September 26
Dear Diary,
Iโm sorry itโs been so long, and I canโt really explain why I havenโt writtenโexcept that there are so many things I feel frightened to talk about, even to you.
First, the most terrible thing happened. The day that Bonnie and Meredith and I were at the cemetery, an old man was attacked there, and almost killed. The police still havenโt found the person who did it. People think the old man was crazy, because when he woke up he started raving about โeyes in the darkโ and oak trees and things. But I remember what happened to us that night, and I wonder. It scares me.
Everyone was scared for a while, and all the kids had to stay inside after dark or go out in groups. But itโs been about three weeks now, and no more attacks, so the excitement is dying down. Aunt Judith says it must have been another vagrant that did it. Tyler Smallwoodโs father even suggested that the old man might have done it to himselfโthough I would like to see somebody bite himself in the throat.
But mostly what Iโve been busy with is Plan B. As far as it goes, itโs been going well. Iโve gotten several letters and a bouquet of red roses from โJean-Claudeโ (Meredithโs uncle is a florist), and everybody seems to have forgotten that I was ever interested in Stefan. So my social positionโs secure. Even Caroline hasnโt been making any trouble.
In fact, I donโt know what Caroline is doing these days, and I donโt care. I never see her at lunch or after school anymore; she seems to have drawn away from her old crowd completely.
Thereโs only one thing I do care about right now. Stefan.
Even Bonnie and Meredith donโt realize how important he is to me. Iโm afraid to tell them; Iโm afraid theyโll think Iโm crazy. At school I wear a mask of calm and control, but on the insideโwell, every day it just gets worse.
Aunt Judith has started to worry about me. She says I donโt eat enough these days, and sheโs right. I canโt seem to concentrate on my classes, or even on anything fun like the Haunted House fund-raiser. I canโt concentrate on anything but him. And I donโt even understand why.
He hasnโt spoken to me since that horrible afternoon. But Iโll tell you something strange. Last week in history class, I glanced up and caught him looking at me. We were sitting a few seats apart, and he was turned completely sideways in his desk, just looking. For a moment I felt almost frightened, and my heart started pounding, and we just stared at each otherโand then he looked away. But since then itโs happened twice more, and each time I felt his eyes on me before I saw them. This is the literal truth. I know itโs not my imagination.
He isnโt like any boy Iโve ever known.
He seems so isolated, so lonely. Even though itโs his own choice. Heโs made quite a hit on the football team, but he doesnโt hang around with any of the guys, except maybe Matt. Mattโs the only one he talks to. He doesnโt hang around with any girls, either, that I can see, so maybe the narc rumor is doing some good. But itโs more like heโs avoiding other people than theyโre avoiding him. He disappears in between classes and after football practice, and Iโve never once seen him in the cafeteria. Heโs never invited anybody to his room at the boarding house. He never visits the coffee shop after school.
So how can I ever get him someplace where he canโt run from me? This is the real problem with Plan B. Bonnie says, โWhy not get stuck in a thunderstorm with him, so you have to huddle together to conserve body warmth?โ And Meredith suggested that my car could break down in front of the boarding house. But neither of those ideas is practical, and Iโm going insane trying to come up with something better.
Every day itโs getting worse for me. I feel as if I were a clock or something, winding up tighter and tighter. If I donโt find something to do soon, Iโllโ
I was going to say โdie.โ
The solution came to her quite suddenly and simply.
She felt sorry about Matt; she knew heโd been hurt by the Jean-Claude rumor. Heโd hardly spoken to her since the story had broken, usually passing her with a quick nod. And when she ran into him one day in an empty hall outside of Creative Writing, he wouldnโt meet her eyes.
โMattโโ she began. She wanted to tell him that it wasnโt true, that she would never have started seeing another boy without telling him first. She wanted to tell him that sheโd never meant to hurt him, and that she felt terrible now. But she didnโt know how to begin. Finally, she just blurted out, โIโm sorry!โ and turned to go into class.
โElena,โ he said, and she turned back. He was looking at her now, at least, his eyes lingering on her lips, her hair. Then he shook his head as if to say the joke was on him. โIs this French guy for real?โ he finally demanded.
