CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
Sobs are wracking my body before I realize I’ve started crying. And almost as soon as I do, I’m laughing, laughing at the power Rebecca’s trying to exert over me as soon as I want someone who isn’t Quinn.
“Get out of my head!” I scream to the sky, and she retreats, but her presence is still there, slowly melding, and I know it’s only a matter of time before it is not her and me, but
“Tave,” Benson says, his hands still on my face. I take a calming breath and ground myself by studying him—his wire-rimmed glasses, slightly askew, the streak of mud across his forehead, his lips. They’re red from my rough affections and all I want to do is kiss them again.
I try to speak, but my teeth are chattering from both cold and nerves and I can’t get anything understandable out.
“Come here,” Benson says, opening his jacket to me. I tuck myself close against his chest and he wraps me up as best he can, holding me tight as the chattering turns into full-body shudders, then slowly subsides.
“Can you talk about it now?” Benson whispers.
I don’t lift my head; I’m not sure I can make this confession while looking at him. “I saw the whole thing. The night they were supposed to die.”
“You mean like you were seeing through Quinn?”
I shake my head violently. “No, I had that part totally wrong. This was never about Quinn; it was about me! Quinn’s not trying to possess me—he’s just trying to get me to remember who I am.”
“And who are you?”
“I’m Rebecca Fielding.” Saying it aloud threatens my grip on reality. Less than a week ago, I thought
But there’s another word, too. One that terrifies me to my bones.
For months I’ve accepted my limitations, accepted the parts of me that will never heal. Accepted that I am less than I once was.
But now I’m not.
I’m
I am forever. I am eternal. I am powerful beyond imagination. It’s why I can make things. Rebecca could. Quinn could. And now I can. The cast-iron covering Benson and I dug up, like the cast-iron manacles I trapped Elizabeth in. I understand why, in that moment, it seemed so familiar.
And that’s only a fraction of what I can do.
Rebecca and Quinn were better than I am now. My creations disappear—two hundred years later, theirs are still here.
I have the potential to do the same thing.
But I have to
It will unlock my abilities … . if only I can remember what it is.
My body starts to shake again. That kind of power makes everything more dangerous, more dire. Maybe I can harness it, but if I can’t, it could destroy us all.
“I don’t understand,” Benson says, and his voice is unsteady. “Like, a past life?”
“Yes. And not just one. A hundred. A thousand. At first I saw Rebecca, the same way I’ve always seen Quinn. But then, it’s like my—my soul, I guess, came out of me and I was
Benson is silent, but his brow wrinkles in obvious thought.
“And it was … familiar. I knew I’d been in that body before.”
“So, do you … remember things now?”
“Sort of. Flashes. It’s not much,” I admit. “But she … I was so afraid. They’re after her, Benson.”
“Who?”
“The Reduciata.” Just saying the word makes a storm of fear roil in my chest.
He swallows hard.
“And that’s why they’re after me. Because she
Again.
“You can’t even imagine what they’ll do,” I finally say, my voice soft. I shake off the awful memories.
Not even memories—shadows, hints of memories.
“We can’t go to the Curatoria either. I have to do this on my own.” Panic quivers inside me and I spin back to Benson. “Not
He reaches for my shoulder, then changes his mind and lets his hands drop. “What do you need me to do?”
“I need—”
“The necklace,” I obediently parrot. “The one Quinn wrote about in his journal—then I’ll remember.” I don’t want to give Rebecca more access to my head—to my heart—but somehow I know that getting the necklace will give me more power, not less. I
“Do you think it’s in the dugout place?” he asks.
“It’s got to be.”
“Let’s go back to the car.” He helps me to my feet, but my fingers and toes are numb and I stagger.
“Easy,” Benson says as he curls his arm around me and leads me away from the ruins of the house I lived in, lifetimes ago. I lean my head against his shoulder and wish we could forget about all this for a few hours and just go back to the hotel. Any hotel. The farther away the better.
But I can’t. I have to remember and then get the hell out of here before they catch up with me. I can protect myself, protect Benson, but only if I remember.
Remember.
A few drops of melted snow from the trees drip onto my face as a gust of wind finds the towering boughs above us. The sudden cold pricks on my skin and I’m myself again. Completely now. Even though I know—know as surely as I know the sky is blue and grass green—that I was Rebecca Fielding in another life.
“I’ll drive,” Benson says. “We shouldn’t stay in one place very long while people are following you—especially around that house. What used to be the house. If they know about Quinn, they might know about this place already.”
“Just a sec,” I say, reaching past him into the passenger seat. “It might be in the stuff you grabbed.” I open Benson’s messenger bag and sort through the contents.
A ring, a small pouch still mostly full of gold, and a lumpy bundle wrapped in a handkerchief.
That’s it.
An energy only I can sense pulses through it and I know what’s inside even as my fingers reach for it, pulling at the sparse stitches that hold the yellowed handkerchief closed.
The necklace.
It’s here.