Page 74 of Invitations


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It was a different story with girls her own age, of course. Young elves in their twenties and younger, university-aged, impressionable younger girls. They watched her walk through the room with widened eyes.Shehad left. Escaped. Broken free of this perfect crystal fishbowl and swam out into the great blue yonder, beyond the horizon. They couldn't possibly know the scars she bore beneath her neatly tailored dresses.

They didn't know how far she'd swum, of course. They’d heard rumors, perhaps had seen with their own eyes on her social media, since scrubbed clean. But they couldn't possibly know how far she'd gone, how close she'd been to getting away for good, the way she’d kissed that golden horizon, going so far beyond the protective reach of their community that she was stillplagued with nightmares of what awaited on the other side of the water.

I suspect you will be excellent sport, sweetling.

Still, even though she knew there were some whispers here and there, she'd come back without so much as a bobble, her life righted on its prescribed course. Her family was thrilled. Her friends were happy to see her again. She had the attention of a handsome, successful elf, whom she was forced to admit seemed entirely decent.

None of them knew that inside she was screaming.

"Ladies, I hope you don't mind. I took the liberty of getting you some refreshment. I hope I guessed well enough on everyone's preferences."

Her grandmother beamed up, positively giddy that her Silva was back, and not only that, but she had such a fine elf at her side.

Silva smiled, knowing full well that there wasn't a single person in attendance who would look at her and realize that she felt dead inside. She had become a very talented hustler in the past year.

"Tannar, that was so thoughtful," her grandmother simpered.

"Sit," she encouraged, her mouth still curved, her eyes twinkling, a perfect mask. A perfect mask for a perfect elf, just what Daytime Silva needed to be. "They're going to be starting soon."

It had all started the day she returned to the office, that winter. The setting seemed appropriate to her. She remembered another afternoon, walking those same halls with a bounce in her step, feeling purposeful for the first time in her life as she'd marched back to her desk, ending one relationship and beginning another. That had been a different Silva, a Silva who was as lost to her as he was.

Her return had been far less tenacious.

Silva entered the building that day, glancing around her, scanning her key card, hurrying down the corridor to slip into the elevator at the last moment, as invisible as a little mouse. The security guard at the door never looked up from his crossword, the co-workers in the elevator never noticing her in time to stop the door without her lunging through. It was then that she realized that this absence, too, had barely been a ripple. None of her chattering coworkers in the elevator paused their conversations to acknowledge her, if they even saw her at all. Her return to her desk was hardly a splash in her department, the team leader doling out assignments for the week, barely raising their eyebrows to her.Why would they have noticed you were gone? They never even noticed you in the first place. Did you matter so little to anyone here?

She already knew the answer. Silva of the Daytime was a mouse, and no one ever saw her. No one ever had. Not really.Only him. The truth of the matter was, she was forced to acknowledge, with the exception of her family, Silva would have been able to disappear from her own life as easily and seamlessly as Tate had managed.

Just thinking his name was like a knife slipped between her ribs. She would hunch against the pain, sucking in a shuddering breath, trying to breathe around it.

She went through that first day feeling so insignificant and invisible that the thought of entering the break room had filled her with gut churning anxiety, and she couldn't affordmoregastrointestinal distress at that point, escaping out-of-doors instead.

"Silva?"

She had been sitting outside in the cold, staring out at nothing as she sipped at her ginger lemon tea, avoiding the noise and conversation of the break room. The landscape around the office complex’s campus was a frozen stasis — Drab and grey. Therewas no snow on the ground, no ice, but everything was frozen solid just the same, rather like her heart.

"May I join you?"

Tannar didn't wait to sit, but he was good enough to take his seat on the opposite side of the table, opposite side and opposite end, giving her all the distance she required.

"I'm glad to see you. I . . . I heard you went through kind of a hard breakup. I just wanted to say . . . I'm sorry. I know how that goes. My ex and I —" he broke off for a moment, and her head had lifted, meeting his eyes for the first time since he joined her. "We were together all through university, we lived together for a year or two after. I thought that was it, you know? A done deal, my whole life mapped out." He'd chuckled, a self-deprecating tone. "Just when you think you have it all figured out, right? I don't even know how we fell apart, not really. Just that one day we were fine . . . and then the next day we weren't. So when I say I'm sorry, I really do mean it. I know it's the worst feeling in the world to have all your expectations slip through your fingers. I’mreallyglad you’re back."

A break-up. That was the story she’d chosen, not that she’d had much of a choice. A monstrous lie, one that made her want to scream, to shred something, to spill blood . . . but her choices were limited and her options few.

The more time that passes, the harder it's going to be to forgive you. The harder for your sort to forget. Don't fool yourself into thinking you're the only one with impossible daydreams, Silva.

She saw Tannar again at the club, that same week. She was there having dinner with her family in the dining room, a weekly tradition they'd kept her entire life. Silva felt a bittersweet prickle, coming back to sit at their table in her usual seat beside her grandmother, ordering the same dish she always had. If any of the families at the surrounding tables had taken note of herabsence over the previous six months, they were good enough not to mention it.

She listened to the same conversations that had been hashed and rehashed for years, the same gossip, the same vacuous chatter about upcoming fundraisers and banquets and club meetings. The croquet pitch was having new shrubbery put in, wasn't that nice? The treasury had allocated funds for an upgrade to the steam room in the pool house. How exciting. Did she happen to see that Aelia Daemmerly had announced her engagement? What wonderful news.

Silva felt a bit like a marionette. She had been absent from her theater for a while and had needed to re-tie her strings, but she knew her role, had played the part long enough that she was able to slip back into the scene without pausing, no extra rehearsals required.You'll go on to do all the things a good little elf is meant to.

This place was never going to feel like home again, she realized. Not in the way that it had. She had been comfortable here once, completely in her element in this environment, with her family and the elves she had called her friends, comfortably nestled in the empty frivolity and ease of her scripted existence. This had been home, and now it never would be again.

She loved her family, could not envision the future without them, but withouthimthere . . . Silva felt as if a part of her heart had been cleaved away, torn by his teeth, and the wound gaped, bleeding freely, wouldneverstop bleeding. She had swum away from this fishbowl and kissed the horizon, had glimpsed what horrors lay beyond the veil, had loved and had been loved in return. She could slip back into this play, she could be Silva of the Daytime once more, but she would never again have the comfort of home. One more thing that had been robbed from her.

Tannar had been having drinks at the bar with several men his age, each of them uniform in their neatness — collared shirts beneath lightweight silk sweaters, or else crisp button downs and chinos with sensible, sedate shoes. There were no Norfolk jackets and scuffed leather boots to be found.

"There's that nice young man from your office, dear." Her grandmother's voice had been hushed, as if she'd not already clocked Tannar at the bar, as if she'd not developed the skill to scan the room and take the measure of those populating it immediately.