ARIEL
I donât want to doubt Selene, but my curiosity keeps me from looking away. Fate says her sister lied to me, and I want to know what she means.
Fateâs image fades from the mirror, replaced by my own.
But itâs not me as I am now. Or even me as I was before I began healing people so frequently.
The image in the cracked mirror is a barely recognizable version of meâshackled to a medical table as Curt injects me with wolfsbane.
I know itâs just an imageâa memoryâbut watching myself writhe in pain as my bones break feels so visceral that itâs as if itâs happening to me right now.
âStop it,â I say. âI canât watch.â
To my surprise, the image fades away, and Fate returns to the mirror.
âYou donât enjoy watching my sisterâs handiwork?â she says. âAnd I thought you two were soâ¦close.â
My heart is still pounding in my chest, and thereâs a ringing in my ears. Iâm struggling to bring my mind back from that point in timeâ¦
But itâs as if Iâm stuck in the memory.
âWhat do you mean?â I say. âYou sent me there.â
Fate lets out a humorless laugh.
âYou did!â I say. âSelene helped me escape. Without my healing giftââ
âWithout my sister,â Fate says. âYou wouldnât have needed your healing âgift.ââ
Iâm shocked that Fate would make such a claim. Iâve never thought she wouldnât be proud to admit to her misdeeds.
She seems to register the reservation on my features.
âIf you donât trust me,â she says. âAt least trust reason. All I wanted was for you to be with your destined mate, Xavier. Why would I do anything to hinder that?â
She makes a good point⦠Maybe my mind is still muddled from the image of my own torture, but her argument is making sense.
What I know for sure is that Fate destined me to be with Xavier. My captivity is what prevented that.
~If she meant for me to be with him, why would she want me to be kidnapped by Hunters?~
~And if sheâs not the one responsible for itâ¦~
âNow you begin to see clearly, my child,â Fate says.
Her use of the phrase âmy childâ snaps me out of my thoughts. It sounds so different coming from her lips than from Seleneâs.
âI donât believe you,â I say. âSelene wouldnâtâ¦â
But I donât know how to finish the sentence.
âIf you donât trust me,â Fate says. âAsk her yourself.â
I want to trust the Moon Goddess. Iâm a werewolfâitâs how I was raised. And, besides that, Iâm perhaps more connected to her than any other of my kind.
~I thought that was a giftâ¦~
~But maybe itâs a curse.~
Apparently satisfied that the seed of doubt has been planted, Fate disappears from the broken mirror, and Iâm left once again looking at myself.
I study my featuresâSeleneâs features. After what Iâve seen and heard tonight, I no longer trust my own reflection.
And I certainly donât trust the Moon Goddess.
NATALIA
I wake up feeling more rested than I have in years.
Chuck still has an arm wrapped around me, even though heâs deep in sleep. I snuggle closer to him and close my eyes again.
Last night was more than I could have expected.
Iâve never pictured myself with a man like Chuck. The Goddess must know something I donât, because Iâve never been more content than I am right now.
After a few minutes of blissful stillness, I feel Chuck wake up and begin to stretch.
I roll over to face him.
âGâmorning, Moonbeam,â he says.
I kiss him in response.
He sighs when we part. âLast night wasâ¦beautiful.â
I can feel myself blushing. âYou think so too?â
He runs a finger down my face. The look in his eyes is pure unadulterated admiration.
âIâm so gratefulâ¦,â he says, âthat I waited for you. Youâre worth the wait.â
I feel queasy. The sweeter he is to me, the less I feel deserving of his praise.
Chuckâs face grows serious as something seems to cross his mind.
âWhat is it?â I say.
âNatalia, I have to admitâ¦â
He pauses, and I wonder if he, too, has been keeping a secret.
âThere were times I lost faith that Iâd ever find you. But Fate had you in her hands all along, and I should have trusted her. She led ~you~ to find ~me~.â
If I felt queasy before, now my stomach is churning with guilt.
But Chuck isnât finished. âWho could believe that youâd show up practically on my doorstep like that?â
Looking into Chuckâs innocent eyes, I know the question is rhetorical. But itâs such a kick in the gut to be so implicitly trustedâand not to deserve that trust.
âYeah,â I say. âItâsâ¦â
âAmazing,â he says. âThe Goddess is rewarding us for our patience.â
I feel like if I donât stop him, heâs going to keep going until it will be too late for me to come clean.
