ€™re going back to Arizona. The assistant coach of the Sidewinders said they might have a spot for another shortstop.โ€

Charlie and I both waited, not breathing, for her response.

โ€œI have a key,โ€ she muttered, and her footsteps were now at the door.

The knob started to turn. I darted back to the truck.

Her words sounded like a weak excuse. The tracker would have to assume this was a story for Charlie and the opposite of the truth.

The door didnโ€™t open.

โ€œJust let me go, Charlie,โ€ Bella said. I could tell she meant the words to sound angry, but the pain in her voice overwhelmed any other emotion.

The door swung open at last. Bella shoved through, Charlie right behind her, his hand outstretched. She seemed aware of that hand, cringing away from it.

I crouched against the floorboards, mostly invisible. I couldnโ€™t help peeking out the window. Without turning to look at her father, Bella

growled, โ€œIt didnโ€™t work out, okay?โ€ She jumped off the porch, but Charlie was motionless now. โ€œI really, really hate Forks!โ€

The words seemed simple enough, but crushing anguish speared Charlie through where he stood. His mind swirled, almost like vertigo. In his thoughts was another face, so much like Bellaโ€™s and also tearstained. But this womanโ€™s eyes were pale blue.

It seemed Bella had scripted these words with care. Charlie stood, stunned and splintering, as Bella ran awkwardly across the small lawn, the heavy duffel compromising her balance.

โ€œIโ€™ll call you tomorrow!โ€ she yelled back toward Charlie while she heaved the bulky bag into the bed of the truck.

He hadnโ€™t recovered enough to respond.

I could no longer doubt that Bella understood the gravity of the situation. I knew she would never cause anyone this kind of pain, especially not her father, if there were any other way at all.

Iโ€™d put her in this hellish position.

Bella ran around the front of the truck. The quick, fearful glances she threw over her shoulder now were not for Charlie. She yanked the truck door open and jumped into the driverโ€™s seat. She reached to turn the key as if knowing it would be waiting for her in the ignition. The engineโ€™s roar shattered the silence of the night. This would be easy enough for the tracker to follow.

I reached out to brush the back of her hand, wishing I could comfort her, but knowing nothing could make this better.

As soon as sheโ€™d reversed out of the driveway, she dropped her right hand from the wheel so that I could hold it. The truck chugged down the street at its maximum speed. Charlie didnโ€™t leave his post at the door, but the street curved and we were quickly out of view. I moved into the passenger seat.

โ€œPull over,โ€ I suggested.

She blinked hard against the tears that streamed down her face and then splashed off the rain jacket she still wore. She passed Alice, without seeming to notice the Jeep on the side of the road. I wondered whether she could see at all.

Alice, still pushing the Jeep so the noisy engine wouldnโ€™t alert Charlie, easily kept up with us.

โ€œI can drive,โ€ Bella insisted, but her words broke and dragged. She sounded exhausted.

She barely registered surprise when I pulled her gently over my lap and eased into the driverโ€™s position. I kept her close beside me. She drooped there, wilting.

โ€œYou wouldnโ€™t be able to find the house,โ€ I said as my excuse, but she didnโ€™t seem to be waiting for a reason. She didnโ€™t care.

We were far enough from the house now (though I could still hear Charlieโ€™s frozen thoughts, motionless in the doorway) that Alice jumped up into the Jeep and started the engine. When the headlights came on behind us, Bella stiffened and twisted to stare out the back window, heart thudding.

โ€œItโ€™s just Alice.โ€ I took her left hand now and squeezed it. โ€œThe tracker?โ€ she whispered.

Heโ€™s following now. Alice could hear Bellaโ€™s whisper easily over the grind of the engine. Emmettโ€™s waiting till heโ€™s clear of the house.

โ€œHe heard the end of your performance,โ€ I told her. โ€œCharlie?โ€ Her voice strained raw.

Alice kept me updated. The trackerโ€™s past the house. I donโ€™t see him going back. Emโ€™s catching up.

โ€œThe tracker followed us,โ€ I assured Bella. โ€œHeโ€™s running behind us now.โ€

This did not comfort her. Her breath caught and then she whispered, โ€œCan we outrun him?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ I admitted. Not in this ridiculous truck.

Bella turned to watch out the window, though I was sure the Jeepโ€™s headlights would blind her to everything else. Alice was watching all the futures related to Charlie that she could perceive. A human sheโ€™d never met was not the easiest subject for her. But it didnโ€™t look as if the hunter or his apprehensive companion had any plans to return.

