“You weren’t here when I woke up,” she says. “I was worried about you.”
Linden laughs shakily. “You were worried?” he says. “You gave me the scare of my life last night.”
“Did I?” She’s trying to blink the lethargy from her eyes. The doctor told us she wouldn’t be very alert and that she wouldn’t be talking much, but he clearly underestimated her resolve. “Where’s Bowen?”
“Bowen is all right,” Linden says, and puts another quick kiss on her lips. “My uncle took him back to the house.”
“He’ll be hungry,” she says. She tries to push herself upright, but Linden holds her shoulders down.
“Bowen is being taken care of, Cecily.” His voice is stern. “You’ll see him later. Right now you need to rest.”
“Don’t order me around like I’m a child,” she says.
“I’m sorry,” he says, taking her hands. “You’re not a child.”
A child is exactly what she is, but she hides it so well sometimes that even I forget.
But it’s no matter what I think. Husband and wife are in their own universe right now, and I’m not a part of their conversation. For the first time I feel the full effect of the annulment.
She looks at me with cloudy eyes. “You were right about everything.”
“Shh.” I touch her arm. “You should be asleep.”
“Who do we think we are,” she says to Linden, “to have children when we can’t cure our own curse?”
Though her voice is calm, her lip is quivering.
“We’ll talk later, love,” Linden coos. “You aren’t thinking clearly.”
“It’s as clear as crystal,” she says. Her voice is eerie and hoarse. Tears are streaking down her temples.
There’s pain in Linden’s eyes, though I’m not sure if it’s because he’s worried or because he believes what she’s saying. He says something into her ear in a low voice, and it calms her. She lets him dab at her runny nose with his sleeve. And she has put up a good fight, but the fever and the exhaustion and the drugs are overpowering her.
“I can go back to the house and check on Bowen,” I offer lamely.
“No.” Her voice is fading as she closes her eyes. “No, no, no. Stay where I can see you. It isn’t safe out there.”
She’s delirious, but there might be some truth to that still.
“That’s enough now.” Linden draws the outline of her eyelids with his finger. There’s a nearly imperceptible tremor in his biceps. “Get some rest. We’ll be right here.”
Her eyebrows raise, but her eyelids stay down. She mumbles, “Promise?”
“Yes,” he tells her, desperation in the word. Of course he won’t leave her. After all this, I don’t believe he’ll ever let her out of his sight again. She knows that; she only needed to hear him say it.
True to his word, he doesn’t leave after she falls asleep. He just sits there, smoothing back her hair and frowning.
I stay in a chair on the opposite side of the bed, invisible. I don’t belong here, but I have no place else to go tonight. I don’t want her to wake in the night and realize I’m gone and go into a panic.
As though Linden has been reading my mind, he says, “Thank you for staying.” He doesn’t take his eyes off Cecily.
“I’ll leave when she’s stronger,” I say.
“I meant what I said before. I want you to be safe.”
“I know,” I say. “You don’t need to worry about me.”
“Just the same, I’d appreciate a good-bye this time.”
He ventures a glance at me, and he smiles the way he did the morning after Rose’s death. That morning the smile faded the instant he realized I wasn’t her. It stays now. He understands that I’m not a ghost. I’m a girl, and one who hasn’t always been especially kind to him.
“I promise I’ll say good-bye this time,” I say. I feel certain I’ll cry if I say anything more.
I listen to the monitor steadily relaying my sister wife’s pulse, and I think of how far away Gabriel is. I don’t know that I could ever love him the way that Linden and Cecily are in love, or the way Linden and Rose were. I never saw the point in exhausting so much emotion on something there are so few years to enjoy. I never planned on getting married, though in weak and foolish moments I let myself pretend there would be time for such things.
But this surge of longing that comes to me now—is it love? I’ve never felt so alone.
We can change so many times in our lives. We’re born into a family, and it’s the only life we can imagine, but it changes. Buildings collapse. Fires burn. And the next second we’re someplace else entirely, going through different motions and trying to keep up with this new person we’ve become.
I was somebody’s daughter once, and then I was somebody’s wife. I’m neither of those things now. This sullen boy sitting before me is not my husband, and the girl he’s fretting over isn’t me, will never be me.
Chapter 8