There were no words to explain the turbulence of emotions whishing through my body.
Striving for control, I concentrated on breathing in slow, deep patterns.
I didnât know what to do.
Apologizing didnât seem to cut it.
Besides, Iâd already done that.
I contemplated telling him that I had temporarily lost control of my senses back there, but I thought he might already know that.
Thoroughly mortified by my actions, I stared out the windscreen into the darkening sky and ignored the boy sitting in the driverâs seat beside me.
âAre we going to talk about it?â Johnny finally asked after several minutes of strained silence.
I shook my head, cheeks flaming with shame, and continued to stare out the window at nothing.
âAre you going to talk to me?â he asked then, voice low and gruff.
Again, I shook my head, too embarrassed to look at him.
âSo, what?â he demanded. âYouâre just going to ignore me altogether?â
I shrugged helplessly.
I knew what was coming if we spoke.
He was going to give me the talk.
And right now, with my emotions frayed and my stomach churning from anxiety, I honestly didnât think I could hear that talk.
I couldnât take his rejection.
âShannon,â Johnny growled, clearly frustrated.
Flicking on the indicator, he pulled onto the side of the road and killed the engine.
Oh no.
Oh please god, no.
âShannon.â Turning in his seat, he pushed the armrest that separated us up, and twisted his body to face me. âWe need to talk about what happened back there.â
âIâm sorry,â I got there first and said. With my heart hammering in my chest, I turned in my seat and faced him. âI am so sorry.â
âI donât want you to be sorry,â he replied, blue eyes burning into mine. âWhat happened in my room?â Shaking his head, he released a pained growl. âI didnât expect it â I didnât expect you.â His breath fanned my face as he spoke, causing my body to shiver involuntarily. âI donât regret it,â he added. âAnd I donât regret you doing that ââ
âBut?â I filled in, keeping my eyes trained on my hands folded on my lap, knowing full well there was a but coming.
âBut Iâm leaving in a couple of months, Shannon,â Johnny finally said. âOnce the summer comes, Iâll be out of here and I wonât be back until school starts.â
âI know,â I whispered, clasping my hands tightly together.
Joey told me all about it.
He was leaving to be a big star.
âThatâs the way it is for me,â Johnny added gruffly. âAnd itâs only going to get worse â longer stints away. More traveling. Permanent moves. Thatâs whatâs coming down the line for me. Down the very close line. It wouldnât be fair of me not to disclose that now.â He sighed wearily and ran a hand through his thoroughly disheveled hair. âYou need to know that Iâm not going to be here for much longer.â
âI know,â I whispered, feeling the burning ache in my chest. âAnd I know I shouldnât have kissed you,â I choked out, voice torn. âOkay? I know that. It was wrong. I understand. I justâ¦I justâ¦â
âYou just what, Shannon?â he coaxed.
âI thought you liked me,â I strangled out.
âJesus Christ,â Johnny groaned, dropping his head in his hands. âOf course, I like you.â He tugged on his hair and sighed. âI think itâs pretty fucking clear that Iâm mad about you.â Exhaling a pained groan, he added, âBut Iâll be eighteen in May, Shannon.â
âIâm sixteen,â I whispered.
âI know, Shannon, fuck I know,â he groaned, voice torn. âBut Iâm trying to do the right thing here.â
My heart fluttered uncertainly.
I didnât know what to think or how to feel.
He was rejecting me and telling me he liked me all in one breath and it was too much for my heart to take.
âFor who?â I croaked out.
âFor the both of us,â Johnny strangled out. âMy career is taking off and I need to stay focused. And you deserve someone who can put you first.â He ran a hand through his hair again, looking both stressed and tired. âI canât do that.â He looked me right in the eyes and said, âI want to â I really fucking want to. But Iâm not in the position to do that for you.â Exhaling heavily, he added, âI canât give you a relationship, Shannon, and it would be selfish of me to ask you for something I canât follow through on.â
There it was.
The rejection Iâd been waiting for.