Emmett was running in the road close behind us now. I was surprised at his intentions. I would have expected heโ€™d be itching to catch the tracker in pursuit, to bring this ordeal to a quick and violent end. Instead, his thoughts were focused on Bella. His few moments as bodyguard seemed to have affected him deeply. Her safety was his current priority.

Bella brought out everyoneโ€™s protective side.

Emmett was imagining the tracker watching; only Alice and I knew he

was carefully keeping his distance, just following the sound of the truck through the darkness. He wouldnโ€™t put himself in closer range tonight. Still, Emmett wanted to make it clear that the tracker would have to go directly through him to get to Bella. He made a running leap that propelled him over the Jeep and into the bed of the truck. I fought with the steering as the truck reacted.

Bella shrieked, her voice rasping with the effort.

I covered her mouth, muffling the sound so she could hear me. โ€œItโ€™s Emmett,โ€ I said.

She inhaled through her nose, slumping again. I freed her mouth and pulled her tight against my side. If felt as if every muscle in her body were trembling.

โ€œItโ€™s okay, Bella. Youโ€™re going to be safe,โ€ I murmured. It didnโ€™t feel like sheโ€™d even heard me speak. The tremors continued. Her breath came quick and shallow.

I tried to distract her. Speaking in my normal voice, as though there were no danger or terror, I said, โ€œI didnโ€™t realize you were still so bored with small-town life. It seemed like you were adjusting fairly wellโ€”especially recently. Maybe I was just flattering myself that I was making life more interesting for you.โ€

Perhaps it was not the most sensitive observation, considering how her escape had upset her, but it did pull her from her abstraction. She fidgeted, sitting up a little straighter.

โ€œI wasnโ€™t being nice,โ€ she whispered, ignoring my frivolous words and going straight to the painful part. She stared down as if ashamed to meet my gaze. โ€œThat was the same thing my mom said when she left him. You could say I was hitting below the belt.โ€

Iโ€™d assumed it was something like that, given the image in Charlieโ€™s head.

โ€œDonโ€™t worry, heโ€™ll forgive you,โ€ I promised.

She looked up at me earnestly, desperate to believe what I was saying. I tried to smile at her, but I couldnโ€™t force my face to obey.

I tried again. โ€œBella, itโ€™s going to be all right.โ€

She shuddered. โ€œBut it wonโ€™t be all right when Iโ€™m not with you.โ€ Her words were barely more than a breath.

My arm flexed around her convulsively while the hole in my stomach

stretched wider. Because she was right. Everything would be wrong when she wasnโ€™t with me. I didnโ€™t quite know how I would function.

I forced my face smooth and made my voice as light as I could. โ€œWeโ€™ll be together again in a few days.โ€ As I said the words, I willed them to be true. They still felt like a lie. Alice saw so many different futures.โ€ฆ โ€œDonโ€™t forget,โ€ I added, โ€œthis was your idea.โ€

She sniffed. โ€œIt was the best idea. Of course it was mine.โ€ I attempted to smile again, then gave up.

โ€œWhy did this happen? Why me?โ€ She whispered the questions flatly, as though they were rhetorical.

I answered anyway, my voice sharp-edged. โ€œItโ€™s my fault. I was a fool to expose you like that.โ€

She stared up at me, surprised. โ€œThatโ€™s not what I meant.โ€ What other reason could there be? Whose fault but my own?

โ€œI was there,โ€ she continued. โ€œBig deal. It didnโ€™t bother the other two. Why did this James decide to kill me?โ€ She sniffled again. โ€œThereโ€™re people all over the place, why me?โ€

It was a fair question, an astute question. And there were more answers than one. She deserved a full explanation.

โ€œI got a good look at his mind tonight. Iโ€™m not sure if thereโ€™s anything I could have done to avoid this, once he saw you. It is partially your fault.โ€ My voice twisted and I hoped she could hear the black humor in it, the irony. โ€œIf you didnโ€™t smell so appallingly luscious, he might not have bothered. But when I defended youโ€ฆโ€ I remembered his incredulity, his indignation even, that I would stand in his way. The arrogance, the ire. โ€œWell, that made it a lot worse. Heโ€™s not used to being thwarted, no matter how insignificant the object. He thinks of himself as a hunter and nothing else. His existence is consumed with tracking, and a challenge is all he asks of life. Suddenly weโ€™ve presented him with a beautiful challengeโ€”a large clan of strong fighters all bent on protecting the one vulnerable element. You wouldnโ€™t believe how euphoric he is now. Itโ€™s his favorite game, and weโ€™ve just made it his most exciting game ever.โ€

No matter how I analyzed it, there was no way around this. Once Iโ€™d taken her to the clearing, this was the only outcome. If I hadnโ€™t opposed him, perhaps it wouldnโ€™t have triggered his love of the game.