โNo,โ said Elena immediately and without hesitation. โI made him up,โ she added simply, โto show everybody I wasnโt upset aboutโโ She broke off.
โAbout Stefan. I get it.โ Matt nodded, looking both grimmer and somewhat more understanding. โLook, Elena, thatย wasย pretty lousy of him. But I donโt think he meant it personally. Heโs that way with everybodyโโ
โExcept you.โ
โNo. He talks to me, sometimes, but not about anything personal. He never says anything about his family or what he does outside of school. Itโs likeโlike thereโs a wall around him that I canโt get through. I donโt think heโll ever let anybody get through that wall. Which is a damn shame, because I think that behind it heโs miserable.โ
Elena pondered this, fascinated by a view of Stefan sheโd never considered before. He always seemed so controlled, so calm and undisturbed. But then, she knew she seemed that way herself to other people. Was it possible that underneath he was as confused and unhappy as she was?
It was then that the idea came, and it was ridiculously simple. No complicated schemes, no thunderstorms or cars breaking down.
โMatt,โ she said slowly, โdonโt you think it would be a good thing if somebody did get behind that wall? A good thing for Stefan, I mean? Donโt you think that would be the best thing that could happen to him?โ She looked up at him intensely, willing him to understand.
He stared at her a moment, then shut his eyes briefly and shook his head in disbelief. โElena,โ he said, โyou are incredible. You twist people around your little finger, and I donโt think you even know youโre doing it. And now youโre going to ask me to do something to help you ambush Stefan, and Iโm such a dumb sucker I might even agree to do it.โ
โYouโre not dumb, youโre a gentleman. And I do want to ask you a favor, but only if you think itโs right. I donโt want to hurt Stefan, and I donโt want to hurt you.โ
โDonโt you?โ
โNo.ย I know how that must sound, but itโs true. I only wantโโ She broke off again. How could she explain what she wanted when she didnโt even understand it herself?
โYou only want everybody and everything revolving around Elena Gilbert,โ he said bitterly. โYou only want everything you donโt have.โ
Shocked, she stepped back and looked at him. Her throat swelled, and warmth gathered in her eyes.
โDonโt,โ he said. โElena, donโt look like that. Iโm sorry.โ He sighed. โAll right, what is it Iโm supposed to do? Hog-tie him and dump him on your doorstep?โ
โNo,โ said Elena, still trying to make the tears go back where they belonged. โI only wanted you to get him to come to the Homecoming Dance next week.โ
Mattโs expression was odd. โYou just want him to be at the dance.โ Elena nodded.
โAll right. Iโm pretty sure heโll be there. And, Elena โฆ there really isnโt anybody but you I want to take.โ
โAll right,โ said Elena after a moment. โAnd, well, thank you.โ
Mattโs expression was still peculiar. โDonโt thank me, Elena. Itโs nothing โฆ really.โ She was puzzling over that when he turned away and walked down the hall.
โHold still,โ said Meredith, giving Elenaโs hair a reproving twitch.
โI still think,โ said Bonnie from the window seat, โthat they were both wonderful.โ
โWho?โ Elena murmured absently.
โAs if you didnโt know,โ said Bonnie. โThose two guys of yours who pulled off the last-minute miracle at the game yesterday. When Stefan caught that last pass, I thought I was going to faint. Or throw up.โ
โOh,ย please,โย said Meredith.
โAnd Mattโthat boy is simply poetry in motionโฆ.โ
โAnd neither of them is mine,โ Elena said flatly. Under Meredithโs expert fingers, her hair was becoming a work of art, a soft mass of twisted gold. And the dress was all right; the iced-violet color brought
out the violet in her eyes. But even to herself she looked pale and steely, not softly flushed with excitement, but white and determined, like a very young soldier being sent to the front lines.
Standing on the football field yesterday when her name was announced as Homecoming Queen, she had had only one thought in her mind. Heย couldnโtย refuse to dance with her. If he came to the dance at all, he couldnโt refuse the Homecoming Queen. And standing in front of the mirror now, she said it to herself again.
