The bell rang. There was no time to go back to the cafeteria and tell Bonnie and Meredith. Elena set off for her next class, past the averted faces and hostile eyes that were becoming all too familiar these days.
It was hard, in history class, not to stare at Caroline, not to let Caroline know she knew. Alaric asked about Matt and Stefan being absent for the second day in a row, and Elena shrugged, feeling exposed and on display. She didnโt trust this man with the boyish smile and the hazel eyes and the thirst for knowledge about Mr. Tannerโs death. And Bonnie, who simply gazed at Alaric soulfully, was no help at all.
After class she caught a scrap of Sue Carsonโs conversation. โโฆ heโs on vacation from collegeโI forget exactly where โฆโ
Elena had had enough of discreet silence. She spun around and spoke directly to Sue and the girl Sue was talking to, bursting uninvited into their discussion.
โIf I were you,โ she said to Sue, โI would keep away from Damon. I mean that.โ
There was startled, embarrassed laughter. Sue was one of the few people at school who hadnโt shunned Elena, and now she was looking as if she wished she had.
โYou mean,โ said the other girl hesitantly, โbecause heโs yours, too? Orโโ
Elenaโs own laughter was harsh. โI mean because heโs
dangerous,โย she said. โAnd Iโm not joking.โ
They just looked at her. Elena saved them the further embarrassment of having to reply or to get tactfully away by turning on her heel and leaving. She collected Bonnie from Alaricโs cluster of after-school groupies and headed for Meredithโs locker.
โWhere are we going? I thought we were going to talk to Caroline.โ
โNot anymore,โ Elena said. โWait until we get home. Then Iโll tell you why.โ
โI canโt believe it,โ said Bonnie an hour later. โI mean, I believe it, but I canโtย believeย it. Not even of Caroline.โ
โItโs Tyler,โ Elena said. โHeโs the one with the big plans. So much for men not being interested in diaries.โ
โActually, we should thank him,โ said Meredith. โBecause of him at least we have until Foundersโ Day to do something about it. Why did you say it was supposed to be on Foundersโ Day, Elena?โ
โTyler has something against the Fells.โ โBut theyโre all dead,โ said Bonnie.
โWell, that doesnโt seem to matter to Tyler. I remember him talking about it in the graveyard, too, when we were looking at their tomb. He thinks they stole his ancestorsโ rightful place as the townโs founders or something.โ
โElena,โ Meredith said seriously, โis there anything else in the diary that could hurt Stefan? Besides the thing about the old man, I mean.โ
โIsnโt that enough?โ With those steady, dark eyes on her, Elena felt discomfort flutter between her ribs. What was Meredith asking?
โEnough to get Stefan run out of town like they said,โ agreed Bonnie.
โEnough that we have to get the diary back from Caroline,โ Elena said. โThe only question is, how?โ
โCaroline said she had it hidden somewhere safe. That probably means her house.โ Meredith chewed her lip thoughtfully. โSheโs got just the one brother in eighth grade, right? And her mom doesnโt work, but she goes shopping in Roanoke a lot. Do they still have a maid?โ
โWhy?โ said Bonnie. โWhat difference does it make?โ
โWell, we donโt want anybody walking in while weโre burglarizing the house.โ
โWhile weโreย what?โย Bonnieโs voice rose to a squeak. โYou canโt be serious!โ
โWhat are we supposed to do, just sit back and wait until Foundersโ Day, and let her read Elenaโs diary in front of the town?ย Sheย stole it fromย yourย house. Weโve just got to steal it back,โ Meredith said, maddeningly calm.
โWeโll get caught. Weโll get expelled from schoolโif we donโt end up going to jail.โ Bonnie turned to Elena in appeal. โTell her, Elena.โ
โWell โฆโ In all honesty, the prospect made Elena herself a little queasy. It wasnโt so much the idea of expulsion, or even jail, as just the thought of being caught in the act. Mrs. Forbesโs haughty face floated before her eyes, full of righteous indignation. Then it changed to Carolineโs, laughing spitefully as her mother pointed an accusing finger right at Elena.
Besides, it seemed such a โฆ aย violation,ย to go into someoneโs house when they were not there, to search their possessions. She would hate it if someone did that to her.
But, of course, someone had. Caroline had violated Bonnieโs house, and right now had Elenaโs most private possession in her hands.
โLetโs do it,โ Elena said quietly. โBut letโs be careful.โ
โCanโt we talk about this?โ said Bonnie weakly, looking from Meredithโs determined face to Elenaโs.
