best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 4

The Struggle (The Vampire Diaries 2)

“But he’s got to have a doctor. He looks like he’s dying!” said Bonnie.

“He can’t. I can’t explain right now. Let’s just get him home, all right? He’s wet and freezing out here. Then we can discuss it.”

The job of getting Stefan through the woods was enough to occupy everyone’s mind for a while. He remained unconscious, and when they finally laid him out in the backseat of Matt’s car they were all bruised and exhausted, in addition to being wet from the contact with his soaking clothes. Elena held his head in her lap as they drove to the boarding house. Meredith and Bonnie followed.

“I see lights on,” Matt said, pulling in front of the large rust-red building. “She must be awake. But the door’s probably locked.”

Elena gently eased Stefan’s head down and slipped out of the car, and saw one of the windows in the house brighten as a curtain was pushed aside. Then she saw a head and shoulders appear at the window, looking down.

“Mrs. Flowers!” she called, waving. “It’s Elena Gilbert, Mrs.

Flowers. We’ve found Stefan, and we need to get in!”

The figure at the window did not move or otherwise acknowledge her words. Yet from its posture, Elena could tell it was still looking down on them.

“Mrs. Flowers, we have Stefan,” she called again, gesturing to the lighted interior of the car. “Please!”

“Elena! It’s unlocked already!” Bonnie’s voice floated to her from the front porch, distracting Elena from the figure at the window. When she looked back up, she saw the curtains falling into place, and then the light in that upstairs room snapped off.

It was strange, but she had no time to puzzle over it. She and Meredith helped Matt lift Stefan and carry him up the front steps.

Inside, the house was dark and still. Elena directed the others up the staircase that stood opposite the door, and onto the second-floor landing. From there they went into a bedroom, and Elena had Bonnie open the door of what looked like a closet. It revealed another stairway, very dim and narrow.

“Who would leave their—front door unlocked—after all that’s happened recently?” Matt grunted as they hauled their lifeless burden. “She must be crazy.”

“She is crazy,” Bonnie said from above, pushing the door at the top of the staircase open. “Last time we were here she talked about the weirdest—” Her voice broke off in a gasp.

“What is it?” said Elena. But as they reached the threshold of Stefan’s room, she saw for herself.

She’d forgotten the condition the room had been in the last time she’d seen it. Trunks filled with clothing were upended or lying on their sides, as if they’d been thrown by some giant hand from wall to wall. Their contents were strewn about the floor, along with articles from the dresser and tables. Furniture was overturned, and a window was broken, allowing a cold wind to blow in. There was only one lamp on, in a corner, and grotesque shadows loomed against the ceiling.

“What happened?” said Matt.

Elena didn’t answer until they had stretched Stefan out on the bed. “I don’t know for certain,” she said, and this was true, if just barely. “But it was already this way last night. Matt, will you help me? He needs to get dry.”

“I’ll find another lamp,” said Meredith, but Elena spoke quickly.

“No, we can see all right. Why don’t you try to get a fire going?”

Spilling from one of the gaping trunks was a terry cloth robe of some dark color. Elena took it, and she and Matt began to strip off Stefan’s wet and clinging clothes. She worked on getting his

sweater off, but one glimpse of his neck was enough to freeze her in place.

“Matt, could you—could you hand me that towel?”

As soon as he turned, she tugged the sweater over Stefan’s head and quickly wrapped the robe around him. When Matt turned back and handed her the towel, she wound it around Stefan’s throat like a scarf. Her pulse was racing, her mind working furiously.

No wonder he was so weak, so lifeless. Oh, God. She had to examine him, to see how bad it was. But how could she, with Matt and the others here?

“I’m going to get a doctor,” Matt said in a tight voice, his eyes on Stefan’s face. “He needs help, Elena.”

Elena panicked. “Matt, no … please. He—he’s afraid of doctors. I don’t know what would happen if you brought one here.” Again, it was the truth, if not the whole truth. She had an idea of what might help Stefan, but she couldn’t do it with the others there. She bent over Stefan, rubbing his hands between her own, trying to think.

What could she do? Protect Stefan’s secret at the cost of his life? Or betray him in order to save him? Would it save him to tell Matt and Bonnie and Meredith? She looked at her friends, trying to picture their response if they were to learn the truth about Stefan Salvatore.