âI didnât ask you for a relationship, Johnny,â I choked out, thoroughly humiliated. âIâve never asked you for anything. So, donât worry about giving me the let me down gently talk because itâs unnecessary.â
Johnny released a frustrated growl. âIâm not trying to let you down, Shannon, Iâm trying to figure this out with you ââ
âListen, Johnny, Iâm really tired,â I whispered, turning back to face the window. âI just want to go home now.â
âCome on, Shannon,â he groaned, tone agitated now. âYou canât avoid this.â
I had every intention of avoiding him for the rest of my life.
I planned on starting that avoiding as soon as I got out of this car.
âShannon, talk to me.â
I remained silent.
âShannon, come on,â Johnny pleaded. âDonât be like this.â
I didnât think there was any other way I could be given the circumstances.
I kissed him.
He rejected me.
I put myself out there for him.
He turned me down.
It was my fault.
One hundred percent.
I accepted responsibility for my recklessness.
But that didnât mean I was strong enough to listen to the painful verbal repercussions of my actions.
âJust fucking talk to me,â Johnny demanded, unwilling to let this go.
âWhatâs to say?â I croaked out, turning back to look at him, giving in to his relentless probing. âYou donât want me. I heard you. I got the message.â
âYou clearly didnât if thatâs what you took from it,â he shot back, looking furious.
When I didnât respond, Johnny literally growled.
âFine, if you donât want to hash this out, then I wonât say another word,â he announced, throwing his hands up in the air. âIs that what you want, Shannon?â
âThatâs what I want, Johnny,â I whispered.
âSuit yourself,â he bit out, starting the engine again. âI give up.â
With his words of rejection belting in my ears, and my emotions in turmoil, I clenched my eyes shut, and prayed for time to speed up.
I had the worst pain in my stomach to match the throbbing ache in my chest that seemed to blossom and burn with every mile he knocked up on the clock.
When Johnny pulled onto my street, I lied just like I had every other time he dropped me home and told him that my house was the one at the other end of the street, knowing full well that if my father saw me climbing out of his car, Iâd be as good as dead.
However, I did not anticipate that he might turn off the engine again, which is exactly what he did.
âAre you okay?â he asked, turning in his seat to face me.
âYeah,â I croaked out.
He nodded slowly. âShannon, listen ââ
âYou donât have to say anything else,â I quickly stopped him by saying. âIt wonât happen again.â
He frowned. âNo, thatâs not what I was ââ
âIâm sorry
I couldnât handle more.
Not tonight.
Mortified, I hovered outside my neighborâs garden wall until it was clear that Johnny was waiting for me to go inside before he left, and then I did the only thing I could; I ducked my head and ran down the footpath to my actual house, not daring to look back at him.
Slipping inside, I closed the door behind me and exhaled a ragged breath before quickly searching the downstairs.
The house was empty.
Ollie, Tadhg, and Sean went to Nanny Murphyâs on weekdays, with the exception of Fridays when Nanny dropped them straight home after school because she went to Beara on the weekends to visit her granddaughter and wouldnât be home until at least eight oâclock.
Joey and Mam both worked on Mondays, and my father kept a stool warm at the bookies most evenings.
Nothing changed.
Miscarriage or no miscarriage, my screwed-up family went on as normalâ¦
Thankful to have avoided another pointless confrontation, I kicked off my shoes and hurried up the staircase to get out of my damp clothes.
We had a second-hand tumble dryer in the utility room that I wasnât supposed to use because of how hard it was on the electricity, but I was going to use it this evening.
I had no choice.
Back in the house of pain, I closed my bedroom door and then quickly stripped out of my wet clothes before throwing on my pajamas.
I was halfway down the staircase with my uniform balled up in my hands when there was a knock on the front door.
Pausing mid-step, I squinted my eyes and tried to make out who the tall shadow outside the frosted glass could be.
Another knock came, louder this time, so I hurried down the remaining steps and wrenched the door open, only to find Johnny standing outside in the rain, looking like some sort of semi-drowned angel.
