She got David's room number from a receptionist at the front desk. She didn't ask if she was allowed to
visit.
All Gillian could think as she walked down the hall was, Please. Please, if David was only all right, there
was a chance that everything could work out.
At the door she stopped and held her breath.
Her mind was showing her all sorts of pictures. David in a coma, hooked up to so many tubes and wires
that he was unrecognizable. Worse, David alive and awake and smiling... and looking at her with violet eyes.
She knew what Angel's plan had been. At least, she thought she knew. The only question was, had he
succeeded?
Still holding her breath, she looked around the door.
David was sitting up in bed. The only thing he was hooked up to was an IV of clear fluid. There was
another bed in the room, empty.
He looked toward the door and saw her.
Gillian walked toward him slowly. She kept her face absolutely expressionless, her eyes on him.
Dark hair. A lean face that still had traces of a summer tan. Cheekbones to die for and eyes to drown in.
But no half-quizzical, half-friendly smile. He was looking back at her as soberly as she was looking at
him, a book slipping unnoticed from his lap.
Gillian reached the foot of the hospital bed. They stared at each other.
What do I say? David, is it really you? I can't. It's too stupid, and what's he going to say back? No,
dragonfly, it's not him, it's me?
The silence stretched on. At last, very quietly, the guy on the bed said, "Are you okay?"
"Yeah." The word came out clipped and dispassionate. "Are you okay?"
"Yeah, pretty much. I was lucky." He was watching her. "You look-kind of different."
"And you're kind of quiet."
Something like puzzlement flashed in his eyes. Then something like hurt. "I was... well, you walked in
here looking so deadpan, and you sound so ... cold..." He shook his head slightly, his
eyes fixed on hers. "Gillian-did I do something to make you want to hit that pole?"
"I didn't do it on purpose!" She found herself lunging forward, reaching for his hands.
He looked startled. "Okay..."
"David, I didn't. I was doing everything I could not to. I would never want to hurt you. Don't you know that?"
His face cleared. His eyes were very dark but very calm. "Yes, I do/' he said simply. "I believe you."
Strangely, she knew he did. hi spite of all the evidence to the contrary, he believed her.
Gillian's hands tightened on his. Their eyes were locked together. It was as if they were getting closer,
although neither of them moved physically.
And then it was all happening, what had started to happen at least twice before. Feelings so sweet and
strong she could hardly bear it. Strange recognition, unexpected belonging... impossible knowing...
Gillian's eyes seemed to shut of their own accord. And then somehow they were kissing. She felt the
warmth of David's lips. And everything was warm and wonderful... but there was more.
It was as if the normal veil that separated two people had melted.
Gillian felt a shock of revelation. This was what it meant, what Angel had spoken to her about. She
knew it intuitively even though she'd never spoken the word before.
Soulmates.
She'd found hers. The one love for her on this earth. The person she was meant to be with, that no one
could keep her from. And it wasn't Angel. It was David.
That was the other thing she knew, and knew with a bedrock certainty that nothing could touch. This
was David, the true David. He was holding her in his arms, kissing her. Her, the ordinary Gillian, who
was wearing an old gray sweatshirt and no makeup.
It was absurd that she'd ever believed things like makeup mattered.
David was alive, that was what mattered. Gillian didn't have his death on her conscience. And if they
could somehow live through the rest of what had to be done, they just might be happier than she had ever
imagined.
How weird that she could still think. But they didn't seem to be kissing anymore; they were just holding
each other now. And that was almost as good, just feeling his body against hers.
Gillian pulled away.
"David-"
His eyes were full of wonder. "You know what? I love you."
"I know." Gillian realized she was being less than romantic. She couldn't help it. This was the time for
action. "David, I have to tell you some things, and I don't know if you can believe me. But you've got to
try." "Gillian, I said I love you. I mean that. We-"
Then he stopped and searched her face. He seemed to see something that changed his mind. "I love
you," he said in a different tone. "So I'll believe you."
"The first thing is that I'm not anything like what you think. I'm not brave, or noble, or witty in the face of
danger or-or anything like that. It's all been-a sort of set-up. And here's how it happened."
And then she told him.
Everything. From the beginning, from the afternoon when she'd heard the crying in the woods and
followed it and died and found an angel.
She told him the whole story, about how Angel had appeared in her room that night and how he'd
changed her whole life. About the whispering that had guided her ever since.
And about the very bad things. Her witch heritage. The spell she'd put on Tanya. The Night World. All
the way up to the accident last night.
When she was done, she sat back and looked at him.
"Well?"
"Well, I probably ought to think you're crazy. But I don't. Maybe I'm crazy, too. Or maybe it's because
I died once, myself. ..."
"You started to tell me that, that first night- and then the car skidded. What happened?"
"When I was seven my appendix burst. I died on the operating table-and I went to a place like that
meadow. I'll tell you the funny thing, though. I felt that rushing thing come at me, too-that huge thing you
said came at you hi the end. Only
it actually reached me. And it wasn't dark or scary. It was white-beautiful light-and it had wonderful wings."
Gillian was staring. "Then what?"
"It sent me back. I didn't have any choice. It loved me, but I had to go back anyway. So- zoom-back
down the tunnel, and pop, back into the body. I've never forgotten it. And, it's hard to explain, but I
know it was real. I guess that's why I believe you."
"Then maybe you understand what I've got to do. I don't know what Angel really is. ... I think he may be
some kind of demon. But I've got to stop him. Exorcize him or whatever."
David took her by the arms. "You can't. You don't know how."
"But maybe Melusine does. It's either her or that guy Ash at the club. He seemed all right. The only
down side is that I think he was a vampire."
David had stiffened. "I vote for the witch-"
"Me, too."
"-but I want you to wait for me. They'll let me out later this afternoon."
"I can't. David, it's for Tanya and Kim, too. Melusine might know how to cure them. Anyway, I'm
certainly going to ask her. And I can't let any more time go by."
David pulled at his hair with the hand that wasn't hooked to the IV. "Okay. All right, give me five
minutes, and we'll go together now."
"No."
He was looking at the IV as if figuring out how to undo it. "Yes. Just wait for me-"
Gillian blew him a kiss from the door and ran before he looked up.
He couldn't help her. You couldn't fight Angel in ordinary ways. All David would be was leverage in
Angel's hands-a hostage-something to threaten to harm.
Gillian jogged out of the hospital and through the parking lot. She found the Geo.
Okay, now if Melusine would just be at the store...
{You don't really want to do this, you know.)
Gillian slammed the car door closed. She sat up very straight, looking at nothing, as she fastened her
seatbelt and started the car.
(Listen, kid. You ain't never had a friend like me.)
Gillian pulled out of the parking lot.
(Come on, give me a break. We can at least talk about this, can't we? There are some things you don't
understand.)
She couldn't listen to him. She didn't dare answer him. The last time, he'd hypnotized her somehow,
made her relax and give up control to him. That couldn't happen again.
But she couldn't shut his voice out. She couldn't get away from it.
(And you can't love him. There are rules against it. I'm serious. You belong to the Night World
now-you're not allowed to love a human. If they find out, they'll kill you both.)
(And what were you trying to do to us?) Damn, she'd answered him back. She wouldn't do that again.