ELSA'S POV
Elsa, why don't you take off," Makayla suggested, she was trying to look busy with the display she was fiddling with, but I could tell she was staring at me out of the corners of her eyes. I wondered how long she had been staring without me noticing.
I was a slow afternoon at Newton's. At the moment there were only two patrons in the store, dedicated backpackers from the sound of their conversation. Makayla had spent the last hour going through the pros and cons of two brands of lightweight packs with them. But they'd taken a break from serious pricing to indulge in trying to one-up each other with the latest tales from the trail. Their distraction had given Makayla a chance to escape.
"I don't mind staying," I said. I felt off today, and I desperately needed a distraction that work clearly wasn't provided. I had spent most of my day trying to think of things to do after I was off. I had been listening to the laughing hikers for so long I was starting to consider backpacking.
"I'm telling you," said the thickset man with the orange beard that didn't match his dark brown hair. "I've seen grizzlies pretty close up in Yellowstone, but they had nothing on this brute." His hair was matted, and his clothes looked like they'd been on his back for more than a few days. Fresh from the mountains.
"Not a chance. Black bears don't get the big. The grizzlies you saw were probably cubs." The second man was tall and lean, his face tanned and wind-whipped into an impressive leathery crust.
"Seriously, Elsa, as soon as these two give up, I'm closing the place down," Makayla whispered.
"If you insist…" I shrugged.
"On all fours it was taller than you," the bearded man insisted while I gathered my things together. "Big as a house and pitch-black. I'm going to report it to the ranger here. People ought to be warned— this wasn't up on the mountain, mind you— this was only a few miles from the trailhead."
Leather-face laughed and rolled his eyes. "Let me guess— you were on your way in? Hadn't eaten real food or slept off the ground in a week, right?"
"Hey, uh, Makayla, right?" the bearded man called, looking toward us.
"See you Monday," I whispered.
Yes, sir," Makayla replied, turning away.
"Say, have there been any warnings around here recently— about black bears?"
"No, sir. But it's always good to keep your distance and store your food correctly. Have you seen the new bear-safe canisters? They only weigh two pounds…"
The doors slid open to let me out into the rain. I didn't bother pulling up the hood of my jacket, I let the rain soak my hair. It hung in my face and clung to my cheeks. I hadn't slept well and the cool wetness woke me up.
I didn't want to go back to Agnarr empty house. Last night had been brutal, and I didn't feel like going back to the memories of it. Like I'd told Jeremy after the movie, there was never any doubt that I would have nightmares.
I seemed to have nightmares nightly. Not nightmares really, not in the plural, because it was always the same nightmare. You'd think I'd get bored after so many months, grow immune to it. But the dream never failed to horrify me, and only ended when I woke up in a cold sweat. Occasionally I would cry out in panic. Agnarr didn't come in to see what was wrong anymore, to make sure there was no intruder strangling me or something like that— he was used to it now.
My nightmare probably wouldn't even frighten someone else. Nothing jumped out and screamed, "Boo!" There were no zombies, no ghosts, no psychopaths. There was nothing, really. Only nothing. Just the endless maze of moss-covered trees, so quiet that the silence was an uncomfortable pressure against my eardrums. It was dark, like dusk on a cloudy day, with only enough light to see that there was nothing to see. I hurried through the gloom without a path, always searching, searching, searching, getting more frantic as the time stretched on, trying to move faster, though the speed made me clumsy.… Then there would come the point in my dream— and I could feel it coming now, but could never seem to wake myself up before it hit— when I couldn't remember what it was that I was searching for. When I realized that there was nothing to search for, and nothing to find. That I was just lost and I would never find my way out.
That's usually about when I'd wake up.
I wasn't paying attention to where I was driving—just cruising through empty, wet side roads to kill time—because I didn't have anywhere to go.
