Read The Knight Of The Rose Online
Authors: A. M. Hudson
“I just thought, with the whole near-death experience and all—you know, people change
from those things, Ara. I didn’t know if you’d want the same things anymore.”
“And you stayed? Even though you weren’t sure?” Admir ation crinkled across my nose.
Mike let everything he worked for in Australia fall apart to be here and make sure
I
got better—even
though he thought I didn’t want to marry him.
His eyes narrowed; “Ara. I’m in this for life. Whether you marry me or not, I will always be
here to love you and protect you and be your friend. That will never change. Never.”
How could it be that I’d missed this? All along, I’d been looking across the road to the boy I
thought I loved, when I should’ve been looking right beside me.
This
is my saviour, my true love—
this is my knight in shining armour. He always has and always will come to my rescue; he has never
left me in the dark. “Good,” I said. “Because I don’t want you to go
anywhere
.”
“Good, because I don’t plan to.”
I smiled and looked down at his big hand propping him up on t he bed beside me. “You are
right, though—about one thing,” I said.
“What’s that?”
“Things do change. I
do
want different things now.” I grabbed his face again wi th both of
my hands and pulled him a little closer. “And I have never been more sure, in all of my existence,
that I want to spend the rest of my life with
you
, Mike.” I moistened my lips with my tongue and
took a deep breath. “I choose you—and I choose life. For forever.”
He leaned down, and his warm, velvet smile melted onto my lips as his breath brushed hot
against my skin. It was the first kiss. My first kiss, in my new life. I’d been given the chance to start
over—cleansed of all the mistakes of the past.
Today, I begin a new journey with the man I should’ve been with from the start.
The hourglass rocked and the balance had t ipped in r everse, but everything was back i n
place—just the way it was destined to be.
True love will be ours now, and happiness will be in every breath that I take beside this man.
We will go on—live, as living was intended, a nd I will love him for forever—for our forever—
because they’ve always been the same.
True love, by definiti on, means “someone that is truly loved”. But t rue love must be
reciprocated, or it is only excruciatingly unbearable and devastating—a never-ending lonely night in
an empty room.
By the dictionary of Ara, true l ove means you could not live wit hout that person. That the
love you feel for them is as honest and deep as the love they feel for you—a soul mate—a perfect
match. For me, that’s Mike. And in only a few hours, we’ll be sharing this truth with the rest of the
world. The presence of my hand over my belly was s upposed to settle the feeling of nerves—like
black bats had assembled in my gut and bludgeoned the ogre to death—but it didn’t. And it didn’t
hide the fact that, in truth, I wa sn’t ready for this. But Dad wouldn’t let me go back to P erth with
Mike unless we were married f irst. So, I stood in front of the full-length, oval mirror, with golden
light spreading its warm beams of morning over my empty bedroom floor, and let time pass around
me. Unable to control it or make good use of it. Just existing as a part of its greater plan.
I reached across and tilted the frame of the twisty-hinged mirror, changing the image to the
plain white of the roof. I couldn’t look at the reflection staring back at me tod ay; she was error,
beautified by justification, and painted in the form of a bright-eyed young girl. A young girl who
was doing what was expected of her, not what her heart truly wanted.
Don’t get me wr ong, I really do love Mike, and once we’re far away from this town, I’ll
forget David ever existed. But the quiet prelude to the tempest had me wondering if I was doing the
right thing. If marrying one man, when I was still in love with another, would perhaps destroy not
just my life, but Mike’s as well.
The blue light of the winter flashed behind my eyelids for a second as I visited the past—the
Christmas gone by where I spent the day on the armchair by the fire downstairs, talking to Mike on
the phone all day. It was cruel of his parent s to demand he return home for Christmas, and it did
them no good since we spent the entire week on the phone to each other anyway. The bill was huge,
but Mike just l aughed and said it was s mall change—a minor drawback in the greater scheme of
things—and covered the costs himself.
When he finally came back, I had never been so glad to see him in all my life. I’d had so
many nightmares while he was gone—one’s that ended in him calling to say he’d changed his mind
about me, or some where his plane crashed while I waited at the airport for him, and some where I
slipped into the darkness again, and he wasn’t here to save me.
I can’t live without him. I need him, almost as much as he needs me.
I shook my head a few tim es, releasing the shiver of memories past, and looked behind me
to the near-empty room. My bed was gone, and the spongy white ca rpet dominated the space. The
new day bed in the co rner had become a shelf for all things bridal, while the bouquets had been
lined up on the hallstand beside the window.
It might not have been my r oom anymore, but it still felt like my room, except, like me, it
had been changed beyond r ecognition. My face, my hands, everything had been polis hed and
shined, shaped and fashioned to look like the bride standing by the mirror in her wedding dress.
The swirling vortex of time had swept everything up, and I was next—destined to leave
everyone and everything behind. But that was always my destiny, wasn’t it? And one day soon, I’m
sure it will carry me away from Mike.
I smiled, looking down at the veil over the chair back beside me.
Then again, Mike would probably find a way to come back to me, just like he did after
Christmas—with a small surprise in a shoebox. I ran my fingers over the silk-stitched flowers on the
veil that was inside the box; the only piece of my mother that would be with me on my wedding
day. I thought it was lost—like ever ything my dad made me leave behind when he dragged me
away from my home, but Mike brought it back to me, and now, just like mum and I always planned,
I’ll wear the same veil she wore when she married my dad.
The familiar chatter of my little bluebird friend on the window formed the song to my empty
silence. I snapped from my reverie, tilted the mirror back down and watched the bird dancing in the
reflection; bouncing happily as if life just went on. So simple. That’s it; eat, sing, dance and play.
I wish I was a bluebird. I’d fly away—over the rainbow.
