Divine Rivals: Part 3: The Words In-Between: Chapter 33
Divine Rivals (Letters of Enchantment #1)
They rolled into Avalon Bluff in the middle of the night. The air was cool and dark and the stars blistered the sky as Iris climbed down from the lorry on shaky legs.
She was suddenly surrounded by nurses, doctors, townspeople. She was swept up and away into the light of the infirmary, so exhausted she could hardly speakâIâm fine, donât waste your efforts on me. Before she could protest, a nurse had her inside the hall, cleaning her scrapes and cuts with antiseptic.
âAre you injured anywhere else?â the nurse asked.
Iris blinked. She felt like she was seeing double for a moment. She couldnât remember the last time she had drunk or eaten something, the last time she had slept.
âNo,â she said, her tongue sticking to her teeth.
The nurse reached for a cup of water and dissolved something in it. âHere, drink this. Marisol is just down the hall. I know sheâll want to see you.â
âIris!â Attieâs voice cut through the clamor.
Iris jumped and frantically looked around, finding Attie weaving through the crowd. She set down the cup of water and launched herself into her friendâs arms. She drew a deep breath and told herself to be calm, but the next moment she was sobbing into Attieâs neck.
âYouâre all right, youâre all right,â Attie whispered, holding her tightly. âHere, let me get a good look at you.â She angled herself back, and Iris dashed the tears from her eyes.
âIâm sorry,â Iris said, sniffing.
âDonât apologize,â Attie said firmly. âIâve been worried sick about you, ever since the first lorry pulled up hours ago. Iâve literally looked at everyone who arrived, hoping to find you.â
Irisâs heart stalled. She felt the color drain from her face. âKitt. Is he here? Did you see him? Is he all right?â
Attie grinned. âYes, heâs here. Donât worry. He just got out of surgery on the upper floor, I believe. Here, Iâll take you to him, but grab your water first.â
Iris reached for her cup. She didnât realize how badly she was shaking until she tried to take a sip and spilled half of it on her chest. Attie noticed but said nothing, leading her to the lift. They ascended to the second floor. It was quieter on the upper story; the corridors smelled like iodine and soap. Irisâs throat narrowed as Attie led her farther down the hallway, around a corner and into a dimly lit room.
There were multiple beds, each partitioned off by cloth walls for meager privacy. Irisâs eyes found him instantly.
Roman was in the first bay, lying on a narrow cot. He was sleeping, his mouth slack and his chest rising and falling slowly, as if he were in the throes of a deep dream. He looked so thin in a hospital gown. He looked so pale in the lamplight. He looked like the slightest thing might break him.
She took a step closer, uncertain if she was supposed to be in there. But a nurse nodded at her, and Iris tentatively continued her path to Romanâs bedside. His injured leg was swathed in linens, propped up on a spare pillow, and intravenous fluids were being fed into a vein in his right hand.
She stopped, gazing down at him. He had taken multiple wounds for her. He had put himself in harmâs way to keep her safe, and she wondered if she would be standing here in this moment with minor scrapes without him or if she would be shredded by shrapnel, dead in the shadows of a trench. If he hadnât come with her ⦠if he hadnât been so stubborn, so insistent that he follow her â¦
She couldnât breathe, and she dared to reach out and trace his hand, the nicks and cuts on his knuckles.
Why did you come here, Kitt?
She returned her gaze to his face, half expecting to find his eyes open and his mouth upturned in a cocky smile. As if he felt the same dangerous spark she did when their skin touched. But Roman continued to sleep, lost to her in the moment.
She swallowed.
Why did you take the wounds that should have been mine?
Her fingertips traced up his arm, across his collar and the slope of his jaw to the thick shock of his hair. She brushed away a lock from his brow, daring him to wake up to her caress.
He didnât, of course.
She was partly relieved, partly disappointed. She was still rife with worry over him, and she felt as if the ice in her stomach wouldnât fully melt until she spoke with him. Until she heard his voice again and felt his gaze on her.
âWe removed twelve pieces of shrapnel from his leg,â the nurse said quietly. âHeâs very fortunate it was only his leg, and all of his arteries were missed.â
Irisâs hand dropped from Romanâs dark hair. She glanced over her shoulder to see the nurse standing at the foot of his bed.
âYes. I was with him when it happened,â Iris whispered, beginning to back away. She could see Attie at the corner of her eye, waiting in the doorway.
âThen he must be here because of you,â the nurse said, moving closer to take his pulse. âIâm sure heâll want to see and personally thank you tomorrow.â
âNo,â Iris said. âIâm here because of him.â And that was all the lump in her throat would allow her to say.
