After we finish our coffees, we head over to the Whole Foods Market on 15th Ave. Kitty got all flustered when Jade gave her the receipt but refused to let her pay the bill. It was folded in two, and I bet he wrote down his phone number for her.
He has no idea what he’s getting himself into.
She acted like she wasn’t interested, but she slipped the folded receipt into her bag when she thought I wasn’t looking. She’s been unusually quiet ever since.
As we walk down the long aisles stacked with a rainbow of organic peppers and fruit, Kitty mumbles about how hard it is shopping for the boys. Lyall and Ben will eat anything, but Elliot only eats low-carb high protein, Alastaire won’t let anything but the finest delicacies taint his refined palate, and Felix always checks labels for MSG and food dyes and throws away anything that doesn’t meet his rigorous standards.
Which is why we’re shopping at Whole Foods, and not the infinitely cheaper supermarket across the way. Not that I’m complaining mind you – I’m addicted to their lemon yogurt.
We shop without speaking, each lost in our own thoughts until Kitty breaks the silence.
“What do you want, Ash?” she asks.
“You mean… from here?” I ask, confused by the sudden question. “I’ve already put some yogurt and strawberries in t–”
“No,” she says, suddenly stopping in the middle of the aisle. “I mean, what do you want from us? Out of this whole thing you’re doing with the boys? I know we said we’ll pass on your demo songs to Fable’s manager, and you’ll obviously get some recognition for working on the new album… but what then? Your band gets signed and you become some kind of star? Is that really what you want?”
Several people trying to push past us in the aisle shoot dirty glances at Kitty, but she’s oblivious.
“Do you really think all of this is going to make you happy?” She asks.
“I don’t know what to say,’ I answer, trying to speak quietly so the other shoppers don’t hear our conversation. “It’s not exactly about… happiness or anything. It’s just something I have to do. Making it as a professional musician had been my dream for as long as I can remember. My only dream, actually. It can’t just be a co-incidence that you all entered my life the way you did. It’s not about fame or money or anything… I just… I don’t know how to explain it.”
Then there’s also the other weird stuff that’s been happening, which I’m sure is somehow connected to Fable – the shadows, the snake, the dreams – but I wouldn’t even know where to begin with that.
“I don’t get why you’re asking me this,” I say. “I mean, you’re then one who convinced me to stick it out in the first place, after I said I didn’t want to be involved.”
“Yes, I remember,” Kitty says thoughtfully, as she pushes the trolley down the aisle, scanning the shelves as I follow behind. “None of those boys is happy, you know. They might look like they’re doing ok, but they’ve all had to build such high walls, it’s like each one of them is trapped inside their own castle. Everyone wants in all the time. The fans, the managers, sponsors, even other celebs looking to boost their own fame. They have to put up a barrier, every second, to keep everyone else out.”
“I think I can relate to that,” I say, placing a bag of golden honeycrisp apples into the trolley.
“Of course you can,” Kitty says. “I think that’s why Felix chose you. You get it. Everyone’s always trying to break down his walls. But not you. You’re hiding away behind walls of your own.”
She doesn’t sound sad as she says it, more matter-of-fact. Like this is something she’s been thinking about for a while. I don’t know what to say, so I don’t say anything. I wait for her to carry on.
“I’m sorry Ash, I know I’m talking in circles,” Kitty says. “I guess I just wonder sometimes if I really did make the right decision convincing you to stay and help with the album. Going down this path isn’t going to help you find happiness, or meaning, or answers, or whatever it is you’re looking for. The music industry can destroy a person. If anything, if BYG Records likes your demo and you get signed or something… your walls are just going to get higher and higher. Do you know what I mean?”
A red-haired lady loading up her cart with several plump green cabbages a few feet from us is side-eying Kitty, and has probably been listening in on the whole thing. I don’t blame her. It’s way too intense and heavy for a grocery store aisle conversation anyway, but Kitty seems totally unfazed. She carries on talking, loading up the trolley with gluten-free dumplings and five huge frozen apple pies.
“Even with the walls, they can’t keep everyone out,” Kitty continues. “Every aspect of their lives is controlled. That’s why they’re doing this whole thing. Hiding out. It’s the first time in years they’ve had control over their own music.”
I shake my head, trying to imagine a life where every decision is made by some manager.
“It doesn’t stop at the music,” she says. “BYG Records controls everything. From what they wear, to what they eat. You know the boys can’t publicly have girlfriends?”
“What about Zara Quinn?” I blurt out before I can stop myself. The memory of Alastaire showing me the photo of Felix’s arms around the starlet at a party flashes through my mind. It’s not like their relationship was news to me though – they’ve been the paparazzo’s favorite on-and-off couple for the past two years. But a part of me wanted to think it was all made up, an act, for show.“The thing with Zara is complicated,” Kitty says, looking thoughtful as she glides down the frozen foods aisle. “If there’s nothing going on between you and my brother, why do you even care?”
