Authors: L.J. Smith
“You can transfer into zoology,” he said. “And go to Davis.” He was smiling, but his eyes were full.
Dani stepped forward. “Can Iâ¦I'd just like to say goodbye.” She got through that much steadily. Then she choked and threw herself into Thea's arms.
Thea hugged back. “I'm sorry I got you in trouble,” she whispered.
“You didn'tâyou told them it wasn't my fault. They're not going to do anything to me. But it's going to be so lonely at school without you⦔ Dani stepped away, shaking her head, trying not to cry. “Blessed be.”
Blaise was back, little bells ringing. She had a pewter chalice in one hand and a bottle in the other.
Just seeing the bottle sent a shiver through Thea. The glass was so dark with age she couldn't tell what color it had been originally, and so misshapen it was hard to know if it was meant to be round or square. There was wax over the cork and all sorts of seals and ribbons.
Gran broke through the seals, pulled off the ribbons. She tried to twist the cork out of the wax, but Blaise had to help.
Then she tipped the bottle above the cup Blaise held.
Brownish liquid ran out. Gran poured until the cup was half full.
“When you drink this,” Gran said to Thea, “you'll forget me. You won't know anyone here. But we won't forget you.” She spoke formally, an announcement before the Circle. “Thea Sophia Harman, let the record show that you are a true daughter of Hellewise.”
She shuffled forward and kissed Thea's cheek.
Thea hugged her, feeling the fragile old body for the last time. “Good-bye, Gran. I love you.”
Then Blaise came, offering the cup in both hands. She looked wild and beautiful, her hair a cataract of black tumbling around her, her hands pale around the chalice.
“Good-bye,” Thea said, and took it from her.
Blaise smiled.
Now, Thea told herself. Don't hesitate. Don't
think
about it.
She lifted the cup to her lips and drank.
And choked slightly on the first swallow. It wasâit tasted likeâ¦
Her eyes went to Blaise's.
Which were large and gray and luminous. They looked at her steadily. So steadily that it was a warning.
Thea kept drinking.
Tea. Watered-down iced tea.
That
was what the Cup of Lethe tasted like.
That bottle was sealedâshe didn't have timeâthere was wax on the corkâ¦
Thea's mind was churning. But she had enough sense to do one thingâshe drank a
lot
of whatever was in the cup, so there wouldn't be any left over for the Circle to examine when Eric was done.
And she kept her face blank as Blaise took the chalice from her and gave it to Eric.
Eric drank, looked slightly surprised, and kept drinking.
“Finish it
allll,
” Blaise said. Her eyes were still on Thea's.
And that was when Thea knew for sure.
You did it before, when you were first talking about giving human boys the Cup of Lethe after spilling their blood at the Homecoming dance. You poured it out and stashed it somewhere and put in tea and redid all those sealsâof course
you
could reproduce them with molds. And nowâ¦and nowâ¦
As Blaise took the chalice back from Eric, it hit Thea in a wave that almost made her hysterical.
This is never going to work. They're never going to
believe
it. Butâ¦
Thea took Eric's hand and sank her nails into his palm. She didn't dare say a word to him, didn't dare even look at him. But she was thinking, don't speak, don't do
anything,
just follow my lead.
She made her face as blank as a wax doll.
Eric was just standing there. He didn't know what to expect, but he obviously felt Thea's nails. And he proved how smart he was by not speaking.
“We stand adjourned,” Gran said tersely. “Blaise, take them out while they're still confused. They should be able to get home on their own.” She turned away without looking at Thea.
“No problem,” Blaise said.
Aradia said, “I'll go with you.”
T
hey walked out to Eric's jeep. The night air was very cold and there was no moon.
Thea kept her hand on Eric's back, ready to press if he hesitated. But he never did.
At the door of the jeep, Thea looked at Blaise. She was afraid to show any expression. Could Aradia see them? She wanted desperately to give Blaise a last hug.
Aradia said, “Is there a window from the shop onto this street?”
Thea looked at Blaise. Blaise said, “No.”
“Then you can say good-bye. After this you're going to have to pretend not to know each other.”
Thea stared at her, then felt a wild choked giggle well up. “Now I know why you're Maiden,” she said, in a bare whisper. “Butâdoes anyone else realize?”
“I don't think so. Some may wonder, but I think they'll keep their mouths shut. Say good-bye quick.”
Thea hugged Blaise, couldn't make herself let go. “Thank you. Oh, Eileithyia, Blaise, I'll miss you.”
“Now
I'm
the last of the Harman line,” Blaise said in a bad imitation of a smirking voice. “I'll have a bedroom to myself,” she added in more believable tones. “And I'm going to get Sheena good.”
“Who?”
“That's right, you didn't hear. She was the one who turned us in. She's one of Tobias's little girlfriends, Circle Midnight. It seems he's been spying on us. He told her enough that she understood we were doing forbidden spells, and she told Gran.”
“It doesn't matter now.”
“Are you kidding? I'm getting sent to the Convent. I'm going to
kill
her.” The bells rang as Blaise tossed her head.