It was no good. She couldn’t risk it. The shock and horror of the discovery had nearly sent Elena herself reeling into madness. If she, who loved Stefan, had been ready to run from him screaming, what would these three do? And then there was Mr. Tanner’s murder. If they knew what Stefan was, would they ever be able to believe him innocent? Or, in their heart of hearts, would they always suspect him?

Elena shut her eyes. It was just too dangerous. Meredith and Bonnie and Matt were her friends, but this was one thing she couldn’t share with them. In all the world, there was no one she could trust with this secret. She would have to keep it alone.

She straightened up and looked at Matt. “He’s afraid of doctors but a nurse might be all right.” She turned to where Bonnie and Meredith were kneeling before the fireplace. “Bonnie, what about your sister?”

“Mary?” Bonnie glanced at her watch. “She has the late shift at the clinic this week, but she’s probably home by now. Only—”

“Then that’s it. Matt, you go with Bonnie and ask Mary to come here and look at Stefan. If she thinks he needs a doctor, I won’t argue anymore.”

Matt hesitated, then exhaled sharply. “All right. I still think you’re wrong, but—let’s go, Bonnie. We’re going to break some tra c laws.”

As they went to the door, Meredith remained standing by the fireplace, watching Elena with steady dark eyes.

Elena made herself meet them. “Meredith … I think you should all go.”

“Do you?” Those dark eyes remained on hers unwaveringly, as if trying to pierce through and read her mind. But Meredith did not ask any other questions. After a moment she nodded, and followed Matt and Bonnie without a word.

When Elena heard the door at the bottom of the staircase close, she hastily righted a lamp that lay overturned by the bedside and plugged it in. Now, at last, she could take stock of Stefan’s injuries.

His color seemed worse than before; he was literally almost as white as the sheets below him. His lips were white, too, and Elena suddenly thought of Thomas Fell, the founder of Fell’s Church. Or, rather, of Thomas Fell’s statue, lying beside his wife’s on the stone lid of their tomb. Stefan was the color of that marble.

The cuts and gashes on his hands showed livid purple, but they were no longer bleeding. She gently turned his head to look at his neck.

And there it was. She touched the side of her own neck automatically, as if to verify the resemblance. But Stefan’s marks were not small punctures. They were deep, savage tears in the

flesh. He looked as if he had been mauled by some animal that had tried to rip out his throat.

White-hot anger blazed through Elena again. And with it, hatred. She realized that despite her disgust and fury, she had not really hated Damon before. Not really. But now … now, she hated. She loathed him with an intensity of emotion that she had never felt for anyone else in her life. She wanted to hurt him to make him pay. If she’d had a wooden stake at that moment, she would have hammered it through Damon’s heart without regret.

But just now she had to think of Stefan. He was so terrifyingly still. That was the hardest thing to bear, the lack of purpose or resistance in his body, the emptiness. That was it. It was as if he had vacated this form and left her with an empty vessel.

“Stefan!” Shaking him did nothing. With one hand on the center of his cold chest, she tried to detect a heartbeat. If there was one, it was too faint to feel.

Keep calm, Elena, she told herself, pushing back the part of her mind that wanted to panic. The part that was saying, “What if he’s dead? What if he’s really dead, and nothing you can do will save him?”

Glancing about the room, she saw the broken window. Shards of glass lay on the floor beneath it. She went over and picked one up, noting how it sparkled in the firelight. A pretty thing, with an edge like a razor, she thought. Then, deliberately, setting her teeth, she cut her finger with it.

The pain made her gasp. After an instant, blood began welling out of the cut, dripping down her finger like wax down a candlestick. Quickly, she knelt by Stefan and put her finger to his lips.

With her other hand, she clasped his unresponsive one, feeling the hardness of the silver ring he wore. Motionless as a statue herself, she knelt there and waited.

She almost missed the first tiny flicker of response. Her eyes were fixed on his face, and she caught the minute lifting of his chest only in her peripheral vision. But then the lips beneath her finger quivered and parted slightly, and he swallowed reflexively.

“That’s it,” Elena whispered. “Come on, Stefan.”

His eyelashes fluttered, and with dawning joy she felt his fingers return the pressure of hers. He swallowed again.

“Yes.” She waited until his eyes blinked and slowly opened before sitting back. Then she fumbled one-handed with the high neck of her sweater, folding it out of the way.

