CHAPTER FIVE
I swam all night, but my stomach still
churns as I walk into the doors at school, zipping up my fleece
jacket as though somehow it will protect me from what’s to come.
Getting through today will be a gauntlet.
We’re two weeks into the school year, now, which
means one thing: it’s my birthday. It should be a happy day. For
any other person in this school, it would be. But my birthday will
forever mark the anniversary of Steven’s death; and no one is going
to let me forget it. The police may have cleared my name, but to
everyone else, I was found guilty. Forever and always, the one who
stole Steven from their lives.
I tip my chin up, square my shoulders, and try to
walk to my locker as if I don’t notice the watchful eyes of my
classmates.
An underclassman, oblivious to the tension in the
hall, walks by me, his eyes sweeping over me in an appreciative,
almost lustful way before he catches my glare and turns away.
A group of people, Sienna and her boyfriend
Patrick, plus Nikki and Kristi, stand together not far from my
locker. They lounge around a big bay window, officially reserved
for seniors. Unofficially, it’s for top tier seniors, and
that means it belongs to them. Why did I have to be cursed with a
locker so close to their stomping grounds?
I turn to my locker, concentrating on keeping my
hand from shaking so much they’ll see it. I screw up the
combination the first time and have to start over. I can feel their
eyes on my back, watching me. My chest tightens and it seems harder
to breathe.
Finally, I hit the last digit and pop the door
open.
Sand spills out in a wave, piling up at my feet. My
books, my papers, everything is filled with grit.
I whirl around, wondering which of my classmates is
to blame. Sienna’s closer than before, her hand on her hip. She’s
wearing a kneelength black skirt and one of Steven’s old T-shirts,
the one he used to wear at least once a week. I haven’t seen that
shirt since last year. Since my seventeenth birthday. I
wonder what else of his she’s kept.
My chest rises and falls rapidly, and I’m so close
to losing it I want to just leave everything like this and
run.
“Happy birthday,” she says, her voice
trembling.
I blink.
There’s no anger to her words.
I clench my hands, desperate to hold it together.
“How long are you going to do this?”
She tilts her head to the side and the light
streaming in from their window catches the tears shimmering in her
eyes. “Until I get my brother back.”
She spins around and walks away. I want to scream
at her that I want him back as much as she does, that I never
wanted to kill him and she doesn’t have to keep doing this to me,
but I swallow the words.
One by one, the crowd disperses. I turn back to my
locker, slam it shut, and stalk off in the opposite
direction.
Happy birthday to me.
When I walk in the door at home, my gram is in her
recliner, but her eyes are shut, and the steady sawing of her
snoring fills the living room. I pause in the faded hardwood entry
and watch her, my hands still gripping my heavy backpack.
Her gray hair is rumpled, her matching pink sweats
and sweatshirt a little wrinkled, but she’s never looked more
serene. I wish I could look that peaceful. Every limb, every muscle
is relaxed.
I turn away and go to the kitchen, flinging open a
few cupboards. Dinner. It will occupy my hands and my mind. I
survey the options for a long moment, my arms crossed. I’m not in
the mood to cook anything elaborate. I only want to get the meal
over with, smile in a convincing way, and retreat to my room to
wait out the hours until dusk. I grab beans, corn, some dry
noodles, and stewed tomatoes. I’ll throw it all together with a
little bit of frozen vegetables and call it soup. Gram loves
soup.
I fill a pot with water and set it on the stove,
twisting the dial to high. As I pull a ladle out of the drawer, a
flash of pink catches my eye. I smile as big as I can manage at my
grandmother as she shuffles toward me, hoping to hide the strain of
my day at school.
“Lexi, honey, I didn’t hear you come in.”
“You were sleeping, Gram.”
She frowns. “You shouldn’t have to cook dinner on
your birthday.”
“I know, but I like cooking.” I dump the noodles
into the pot and then turn back to look at her. “It’s okay, really.
You can sit down. It’ll be ready in twenty minutes.”
She shuffles away from me down the hall, her
slippers swishing on the hardwood. I watch her until the bright
pink disappears.
I twist back around and reach for the can opener,
humming to myself as I open up the tomatoes and dump them into the
pot. Everything about school sucks, but I find comfort in the
normalcy of being at home. It’s so different from my intense,
supernatural problems. When I’m here, I don’t have to watch my
back.
I find the Italian seasoning jar in the cupboard
and pour a bunch in. Then I lean a hip against the counter as I
watch the soup come to a boil.
The shuffling returns. My grandmother’s face is
hidden by a big box wrapped in plain brown paper. Her wrinkled,
veiny hands grip it tightly.
My mouth goes dry. “I thought we agreed no gifts,”
I say. I refuse to take anything but the gas money I so desperately
need.
“This isn’t from me,” she says, placing it on the
counter.
When I see the handwriting on the top, my mouth
goes dry.
“It’s from your mother. She gave it to me before .