“I don’t care,” I say too quickly, hoping Kitty doesn’t notice the hitch in my voice.
“Uh huh, sure thing,” she says. “You like him though, don’t you?”
She turns around, and stares at me, waiting for an answer. For once, my face doesn’t go red. I can feel it turning white. Because right behind Kitty, a middle-aged woman with curly black hair in a messy bun is placing a tub of ice cream in her trolley. Her husband is crossing something off a shopping list.
Mia’s parents.
“Susan,” I say, my voice coming out as a croak. “Jeremy.”
They look up, meeting my eyes, and their faces turn as white as mine.
I used to see them all the time before the accident. They were family friends, which is how I met Mia in the first place. Susan and my mom were BFFs at chef school, and I always thought it was kind of cool that I was besties with my mom’s best friend’s daughter.
Our two families were always together – 4th of July barbeques, camping trips up the coast, Christmas Eve, you name it. They basically were family.
Since the accident though, Susan and Jeremy have been like strangers. In fact, I haven’t seen them once since the night of the candlelight vigil. I can’t believe how much older they look since then. It’s like they’ve both aged twenty years, although it’s only been two.
I take a step towards them, and Susan’s shocked expression suddenly hardens into a cold, stiff mask. She abruptly pushes her trolley past me, without even looking back. Jeremy stops in front of me, running his hand shakily through his salt and pepper hair.
“I’m… sorry, I really am… we just… can’t…” he says, before hurrying after his wife.
There were tears in his eyes.
I stand still in the middle of the aisle, feeling like I’ve just been drenched with ice cold water. I’m sure the bystanders must be staring at me, and I vaguely wonder if any of them saw the whole thing.
After being publicly brushed off and ignored like that, I should be feeling embarrassed. Humiliated.
But all I feel is a piercing sorrow. And a new, fierce determination.
“Ash… are you ok?” Kitty asks, placing her hand on my elbow.
“Yes, I’m fine,” I say. “We need to make a detour before we go back to the cabin. There’s something I have to do.”
Something I haven’t done in a long, long, time.
I’m going to visit Mia’s grave.
There’s a somber mood in the car as we drive across town to the Ninth Order of Angels Catholic Church.Kitty doesn’t ask me about what happened at the shops. She doesn’t need to – it’s pretty clear what went down.A few months after the accident, after it became obvious that Mia’s parents were avoiding my mom and dad and me, I tried to see it from their perspective. I realized that every time they looked at me, they were seeing the girl who survived instead of Mia. How many times had they wished in the small lonely dark hours of the night for history to rewrite itself? For me to be at the bottom of the ocean with the others, while their daughter got to live on instead? How fervently had they bargained, begged, prayed?I forgave them long ago, but they clearly haven’t yet forgiven themselves.A flock of blackbird
Ask the angel.The words echo through my mind over and over. There’s no doubt who I need to speak to. I only know one angel, after all, even if in real life he’s more pervy and devilish than angelic.Still, I can’t even imagine what I’m meant to say to Alastaire. He’s going to think I’m crazy if I start asking him about witches and sea serpents and ghostly messages from my dead friends.Before we reach the cabin, Kitty and I stop at the edge of the forest clearing where I found my bicycle overgrown with roses and moss a few weeks ago.I wanted to show her that it’s the same as Mia’s grave. She still doesn’t believe that the crumbling old headstone could possibly be Mia’s, but at least if she sees my bike she’ll have to admit that something suspicious is going on.But when we reach the spot, there’s nothing there
Elliot sits next to me on the steps in silence.We look out across Kitty’s vegetable patch. The forest surrounding the clearing is cloaked in darkness, but closer in, silvery starlight bathes the lettuces and cabbages in a soft glow. The light glimmers on the still surface of the water in the birdbath at the garden’s centre. For the first time since Kitty unearthed the secret garden from its prison beneath the brambles, I notice that the birdbath’s column is actually a stone figure, covered in ivy. A beautiful face, a flowing robe, two arms outstretched, holding the water-filled bowl – and two perfect, folded wings sweeping the ground.An angel.That’s right. The angel doesn’t necessarily need to be Alastaire. It could be a statue. Or a painting. Or a lingerie-clad supermodel in a Victoria’s Secret show. Maybe Mia wants me to
I should do this more often.My ensuite bathroom at home has a shower, so I hardly ever take baths. Even here at the cabin, I’ve been showering upstairs every evening out of habit, totally ignoring the beautiful porcelain clawfoot tub in the downstairs bathroom.I hold my champagne glass in the air, admiring the way the warm candlelight glints off the bubbling golden liquid.The boys looked mildly shocked earlier when I passed on supper and instead took a crystal champagne flute out of the cupboard. I half filled the glass with sparkling champers, then reconsidered and filled it to the very brim. Ben and Alastaire were thrilled – they’ve been trying to get me to drink with them for weeks now. They weren’t as thrilled when I said I was drinking it alone, in the bathtub, and I was locking the door behind me to keep out any unwanted visitors.The fruity bubbles sparkle on my tongu