Instantly, my heart jackknifed in my chest and then began to thud so hard it was almost painful.
Seriously, God?
Why?
âHi,â I whispered, clutching the door with a death grip. The step into our house was a least a foot high, but I still found myself staring up at him.
âHi,â Johnny replied, blue eyes locked on mine. âYou live at 95.â
I nodded, mortified.
âI thought your house was number 81?â He frowned. âThatâs where Iâve been dropping you off?â
I shrugged helplessly, feeling at a loss.
âWell, you left your bag in the car.â Shifting my bag off his right shoulder, he held it out to me.
âIâm sorry,â I mumbled, feeling my cheeks flush once again. âYour jacketâs up in my bedroom âIâll go and get it.â I turned to run up the staircase, but he stopped me with a hand to my wrist.
âDonât worry about it,â he explained, quickly retracting his hand. âIâll get it off you at school or something.â
âOkay.â
Shoving his hands into his pockets, Johnny rocked back on his heels, considering me for a brief moment before blowing out a breath. âAre you okay?â
âYeah,â I whispered, not feeling one bit okay.
âShannon, I donât want you to think that I donât want you ââ
âPlease, donât say anything,â I begged, beyond mortified at this stage. âPlease.â
âThings are complicated for me right nowââ
âJohnny, please just forget it ever happened.â
He stared hard at me for an achingly long moment before nodding stiffly. âIf thatâs what you want.â
I sagged slightly. âIt is.â
His gaze flicked to my neck then, and his expression instantly darkened.
âI need to go inside now,â I stated, fearful of him starting back up where he had left off.
âRight,â he said with a small shake of his head. âOf course, yeah, and Iâd better get going.â
âOkay.â
âIâll guess Iâll see you tomorrow,â Johnny said, and then he turned around and walked away from me.
Feeling bereft, I chewed on my lip as I watched him walk away. âBye, Johnny.â
âBye, Shannon,â he called back, casting a quick smile over his shoulder.
Oh, god.
With my heart knocking around restlessly in my chest, I closed the door and trudged back up the staircase.
I needed to lie down for a minute so I could process my thoughts.
Slipping back inside my tiny room, I walked straight to my single bed with the intention of faceplanting the mattress, only to stop short when my eyes landed on Johnnyâs jacket strewn on my bed.
Like the creeper I was, I sank down on the foot of my bed, reached for his jacket, and held it to my chest.
His smell was everywhere.
On his jacket.
On me.
Holding the drenched fabric, I inhaled deeply, taking in the familiar scent of his deodorant, and then mentally chastised myself for being such a freak.
What was I doing?
Why was I allowing myself to feel these emotions?
They were dangerous.
I had to stop.
He doesnât want you.
No one does.
Feeling sick to my stomach with regret and anxiety, I pulled back the covers, climbed into my bed, and then curled into the smallest ball I could.
Everything hurt.
My body.
My brain.
My heart.
Breathing slowly, I attempted to rid my mind of every bad thought plaguing me.
Every embarrassing and soul-destroying memory of how ridiculously stupid I had behaved.
It didnât last long.
Fifteen minutes into my silent mourning, the sound of the front door slamming filled my ears.
No less the three minutes later, my bedroom door flew inwards.
âWhereâs the dinner?â
Remaining perfectly still, I clutched the duvet as my body coiled tight with anxiety. âI forgot.â
âWell get out of that fucking bed and come down stairs,â Dad snarled from my doorway. âYouâve jobs to do around this house, girl, and that includes putting on the dinner. âTis about time you earned your keep.â
âI feel sick,â I croaked out.
It wasnât a lie.
My stomach was cramping up.
âYouâll feel a lot fucking sicker if you donât get your useless hole out of that bed,â my father warned. âSick. Your motherâs fucking sick and sheâs working to pay your bastard school fees, you ungrateful little cunt.â
I knew he hadnât been drinking today, but my father sober was still terrifying to me.
