Black Thorns: Chapter 6
Black Thorns: A Dark New Adult Romance (Thorns Duet Book 2)
I stare in the darkness, my lips parting.
Unable to resist, I reach out blindingly until I touch Sebastianâs sleeve. Heâs no longer retelling the events of the first day he âmetâ me, but Iâm not done listening.
Iâm not done hearing him say that he actually knew I existed all along.
He might not have shown it, but he knew I was there. Maybe for as long as Iâve known about him.
âWhy were you crying that day?â His voice is quiet, almost unsure, which is so unlike him. Heâs usually bursting with quiet confidence, but right now, heâs showing me a side of him he never has before. âIâve waited so long to ask that question.â
I donât even have to think hard about it. I remember it clearly as if it were a few days ago. âAre you sure you want to know? Itâs a stupid reason and I hate to shatter your memories.â
âNothing is stupid about you, Nao.â
My grip tightens on his sleeve. âIt was my birthday. Mom asked me what present she could get me, and I told her I wanted Dad. She didnât like that and we got into a huge fight right before I left for school. Thatâs why I was crying. See? Itâs a stupid reason.â
âItâs not. Why did you smile after?â
âI had an angsty teenage moment where I thought, âHey, maybe the world would be better off without me.â Then I looked up and asked for a sign to show me that Iâm important somehow and that my existence matters. It could have been anything as long as I could feel it. Thatâs when the leaf fell on my nose, and for some reason, that made me so giddy inside. Boring, I know. Iâve ruined your image of that memory.â
Sebastian grabs my arm and tugs me down so that my head lies on his muscled thigh. A muffled wince leaves him and even through the darkness, I can imagine the frown etched deep between his brows.
His lean fingers comb through my hair, stroking gently. It takes everything in me not to moan, and instead, I try to get up so I donât hurt him.
Sebastian locks a steel-like arm over my upper chest, forbidding me from moving. âYou didnât ruin anything. You just amplified it, and do you know what that means? Youâre stuck with me, baby.â
The need to cry hits me again, but I sniffle so I donât turn into a crybaby. I have a reputation to keep, dammit. âI still havenât forgiven you.â
âEven when Iâm dying?â
âYouâre not dying!â My voice chokes. âWeâll get out of here.â
âIâm kidding. I was only trying to play on your sympathy.â
âDonât do that again.â My fingers dig into his pants and I struggle to push the image of him dying out of my head.
That thought chokes me.
It steals my breath and leaves me with muddied, chaotic thoughts.
âIâm just playing with you, Tsundere.â His voice lowers and itâs almost soothing, despite the tinge of pain in it. âI wouldnât leave you alone after I waited three years.â
âYouâ¦waited?â
âI think I have.â
âWhat were you waiting for?â
âI donât know. Maybe an opportunity.â
I scoff. âYou couldâve made your own opportunity without waiting for Reinaâs bet.â
âThatâs the problem. I didnât know I needed to make a move until that fucker Josh almost took you away. Being threatened made me take action.â
âJosh wouldnât have stood a chance. Arrogant football players arenât my type.â
âExcept for me?â
âI never said that.â
âYou donât have to, Tsundere. I watched you long enough to recognize your hot and cold attitude.â
I bite my lower lip and inhale deeply, taking in his scent mixed with blood and something else. âI canât believe you watched me for three years and I didnât notice anything.â
âIâm pretty good. Besides, you tend to be blind to your surroundings, especially when you have those headphones on.â
âNot to you,â I murmur. âYou see, I watched you, too.â
âYou did?â
I nod against his thigh. âSince the first day I got to school. You probably donât remember it, but I do. Clearly.â
Heâs quiet for a beat, and I can only hear the guttural sounds of his breathing in the dark silence. Itâs haunting and chopped off, a clear indication that he needs help and no matter how much we fool ourselves into believing weâll be okay, we probably wonât.
I suck in a sharp breath and choose to remain in the here and now, even if itâs only temporary.
The now is all we have.
âIt was during my first day at Blackwood High. Once again, I was mad at how Mom kept relocating us from one city to another. Not that I loved San Francisco, but it felt like home for so long. And out of the blue, Mom told me sheâd bought a house in some town filled with rich people. Weâd lived in small towns before and Iâd hated them all. People in those places were mostly racist, narrow-minded assholes, and yet, Mom didnât seem to care.
âI didnât believe her when she said this time would be different. She kept singing different tunes about the wealth of the town or how the crime rate in Blackwood was close to zero or that its residents were the kindest. But she forgot the tiny detail about how Iâd be a transfer student in the middle of my senior year and theyâre always doomed for rejection.
âI missed the tour the principal specifically booked for Mom and me, because we arrived at the last second into town. In addition to being a new face in the middle of the year, I was completely clueless about how to get to Blackwood High, and to make matters worse, it was raining. The GPS got me to the top of a hill, then got so funky that I couldnât tell whether the school was located to the left or the right. So I stopped the car on the side of the road near a football field and got out, assuming it was the schoolâs field. But I couldnât find anyone to direct me to the stupid school. I thought my first day was doomed for failure from the get-go.
âBut when I was walking back to my car, someone tapped my shoulder and pointed to the right without really looking at me. He was running in the middle of the pouring rain and he had earbuds in, so he didnât hear me when I thanked him. He didnât notice that I stood there, staring, thinking maybe this town wouldnât be as bad as the others.â I gulp down the lump that has formed in the back of my throat. âThat someone was you. It was a random show of compassion, but for a newbie in town who knew no one and was clueless, it meant a lot more than youâd think.â
Heâs silent for a second and if it werenât for the irregular rhythm of his breathing, Iâd believe heâd fallen asleep or something.
