Total pages in book: 98
Estimated words: 90972 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 455(@200wpm)___ 364(@250wpm)___ 303(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 90972 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 455(@200wpm)___ 364(@250wpm)___ 303(@300wpm)
This is for the best. The quicker we get it over with, the quicker we can all move on.
Tamson included.
Chapter 8
Tamson
It’s a beautiful day. Surprisingly cool, with a nice breeze that lifts the hair on the nape of my neck while I sit under a tree, eating my lunch on the fringe of campus. If I get any further away, I won’t even be on campus anymore.
Would that be a bad thing?
If it wasn’t for Dad pinning literally all of his hopes on me, I wouldn’t be here anymore. I mean, how many times does a person have to walk into a closed fist before you have to wonder if there’s something wrong with them? Like if they have a death wish or something. That’s how it feels now, pretty much hiding from everybody, trying like hell not to be noticed. To be noticed is to be ridiculed, ashamed, used. The way Kellen used me a week ago.
It’s getting easier to live with what happened, even if it will never actually be easy to accept. It’s amazing I have skin on my right hand after scrubbing it raw so many times, but I still feel so dirty. I guess it’s the kind of thing I’ll never be able to wash away. But here I am, still showing up for class, still leaving myself open to the laughter and the whistles. I’ve turned ignoring catcalls into an artform, keeping a wall around me at all times while I crumble inside. Every day, I’m a little less than I was the day before. All thanks to them. And I still don’t know why. I guess I never will.
It’s little moments like this that make things more bearable. Sitting alone, taking deep breaths of fresh air. When I’m almost hidden away from my tormentors, I can appreciate how pretty campus is. I can almost trick myself into feeling at peace, if not exactly happy. Happiness isn’t something within reach. Not for me. I know better than to look for it.
After unwrapping my tuna sandwich, I open the little baggie of potato chips I packed along with it. Jason always ate them this way, with the chips crushed up and sprinkled on top. “Try it and you’ll never go back,” he used to say when I would tease him. Then I did try for the first time and I found out he was right. It was freaking delicious. I’ve never eaten one without chips since. It’s funny how we carry people with us through little things like this. I need to carry him with me. I can’t forget him.
I’m in the middle of chewing the first bite when a deep voice rings out nearby. A voice I’ve heard in my nightmares countless times in the past week. “I was wondering why it smelled like fish out here. I thought it was just you.”
Goddamn him. The food sours in my mouth, and my hands are shaking as I lower the sandwich to my lap, appetite gone. Why can’t he leave me alone?
I keep my gaze lowered—the last thing I want is to make eye contact with this psycho. I don’t say a word. I barely even breathe. Like if I don’t acknowledge him, he’ll go away. I know better, but it’s the only thing I can do to help myself when I feel so damn helpless.
“Look at you, hiding from everybody,” Kellen taunts, chuckling. Like he can see through me. Well, I guess it doesn’t take a genius to know I’m trying to avoid everybody. I stare down at my hands, fighting like hell not to cry while he adds, “I hope you don’t think you can hide from me, Dragonfly.”
It’s obvious he’s not going anywhere until I react, so my shoulders rise and fall in a sigh. “What do you want? Don’t you have anything better to do than seek me out?”
“Listen to you,” he murmurs. There’s something extremely dark and menacing in those three words. The growl in his throat sends goosebumps racing over my arms and makes me wish I hadn’t said anything at all. “Listen to that attitude. Be careful. You might end up regretting it.”
And exactly what the hell is that supposed to mean? I know better than to ask—I would never get a straight answer.
“The only thing I regret is making it so easy for you to trick me,” I reply as I force myself to lift the sandwich to my lips again and sink my teeth in. He has already taken so much from me. I will not let him take this, too.
“It wasn’t a trick. There really was a study session. I taught you a few things, didn’t I?”
His laughter brings back every ugly memory I have tried so hard to push way down. My stomach turns and threatens to send what I just swallowed back up and out. Only a few slow breaths make it possible to hang on. He has a talent for making me feel like I’m going to throw up.