THE SMELL OF LILIES AND RAIN drifted into my nose, and I chased it, burying my face into the pillow.
Rika.
Sleep weighed heavy on my eyes, and I put out a hand, smoothing it over the sheets and searching for her next to me in bed.
But she wasnât there.
I blinked, forcing my eyes open. Alarm set in as I turned over and propped myself up on one elbow, quickly twisting my head around to look for her.
And I immediately found her.
I relaxed, a grin lifting my lips as I watched her in the shower, the one that sat in my bedroom as a feature in my Delcour apartment.
Our apartment.
Within a month after everything had happened at the yacht, I moved her in. She slept here every night anyway, and since Will wanted to be close, we gave her apartment to him.
Kai, on the other hand, opted for distance. He bought an old Victorian on the other side of the city, and I wasnât sure why. He couldâve had any apartment he wanted here, and I didnât see the value in the black brick monstrosity heâd purchased that shouldâve been condemned.
But for some reason, he wanted to be on his own.
Rika ran a loofah down her arms, soaping up her body, and I turned on my side, propping my head up on my hand as I watched her.
She mustâve sensed me, because she turned her head, smiling at me over her shoulder.
She placed her foot on the edge of the tub and bent over, running the loofah down her leg slowly and playfully, knowing what she was doing to me with her fake, innocent little smiles.
The rainfall shower fell over her body, but her hair wasnât wet, since she had it tied up in a loose bun. And despite my growing erection under the sheets and the smell of her body wash filling the room, I stayed put, just watching her.
The reward for my patience would come soon enough.
Sometimes, I just had to watch her. I had to keep my eyes on her, because it was still so hard to believe that she was real. That she was here and mine.
Iâd asked myself a thousand times how we got here. How we found each other and made it here.
She would say that it was Devilâs Night.
Without the events of that night, I wouldnât have challenged her. She wouldnât have learned how to be strong and fight back or how to own who she was and save herself.
We wouldnât have been locked palm to palm, trying to push the other one down, and we wouldnât have made each other the people we were now. Everything happens for a reason, she would say.
She would say that I built her. That I created a monster, and that somewhere during the blood, tears, struggle, and pain, we realized that it was love. That all sparks lead to a flame.
But what she failed to remember wasâ¦our story started long before that night.
I stand outside my new G-class, leaning back against it with my arms folded over my chest. I have shit to do and places to be, and I donât have time for this.
Turning over my palm, I look down at my phone and the text from my mom again.
Stuck in the city, and Edward is busy. Pick up Rika from soccer practice, please? 8 p.m.
I roll my eyes and check the time on the phone. Eight-fourteen. Where the hell is she?
Kai, Will, and Damon are already at the party, and Iâm late, because why? Oh, yeah. I guess being sixteen and finally getting my fucking license means playing chauffeur to thirteen-year-olds whose mothers canât get off their drunken asses to pick them up.
Rika walks out of the soccer complex, still dressed in her red and white uniform and leg pads, and stops, seeing me standing there.
Her eyes are red as if sheâs been crying, and I can tell by the way she stiffens that sheâs uncomfortable.
Sheâs scared of me.
I hold back my smile. I kind of like how sheâs always aware of me even if I would never admit it out loud.
âWhy are you picking me up?â she asks softly, her hair pulled back in a ponytail with fly-aways floating around her face.
âBelieve me,â I shoot out sarcastically. âIâve got better things to do. Get in.â
And I turn around to open my door and climb in the car.
I start the engine, shifting it into gear as if Iâm not going to wait for her, and I see her walk hurriedly around the front and open the passenger door, climbing in.
She puts on her seatbelt and stares at her lap, remaining silent.
She looks upset, but I donât think it has anything to do with me.
âWhy are you crying?â I demand, trying to act like I donât care if she answers me or not.
Her chin shakes, and she puts her hand to her neck, touching the fresh scar from the accident that killed her father only a couple of months ago. âThe girls were making fun of my scar,â she says quietly.
And then she turns her eyes on me, looking hurt. âIs it really that ugly?â
I look at it, feeling anger. I could get those girls to shut up.