โ€œBut if I had stood by,โ€ I muttered, mostly to myself, โ€œhe would have

killed you right then.โ€

โ€œI thoughtโ€ฆ,โ€ she whispered, โ€œI didnโ€™t smell the same to the others.โ€ She hesitated. โ€œAs I do to you.โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t.โ€ What she was to me, simply physically, was something more intense than Iโ€™d ever seen in any other immortalโ€™s mind. โ€œBut that doesnโ€™t mean that you arenโ€™t still a temptation to every one of them. If you had appealed to the tracker, or any of them, the same way you appeal to me, it would have meant a fight right there.โ€

Her body shuddered against mine.

It would have been easier, though, I realized now, if it had come to a fight. I felt certain the frightened redhead would have run, and I doubted that Laurent would have stood with the tracker when it was an obviously losing prospect. Even if theyโ€™d all joined in, they could never have survived. Especially with Jasper launching a surprise attack from the midst of his smokescreen while all eyes were riveted on Emmett. Iโ€™d seen enough of his memories to believe that Jasper could probably have handled all three. Not that Emmett would have let him.

And if we were a normal coven (though we could never be considered normal at our size), we probably would have attacked just for the insult.

But we werenโ€™t normal, we were civilized. We tried to live to a higher standard. A gentler, more peaceable standard. Because of our father.

Because of Carlisle, tonight we had hesitated. We had chosen the more humane route, because that was our habit, our way of life.

Did that make usโ€ฆ weaker?

I flinched at the thought, but then immediately decided that our choice was still the right one, even if it did make us weak. I could feel that. It resonated deeply in my mind, my beingโ€ฆ or my soul, if such a thing existed. Whatever it was that drove this corporeal form.

It didnโ€™t matter now. Alice might give us some power over the future, but the past was as lost for us as it was for anyone else. We had not attacked, and now we had the more complicated version still ahead. The coming fight could not be avoided.

โ€œI donโ€™t think I have any choice but to kill him now,โ€ I murmured. โ€œCarlisle wonโ€™t like it.โ€

But he would understand, I was sure. Weโ€™d given this tracker the option to walk away. He wasnโ€™t going to take us up on the offer. There was only

kill or be killed now.

โ€œHow can you kill a vampire?โ€ Bellaโ€™s voice was a whisper. I could still hear the sound of suppressed tears in it.

I should have anticipated the question.

She stared up at me with a different kind of fear than before, almost as though she was concerned the task would fall to her. Of course, I could never be sure with Bella.

I made no attempt to soften the realities. โ€œThe only way to be sure is to tear him to shreds, and then burn the pieces.โ€

โ€œAnd the other two will fight with him?โ€

โ€œThe woman will.โ€ If she could control her terror, that is. โ€œIโ€™m not sure about Laurent. They donโ€™t have a very strong bondโ€”heโ€™s only with them for convenience. He was embarrassed by James in the meadow.โ€ Not to mention that James had made plans to kill Laurent. Perhaps Iโ€™d tip him off; that was sure to shift alliances.

โ€œBut James and the womanโ€”theyโ€™ll try to kill you?โ€ she whispered, her voice distorted by pain.

And then I understood. Of course she was panicking about the wrong thing as usual.

โ€œBella, donโ€™t you dare waste time worrying about me,โ€ I hissed. โ€œYour only concern is keeping yourself safe andโ€”please, pleaseโ€”trying not to be reckless.โ€

She ignored that. โ€œIs he still following?โ€

โ€œYes. He wonโ€™t attack the house, though. Not tonight.โ€

Not while we were together. Was our splitting up exactly what the tracker wanted? But I remembered what Alice saw happening if we tried to guard Bella here. I had no love for Mike Newton, but neither he nor anyone else in Forks was an acceptable sacrifice.

I turned off onto the drive, dully noting that there was no sense of relief in reaching my home. There was no space out of harmโ€™s way while the tracker lived.