I imagined the nightmare was some product of my panic attack. Like a lingering echo of a traumatizing event. And maybe it was—partly—but there was more to it than that. It was a repeated memory of a night I wanted to forget, of feelings and memories that I wanted to banish from my mind but I never quite seemed to be able to.
Moving on was harder than I thought it would, I could go out with a friend, go to work, go to school, do everything a person should do and it still wasn't quite enough and I wondered why. Why couldn't I just let her go?
It will be as if I'd never existed. The words ran through my head, lacking the perfect clarity of my hallucination last night. They were just words, soundless, like print on a page. Just words, but they still stung just the same.
I pulled over and parked the car along the curb. I leaned forward, pressing my face against the steering wheel and sighed.
I wondered how long this could last. Maybe someday, years from now, I would be able to look back on our time together and truly appreciate it for what it was. Not for what I thought it was. I would look back and instead of the hurt and the anger, I would feel grateful for the time I had—for the world I had so briefly been a part of. Maybe someday I'd be able to see it that way.
But what if I couldn't? What if the memory always made me cringe, always made me hurt and burn with anger at her for breaking all her promises.
I sighed again. As if she'd never existed, I scoffed. What a stupid and impossible promise to make. She could delete my pictures and reclaim her gifts, but that didn't put things back the way they'd been before I'd met her. The physical evidence was the most insignificant part of the equation. She couldn't take back the memories or the feelings. All she took with her was my goodbye, my closure, my chance at moving on easily.
I leaned back and looked at my face in the rearview mirror. My hair had gotten long over the last few months. I hadn't cut it since before last summer. It hung in wet curls in my pale face. My eyes looked dark against my white skin, and the nightmare had left purple circles under my eyes. I snorted to myself—I could pass for a vampire looking like this.
As if she'd never existed? Ridiculous. It was a promise that she could never keep, a promise that was broken as soon as she made it.
It made me feel stupid for ever worrying about keeping my promise. Where was the logic in sticking to an agreement that had already been violated by the other party. Who cared if I was reckless? There was no reason why I couldn't be a little reckless, flirt with danger. I didn't owe her anything.
In fact, being reckless had made woken me up. Straying from safe and being impulsive had made me feel alive. Why not keep it up? Why not live a little? I'd been careful all my life, and I'd spent a year doing nothing but pouring my heart into a dead-end relationship. I wanted to try new things, I wanted to live—and live recklessly, at that. I furrowed my brow. To be reckless in Forks would take a lot of creativity but I had to find a way. I wasn't going to hold fast to a broken pact. But how could I cheat on my side of the deal, here in this harmless little town? This dull, safe, little town.
I stared out the windshield for a long moment, and no thoughts came. I cut the engine, which was groaning in a pitiful way after idling for so long, and stepped out into the cold drizzle.
The cold rain dripped through my hair and down my cheeks. It helped to clear my head. I blinked the water from my eyes, staring blankly across the road.
After a minute of staring, I recognized where I was. I'd parked on Russell Avenue. I was standing in front of the Cheney's house—my truck was blocking their driveway—and across the road lived the Markses. I figured I should probably move my truck, and go home. Enough idle wandering for the day.
As I took a deep breath in preparation to move, a sign in the Markses' yard caught my eye—it was just a big piece of cardboard leaning against their mailbox post, with black letters scrawled in caps across it.
Sometimes, kismet happens.
Coincidence? Or was it meant to be? I didn't know, but it seemed kind of silly to think that it was somehow fated, that the dilapidated motorcycles rusting in the Markses' front yard beside the hand-printedFOR SALE, AS ISsign were serving some higher purpose by existing there, right where I needed them to be.
So maybe it wasn't kismet. Maybe there were just all kinds of ways to be reckless, and I only now had my eyes open to them.
Reckless and dangerous. Those were Agnarr's two very favorite words to apply to motorcycles.