But I push down my emotions and shrug, acting like her feelings donât matter.
âItâs big,â I answer, pulling out of the parking lot.
She turns back around, her shoulders slumping in sadness as she drops her head.
So fucking broken.
I mean, yeah, she lost her dad recently, and her mom is caught up in her own misery and selfishness, but every time I see Rika, she looks like a feather that will blow away with the slightest breeze.
Get over it already. Cryingâs not going to help.
She continues to sit quietly, so small next to me, since Iâm nearly six feet now. And while Rika isnât short, she looks like something that has melted and is about to disappear altogether.
I shake my head, checking my phone again for the time. Damn, I was late.
But then I hear a horn blow, and I pop my eyes up, seeing taillights race for me. âShit!â I bellow, slamming on the brakes and jerking the steering wheel to the side.
Rika sucks in a breath and grabs the door as I spot a car stopped in the middle of the country road and another one swerving up ahead of me and then speeding off. I come to a screeching halt off to the side, both of our bodies pushing against our seatbelts with the sudden stop.
âJesus,â I bark, seeing a woman kneeling in the street. âWhat the hell?â
The taillights of the other car grow smaller and smaller in the distance, and I look over my shoulder, not seeing any other cars coming.
Opening the door, I step out of the car, hearing Rika do the same behind me.
I walk over to the middle in the road, and as I get closer, I see what the woman is hovering over.
âI canât believe that asshole just drove off,â she fumes, turning around to look at me.
A dog, barely alive, lies in the road, whimpering as it struggles for short, shallow breaths. Thereâs blood spilling out of its stomach, and I can see some of its insides.
Itâs just a little guy, some kind of Spaniel, and my stomach rolls, hearing its strangled breathing.
Itâs suffocating.
The prick that sped off mustâve hit it.
âShouldnât the kid go sit in the car?â the woman asks, looking at Rika next to me.
But I donât spare Rika a glance. Why did everyone try to coddle her? My mother, my father, Trevorâ¦it only weakened her.
The ladyâs kids sat in her car, calling for her, and I looked down at the dog, hearing it whimper and seeing it jerk as it struggled.
âYou can go ahead and go,â I tell her, gesturing to her kids in the car. âIâll see if I can find an open vet.â
She peers up at me, looking half uncertain and half thankful. âAre you sure?â she asks, shooting her children a glance.
I nod. âYeah, get your kids out of here.â
She stands up, gives the little dog a sad look, her eyes watering, and then she turns and gets in the car. âThank you,â she calls.
I wait for her to leave and turn to Rika. âGo sit in the car.â
âI donât want to.â
I narrow my eyes on her and snap, âNow.â
Her tear-filled eyes look up at me desperately, but she eventually spins around and rushes for my car.
Kneeling down, I put my hand on top of the little dogâs head, feeling his soft fur between my fingers, and stroke him gently.
His paws shake as he fights for breath, and the gargled sound in his throat is making my eyes blur and my heart pump painfully.
âItâs okay,â I say quietly, a tear spilling down my face.
Helpless. I hate being helpless.
Closing my eyes, I stroke his head and then slowly trail my hand down.
Down the back of its head, down the back of its neckâ¦
And then I curl my fingers around its throat and squeeze as tight as I can.
It jerks, its body shaking just barely as it musters the last of its energy to fight.
But thereâs barely anything left.
My body burns, every muscle tight, and I steel my jaw, trying to hold out for one more second.
Just one more second.
I squeeze my eyes shut, tears caught in my throat.
The dog spasms, and thenâ¦finally⦠he goes limp, the life drained out of him.
I let out a shaky breath and pull my hand away.
Fuck.
Acid bile fills my throat, and the pangs of nausea hit the back of my mouth. I heave, but I force deep breaths in and out, pushing it back down.
I slide my hands under the dog and lift him up, ready to carry him to the car, but as soon as I turn around, I stop. Rika is standing a few feet behind me, and I know she saw everything.
She looks at me like I betrayed her.
