Chapter One: New Flame
She sat,
legs crossed under the table, an arm draped across the shiny surface while the
other hand supported her thin face. Her bordering on too long fingernails,
sporting chipped nail polish, tapped a rhythm across one of her high cheekbones;
probably bored out of her mind and already disinterested. At first glance, her
flaming crimson hair seemed more like a wig, but roots don't lie. It flared
around her head like its own version of the sun.
Drei stood
next to me, tall and powerful. It had been his idea for me to meet with her. Caroline,
he insisted, would help me to learn what it was I was supposed to do. She
already had a following—however small it might have been—and a plan. I had
neither. Not to mention I didn’t have a clue as to where to start.
“Are you
sure that's her?” I whispered, crossing my arms over my fluttering stomach. There
was something in her demeanor that made me feel threatened. But Drei wouldn't
purposely put me in harm's way. He had spent the five years we had known each
other keeping me safe. He was my rock, my love; I trusted him.
“Caroline
is a bit of a wild child, but she has much to teach you if you are willing,”
Drei said softly.
I couldn't
tear my eyes from her; she couldn't have been more than 25, fresh from college
if she ever attended. Throughout my entire life, I couldn't recall once talking
to someone like her. She was so much freer of society and could care less what
people thought. I was her opposite in every way.
“Go on;”
Drei waited for me to start towards her. He had made the initial contact; I had
to prove he wasn’t dragging me into it, even if this really wasn’t my choice.
As we
reached the table in the corner of the cafe, gold flecked bronze eyes swiveled
towards us, seeming to absorb what she liked and disliked. The judgment cast on
me was obvious: I wasn't someone she worked with. She was intrigued by Drei,
her eyes lighting up a moment before she buried it, fearing she would have to
take me on if she invited him.
“Sit,” she commanded
in a rich voice.
At her
questioning gaze, Drei introduced us; “I am Drei, the one who contacted you. This
is Abriel.”
She nodded
as though she hated the formality of it all, but didn't want to start talking
before she knew for sure we weren't mistaken. Rather intelligent on her part—not
that she didn’t seem intelligent.
“I don't
usually consider people like you,” she said, pausing to sip her latte. From the
sweetly spiced smell wafting from the cup, I knew it was a mocha chai. Personally,
I found them too sweet. “It may be your too normal hair, the cutesy ballet
flats, the skirt—I couldn't tell you. But something about people like you…” she
scrunched her nose a bit, staring at me, “makes me not trust anyone.”
“I take it
you like my blouse,” I said, lacking any other comment. It felt hopeless. If
she didn't like me, what could I do to change it? The only thing to do, really,
was make whatever was left of this meeting bearable.
“Have one
just like it,” she replied, taking another sip. “A wrap blouse is a necessity.”
Silence
ensued. She didn't leave, which was good—for us anyway—but she didn't say
anything either. When Drei asked if I wanted a cinnamon chai—my favorite—I
nodded and he left.
“Who is he,
really?” Caroline asked, her eyes following his departure. She was interested
in him, but not in a sensual way. Which was to all of our benefit. If she had
been anywhere near drooling after him, I would have left and never glanced
back.
For a
fleeting moment I thought about revealing him as a vampire, but I knew better. If
he wanted her to know, he'd tell her. “A friend.”
“More like
a muscle man.” She took another drink. Maybe I had been wrong about her not
being interested in that sense.
“Why haven't
you left yet?” I found myself saying; it came about more because I wanted to
change the subject, but I rationalized I had valid reason to ask. Caroline had
already made it clear she didn't like me, so it didn't make sense for there to
be an awkward silence between us—especially not when she was still ogling him.
“Honestly?”
She raised an eyebrow as her eyes returned to mine, wrapping both pale hands
around her cup. I nodded, half afraid I would say something inappropriate. “The
fact that we have the same blouse counts for something. It means you’re not
totally hopeless.” She thought a moment longer over a more legitimate reason. “He
doesn't hang around you for nothing. Someone like him knows who he wants to be
around, so there's got to be something I'm missing. Is there?” She held my gaze
steadily.
“Perhaps,”
I said, my voice even, more uncertain what her intentions for either of us
were. The answer she sought was also the thing that put me at risk. If she
wanted me to reveal my hand, I needed to know she wasn’t going to turn around
and sell me up the river. “Is there a reason why you have such control over who
works with you? Why you have such a following when you're so young?”
Caroline
laughed. “You're gutsy. I like that.” She finished the rest of her mocha chai,
tossing the cup in the trashcan across from the table and sat back. “Every
revolutionary is young. You don't see some grandfather leading an uprising, do
you?”
“No. But
why you?”
Her lips
cocked to one side, she laid her hand palm up on the table between us. “Because
I can do this,” she answered as a small flame sprang to life in her palm. “Does
that scare you?”
Continuing
to hold her gaze, I created a vacuum around her flame. When it extinguished, she
looked down at her hand, shocked momentarily, but then smiled at me.
“Coincidence?”
she questioned for the sake of it. The spark in her eyes revealed she already
knew the answer.
“It wasn’t.”
“I'm not
the only one with tricks, I see,” she said, still smiling as if amused. “That
was pretty nifty. Does he know?” She bobbed her head in the direction of Drei,
walking back with my chai and his latte.
“He knows
more than I can say.”
“We'll be
in touch,” she announced, standing as Drei handed me the chai. She was taller
than I had thought, only a few inches shorter than Drei. “I'll have one of my
people pick you up. Then I'll tell you everything you need to know about
helping me.”
We watched
her leave, and then sat with our heads bowed together. It had been a long while
since I'd had to trust anyone but Drei. But something about Caroline—whether it
was her spunky attitude or her power over fire—interested and frightened me. Not
to mention, I still couldn’t make heads or tails about her interest in Drei,
though I knew I shouldn’t worry about it—he had chosen me, after all. Ambivalent
as I was, I wanted to trust her, to be around and learn from her. As this
occurred to me, I realized I wanted to run from her, as well.
“That went
well.” Drei sipped his latte.
“We'll see
soon enough.”
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