Agnarr's job didn't get a lot of action compared to cops in bigger towns, but he did get called in on traffic accidents. With the long, wet stretches of freeway twisting and turning through the forest, blind corner after blind corner, there was no shortage of that kind of action. But even with all the huge log-haulers barreling around the turns, mostly people walked away. The exceptions to that rule were often on motorcycles, and Agnarr had seen one too many victims, almost always kids, smeared on the highway. He'd made me promise before I was ten that I would never accept a ride on a motorcycle. Even at that age, I didn't have to think twice before promising. Who would want to ride a motorcycle here? It would be like taking a sixty-mile-per-hour bath.
So many promises I kept…
It clicked together for me then. I wanted to be reckless—hell, I wanted to be stupid—and I wanted to break promises. Why stop at one?
That's as far as I thought it through. I practically ran through the rain to the Markses' front door and rang the bell.
One of the Marks boys opened the door, the younger one, the freshman. I couldn't remember his name. His sandy hair only came up to my shoulder.
He had no trouble remembering my name "Elsa Winters?" he asked in surprise.
"How much do you want for the bike?" I panted, jerking my thumb over my shoulder toward the sales display.
"Are you serious?" he demanded.
"Of course I am."
"They don't work." I sighed impatiently— this was something I'd already inferred from the sign. "How much?"
"If you really want one, just take it. My mom made my dad move them down to the road so they'd get picked up with the garbage."
I glanced at the bikes again and saw that they were resting on a pile of yard clippings and dead branches. "Are you positive about that?"
"Sure, you want to ask her?"
It was probably better not to involve adults who might mention this to David.
"No, I believe you."
"You want me to help you?" he offered. "They're not light."
"Okay, thanks. I only need one, though."
"Might as well take both," the boy said. "Maybe you could scavenge some parts."
He followed me out into the downpour and helped me load both of the heavy bikes into the back of my truck. He seemed eager to be rid of them, so I didn't argue.
"What are you going to do with them, anyway?" he asked. "They haven't worked in years."
"I kind of guessed that," I said, shrugging. My spur-of-the-moment whim hadn't come with a plan intact. "Maybe I'll take them to Dowling's."
He snorted. "Dowling would charge more to fix them than they'd be worth running."
I couldn't argue with that. John Dowling had earned a reputation for his pricing; no one went to him except in an emergency. Most people preferred to make the drive up to Port Angeles, if their car was able. I'd been very lucky on that front— I'd been worried, when Agnarr first gifted me my ancient truck, that I wouldn't be able to afford to keep it running. But I'd never had a single problem with it, other than the screaming-loud engine and the fifty-five-mile-per-hour maximum speed limit. Kristoff Black had kept it in great shape when it had belonged to his father, Billy.…
Inspiration hit like a bolt of lightning— not unreasonable, considering the storm. "You know what? That's okay. I know someone who builds cars."
"Oh. That's good." He smiled in relief.
He waved as I pulled away, still smiling. Friendly kid.
I pulled over a few streets down and pulled out my phone, I searched for Agnarr's name in the contacts list and hit dial. The phone went straight to voice mail; I huffed impatiently and called a different number.
"Chief Winters, please," I said when the deputy answered. "It's Elsa."
"Oh, hey, Elsa ," Deputy Steve said affably. "I'll go get him."
I waited.
"What's wrong, Elsa?" Agnarr demanded as soon as he picked up the phone.
"Can't I call you at work without their being an emergency?"
He was quiet for a minute. "You never have before. Is there an emergency?"
"No, your cell phone is turned off." I replied.
"No, it isn't! It's—oh…" His voice trailed off, "I think it died."
"It's okay, Dad, listen I was wondering if you could give me directions to the Black's place—I'm not sure I can remember the way and I don't remember the address to use my phone. I want to visit Honeymaren. I haven't seen her in months."
When Agnarr spoke again, his voice was much happier. "That's a great idea, Elsa. Do you have a pen?"
The direction he gave me were very simple. I assured him that I would be back for dinner, though he tried to tell me not to hurry. He wanted to join me in La Push, but I was worried he'd see the bikes.