Emmett was still riled. I wished I could tell him the trackerโ€™s location to ease his agitation, but I couldnโ€™t risk being overheard. The tracker had guessed that we had extra abilitiesโ€”it would only help him if we gave clues as to what they were.

I noticed his thoughts drifting to the edges of my hearing just as Alice

chimed in.

He meets the female now, on the other side of the river. They split up again and watch. She takes the mountainside; he takes the trees.

The extra distance didnโ€™t make me feel any better.

Emmettโ€™s overzealous bodyguard mindset was operating at full steam by this point. As we rolled up to the house, he leaped from the truck bed and paced to the passenger side. He wrenched the door open and reached for Bella.

โ€œGently,โ€ I reminded him almost silently.

I know.

I could have stopped him. This wasnโ€™t necessary. But then, was any precaution too much at this point? If Iโ€™d been more cautious, we wouldnโ€™t be in this predicament.

It did feel safer in a strange way to see Emmett, massive and indestructible, cradling Bella in his colossal armsโ€”she was barely visible behind them. He ducked through the front door before a second had passed. Alice and I were at his sides instantly.

The rest of my family was gathered in the living room, all on their feet, and in the middle of their circle, Laurent.

His thoughts were frightened, apologetic. The fear was only heightened when Emmett set Bella carefully on her feet beside me and took a deliberate step forward, a bass growl building in his chest. Laurent took a quick half step back.

Carlisle gave Emmett a warning look, and he settled back on his heels. Esme stood close to Carlisleโ€™s side, her eyes flashing from my face to Bellaโ€™s and then back again. Rosalie was also staring at Bella, glaring at Bella, but I ignored her as best I could. I had more important things to deal with.

I waited until Laurentโ€™s eyes flickered to me.

โ€œHeโ€™s tracking us,โ€ I told him, prompting the thoughts I wanted to hear.

Of course heโ€™s tracking the human. And heโ€™ll find her. โ€œI was afraid of that,โ€ he said aloud.

I need to get out of the way, his thoughts continued. James canโ€™t think Iโ€™ve chosen another side. The last thing I need is him looking for me afterward. Laurent suppressed a shudder. Perhaps I could tell him Iโ€™m just gathering info. His face, though, when he divided from us in the woodsโ€ฆ

Better to disappear while heโ€™s caught up in this hunt.

My teeth were grinding again. Laurent eyed me nervously.

He knew James well enough to understand the rupture heโ€™d caused in the clearing. Though I felt no desire to do him favors, I knew heโ€™d be grateful enough when James was dead.

โ€œCome, my love,โ€ I heard Alice whisper in Jasperโ€™s ear. I hadnโ€™t noticed him especially as we came in; he was still camouflaging himself. Jasper didnโ€™t question Alice now, even in his thoughts. The two of them darted up the stairs hand in hand. Laurent didnโ€™t bother to watch them leave, so effective was Jasperโ€™s effort. I saw that Alice would write down the necessary information so Laurent could not overhear. It wouldnโ€™t take her long to pack what they would need.

โ€œWhat will he do?โ€ Carlisle demanded of Laurent, though I could have answered as well.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ Laurent said with every sign of sincerity. Sorry I ever met those demons. I should have known better than to play with fire. Damned boredom made me foolish. โ€œI was afraid, when your boy there defended her, that it would set him off.โ€ Of course it would. He ensured James would never quit till they were both dead. Itโ€™s as if these strangers live in some other world. Or think they do. The real world is about to intrude on that fantasy.

โ€œCan you stop him?โ€ Carlisle pressed.

Ha! โ€œNothing stops James when he gets started.โ€ โ€œWeโ€™ll stop him,โ€ Emmett growled.

Laurent eyed Emmett almost hopefully. If only it were possible. It would certainly make my life easier.

โ€œYou canโ€™t bring him down,โ€ Laurent warned. He seemed sure he was doing us a great favor by giving us this information. โ€œIโ€™ve never seen anything like him in my three hundred years. Heโ€™s absolutely lethal. Thatโ€™s why I joined his coven.โ€

A few scattered memories of his adventures with James and Victoria ran through his head, though Victoria was always a background figure, on the fringes. James had kept Laurentโ€™s life interesting, at least, but the sadism of these rampages had begun to bother Laurent in the last few years. By that point, there hadnโ€™t been a safe way to disengage himself.