My sleep is anything but peaceful.Half awake, I toss and turn for hours, stuck in the delirium between dreams and reality. At one stage I think I hear footsteps next to my bed, but I can’t move, can’t open my eyes.I feel the duvet gently lifted away, and cool lips touching the bruise on my chest. I slip deeper under the tides of sleep, and for a while I’m wandering in a cool green forest, with fir trees as tall as towers, and distant silver birds high up in the branches. They call down to me, and I will my arms to turn into wings so that I can fly up and join them.Just as the first snowy white feathers break the surface of my skin, a whisper pulls me from my dreams.“Wake up, Cupcake.”I open my eyes to find Alastaire sitting on the end of my bed, his face illuminated by the pale light of the crescent flooding in through the window. I can see stars ou
Felix’s love bite is gone the next morning.Not healing, not faded – just gone. As if it was never there in the first place.I run my fingers over the smooth patch of skin, still feeling the touch of his cold lips.If it weren’t for Alastaire seeing the mark and losing his shit over it, I might have thought I’d imagined the whole thing.Great. Yet another lovely incident to add to the long list of ‘Impossible Things That Can’t Be Happening To Me But Somehow Are.’Unfortunately, the other, older bruise over my ribcage is still right where it was, as darkly purple and painful as ever.Even though there’s no longer a need for me to cover up, I still choose a high-necked skater dress with a button-up collar. My neck and shoulders are totally hidden, and I won’t have to wonder if Felix or Alastaire t
I hear her before I see her.I’m making my way along the trickiest section of the path – a faint steep zigzag through the ferns and bracken – when the sound of a woman singing catches my attention.The song is slow, sad, beautiful yet somehow broken – like the words are drowning in sorrow, too heavy for the singer to bear.She can’t be far – just a few yards from the path – so I walk as quietly as I can in the direction the song is coming from.As I draw nearer, I can hear the words more clearly.Once again the threads pull tightA promise made, an oath to keepRivers of song creep through the nightFlow like the bloodlines she must reap.
By the time I reach the edge of the forest, my legs feel like they’re about to collapse beneath me.I catch my breath for a moment under the shade of a huge oak tree, trying to process everything that just happened.I ran into Bea. I tried to speak to her. Then she burst into flames and disappeared.Impossible. Just… impossible.It’s hard to accept the finality of what I saw. I need to know for sure whether or not that thing was really Bea. Even if it means I might be putting myself in danger.I step out into the road, looking down Greenbriar Terrace. Bea lives just a short walk away, in Arlington Heights, neatly sandwiched between the forest and the Japanese Gardens. During the day, she’s usually one of two places – managing the Rose Inn, which is on the front of her property, or doing random hippy stuff at her cottage hidden away at
Time passes. Maybe minutes, maybe hours. I stir to wakefulness, rising up out of a deep and dreamless sleep. The room is dark. I can hear Felix’s voice, soft and muffled. He’s singing Déjà Vu. Where is he? I sit up in bed with a jolt, wide awake, trying to trace the source of the sound. It’s distant, yet somehow very close… far away, but definitely in my bedroom. In fact, it’s in my bed. Silvery light bleeds out from beneath my pillow, a soft glow seeping into the dark. I lift my pillow and I almost can’t believe my eyes – it’s my long-lost phone. It’s been missing for ages, since my birthday. It purrs softly in my hand, and in a split second I’m both relieved to have finally found it, and bitterly disappointed to realise that the singing
“Let go of me!” I hear Jade shout.It takes me a moment to make sense of the scene before me.The helicopter is hovering above us like a swollen obsidian dragonfly stirring the sky with metal wings, a rescue ladder dangling down, held by the scowling lady in black.She’s shouting “GO! GO! GO!” in the general direction of the boys.Kitty is half way up the ladder, her dress billowing around her legs.A huge man in a black suit is holding Jade back. Jade’s yelling Kitty’s name over and over, fighting to break away.For a moment Kitty stops climbing. She looks back over her shoulder at Jade, and I can see the pain written all over her face.But the lady in black looks up at her and shouts “DON’T STOP!”, and Kitty hurriedly turns her back on Jade and continues climbing, before disappearing int
“Nothing’s over,” Jade says seriously, turning to face Kitty with a solemn expression. “I’m getting you out of here. We just need to find someplace quiet. Away from people. Where we can figure this whole thing out.”“'’Tis too late for al' dat,” I hear a soft Irish accent right next to my ear. ”We’ll 'av ter leave.”I snap my head around, face to face with the pretty girl in the pink dress. The girl who is so unusually strong, and whose lap I’m sitting on. The girl with Lyall’s voice. Lyall’s soft brown eyes. Lyall’s gentle bittersweet grin I know so well, sweetly smiling at me right now.“Lyall?!” I ask. My hands move faster than my manners - I pull the glittery pink mask away from his face and over his head.“Surprise,” Lyal
They are upon us within seconds.The sound of screaming drowns out my thoughts, and I watch dazed as girls close in from all directions, their arms outstretched as they yell Felix and Alastaire’s names.The ground seems to shift beneath us, and the air all around us shimmers, vibrating with tension.A girl just a few feet away from me hold up her phone and takes a photo, and for a moment the flash blinds me, sending a sharp pain searing through the backs of my eyes.I tremble, the hysterical fangirl shrieks shuddering through my chest like the buzzing of a million bees.And as in any swarm, a queen leads the charge.Beth Donklin, our school’s undisputed Queen Bee, leader of the three B’s, Her Royal Bitchiness, is just a few feet in front of me.