I avert my eyes, hardening myself, and walk around her, putting the dog in the back of the G-Class.
Who the fuck is she to judge me? I did what I had to do.
I grab a towel from my duffel bag, having just gotten done with basketball practice before picking up Rika, and laid the dog on it. Taking out another towel, I wipe up the small amount of blood on my hands and then lay that on top of him as well, shutting the back hatch.
Climbing back in the car, I start the engine as Rika opens up the passenger door and plops down, not saying a word to me.
I speed off, gripping the steering wheel, and her silence is as loud as my fatherâs insults and berating.
I did what was right. Screw you. I donât fucking care what you think.
I breathe hard, getting angrier by the second.
âYou think that the vet who put your cat to sleep a year ago is any better?â I charge, shooting her glares as I watch the road. âHuh?â
Her lips tighten, and I can see the tears pooling again. âYou did it with your hands,â she cries, turning to me and yelling. âYou killed him yourself, and I could never have done that!â
âAnd thatâs why youâll always be weak,â I throw back. âYou know why most people in the world are unhappy, Rika? Because they donât have the courage to do the one thing that will change their lives. That animal was in misery, and you were in misery watching it. Now heâs not suffering anymore.â
âIâm not weak,â she argues, but her chin trembles anyway. âAnd what you did didnât make me happy. It didnât make me feel any better.â
I smile nastily. âYou think Iâm bad? You think less of me? Well, guess what? I donât give a fuck what you think! Youâre a thirteen-year-old piece of baggage my family has to look after thatâs going to turn into nothing but an eighteen-year-old copy of your drunk mother!â
Her eyes flood, and she looks about ready to break.
âOnly you probably wonât be able to land a rich husband with that scar,â I growl.
She sucks in a breath, looking stunned. Her face cracks, and her body racks with sobs. She grabs the door handle and begins yanking and pulling it, trying to get out of the car.
âRika!â I yell.
Iâm going sixty-fucking-miles an hour!
I dart my hand over, grabbing her wrists and swerving the car off to the side, screeching to a halt.
She fumbles, unlocking the door, and jumps out, running away into the trees.
I put the car in neutral and set the parking brake, pushing open the door and jumping out.
âGet back in the car!â I yell, slamming the door shut.
She swings around. âNo!â
I run after her. âWhere the hell do you think youâre going? I got shit to do! I donât have time for this!â
âIâm going to see my dad,â she calls over her shoulder. âIâll walk home.â
âLike hell you will. Get in the damn car and stop pissing me off.â
âLeave me alone!â
I stop, fuming. The cemetery is right over the hill, but itâs pitch black outside.
I shake my head, backing away. âFine!â I bark. âGo visit your dad, then!â
Spinning around, I storm for my car and climb in, leaving her out there.
Turning on the engine, I hesitate for a moment. Itâs dark. And sheâs alone.
Fuck it. If she wants to be a brat, then it isnât my fault.
I put it into gear and speed down the road, heading straight to my house.
Leaving the car running, I hop out and walk to the garden shed, digging out a shovel and going back to my car.
My ears turn cold from the October chill, but the rest of my body is still on fire from the fight.
She looked at me just like my father always did. As if everything I do is wrong.
I bottle up whatâs inside meâthe anger and this need I canât explain. Something inside of me wants to self-destruct, wants to make messes, and wants to do the things others wonât do.
I donât want to hurt people, but the more time that passes, the more it feels like Iâm trying to crawl out of my head.
I want chaos.
And Iâm tired of being powerless. Iâm tired of him keeping me down.
I tried to do the hard thing today. The thing no one else would do but had to be done.
And sheâd looked at me just like him. Like there was something wrong with me.
Tossing the shovel in the car, I race down the driveway and make my way to the only place I can think of.
St. Killianâs.
Pulling up outside the old cathedral, I keep the headlights on and walk around to the side, starting to dig the hole. The dog hadnât had a collar, and it canât stay exposed long enough for me to find its owner, so I have to bury it.
And this is the one place I like, so it makes sense to do it here.
