I bristled, despite knowing he was right. My history with psychiatrists would have colored the doctors' judgment. I could never have warned them about Brody or Aimee or anyone, not without risking the best home I'd ever had.
The days all blended into one indistinguishable week. The day of the funeral arrived and the house was swathed in silence. Poor Izzy couldn't even crack a smile. And yet the sun shone on the fall afternoon, as if blessing us with a burst of golden light to say farewell to our little brother.
I was sick of golden light.
Brody had an open casket, revealing his cute little smiling lips and corkscrew curls. Many well-wishers managed a sad smile when they bid the little boy farewell.
And Brody still shone.
The little boy still radiated lustrous gold so bright it speared my eyes, drawing hot tears. I steeled myself, lowered my head until I regained control. Nobody would know the depth of my anger, the intensity of my guilt. My grief had grown into a solid, black lump in my chest. Fed by anger, and hate. Hatred for myself, anger at myself. Even Aidan's words didn't assuage my guilt.
That night, the dreams made it all worse. For the few hours of sleep I managed to get, every unconscious second was violated by dreams. Dreams of wings flapping, thrusting against my face, lifting my hair. Of muzzles twitching, dark eyes shining, reflecting the white moon. Those eyes bored into me. Knowing eyes. Intelligent, human eyes.
The week after the funeral crawled by. A week in which every minute was weighed down with my tears and my anger. The dreams worsened and I rarely slept. The house still lay silent most of the time, as if no one dared to have any fun—as if TV, games and laughter would lessen our loss.
I dried the dishes while Aidan stacked them away. Ms. Custer chatted with Simon and Izzy in the living room.
"It's my fault," I said softly.
"It's not."
"I should have done something!" I flung the cloth at the counter and sank into the nearest chair.
Aidan sighed. "Look, Bryn, maybe it doesn't work that way. Maybe sometimes premonitions happen for reasons other than the obvious." He shook his head, eyes narrowed, impaling me with the fiercest stare. "You have to snap out of it."
I got to my feet again and grabbed another dish. He'd never be able to understand what I was going through. Not until he could see the glow and live with the knowledge himself. And that would never happen.
"Stop beating yourself up," he continued. "You see the glow, then the person dies. Each time it's different. You never know when they'll die. So you can't do anything to save them, Bryn." Aidan sighed, his eyes filled with regret and grief. He took a step toward me, hesitated for a moment, then turned abruptly on his heel and left the kitchen.
His parting words chilled me like a plunge into arctic waters: You see the glow, then they die. I turned and stared, horrified, after Aidan.
He knew it was me.
The hours ticked by slower than a sleepwalking snail and I'd wasted enough time moping around, wondering what Aidan was thinking. Time to find out. I padded down to his room, straining to keep the floorboards from creaking beneath my feet. The clunk of a cabinet drawer downstairs echoed up the stairs. Ms. Custer was still awake. Guess she had her own bad dreams to evade.
We hadn't received our scolding from our foster mom after all. She wasn't faring too well. She'd never lost a child before. And though Social Services understood and hadn't questioned the quality of her care, she still blamed herself. As if she'd personally caused Brody's death. As if she thought she could have prevented it. Guess we were in pretty much the same boat.
My knuckles tapped the door. Not too loud, as we could still get in trouble. The door whispered open against the pressure of my knock. "Aidan?" I whispered. My voice echoed in the empty darkness. I flicked the switch, my heart racing, dread weighing on my bones. Before the bare bulb exposed the room, intuition had already filled me in.
All traces of Aidan were wiped clean. No rumpled bedding spilled across his bed. No computers, electronics or books overflowed the table. His dresser lay bare and his closet hung open to reveal abandoned racks and shelves.
When did he pack? When did he get all his stuff out? And why in the hell would he leave like a stranger, without saying goodbye? As if we'd shared nothing between us. Not the tumultuous heat of those kisses or the shared grief or even my strange and horrible secret. How could he leave me now?
The amber stone seared my throat as if sharing the simmering pain in my gut.
Staggering toward the open window I slumped against the sill, struggling to breathe. Voices filtered to me from the porch below: Aidan and Ms. Custer. "Thank you, and good luck," my foster mom was saying, a sad and oddly hollow timbre to her voice.
I didn't waste a second, just tore out of the room and down the stairs, landing on the last step as the door closed with a soft click.