Those green eyes were dazed and heavy, but as stubborn as she had ever seen them. “No,” Stefan said, his voice a cracked whisper.

“You have to, Stefan. The others are coming back and bringing a nurse with them. I had to agree to that. And if you’re not well enough to convince her you don’t need a hospital …” She left the sentence unfinished. She herself didn’t know what a doctor or lab technician would find examining Stefan. But she knew he knew, and that it made him afraid.

But Stefan only looked more obstinate, turning his face away from her. “Can’t,” he whispered. “It’s too dangerous. Already took

… too much … last night.”

Could it have been only last night? It seemed a year ago. “Will it kill me?” she asked. “Stefan, answer me! Will it kill me?”

“No …” His voice was sullen. “But—”

“Then we have to do it. Don’t argue with me!” Bending over him, holding his hand in hers, Elena could feel his overpowering need. She was amazed that he was even trying to resist. It was like a starving man standing before a banquet, unable to take his eyes from the steaming dishes, but refusing to eat.

“No,” Stefan said again, and Elena felt frustration surge through her. He was the only person she’d ever met who was as stubborn as she was.

“Yes. And if you won’t cooperate I’ll cut something else, like my wrist.” She had been pressing her finger into the sheet to staunch the blood; now she held it up to him.

His pupils dilated, his lips parted. “Too much … already,” he murmured, but his gaze remained on her finger, on the bright drop of blood at the tip. “And I can’t … control …”

“It’s all right,” she whispered. She drew the finger across his lips again, feeling them open to take it in; then, she leaned over him and shut her eyes.

His mouth was cool and dry as it touched her throat. His hand cupped the back of her neck as his lips sought the two little punctures already there. Elena willed herself not to recoil at the brief sting of pain. Then she smiled.

Before, she had felt his agonizing need, his driving hunger. Now, through the bond they shared, she felt only fierce joy and satisfaction. Deep satisfaction as the hunger was gradually assuaged.

Her own pleasure came from giving, from knowing that she was sustaining Stefan with her own life. She could sense the strength flowing into him.

In time, she felt the intensity of the need lessen. Still, it was by no means gone, and she could not understand when Stefan tried to push her away.

“That’s enough,” he grated, forcing her shoulders up. Elena opened her eyes, her dreamy pleasure broken. His own eyes were green as mandrake leaves, and in his face she saw the fierce hunger of the predator.

“It isn’t enough. You’re still weak—”

“It’s enough for you.” He pushed at her again, and she saw something like desperation spark in those green eyes. “Elena, if I take much more, you will begin to change. And if you don’t move away, if you don’t move away from me right now …”

Elena withdrew to the foot of the bed. She watched him sit up and adjust the dark robe. In the lamplight, she saw that his skin had regained some color, a slight flush glazing its pallor. His hair was drying into a tumbled sea of dark waves.

“I missed you,” she said softly. Relief throbbed within her suddenly, an ache that was almost as bad as the fear and tension had been. Stefan was alive; he was talking to her. Everything was going to be all right after all.

“Elena …” Their eyes met and she was held by green fire. Unconsciously, she moved toward him, and then stopped as he

laughed aloud.

“I’ve never seen you look like this before,” he said, and she looked down at herself. Her shoes and jeans were caked with red mud, which was also liberally smeared over the rest of her. Her jacket was torn and leaking its down stu ng. She had no doubt that her face was smudged and dirty, and she knew her hair was tangled and straggly. Elena Gilbert, immaculate fashion plate of Robert E. Lee, was a mess.

“I like it,” Stefan said, and this time she laughed with him.

They were still laughing as the door opened. Elena stiffened alertly, twitching at her turtle-neck, glancing around the room for evidence that might betray them. Stefan sat up straighter and licked his lips.

“He’s better!” Bonnie caroled out as she stepped into the room and saw Stefan. Matt and Meredith were right behind her, and their faces lit with surprise and pleasure. The fourth person who came in was only a little older than Bonnie, but she had an air of brisk authority that belied her youth. Mary McCullough went straight over to her patient and reached for his pulse.

“So you’re the one afraid of doctors,” she said.

Stefan looked disconcerted for a moment; then, he recovered. “It’s sort of a childhood phobia,” he said, sounding embarrassed. He glanced sideways at Elena, who smiled nervously and gave a tiny nod. “Anyway, I don’t need one now, as you can see.”

