Divine Rivals: Part 3: The Words In-Between: Chapter 30
Divine Rivals (Letters of Enchantment #1)
Three days came and went. It was a strange rhythm to adjust to: nights in the communication trenches and rigid days at the front lines. The Sycamores were rotating with another platoon and would do so for seven days before they returned to base to rest and recover for seven.
And all the while, Iris filled up her notepad.
She never wrote during the day, when she was hunkered down beside Roman at the front, terrified to do something as innocent as scratch her nose. But at night when they were in reserves, the Sycamore Platoon began to warm to her, and she often played cards with them by lantern light, remembering how friendly competition was an effective way to gain access to a deeper, more intimate story.
She asked the privates about their lives back home and the families that loved them. She asked what had made them want to join the war. She asked about past battlesâlosses and victoriesâand soaked in the stories of courage and loyalty and pain they shared. The soldiers called one another brother and sister, as if the war had forged bonds that were deeper than blood.
It made her feel incredibly fulfilled one moment and deeply sad the next.
She missed her mother. She missed Forest. She missed Attie and Marisol. She missed writing to Carver.
Sometimes she tried to mentally trace the path that had brought her to this place, but it was too difficult to relive. It stirred up half-buried feelings in her, too dangerous to unearth at the moment.
Even so ⦠the blood was humming in her veins.
On the fourth night, Iris was writing her notes for the day when she was struck by a wave of exhaustion.
She paused, her hand cramping.
Roman sat in his customary place across the trench from her, eating from a tin of beans. His black hair hung tangled in his eyes and his beard was growing, shadowing the lower half of his face. His cheekbones were more pronounced, as if he had lost weight. His knuckles were bright with scabs, his fingernails crowded with dirt, and his jumpsuit had a hole in one knee. He honestly looked nothing like she remembered. When they were working at the Oath Gazette, he was always groomed and richly dressed, walking around with a pompous air.
Why is he here? she wondered for the hundredth time. She had once thought he would be easy to understand, but with each day that passed, she was beginning to realize that Roman Kitt was a mystery. A mystery she was tempted to solve.
Iris didnât study him for long, for fear of drawing his attention. She glanced back down to her notepad and she suddenly felt empty and tired, as if she had aged years in a night.
She closed her eyes and leaned her head back.
She surrendered to slumber before she knew it.
Iris walked the trenches at night.
She was alone with only the moon for company, full and bright above her, swollen with silver light. She paused, listening to the wind that descended. Where was everyone? Where was she supposed to be?
Where was Roman, her pesky shadow?
In the distance, she heard howls. The hounds. Her heart spiked as she rushed to the closest bunker, feeling exposed and frightened.
There was a light burning within the darkness.
The moment Iris stepped into the bunker, drawn to the fire, she realized it was a room. Her old living room in the flat. The place she had shared with her mother and Forest. As her eyes traced over the familiarityâthe threadbare rug, the wallpaper that was hanging in strips, the sideboard with Nanâs radioâthey caught on one person she never thought sheâd see again.
âLittle Flower,â her mother said, perched on the sofa. A cigarette was smoking in her fingertips. âWhere have you been, sweetheart?â
âMum?â Irisâs voice felt rusted. âMum, what are you doing here?â
âIâm here because youâre here, Iris.â
âWhere are we?â
âHome for now. Did you think Iâd ever leave you?â
Irisâs breath caught. She felt confused, trying to remember something that was slipping from her memory.
âIâm writing again, Mum,â she said, her throat narrow. âOn Nanâs typewriter.â
âI know, my love,â Aster said with a smile. The smile that had thrived before the wine and the addiction. The smile that Iris loved most. âYouâll be a famous writer someday. Mark my words. Youâll make me so proud.â
Iris tilted her head. âYouâve said that to me before, havenât you, Mum? Why canât I remember?â
âBecause this is a dream and I wanted to see you again,â Aster said, smile fading. Her wide-set eyesâhazel eyes that Forest and Iris had both stolen from herâwere bright with piercing sadness. âItâs been so long since I looked at you and truly saw you, Iris. And I realize how much I missed. Iâm sorry, sweetheart, but I see you now.â
The words cleaved Irisâs chest in two.
She was doubling over from the pain, the rawness, and she realized she was weeping, as if her tears could wash away what had happened. Because her mother was dead.
âIris.â
A familiar voice began to melt the edges of the room. The bunker. The tendril of darkness.
âIris, wake up.â
It was the voice of a boy who had arrived at her flat on the worst day of her life. Who had brought her abandoned coat to her, as if he were worried she would catch cold. The voice of a boy who had followed her to war and thrown paper wads at her face and set a newspaper in her hands with her article on the front page and challenged her to run up a hill to see the view beyond it.
The dream broke. Iris was curled into herself, quietly weeping.
Roman sat beside her. The moonlight was bright, and his hand was on her shoulder. She could feel the heat of his palm through her jumpsuit.
âItâs all right,â he whispered.
She covered her face, to hide her emotion. But terrible sounds slipped through her fingers, and she shuddered, trying to swallow everything down to where she had once kept it hidden in her bones. She could deal with this later. She was mortified that she was sobbing in a trench, and the Sycamores were no doubt listening to it, and they must think she was so weak and pathetic andâ
Roman gently removed her helmet. He caressed her hair; it was matted and gross and she longed for a proper shower and yet his touch was comforting.
She drew a resolved breath, pressing her fingertips to her throbbing eyes. Romanâs hand drifted from her hair, his arm coming to rest around her shoulders. She sank into his side, into his warmth.
âIâm sorry,â Iris whispered. âI dreamt of my mum.â
âYou have nothing to be sorry about.â
âIâm embarrassed that Iââ
âNo one heard you but me,â he said. âItâs not uncommon to wake up with tears in your eyes here.â
Iris raised her head, a crick pulling in her neck. Snot flowed from her nose, and she was about to reluctantly wipe it on her sleeve when a handkerchief appeared, as if from thin air. She blinked and realized Roman was handing her one.
âOf course, you would bring a handkerchief to the front lines,â she said, half a grumble.
âThey didnât include it in your âthings to bring to warâ list, Winnow?â he quipped.
Iris blew her nose. âShut up, Kitt.â
He only answered with a chuckle, setting the helmet back onto her head. But he remained close at her side, keeping her warm through the darkest hours before dawn.