Destiny Rising (Page 57)

For an hour today, Andres and I tried to unlock more of my Power.

It was a complete failure.

Andres had decided that learning to move things with my mind could be useful, so he folded pieces of paper all over James’s house and encouraged me to imagine protecting my friends from evil by flinging them around. It was sickening to imagine Stefan or Bonnie or Meredith at Klaus’s mercy, and I wanted to save them. I knew that if I could swing a stake at the right time, I might change things in a fight. But I couldn’t even stir a page.

I’m going to be as ready as I can be, though. If I can’t use my Guardian Powers to defeat Klaus, I’ll fight him face-to-face. If I can’t be killed by the supernatural, I have a huge advantage. Meredith and Stefan have been teaching me how to fight, how to use weapons.

Klaus is so much worse than Damon could ever be: when I think back, I can remember so many times that Damon saved innocents instead of killing them – Bonnie, the humans of the Dark Dimension, half our high school. Me. I owe him my life. Time after time, even when he’s wavered, he’s turned away from the easy darkness and come down on the right side, the side that saved the helpless. I know he’s strayed again –

Elena paused. She couldn’t bear to think of it: Damon killing again. But she took a deep breath and faced the truth.

– but maybe it is our fault, mine and Stefan’s, for not showing him we care. It was just that once I got Stefan back, all I could think of was clutching him to me so tight that he’d never slip away again. Damon needs us, though he’ll never admit it, but we’ll fight through the darkness that shrouds him. We will save him. If I can just remind the Guardians of all Damon’s done for us in the past, they’ll see that he isn’t evil. They can be rational, even if they are cold and distant.

I used to hate the idea of being a Guardian, of becoming less human. But now I know that it’s a gift, a sacred trust to protect the world. As a Guardian, I can stop some of the deaths, some of the suffering. Once I fully come into my Power, I can use it to defeat the right target. I can still be the one to kill Klaus.

"I called Alaric and told him I’d meet him in an hour," Meredith said. "I had to talk to you guys first." She stirred a spoonful of sugar into her tea with such careful, precise movements that Elena was sure Meredith was keeping a firm control on herself to avoid slipping into hysteria.

It was the same reason, Elena knew, that Meredith had called just the three of them to meet her at the coffeehouse: Elena, Bonnie, and Matt, Meredith’s oldest friends, the tight group that had withstood so much together. Meredith loved Alaric and trusted him with all her heart, just as Elena did Stefan, but sometimes you wanted your best friends with you.

"Cristian says he wants to be my family," Meredith said. "He isn’t interested in fighting on Klaus’s side. But how can I believe him? I asked Zander what he could sense about Cristian, but he wasn’t sure. He says that sometimes, if the person has a lot going on emotionally, his Power doesn’t work on them." She glanced at Bonnie sympathetically. "Zander misses you," she said, and Bonnie stared down at her lap.

"I know," she said softly. "But I can’t be the person he needs." Elena squeezed her hand beneath the table.

Matt rubbed the back of his neck. "Maybe Cristian is telling the truth," he offered. "Chloe left Ethan and stopped drinking blood. There are good vampires – we know that. Look at Stefan."

"Where is Chloe, anyway?" Bonnie asked. "You’ve been spending all your time with her."

"Stefan took her hunting in the woods," Matt told her. "She’s afraid to go by herself since Klaus attacked her, but Stefan says if she’s going to survive, she can’t hide forever. And I have a game later, so Stefan can keep her company, help her stave off the blood lust."

"At least it sounds like Cristian wants to try," Elena told Meredith. "I’m scared I’ve lost Damon. He was so violent. It was like he wanted me to give up on him." She hadn’t told Meredith and the others that Damon had confessed so casually to killing someone, but she’d told them about the brutal, frightening scene at the billiards hall.

Meredith stared down at the surface of her tea for a moment, then raised her eyes to meet Elena’s. "Maybe you should," she said quietly.

Elena shook her head in immediate denial, but Meredith pushed on. "You know what he’s capable of, Elena," she said. "If he really wants to be bad again, he’s strong enough and clever enough to be really bad. The Guardians might be right. Maybe he’s even a bigger threat than Klaus."

Elena clenched her fists. "I can’t, Meredith," she said, her voice cracking. "I can’t. And I can’t let anyone else, either. It’s Damon." Her eyes met Meredith’s. "Cristian’s your family – that’s why you can’t kill him without giving him a chance. Well, Damon’s become my family, too."

Bonnie looked back and forth between them, wide-eyed. "What can we do?" she asked.

"Listen," Matt said suddenly. "Meredith was a hunter when she met Stefan and Damon, even though the rest of us didn’t know it. She hated vampires, right?" They all nodded. "So" – he turned to Meredith – "how did you get past it?"

Meredith blinked. "Well," she said slowly, "I knew Stefan wasn’t a killer. He loved Elena so much, and he tried to protect people. Damon . . ." She hesitated. "For a long time, I thought I probably would have to kill Damon. It was my duty. But he changed. He fought on the right side."

She looked back down at the table, her face grim. "Duty is important, Elena," she said. "A hunter or a Guardian, we are the ones responsible for saving innocent people from evil. You can’t ignore that." Elena’s eyes filled with tears.