washer.”
I glared at her—I did not find her joke humorous in the slightest. She scowled back for a moment, and then her face relaxed.
She changed the subject. “What are you hunting tonight?”
It was so strange. On the one hand, she didn’t seem to take the danger seriously at all. On the other, she was so calm in accepting the ugliest facets of my life.
“Whatever we find in the park. We aren’t going far.”
“Why are you going with Alice?”
Alice was listening intently now.
I frowned. “Alice is the most… supportive.” There were other words I’d like to say for Alice’s benefit, but they would only confuse Bella.
“And the others?” Bella nearly whispered, her voice shifting from curious to anxious. “What are they?” She would be horrified if she knew how easily they could all hear that whisper.
There were also many ways to answer this question. I chose the least frightening. “Incredulous, for the most part.” They were definitely that.
Her eyes darted to the back corner of the cafeteria, where my family sat. Alice had warned them, and they were all looking elsewhere.
“They don’t like me,” she guessed.
“That’s not it,” I quickly countered.
Ha! Rosalie thought.
“They don’t understand why I can’t leave you alone,” I continued, trying to ignore Rose.
Well, that’s true enough.
Bella made a face. “Neither do I, for that matter.”
I shook my head, thinking of her ridiculous assumption before—that I didn’t care for her as much as she cared for me. I thought I’d explained this.
“I told you—you don’t see yourself clearly at all. You’re not like anyone I’ve ever known. You fascinate me.”
She looked doubtful. Maybe I needed to be more specific.
I smiled at her. Despite everything on my mind, it was important for her to understand this. “Having the advantages I do…” I brushed two of my fingers casually across my forehead. “I have a better than average grasp of human nature. People are predictable. But you… you never do what I expect. You always take me by surprise.”
She glanced away from me, and there was something unsatisfied about her expression. This specific detail had obviously not convinced her.
“That part is easy enough to explain,” I continued quickly, waiting for her eyes to return to me. “But there’s more.…” So much more. “And it’s not so easy to put into words—”
Goggle at me, will you, you bat-faced little nuisance?
Bella’s face went white. She looked frozen, as though she couldn’t look away from the back corner of the room.
I turned quickly and shot Rosalie a threatening glare, my lips pulling away from my teeth. I hissed quietly at her.
She flashed a glance at me from the corner of her eye, then angled her head away from us both. I looked back to Bella just as she turned to stare at me.
She started it, Rosalie thought sullenly.
Bella’s eyes were huge.
“I’m sorry about that,” I murmured quickly. “She’s just worried.” It irritated me to have to defend Rosalie’s behavior, but I couldn’t think of another way to explain. And at the heart of Rosalie’s hostility, this was the true issue. “You see… it’s dangerous for more than just me if, after spending so much time with you so publicly…”
I couldn’t finish. Filled with horror and shame, I stared down at my hands—the hands of a monster.
“If?” she prompted.
How could I not answer her now?
“If this ends… badly.”
My head fell into my palms. I didn’t want to see her eyes as understanding dawned, as she realized what I was saying. For all this time, I’d been trying to earn her trust. And now I’d had to tell her exactly how much I didn’t deserve it.
It was right to have her know. This would be the moment when she would walk away. And that was good. My first, instinctive rejection of Alice’s panic was wearing off. I couldn’t honestly promise Bella that I was no danger to her.
“And you have to leave now?”
I looked up at her slowly.
Her face was calm—there was a hint of sorrow in the pucker mark between her brows, but no fear at all. The perfect trust I’d seen when she’d jumped into my car in Port Angeles was evident again in her eyes. Though I didn’t deserve it, she still trusted me.
“Yes,” I told her.
My answer made her frown. She should have been only relieved to see me go, but instead, she was sad.
I wished I could smooth away the little v between her eyebrows with my fingertip. I wanted her to smile again.
I forced myself to grin at her.