After digging the hole about two feet deep, I return to my car and open the back door, hearing notifications from my cell phone up on the front seat.
The guys are probably wondering where the hell I am.
I was supposed to go home and collect our stock of toilet paper, spray paint, and nails for some Devilâs Night pranks. The same boring shit we always do before we go get drunk at the warehouse.
I cradle the dog in my arms, leaving him wrapped in the blankets, and carry him to the hole, kneeling down and gently placing him in.
The blood had soaked through the towel, and my hand is stained red. I wipe it off on my jeans and then take the shovel again, filling in the hole.
When Iâm done, I stand there, leaning on the long wooden handle of the shovel as I stare at the mound of fresh dirt.
Youâre weak.
Nothing.
Stop pissing me off.
Iâd said the same things to her that my father says to me. How could I do that?
She isnât weak. Sheâs a kid.
Iâm angry at my father, and Iâm angry that she pulls at me as much as she does. Ever since we were little.
And Iâm angry that I grew up so pissed off about everything. Thereâs not much that makes me feel good.
But I shouldnât have hurt her. How could I have said those things? I wasnât him.
I let out a breath, seeing the cold steam expel from my mouth. Itâs freezing out here, and the chill finally seeps into my bones, reminding me that Iâd left her. Alone. In the dark. In the cold.
I charge up to the car, throwing the shovel in the back and grabbing my phone, checking the time.
An hour.
I left her an hour ago.
Climbing in, I start the car and put it in reverse, backing up and turning around. Slamming into first, I peel out of the clearing, down the old dirt road, seeing the cathedral disappear in the darkness in my rearview mirror.
I speed down the highway and through the community gate, turning into Grove Park Lane and racing to the end, where St. Peterâs Cemetery sat.
Rika had dived into the woods, coming into the cemetery through the back, but I just drive in, knowing right where to go.
Her fatherâs headstone sits not far from my familyâs tomb. He couldâve afforded something that grandiose, too, but Schrader Fane wasnât a pretentious asshole like the men in my family. A simple marker was enough and all he deemed appropriate according to his will.
I drive down the dark, narrow lane, nothing but trees and a sea of gray, black, and white stones to my left and right.
Stopping at the top of a small hill, I park and turn off the car, already spotting what I think is a pair of legs lying on the grass a ways down.
Jesus.
Racing down the grass in between headstones, I see Rika lying over her fatherâs grave, curled up and tucking her hands into her chest.
I stop and gaze down at her sleeping, for a moment seeing that baby from so long ago.
Kneeling down on one knee, I slide my hands underneath her body and lift her up, so small and light.
She squirms in my arms. âMichael?â she says.
âShhh,â I soothe. âIâve got you.â
âI donât want to go home,â she protests, reaching up to hook a hand over my shoulder with her eyes still closed.
âNeither do I.â
I spot a stone bench a few yards back up the hill and carry her, guilt racking through me over how cold her skin is.
I shouldnât have left her.
Sitting down on the bench, I keep her in my lap as she lays her head against my chest, and I hold her close, trying to warm her or do anything to make her feel better.
âI shouldnât have said those things to you,â I admit in a raspy voice. âYour scar isnât ugly.â
She slides her arms around my waist and presses close, shivering. âYou never apologize,â she states. âTo anybody.â
âIâm not apologizing.â I shoot back, kind of joking.
I am apologizing, actually. I feel bad, but I have a hard time ever admitting I did anything wrong. Probably because my father never fails to let me know anyway.
But sheâs right. I never apologize. People take the shit I dole out, but not her. She ran away from me. In the dark. Into a cemetery.
âYou got a lot of guts,â I tell her. âI donât. Iâm just a coward that picks on kids.â
âThatâs not true,â she replies, and I can tell thereâs a smile in there somewhere.
But she doesnât see what I see. Sheâs not in my head. Iâm a coward, and Iâm mean, and I feel so fucking aggravated all the time.