âYou have five minutes to get down those stairs, girl,â he added. âDonât make me come back up to ya.â
He slammed my bedroom door closed, and while I listened to him thumping back down the stairs, I debated my options.
Stay where I was and take a beating, or do as he asked and risk one anyway?
There was no choice.
There never was.
Not for me anyway.
Throwing back the covers, I climbed out of bed and walked back down to hell.
âAre you still talking to me?â were the first words that came out of Claireâs mouth when I answered her phone call later that night.
I was just finishing mopping the kitchen floor before bed, having cooked the dinner and washed all the dishes.
Balancing my phone between my ear and shoulder, I poured the water from the mop bucket down the kitchen sink and quickly tucked them away in the utility room.
âConsidering I just answered your call, Iâd say itâs pretty obvious that Iâm still talking to you,â I replied in a hushed tone.
It was gone eleven at night, but my father was still in the living room watching some match on the television, and I knew better than to disturb him.
âIâm so sorry,â Claire groaned down the line. âI didnât mean to embarrass you today, I swear. I was just sick of listening to those two d
âDonât worry about it.â Grabbing Johnnyâs jacket out of the tumble drier, I flicked off the kitchen light and padded out. âIâm not mad,â I added, my voice barely more than a whisper.
âCan you talk right now?â she questioned.
âYeah,â I whispered, creeping towards the staircase. âJust give me two secs.â
âOkay,â she replied.
Holding my phone to my chest, I tiptoed up the staircase, avoiding every creak with expert precision.
âOkay, Iâm back,â I told her in a more audible tone once I was safely inside my bedroom with the door locked.
âYouâre sure youâre not mad at me?â
I shook my head and flopped down on my bed. âIâm really not.â
âOh, thank god,â Claire sighed loudly. âIâve been a wreck all evening worrying about it. I wonât be in class tomorrow and I was afraid you wouldnât pick up when I called.â
My heart sank. âYouâre not coming to school tomorrow?â
âI have that hockey blitz with the school,â she explained. âBut Lizzie will be there.â
At least thereâs that.
âWell, Iâm not mad.â
âYouâre sure?â
âI have good news,â I said, deciding on changing the topic. Otherwise we would end up going back and forth all night. âI forgot to tell you last week, but I think youâll like it.â
âSpill your beans, Lynch.â
âMam signed the forms. I turned them in the other week.â Exhaling heavily, I said, âIâm allowed to go to Donegal with you after Easter.â
I had to hold the phone away from my ear for a few moments while Claire squealed her excitement out of her system.
âThis is the best news ever,â she gushed. âYou have no idea how happy youâve just made me. I thought I was going to be trapped in a foreign county for two days with Lizzie and Pierce,â she continued to say. âAnd you know how screwed up their relationship is.â
âA foreign county,â I snickered, then grunted when a sharp pain ricocheted through my side.
âAre you okay?â
âYeah, itâs just my stomach,â I replied, stroking the curve of my belly. âItâs been bothering me all day.â Worrying my lip, I added, âI hope Iâm not coming down with something.â
âThen you better take some paracetamol and get the hell over it,â Claire retorted chirpily. âBecause weâre going to Donegal, baby! Woo!â
âAfter Easter,â I reminded her.
âSo?â she shot back. âItâs still the best news ever.â
I laughed at her enthusiasm because, in all honesty, how could I not?
It was infectious.
âSo, have you figured out how youâre going to manage forty-eight hours in close quarters with Gerard?â I asked with a teasing lilt to my tone, thankful for the distraction from my life.
Claire groaned loudly. âHe drives me crazy, Shan.â
âHe likes you,â I told her. âAnd before you shut me down and tell me he likes everyone, I mean he really likes you, Claire. Itâs obvious when you guys are together that heâs into you.â
It really was.
At school, they watched each otherâs moves constantly.
He was always coming over to her, cracking jokes and making pointless conversation.
They behaved like an old married couple when they were together, with witty banter and quick retorts, and I couldnât figure out why they werenât a couple already.
It seemed so inevitable.