I didn't think.
Didn't stop.
I just hurtled past Ms. Custer to the door and flung it open. "Bryn, honey. What—" Her voice rose. I ignored her and hurried after Aidan, praying I wasn't too late. On a different level of consciousness, I recognized I was going all crazy, over-obsessed girlfriend on him as he drove out of my life. At this point, I didn't care.
"Aidan!" I called out as I hopped down the porch stairs and skidded to a stop in front of him. "What's going on? Where are you going?"
He reached for his helmet, a weary sadness shadowing his eyes. "I have to leave. My boss wants me back ASAP. Emergency."
"What about school?"
Lame reason Bryn. There are other schools outside of Craven.
He shrugged, as if school was the least important thing in the world. But the sadness lingered in his eyes. He couldn't hide it.
I ached with too many facets of grief. I felt so profoundly tired. Of losing the people I cared for. Of being alone. Of caring.
Don't you care about me?
The question teetered at the tip of my tongue. Either pride or self-preservation stole my question away. I gritted my teeth, refused to appear a love-stricken teenager begging Aidan to stay.
He swung his leg over the Ducati seat and tugged me close. I didn't want the hug. False comfort when he prepared to desert me. His embrace was a twisted fusion of lies and dreams. But I shared the hug, took every little bit of him I could.
"I'm sorry, Bryn." Above me, warm breath ruffled my hair but the night mocked me. "I have to go."
Then he mounted the bike, tugged the helmet on and tightened the strap. He revved the engine, the sound dragging forth memories of that cool evening when he first rode into my life.
In seconds, he turned onto the street and disappeared into the darkness.
Straight out of my life.
I stood in the dark, not bothering to hug myself against the cold, not registering the twitch of drapes across the road. Not caring that Ms. Custer might come out and scold. The cold night transformed my breath into a ghostly apparition, spreading fading fingers to grasp the softest breeze. My amber talisman burned the skin at my neck as I watched him go.
So many questions he'd left unanswered. What was wrong with me? Why did I see the golden haze? Questions only he knew how to answer. He knew. And he'd left. It wasn't like Aidan at all.
Then it hit me like a bolt out of the deep black sky. How well did I really know Aidan? He'd barely been with us long enough to call him part of the family, but he'd found little nooks and crannies to immerse himself in. Ms. Custer, her kids and just about the entire population of Craven adored him.
But my knowledge of his past was nonexistent. We'd spent a lot of time together and yet I had no idea where he came from, or what his family had been like. He'd never spoken of his last foster family, never discussed himself at all.
The frigid fingers groping at my heart had nothing to do with the winter cold.
Who was Aidan Lee?
I tiptoed into the house and held my breath as I shut the door. Then winced when Ms. Custer called out. Entering the living room, I pulled a rug from a small pile near the door and sank onto the couch. Another of her favorite old black-and-white movies flickered on the small screen.
"What did he say?" I asked, staring at Marilyn as her dress floated on a cheeky gust of air.
Her voice crackled and she cleared her throat before she spoke. "That he had to leave. That he was being transferred to another foster home and the circumstances were unusual. It wasn't my place to ask, honey." She nodded in silence, taking Aidan's words as gospel.
"He didn't say why?" I asked.
Marilyn pouted.
Ms. Custer shook her head.
"Or where?"
"Bryn, honey, I think he meant to leave and not be found. So whatever plan you're hatching in that pretty little head of yours . . . forget it." Her eyes were sad as she took my chin in her hands and drew me into her soft embrace. "Your heart will heal, child. First love is always the hardest."
But her smile failed to soothe me. She knew mere words would not help me. I was desperate for her to call Social Services, the police, anyone who could help us to find him. But in that dark place where I knew I couldn't help the poor people who glowed, in that same dark corner of my soul lived the truth.
Aidan did not mean to be found.
We watched Miss Monroe entrance her beau, in a sad and comfortable silence, until the credits rolled and my discreet tears dried.
The last of the credits and the onset of Ms. Custer's soft snores gave me a reason to slip upstairs. The stairs creaked in the eerie, middle-of-the-night way they always do when the house settles and warmth creeps out of the wood. I passed my room and stood in Aidan's doorway. He'd left, despite knowing how much I needed him, and that nobody else could help me. I dared not risk my secret with anyone.