. .” Her voice trails off, and then she clears her throat. “She
wanted me to give it to you.”
I frown. “You’ve kept this for six years?”
“I was afraid it would upset you too much to have
her old things. But you’re an adult now. If you want to see them,
they’re yours.”
“Oh.” I stare at the package.
She puts a hand on mine. “I’ll finish up this soup.
Why don’t you go to your room and open it in private?”
This time I don’t resist. I take the package and
retreat to my room, closing the door behind me with a quiet
click.
Six years, my grandmother has kept this.
I perch at the edge of my bed, on top of my mom’s
old flowery comforter. It seems like a lifetime ago that I lived
with her in a rental house on the other side of town.
I stare at the box for several long seconds. I’m
afraid to discover what’s inside. What if it’s something stupid,
like a jewelry box or stuffed teddy bear?
What I need is answers, something that tells me
what I’m supposed to do, how I’m supposed to fix the lives I’ve
ruined.
I reach out and tear the paper off. My heart beats
louder in my ears. The box is heavy as I rip open the lid and reach
in. My fingers find a scrap of paper, and I pull it out, unfolding
it as I take in a long breath.
For my daughter, on her sixteenth birthday.
My only regret is not being here for you today
when you need me. I hope this will help you understand what is to
come.
I don’t realize I’m crying until a dark splotch
appears on the paper. It was supposed to be for my sixteenth
birthday. The day everything changed. Did my grandmother know that
and forget? Or did my mother not make it clear?
I read the note again.
My mom knew. She knew she was going to leave me,
and she wrote this note, four years before I was supposed to read
it.
Did she write it before or after she killed
Greg?
I reach in and touch something hard and leathery,
and as I pull it out, I realize it’s a book. A very old book.
My fingers trail over the dry, fading surface as I
pull it onto my lap, the dust covering my jeans. It must be
ancient. As I lift open the cover, the spine cracks.
The first aged, yellowed page is nearly blank,
except for three words written in stark, perfect calligraphy:
For the cursed.
I take in a jagged breath of air, then slide my
finger over the page and flip it over.
January 7, 1750
William doesn’t belong with Julia. Their
betrothal is a business arrangement, nothing more. Now that he is
in love with me, he wants to marry me, and not her. He has promised
me he will end their engagement.
I suppose she does not care much what he wants,
for it is William’s title she is after, and she will fight for that
if he tries to jilt her. I hope he remains strong.
Tonight, when he dared dance with me at the
Harksbury ball, I saw it in her eyes. I knew before the song was
over that I had committed a sin. Afterward, I stood by, humiliated,
as he lied to soothe her. He told her he was only being polite.
Told her no one had asked me to dance and so, as a gentleman, he
had asked me.
A pity dance.
And yet still she seethed, and I knew something
had shifted between us.
She will do anything to have him, anything to
become a duchess. That is why we must elope. Will has asked me to
wait one month, and then he will be mine, and only mine.
Charlotte
January 18, 1750
I am terrified. Julia knows. She knows
everything. She found me packing my bags, and she confronted me.
She thinks just because I am her paid companion that she can
control everything about me, but she cannot decide who I will
love.
She told me I was a fool to believe him. She
told me he compromised her and is duty bound to marry her. Her
words left a dull ache in my chest. She must be lying. It is I who
has been compromised. But I am little more than a servant. He
cannot be forced to marry me. For the first time, I am not sure I
have done the right thing these last months.
But I must trust in him. He loves me. He will
honor all of his whispered promises. There is nothing I can do but
believe in it for it is too late to go back and undo the things I
have done.
Charlotte
February 7, 1750
Will was supposed to arrive last night to take
me away. I sat on an overturned bucket behind the stables for three
hours, shivering against the cold, and yet he did not arrive. I had
to beg a groom to saddle a horse so that I could go to his estate.
And yet it was useless because they said he has gone hunting up
north with friends. How could he do such a thing at a time like
this?
I was forced to go back home, but Julia soon
discovered where I had gone. She came at me in a rage, and if not
for her father’s valet, I might very well have been injured. Her
father dismissed me not an hour later without references.
This afternoon, I stood on the stoop awaiting
the carriage that would take me away from the only home I have
known these last two years, when Julia positively flew up the drive
on horseback, her hair undone and streaming behind her. I had never
seen her so unkempt, and the look in her eyes was enough to put my
stomach in knots.
She leapt from her horse and threw something at
me. Some shimmery, dusty powder, which sent me into a coughing fit.
It still burns in my lungs as I write this, miles away at a shabby
inn.
It was a gypsy curse, she claimed. Her eyes were
wide and frightening as she told me I would be as lonely and
miserable as she was then. That I would pay for trying to steal her
betrothed. I tried to tell her it was he who pursued me, but she
would have none of it.
I have little to my name, but so long as Will
keeps his promises to me, all will be right.