โTonight anyone you want will be yours,โ Bonnie was saying soothingly. โAnd, listen, when you get rid of Matt, can I take him off and comfort him?โ
Meredith snorted. โWhatโs Raymond going to think?โ
โOh,ย youย can comfortย him.ย But, really, Elena, I like Matt. And once you home in on Stefan, your threesome is going to get a little crowded. So โฆโ
โOh, do whatever you want. Matt deserves some consideration.โ Heโs certainly not getting it from me, Elena thought. She still couldnโt exactly believe what she was doing to him. But just now she couldnโt afford to second-guess herself; she needed all her strength and concentration.
โThere.โ Meredith put the last pin in Elenaโs hair. โNow look at us, the Homecoming Queen and her courtโor part of it, anyway. Weโre beautiful.โ
โIs that the royal โweโ?โ Elena said mockingly, but it was true. Theyย wereย beautiful. Meredithโs dress was a pure sweep of burgundy satin, gathered tight at the waist and pouring into folds from the hips. Her dark hair hung loose down her back. And Bonnie, as she stood up and joined the others in front of the mirror, was like a shimmering party favor in pink taffeta and black sequins.
As for herself โฆ Elena scanned her image with an experienced eye and thought again, The dress is all right. The only other phrase that came to mind wasย crystallized violets.ย Her grandmother had kept a little jar of them, real flowers dipped in crystallized sugar and frozen.
They went downstairs together, as they had for every dance since the seventh gradeโexcept that before, Caroline had always been with them. Elena realized with faint surprise that she didnโt even know who Caroline was going with tonight.
Aunt Judith and Robertโsoon to be Uncle Robertโwere in the living room, along with Margaret in her pajamas.
โOh, you girls all look lovely,โ said Aunt Judith, as fluttery and excited as if she were going to the dance herself. She kissed Elena, and Margaret held up her arms for a hug.
โYouโre pretty,โ she said with four-year-old simplicity.
Robert was looking at Elena, too. He blinked, opened his mouth, and closed it again.
โWhatโs the matter, Bob?โ
โOh.โ He looked at Aunt Judith, seeming embarrassed. โWell, actually, it just occurred to me that Elena is a form of the name Helen. And for some reason I was thinking of Helen of Troy.โ
โBeautiful and doomed,โ said Bonnie happily.
โWell, yes,โ said Robert, not looking happy at all. Elena said nothing.
The doorbell rang. Matt was on the step, in his familiar blue sports coat. With him were Ed Goff, Meredithโs date, and Raymond Hernandez, Bonnieโs. Elena looked for Stefan.
โHeโs probably already there,โ said Matt, interpreting her glance. โListen, Elenaโโ
But whatever he had been about to say was cut off in the chatter from the other couples. Bonnie and Raymond went with them in Mattโs car, and kept up a constant stream of witticisms all the way to the school.
Music drifted out the open doors of the auditorium. As Elena stepped out of the car, a curious certainty rushed over her. Something was going to happen, she realized, looking at the square bulk of the school building. The peaceful low gear of the last few weeks was about to slip into high.
Iโm ready, she thought. And hoped it was true.
Inside, it was a kaleidoscope of color and activity. She and Matt were mobbed the instant they came in, and compliments rained down on both of them. Elenaโs dress โฆ her hair โฆ her flowers. Matt was a legend in the making: another Joe Montana, a sure bet for an athletic scholarship.
In the dizzying whirl that should have been life and breath to her, Elena kept searching for one dark head.
Tyler Smallwood was breathing heavily on her, smelling of punch and Brut and Doublemint gum. His date was looking murderous. Elena ignored him in the hopes that he would go away.
Mr. Tanner passed by with a soggy paper cup, looking as if his collar was strangling him. Sue Carson, the other senior homecoming princess, breezed up and cooed over the violet dress. Bonnie was already out on
the dance floor, shimmering under the lights. But nowhere did Elena see Stefan.
