Henry trails her through the apartment as she gets ready. โWhy would you agree to this?โ he asks.
Because she knows the darkness better than anyone, knows his mind if not his heart.
โBecause I donโt want to lose you,โ says Addie, pulling up her hair. Henry looks tired, hollowed out. โItโs too late,โ he says.
But itโs not too late. Not yet.
Addie reaches into her pocket and feels the ring where it always is, waiting, the wood warm from being pressed against her body. She draws it out, but Henry catches her hand.
โDonโt do this,โ he pleads.
โDo you want to die?โ she asks, the words cutting through the room. He pulls back a little at the words. โNo. But I made a choice, Addie.โ โYou made a mistake.โ
โI made aย deal,โ he says. โAnd Iโm sorry. Iโm sorry I didnโt ask for more time. Iโm sorry I didnโt tell you the truth sooner. But it is what it is.โ
Addie shakes her head. โYou may have made peace with this, Henry, but I havenโt.โ
โThis wonโt work,โ he warns. โYou canโt reason with him.โ
Addie tugs free of his grip. โIโm willing to try,โ she says, slipping the ring over her finger.
There is no flood of darkness.
Only a stillness, a vacant quiet, and thenโ A knock.
And she is grateful that at least he didnโt invite himself in. But Henry stands between her and the door, his hands braced across the narrow hall. He doesnโt move, his eyes pleading. Addie reaches up and cups his face.
โI need you to trust me,โ she says.
Something cracks in him. One hand drops from the frame.
She kisses him, and then she slides by, and opens the door for the dark. โAdeline.โ
Luc should look out of place in the buildingโs hall, but he never does.
The lights on the walls have dimmed a little, softened to a yellow haze that haloes the black curls around his face, and catches slivers of gold in his green eyes.
He is dressed in all black, tailored slacks and a button-down shirt, the sleeves rolled to the elbows, an emerald pin driven through the silk tie at his throat.
It is far too hot for such an outfit, but Luc doesnโt seem to mind. The heat, like the rain, like the world itself, seems to have no hold on him.
He does not tell her she looks beautiful. He does not tell her anything.
He simply turns, expecting her to follow.
And as she steps into the hall, he looks to Henry. And winks. Addie should have stopped right there.
She should have turned around, let Henry pull her back inside. They should have shut the door, and bolted it against the dark.
But they didnโt.
They donโt.
Addie glances back over her shoulder at Henry, who lingers in the doorway, a cloud shadowing his face. She wills him to close the door, but he doesnโt, and she has no choice but to step away, and follow Luc as Henry watches.
Downstairs, he holds open the buildingโs door, but Addie stops. Looks down at the threshold. Darkness coils in the frame, shimmers between them and the steps down to the street.
She doesnโt trust the shadows, she canโt see where they lead, and the last thing she needs is for Luc to strand her in some far-off land if and when the night goes bad.
โThere are rules tonight,โ she says.
โOh?โ
โI wonโt leave the city,โ she says, nodding at the door. โAnd I wonโt go that way.โ
โThrough a door?โ โThrough the dark.โ
Lucโs brows draw up. โDonโt you trust me?โ
โI never have,โ she says. โThereโs no use starting now.โ
Luc laughs, soft and soundless, and steps outside to hail a car. Seconds later, a sleek black sedan pulls up to the curb. He holds out his hand to help her in. She doesnโt take it.
He does not give the driver an address. The driver does not ask for one.
And when Addie asks where they are going, Luc does not answer. Soon they are on the Manhattan Bridge.
The silence between them should be awkward. The halting conversation of exes too long apart, and still not long enough to have forgiven anything.
What is forty years against three hundred? But this is a silence born of strategy.
This is the silence of a chess game being played. And this time, Addie has to win.