Falling From Grace (66 page)

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Authors: S. L. Naeole

Tags: #Legends; Myths; Fables, #Juvenile Fiction, #General

BOOK: Falling From Grace
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“You’re not dead.
 
You can’t tell me you love me and then leave me.
 
You’re not dead, do you hear me?
 
You’re not, you’re not!”

For every crack that lined my heart, for every single tear that I had shed, I hit him.
 
I hit him for things he had had nothing to do with.
 
I hit him for every plan that might have been made but now wouldn’t.
 
I hit him for every dashed away hope, for every crushed dream, for every single moment that now stretched out before me, empty and without reason.
 
I hit him for every single time I doubted myself, doubted him.
 
And, mostly, I hit him because if I stopped, if I thought about stopping, I feared I wouldn’t know what else there was left for me to do in this world.
 

A hand grabbed my aching wrist as it rose once more, stopping it before I could cause more damage to my hand.
 
I looked at it, strong, determined, and followed the lines of the wrist, to the arm…to its owner.

Two liquid pools of mercury stared up from beneath me.

Reason would have demanded that I pass out from shock.
 
But there wasn’t room for reason in my world anymore.
 
There never had been.
 
There was only room for drowning in those eyes that held mine locked onto them.
 
Oh, I was in shock; the fact that I couldn’t move, couldn’t breathe was proof enough of that.
 
But I also couldn’t blink, afraid that if I did so, those glimmering orbs would disappear when my lids rose.
 
I couldn’t let the sight of something so beautiful disappear.
 
I desperately fought the human instinct to close my eyes.

“Grace.”

And I blinked.
 
Because apparently shocking one’s ears coincides with the need to blink.

“Grace, please stop hitting me.”

I shook my head at the absurdity of it.
 
I must be hallucinating, because the dead didn’t speak.
 
They didn’t gaze up into my eyes and say innocuous things that made me feel like I could leap off the very edge of the sky and never touch ground.
 
I shook my head because forget reason, forget logic, this miracle couldn’t possibly be mine.

And yet, the gasps behind me

of a mother’s joy, a sister’s hope

weren’t absurd.
 
They were the confirmation that I wasn’t in the midst of a mental breakdown.
 
“You’re here,” was all I could form by way of recognition.
 
He was alive, he was here, he was holding onto my wrist and that contact was mending my battered hand as surely as it was the other parts of me that I believed had died right along with him.

He sat up, his grip around my wrist loosening, and then made motions to stand while I moved away, making way for his family to embrace him in a way that I couldn’t.
 
His mother’s arms, strong and firm, gripped him tightly to her chest, his sister wrapped around his neck, the three of them lost in the joy of their reunion.
 
They were silent, their heads pressed together, sharing their thoughts.

It was such a private moment I almost felt like I was intruding.
 
Almost.
 
I had questions of my own that needed to be answered.
 
But, more than anything else, I needed to hear him say those words again.
 
I needed to hear them, to reassure myself that I hadn’t imagined them, that it hadn’t been a figment of my imagination brought on by shock.
 
I needed them because I had stopped breathing when he had opened his eyes, and without them, I don’t think I’d be able to remember how to start again.

Slowly, Lark lowered her arms from around Robert’s neck.
 
Ameila gently released him, but held onto his hand.
 
I stood silent as they moved to his side.
 
He was looking directly at me, a concerned expression on his face.
 
He reached a hand out to me but started to pull it back when I looked at it skeptically, hesitantly.
 
Seeing what he was doing, what he had interpreted in my thoughts, I rushed forward to grab it.
 
I knew what chances I had were few, and I wasn’t about to miss out on any of them.
 
I held his hand clasped in mine, and looked into his eyes.

“I’m okay,” he said softly, and pushed a piece of my hair away from my eyes with the hand that I was holding onto tightly.
 
“I’m better than okay.
 
You’re still here.
 
You didn’t leave me.”

Nervous laughter poured out of me.
 
Hadn’t I said the very same thing to him a few weeks ago?
 
What was I supposed to say now?
 
How does one deal with stuff like this?
 
This reality that wasn’t…real?
 
Broken hearts were one thing, but I had just watched him die.
 
I watched as his dead body changed, watched as it grew wings

wings for goodness sake!
 
And now, he was talking to me, as though everything was normal.
 
Was there ever going to be a moment when I became comfortable with things like this?

He pulled me closer, and I was hit with a sudden sense of shyness and fear.
 
He sensed my hesitation and eased his hold on me.
 
“I-I don’t know how to be with you,” I said softly, and I didn’t.
 
He had turned my entire sense of self upside down in just a few hours.
 
I didn’t understand anything that had happened, and I didn’t understand why I couldn’t have just walked away.

“You couldn’t walk away because your heart knew where it belonged,” Ameila responded to my thoughts, which elicited a gasp from her children.
 
She had not done this for such a long time

why now?
 
She placed a hand at my back and turned my chin to face her.
 
“There is so much you have yet to be told, little one.
 
But let us not do it here.
 
People are coming.”

I didn’t have a chance to express my objections to leaving when I felt a sharp pull and found myself pressed up against Robert’s chest, my face in the small hollow of his neck.
 
His arms were wrapped around me, clamping me to him like a vise.
 
I didn’t know what was happening, only that the bite of a cold wind was stinging my back and shoulders.
 