He wished he could feel optimistic now, but heโ€™d seen James triumph

over impressive odds. His eyes turned to Bella, and all he saw was a human girl, one of billions, nothing to distinguish her from any of the others.

He didnโ€™t think the words before he spoke them aloud. โ€œAre you sure itโ€™s worth it?โ€

The roar that ripped through my teeth was as loud as a detonation. Laurent immediately slid into a submissive posture, while Carlisle held his hand up.

Control, Edward. This one is not our enemy.

I worked to calm my fury. Carlisle was right, though Laurent was certainly not our friend, either.

โ€œIโ€™m afraid youโ€™re going to have to make a choice,โ€ Carlisle said.

There arenโ€™t many choices left to me, Laurent thought. I can only make myself scarce and hope James doesnโ€™t think Iโ€™m worth the trouble. His mind ranged back over the slightly less fraught conversation theyโ€™d been having before our arrival and fastened on one piece of information. Iโ€™ve clearly burned my bridges with this company, but perhaps I could surround myself with other friends. Talented friends.

โ€œIโ€™m intrigued by the life youโ€™ve created here.โ€ He felt he was choosing his words very diplomatically, trying to make eye contact with each of us. My access to his inner monologue rather ruined the effect for me. โ€œBut I wonโ€™t get in the middle of this. I bear none of you any enmity, but I wonโ€™t go up against James. I think I will head northโ€”to that clan in Denali.โ€ He imagined five strangers like Carlisle, slow to attack, but with great numbers and talents among them. Perhaps that would give James pause.

A feeling of gratitude had Laurent turning to warn Carlisle again. โ€œDonโ€™t underestimate James. Heโ€™s got a brilliant mind and unparalleled senses. Heโ€™s every bit as comfortable in the human world as you seem to be, and he wonโ€™t come at you head-on.โ€ A few of Jamesโ€™s convoluted ploys ran through his memory. The tracker had patienceโ€ฆ and a sense of humor. A dark one.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry for whatโ€™s been unleashed here,โ€ Laurent continued. โ€œTruly sorry.โ€

He inclined his head, submissive again, but his eyes darted to Bella and away, his thoughts mystified by the risk we were taking for her sake. They donโ€™t understand about James, he decided. They donโ€™t believe me. I wonder how many of them heโ€™ll leave alive.

Laurent thought us weak. He saw our apparent domesticity as a deficiency. Iโ€™d worried the same thing earlier, but not now. Weak was not the impression I planned to leave with James. But let Laurent believe James would win. He could hide in terror for the next century and I would not mourn his discomfort.

โ€œGo in peace,โ€ Carlisle said, both offer and command.

Laurentโ€™s eyes swept through the room, appreciating a kind of life heโ€™d left behind long ago. Though this was not a palace, and heโ€™d lived in several, there was an atmosphere of permanence and sanctuary here that heโ€™d not felt in centuries.

He nodded once at Carlisle, and for a brief moment, I felt a strange kind of yearning from the dark-haired vampire toward my father. A sense of respect and a desire to belong. But he quashed the emotion before it could take root, and then he was racing out the door, with no intention of slowing until he was safely in the ocean, his scent untraceable.

Esme dashed across the living room to start the steel shutters rolling down the huge windows that comprised the back wall of the house.

โ€œHow close?โ€ Carlisle asked me.

Laurent was almost outside my range and not slowing. He had no desire to run into James on his way out. Heโ€™d hear nothing we said. I reached for James. Aliceโ€™s vision had given me the direction. It was far enough that he, too, would not be able to hear our plans.

โ€œAbout three miles out past the river. The tracker is circling around to meet up with the female.โ€

He would join her on higher ground, where he could watch in which direction we ran.

โ€œWhatโ€™s the plan?โ€ Carlisle asked.

Though I knew the tracker couldnโ€™t hear, and the shutters were still groaning, I kept my voice low. โ€œWeโ€™ll lead him off, and then Jasper and Alice will run her south.โ€

โ€œAnd then?โ€

I knew what he was asking. I looked straight into his eyes as I answered. โ€œAs soon as Bella is clear, we hunt him.โ€

Though Carlisle knew this was coming, he still felt a flare of pain. โ€œI guess thereโ€™s no other choice.โ€

Carlisle had been scrupulously protecting life for three centuries. Heโ€™d

always been able to find common ground with other vampires. This would not be easy for him, but he was no stranger to difficulty.

We needed to hurry, not to give the tracker any more time than necessary before we gave him a trail to chase. But there were practicalities we needed to address before we could run.