âHaving him carry on like that towards me is not a compliment,â Claire grumbled when I called her out on it. Huffing, she added, âAny girl who walks past that boy turns his head.â
âYeah, but you havenât just turned his head, Claire,â I told her. âI think youâve turned his heart.â
âYou canât turn something that isnât there, Shan,â she replied, tone sad.
âI donât believe that,â I countered.
âThatâs because you donât know him like I do,â was all she replied.
âWell, I think you and Gibsie together make sense,â I pressed. âA lot more than Lizzie and Pierce.â
âThat wouldnât be hard,â Claire chuckled. âMe and Mr. Mulcahy make more sense than those two.â
âTrue,â I mused.
âSo, hereâs what weâll do,â she said then. âYou can keep me focused and away from Gerard when weâre in Donegal, and Iâll do the same for you with Johnny.â
I exhaled a shaky breath. âAbout thatâ¦â
âGo on,â she urged.
Clenching my eyes shut, I blurted, âHe dropped me home again.â
âWhat?â Claire shrieked.
I blew out a breath. âI know.â
âOh my god, Shan, whatâs this about?â
âI really donât know,â I groaned, scrubbing my face with my hand. âIâm so confused.â
âConfused?â
Deciding to give her full disclosure, I whispered, âHe didnât just drop me home, Claire. I went over to his house again.â
âShut the front door,â she gasped.
Nodding, I groaned into my hand. âAnd I kissed him.â
âShut the front door!â she repeated, louder now, and in a much more excited tone. âWhere did this happen?â
âIn his bedroom,â I confessed, and then reluctantly added, âOn his bed.â
âOh. My. God,â she squealed. âOh my bloody god, Shan!â
âHe didnât kiss me back,â I admitted, grimacing.
âThat bloody idiot,â she growled, tone switching instantly.
âIâm the idiot, Claire,â I hurried to say, feeling just as mortified now as I was in his car on the drive of shame home. âWhat the hell was I thinking?â
âWas he mean to you?â she demanded. âBecause Iâll kick his big, rugby-loving ass if he was mean to you ââ
âHe wasnât mean to me, Claire,â I croaked out. âHe wasâ¦lovely.â
âNo, Shannon, youâre the lovely one. Heâs a dick,â Claire corrected angrily. âBecause only a complete dick takes my best friend to his house, brings her up to his bedroom, and then, when she puts herself out there for the first time in her life, he goes and rejects her.â
âI kissed him, Claire,â I whispered. âNot the other way around.â
âAnd he clearly didnât deserve your kiss,â Claire snipped. âYouâre too good for the big eejit.â
âI thought you liked Johnny?â
âI used to,â she agreed angrily. âI used to think he was a good guy. I used to think he was better than that reputation of his,â she growled. âNot anymore.â
âItâs my fault, Claire.â
âNo, Shan,â she growled. âHe led you on, and you deserve so much better than having some rugbyhead asshole do that.â
âHe really didnât,â I admitted. âIt was all me.â
âI donât care,â she snipped. âHeâs an eejit.â
âWhat do I do now?â I asked, feeling unsure.
âWhat do you mean?â
âI have his jacket.â I confessed. âI need to return it to him.â
âWhy do you have his jacket?â
âHe gave it to me ââ I paused before adding, âActually this is the second one heâs given me. He gave me his coat after school, too, but that one was soaked from the rain so he gave me another one.â
âThere you go,â she snapped. âLeading you on!â
âI donât think thatâs what he was doing,â I argued weakly. âHe was just being nice, Claire.â Exhaling heavily, I added, âHeâs just a really good guy.â
âFine,â she sighed, relenting on her anger a little. âJust give his coat back to him at school tomorrow and be done with the big ape.â
âOkay,â I replied, sad at the thought.