I wound my arms up around his neck, though I’m not exactly sure if it was to keep from falling, or just to be closer to him.
 
I simply didn’t care at the moment.

It took only minutes for Robert to finally place my feet back on solid ground.
 
My knees had started to shake from the crush of emotions that were welling up inside of me.
 
For the first time since we had met, Robert didn’t let me get used to it on my own.
 
He picked me up again, one arm beneath the bend of my knees, the other around my back, and carried me into his home.
 
This was where I would be told the truth.

He carried me into the living room, but instead of setting me down onto a sofa or chair, he simply remained standing with me in his arms.
 
“There is so much to tell you,” he murmured into my hair.
 
“I don’t know where to begin.”

Ameila appeared then, followed by Lark.
 
I hadn’t realized that we had gotten there before the two of them.
 
“Let me explain it, son.
 
She still has feelings of distrust, and I do not blame her.”
 
Ameila reached for my hand, and, with all three angels standing in the middle of their living room while I was cradled in Robert’s arms, she began to explain to me what it was that I had just endured.

“Sam had misled Robert.
 
He’s been mentoring him these past few decades

having him accompany him while he fulfills the duties of his call

and Robert had looked up to his wisdom and experience like any one would of a big brother, for that is what Sam’s role was intended to be.
 
But Sam took that trust too far.
 
He told Robert that his wings would come only while suffering a great pain.”

Ameila’s voice grew soft then as she looked at her son.
 
“But what is there in an angel’s life that can cause us true pain other than to betray our hearts?”

I looked at her in confusion.
 
“I thought that the only way your kind felt pain was when you lied?”

She nodded her head.
 
“Yes.
 
But you see, it is in our hearts to be honest.
 
We cannot be who we are, fulfill the roles in this world that we’re meant to play, if we are not honest with those that we are born to protect, born to care for, and…born to love.
 
You, my dear Grace, are the truth that is my son’s heart, and when he denied
you
that, when he denied
himself
that truth by lying to you and saying that he did not love you, it caused him a pain so great, it k-” Ameila’s voice caught in her throat as she struggled with the words “-killed him.
 
You see, foolish boy that my son is, he was doing this not only for himself, but for you as well.
 
He thought

he believed that if he could receive his wings, he’d receive the call, and then he’d be able to let you go.

“He thought this would make it easier for you to have the normal life that you craved, and he assumed that you understood he’d have to leave one day when this happened.
 
However, he and Sam forgot that our wings do not come because we will them to, or because we want them to.
 
You cannot tell a lie so blatant and expect the pain of dying to be enough to trigger the change.

“But Sam told Robert that lying to you, the pain that he’d feel through you, coupled with the punishment our bodies dole out when we break one of our own rules would do just that.
 
And Robert paid the price for it.
 
Our wings…they are tied to our emotions as angels.
 
It takes a great catalyst of feeling to bring them forth.
 
Love, hate, anger, jealousy, sadness, compassion…it takes a combination of so many emotions to spark our body’s physical change, but one emotion, far more significant than all of the others, always stands out

the trigger to it all.”

I felt Robert pull me in closer to him, his cheek resting solidly on the top of my head.
 
I rested my face against the cool material of his shirt, and searched for the soft wooshing of his heartbeat, needing its steady beat to comfort me as my mind fought to sort out all of this new information.
 
His chest was silent.

“Ahh, yes.
 
There is an issue that was confusing me at first, but I understand now why that is.
 
You hear no heart in his chest.”

I turned my head to look at her, nodding unnecessarily while swallowing down the fear that was slowly creeping up within me.

“Grace, you know how Robert came into existence

how different he is, even among us.
 
His birth was not like Lark’s, in that he was born from a corpse.
 
Do you understand what that means?
 
It means that he has always been on the cusp between life and death, owing his soul to both.
 
Death won out tonight when his body could take no more, but you

you came back for him, and you allowed him his last bit of peace.
 
He knew he was dying, and so to make peace, he could finally tell you the truth.
 
He would see you with a normal life.
 
But, none of us, especially not Robert, knew what would happen as a result.

“You are his salvation, Grace.
 
His love for you brought his wings, and your love for him brought him life.
 
And, to be given life through death, not once, but twice…it must exact a cost, even if only in a minor way.
 
His price was that of the part that makes him the most human

the most human like you.”

I turned my head to look up at Robert, whose gaze was pointed down towards me, his eyes focused and intense.
 
I knew it in my own beating heart that it wasn’t what made me human.
 
The literal heart could beat forever, but the figurative heart, the romantic heart was what kept love alive.
 
His heart was still there.
 
I could feel it in me, even if I couldn’t hear it in him.

“You understand,” Ameila smiled.
 
“I am glad for it.
 
But, you must question why his wings are that color…”

I looked at Ameila and she knew that I honestly had not until that moment.
 
“I was always under the impression that angels’ wings are supposed to be white.”

She nodded her head, and then took a step away from us, her head lowered, and I watched in amazed horror as arm like limbs started to jut out from behind her, tearing through her blouse and lengthened, branching out like Robert’s had done, but far more smoothly.
 
The branches splintered and grew outward, each end bisecting multiple times, finally blooming into a pair of immense wings that were a white that reminded me of cotton balls and baby powder

pure and innocent.
 

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