IĀ WAS HAVING A BAD WEEK.
I knew that essentially nothing had changed. Okay, so Victoria had not given up, but had I ever dreamed for one moment that she had? Her reappearance had only confirmed what Iād already known. No reason for fresh panic.
In theory. Not panicking was easier said than done.
Graduation was only a few weeks away, but I wondered if it wasnāt a little foolish to sit around, weak and tasty, waiting for the next disaster. It seemed too dangerous to be human ā just begging for trouble. Someone like me shouldnātĀ beĀ human. Someone with my luck ought to be a little less helpless.
But no one would listen to me.
Carlisle had said, āThere are seven of us, Bella. And with Alice on our side, I donāt think Victoriaās going to catch us off guard. I think itās important, for Charlieās sake, that we stick with the original plan.ā
Esme had said, āWeād never allow anything to happen to you, sweetheart. You know that. Please donāt be anxious.ā And then sheād kissed my forehead.
Emmett had said, āIām really glad Edward didnāt kill you. Everythingās so much more fun with you around.ā
Rosalie had glared at him.
Alice had rolled her eyes and said, āIām offended. Youāre not honestly
worriedĀ about this, are you?ā
āIf itās no big deal, then why did Edward drag me to Florida?ā Iād demanded.
āHavenāt you noticed yet, Bella, that Edward is just the teeniest bit prone to overreaction?ā
Jasper had silently erased all the panic and tension in my body with his curious talent of controlling emotional atmospheres. Iād felt reassured, and let them talk me out of my desperate pleading.
Of course, that calm had worn off as soon as Edward and I had walked out of the room.
So the consensus was that I was just supposed to forget that a deranged vampire was stalking me, intent on my death. Go about my business.
I did try. And surprisingly, thereĀ wereĀ other things almost as stressful to dwell on besides my status on the endangered species list. . . .
Because Edwardās response had been the most frustrating of them all. āThatās between you and Carlisle,ā heād said. āOf course, you know
that Iām willing to make it between you and me at any time that you wish. You know my condition.ā And he had smiled angelically.
Ugh. I did know his condition. Edward had promised that he would change me himself whenever I wanted . . . just as long as I wasĀ marriedĀ to him first.
Sometimes I wondered if he was only pretending that he couldnāt read my mind. How else had he struck upon the one condition that I would have trouble accepting? The one condition that would slow me down.
All in all, a very bad week. And today was the worst day in it.
It was always a bad day when Edward was away. Alice had foreseen nothing out of the ordinary this weekend, and so Iād insisted that he take the opportunity to go hunting with his brothers. I knew how it bored him to hunt the easy, nearby prey.
āGo have fun,ā Iād told him. āBag a few mountain lions for me.ā
I would never admit to him how hard it was for me when he was gone
ā how it brought back the abandonment nightmares. If he knew that, it would make him feel horrible and he would be afraid to ever leave me, even for the most necessary reasons. It had been like that in the beginning, when heād first returned from Italy. His golden eyes had turned black and heād suffered from his thirst more than it was already necessary that he suffer. So I put on a brave face and all but kicked him out the door whenever Emmett and Jasper wanted to go.
I think he saw through me, though. A little. This morning there had been a note left on my pillow:
Iāll be back so soon you wonāt have time to miss me. Look after my heart ā Iāve left it with you.
So now I had a big empty Saturday with nothing but my morning shift at Newtonās Olympic Outfitters to distract me. And, of course, the oh-so- comforting promise from Alice.
āIām staying close to home to hunt. Iāll only be fifteen minutes away if you need me. Iāll keep an eye out for trouble.ā
Translation: donāt try anything funny just because Edward is gone.
Alice was certainly just as capable of crippling my truck as Edward
was.
I tried to look on the bright side. After work, I had plans to help
Angela with her announcements, so that would be a distraction. And Charlie was in an excellent mood due to Edwardās absence, so I might as well enjoy that while it lasted. Alice would spend the night with me if I was pathetic enough to ask her to. And then tomorrow, Edward would be home. I would survive.
Not wanting to be ridiculously early for work, I ate my breakfast slowly, one Cheerio at a time. Then, when Iād washed the dishes, I arranged the magnets on the fridge into a perfect line. Maybe I was developing obsessive-compulsive disorder.
