More added.
Smiling slightly at his exact quotation of my previously-said words – which I have done a complete 180 on in the last few minutes – I scoot over to give him room to sit or lay down next to me, then rest my head on his chest to have him pull me closer to him when he does.
I look down at the lengths of our bodies, marveling at the fact that they fit so perfectly together, as if I was made for him and he was made for me, and am incredibly taken by surprise when Luke gently picks me up and sets me down on his lap.
“I decided you were’t close enough,” he whispers in my ear for an explanation, and I smile slightly. I don’t think I ever actually could be close enough for him.
“I kind of figured that,” I tell him quietly in reply, and lean back against him to sigh in pleasure when his arms lock around me and he holds me against him.
A few moments go by in this contented silence until Luke shifts slightly and murmurs, “Lizzie, I’m sorry that I did all of this and didn’t tell you about it.”
I can’t help but smile as I reply, “Don’t be. To be honest, I’m really enjoying our honeymoon so far.” I turn my head so that I can look at him and give him a smile, and he smiles back at me and tightens his grip on me.
“Yeah, I’m not really sorry about it either,” he whispers in my neck, his lips brushing my neck, and a small grin flits across my face. Of course Luke’s not sorry about it; he has everything he could possibly want. After a moment’s hesitation, he adds quietly, his voice filled with longing and emotion, “I wish I could live in this moment forever.”
“Agreed,” I respond quietly, feeling him pressing against me on every line of my body and inhaling his scent into my nose with every breath I take and listening to his voice intently every time he speaks. In the last three months that we’ve been together, he has become part of every aspect of my life: he has become the first thing I see in the morning and the last thing I see at night, and he’s just gotten inside of me.
Occasionally when I close my eyes, what I see is him, as though his image has been burned on the back of my eyelids, and sometimes, when he’s away from me, I’ll get small but definite pangs of longing that pull at my heart and make me desperately want to have him standing right next to me. I don’t know what I’d do if I lived to see him die; I guess I’d probably want to kill myself. I think I finally understand even just a fraction of how Luke feels in regards to that and why he’s so opposed to me being the spark.
In the last three months, it’s as if Luke has stormed my heart, and captured a part of it permanently. I know that I will die loving him to some extent – hell, I might even love him more than Jackson right now – but what surprises me the most about me loving him is how quickly he crept up on me. It’s only taken him three months to claim a large part, maybe even more than half, of my love for himself. I guess that just shows how good Luke is at changing me, because God knows that Jackson did never and could never accomplish something of that magnitude; after all, it took Jackson almost nine months to get me to even consider him as something more than a friend.
“Lizzie?” Luke murmurs, his voice in my ear and his lips on the back of my neck tearing me away from my thoughts.
“Luke?” I reply with the same tone, then wait expectantly for him to tell me what’s on his mind. That’s one of the many things I’ve grown to love about Luke: he isn’t very good at – nor does he try very often – to hide his feelings and thoughts, so I almost always know what he’s thinking and feeling. It makes our relationship a lot easier for me, trust me.
Jackson, however, is incredibly skilled at hiding his emotions and thoughts, and I can’t read his mind either because he’s also very good at blocking that off, so my relationship with him is a lot harder than my relationship with Luke. Of course, my relationship with Jackson would be harder, even without that, because of all the baggage and mixed feelings we both have. That, and the fact that neither one of us really knows if we honestly love the other person.
With Luke, that’s not an issue at all; in fact, it’s almost an issue for me that I know he loves me as much as he does, because I feel terrible for not returning that love. Luke tells me every day, at least five times a day, that he loves me, and invariably there’s the word ‘always’ in his professions of love. If it were any other seventeen-year-old boy telling me that they will love me always, I would laugh, but I know for a fact that Luke actually does and will love me always.
It’s almost like Luke is far beyond his years emotionally; to be honest, it seems like he loves me with the same intensity that my parents, who have been together for fifteen hundred years, love each other. Seeing how much he truy loves me and discovering how much he’s willing to give me without any hope of it being returned is almost alarming; after all, knowing that he would give me everything – he’s already given me almost everything, his heart, soul and life included – if I wanted him to is slightly frightening. I don’t want to have that kind of power over him, because, like I told Kuro, I don’t want to rule or own anyone, but it looks like Luke isn’t going to give me a choice in the matter.