I caught Roseโ€™s eye. โ€œGet her upstairs and trade clothes.โ€

Confusing the scent was the obvious first step. Iโ€™d take something of Bellaโ€™s with me, too, and create a trail that would goad the tracker forward.

Rosalie knew this, but her eyes flashed with disbelief.

Donโ€™t you see what sheโ€™s done to us? Sheโ€™s ruined everything! And you want me to protect her?

She spit the rest of her answer aloud, resolved that Bella would hear it, too. โ€œWhy should I? What is she to me? Except a menaceโ€”a danger youโ€™ve chosen to inflict on all of us!โ€

Bella jerked as if Rosalie had slapped her.

โ€œRoseโ€ฆ,โ€ Emmett murmured, putting one hand on her shoulder. She shook it off. Emmettโ€™s eyes cut to me, half expecting me to spring at her.

But none of this mattered. Roseโ€™s spoiled temper tantrums had always been irritating, but this petty flare-up was ill timed, and time was something I didnโ€™t have enough of.

If sheโ€™d decided to cease being my sister tonight, that was her choice and I accepted it.

โ€œEsme?โ€ I knew what her response would be. โ€œOf course!โ€

Esme understood the time limits. She lifted Bella carefully into her arms, much as Emmett had, though the effect was very different, and flew up the stairs with her.

โ€œWhat are we doing?โ€ I heard Bella ask from Esmeโ€™s office.

I left Esme to it, and focused on my part. The tracker and his wild partner had moved outside my range. They couldnโ€™t hear us, but I was sure they could see us. They would see our vehicles leave. And they would follow.

What do we need? Carlisle asked.

โ€œThe satellite phones. The larger sports bag. Are the tanks full?โ€

Iโ€™ll do it. Emmett sprinted out the front door toward the garage. We always kept several gas drums ready for emergencies.

โ€œThe Jeep, the Mercedes, and her truck, too,โ€ I whispered after him.

Got it.

Weโ€™re splitting into three? Carlisle was also wary of dividing our force. โ€œAlice sees itโ€™s the best way.โ€

He accepted that.

Heโ€™ll get hurt. He doesnโ€™t think. He just rushes in. This is all her fault!

Rosalie was assailing me with a torrent of grievances. I found it easy to tune her out. Easy to pretend she wasnโ€™t even there.

Whatโ€™s my part? Carlisle wanted to know.

I hesitated. โ€œAlice saw you with Emmett and me. But we canโ€™t leave Esme alone to watch Charlie.โ€ฆโ€

Carlisle turned to Rosalie with a stern expression. โ€œRosalie. Will you do your part for our family?โ€

โ€œFor Bella?โ€ She sneered the name.

โ€œYes,โ€ Carlisle responded. โ€œFor our family, as I said.โ€

Rosalie glared at him resentfully, but I could hear her pondering the options. If she protracted this fit, turned her back on all of us, then Carlisle would certainly stay here with Esme rather than be on the front line, keeping Emmett from dangerous excesses. Rosalie saw only the danger to Emmett. But part of her was growing nervous about my visible detachment.

She finally rolled her eyes. โ€œOf course I wonโ€™t let Esme go alone. I

actually care about this family.โ€

โ€œThank you,โ€ Carlisle respondedโ€”with more warmth than I would have bothered withโ€”and then dashed out of the room.

Emmett was just coming through the front door with the large bag we kept some of our sports toys in slung over his shoulder. The bag was big enough to fit a small person. Bulky with equipment, it looked like there might already be someone inside it.

Alice appeared at the top of the stairs, just in time to meet Bella and Esme as they emerged from Esmeโ€™s office. Together, they lifted Bella by the elbows and rushed her down the stairs. Jasper followed. He was clearly on edge, tightly wound, his eyes roaming restlessly across the windows at the front of the house. I tried to use his savage appearance to calm myself. Jasper was more lethal than the thousands of vampires whoโ€™d tried to destroy him. Today heโ€™d exhibited new skills Iโ€™d never imagined, and I was sure he had other tricks up his sleeve. The tracker had no idea what he was

up against. Bella would be safer with Jasper standing guard than anyone. And with Alice beside him, the tracker couldnโ€™t take them by surprise. I tried to believe that.

Carlisle was already back with the phones. He gave Esme one, and then brushed her cheek. She looked up at him with total confidence. She was sure we were doing the right thing, and because of that, we would be successful. I wished I had her faith.

