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Her eyes stung again. Poor Matt. She’d hurt him, but he’d been so nice about it. He’d even been nice to Stefan.

Stefan. Her heart thudded once, hard, squeezing two hot tears out of her eyes. There, she was crying at last. She was crying with anger and humiliation and frustration — and what else?

What had she really lost today? What did she really feel for this stranger, this Stefan Salvatore? He was a challenge, yes, and that made him different, interesting. Stefan was exotic… exciting.

Funny, that was what guys had sometimes told Elena she was. And later she heard from them, or from their friends or sisters, how nervous they were before going out with her, how their palms got sweaty and their stomachs were full of butterflies. Elena had always found such stories amusing. No boy she’d ever met in her life had made her nervous.

But when she’d spoken to Stefan today, her pulse had been racing, her knees weak. Her palms had been wet. And there hadn’t been butterflies in her stomach — there had been bats.

She was interested in the guy because he made her feel nervous? Not a very good reason, Elena, she told herself. In fact, a very bad reason.

But there was also that mouth. That sculpted mouth that made her knees weak with something entirely different than nervousness. And that night-dark hair — her fingers itched to weave themselves into its softness. That lithe, flat-muscled body, those long legs… and that voice. It was his voice that had decided her yesterday, making her absolutely determined to have him. His voice had been cool and disdainful when talking to Mr. Tanner, but strangely compelling for all that. She wondered if it could turn night-dark as well, and how it would sound saying her name, whispering her name…

“Elena!”

Elena jumped, her reverie shattered. But it wasn’t Stefan Salvatore calling her, it was Aunt Judith rattling the front door open.

“Elena? Elena!” And that was Margaret, her voice shrill and piping. “Are you home?”

Misery welled up in Elena again, and she glanced around the kitchen. She couldn’t face her aunt’s worried questions or Margaret’s innocent cheerfulness right now. Not with her eyelashes wet and new tears threatening any minute. She made a lightning decision and quietly slipped out the back door as the front door banged shut.

Once off the back porch and into the yard, she hesitated. She didn’t want to run into anyone she knew. But where could she go to be alone?

The answer came almost instantly. Of course. She’d go see Mom and Dad.

It was a fairly long walk, almost to the edge of town, but over the last three years it had become familiar to Elena. She crossed over Wickery Bridge and climbed up the hill, past the ruined church, then down into the little valley below.

This part of the cemetery was well-kept; it was the old section that was allowed to run slightly wild. Here, the grass was neatly trimmed, and bouquets of flowers made splashes of bright color. Elena sat down by the big marble headstone with “Gilbert” carved into the front.

“Hi, Mom. Hi, Dad,” she whispered. She leaned over to place a purple impatiens blossom she’d picked along the way in front of the marker. Then she curled her legs under her and just sat.

She’d come here often after the accident. Margaret had been only one at the time of the car crash; she didn’t really remember them. But Elena did. Now she let her mind leaf back through memories, and the lump in her throat swelled, and the tears came easier. She missed them so much, still. Mother, so young and beautiful, and Father, with a smile that crinkled up his eyes.

She was lucky to have Aunt Judith, of course. It wasn’t every aunt who would quit her job and move back into a little town to take care of two orphaned nieces. And Robert, Aunt Judith’s fiancé, was more like a stepfather to Margaret than an uncle-to-be by marriage.

But Elena remembered her parents. Sometimes, right after the funeral, she had come out here to rage at them, angry with them for being so stupid as to get themselves killed. That was when she hadn’t known Aunt Judith very well, and had felt there was nowhere on earth she belonged anymore.

Where did she belong now? she wondered. The easy answer was, here, in Fell’s Church, where she’d lived all her life. But lately the easy answer seemed wrong. Lately she felt there must be something else out there for her, some place she would recognize at once and call home.

A shadow fell over her, and she looked up, startled. For an instant, the two figures standing over her were alien, unfamiliar, vaguely menacing. She stared, frozen.

“Elena,” said the smaller figure fussily, hands on hips, “sometimes I worry about you, I really do.”

Elena blinked and then laughed shortly. It was Bonnie and Meredith. “What does a person have to do to get a little privacy around here?” she said as they sat down.

“Tell us to go away,” suggested Meredith, but Elena just shrugged. Meredith and Bonnie had often come out here to find her in the months after the accident. Suddenly, she felt glad about that, and grateful to them both. If nowhere else, she belonged with the friends who cared about her. She didn’t mind if they knew she had been crying, and she accepted the crumpled tissue Bonnie offered her and wiped her eyes. The three of them sat together in silence for a little while, watching the wind ruffle the stand of oak trees at the edge of the cemetery.

“I’m sorry about what happened,” Bonnie said at last, in a soft voice. “That was really terrible.”

“And your middle name is ‘Tact,’ ” said Meredith. “It couldn’t have been that bad, Elena.”

“You weren’t there.” Elena felt herself go hot all over again at the memory. “It was terrible. But I don’t care anymore,” she added flatly, defiantly. “I’m finished with him. I don’t want him anyway.”

“Elena!”

“I don’t, Bonnie. He obviously thinks he’s too good for — for Americans. So he can just take those designer sunglasses and…”

There were snorts of laughter from the other girls. Elena wiped her nose and shook her head. “So,” she said to Bonnie, determinedly changing the subject, “at least Tanner seemed in a better mood today.”

Bonnie looked martyred. “Do you know that he made me sign up to be the very first one to give my oral report? I don’t care, though; I’m going to do mine on the druids, and—”

“On the what?”

“Droo-ids. The weird old guys who built Stonehenge and did magic and stuff in ancient England. I’m descended from them, and that’s why I’m psychic.”

Meredith snorted, but Elena frowned at the blade of grass she was twirling between her fingers. “Bonnie, did you really see something yesterday in my palm?” she asked abruptly.

Bonnie hesitated. “I don’t know,” she said at last. “I — I thought I did then. But sometimes my imagination runs away with me.”

“She knew you were here,” said Meredith unexpectedly. “I thought of looking at the coffee shop, but Bonnie said, ‘She’s at the cemetery.’ ”

“Did I?” Bonnie looked faintly surprised but impressed. “Well, there you see. My grandmother in Edinburgh has the second sight and so do I. It always skips a generation.”

“And you’re descended from the druids,” Meredith said solemnly.

“Well, it’s true! In Scotland they keep up the old traditions. You wouldn’t believe some of the things my grandmother does. She has a way to find out who you’re going to marry and when you’re going to die. She told me I’m going to die early.”

“Bonnie!”

“She did. I’m going to be young and beautiful in my coffin. Don’t you think that’s romantic?”

“No, I don’t. I think it’s disgusting,” said Elena. The shadows were getting longer, and the wind had a chill to it now.