Free Read Novels Online Home

Power & Choice (Iris Boys Book 2) by Lucy Smoke (8)

Chapter 8

Knix and Texas talked quietly in the front seat of the SUV as Erika and I sat in the back. Erika didn’t even bat an eyelash at the guys. She knew I was living with them now, and that my mom was in the cancer center. Her eyes flashed between them and me every so often though, and I know the moment we got away from the guys and into the dance club, she would be asking me all sorts of questions. Like whether or not I had kissed Bellamy, Knix, or Marv again. Or if I’d kissed Texas too. I had no clue what I was supposed to tell her.

I sighed as I thought about it, drawing Texas’ attention. He glanced back at us. “You okay there, Princess?”

“You got it, whiz-kid.”

He frowned before whipping his head to Knix, who chuckled under his breath. “Who told her that nickname?” he demanded.

Using the rearview mirror as a spyglass, because I was sitting right behind him, I could see that Knix was trying valiantly to keep his lips pressed together in a mulish line to keep from laughing. Texas narrowed his eyes before swinging back to me.

“Let’s hear it,” he directed his attention to me fully. “Who gave you that nickname?”

I shrugged and blinked at him innocently while Erika stared at the both of us with a raised brow. “I have no clue what you’re talking about,” I said as seriously as I could muster. Bellamy would not be happy if I ousted him. Texas growled low in his throat, all of his usual teasing-sun- shininess forgotten as he reached down to unbuckle himself. For what, I didn’t know. What could he do in a moving car?

He didn’t even get the chance to finish though, before Knix barked out a command. “Car moving. Seat belt stays on.”

“You know they’re serious when they forget to use ‘the’ or ‘is,’” Erika leaned over and whisper-talked to me. I snickered and turned to look out my window.

Knix slowed the SUV as we arrived at a large brick building that looked like it could have been a warehouse at some point but was now settled between a high-class boutique with a glass façade and a quiet Irish sounding bar called Madra Rua. Knix and Texas turned to face the building, both frowning as they took in the line of people waiting – girls in short skirts and guys in jeans trying too hard to look bored.

“This is the place?” Knix nodded towards the warehouse.

I turned to Erika; she nodded enthusiastically. “It sure is. Oh my god, I’m so freaking pumped! Let’s go!” She grabbed my arm and dragged me along behind her. “Thanks for the ride!” she called behind her as she pulled me out of the SUV and onto the sidewalk.

“Call me if you need a ride!” Knix hollered back.

“I will.” I closed the door behind me and Erika jerked me towards the end of the line.

“Hurry up,” she said. “I don’t want anyone else getting in before us.” From the looks of it, several people would be getting in before us, but I guessed she meant in line before we got there. I looked over my shoulder at the dark SUV. Knix waited a few beats before the turn signal came on and he pulled back onto the busy street.

Cars rushed past the building, the wind from their velocity sent skirts flying up and girls cursing. I was so glad I had chosen a pair of shorts tonight. Erika had taken one look at them and scoffed, but I hadn’t let her convince me to change them. I was going to a stupid dance club because she asked, not because I really wanted to go. I would have much rather been at home sitting between Knix and Marv, scarfing popcorn and watching a movie.

Surprisingly the line didn’t take too long. Within twenty minutes we were the next to be let in and when we showed our IDs, the doorman uncapped a black sharpie and slashed X’s over the back of each of our hands. Erika grumbled, but let them do it and we were suddenly in the club. It was darker than it had been outside with all the street lamps and car headlights. Smoke lingered above the dance club – I was surprised. I thought there were laws saying you couldn’t smoke in public buildings anymore.

As we moved further into the big, converted space, I realized that there were smoke machines by the DJ stand and up in the balconies. There were...so many balconies. Four wraparounds overlooking the dance floor, the bars, and the DJ stand. People were dressed a lot nicer than I was in my dark jean shorts. I looked down at the frayed ends and wished I had let Erika convince me to change. She noticed my preoccupation and looked down at my shorts as well before smirking at me.

“I told you,” she said.

I rolled my eyes and released the hem. “Come on,” I said, grabbing her hand. “I want to grab a bottle of water.” I could already feel the heat of the mash of bodies pressed against one another even though we weren’t anywhere near the dance floor yet. I knew I would need the hydration.

“Hold on, slow your roll.” Erika pulled back, stopping me.

“What?”

“You’re acting like it’s not going to be there for much longer,” she snapped. “Look around.” She punctuated that with a gesture to our outrageous surroundings – the thumping music that reverberated up through the floor and walls. “This is a club. Everyone’s drinking. We should too!”

I raised a brow at her and looked at her like she was crazy. “Um, that’s going to be a little hard to do.” I raised my hand, the back facing towards her. “They know we’re underage.”