âYou probably donât even recall that moment,â I blurt. âButâ¦do you know why you did it?â
âDid what?â
âPointed a stranger in the right direction. You lack empathy, so you shouldnât have stopped to help.â
âI didnât stop to help.â
âYou tapped my shoulder and helped.â
âI probably saw something in you.â
âLike what?â
âI donât know. Just like I donât know why I stopped and stared at you that day. Maybe all of those things led to how we got together.â
âYou think?â
âIâm sure. After all, you watched me as much as I watched you. Did you have a crush on me, baby?â
âNo!â
âDefensive, Tsundere. How about you be honest for once?â
âItâs just that whenever I saw you the other times, I thought of the feelings Iâd had on that day. It was oddly relieving and safe.â
âThen I came along and crushed those feelings?â Thereâs an exhausted hoarseness in his voice, and while I love the natural edge of it, itâs abnormal.
âNot really.â
âDo you mean to tell me you still feel relieved and safe?â
âTo a degree, yes. The way you came after me with sheer determination scared the shit out of me. Our relationship and depraved chases terrified me, too, but I do feel safe with you. If I didnât, I wouldâve ended it a long time ago.â
âMmmâ¦Iâ¦like thatâ¦â he trails off, his voice losing its raspiness and turning weak.
I sit up carefully and his hand lies limp on my shoulder, not even attempting to stop me. âSebastian?â
âMmm..?â
I gently touch his abdomen, then trace a path up to his cheek. I stiffen when his hot skin meets mine. Holy shit. Heâs burning up.
Fever is totally bad. He could have an infection or something worse.
I feel up his neck and face thatâs lolled to the side, his chapped lips slightly parting. âSebastian, can you hear me?â
He releases an absentminded noise but doesnât stir.
âSebastian! Open your eyes!â
He remains in the same position. I check under the T-shirt thatâs against his shoulder and breathe out a sigh of relief when I donât feel any stickiness. Although heâs still no longer bleeding, the fever could mean something worse.
Tendrils of malevolent fear snap around my ribcage and worst-case scenarios play in my head.
God, no.
Please donât take him away.
Please. I would do anything.
Fresh tears fill my lids as I feel for the bottle of water, pour some on the shirt, then place it on his forehead.
I continue calling his name, although heâs still not moving, and he seems to be getting warmer, not colder.
I drink some water, then brush my lips against his chapped ones, trying to get him to take a sip, even if itâs only a little one.
The sound of his swallow is like music to my ears. At least heâs staying a little hydrated.
But even I know that if he doesnât get medical help soon, he wonât be able to survive.
I continue brushing my lips against his, attempting to get him to drink as much water as possible. When heâs no longer swallowing, I pull back and check his pulse in his neck.
Fat tears cascade down my cheeks at the dim pulse beneath my fingers.
I can almost hear the life leaving him, and the most dooming part is that I canât do anything to stop or even slow it down.
Placing both palms on his neck, I lower my head. âSebastianâ¦please, babyâ¦please open your eyes, pleaseâ¦I canâtâ¦I canât live without you anymore. I donât want to imagine it, so pleaseâ¦please stay with meâ¦â
A low grunt leaves his throat and I straighten, sniffling. âSebastian..?â
âYouâ¦called meâ¦babyâ¦â
I smile at the amusement in his voice, allowing the salty tears inside my mouth. âIâll call you anything you want. Just stay with me.â
âBabyâ¦â he grunts.
âYes?â
âMarryâ¦me.â
âHuh?â
âWhenâ¦we get outâ¦of here. Marryâ¦me.â
I scoff through my tears.
This is crazy.
Weâre crazy.
But if thereâs anything Iâve learned through this whole thing, itâs that nothing lasts forever. Our fates have been connected for three years, even though weâve watched each other from afar.
What we have happens once in a lifetime and itâs pointless to fight it anymore.
âOkay. Iâll marry you.â
âYou canât change yourâ¦mindâ¦once we survive.â
âI wonât.â
âGoodâ¦b-becauseâ¦I wonât let youâ¦â
âSebastian?â I grab his face and shake him gently, but heâs out cold again.
This canât go on.
After adjusting the wet T-shirt on his forehead, I jolt up and slowly walk to where I remember the door to be. My steps are careful as I take a stab in the dark.
I bump against a wall and place my hands on it, feeling my way.
Once I touch metal, I bang on the door with both fists. âOpen up!! You said you wanted to play a game, so why arenât you playing? Open up, you sick bastards!â
I keep on hitting and calling them names in both English and Japanese. When that doesnât work, I pull, then push at the door, shouting, âIf my dad finds out about this, heâll kill you! Iâll make sure he fucking kills you!! Open the damn door!â
âNot yet, Ojou-sama.â The voice that comes from the other side of the door makes me stop in my tracks.
Heâs speaking in Japanese, but why the hell does he sound so familiar? Itâs not Ren or the other guy who was with him that day at our house.
This one is calmer, sounds more dangerous. As if heâs issuing death sentences to the undead.
Ojou-sama.
He called me princess in the most honorific term possible, and itâs not the first time.
Someone called me that before, but who? And when?
âWho are you?â I ask in Japanese.
âThe one who will make you worthy of joining our family. In order to do that, you have to suffer a great loss.â