โThereโs nothing to talk about. Youโre coming,โ Meredith told her. โYou promised,โ she added, as Bonnie took a breath to object afresh. And she held up her index finger.
โThe blood oath was only to help Elenaย getย Stefan!โ Bonnie cried.
โThink again,โ said Meredith. โYou swore you would do whatever Elena asked in relation to Stefan. There wasnโt anything about a time limit or about โonly until Elena gets him.โโ
Bonnieโs mouth dropped open. She looked at Elena, who was almost laughing in spite of herself. โItโs true,โ Elena said solemnly. โAnd you said it yourself: โSwearing with blood means you have to stick to your oath no matter what happens.โโ
Bonnie shut her mouth and thrust her chin out. โRight,โ she said grimly. โNow Iโm stuck for the rest of my life doing whatever Elena wants me to do about Stefan. Wonderful.โ
โThis is the last thing Iโll ever ask,โ Elena said. โAndย Iย promise that. I swearโโ
โDonโt!โ said Meredith, suddenly serious. โDonโt, Elena. You might be sorry later.โ
โNow youโre taking up prophecy, too?โ Elena said. And then she asked, โSo how are we going to get hold of Carolineโs house key for an hour or so?โ
November 9, Saturday
Dear Diary,
Iโm sorry itโs been so long. Lately Iโve been too busy or too depressedโor bothโto write you.
Besides, with everything thatโs happened Iโm almost afraid to keep a diary at all anymore. But Iย needย someone to turn to, because right now thereโs not a single human being, not a single person on earth, that Iโm not keeping something from.
Bonnie and Meredith canโt know the truth about Stefan. Stefan canโt know the truth about Damon. Aunt Judith canโt know about anything. Bonnie and Meredith know about Caroline and the diary; Stefan doesnโt. Stefan knows about the vervain I use every day now; Bonnie and Meredith donโt. Even though Iโve given both of them sachets full of the stuร. One good thing: it seems to work, or at least I havenโt been sleepwalking again since that night. But it would be a lie to say I havenโt been dreaming about Damon. Heโs in all my nightmares.
My life is full of lies right now, and I needย someoneย to be completely honest with. Iโm going to hide this diary under the loose floorboard in the closet, so that no one will find it even if I drop dead and they clean out my room. Maybe one of Margaretโs grandchildren
will be playing in there someday, and will pry up the board and pull it out, but until then, nobody. This diary is my last secret.
I donโt know why Iโm thinking about death and dying. Thatโs Bonnieโs craze; sheโs the one who thinks it would be so romantic. I know what itโs really like; there was nothing romantic about it when Mom and Dad died. Just the worst feelings in the world. I want to live for a good long time, marry Stefan, and be happy. And thereโs no reason why I canโt, once all these problems are behind us.
Except that there are times when I get scared and I donโt believe that. And there are little things that shouldnโt matter, but they bother me. Like why Stefan still wears 7atherineโs ring around his neck, even though I know he loves me. Like why heโs never said he loves me, even though I know itโs true.
It doesnโt matter. Everything will work out. It has to work out. And then weโll be together and be happy. Thereโs no reason why we canโt. Thereโs no reason why we canโt. Thereโs no reason
Elena stopped writing, trying to keep the letters on the page in focus. But they only blurred further, and she shut the book before a betraying teardrop could fall on the ink. Then she went over to the closet, pried up the loose board with a nail file, and put the diary there.
She had the nail file in her pocket a week later as the three of them, she and Bonnie and Meredith, stood outside Carolineโs back door.
โHurry up,โ hissed Bonnie in agony, looking around the yard as if she expected something to jump out at them. โCome on, Meredith!โ
โThere,โ said Meredith, as the key finally went the right way into the dead bolt lock and the doorknob yielded to her turning fingers. โWeโre in.โ
โAre you sureย theyโreย not in? Elena, what if they come back early? Why couldnโt we do this in the daytime, at least?โ
โBonnie, will you getย inside?ย Weโve been through all this. The maidโs always here in the daytime. And they wonโt be back early tonight unless somebody gets sick at Chez Louis. Now, come on!โ said Elena.
โNobody would dare to get sick at Mr. Forbesโs birthday dinner,โ Meredith said comfortingly to Bonnie as the smaller girl stepped in. โWeโre safe.โ
โIf theyโve got enough money to go to expensive restaurants, youโd think they could afford to leave a few lights on,โ said Bonnie, refusing to be comforted.