Charlotte
February 15, 1750
I have been unable to find Will. He has been
away from his home for more than a week. I have rented a small room
over a tavern, as it was all I could afford. I am but a few miles
from Will’s home, just down the coast, near the Exmoor Cliffs. I
had originally planned to travel inland, but I could not bear to
leave the sea behind. Odd, as I had always loathed the smell of the
salt in the air.
Charlotte
The lump in my throat grows. This is it. This is
how it all started. Two hundred and fifty years ago. My fingers
tremble as they slide across the curled yellow paper. I flip the
page.
March 21, 1750
I found myself in the sea last night, swimming
for no reason at all. I am lucky I did not drown for I have never
learned how to swim. I want to go home, but I do not have a home
anymore, and I must remember that.
I think I may be with child, and I do not know
what to do. I have sent two letters for Will, but he has not
answered. I suspect Julia is somehow intercepting my
correspondence.
Charlotte
March 30, 1750
I cannot stay here any longer as I am nearly out
of funds and I will be thrown out on the street soon. I must travel
south to find my cousin and pray that she will take me
in.
But I will not leave just yet. I cannot bear to
go without seeing Will again. I am going to Varmoth Manor one last
time in the hopes that he has returned.
I must know if he will truly marry Julia as the
papers say.
Charlotte
April 2, 1750
He is dead. I’ve done something terrible. I do
not understand what has happened to me, but I must flee.
Julia did something to me. I should have
known by the crazed look of her she was desperate, that she’d done
something so much worse than I had believed.
I must find her immediately. Before I am hanged
for murder. I am but a servant and he a duke. They will not rest
until they uncover the truth.
Until they uncover me.
Charlotte
I flip the page, but there are no more entries in
Charlotte’s dark, angled cursive. I flip back and forth a few
times, trying to figure out what happened.
The next dates are from late 1766. These entries
are written in a different handwriting, lighter, curlier than
Charlotte’s. I turn back to her entries and do the math.
Sixteen years. There’s a sixteen year gap. I hold
my breath as my eyes scan the first entry.
It’s Charlotte’s daughter. Will’s daughter. Cursed
to the same fate. My chest tightens and I stop midsentence. I flip
several pages, until I spot a new script. This time, it’s eighteen
years later. A new girl. Same story. She recaps the last couple of
years on the first page. She tells about the first one she
killed.
I flip back a few pages. Why did Charlotte stop
writing? Did she die, or simply pass the book along to her
daughter?
My fingers flip faster and faster as the writing
changes again and again and again. I can’t bear to read the
stories, not today. I expect they’ll all be painfully
familiar.
Just as I am about to slam the book shut, I glimpse
the final set of entries.
My mother’s handwriting stares back at me.
The entry isn’t dated on top, like the others, but
rather scribbled to the side, as if done in haste. It’s over
sixteen years old. I wasn’t even two yet when she wrote it.
I jerk back. It’s the year my father left us. It’s
hard to breathe over the lump in my throat as I take in the words
on the page.
I told him the truth. I thought that he loved me,
that he would stay. If not for me, then for Lexi. But he couldn’t
stand the sight of me once he learned what I am. He was gone within
hours, while she still slept. He never even told her
good-bye.
I blink. My father. She’s talking about my
father.
I’ll never show someone my true nature again. This
is pain like I’ve never felt. Rejection.
I grind my teeth hard in a desperate attempt to
keep the tears at bay. The page is ripped on three of the four
edges, as if it had once been longer, but this is all she was
willing to save. All she was willing to share for all eternity,
with the other girls who would eventually read the book.
I flip the page.
I’ve done the one thing I thought I’d never do
.
I’ve killed.
I didn’t know Greg had followed me. I didn’t know
he was there, in the shadows, as I stepped into the ocean.
It doesn’t matter how it happened, all that matters
is he’s gone. And I’m the one who killed him. It was nearly
impossible to let go of his hand, even after it grew cold. I left
him there at the edge of the tides for someone else to find.
This pain hurts more than anything I could have
imagined, far more than mere rejection. It is impossible to live
with.
I want to be there for Lexi, but I can’t go on. I’m
no stronger than the others who came before me. I’ll never be happy
because I’ll always be a siren.
Lexi, when you read this, please know that my only
regret is leaving you.
I sob, a great, choking thing that racks my
shoulders. Collapsing into a ball, I push the book off me. It hits
the floor with a loud thunk.
I suppose I knew all along my mother killed
herself, but seeing it like this, so black and white, is
devastating. It was her decision to tie that cinder block to her
feet, to leap from the pier.
And hers is the same pain that I live with every
day.
What if I’d had this book two years ago? Would I
have gone swimming with Steven? I’d like to think no. Never. But
I’m not sure if that’s true.
For two hundred and fifty years, every generation
gave birth to another girl like me. And every girl lured another
man to his death. It was inevitable, my killing Steven.
I know what I am now, what I’ll always be—a
siren.
I clutch my knees to my chest and sob even harder,
hoping my grandmother can’t hear me.