Erika smirked at me and shook her head. “Oh, Harlow.” She sighed. “Have I taught you nothing?” I frowned at her. What the hell did that mean? “The bouncers out front know we’re underage, but they see hundreds of people in a night. Do you really think they’re going to remember us? We can just go to the bathroom and wipe this shit off. No one else will know!”

“Don’t they card you at the bar too?” This did not seem like a good plan.

Erika rolled her eyes at me. “We’re not going to buy us drinks,” she said. “Guys are going to buy us drinks.”

“I don’t know–” I began.

“It’ll be fine,” she interrupted. “We’ll flirt a little and then bam, free drinks.”

“What about Josh?” I asked.

Erika shrugged. “I’m not going to do anything,” she insisted. “It’s just flirting.”

“You’re giving guys the wrong impression.” I shook my head and Erika groaned.

“Come on, Harlow,” she pleaded. “Just tonight. Please – no judgment – just fun.”

“I think we should–” Erika ignored my final protest and grabbed my arm, dragging me to the general vicinity of where I guessed the female restrooms were. I sighed and just let it go. She could flirt all she wanted, I wouldn’t. Inside, it was dingy, but I could tell that at some point it had been a rather nice bathroom. The tiles on the floor and halfway up the walls didn’t need a thorough scrubbing as much as they needed to be taken out and replaced. The mirrors were clear of any lipstick notes or water marks. It was surprisingly clean for a dance club – or any kind of club for that matter.

Erika stopped at the furthest sink, turned the hot water up to full blast which was only a trickle faster than it was at normal, and she proceeded to scrub the crap out of the back of her hands. She pumped the soap furiously as she washed. I sighed and stepped up next to her. I didn’t want to be the only one with black X’s. I started scrubbing as well. The markings came off after several more washes. Erika, in her determination, was done long before me and she waited impatiently by the door as she dried her hands.

“Finally,” she said when I approached, the backs of my hands scrubbed red, but clean. She grabbed my wrist and tugged me out into the crowded club. It seemed that while we had been in the relative safety and quiet of the bathroom, more people had arrived. I wondered briefly why no one had been in the bathroom with us, but then I figured it might have been too early in the night for bathroom lines to have started yet. No one was drunk yet.

“Let’s dance for a little bit before we hit the bars,” Erika announced.

I couldn’t help the small amount of relief I felt. We hit the dance floor just as the song changed. I smiled when I recognized the opening tunes and began to dance. Erika laughed and jumped up and down as others did when the beat started moving rhythmically. I swayed and laughed and tilted my head, singing loudly, confident that no one could hear me above the crowd.

I was starting to sweat and remembered that I had wanted a water earlier. Just as I was about to snag Erika’s arm and ask her to go with me to the bar, a pair of wide biceps curled around my middle and jerked me back into a strong chest. I looked up, startled and half irritated before I recognized the electric blue irises of the man holding me.

“Grayson?”

He didn’t smile at me. Instead he was glaring over my head at something. I whipped my chin around and saw that several guys were either subtly looking away or leaving the dance floor entirely. Erika was still too caught up in jumping alongside a group of other girls to notice what was going on. I turned back to Grayson.

“What are you doing here?” I called over the music.

He looked down at me and his frown deepened before I felt him lift me up. With my back to his chest, Grayson walked me towards the edge of the dance floor. Irritated, I swung my legs, trying to walk despite the fact that I wasn’t touching the ground. I debated on kicking him to get him to let me down, but then decided against it because I didn’t want to risk him dropping me.

When we reached the edge of the dance floor he put me down, but I didn’t have time to demand answers, because the next thing I knew, his hand was wrapped around my upper arm in a tight grip and he was dragging me through the club. To where, I couldn’t see. Grayson shoved bodies out of the way and skirted whole groups with me in tow. I didn’t realize the crowded noise was growing quieter until we stepped out onto a back-patio. There were several filled tables of people smoking, clutching their cigarettes as they laughed and chatted and inhaled so hard that the cherries on the ends of their cigarettes burned brightly.

“Grayson,” I said, immediately shocked by just how clear and loud my voice came out. I lowered my volume. “What are you doing here?”

“I could ask you the same thing,” he snapped. “What was that out there?”

“What was what?” I asked, confused.

“Those animals were practically ready to dive on top of you.”

“I was just dancing.” I took a step away from him when he dropped my arm.

“Do your boyfriends know you’re here?” he demanded. “Do they know about that–” he looked pointedly down at my X-less hands. “That’s not very ‘good girl’ of you.”

I bristled. “Who said I had to be a good girl all the freaking time? Yea, the guys know where I am. But who said I have to follow the rules and do what I’m told all the time? I can leave and go somewhere and not tell them. If I want to.”

