didnât.â
âNot yet,â Luke said.
âBreakfast?â Celia looked toward the fridge where she knew she had eggs and bacon and frozen hash browns, but was unable to force herself to get out of her chair and cook them.
Sheâd just survived dying at the hands of a monster. Literally. Breakfast seemed so mundane after that.
âKiss me,â she told him. He leaned across the table and did. Her eyes were still closed when he pulled back, and she left them that way to say, âOn second thought, if youâre going to leave, you should do it now before I invest any more time.â
âCeliaâ¦â
Her eyes opened. She shook her head. âNo. No excuses. You can run away.â
His eyes flashed. âIâm not running away.â
âNo?â She got up and went to the fridge. The cold air bathed her suddenly too-warm face. She looked at the eggs, the cheese, the small bowl of broccoli sheâd cut up before being taken. It would be wilted by now. No good. âWhat do you call it, then?â
He was up behind her, not touching her but close enough that he could if he wanted to. âI just think itâd be better if I go. There might be trouble.â
âWorse than being kidnapped by something out of a horror movie and fed upon?â she asked in a flat voice. She closed her eyes again, exhausted. When she turned to look at him, she hated what she saw. âIf you donât want me, just go. Iâm tired of begging you to stay.â
âIf I donâtâ¦how could you even think that?â
âHow could I think anything else?â She tossed up her hands.
Luke looked bleak. âIt never wouldâve happened ifââ
âIf what?â
Celia stepped up to him as he backed away. âIf I hadnât met you? If those things hadnât attacked you in the first place? What, Luke?â
âIf I hadnât gone after them!â he shouted. âThose monsters killed my parents, my sister, her family. They came after everyone I love!â
She opened her mouth to shout back, but stopped, stunned. Tears burned in her eyes at the thought of what heâd lost, how she hadnât even known. She swallowed the razors in her throat. âIâm so, so sorry.â
He shook his head and moved two steps toward her to take her by the upper arms. Last night heâd been too gentle with her, but now he had no such softness. His fingers pinched, and she winced but didnât try to get away.
âYou werenât listening,â Luke said. âEveryone I love. Thatâs you too, Celia. I love you.â
âThen why do you want to keep walking away from me?â she cried. âAll youâve ever done is leave me, over and over, and I understood it when I thought it was something you had to doâ¦because of those things out there. Because of what youâd taken upon yourself to do. I thought I could understand, then, but itâs over Luke. Itâs all over now.â
âIs it?â He shook his head again, turning on his heel to pace as he ran his hands through his hair. It had grown longer than sheâd ever seen it, still too short to do more than stand on end from his rumpling fingers. âThat thing that took you. I killed it. But I donât think it was the very last one, Celia. I can still hearâ¦something. Maybe Iâm just crazy, maybe Iâll always just be crazy.â
He looked up at her, eyes red-rimmed, mouth grim. âBut what if there are other things out there? Not just like what I found in that cave, but other monsters?â
âLet someone else hunt them!â she shouted, stamping her foot so hard it sent shocks of pain traveling her entire body.
Lukeâs shoulders hunched. âItâs my fault you were taken,â he said in a low, broken voice and turned his back on her. âItâs my fault you were almost killed. If I leave, maybe youâll be
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