She turned and left the room, her breaths turning shallow and quick, and she thought she might faint in the corridor until she glanced up and saw someone striding toward her with purpose. Long black hair was escaping a braid. Blood was splattered on her skirts and fire shone in her brown eyes.
Marisol.
âThere you are!â Marisol cried, and Iris worried she was in trouble until she realized that that Marisol was crying. Tears shone on her cheeks. âMy gods, I have been praying every day for you!â
One moment, Iris was standing uncertain, trembling in the hall. The next, Marisol had embraced her, weeping into her matted hair. Iris sighedâshe was safe, she was safe, she could let down her guard and breatheâand she held to Marisol, struggling to hide the tears that surged.
She didnât think she could cry anymore, but when Marisol leaned back and framed her face, Iris let her tears fall.
âWhenâs the last time you ate, Iris?â Marisol asked, tenderly wiping her tears away. âCome, Iâm taking you home and feeding you. And then you can take a shower and rest.â
She reached for Attieâs hand, holding both girls close.
Marisol led them home.
Iris wanted a shower first.
While Marisol and Attie prepared hot cocoa and a late-night meal in the kitchen, Iris trudged upstairs to the lavatory. The adrenaline that had kept her going since that afternoonâa day that felt like years ago, a day when the sky was blue and the storm clouds were building and the trenches were full of heavy silence and the Sycamore Platoon was aliveâwas utterly gone. She could suddenly feel the keen edge of her exhaustion.
She carried a candle into her bedroom. She dropped the bags from her back to the floor, where they lay like two heaps on the rug. She stripped, shivering as the bloodstained linen peeled off her skin.
A quick shower, Marisol had told her. Because it was the middle of the night, and they must always be ready for the hounds to come.
Iris washed by candlelight. It was dark and warm, the steam curling up from the tiles, and she stood in the shower, her eyes closed and her skin burning as she scrubbed. She scrubbed as if she could wash it all away.
Her ears still held a faint ring; she wondered if it would ever fade.
She knocked something off the soap ledge. The clang made her jump, her heart faltering. She almost cowered, but slowly told herself she was fine. She was in the shower, and it was just a metal tin of Marisolâs lavender shampoo.
When Iris was certain she had washed away the dirt and the sweat and the blood, she shut off the valve and dried herself. She didnât even want to look at her body, the marks on her skin. Bruises and cuts to remind her what she had experienced.
She thought of Roman as she drew on her nightgown. He lingered in her mind as she worked the tangles from her damp hair. When would he wake? When should she return to him?
âIris?â Marisol called. âBreakfast!â
Breakfast, in the middle of the night.
Iris set her comb aside and carried her candle down the stairs, into the kitchen. At the smell of the food, her stomach clenched. She was so hungry, but she wasnât sure if she would be able to eat.
âHere, start with the cocoa,â Attie said, offering a steaming cup to Iris.
Iris took it gratefully, sinking into her usual chair. Marisol continued to set down plates on the table. She had made some sort of cheesy hash, full of comforting ingredients, and gradually, Iris was able to begin taking a few bites. The warmth trickled through her; she sighed and felt herself slowly returning to her body.
Attie and Marisol sat and ate with her, but they were quiet. And Iris was thankful. She didnât think she could speak of it yet. Just having them close beside her was all she needed.
âCan I help you clean, Marisol?â Attie asked, rising to gather the dishes when they were done.
âNo, Iâve got this. Why donât you help Iris to her room?â Marisol said.
Irisâs eyes were heavy. Her feet felt like iron as she rose, and Attie took hold of her arm. She hardly remembered ascending the stairs, or Attie opening her door and guiding her inside.
âDo you want me to stay with you tonight, Iris?â
Iris sank to her pallet on the floor. The blankets were cold.
âNo, Iâm so tired I donât think sleeping will be an issue. But wake me if a siren sounds.â
She hardly remembered falling asleep.
Iris woke with a start.
She didnât know where she was at first. Sunlight was streaming in through the window, and the house was silent. She sat forward, her body stiff and sore. The B and B. She was at Marisolâs, and it looked to be late morning.
The events of the past few days returned to her in a rush.
Roman. She needed to go to the infirmary. She wanted to see him, touch him. Surely he was awake by now.
Iris stood with a groan. She had fallen asleep with wet hair, and it was a snarled mess now. She was reaching for her comb when she saw her bag on the floor nearby, Romanâs directly next to it. Both were scuffed and streaked with dirt. And then her gaze roamed to her jumpsuit, discarded by her desk where her typewriter sat, gleaming in the light.
Carver.