Then she tightened her grip on Thea. “I don't know why you want to be with a human,” she whispered. “But I hope you keep on wanting it now that you have it.”
“Blaise, when you get backâplease don't hurt them anymore. They're people. Really.”
Blaise sighed noncommittally; Thea could feel it. But all she said, almost too softly for Thea to hear, was, “I'll miss youâsister.”
Then Thea could let go.
When she was in the jeep, Aradia leaned into the open door.
“Two things,” she said rapidly. “And they're all the help I can give you. Mother Cybele mentioned Circle Daybreak. I've heard rumors that there are witches somewhere who are starting it up again, witches who want to forget the Burning Times, and who don't hold to Night World law. I don't know if it's true. But if it is, maybe you can find it.”
Thea's breath was taken away. The possibility leaped inside her like some unimagined joy.
“And the other thing,” Aradia said, with a rare smileâalmost a brief grin. “Word is that some of your Redfern cousins have started going peculiar. I've even heard that they're talking about finding human soulmates, just like you. You might try and contact
them
and see what the story is.”
Thea's breath came back, and with it, tears. “Oh, Aradia. Thank you.”
“Good luck, Thea. And Eric. Both of you, wherever you go.”
Eric, who had been sitting quietly behind the wheel, reached out to touch her hand lightly. “And you, too.” Thea could tell by his voice that he was puzzled and dazed, but he was trying not to show it.
Then they drove away. Thea turned around to watch Blaise getting smaller and smaller. A little wind blew Blaise's hair, and she looked like a dark and mysterious Aphrodite, a goddess who always did what you least expected.
Eric drove fast until they were a good distance from the shop, then pulled to the curb on a tiny residential street. He looked at Thea and said cautiously, “Am I immune to
this
stuff? Because I'm not forgetting anything. Or is it going to kick in any minute now?”
Thea kissed him.
Then she began to laugh hysterically.
“No. No.”
“You mean we're really safe? You're going to keep your powers?”
“Yes! Yes!”
She had to keep telling him over and over to convince him. But finally he got it and his face changed. Was transformed by his lightning-bolt smile. He squeezed her and shook her and finally jumped out of the jeep and yelled “All right! Way to go, Blaise!
All right! Yes!
”
“Eric!”
He pounded the jeep.
“Eric, get back in, you idiot! There might be Night People around.” Then, still laughing uncontrollably with love and gratitude and the relief of tension, she said, “Come in
here.
” And she held out her arms.
He jumped back in. They fit together perfectly, his arms around her, his breath against her hair.
“I'm so happy,” he said. “I love you, witch.”
Thea was laughing and crying at once. “I love you, too.”
He kissed her temple. She kissed his cheek. Then he kissed her mouth and stayed there for a long while. And Thea forgot about laughing, forgot that there was a world outside the two of them.
And then they sat together in the darkness, resting against each other, just breathing. Safe. Connected.
Thea was with someone who knew her, who saw what she saw. Her soulmate. And they were free to be with each other, without being hunted, without fear.
She was filled with joy and tranquility.
And with quiet sadness, too. It wasn't as if this new beginning came free. She still was an exile, cut off from her family. Gran was lost to her. If she saw Blaise, it would have to be in secret. She'd given up a lot.
Almost
everything.
But she didn't regret it. Not with Eric warm and solid in her arms. Not with the Night World saved from civil war, and the threat to the humans here over.
And what now? she wondered.
Strangely, even though there was no clear answer, she didn't feel afraid. She could visualize many futures, and they all seemed equally likely.
Now they would go to Eric's house, and Eric's mother would be puzzled but generous, and Roz would be ferocious but delighted. And next week Thea would go back to school and transfer into honors zoology.
She would get a scholarship to Davis and become a vet and use her powers to find out what was wrong with sick animals. Or she would find herself interested in wolves or elephants and would become a naturalist and visit faraway places to study them. Or she and Eric would adopt a puppy like Bud and write a book together to help people understand their dogs.
Or she would find Circle Daybreak and meet witches who wanted to forget the Burning Times. And they would be the first to reintroduce humans to magic, and Rosamund would grow up fierce and proud, knowing all the legends of Hellewise.
Or she would find her vampire cousins and see if the soulmate principle was really coming back. And their group would be like a magnet, attracting other young Night People with radical ideas, starting an underground revolution.
Maybe a new generation of Redferns and Harmans were forming alliances with humans. Maybe it was time for hatred to stop.
Maybe the old powers were waking and new times were coming. Maybe the world was about to change.
Only one thing was sure.
There were infinite possibilities.
She held Eric and felt his breathing and was at peace with the night.
L.J. Smith is the
New York Times
bestselling author of
The Vampire Diaries
and has written more than twenty-five books for young adults. She lives in the Bay Area of California, where she enjoys reading, hiking, traveling, and communing with her cat Suzie. Her favorite place is a cabin in Point Reyes National Seashore. Come visit her at www.ljanesmith.net, where she has lots of free stories for downloading.