From a distance I watch her run down the stairs, tears staining her cheeks. I donât know what sheâs done or where sheâs been. I havenât seen her for an entire week because she refused to leave her bedroom. I wanted to honor her need for solitude, and to give her some time to herself to process the Patriarchal Ceremony and everything that it means.
But now sheâs roaming about the house, and suddenly sheâs crying? That doesnât sit well with me. I never expected to feel as much as I do now.
I have to physically restrain myself, and I clutch the stair banister to stop myself from running after her. I wish I could take her pain away, but I canât. Not yet, anyway. Not until she knows the truth.
I close my eyes and breathe out a sigh.
Soon, Noah, soon.
All the pawns are moving on the stage, and so is she. Itâs all part of the plan, and I must continue. Thereâs no going back, not after that Ceremony. Natalie is my wife now, and she will give birth for me, one day, and when she does, we will rule this fucking community.
Natalie marches straight for the front doors, with no one there to stop her from leaving, and Iâm clutching the banisters so hard I swear itâs going to crack.
âLet her go. She wonât go anywhere,â father says, watching too. âBesides, there are guards everywhere. Whatâs she gonna do, escape?â He snorts, but itâs not that funny to me.
Sheâs tried before, so whatâs going to stop her from trying again? Every time she tries, she learns something new, and one of these days, sheâs going to find something to use against us ⦠and flee. I need to get ahead of it. Nowâs the time to act and give her a reason to stay.
âShe wonât,â my father reiterates, and he grabs my arm and forces me to turn and look at him. âSheâs your wife now. Control her. Rein her in.â
I suck in a breath, and reply, âSheâs still a woman with her own mind and heart.â
âShe needs to make you an heir.â
Oh, not this again.
âYou need to make an heir.â He taps my chest.
I swat him away. âI know. I already fucked her twice since she came here. What more do you want?â
âEvery day, until itâs done,â he growls. âThe other patriarchs are growing impatient.â
âSo? They know nature takes time.â
âYou take time. You couldâve gotten a wife much sooner than this if youâd only accepted my choices, but you chose to wait until this one came along. Your marriage long overdue, and you know that.â
I roll my eyes and turn away. âIâm done with this conversation.â
I walk off before we start a fight. Iâve had enough of those these past couple of years. My father is so blinded by his quest for an heir that he doesnât care who he hurts in the process. He doesnât even care who I fuck as long as itâs someone who can produce a legitimate heir to further the lineage. Thatâs all my father cares aboutânot me, not his wifeâonly his family line. For power. So our name stays in patriarchal positions. Power comes first.
Well, fuck him. Iâm going to choose love first.
So I run down the stairs and go after her.
I donât know where sheâs gone or what sheâs doing, but I will find her ⦠because sheâs my wife and a husband takes care of his wife, just as our rules tell us to do. And because I need her by my side. I want to love her, but she wonât let me, and thatâs okay. She will, one day, but I start now by consoling her.
But where is she?
Thereâs only one place Iâd expect her to go in this community ⦠her previous hut.
So I make my way to it, ignoring the people fawning over my presence and ready to bow at my feet. I donât have time to make any blessings right now, and Iâm not here to appease them. Iâm here to find my wife.
The door to her hut is cracked open slightly, which means someoneâs inside. I push it open and peek inside. Natalieâs sitting on her old bunk bed with a scarf in her hand. That same scarf she had on when I first snatched her away. That scarf ⦠that belongs to the Family.
âI know youâre there â¦â she says.
I step inside and close the door behind me.
âOf course youâd follow me.â
âI need to know if youâre okay,â I say.
âIt doesnât matter.â Her reply is soft, barely audible, but I can hear it.
I approach her and sit down beside her, placing my hand over hers. âIt does to me.â
âWhy?â She looks at me, her eyes stained red. âWhy do you even care? All you want is a wife. A baby. Iâm nothing more than an incubator.â
I grab her face and caress her cheek. âThatâs not true, and you know it isnât.â
She makes a face. âWhy should I believe you?â
âBecause ⦠I need you,â I reply, smiling gently.