“Why don’t you let me be the judge of that? Your pulse is all right. In fact, it’s surprisingly slow, even for an athlete. I don’t think you’re hypothermic, but you’re still chilled. Let’s get a temperature.”

“No, I really don’t think that’s necessary.” Stefan’s voice was low, calming. Elena had heard him use that voice before, and she knew what he was trying to do. But Mary took not the slightest notice.

“Open up, please.”

“Here, I’ll do it,” said Elena quickly, reaching to take the thermometer from Mary. Somehow, as she did so, the little glass

tube slipped out of her hand. It fell to the hardwood floor and smashed into several pieces. “Oh, I’m sorry!”

“It doesn’t matter,” Stefan said. “I’m feeling much better than I was, and I’m getting warmer all the time.”

Mary regarded the mess on the floor, then looked around the room, taking in its ransacked state. “All right,” she demanded, turning around with hands on hips. “What’s been going on here?”

Stefan didn’t even blink. “Nothing much. Mrs. Flowers is just a terrible housekeeper,” he said, looking her straight in the eye.

Elena wanted to laugh, and she saw that Mary did, too. The older girl grimaced and crossed her arms over her chest instead. “I suppose it’s useless to hope for a straight answer,” she said. “And it’s clear you’re not dangerously ill. I can’t make you go to the clinic. But I’d strongly suggest you get a checkup tomorrow.”

“Thank you,” said Stefan, which, Elena noticed, was not the same as agreeing.

“Elena, you look as if you could use a doctor,” said Bonnie. “You’re white as a ghost.”

“I’m just tired,” Elena said. “It’s been a long day.”

“My advice is to go home and go to bed—and stay there,” Mary said. “You’re not anemic, are you?”

Elena resisted the impulse to put a hand to her cheek. Was she so pale? “No, I’m just tired,” she repeated. “We can go home now, if Stefan’s all right.”

He nodded reassuringly, the message in his eyes for her alone. “Give us a minute, will you?” he said to Mary and the others, and they stepped back to the staircase.

“Good-bye. Take care of yourself,” Elena said aloud as she hugged him. She whispered, “Why didn’t you use your Powers on Mary?”

“I did,” he said grimly in her ear. “Or at least I tried. I must still be weak. Don’t worry; it’ll pass.”

“Of course, it will,” said Elena, but her stomach lurched. “Are you sure you should be alone, though? What if—”

“I’ll be fine. You’re the one who shouldn’t be alone.” Stefan’s voice was soft but urgent. “Elena, I didn’t get a chance to warn you. You were right about Damon being in Fell’s Church.”

“I know. He did this to you, didn’t he?” Elena didn’t mention that she’d gone searching for him.

“I—don’t remember. But he’s dangerous. Keep Bonnie and Meredith with you tonight, Elena. I don’t want you alone. And make sure no one invites a stranger into your house.”

“We’re going straight to bed,” Elena promised, smiling at him. “We won’t be inviting anybody in.”

“Make sure of it.” There was no flippancy in his tone at all, and she nodded slowly.

“I understand, Stefan. We’ll be careful.”

“Good.” They kissed, a mere brushing of lips, but their joined hands separated only reluctantly. “Tell the others ‘thank you,’” he said.

“I will.”

The five of them regrouped outside the boarding house, Matt offering to drive Mary home so Bonnie and Meredith could go back with Elena. Mary was still clearly suspicious about the night’s goings-on, and Elena couldn’t blame her. She also couldn’t think. She was too tired.

“He said to say ‘thanks’ to all of you,” she remembered after Matt had left.

“He’s … welcome,” Bonnie said, splitting the words with an enormous yawn as Meredith opened the car door for her.

Meredith said nothing. She had been very quiet since leaving Elena alone with Stefan.

Bonnie laughed suddenly. “One thing we all forgot about,” she said. “The prophecy.”

“What prophecy?” said Elena.

“About the bridge. The one you say I said. Well, you went to the bridge and Death wasn’t waiting there after all. Maybe you misunderstood the words.”

“No,” said Meredith. “We heard the words correctly all right.”

“Well, then, maybe it’s another bridge. Or … mmm …” Bonnie snuggled down in her coat, shutting her eyes, and didn’t bother to finish.

But Elena’s mind completed the sentence for her. Or another time.

An owl hooted outside as Meredith started the car.

You'll Also Like