His name whispered through her, and she eagerly glanced at her wardrobe, expecting to find letter after letter on the floor.
There was nothing. The floor was bare. He hadnât written to her at all while she was away, and her heart sank.
Iris closed her eyes, her thoughts swimming. She remembered his final letter to her. The one she had shoved in her pocket and tried to read before Roman interrupted her twice.
She dove for her jumpsuit, searching the pockets. She half expected the paper to be gone, just like her motherâs locket, as if the battle had also torn it away from her. But the letter was still there. A few specks of blood had dried on one of the corners. Irisâs hands trembled as she smoothed the page out.
Where had she left off? He was asking her questions. He wanted to know more about her, as if he felt the same hunger she did. Because she wanted to know him too.
She found the place. She had almost been at the end when Roman had rudely tossed that paper wad at her.
Iris bit her lip. Her eyes rushed along the words:
I want to know everything about you, Iris.
I want to know your hopes and your dreams. I want to know what irritates you and what makes you smile and what makes you laugh and what you long for most in this world.
But perhaps even more than that ⦠I want you to know who I am.
If you could see me right now as I type this ⦠you would smile. No, youâd probably laugh. To see how badly my hands are shaking, because I want to get this right. Iâve wanted to get it right for weeks now, but the truth is I didnât know how and Iâm worried what you might think.
Itâs odd, how quickly life can change, isnât it? How one little thing like typing a letter can open a door you never saw. A transcendent connection. A divine threshold. But if thereâs anything I can should say in this momentâwhen my heart is beating wildly in my chest and I would beg you to come and tame itâis this: your letters have been a light for me to follow. Your words? A sublime feast that fed me on days when I was starving.
I love you, Iris.
And I want you to see me. I want you to know me. Through the smoke and the firelight and kilometers that once dwelled between us.
Do you see me?
âC.
She lowered the letter but continued to stare at Carverâs inked words.
What is a synonym for sublime? Roman had once asked her from his second-story window. As if he were a prince, trapped in a castle.
Divine, she had grumbled from below, where she had been watering the garden. Transcendent, Attie had offered, assuming he was writing about the gods.
Irisâs heart pounded. She read through Carverâs letter againâI love you, Irisâuntil the words began to melt into each other, and her eyes were blinking back a sudden flood of tears.
âNo,â she whispered. âNo, it canât be. This is a mere coincidence.â
But she had never been one to believe in such things. Her gaze snagged on Romanâs bag, lying in the center of the floor. He had been so insistent that she grab his bag after he had been injured. She could still hear his voice, vividly.
Iris ⦠my bag ⦠I need you ⦠need to get my bag. Thereâs something ⦠I want youâ
The world stopped.
The roaring in her ears returned, as if she had just crouched through an hour of artillery fire.
Carverâs letter slipped from her fingers as she walked to Romanâs bag. She bent down and retrieved it, dried dirt cascading in clumps from the leather. It took her a minute to get the front untethered. Her fingers were icy, fumbling. But at last it was open and she turned it upside down.
All his possessions began to spill out.
A wool blanket, a few tins of vegetables and pickled fruits. His notepad, full of his handwriting. Pens. A spare set of socks. And then the paper. So many loose pages, fluttering like snow down to the floor. Page after page, crinkled and folded and marked by type.
Iris stared at the paper that gathered at her feet.
She knew what this was. She knew as she dropped Romanâs bag, as she knelt to retrieve the pages.
They were her letters.
Her words.
First typed to Forest, and then to someone she had known as Carver.
Her emotions were a tangled mess as she began to reread them. Her words stung as if she had never once typed them sitting on the floor of her old bedroom, lonely and worried and angry.
I wish you would be a coward for me, for Mum. I wish you would set down your gun and rend your allegiance to the goddess who has claimed you. I wish you would return to us.
She had thought that Carver had thrown away the very first of her letters. She had asked him to send them back to her, and he had said it wasnât possible.
Well, now she knew he was lying. Because they were here. They were all here, wrinkled as if they had been read numerous times.
Iris stopped reading. Her eyes were smarting.
Roman Kitt was Carver.
He had been Carver all along, and this realization struck her so hard she had to sit down on the floor. She was overwhelmed by a startling rush of relief. It was him. She had been writing to him, falling for him, all this time.
But then the questions began to swarm, nipping at that solace.
Had he been playing her? Was this a game to him? Why hadnât he told her sooner?
She covered her face, and her palms absorbed the heat of her cheeks.
âGods,â she whispered through her fingers, and when she opened her eyes again, her sight had sharpened. She stared at her letters, spread around her. And she began to gather them up, one by one.