The last two magnets ā round black utilitarian pieces that were my favorites because they could hold ten sheets of paper to the fridge without breaking a sweat ā did not want to cooperate with my fixation. Their polarities were reversed; every time I tried to line the last one up, the other jumped out of place.
For some reason ā impending mania, perhaps ā this really irritated me. Why couldnāt they just play nice? Stupid with stubbornness, I kept shoving them together as if I was expecting them to suddenly give up. I could have flipped one over, but that felt like losing. Finally, exasperated at myself more than the magnets, I pulled them from the fridge and held them together with two hands. It took a little effort ā they were strong enough to put up a fight ā but I forced them to coexist side-by-side.
āSee,ā I said out loud ā talking to inanimate objects, never a good sign ā āThatās not so horrible, is it?ā
I stood there like an idiot for a second, not quite able to admit that I wasnāt having any lasting effect against scientific principles. Then, with a sigh, I put the magnets back on the fridge, a foot apart.
āThereās no need to be so inflexible,ā I muttered.
It was still too early, but I decided Iād better get out of the house before the inanimate objects started talking back.
When I got to Newtonās, Mike was methodically dry mopping the aisles while his mom arranged a new counter display. I caught them in the middle of an argument, unaware that I had arrived.
āBut itās the only time that Tyler can go,ā Mike complained. āYou said after graduation āā
āYouāre just going to have to wait,ā Mrs. Newton snapped. āYou and Tyler can think of something else to do. You are not going to Seattle until the police stop whatever it is that is going on there. I know Beth Crowley has told Tyler the same thing, so donāt act like Iām the bad guy ā oh, good morning, Bella,ā she said when she caught sight of me, brightening her tone quickly. āYouāre early.ā
Karen Newton was the last person Iād think to ask for help in an outdoor sports equipment store. Her perfectly highlighted blond hair was always smoothed into an elegant twist on the back of her neck, her fingernails were polished by professionals, as were her toenails ā visible through the strappy high heels that didnāt resemble anything Newtonās offered on the long row of hiking boots.
āLight traffic,ā I joked as I grabbed my hideous fluorescent orange vest out from under the counter. I was surprised that Mrs. Newton was as worked up about this Seattle thing as Charlie. Iād thought he was going to extremes.
āWell, er . . .ā Mrs. Newton hesitated for a moment, playing uncomfortably with a stack of flyers she was arranging by the register.
I stopped with one arm in my vest. I knew that look.
When Iād let the Newtons know that I wouldnāt be working here this summer ā abandoning them in their busiest season, in effect ā theyād started training Katie Marshall to take my place. They couldnāt really afford
both of us on the payroll at the same time, so when it looked like a slow day
. . .
āI was going to call,ā Mrs. Newton continued. āI donāt think weāre expecting a ton of business today. Mike and I can probably handle things. Iām sorry you got up and drove out. ā
On a normal day, I would be ecstatic with this turn of events. Today . .
. not so much.
āOkay,ā I sighed. My shoulders slumped. What was I going to do now?
āThatās not fair, Mom,ā Mike said. āIf Bella wants to work āā
āNo, itās okay, Mrs. Newton. Really, Mike. Iāve got finals to study for and stuff. . . .ā I didnāt want to be a source of familial discord when they were already arguing.
āThanks, Bella. Mike, you missed aisle four. Um, Bella, do you mind throwing these flyers in a Dumpster on the way out? I told the girl who left them here that Iād put them on the counter, but I really donāt have the room.ā
āSure, no problem.ā I put my vest away, and then tucked the flyers under my arm and headed out into the misty rain.
The Dumpster was around the side of Newtonās, next to where we employees were supposed to park. I shuffled along, kicking pebbles petulantly on my way. I was about to fling the stack of bright yellow papers into the trash when the heading printed in bold across the top caught my eye. One word in particular seized my attention.
I clutched the papers in both hands as I stared at the picture beneath the caption. A lump rose in my throat.
SAVE THE OLYMPIC WOLF
Under the words, there was a detailed drawing of a wolf in front of a fir tree, its head thrown back in the act of baying at the moon. It was a disconcerting picture; something about the wolfās plaintive posture made him look forlorn. Like he was howling in grief.
And then I was running to my truck, the flyers still locked in my grip.
Fifteen minutes ā thatās all I had. But it should be long enough. It was only fifteen minutes to La Push, and surely I would cross the boundary line a few minutes before I hit the town.