Privately, Elena agreed with this. It was strange and disconcerting to be wandering through someone elseโs house in the dark, and her heart pounded chokingly as they went up the stairs. Her palm, clutching the key chain flashlight that showed the way, was wet and slippery. But in spite of these physical symptoms of panic, her mind was still operating coolly, almost with detachment.
โItโs got to be in her bedroom,โ she said.
Carolineโs window faced the street, which meant they had to be even more careful not to show a light there. Elena swung the tiny beam of the flashlight around with a feeling of dismay. It was one thing to plan to search someoneโs room, to picture e ciently and methodically going through drawers. It was another thing actually to be standing here, surrounded by what seemed like thousands of places to hide something, and feeling afraid to touch anything in case Caroline noticed it had been disturbed.
The other two girls were also standing still.
โMaybe we should just go home,โ Bonnie said quietly. And Meredith did not contradict her.
โWe have to try. At least try,โ said Elena, hearing how tinny and hollow her voice sounded. She eased open a drawer on the highboy and shone the light onto dainty piles of lacy underwear. A momentโs poking through them assured her there was nothing like a book there. She straightened the piles and shut the drawer again. Then she let out her breath.
โItโs not that hard,โ she said. โWhat we need to do is divide up the room and then searchย everythingย in our section, every drawer, every piece of furniture, every object big enough to hide a diary in.โ
She assigned herself the closet, and the first thing she did was prod at the floorboards with her nail file. But Carolineโs boards all seemed to be secure and the walls of the closet sounded solid. Rummaging through Carolineโs clothes she found several things sheโd lent the other girl last year. She was tempted to take them back, but of course she couldnโt. A search of Carolineโs shoes and purses revealed nothing, even when she dragged a chair over so that she could investigate the top shelf of the closet thoroughly.
Meredith was sitting on the floor examining a pile of stuffed animals that had been relegated to a chest with other childish mementos. She ran her long sensitive fingers over each, checking for slits in the material. When she reached a fluffy poodle, she paused.
โI gave this to her,โ she whispered. โI think for her tenth birthday. I thought sheโd thrown it away.โ
Elena couldnโt see her eyes; Meredithโs own flashlight was turned on the poodle. But she knew how Meredith was feeling.
โI tried to make up with her,โ she said softly. โI did, Meredith, at the Haunted House. But she as good as told me she would never forgive me for taking Stefan from her. I wish things could be different, but she wonโt let them be.โ
โSo now itโs war.โ
โSo now itโs war,โ said Elena, flat and final. She watched as Meredith put the poodle aside and picked up the next animal. Then she turned back to her own search.
But she had no better luck with the dresser than she had with the closet. And with every moment that passed she felt more uneasy, more certain that they were about to hear a car pulling into the Forbesesโ driveway.
โItโs no use,โ Meredith said at last, feeling underneath Carolineโs mattress. โShe must have hidden it โฆ wait. Thereโs something here. I can feel a corner.โ
Elena and Bonnie stared from opposite ends of the room, momentarily frozen.
โIโve got it. Elena, itโs a diary!โ
Relief swooped through Elena then, and she felt like a crumpled piece of paper being straightened and smoothed. She could move again. Breathing was wonderful. Sheโd known, sheโd known all along that nothingย reallyย terrible could happen to Stefan. Life couldnโt be that cruel, not to Elena Gilbert. They were all safe now.
But Meredithโs voice was puzzled. โItโs a diary. But itโs green, not blue. Itโs the wrong one.โ
“What?โย Elena snatched the little book, shining her light on it, trying to make the emerald green of the cover change into sapphire blue. It didnโt work. This diary was almost exactly like hers, but it wasnโt hers.
โItโs Carolineโs,โ she said stupidly, still not wanting to believe
it.
Bonnie and Meredith crowded close. They all looked at the
closed book, and then at one another. โThere might be clues,โ said Elena slowly.
โItโs only fair,โ agreed Meredith. But it was Bonnie who actually took the diary and opened it.
Elena peered over her shoulder at Carolineโs spiky back-slanted writing, so different from the block letters of the purple notes. At first her eyes wouldnโt focus, but then a name leapt out at her.ย Elena.
โWait, whatโs that?โ
Bonnie, who was the only one actually in a position to read more than one or two words, was silent a moment, her lips moving. Then she snorted.
โListen to this,โ she said and read: โโElenaโs the most selfish person Iโve ever known. Everyone thinks sheโs so together, but itโs really just coldness. Itโs sickening the way people suck up to her, never realizing that she doesnโt give a damn about anyone or anything except Elena.โโ
“Carolineย says that? She should talk!โ But Elena could feel heat in her face. It was, practically, what Matt had said about her when she was after Stefan.