But life is not a novel, and people don’t really get happy endings. I understand all the
negative philosophical one-liners this town loves so much now. Th ey’re phrases invented by smart
people who know life isn’t made of dreams, even though it sometimes feels like a dream. But we’re
not the leading ladies of our own i llusory films. This is li fe, and I am real. At least, they tell me I
am, anyway. They tell me this is the real world. Time to grow up, Ara. Time to stop dreaming, Ara.
David said it best; “Even dreams eventually die.”
So I’m living a lie instead. Lying to my family, lying to Mike—making him believe I can be
normal. Time to be normal, Ara. I blinked, taking a deep breath, suffocating under the mas k that
slipped into place. “There, that’s bett er.” I smiled at my no rmal-self in the reflection; she smiled
back. “Everything is wonderful.” I must repeat this every day; “This is my lif e, and everything is
truly wonderful.”
I ran my fin gers over the yellow and silver embroidered cherry blos soms, flowing like a
swarm of butterflies over the fitted bodice of my white dress. My waist looked small, and my skin
was golden-brown, thanks to Emily forcing me to have a spray- on tan. She was ri ght, it did look
great. I looked healthy, li ke there was a kind of glow around me. I wasn’t totally sold on t he full
hoop skirt and l ong train, but it had been a s tipulation of Vicki’s that she get to help choose the
dress—without any arguments.
Despite my distaste in ostentatious imagery, I love my dress.
I love my ring—the one Mike designed for me when he was younger; the rose made of ruby,
with emerald-adorned gold vines. It rested safely back in place since the first day I woke from my
nightmare. Not that planning a wedding had been any less of a nightmare.
The white bouquets, embellished with a few pale-yellow roses filled the entire room with a
soft, fragrant perfume, but though th ey smelled sweet, they’d caused a lot of trouble. Vicki, of
course, wanted red roses. Mike intervened in the end and told her it was my choice. She meant well,
and red would’ve been great, but she can never understand what the red rose once meant to me: how
it represented the part of me that would always belong to David.
That was a different time; I wish it were a different life.
I took a wispy breath and fel t my heart fl utter as I pu shed his face away from my mind. I
can’t have any thoughts of him today, or I’ll fall to pieces.
There is, and never was a David Knight. He died in nineteen-thirteen when his uncle bit him
and turned him into a vampire: he never loved me, never promised me eternity—never existed.
I am moving on, as he did, and leaving all hope of love and destiny to the children who read
fairy-tales.
They say that spring represents new beginnings—the end of the dar kness, the cloaking of
faux pas, the chance to wake up and start all over again. David will never be far from my thoughts,
but I will live for the rest of my life without him in my embrace.
I looked at myself in the mirror again, at the bride, the woman that now stood before me:
this is moving on.
“Ara? Are you okay?” Emily smiled at me from the doorway.
“Emily—you look beautiful,” I all but squealed and hugged her as she walked over to me.
She held me tight . Then, standing her at arms-len gth, I smiled, admiring her dress. “Yellow is
definitely your colour.”
“Well, thank you for choosing such a tast eful bridesmaid dress.” She smiled, r unning her
fingers over the chiffon.
“I’m glad we went for the shorter dress—it’s says spring to me.” I tapped my chin with my
finger.
“It doesn’t feel like spring. It’s so cold today.” She smiled and tilted her head to one side,
pausing there for a second. “Is it David? Is that what you were thinking about just now?”
A rush of hot blood shot through my stomach; I clutched my silver locket.
On my own, with the f our walls of my room surrounding me—closing me in—convincing
myself that life was that path I’d chosen was easy. But in the presence of those who prove li fe is
still real and still hurts, believing I no longer belonged to him made me want to fold over and cry.
The truth is that, though my heart belongs to Mike, for all my life, a part of me will forever
hold onto David; I will forever believe I still belong to him, no matter how often I stare into a mirror
and tell myself otherwis e. “You know me too well.” I sighed and for ced myself to release the
pendant. “I’m gonna miss you, Emily.”
“Don’t cry,” she said, hugging me again, “you’ll make your mascara run again.” We laughed
and both stood back, wiping our cheeks. “Don’t worry. I’ll come see you real soon. You’ll see. And
as for David? Well, I know you love him. You probably always will, and I know it’s been hard, but
he’s gone, Ara. I haven’t seen him—just like I never saw Jason again.” She shook her head, smiling
sympathetically. “They’re not coming back.”
I nodded, pushing an internal shudder down from the mention of my attacker . The memory
of that night had been locked d eep in my su bconscious, and the key thrown away, but whenever I
heard the name
Jason
—even if it wasn’t in re ference to him—I trembled. My fingers found the
locket again and held it tight.
“It was supposed to be him, though, right?” She smiled, nodding toward my locket. “He was
the one you were going to marry.”
“Yeah. I mean, I wanted it to be. But not anym ore. I am happy, and I do love Mike—he’s
good for me. He’s right for me. I just miss Davi d, and—” I f aced the mirror again, dropping the
chain from my fingers and letting it fall, cool against my skin. “I just wish I’d been given the chance
to say goodbye.”
“I wish it had been different, too,” Emily said. “Then you wouldn’t be leaving me tonight.”
Her hands rested on the tops of my arms and she loo ked at me carefully thr ough the ref lection.
“You look so beautiful, Ara. I’ve never seen a more beautiful bride.”
“Oh!” We both looked up to t he whimpering gasp as Vicki walked in and burst into tears—
again: “My beautiful Ara-Rose. I can’t believe you’re getting married,” she trilled in a high-pitched
wail. Vicki hugged me, being careful of my cas cading curls. “It feels like we only got you a few
weeks ago, and now look at you—al l grown up an d leaving us.” She wi ped away her tears. “Oh.