She handed me a wad of fabric. Socks. Bellaโ€™s scent was fresh and strong. I shoved them in my pocket.

Alice took the other phone from Carlisle.

โ€œEsme and Rosalie will be taking your truck, Bella,โ€ Carlisle told her, as if asking permission. It was so like him.

Bella nodded.

โ€œAlice, Jasperโ€”take the Mercedes. Youโ€™ll need the dark tint in the South.โ€

Jasper nodded. Alice already knew this.

โ€œWeโ€™re taking the Jeep. Alice, will they take the bait?โ€

Alice concentrated, her hands clenched into fists. It wasnโ€™t a simple process, looking for maneuvers that never actually came in contact with any of us, but she was tuning in to these new enemies. Sheโ€™d get better with time. Hopefully we wouldnโ€™t need that. Hopefully we would end this tomorrow.

I saw the tracker flying through the treetops, focused on the fleeing Jeep. The redhead keeping her distance, following the sound of Bellaโ€™s truck as it chugged north a few minutes later. There were only the smallest of variations.

By the time she relaxed her vigil, we were both positive.

โ€œHeโ€™ll track you. The woman will follow the truck. We should be able to leave after that.โ€

Carlisle nodded. โ€œLetโ€™s go.โ€

I thought I was ready. The passing seconds were already pounding in my head like drumbeats. But I wasnโ€™t.

Bella seemed so forlorn at Esmeโ€™s side, her eyes bewildered, as if she couldnโ€™t process how everything had changed so quickly. Only an hour ago, we were perfectly happy. And now she was hunted, left to vampires she barely knew for her protection. Sheโ€™d never looked so vulnerable as she did

standing there, alone in a room full of inhuman strangers.

Could a dead heart break?

I was at her side, my arms tight around her, pulling her off the ground. Her warmth in my arms was quicksand and I wanted to drown in it, to never pull free. I kissed her just once, worried that the plans would all crumble into chaos if I couldnโ€™t make myself step away from her. Part of me didnโ€™t care if every human life in Forks and La Push and Seattle were sacrificed to keep her by my side.

I had to be stronger than that. I would end this. I would make her safe again.

It felt as though all the cells in my body were dying off one by one as I set her back on her feet. My fingers lingered against her face, and then stung as I forced them free.

Stronger than this, I reminded myself. I had to shut down all this agony so I could do my job. Destroy the danger.

I turned away from her.

Iโ€™d thought Iโ€™d known what burning felt like.

Carlisle and Emmett fell into step beside me. I took the bag from Emmett. I knew what the tracker expectedโ€”that I would be too weak to let her out of my sight. I cradled the bag as though it contained something infinitely more precious than footballs and hockey sticks as I rushed down the front steps flanked by my brother and my father.

Emmett climbed into the backseat of the Jeep and I placed the bag upright beside him, then quickly slammed the door, trying to look stealthy about it. I was in the driverโ€™s seat in a flash, Carlisle already beside me, and then we were jolting up the drive at a pace that would have horrified Bella if sheโ€™d actually been there with us.

I couldnโ€™t think like that. I had to trust Alice and Jasper and keep my head focused on my part.

The tracker was still too far away for me to hear him. But I knew he was watching, following. Iโ€™d seen it in Aliceโ€™s head.

Turning north onto the freeway, I accelerated. The Jeep was a lot faster than the truck, but it wasnโ€™t fast enough to get any headway, even at the maximum speed I could chance without risking the engine. But I didnโ€™t want to outrun the tracker now. He would only see that I was pushing the Jeep hard, as though escape were truly the motive. I hoped he wouldnโ€™t

realize Iโ€™d chosen the Jeep for just this purpose. He didnโ€™t know what else I had in my garage.

For just a flicker, he was close enough to hear.

โ€ฆ take a ferry? Itโ€™s a long way around otherwise. I could cut through.โ€ฆ

โ€œMake the call,โ€ I said, barely moving my lips, though I knew he was too far behind us to see my face.

Carlisle didnโ€™t bring the phone to his ear; he kept it by his thigh, out of sight, as he dialed one-handed. We all heard the quiet click as Esme picked up. She said nothing.

โ€œClear,โ€ Carlisle whispered. He disconnected.

And I was disconnected, too. I had no way to see what she was doing now. No chance to hear her voice. I shoved the despair away from me before I could start wallowing.

I had a job to do.

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