โGo on, thereโs more,โ said Meredith, poking at Bonnie, who continued in an offended voice.
โโBonnieโs almost as bad these days, always trying to make herself important. The newest thing is pretending sheโs psychic so people will pay attention to her. If she wasย reallyย psychic sheโd figure out that Elena is just using her.โโ
There was a heavy pause, and then Elena said, โIs that all?โ โNo, thereโs a bit about Meredith. โMeredith doesnโt do
anything to stop it. In fact, Meredith doesnโtย doย anything; she just watches. Itโs as if she canโt act; she can only react to things. Besides, Iโve heard my parents talking about her familyโno wonder she never mentions them.โ Whatโs that supposed to mean?โ
Meredith hadnโt moved, and Elena could see only her neck and chin in the dim light. But she spoke quietly and steadily. โIt doesnโt matter. Keep on looking, Bonnie, for something about Elenaโs diary.โ
โTry around October eighteenth. That was when it was stolen,โ said Elena, putting her questions aside. Sheโd ask Meredith about it later.
There was no entry for October eighteenth or the weekend after; in fact, there were only a few entries for the following weeks. None of them mentioned the diary.
โWell, thatโs it then,โ said Meredith, sitting back. โThis book is useless. Unless we want to blackmailย herย with it. You know, like we wonโt show hers if she wonโt show yours.โ
It was a tempting idea, but Bonnie spotted the flaw. โThereโs nothing bad about Caroline in here; itโs all just complaints about other people. Mostly us. Iโll bet Caroline wouldย loveย to have it read out loud in front of the whole school. Itโd make her day.โ
โSo what do we do with it?โ
โPut it back,โ said Elena tiredly. She swung her light around the room, which seemed to her eyes to be filled with subtle
differences from when theyโd come in. โWeโll just have to keep on pretending we donโt know she has my diary, and hope for another chance.โ
โAll right,โ said Bonnie, but she went on thumbing through the little book, occasionally giving vent to an indignant snort or hiss. โWill you listen to this!โ she exclaimed.
โThere isnโt time,โ Elena said. She would have said something else, but at that moment Meredith spoke, her tone commanding everyoneโs immediate attention.
โA car.โ
It took only a second to ascertain that the vehicle was pulling up into the Forbesesโ driveway. Bonnieโs eyes and mouth were wide and round and she seemed to be paralyzed, kneeling by the bed.
โGo! Go on,โ said Elena, snatching the diary from her. โTurn the flashlights off and get out the back door.โ
They were already moving, Meredith urging Bonnie forward. Elena dropped to her knees and lifted the bedspread, pulling up at Carolineโs mattress. With her other hand she pushed the diary forward, wedging it between the mattress and the dust rume. The thinly covered box springs bit into her arm from below, but even worse was the weight of the queen-size mattress bearing down from above. She gave the book a few more nudges with her fingertips and then pulled her arm out, tugging the bedspread back in place.
She gave one wild glance back at the room as she left; there was no time to fix anything more now. As she moved swiftly and silently toward the stairs, she heard a key in the front door.
What followed was a sort of dreadful game of tag. Elena knew they were not deliberately chasing her, but the Forbes family seemed determined to corner her in their house. She turned back the way she had come as voices and lights materialized in the hall as they headed up the stairs. She fled from them into the last doorway down the hall, and they seemed to follow. They moved across the landing; they were right outside the master bedroom.
She turned toward the adjoining bathroom, but then saw lights spring to life under the closed door, cutting off her escape.
She was trapped. At any moment Carolineโs parents might come in. She saw the french windows leading to a balcony and made her decision in that same instant.
Outside, the air was cool, and her panting breath showed faintly. Yellow light burst forth from the room beside her, and she huddled even farther to the left, keeping out of its path. Then, the sound she had been dreading came with terrible clarity: the snick of a door handle, followed by a billowing of curtains inward as the french windows opened.
She looked around frantically. It was too far to jump to the ground, and there was nothing to grab hold of to climb down. That left only the roof, but there was nothing to climb up, either. Still, some instinct made her try, and she was on the balcony railing and groping for a handhold above even as a shadow appeared on the filmy curtains. A hand parted them, a figure began to emerge, and then Elena felt something clasping her own hand, locking on her wrist and hauling her upwards. Automatically she boosted with her feet and felt herself scrambling onto the shingled roof. Trying to calm her ragged breath, she looked over gratefully to see who her rescuer wasโ and froze.