I donât want to upset her more than she already is. Being up there with all those men watching her while I fucked her mustâve been an ordeal, and I canât imagine having to be in her place. I admire her strength, her resilience. âAs more than just a wife. As a friend. A partner in crime. A patriarch is nothing without his significant other.â
âThen give me a reason,â she says, clutching the scarf. âGive me anything. Something ⦠so I can live with myself and this decision.â
I lick my lips. âI donât know if I can give you what you want.â
âYou must,â she growls. âIf you want me to be a willing participant, give me more information. Tell me the truth. Tell me about this scarf and why I had it before I came here.â
Her eyes are filled with so much worry, so much pain and hidden grief that itâs becoming too hard for me to ignore. I wasnât planning on revealing anything to her before the time was there, but if I donât do it, I might lose her in the process.
Even though I didnât mind it if she hated me before, somethingâs changed. Something about us. When I look into her eyes, I feel so much, and it hurts to see her in pain like this when Iâm the one who could resolve all of it.
Iâm the cause behind her hatred, and it ruins me.
But if I tell her the truth, sheâll probably hate me even more.
âIâm not going to allow you to do this if you donât give me even an ounce of truth, Noah,â she reaffirms. âIâd rather die than let any man control my body.â
My pupils dilate, and I place a hand on her arm. âWhat are you saying?â
âYou know damn well what I mean â¦â She rips her arm away. âYou forced me to make a choice, now Iâm giving you one. Give me what I want or I wonât last the week. I promise you that.â
âYou wouldnât,â I say, upset at the mere suggestion that sheâs going to end things forever.
âI would,â she hisses.
I can see the perseverance in her eyes, a flame thatâs never shone brighter than it does now, and I know sheâs serious. Sheâd do it just to spite me, to get in my way, but I wonât allow it.
Grunting, I get up from the bed and pace around the room. I didnât plan on revealing this so soon, but if itâs the only choice I have to keep her in my life, then Iâll do it. âFine.â
Her eyes immediately light up. âYou ⦠youâll give me what I want?â
I close my eyes and let out a sigh. Then I hold out my hand and wait until she grabs ahold. âYou want to know the truth? Iâll show you ⦠but you wonât like it one bit.â
Natalie
I let Noah guide me outside onto the grass and out into the field. People are looking at us, but he flat-out ignores it, which surprises me. I always thought patriarchs werenât supposed to be on the grounds unless for special occasions, yet here he is marching around on the community grounds as though heâs one of them. But everyone, including him, knows heâs not, yet he doesnât seem to care even the slightest bit about what this could mean. Could he be punished by the other patriarchs for blatantly defying their rules? Does he even care that they would?
He pulls me along so defiantly, almost as though heâs on a mission, that I canât help but think he finally saw the light. And for some reason, it makes me anxious ⦠as though Iâm not prepared to discover whatever it is he wants to show me.
âWhere are we going?â I ask, in a moment of clarity.
âYour memories,â he says.
That doesnât make any sense. You canât just walk into your own memories. Whatâs he playing at?
We walk through the woods until we get to a clearing where the apple trees are kept. Some of them were planted by my own hands, their sprouts giving me a twinge of pride. But it soon fades as Noah plucks an apple from the tree and throws it at me.
âCatch,â he says, barely in time.
I frown and stare at the apple in my hand. âWhatâs the point of this?â
âLook at it. See anything familiar?â he muses.
âNo, I donât understand,â I reply, still staring at the apple.
What am I supposed to see?
âYou were here before,â he says.
âYes, with the other initiates and elder wives. We planted some of the trees,â I answer.
He shakes his head. âBefore that.â
âThereâs no beforeââ
âYes, there is.â Heâs never sounded more serious than now. âThere were many.â He picks another apple and chucks it right at me. âMany times before â¦â Another one, and another one, until I canât catch all of them and some drop to the ground.
He grabs a basket standing underneath the tree and brings it to me, picking up the apples that fell to the ground one by one until theyâre all in the basket, and then he shoves it into my hands.