So it was with a deadline that I drove too quickly through the storm-darkened streets out of town. I hoped I could get Honeymaren alone. Billy would probably tell on me if she knew what I was up to.
While I drove, I worried a little bit about Billy's reaction to seeing me. He would be too pleased. In Billy's mind, no doubt, this had all worked out better than he had dared to hope. His pleasure and relief would only remind me of what I didn't want to think about right now.
The Blacks' house was vaguely familiar, a small wooden place with narrow windows, the dull red paint making it resemble a tiny barn. Honeymaren's head peered out of the window before I could even get out of the truck. No doubt the familiar roar of the engine had tipped him off to my approach. Honeymaren had been very grateful when Agnarr bought Billy's truck for me, saving Honeymaren from having to drive it when he came of age. I liked my truck very much, but Honeymaren seemed to consider the speed restrictions a shortcoming.
she met me halfway to the house.
Lesa!" Her excited grin stretched wide across her face, the bright teeth standing in vivid contrast to the deep russet color of her skin. I'd never seen her hair out of its usual ponytail before. It fell like the Dark brown curtains on either side of her broad face.
Honeymaren had grown into much of her potential in the last eight months. she'd past that point where the soft muscles of childhood hardened into the solid, lanky build of a teenager; the tendons and veins had becoming prominent under the skin of her arms, is hands. His face was still sweet like I remembered it, though it had hardened, too—the planes of her cheekbones sharper, her jaw squared off, all childish roundness gone.
"Hey, Maren!" I felt a surge of enthusiasm at his smile. I realized how pleased I was to see her.
I smiled back, and something clicked silent into place, like two corresponding puzzle pieces. I'd forgotten how much I really liked Honeymaren Black.
she caught me in her strong arms and pulled me into a big bear hug. When she set me back down I stared up at her in surprise, leaning my head back though the rain pelted my face.
"You grew again!" I accused in amazement.
she laughed, his smile widening impossibly. "Two. three," she announced with self-satisfaction. Her voice was deeper, but it had the husky tone I remembered.
"Is it ever going to stop?" I shook my head in disbelief. "You're gorgeous."
"yeah thanks, Still a beanpole, though." she grimaced. "Come inside! You're getting all wet."
she led the way, twisting her hair in her hands as she walked. Hsh pulled a rubber band from her hip pocket and wound it around the bundle.
"Hey, Dad," she called as he ducked to get through the front door. "Look who stopped by."
Billy was in the tiny square living room, a book in his hands. He set the book in his lap and wheeled himself forward when he saw me.
"Well, what do you know! It's good to see you, Elsa."
We shook hands. Mine was lost in his wide grasp.
"What brings you out here? Everything okay with Agnarr "
"Yes, absolutely. I just wanted to see Maren—I haven't seen him in forever."
Honeymaren's eyes brightened at my words. she was smiling so big it looked like it would hurt her cheeks.
"Can you stay for dinner?" Billy was eager, too.
"No, I've got to feed Agnarr, you know."
"I'll call him now," Billy suggested. "He's always invited."
I laughed to hide my discomfort. "It's not like you'll never see me again. I promise I'll be back again soon— so much you'll get sick of me." After all, if Honeymaren could fix the bike, someone had to teach me how to ride it.
Billy chuckled in response. "Okay, maybe next time."
"So, Elsa, what do you want to do?" Honeymaren asked.
"Whatever. What were you doing before I interrupted?" I was strangely comfortable here. It was familiar, but only distantly. There were no painful reminders of the recent past.
Honeymaren hesitated. "I was just heading out to work on my car, but we can do something else…"
"No, that's perfect!" I interrupted. "I'd love to see your car."
"Okay," she said, not convinced. "It's out back, in the garage."
Even better, I thought to myself. I waved at Billy. "See you later."