My truck roared to life without any difficulty.
Alice couldnāt have seen me doing this, because I hadnāt been planning it. A snap decision, that was the key! And as long as I moved fast enough, I should be able to capitalize on it.
Iād thrown the damp flyers in my haste and they were scattered in a bright mess across the passenger seat ā a hundred bolded captions, a hundred dark howling wolves outlined against the yellow background.
I barreled down the wet highway, turning the windshield wipers on high and ignoring the groan of the ancient engine. Fifty-five was the most I could coax out of my truck, and I prayed it would be enough.
I had no clue where the boundary line was, but I began to feel safer as I passed the first houses outside La Push. This must be beyond where Alice was allowed to follow.
Iād call her when I got to Angelaās this afternoon, I reasoned, so that sheād know I was fine. There was no reason for her to get worked up. She didnāt need to be mad at me ā Edward would be angry enough for two when he got back.
My truck was positively wheezing by the time it grated to a stop in front of the familiar faded red house. The lump came back to my throat as I stared at the little place that had once been my refuge. It had been so long since Iād been here.
Before I could cut the engine, Jacob was standing in the door, his face blank with shock.
In the sudden silence when the truck-roar died, I heard him gasp. āBella?ā
āHey, Jake!ā
āBella!ā he yelled back, and the smile Iād been waiting for stretched across his face like the sun breaking free of the clouds. His teeth gleamed bright against his russet skin. āI canāt believe it!ā
He ran to the truck and half-yanked me through the open door, and then we were both jumping up and down like kids.
āHow did you get here?ā āI snuck out!ā
āAwesome!ā
āHey, Bella!ā Billy had rolled himself into the doorway to see what all the commotion was about.
āHey, Bil ā!ā
Just then my air choked off ā Jacob grabbed me up in a bear hug too tight to breathe and swung me around in a circle.
āWow, itās good to see you here!ā āCanāt . . . breathe,ā I gasped.
He laughed and put me down.
āWelcome back, Bella,ā he said, grinning. And the way he said the words made it sound likeĀ welcome home.
We started walking, too keyed up to sit still in the house. Jacob was practically bouncing as he moved, and I had to remind him a few times that my legs werenāt ten feet long.
As we walked, I felt myself settling into another version of myself, the self I had been with Jacob. A little younger, a little less responsible. Someone who might, on occasion, do something really stupid for no good reason.
Our exuberance lasted through the first few topics of conversation: how we were doing, what we were up to, how long I had, and what had brought me here. When I hesitantly told him about the wolf flyer, his bellowing laugh echoed back from the trees.
But then, as we ambled past the back of the store and shoved through the thick scrub that ringed the far edge of First Beach, we got to the hard parts. All too soon we had to talk about the reasons behind our long separation, and I watched as the face of my friend hardened into the bitter mask that was already too familiar.
āSo whatās the story, anyway?ā Jacob asked me, kicking a piece of driftwood out of his way with too much force. It sailed over the sand and then clattered against the rocks. āI mean, since the last time we . . . well, before, you know . . .ā He struggled for the words. He took a deep breath and tried again. āWhat Iām asking is . . . everything is just back to the way it was beforeĀ heĀ left? You forgave him for all of that?ā
I took a deep breath. āThere was nothing to forgive.ā
I wanted to skip past this part, the betrayals, the accusations, but I knew that we had to talk it through before weād be able to move on to anything else.
Jacobās face puckered up like heād just licked a lemon. āI wish Sam had taken a picture when he found you that night last September. It would be exhibit A.ā
āNobodyās on trial.ā
āMaybe somebody should be.ā
āNot even you would blame him for leaving, if you knew the reason why.ā
He glared at me for a few seconds. āOkay,ā he challenged acidly. āAmaze me.ā
His hostility was wearing on me ā chafing against the raw; it hurt to have him angry with me. It reminded me of the bleak afternoon, long ago, when ā under orders from Sam ā heād told me we couldnāt be friends. I took a second to compose myself.
āEdward left me last fall because he didnāt think I should be hanging out with vampires. He thought it would be healthier for me if he left.ā
Jacob did a double take. He had to scramble for a minute. Whatever heād been planning to say, it clearly no longer applied. I was glad he didnāt know the catalyst behind Edwardās decision. I could only imagine what heād think if he knew Jasper had tried to kill me.
