Burning Bright: Jem’s meeting with Tessa from his viewpoint
Jem’s father’s violin had
been made for him by the luthier Guarnerni, who had made violins for musicians
as famous as Paganini. In fact Jem sometimes thought his father might have been
a sort of Paganini himself, famous all over the world for his playing, if he
had not been a Shadowhunter. Shadowhunters might dabble in music or painting or
poetry, especially after retirement from active duty, but they were always
Shadowhunters first and foremost.
Jem knew his talent for
the violin was not as great as his father’s — who had taught him how to play
when he was still young enough to have trouble balancing the heavy instrument —
but he played it for reasons that went far beyond art alone.
This evening he had felt too unwell to join the
others at dinner — pain in his bones and a creeping lassitude in his limbs —
until he had finally given in and taken just enough yin
fen to quell the pain and spark a bit of energy. Then had come the
annoyance at his own dependence, and when he had gone looking for Will, always
his first line of defense against the addiction, his parabatai had —of course — not been
there. Out again, Jem thought, walking the streets like Diogenes, though with a
less noble purpose.
So Jem had retreated to
his room and to his violin. He was playing Chopin now, a piece originally for
piano that his father had adapted for violin. The music began with softness and
built to a crescendo, one that would wring every ounce of energy, sweat and
concentration out of him, leaving him too exhausted to feel the yearning for
the drug that plucked at his nerve endings like fire.
It was in fact, one of
the pieces his father had wooed his mother with, before they were married.
Jem’s father was the romantic, his mother more practical, but the music had
moved her nonetheless. His father had insisted Jem learn it — “I played it for
my bride, and one day, you will play it for yours.”
But I will never have a bride. He
did not think it in a self-pitying way. Jem was like his mother: practical
about most things, even his own death. He was able to hold the fact of it at
arm’s length and examine it. Every one of the children of the Institute was
peculiar, he thought: Jessamine with her bitterness and her dollhouse, Will
with his lies and secrets, and Jem — his dying was only another sort of
peculiarity.
He paused for a moment,
gasping for breath. He was playing by the window, where it was cooler: he had
cracked it slightly open, and the bitter London air touched his cheeks and hair
like fingertips as the bow in his hand stilled. He stood in a patch of moonlight,
silver as yin fen powder
. . .
He clamped his eyes shut
and threw himself, again, into the music, the bow sawing against the strings
like a cry. Sometimes the desire for the drug was almost overpowering, stronger
than the desire for food, for water or air, for love . . .
I played it for my bride, and one day, you will
play it for yours. Jem held to that thought resolutely. Sometimes
he wondered what it would be like to look at girls as Will did, with his dark
blue eyes raking them, offering insults and compliments loud enough to get him
slapped at nearly every Christmas party. He wanted casual companionship,
sometimes, when a pretty girl flirted with him, or when he was especially
lonely.
But Jem did not, could
not, think of girls that casually: he supposed an affair might be possible, but
it was not what he wanted. He wanted what his father had had — the sort of love
poets wrote about. The way his parents had looked at each other, the peace that
had wrapped them when they were together. The facsimile of love would not bring
him that, and were he to waste time on it, he might miss his opportunity for
the real thing — and he would not have many.
A twinge went through him
as his need for the drug increased, and he sped up his playing. He tried not to
look at the box on his nightstand. It was times like this when he asked himself
why he did not just take handfuls of the stuff at a time. Most who were
addicted to yin fen took it unceasingly until they died for the euphoric
feeling of being untiring and indomitable, of having the force and power of a
star. It was that euphoria that killed them in the end, burning out their
nerves, crushing their lungs and exhausting their hearts.
Sometimes Jem felt as if
he wanted to burn. Sometimes he did not know why he struggled against it, why
he valued a longer life of suffering over a shorter life without pain. But then
he reminded himself that the lack of pain would only be another illusion: like
Jessamine’s dollhouse, like Will’s stories of brothels and gin palaces.
And, if he were truly honest, he knew it would end
his chances to find the kind of love his parents had once had. For that was
what love was, wasn’t it — to burn bright in someone else’s eyes?
He continued to play. The
music had risen to a crescendo. He was breathing hard, sweat standing out on
his forehead and collarbones despite the chill of the evening air. He heard the
click of his bedroom door as it opened behind him and relief spilled through
him, though he did not stop playing. “Will,” he said, after a moment. “Will, is
that you?”
There was only silence,
uncharacteristic of Will. Perhaps Will was annoyed about something. Jem lowered
his bow and turned, frowning. “Will —±” he began.
But it wasn’t Will at
all. A girl stood hesitantly in the doorway of his room. A girl in a white
nightgown with a dressing-gown thrown over it. Her gray eyes were pale in the
moonlight, but calm, as if nothing about his appearance startled her. She was
the warlock girl, he realized suddenly; the one Will had told him about earlier,
but Will had not mentioned the quality of stillness about her that made Jem
feel calm despite his longing for the drug, or the small smile on her lips that
lit her face. She must have been there for quite a few moments, listening to
him play: the evidence that she had enjoyed it was in her expression, in the
dreamy tilt of her head.
“You’re not Will,” he said,
and immediately realized that this was a terrifically stupid thing to say. As
she began to smile, he felt an answering smile beginning on his own lips — for
such a long time Will had always been the person he wanted most to see when he
was like this, and now, for the first time, he found himself glad not to see
his parabatai, but someone else instead.
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