Page 49 of The Phoenix Bride

Page List

Font Size:

“He seems sweet enough.”

“Yes.”

“He would allow me my freedoms, I think. Give me security. We would likely spend half the year in London, too; I’d be near my sister.”

“I thought you didn’t like London.”

“I think I could come to like it,” I admit. “If I had the time to learn it properly. Tonight has taught me that. But I have never lived in a city before, not really. I don’t know if I can.”

“You can, if you wish to,” he says. “I felt the same once. When I first chose to move here, I wondered constantly if I was making a mistake. I feared this city would be cruel, but it was not. Or rather—even though ithasbeen cruel sometimes, I have never regretted coming here.”

“But you are brave,” I tell him, my throat tightening as I speak. “And I am not.”

“You are brave, also.”

“I am not. When Will—” My stomach turns, and I stop speaking. I breathe shakily. David waits without prompting me. I continue. “When Will passed, I was asked if I wished to see him—to see the body—before they took him away. To say goodbye. And I couldn’t. I couldn’t stomach it. I couldn’t evenlookat him. I wasn’t brave enough.”

“Will didn’t need you to look at him,” David replies. “To look would have been for your sake, not his. It was your right to refuse.” I shake my head, breaths speeding to gasps. He reaches toward me, offering his hands, and I take them. “Cecilia, I think you have more courage than I do. More courage than anyone else I know.”

“That can’t be true. If I had courage, I would have told SamuelGrey to leave me alone. I would have refused my sister and refused the world, and…”

I trail off. David smiles encouragingly at me. “And?”

And I would have told you how I felt about you—how I have felt about you, I think, since you took my hand in yours and showed me I was still alive.

I don’t say it. I look into his eyes, and he stares back at me, unwavering. He is as steady as the ground beneath my feet, fingers warm against my skin, patient, accepting; and if Will was a slip, a slide,thisthreatens a plunge.Thisis why they call it falling. I must step away from him, or soon I will be lost entirely.

I don’t step away. His hands loosen—releasing me—but I clutch on to him, keeping him there. Our fingers interlace.

“What are you doing?” David asks me. But he lets me cling to him, all the same.

“I don’t know,” I reply. “Will you pull away again?”

He doesn’t say anything in response. His hands remain in mine, and the silence grows expectant.

I can hear my pulse thudding in my ears. “Why is it,” I ask him, “that the heart sometimes speeds or slows?”

His grip on my palms tightens, and I take a step closer to him. He says, voice strained, “For many reasons.”

“Such as?”

“Well—it is affected by stress, for example, or exertion, or fear. Different responses mean different things.”

I raise one of his hands, pressing his fingers to my neck, so he can feel my pulse. It is thrumming like a songbird’s wings.

“What does this mean?” I ask him.

He breathes in shakily. I expect him to step back, but he doesn’t. “I…”

“What does it mean, David?”

“We can’t,” he says.

“We could pretend we can. Just for a moment. Please?”

“We can’t,” he repeats. “Tell me you don’t mean it, Cecilia. I won’t know what to do if you mean it.”

“Can a heartbeat lie?”