āHe came back, though, didnāt he?ā Jacob muttered. āToo bad he canāt stick to a decision.ā
āIf you remember,Ā IĀ went and gotĀ him.ā
Jacob stared at me for a moment, and then he backed off. His face relaxed, and his voice was calmer when he spoke.
āThatās true. So I never did get the story. What happened?ā I hesitated, biting my lip.
āIs it a secret?ā His voice took on a taunting edge. āAre you not allowed to tell me?ā
āNo,ā I snapped. āItās just a really long story.ā
Jacob smiled, arrogant, and turned to walk up the beach, expecting me to follow.
It was no fun being with Jacob if he was going to act like this. I trailed behind him automatically, not sure if I shouldnāt turn around and leave. I
was going to have to face Alice, though, when I got home. . . . I supposed I wasnāt in any rush.
Jacob walked to a huge, familiar piece of driftwood ā an entire tree, roots and all, bleached white and beached deep in the sand; it wasĀ ourĀ tree, in a way.
Jacob sat down on the natural bench, and patted the space next to him. āI donāt mind long stories. Is there any action?ā
I rolled my eyes as I sat next to him. āThereās some action,ā I allowed. āIt wouldnāt be real horror without action.ā
āHorror!ā I scoffed. āCan you listen, or will you be interrupting me with rude comments about my friends?ā
He pretended to lock his lips and then threw the invisible key over his shoulder. I tried not to smile, and failed.
āIāll have to start with the stuff you were already there for,ā I decided, working to organize the stories in my head before I began.
Jacob raised his hand. āGo ahead.ā
āThatās good,ā he said. āI didnāt understand much that was going on at the time.ā
āYeah, well, it gets complicated, so pay attention. You know how AliceĀ seesĀ things?ā
I took his scowl ā the wolves werenāt thrilled that the legends of vampires possessing supernatural gifts were true ā for a yes, and proceeded with the account of my race through Italy to rescue Edward.
I kept it as succinct as possible ā leaving out anything that wasnāt essential. I tried to read Jacobās reactions, but his face was enigmatic as I explained how Alice had seen Edward plan to kill himself when heād heard that I was dead. Sometimes Jacob seemed so deep in thought, I wasnāt sure if he was listening. He only interrupted one time.
āThe fortune-telling bloodsucker canāt see us?ā he echoed, his face both fierce and gleeful. āSeriously? ThatāsĀ excellent!ā
I clenched my teeth together, and we sat in silence, his face expectant as he waited for me to continue. I glared at him until he realized his mistake.
āOops!ā he said. āSorry.ā He locked his lips again.
His response was easier to read when I got to the part about the Volturi. His teeth clenched together, goose bumps rose on his arms, and his nostrils flared. I didnāt go into specifics, I just told him that Edward had talked us out of trouble, without revealing the promise weād had to make, or the visit we were anticipating. Jacob didnāt need to have my nightmares.
āNow you know the whole story,ā I concluded. āSo itās your turn to talk. What happened while I was with my mom this weekend?ā I knew Jacob would give me more details than Edward had. He wasnāt afraid of scaring me.
Jacob leaned forward, instantly animated. āSo Embry and Quil and I were running patrol on Saturday night, just routine stuff, when out of nowhere ā bam!ā He threw his arms out, impersonating an explosion. āThere it is ā a fresh trail, not fifteen minutes old. Sam wanted us to wait for him, but I didnāt know you were gone, and I didnāt know if your bloodsuckers were keeping an eye on you or not. So we took off after her at full speed, but sheād crossed the treaty line before we caught up. We spread out along the line, hoping sheād cross back over. It was frustrating, let me tell you.ā He wagged his head and his hair ā growing out from the short crop heād adopted when heād joined the pack ā flopped into his eyes. āWe ended up too far south. The Cullens chased her back to our side just a few miles north of us. Would have been the perfect ambush if weād known where to wait.ā
He shook his head, grimacing now. āThatās when it got dicey. Sam and the others caught up to her before we did, but she was dancing right along the line, and the whole coven was right there on the other side. The big one, whatās-his-name āā
āEmmett.ā
āYeah, him. He made a lunge for her, but that redhead is fast! He flew right behind her and almost rammed into Paul. So, Paul . . . well, you know Paul.ā
āYeah.ā
āLost his focus. Canāt say that I blame him ā the big bloodsucker was right on top of him. He sprang ā hey, donāt give me that look. The vampire was on our land.ā
I tried to compose my face so that he would go on. My nails were digging into my palms with the stress of the story, even though I knew it
had turned out fine.