One more whiff of Doublemint and she was going to be sick. She nudged Matt and they escaped to the refreshment table, where Coach Lyman launched into a critique of the game. Couples and groups came up to them, spending a few minutes and then retreating to make room for the next in line. Just as if we reallyย wereย royalty, thought Elena wildly. She glanced sideways to see if Matt shared her amusement, but he was looking fixedly off to his left.
She followed his gaze. And there, half concealed behind a cluster of football players, was the dark head sheโd been looking for. Unmistakable, even in this dim light. A thrill went through her, more of pain than anything else.
โNow what?โ said Matt, his jaw set. โThe hog-tying?โ
โNo. Iโm going to ask him to dance, thatโs all. Iโll wait until weโve danced first, if you want.โ
He shook his head, and she set out toward Stefan through the crowd.
Piece by piece, Elena registered information about him as she approached. His black blazer was of a subtly different cut than the other boysโ, more elegant, and he wore a white cashmere sweater under it. He stood quite still, not fidgeting, a little apart from the groups around him. And, although she could see him only in profile, she could see he wasnโt wearing his glasses.
He took them off for football, of course, but sheโd never seen him close up without them. It made her feel giddy and excited, as if this were a masquerade and the unmasking time had come. She focused on his shoulder, the line of his jaw, and then he was turning toward her.
In that instant, Elena was aware that she was beautiful. It wasnโt just the dress, or the way her hair was done. She was beautiful in herself: slender, imperial, a thing made of silk and inner fire. She saw his lips part slightly, reflexively, and then she looked up into his eyes.
โHello.โ Was that her own voice, so quiet and self-assured? His eyes were green. Green as oak leaves in summer. โAre you having a good time?โ she said.
I am now.ย He didnโt say it, but she knew it was what he was thinking; she could see it in the way he stared at her. She had never been so sure of her power. Except that actually he didnโt look as if he were having a
good time; he looked stricken, in pain, as if he couldnโt take one more minute of this.
The band was starting up, a slow dance. He was still staring at her, drinking her in. Those green eyes darkening, going black with desire. She had the sudden feeling that he might jerk her to him and kiss her hard, without ever saying a word.
โWould you like to dance?โ she said softly. Iโm playing with fire, with something I donโt understand, she thought suddenly. And in that instant she realized that she was frightened. Her heart began to pound violently. It was as if those green eyes spoke to some part of her that was buried deep beneath the surfaceโand that part was screaming โdangerโ at her. Some instinct older than civilization was telling her to run, to flee.
She never moved. The same force that was terrifying her was holding her there. This is out of control, she thought suddenly. Whatever was happening here was beyond her understanding, was nothing normal or sane. But there was no stopping it now, and even while frightened she was reveling in it. It was the most intense moment sheโd ever experienced with a boy, but nothing at all was happening. He was just gazing at her, as if hypnotized, and she was gazing back, while the energy shimmered between them like heat lightning. She saw his eyes go darker, defeated, and felt the wild leap of her own heart as he slowly stretched out one hand.
And then it all shattered.
โWhy, Elena, howย sweetย you look,โ said a voice, and Elenaโs vision was dazzled with gold. It was Caroline, her auburn hair rich and glossy, her skin tanned to a perfect bronze. She was wearing a dress of pure gold lamรฉ that showed an incredibly daring amount of that perfect skin. She slipped one bare arm through Stefanโs and smiled lazily up at him. They were stunning together, like a couple of international models slumming at a high school dance, far more glamorous and sophisticated than anyone else in the room.
โAnd that little dress is soย pretty,โย continued Caroline, while Elenaโs mind kept on running on automatic. That casually possessive arm linked with Stefanโs told her everything: where Caroline had been at lunch these past weeks, what she had been up to all this time. โI told Stefan we simply had to stop by for a moment, but weโre not going to stay long. So you donโt mind if I keep him to myself for the dances, do you?โ
Elena was strangely calm now, her mind a humming blank. She said no, of course she didnโt mind, and watched Caroline move away, a symphony in auburn and gold. Stefan went with her.
There was a circle of faces around Elena; she turned from them and came up against Matt.