I tighten my hold on her, trying to keep her warm. âCan I tell you something, kid?â I ask, a lump swelling in my throat. âIâm always afraid. I do what he tells me to do. I stand and speak, or I stay silent, and I never say no to anything he wants. I never stand up for myself.â
I told her she was weak. But it was me. Iâm weak. I hate who I am. Everything gets in my head, and I have no control.
âPeople donât see me, Rika,â I confide. âI only exist except as a reflection of him.â
She tilts her head up a little, her eyes still closed.
âThatâs not true,â she mumbles sleepily. âYouâre always the first person I notice in a room.â
My eyebrows pinch together in sadness, and I turn my head away, afraid she can hear my heavy breathing.
âDo you remember when your mom made you and your friends take Trevor and me hiking with you last summer?â she asks. âYou let us do everything. You let us get close to the edge of the cliff. Climb boulders. You let Trevor swearâ¦â Her fingers curl into my back, clutching my T-shirt. âBut you wouldnât let us go too far. You said we needed to save our energy for the return trip. Thatâs how you are.â
âWhat do you mean?â
She inhales a deep breath and then exhales. âWell, itâs like youâre saving your energy for something. Holding back,â she says, nestling into me and getting comfortable. âBut it doesnât make any sense. Life is one-way, and there is no return trip. What are you waiting for?â
My chest shakes for a moment, and I stare down at her, her words hitting me like a truck.
What am I waiting for?
The rules, the restraints, the expectations, and what was considered acceptable were things that held me back, but they were all things of other peopleâs design. Other peopleâs restraints. Other peopleâs rules and expectations.
And they were all an illusion. They only exist when I let them.
Sheâs absolutely right.
What is my father going to do to me, and do I care?
I want that.
You canât have it.
Well, what happens if I take it anyway?
I want to do that.
You canât.
Whoâs going to stop me?
Jesus, sheâs right. What the fuck am I waiting for? What can he do?
I want a little havoc, a little trouble, a little fun, a chance to go where my heart takes meâ¦who the hellâs going to stop me?
Every tense muscle in my body begins to slowly relax, and the knots in my stomach start to uncoil. My skin buzzes, and I feel my insides flip, forcing me to hold back a smile.
And I inhale a deep, cool breath, filling my lungs with air that tastes like water in a desert.
Yes.
Keeping her in my arms, I stand up, holding her tight as I carry her back to the car.
I donât bother taking her home. I donât want her to be alone.
I carry her inside my house, the foyer dark since itâs almost ten. My father is no doubt in the city for the night, and my mother is probably on her way to bed. But as I climb the stairs, I pass her in the hallway, Rika passed out in my arms.
âIs she okay?â My mom rushes up to us, already dressed in a nightgown with book in her hand.
âSheâs fine,â I reply, stepping into my room.
Walking over to my bed, I lay her down on top of the comforter and pull the blanket kept down at the bottom over her.
âWhy donât you put her in a guest room?â my mother suggests.
But I shake my head. âIâll sleep in one tonight. Let her have my room. She needs to feel safe.â
And then I look at my mother. âShe should have her own room here, though.â
She sleeps over a lot since her fatherâs death, and given her motherâs behavior, I donât see that changing anytime soon.
Let her have a space here that feels like a home.
My mom nods. âThatâs a good idea.â
I walk past my mother, grabbing a clean pair of jeans and a T-shirt out of my closet. âPoor thing.â My mother strokes her hair. âSo fragile.â
âNo, she isnât,â I correct. âDonât coddle her.â
I snatch my black hoodie off the chair by the door and head into the bathroom to change, since the dogâs blood is all over my jeans.
After Iâm in fresh clothes, I dial Kai, hearing loud music and lots of voices in the background.
âDo you still have those masks we used for paintball last weekend?â I ask, stuffing my wallet in my new jeans and running my fingers through my hair.
âYeah, theyâre in the trunk of my car,â he answers.
âGood. Get the guys, and meet me at Sticks.â
âWhat are we going to do?â
âWhatever we want,â I reply.
And then I hang up, walk back into my bedroom, and take one last look at Rika as she sleeps on my bed.
The corners of my mouth lift, and I canât wait for tonight.
She corrupted me.
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