He raised his eyebrows before narrowing his gaze. “Are you drunk? Have you already been drinking?” When he reached for me, I slapped his hands away and took another step back.

“No, I have not been drinking and I am not drunk,” I whisper-yelled when I noticed some of the smokers had turned their attention to us. I narrowed my eyes at him, mimicking his expression. “What are you doing here? Are you following me again?”

He groaned, rolling his eyes. Placing his hands on his hips, Grayson tipped his head back and stared at the ceiling as though he were praying for patience...or praying that it would fall on him. I was kind of hoping for the second option at this point.

"Grayson," I said – done with this whole situation. "What. Are. You. Doing. Here?"

"I came here to find a friend," he replied, finally looking back down at me. His blue eyes crackled with heat and something more. I resisted the urge to take a third step back. I felt like that would be noticeable and maybe, just maybe, a little overkill.

"Me?" I asked. "Am I that friend? How did you even know I was here?"

At that, he smirked. "No, Harlow, you’re not the friend I’m here looking for.”

“Okay, if I’m not, then how do you explain us being here at the same time? Don’t you think this is a little too coincidental?”

God, what was it with this guy? Half the time he was a complete douchebag, and then there were times… I thought back to how worried he had been about his brother. He wasn’t all bad. I knew that instinctively, and maybe that’s why I kept letting myself get pulled in by him. Why I kept answering him when he called or texted. There was just something about him.

“A coincidence is a coincidence,” he said with a shrug, before pulling out his phone.

I narrowed my gaze. Right now, that something about him was all douche. “I don’t believe in coincidences – what are you doing?”

“I’m ordering you an Uber. I don’t have time to take you home and you really shouldn’t be here–” I shoved him hard and his phone fell from his hand, cracking on the pavement flooring of the outdoor patio. Several eyes shot back in our direction and my face heated. Grayson recovered quickly, bending to pick up the broken phone before steering me to a more empty section of the patio.

“Are you done?” he snapped.

“I’m not leaving,” I replied.

"Harlow–"

"I'm here with my friend," I snapped. "I don't get to see her anymore. I'm here to have fun." I emphasized the last word because it was the most important. I never got to have fun anymore. I mean, pranking Marv was one thing, but I hadn't seen Erika in over a month and before that we had seen each other five days a week every week. It was a difficult change. Though the guys were great at distracting me, I missed her. I realized that I wasn't being a good friend out here, ditching her when she might need me. I sighed and moved around Grayson, done trying to figure him out.

"Where are you going?" he demanded.

"Back inside," I said. "Erika's in there alone and I came here with her. Don't worry about me, Grayson. I'll be just fine without you." I turned and strode to the doors leading back into the building. I didn't even have the energy to ask him for the reason he wanted to meet the other day. I knew he probably had something to tell me, but I was so tired of everything he brought with him. The guys didn't seem to care for him. He was selfish, plain as could be, even if he was a good guy deep down.

When I finally caught up with Erika, she was at one of the bars, flirting heavily with someone. When I caught her attention, she waved me over. Her face was happy, her cheeks flushed, and it was clear she had already gotten herself a drink or two. When she offered me a shot, courtesy of one of the guys, I didn't say no. I took it from her and downed it, letting the liquid fire scorch a path down my throat.

"Who's your friend?" one of the guys asked, motioning to me. Erika grinned and introduced us. As I shook their hands, I learned that they were all centers at one of the local universities. Some of them were more good-looking than the others. We talked. Erika flirted. Within the next hour, I didn't see Grayson again, but I did take quite a few more shots. When my mind blurred and my stomach cramped, I realized I had to pee really bad.

"I gotta go to the bathroom," I mumbled to Erika. Surprisingly, she didn't offer to come with me like she usually would. I didn't mind. I didn't like it when she followed behind me to the bathroom just because.

I made my way through the club, pushing past sweaty bodies. The hot, stale air was heavy and by the time I made it to the bathroom line, I was panting. The line was much longer now than what Erika and I had experienced earlier, and I had to wait nearly fifteen minutes before I even passed the bathroom threshold. No one came in after me, for which I was grateful. I wasn't drunk enough to not care if other people were in there while I was peeing.

When I finished, I exited the stall and washed and dried my hands and strode back out into the club. The door swung closed behind me and as I moved towards the crowds of people, behind me, a small, fragile whimper stopped me. I turned back.

Across the hallway from the women's bathroom was a small alcove where I expected a storage or staff door to be. I moved closer. The whimpering was gone but the small sound of sorrow and fear and pain pushed me to turn the corner.