I want to be honest and open with him. I donât think our relationship can continue without that, butâ¦
âWhatâs wrong?â he says, looking intently at me. âSomething on your mind?â
~Yes, Chuck. Iâve been lying to you about pretty much everything.~
âYou can tell me,â he says. âWhat is it?â
I know this feels like the moment to open upâheâs even asking me toâbut I donât believe him when he says I can tell him.
If he knew that I lied to him about the beliefs he holds most dearâ¦
Heâd never look at me the same way again.
I avoid his searching blue eyes. The concern in them hurts to look at.
As much as I canât stand lying to him, losing his respect would be worse. I canât risk losing his trustâI canât risk losing ~him~.
ARIEL
Having slept restlessly, I storm down the palace steps. Iâve been unable to connect with Selene mentally, and I need answers.
Iâm disappointed in myself for taking Fateâs bait, but I know I wonât be satisfied until this matter is settled.
~What does this mean about Selene? About who I am?~
Iâm not sure if Iâm angrier at Fate or Selene, but Iâm about to find out.
I cross the back courtyard and make my way to the Moon Chapel.
I allow my eyes to adjust to the dim light. This place is set up for nighttime ceremonies. It feels strange to be here during the day.
A worshipper looks startled when I enter the otherwise empty sanctuary, and I make an effort to compose my features.
âWhere is she?â I say without thinking. âWhereâs Selene?â
The woman, who has evidently just finished her prayers, drops her jaw and looks at me with a baffled expression on her face.
âButâyouââ
Itâs now that I realize my appearance must be confusing her. Surely, this woman isnât one of those who has bought into the idea that I ~am~ the Moon Goddess.
âIâm just Ariel,â I say. âIâm here to seeââ
But then I hear her in my mind. ~âTurn around, Ariel.â~
I speak to the worshipper again: âDo you mind if I have the chapel to myself for prayer?â
The woman nods vigorously, still apparently entranced by my appearance, and exits the chapel.
I turn around, and Selene is standing at the altar.
It takes me a moment to compose myself. But I remember why Iâm here, and Iâm not going to waste this opportunity.
âFate spoke to me,â I say. âAbout myâ¦traumatic experiences.â
A look of understanding spreads across the Moon Goddessâs face.
âShe pointed out that none of those experiences were fated to happen. She says thatâ¦â I canât bear to look at Selene as I make the accusation, and my voice wavers.
âShe says that I caused those things to occur?â Selene says. âIs that it?â
I nod, ashamed to speak the words out loud.
âWell,â Selene says. âI knew this day would come. Itâs true⦠I orchestrated your kidnapping and imprisonment.â
I suddenly feel dizzy.
I clutch onto a pew to balance myself.
~Fate was telling the TRUTH?!~
My mind begins spinning out of control as I find myself questioning everything. Selene has been my savior. The light in my darkest hour.
Now I find out ~she~ is responsible for the very cruelty she saved me from?
Sheâs the one who put me through that misery, torture, painâ¦
My heart aches as if itâs splitting in two like my mirror. Only, this time, the Moon Goddess is doing the damage.
I search my soul for the right words, but I draw a blank.
âHow could you?â I say. âHow? Why?â
âMy child,â Selene says. âYou must understand, I did what I had to for your benefitâ¦â
I shake my head in anger.
âTrust me. It hurt me as much as it did you. But you had to be broken in order to be rebuilt even stronger. You had to experience pain in order to becomeââ
âStop,â I say. âI donât want to hear your excuses. I was tortured for ~two years~. Thereâs no excuse for that.â
âArielââ
âYou had no right. I used to think your sister was the cruel one, but this is beyond anything I could imagine.â
Selene isnât even trying to respond now. She just stands at the altar, apparently waiting for me to finish.
âWhy did you do this?â I say. âSo that I could become your healer? Your puppet? Youâre worse than Fate.â
âI understand your anger,â Selene says. âBut you must see that this was for the best. Look at you! Youâve become a healer for the whole werewolf kingdom.â
âWhat choice did I have in the matter, though? Youâre supposed to represent free will, and yet youâve toyed with me more than even your sister.â
Seleneâs eyes darken at that. For once, her expression is clouded with doubt.
I feel tears beginning to build behind my eyes, but Iâm too hurt to allow her to see them.
âYouâre as twisted as your sister.â
Selene is visibly hurt by my words.
It pains me to hurt her, and yet Iâm too angry to stop myself now.
âI renounce you,â I say through gritted teeth. âI donât want anything to do with you.â
A silver tear slides down Seleneâs face, and she fades away without another word. She disappears like a glint of moonlight smothered by a passing cloud.
A wave of pain rocks through me, and I collapse onto the stone floor.