“You know I love you with all of my heart, right?” he whispers in my ear, and immediately warning bells sound in my head. Luke doesn’t adopt a tone like that or say something like that unless he’s about to unleash potentially devastating news on me and is afraid of my response. If it truly is devastating – as in, Abby is dead or Jackson went on a killing spree and eventually got himself killed – Luke actually does have a reason to fear my response.
“It’s not like you don’t tell me that five to ten times a day,” I reply, trying and failing miserably to bring some humor into the depressing air that has taken over our conversation.
“Lizzie, I haven’t been completely honest with you,” Luke begins, and immediately my heart sinks. I’m almost afraid of what could be so bad as to make Luke, who tells me everything, want to keep it from me.
“What haven’t you been honest about?” I ask tactfully, hoping to get a direct and not drawn-out answer. After all, there’s nothing I like less than having to have a whole five-minute conversation with someone to get a piece of information I could have gotten out of that person with one simple, blunt question. It’s just not a very effective interrogation tactic, and, when you have to question a large amount of people in a short amount of time – like I did when I was an assassin and gathering information for missions – it just can’t be used because it’s too time-consuming.
“Lizzie, while I’m not going to try to stop you from being with him or whatever,” Luke begins, and I can instantly tell – much to my dismay – that it’s something about Jackson, “but I feel like I should let you know that I get insanely jealous when I see you with Jackson.”
I almost laugh out loud at Luke’s annoucement, as he didn’t have to make a grand show out of telling me that for me to know it. The look in his eyes every time I’m with Jackson when I’m around him is a declaration all its own.
However, in order to not offend him and humor him, I stifle my laughter and tell him, my tone just as serious as his, “Luke, I know that, but I’m afraid I can’t stop seeing Jackson. I...” Here I pause, not knowing what to say about Jackson’s and my relationship. “I need him, Luke,” I finally finish, and I know that my words are true.
I really do need Jackson; he’s been such a major part of my life for the last almost year now – the last three months especially – that I honestly don’t think I could stop seeing him without going into incredibly painful withdrawals. It’s almost like I’m addicted to him, and I need him to be there to get me through the day. Of course, I feel the same way about Luke – I know I couldn’t quit him cold-turkey either – but the situation that I’m in actually isn’t that uncommon for an immortal.
We tend, much more than regular humans, to latch onto and get addicted to people instead of substances, which is almost cruel when those people happen to mortal. I guess it’s a good thing that Luke and I will be dying soon so I don’t have to experience time cutting me off from my opiate that is him after sixty or seventy years.
“I know,” Luke replies quietly, nodding his head slightly in understanding. “It’s almost like he’s your drug, isn’t it?” he questions, and I look up at him in surprise. He’s a mortal, so how on earth does he know what it’s like to be addicted to someone? However, I don’t get a chance to vocalize my question, because Luke continues, his voice filled with intensity and passion, “Lizzie, sometimes, when you’re not around or even right next to me, I get filled with such a powerful desire for you that I can’t even breathe for a few seconds, and I get incredibly edgy until I see you again. My mood goes down the second you leave the room, and it’s almost like I have withdrawals from you if I can’t reach out and touch you and hold you.” After a moment of silence, he adds quietly, “It’s almost scary to think what I would do if you died.”
“I try not to think about what I would if Jackson died,” I murmur quietly, for once allowing my mind to wander in that direction. If Jackson were gone, and my supply of morphine completely dried up, the first thing I would do, no questions asked, would be to track down Jackson’s killers and make them pay for what they did. I don’t know what I’d do after that though; maybe I’d spend the rest of my life trying to forget him, or maybe even trying to join him.
“I think you’d react in a similar way to what I would if I lost you,” Luke says quietly, and I nod my head in agreement. “After all, the feelings are the same, even if they are to different levels, and I’d think that they’d trigger relatively similar responses.”
“Yeah,” I agree, and am suddenly seized by a desire to stop talking about what would happen if we saw our loved ones die. “Luke, I want to talk about or do something happy,” I tell him, and, before he can respond, I turn to face him, wrap my arms around the back of his neck, and kiss him passionately.
After a few long, blissful moments, I pull back to leave a very stunned Luke sitting there with a pleased look on his face, and turn myself back around to curl up against him and rest my head on his chest. I then reach over and turn the lamp illuminating the room off, and whisper into the darkness, “Goodnight Luke.”
“Goodnight, Missus Elizabeth Eleanor Marie Gates,” he murmurs in reply, and I fall asleep as soon as the last word is out of his mouth.
