Chapter Four: Light My Fire
Valetta and Mitchell searched
for a few people I had met at the camp whom I knew would be assets to the
project if we could find them. I had absolute confidence in their ability. The
only restraint I gave them, however, was not to approach them regarding the
movement. That was something I needed to do personally.
Drei helped me find the one
person locally I knew would be the most difficult to approach. Then, after
insisting I adjust to introducing myself as Leirba, he disappeared, claiming he
had something he needed to do. I didn’t know what he was doing but I trusted
him, so I tried not to let the worry overrun my thoughts.
The day had been overcast but I
had arranged a rendezvous after dusk, not wanting to risk frightening my guest
with an unanticipated injury. We were meeting at a café. It had been forever
since I had had a cinnamon chai latte and I couldn’t help breathing in the
scent every few minutes to luxuriate in it; it smelled like heaven.
I had to wait quite a while for
her to arrive—granted, I had been extremely early. When she walked through the
door, I couldn’t help smiling at her. Her long red hair cascaded over her
shoulders. She was wearing her classic skinny jeans paired with rainbow flats
to match her tie-dye tee. Fashion aside, she wasn’t how I remembered her; her
lips smiled, but sorrow and guilt made her cautious, tentative. Sleepless
nights left dark circles under her eyes that showed through her concealer; she
looked thinner.
“Caroline,” I called, catching
her bronze eyes.
She smiled a little more warmly as
she strolled up to the table. Cocking her head to one side and furrowing her
brow slightly, she asked, “Have we met before? You look…familiar.”
“I’m Leirba,” I said, shaking
her hand.
She gasped and grimaced; “Your
hands are freezing.”
Folding my hands in my lap, I
nodded my head in the direction of the empty seat. “Please…sit.”
“I’ll just get something—”
“Mocha chai?” I interrupted,
motioning to the girl at the counter. I had already ordered and paid for it,
but I didn’t want it cold by the time she arrived. The guy working brought her
drink over a moment later, smiling flirtatiously at the two of us before returning
to work.
After taking a drink, she set
her cup down and stared at me a moment. “How’d you know?”
“I have my ways,” I replied
cryptically, still holding her gaze as I sipped my own drink. Her brow furrowed
in confusion and I could see the allure Mitchell found in puzzling me. True, I
hated when I was the one being puzzled, but there was something about a good
secret that made riddling another person entertaining.
“I really think I’ve met you
somewhere before. I’m almost certain,” she insisted, sitting forward on her
elbows. “But it doesn’t make sense because she—she…never mind.” Silence fell
between us as she watched her finger run along the rim of her mug.
“She what?” I asked gently. “Died?”
Her bronze eyes shot up at me,
surprised but also horrified and hurt. “Yeah;” she studied me carefully as if I
were the devil. What I was doing was somewhat evil, I’ll concede, but it
probably would have gone a lot worse if I’d come straight out with it from the
start—the most likely outcome would be her yelling and storming out, and I
couldn’t waste time chasing after her. She needed to arrive at her own
conclusion about my identity if I was going to be able to bring her and the
others into the fold within the month.
“Are you sure?” I tilted my head
to one side, staring at her.
“I was there,” she replied
softly, daring me to prove her wrong.
I sauntered to the counter,
picking up a napkin on the way there. Using one of their pens, I wrote out
Leirba in capital letters and drew an arrow from the A to the L. After thanking
the guy at the register, I returned to our table and slid the napkin across its
surface so she could read it.
At first, confusion flitted
across her face as she tried making sense of it. She even glanced up at me a
few times in disbelief. Disbelief and confusion quickly transformed into a
bittersweet joy which was tossed aside by grief and guilt, her face
disappearing into her hands as silent sobs wracked her body.
“Caroline?” She worried me. I
hadn’t any idea she was this shaken by it. No, that’s a lie. I did know. Her
entire revolution fell apart because she thought I was dead. Because she blamed
herself.
“I’m so sorry, Abs,” she
murmured into her hands. “I never meant for any of that to happen; I was trying
to prevent anything like that. You weren’t supposed to get hurt. I’m sorry. So,
so sorry.”
Laying a hand on her forearm, I said,
“You have nothing to be sorry for; you aren’t responsible for what happened.” As
I spoke, I worked at untying the knot of sorrow and guilt inside her, pulling
the emotions surrounding the event away from her and setting them adrift into
the sky; only then was I able to loosen and release the pain of the event. All
of it floated through the ceiling in blue and decaying black ribbons; it was
almost as beautiful as when I had done the same for Nick upon our first
meeting. Of course, then, I hadn’t really known what I was doing. I was just
hoping my crazy idea would work.
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