A thick stand of trees and shrubbery concealed his garage from the house. The garage was no more than a couple of preformed sheds that had been bolted together with their interior walls knocked out. Under this shelter, raised on cinder blocks, was what looked to me like a completed automobile. I recognized the symbol on the grille.
"What kind of Volkswagen is that?" I asked.
"It's an old Rabbit—1986, a classic."
"How's it going?"
"Almost finished," she said cheerfully. And then her voice dropped into a lower key. "My dad made good on his promise last spring."
"Ah," I said.
she seemed to understand my reluctance to open the subject. I tried not to remember last May at the prom. Honeymaren had been bribed by her father with money and car parts to deliver a message there. Billy wanted me to stay a safe distance from the person I loved the most. In hindsight, maybe I should have listened.
But I wasn't going to dwell on that, I was ready to be reckless.
"Honeymaren, what do you know about motorcycles?" I asked.
He shrugged. "Some. My friend Sven has a dirt bike. We work on it together sometimes. Why?"
"Well…," I pursed my lips as I considered. I wasn't sure if he could keep his mouth shut, but I was willing to take a chance. "I recently acquired a couple bikes, and they're not in the greatest condition. I wonder if you could get them running?"
"Cool." He seemed truly pleased by the challenge. His face glowed. "I'll give it a try."
I held up one finger in warning. "The thing is," I explained, "Agnarr doesn't approve of motorcycles. Honestly, he'd probably bust a vein in his forehead if he knew about this. So you can't tell Billy."
"Sure, sure." Honeymaren smiled. "I understand."
"I'll pay you," I continued.
This offended her. "No. I want to help. You can't pay me."
"Well… how about a trade, then?" I was making this up as I went, but it seemed reasonable enough. "I only need one bike—and I'll need lessons, too. So how about this? I'll give you the other bike, and then you can teach me."
"Swee-eet." she made the word into two syllables.
"Wait a sec—are you legal yet? When's your birthday?"
"You missed it," she teased, narrowing his eyes in mock resentment. "I'm nineteen."
"Not that your age every stopped you before," I muttered. "Sorry about your birthday."
"Don't worry about it. I missed yours. What are you, forty?"
I sniffed. "Close."
"We'll have a joint party to make up for it."
"Sound like a date."
Her eyes sparkled at the word.
I grinned at her enthusiasm. I realized that I had even felt a surge of enthusiasm at the word, and that confused me. I didn't understand what it meant.
"Maybe when the bikes are finished—our present to ourselves," I smiled.
"Deal. When will you bring them down?"
I bit my lip, embarrassed. "They're in my truck now," I admitted.
"Great." she seemed to mean it.
"Will Billy see if we bring them around?"
she winked at me. "We'll be careful."
We eased around from the east, sticking to the trees when we were in view of the windows, affecting a casual-looking stroll, just in case. Honeymaren unloaded the bikes swiftly from the truck bed, wheeling them one by one into the shrubbery where I hid. It looked too easy for him— I'd remembered the bikes being much, much heavier than that.
"These aren't half bad," Honeymaren appraised as we pushed them through the cover of the trees. "This one here will actually be worth something when I'm done— it's an old Harley Sprint.
"That one's yours, then."
"Are you sure?"
"Absolutely."
"These are going to take some cash, though," she said, frowning down at the blackened metal. "We'll have to save up for parts first."
"Wenothing," I disagreed. "If you're doing this for free, I'll pay for the parts."
"I don't know…," she muttered.
"I've got some money saved. College fund, you know." College, schmollege, I thought to myself. It wasn't like I'd saved up enough to go anywhere special— and besides, what difference would it make if I skimmed a little bit off the top?
Honeymaren just nodded. This all made perfect sense to him
As we skulked back to the makeshift garage, I contemplated my luck. Only a teenage girl would agree to this: deceiving both our parents while repairing dangerous vehicles using money meant for my college education. she didn't see anything wrong with that picture. Honeymaren was a gift from the gods.