âHeâs a fool, you know,â she added. âYouâre gorgeous, and kind, and sweet, and loyal, and a million other brilliant things heâll never find in whores like that Bella Wilkinson.â
âThank you,â I replied, appreciating her attempt to console me. It wasnât true, of course, but her words did help. âBut youâre not allowed to hate him because of this.â
âReally?â she whined. âReally?â
âHe didnât do anything wrong, Claire,â I pushed. âSeriously. He couldnât have been nicer to me.â
âThen why didnât he kiss you back?â she demanded.
âBecause he doesnât want me,â I bit out. âObviously.â
âThen heâs insane,â she grumbled. âIf I had a penis or liked girls, I would want you.â
âThanks,â I half sobbed/half laughed. âIf I had a penis or liked girls, Iâd want you, too.â
âSo, weâre really not going to hate him?â
âNo,â I replied. âWeâre really not.â
âUgh,â Claire groaned. âFine.â
âYouâre a great friend, Claire,â I told her. âI donât know what Iâd do without you.â
âAm I a great enough friend that I get the details?â
âWhat kind of details?â I asked nervously. âWhat do you want to know?â
âAll the details,â she replied.
Ugh.
âItâs so embarrassing,â I whispered. âHumiliating, actually.â
âOkay, Iâm sorry,â she quickly replied. âYou donât have to talk about it.â
âHeâs beautiful,â I whispered after a pause.
âYeah, yeah,â she grumbled. âEverybody already knows that.â
âNo, Claire,â I urged. âI mean heâs really beautiful.â Closing my eyes, I whispered, âUnder the clothes.â
âOh my god!â she screamed in my ear. âHow do you know whatâs under his clothes?â
âBecause he took a shower and he was only half dressed when I came out ââ
âCame out of where?â
âHis shower.â
âHold up!â Claire squeaked, âDid you take a shower with Johnny Kavanagh?â
âWhat â no!â I shook my head. âI took a shower in his shower.â
âOkay, you need to take this back to the beginning because Iâm losing the run of my filthy imagination here.â
âWe were both soaked from the rain,â I explained with a weary sigh. âHis Mam took my clothes down to dry them. I used the shower in his ensuite. He took a separate shower. And then we both just sort of ended up in his room.â
âWith no clothes on?â
âHe had jocks on,â I replied, resisting the urge to tell her about what I saw before he had his jocks on. âThatâs it.â
âAnd you?â she pressed.
âJust a towel.â I bit down on my lip, feeling my face flame with heat. âI think I flashed him my, uh, you knowâ¦. and I donât really know how it happened, but we both ended up on his bed,â I hurried to say, keeping my voice low. âAnd then he was right there, like his face was so close to mineâ¦â Exhaling a ragged breath, I added, âAnd I just lost my mind and kissed him.â
âI know,â I groaned. âAnd then I panicked and locked myself in his bathroom.â I cringed at the memory. âAnd he was so kind to me, Claire. I mean, he could have flipped out and thrown me out, but he just kept talking to me from the other side of the door, trying to coax me out ââ
âUgh, I canât,â she moaned. âIt hurts my heart too much.â
âHe promised he wouldnât talk about it if I came out,â I continued to talk despite her protests, needing to get this off my chest. âOf course, he lied. When were back in his car, he gave me the talk ââ
âNot the talk,â she breathed. âPlease tell me he didnât give you the talk.â
âHe did,â I strangled out. âAnd then he kept telling me that I didnât need to be sorry and I think he meant it, but Iâm just so embarrassed by it all. I swear, I will never put myself out there like that for anyone ever again.â
âDamn,â Claire sighed. âI wish I didnât have that stupid blitz tomorrow. I donât want you being alone at school while youâre feeling like this.â
âMe too,â I agreed glumly. âAt least Lizzie will be there.â
âMaybe donât mention this to Liz,â Claire interjected. âSheâll cut his dick right off.â
âNo one can know about this, Claire,â I whispered. âNo one.â
âAgreed.â
I clutched my stomach when another stabbing pain ricocheted through me, causing me to grunt once more in pain.
âHey â maybe you should take tomorrow off,â she offered, sounding concerned. âYou donât sound too good.â
âIâll be okay,â I whispered.
And I would be.
I hoped.