now, no thought for five years into the future, let alone fifty. What will you do when she asks you to change her?”
“I’ll tell her why it’s wrong. I’ll tell her everything she’ll lose.”
And when she begs?
I hesitated, thinking of Alice’s vision of a grieving Bella, her hollow cheeks, her body curled in on itself in agony. What if my presence, and not my absence, were the reason she felt that way? I imagined her full of Rosalie’s bitterness.
“I’ll refuse.”
Rose heard the iron in my tone, and I could see that she finally understood my resolve. She nodded to herself.
I still think it’s too dangerous. I’m not sure you’re that strong.
She turned around and started walking slowly back toward the house. I kept pace with her.
“Your life isn’t what you wanted,” I began quietly. “But in the last seventy years or so, would you say you’ve had at least five years of pure happiness?”
Flashes of the best parts of her life, all of them revolving around Emmett, moved through her head, though I could see that, obstinate as ever, she didn’t want to agree with me.
I smiled halfheartedly. “Ten years, even?”
She wouldn’t answer me.
“Let me have my five years, Rosalie,” I whispered. “I know it can’t last. Let me be happy while happiness is possible. Be part of that happiness. Be my sister, and if you can’t love my choice the way I love yours, can you at least pretend to tolerate her?”
My words, gentle and quiet, seemed to hit her like bricks. Her shoulders were suddenly stiff, brittle.
I’m not sure what I can do. Seeing everything I want… out of my reach… It’s too painful.
It would be painful for her, I knew that. But I also knew that her regret and sorrow wouldn’t equal even a fraction of the anguish that was waiting for me. Rosalie’s life would go back to what it was now. Emmett would be there throughout to comfort her. But I… I would lose everything.
“Will you try?” I demanded, my voice sterner than before.
Her walk slowed for a few seconds, and her eyes were on her feet. Finally, her shoulders slumped and she nodded. I can try.
“There’s a chance… Alice saw Bella coming to the house in the morning.”
Her eyes flashed up, angry again. I need more time than that.
I held my hands up, placating. “Take the time you need.”
It made me sad, and tired, to see that her eyes were suspicious again. Maybe she wasn’t strong enough. She seemed to feel the judgment in my gaze. She looked away, then suddenly ran for the house. I let her go.
My other errands did not take so long, nor were they as difficult. Jasper agreed easily to my request. My mother was glowing with happy anticipation. What I’d wanted from Emmett no longer applied; it was clear he’d be with Rosalie, and she’d be somewhere far from here.
Well, it was a start. At least I’d gotten Rose to promise to try.
I even took a second to put on fresh clothes. Though the sleeveless shirt Alice had given me long ago had not brought about any of the miseries I’d feared—and had brought some pleasures I hadn’t anticipated—I still found it strangely distasteful. I was more comfortable in my usual clothes.
I passed Alice on my way out, leaning up against the pillar at the edge of the porch steps, near where Rosalie had waited before. Her grin was smug. Everything looks perfect for Bella’s visit. Just as I’d envisioned.
I wanted to point out that what she saw now was still just a vision, changeable as the first, but why bother?
“You’re not taking Bella’s desires into account,” I reminded her.
She rolled her eyes. When has Bella ever said no to you?
It was an interesting point.
“Alice, I—”
She interrupted, already knowing my question.
See for yourself.
She pictured the intertwined ribbons of Bella’s future. Some were solid, some insubstantial, some disappearing into mist. They were more ordered now, no longer snarled into the messy knot. It was a relief that the most nightmarish of futures was entirely missing. But there, in the sturdiest thread, Bella of the bloodred eyes and diamond skin still held the most prominent place. The vision I was looking for was only part of the more nebulous lines, ribbons at the periphery. Bella at twenty, Bella at twenty-five. Flimsy-seeming visions, blurred around the edges.
Alice wrapped her arms tight around her legs. She didn’t need to read thoughts or the future to read the frustration in my eyes.
“That’s never