âWe used to do this all the time,â he says.
My brows furrow. âWe?â
A wicked smile appears on his face, and he leans in, picks an apple out of the basket, and takes a bite. âSavory.â
âThis doesnât make any sense,â I say. âIâve never been here before ⦠before all this â¦â
âDonât you remember?â he asks, still clutching the partially bitten apple. âDig deep into your memories, Natalie. Remember. Itâs the only way.â
My lips part, but I donât know what to say. Does he mean ⦠Iâm really from here? Me? I came from this community?
I shake my head. âNo, my mom left me at an orphanage. Iâm from the outside world.â
âYou were ⦠but only temporarily,â he says, throwing the apple away.
He grabs both my arms, causing me to drop the basket, and drags me along the trees to a well nearby. He pushes me against the stones, and says, âLook at the water.â
And I do ⦠but all I see is my own reflection. The woman Iâve become ⦠and maybe an inkling of the little girl I used to be. Afraid, alone ⦠left to be raised by strangers. But I once had a mom. I know, because I remember her, I remember her beautiful auburn locks, and the sandalwood scent that followed wherever she went. The woman who held my hand as she whisked me away in the night â¦
And the boy who stares right back at me ⦠the boy with the tattoo on his hand.
The boy ⦠standing on the opposite end of the well right now.
That same boy is staring back at me through the water, rippling from the drops of my tears.
I look up, tears streaming down my face as I see the man the boy has become.
âI remember you on the night my mother left me â¦â I mutter, choking on my own words.
He nods and tries to approach me, but I circle around the well to keep him at bay.
âStay away,â I growl.
I donât know why I bark like that, but I need time, space, everything. I canât process this all at once.
âWhat do you remember?â he asks, holding up a single hand.
âYou ⦠my mother ⦠She pushed me away from my own home, from my life. And I ended up in the orphanage?â I shake my head at my own memories mixing with my own thoughts. âNo, no, that canât be right.â
âIt is,â he says. âItâs the truth.â
âNo, you donât know that,â I say, my body shaking like a twig.
âYour mother lives here in the community. Just like me, you were born here, too.â
âNo!â I close my eyes and will the memories away, but they wonât stop invading my mind. Images of a boy with a playful smile who would throw apples at me and run with me through the woods, that same boy who would sit with me and read books near the fire, that boy ⦠is him.
âIâm not from here!â I yell with a visceral rage that rakes at my heart.
I want to claw at my own brain and rip out the memories, but I canât. Heâs unplugged the bottle, pulled out the genie, and thereâs no way to put it all back inside.
With gentle footsteps, he approaches me again. âYou forgot ⦠because thatâs what people do when theyâre in pain, when the trauma is too big. They cover it up and make it disappear.â
I lick my lips but taste the salt of my own tears cascading down my cheeks. âYouâre a liar.â
âYou remember me, donât you? Thatâs why you came to see me at that meeting in town, where I was recruiting new followers to join the Family.â
âStop,â I say, clenching my fists together.
But he refuses to listen. âYou came because you were compelled, Natalie. Donât you see? Your heart wanted you to remember!â
My body is frozen to the ground. No matter how hard I try, it wonât move. All I can do is dig my fingers deep into the wellâs stones and listen to his words as they cut into my soul.
âI wanted to know where that scarf came from,â I say, my lips trembling.
âYou already know the answer. Itâs the same scarf your mother put around your neck when she pushed you out of your home and forced you to leave this place,â he says.
âHow do you know?â I ask. My memories donât feel like my own. They feel like ⦠theyâre his too.
Heâs right in front of me now, and he grabs my face with both hands. âI know because I was there.â
âNo, I donât believe it,â I say, still not wanting to face reality.
âLook at me,â he growls, his hands still on my cheeks. âYou know me.â
Tears roll down my cheeks as I look into his eyes. Theyâre the same eyes as the boy I once said goodbye to when my mother whisked me away into the darkness. When we left all that Iâd ever known. The community. The Family. My people. My ⦠betrothed.