“Felix,” I say, the sound of his name sweet as honey on my lips.“Took you long enough,” he says, pulling me closer. His crooked smile is wickedly dark, and I can just make out the scent of the forest on him – midnight pine, icy moss, night-blooming flowers.Mystical and arcane – a deep dark mystery that has me firmly in its grasp.“What are you doing here?” I ask, trying to detach myself from him, but finding that somehow, I’m unable to.I have no control of my limbs, and my hand refuses to unclasp his; my feet glide gracefully over the grass in a perfect waltz.“You really thought I’d miss tonight?” He asks.
A pair of gleaming yellow eyes. Bristling fur, black as coal.And a row of teeth like little white knives flashing towards my throat.I jump off the bench in a heartbeat, and I hear the sharp snap of the wolf’s jaws closing on thin air, in the exact spot I was a moment before.I land hard on my back, knocking the air from my lungs. For a second everything’s a blur; I see the stars swimming in and out of focus between the swaying tree branches above me.A shadow moves into my vision, blocking out the starlight.I need to move. Now.But before I can spring into action, strong arms are around me, wrapping me up, lifting me onto my feet.“Are you ok?” A familiar voice asks.It takes a moment for my vision to clear.I step back, ready to bolt.The face I see
The bright golden moon hangs low and heavy in the black sky.Jamie, Grace, Zee and I make our way from the Huntson High car park towards the lawns, where a large, colorful crowd is milling about on the moonlit grass.In the distance, I see turrets, and I recognize the plywood castle backdrop from last year’s production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. It’s been reworked into some sort of makeshift stage, complete with amps and overhead lights.I’ll be on that stage in an hour. In front of all those people. Somehow I’m not even nervous. Just extremely, utterly excited.“Walk faster ladies!” Jamie shrieks, tugging Zee behind her. “We’re gonna miss the chance to see Alix getting kissed by all the moms and grandmas! Maybe even grandpas! C’mon! Hurry!”“E
Warm. It’s so soft and warm here.I’m curled up on my side, cozy as a caterpillar wrapped up a cocoon of velvet sunshine, sleepily waking up to greet the new day.It’s a new day.I bolt upright in bed, the events before I passed out rushing back to me.I was in a clearing in the forest with Felix. He kissed me. And he changed, or at least he appeared to – he became the figure from my dreams, the dark prince from Gran’s fairy tale.What the hell is happening to me? Was I hallucinating? Having some sort of vision?He called me a name – Odin or Onion or something – and then… nothing.It all went black.And now I’m back in my bedroom at home, far from the forest and the cabin and (hopefully) Felix.He must have carried me here after I f
Wait.My voice sounds hollow and distant, like it’s coming from far away. Felix hovers over me, a darkness dawning in his eyes as I speak.“Wait, Felix,” I whisper. “This isn’t… I can’t do this.”His dark hair falls in front of his eyes, and he pushes it back as he nods, releasing me as he sits up, leaning his back against the trunk of the tree we lie beneath.I stay on my back for a few moments, trying to catch my breath as I stare up at the canopy of brilliant bright red leaves overhead. As I watch, a single, delicate leaf drifts down, landing on my breast like a drop of blood.Felix reaches for it with a faraway look in his eyes, his fingertips leaving echoes of prickling electricity where they brush my skin.He holds the frail crimson leaf up into the silver moonlig