Sunlight invades my eyes, and I blink once or twice to allow my eyes time to adjust. As I stare at the white ceiling for a few moments, I suddenly realize that there’s someone next to me, and I roll over to find Jackson sitting on the edge of the bed, looking down at me with a small smile on his face.
“Good morning,” he tells me softly, then finds one of my hands with his own and gives it a reassuring squeeze. However, that gesture does nothing to do the alarm that I’m feeling at him being here and not Luke, and I immediately straight up to regard him with a mixture of surprise and suspicion. It’s not that I don’t trust him, it’s just that... oh, right, I don’t trust him, or at least I don’t trust the person he is when he loses control.
“How long have you been here?” I ask him in reply, almost shocked and slightly disconcerted that Luke would let him into our bedroom on our honeymoon. Of course, there’s always the possibility that Luke didn’t let Jackson in and Jackson let himself in, but I’d rather not think about that.
“Since three in the morning,” he answers with a smile, and gently removes his hand from my own to raise it to my face and gently stroke my cheek. “It was amazing, seeing you so peaceful in his arms,” he murmurs, his eyes locked on mine. “You never were that peaceful when you were with me, awake or asleep.”
“Jackson,” I begin, but he bulldozes right past me as if I hadn’t said anything at all.
“I guess I can’t really blame you though; Gates is a lot calmer and a whole hell of a lot more peaceful than I am.” Jackson’s mouth twists into a bitter smile, and I feel like crying. He has to make everything so hard on me, doesn’t he? However, Jackson isn’t even done yet, because he continues, “Lizzie, I have never known a day of peace in my life, and neither have you, but I would gladly drop everything and try my best to be peaceful for you.” His gaze is glued on mine, and I can see the pleading look in his eyes.
However, I don’t let pity for him win out this time, and shoot back harshly, “Jackson, don’t you get it? You’ve lost; I’m Luke’s, and there’s nothing you can do about it!”
“Lizzie,” Jackson begins, surprisingly not angry at all, with an even tone to his voice, “I haven’t lost yet, because I still take up a part of your heart. Just because you’re married to him doesn’t mean that you’re his, if you don’t feel that way in your heart, and I know you don’t. Lizzie, as long as I have that precious part of your heart, I will fight with all of my being to keep it, and even to take up more of your heart, if you’re willing to give it to me. As long as you give me even just the slightest chance that you might choose me in the end – in other words, as long as you give me something to fight for – I will fight until you are truly his or you are truly mine.”
“Jackson,” I begin, to immediately freeze. Since he’s right and there’s nothing I can say that will convince either one of us that he isn’t, there isn’t really anything I can say at all. I mean, how do you argue an issue you know you’re going to lose? After a few long moments, I finally look over at him and tell him, my eyes locked on his, “You know there’s a chance that you could lose me completely, right?”
“Lizzie, there was that possibility from the moment you set foot in this dimension,” he says softly, and I can’t help but lower my head slightly in admittance. “At least I won’t have completely lost you – as in you won’t be dead – if you choose Gates, and it would be a lot easier for me to live with you belonging to him than you belonging to the afterlife.”
“Yeah, I guess it would be,” I agree quietly, and a small smile curves Jackson’s lips.
He tells me, his grin insincere as he looks over at me, “However, you seem to be determined to leave me with nothing, and die as well as choose Luke.” His eyes are cold and hard and bitter as he stares over at me, his smile not even coming close to touching and melting them.
“Jackson,” I start, my eyes locked on his, “you know I don’t want this, that I don’t want to be married and seventeen or the spark who’s going to be inevitably consumed and destroyed, but you also know that I feel it’s my duty to be the Sections’ martyr, now that they’ve chosen me to be their martyr.”
“And you also know that I think – well, I know – you don’t owe these people anything. The only person you owe anything to is yourself, and you owe yourself the possibility to keep on living. You owe yourself a sense of self-preservation, Lizzie.”
“I guess it’s too bad that I don’t have one then,” I answer icily, and rise to my feet, intending to leave the room. I don’t want to be in Jackson’s company any more, if he’s going to insist on bringing the Triple Crown into every conversation and making it so that we can’t even pretend like everything’s like it used to be.
“Lizzie, it’s in your best interests – hell, it’s in my and Luke’s and everyone who cares about you’s best interests – for you get one really soon,” Jackson tells me, his voice pleading, and I turn my head to see him giving me the most begging voice he can muster.
However, like all of his other pleas for me to save myself, it doesn’t do anything to change my mind, and I tell him, “Jackson, it’s too late. I’ve already lit myself on fire.”