āAnyway, Paul missed, and the big one got back on his side. But by then the, er, well the, uh, blonde . . .ā Jacobās expression was a comical mix of disgust and unwilling admiration as he tried to come up with a word to describe Edwardās sister.
āRosalie.ā
āWhatever. She got real territorial, so Sam and I fell back to get Paulās flanks. Then their leader and the other blond male āā
āCarlisle and Jasper.ā
He gave me an exasperated look. āYou know I donāt really care. Anyway, soĀ CarlisleĀ spoke to Sam, trying to calm things down. Then it was weird, because everyone got really calm really fast. It was that other one you told me about, messing with our heads. But even though we knew what he was doing, we couldnātĀ notĀ be calm.ā
āYeah, I know how it feels.ā
āReally annoying, thatās how it feels. Only you canāt be annoyed until afterwards.ā He shook his head angrily. āSo Sam and the head vamp agreed that Victoria was the priority, and we started after her again. Carlisle gave us the line, so that we could follow the scent properly, but then she hit the cliffs just north of Makah country, right where the line hugs the coast for a few miles. She took off into the water again. The big one and the calm one wanted permission to cross the line to go after her, but of course we said no.ā
āGood. I mean, you were being stupid, but Iām glad. Emmettās never cautious enough. He could have gotten hurt.ā
Jacob snorted. āSo did your vampire tell you we attacked for no reason and his totally innocent coven āā
āNo,ā I interrupted. āEdward told me the same story, just without quite as many details.ā
āHuh,ā Jacob said under his breath, and he bent over to pick up a rock from among the millions of pebbles at our feet. With a casual flick, he sent it flying a good hundred meters out into the bay. āWell, sheāll be back, I guess. Weāll get another shot at her.ā
I shuddered; of course she would be back. Would Edward really tell me next time? I wasnāt sure. Iād have to keep an eye on Alice, to look for the signs that the pattern was about to repeat. . . .
Jacob didnāt seem to notice my reaction. He was staring across the waves with a thoughtful expression on his face, his broad lips pursed.
āWhat are you thinking about?ā I asked after a long, quiet time.
āIām thinking about what you told me. About when the fortune-teller saw you cliff jumping and thought youād committed suicide, and how it all got out of control. . . . Do you realize that if you had just waited for me like you were supposed to, then the bl āĀ AliceĀ wouldnāt have been able to see you jump? Nothing would have changed. Weād probably be in my garage right now, like any other Saturday. There wouldnāt be any vampires in Forks, and you and me . . .ā He trailed off, deep in thought.
It was disconcerting the way he said this, like it would be a good thing to have no vampires in Forks. My heart thumped unevenly at the emptiness of the picture he painted.
āEdward would have come back anyway.ā
āAre you sure about that?ā he asked, belligerent again as soon as I spoke Edwardās name.
āBeing apart . . . It didnāt work out so well for either of us.ā
He started to say something, something angry from his expression, but he stopped himself, took a breath, and began again.
āDid you know Sam is mad at you?ā
āMe?ā It took me a second. āOh. I see. He thinks they would have stayed away if I wasnāt here.ā
āNo. Thatās not it.ā āWhatās his problem then?ā
Jacob leaned down to scoop up another rock. He turned it over and over in his fingers; his eyes were riveted on the black stone while he spoke in a low voice.
āWhen Sam saw . . . how you were in the beginning, when Billy told them how Charlie worried when you didnāt get better, and then when you started jumping off cliffs . . .ā
I made a face. No one was ever going to let me forget that.
Jacobās eyes flashed up to mine. āHe thought you were the one person in the world with as much reason to hate the Cullens as he does. Sam feels sort of . . . betrayed that you would just let them back into your life like they never hurt you.ā
I didnāt believe for a second that Sam was the only one who felt that way. And the acid in my voice now was for both of them.
āYou can tell Sam to go right to āā
āLook at that,ā Jacob interrupted me, pointing to an eagle in the act of plummeting down toward the ocean from an incredible height. It checked itself at the last minute, only its talons breaking the surface of the waves, just for an instant. Then it flapped away, its wings straining against the load of the huge fish it had snagged.