โYou knew he was coming with her.โ
โI knew she wanted him to. Sheโs been following him around at lunchtime and after school, and kind of forcing herself on him. But โฆโ
โI see.โ Still held in that queer, artificial calm, she scanned the crowd and saw Bonnie coming toward her, and Meredith leaving her table. Theyโd seen, then. Probably everyone had. Without a word to Matt, she moved toward them, heading instinctively for the girlsโ rest room.
It was packed with bodies, and Meredith and Bonnie kept their remarks bright and casual while looking at her with concern.
โDid you see that dress?โ said Bonnie, squeezing Elenaโs fingers secretly. โThe front must be held on with superglue. And whatโs she going to wear to the next dance? Cellophane?โ
โHandiwrap,โ said Meredith. She added in a low voice, โAre you okay?โ
โYes.โ Elena could see in the mirror that her eyes were too bright and that there was one spot of color burning on each cheek. She smoothed her hair and turned away.
The room emptied, leaving them in privacy. Bonnie was fiddling nervously with the sequined bow at her waist now. โMaybe it isnโt such a bad thing after all,โ she said quietly. โI mean, you havenโt thought about anything else but him in weeks. Nearly a month. And so maybe itโs just for the best, and you can move on to other things now, instead of โฆ well, chasing him.โ
Et tu, Brute? thought Elena. โThank you so much for your support,โ she said aloud.
โNow, Elena, donโt be like that,โ Meredith put in. โShe isnโt trying to hurt you, she just thinksโโ
โAnd I suppose you think so, too? Well, thatโs fine. Iโll just go out and find myself some other things to move on to. Like some other best friends.โ She left them both staring after her.
Outside, she threw herself into the whirl of color and music. She was brighter than she had ever been at any dance before. She danced with everyone, laughing too loudly, flirting with every boy in her path.
They were calling her to come up and be crowned. She stood on the stage, looking down on the butterfly-bright figures below. Someone gave her flowers; someone put a rhinestone tiara on her head. There was clapping. It all passed as if in a dream.
She flirted with Tyler because he was closest when she came off the stage. Then she remembered what he and Dick had done to Stefan, and she broke off one of the roses from her bouquet and gave it to him. Matt was looking on from the sidelines, his mouth tight. Tylerโs forgotten date was almost in tears.
She could smell alcohol along with the mint on Tylerโs breath now, and his face was red. His friends were around her, a shouting, laughing crowd, and she saw Dick pour something from a brown paper bag into his glass of punch.
Sheโd never been with this group before. They welcomed her, admiring her, the boys vying for her attention. Jokes flew back and forth, and Elena laughed even when they didnโt make sense. Tylerโs arm circled her waist, and she just laughed harder. Out of the corner of her eye she saw Matt shake his head and walk away. The girls were getting shrill, the boys rowdy. Tyler was nuzzling moistly at her neck.
โIโve got an idea,โ he announced to the group, hugging Elena more tightly to him. โLetโs go someplace more fun.โ
Somebody shouted, โLike where, Tyler? Your dadโs house?โ
Tyler was grinning, a big, boozy, reckless grin. โNo, I mean someplace where we can leave our mark. Like the cemetery.โ
The girls squealed. The boys elbowed each other and faked punches. Tylerโs date was still standing outside the circle. โTyler, thatโs crazy,โ
she said, her voice high and thin. โYou know what happened to that old man. I wonโt go there.โ
โGreat, then, you stay here.โ Tyler fished keys out of his pocket and waved them at the rest of the crowd. โWhoย isnโtย afraid?โ he said.
โHey, Iโm up for it,โ said Dick, and there was a chorus of approval. โMe, too,โ said Elena, clear and defiant. She smiled up at Tyler, and he
practically swung her off her feet.
And then she and Tyler were leading a noisy, roughhousing group out into the parking lot, where they were all piling into cars. And then Tyler was putting the top of his convertible down and she was climbing in, with Dick and a girl named Vickie Bennett squashing into the backseat.
โElena!โ somebody shouted, far away, from the lighted doorway at the school.
โDrive,โ she said to Tyler, taking off her tiara, and the engine growled to life. They burned rubber out of the parking lot, and the cool night wind blew into Elenaโs face.