āYou see it everywhere,ā Jacob said, his voice suddenly distant. āNature taking its course ā hunter and prey, the endless cycle of life and death.ā
I didnāt understand the point of the nature lecture; I guessed that he was just trying to change the subject. But then he looked down at me with dark humor in his eyes.
āAnd yet, you donāt see the fish trying to plant a kiss on the eagle. You never seeĀ that.ā He grinned a mocking grin.
I grinned back tightly, though the acid taste was still in my mouth. āMaybe the fish was trying,ā I suggested. āItās hard to tell what a fish is thinking. Eagles are good-looking birds, you know.ā
āIs that what it comes down to?ā His voice was abruptly sharper. āGood looks?ā
āDonāt be stupid, Jacob.ā
āIs it the money, then?ā he persisted.
āThatās nice,ā I muttered, getting up from the tree. āIām flattered that you think so much of me.ā I turned my back on him and paced away.
āAw, donāt get mad.ā He was right behind me; he caught my wrist and spun me around. āIām serious! Iām trying to understand here, and Iām coming up blank.ā
His eyebrows pushed together angrily, and his eyes were black in their deep shadow.
āI loveĀ him. Not because heās beautiful or because heāsĀ rich!ā I spat the word at Jacob. āIād much rather he werenāt either one. It would even out the gap between us just a little bit ā because heād still be the most loving and unselfish and brilliant andĀ decentĀ person Iāve ever met. Of course I love him. How hard is that to understand?ā
āItās impossible to understand.ā
āPlease enlighten me, then, Jacob.ā I let the sarcasm flow thick. āWhatĀ isĀ a valid reason for someone to love someone else? Since apparently Iām doing it wrong.ā
āI think the best place to start would be to look within your own species. That usually works.ā
āWell, that just sucks!ā I snapped. āI guess Iām stuck with Mike Newton after all.ā
Jacob flinched back and bit his lip. I could see that my words had hurt him, but I was too mad to feel bad about that yet. He dropped my wrist and folded his arms across his chest, turning from me to glare toward the ocean.
āIām human,ā he muttered, his voice almost inaudible.
āYouāre not as human as Mike,ā I continued ruthlessly. āDo you still think thatās the most important consideration?ā
āItās not the same thing.ā Jacob didnāt look away from the gray waves. āI didnāt choose this.ā
I laughed once in disbelief. āDo you think Edward did? He didnāt know what was happening to him any more than you did. He didnāt exactly sign up for this.ā
Jacob was shaking his head back and forth with a small, quick movement.
āYou know, Jacob, youāre awfully self-righteous ā considering that youāre a werewolf and all.ā
āItās not the same,ā Jacob repeated, glowering at me.
āI donāt see why not. You could be aĀ bitĀ more understanding about the Cullens. You have no idea how truly good they are ā to the core, Jacob.ā
He frowned more deeply. āThey shouldnāt exist. Their existence goes against nature.ā
I stared at him for a long moment with one eyebrow raised incredulously. It was a while before he noticed.
āWhat?ā
āSpeaking of unnatural . . . ,ā I hinted.
āBella,ā he said, his voice slow and different. Aged. I realized that he sounded suddenly older than me ā like a parent or a teacher. āWhat I am was born in me. Itās a part of who I am, who my family is, who we all are as a tribe ā itās the reason why weāre still here.
āBesides thatā ā he looked down at me, his black eyes unreadable ā āIĀ amĀ still human.ā
He picked up my hand and pressed it to his fever-warm chest. Through his t-shirt, I could feel the steady beating of his heart under my palm.
āNormal humans canāt throw motorcycles around the way you can.ā
He smiled a faint, half-smile. āNormal humans run away from monsters, Bella. And I never claimed to be normal. Just human.ā
Staying angry with Jacob was too much work. I started to smile as I pulled my hand away from his chest.
āYou look plenty human to me,ā I allowed. āAt the moment.ā
āI feel human.ā He stared past me, his face far away. His lower lip trembled, and he bit down on it hard.
āOh, Jake,ā I whispered, reaching for his hand.
This was why I was here. This was why I would take whatever reception waited for me when I got back. Because, underneath all the anger and the sarcasm, Jacob was in pain. Right now, it was very clear in his eyes. I didnāt know how to help him, but I knew I had to try. It was more than that I owed him. It was because his pain hurt me, too. Jacob had become a part of me, and there was no changing that now.