A tall man with a short crop of dishwater blonde hair moved his pelvis against someone I couldn't see. Slender, dainty hands, nails painted royal purple, were pressed against the wall on either side of him. As I moved closer, the man stopped grinding and reached a hand up to whoever was in front of him. He dipped his head down and I watched as the small, elegant hands balled into fists so tight the knuckles blanched white. I paused, unsure if I was interrupting something wrong. I turned again to go when that small whimper stopped me in my tracks.

A swell of anger rooted somewhere deep down in me rose to the surface. As I turned back, it felt like everything slowed – as if my entire body was moving against a heavy wave of tension.

"Hey!" I snapped, startling the man. Time sped up.

His face whipped around, his dull eyes taking me in before his lips curled into a sneer. "Mind your own business, bitch," he said before turning back to the girl.

I stomped up to his back, grabbed his shoulder and swung him around. The woman behind him was pale and skinny – so skinny that it was a wonder her clothes didn't fall right off of her. Her sunken eyes were glazed over, filled with a deeply rooted pain. I fought the urge to flinch just looking at her. Instead, I lowered my voice, and softening my tone as I shoved the guy away.

"Are you okay?" I asked.

"She's fucking fine," the man was there again, shoving me back. "Get the fuck out of here."

"No," I turned and stood directly in front of the girl, blocking her from him. My hands shook. He was taller than me, not by much, but still...and he was a guy and I was short and not very strong.

The girl behind me didn't leap up, too embarrassed, I assumed, to try to stop me from squaring off in front of the man who – a moment before had been grinding himself all over her. She hadn't wanted it. How had no one noticed she was back here with him? Where were her friends? I glared at the guy in front of me, taking in the skeletal hollows of his cheekbones and his red, clouded eyes. He was completely strung out.

"No?" The man was momentarily confused by my defiance, but that didn't stop him from grabbing me by the shoulders and throwing me towards the hallway. He shoved me again, harder, towards the end of the hallway. "Stay gone, you little bitch." He turned around.

I don't know if it was the alcohol running through my veins or if a wave of brave righteousness swept through me. All I knew was, I couldn't let him go back to her. How did he not see that she didn't want what he was doing? Why didn't he care? I didn't understand how anyone could be so callous. I grabbed his arm and this time, I didn't have to turn him. He turned back towards me with a huff, probably prepared to cut off a warning for him to leave the girl alone or something. But I didn’t have a warning for him. I clenched my fist, pulled back, and slammed my knuckles into his nose.

He choked, shocked, as blood poured out of his nostrils. He stumbled back, knocking his shoulder into the wall. I moved closer before he could stop me, and grabbed his shoulders with each hand, slamming my knee into his dick. He dropped like a pile of rocks, wheezing with one hand over his bloody nose and one over his injured groin; a pathetic, whiny, mess – whimpering and sniveling with tears leaking out of his eyes. Good, I thought. He deserved it.

I skirted around him, back to the girl. She was exactly where I had left her with her legs slightly spread apart as she leaned against the wall. I approached her slowly, and when I raised my hand, I noticed that my knuckles were scraped, but not bruised and my thumb definitely didn't hurt. I guess Knix and Bellamy's self-defense stuff was really working.

I closed the distance between the girl and me, moving gradually toward her so as not to startle her. She didn't give any indication that she knew I was there. "Hey," I said gently, "my name's Harlow. Are you okay?" She didn't reply, so I tried something else. "You don't have to worry about that guy," I continued. "I don't think he'll be trying anything on anyone tonight."

She blinked at me, long slow blinks, as if she was just coming back from somewhere else, and began to shiver when I reached for her. She let me take her hand and pull her behind me. The guy was still there when we rounded the corner. I must have kneed him harder than I thought because it looked like he had completely given up on trying to stop the blood flow coming from his nose and was focused on holding his family jewels. I scowled at him as I pulled the girl behind me and into the empty bathroom before slamming the door closed behind us and locking it. I turned back to her, but she wasn't looking at me.

Her pale face was turned towards the row of mirrors on one side of the bathroom and she stepped towards them, her hands gripping the short dress she wore. I began to wonder if I was too late, if the guy had already done something before I arrived. I hesitated, still standing in front of the locked bathroom door. There were voices outside after a while. Someone had found the pervert. I listened as two guys talked, asking him questions that he didn’t answer. After a while they sighed, and I listened as they hauled him up and carted him away, musing aloud about how stupid people get when they were drunk.

It was several minutes after they had left that I finally moved towards the girl as she stared at her reflection. When I stood behind her, her eyes flickered towards me before she finally spoke. "Thanks," she rasped, turning her gaze away.

"You're welcome," I replied.

Something told me not to turn around and walk out. She was fine now; the guy was gone. Still, I hesitated. Whoever had carted him away had surely made him leave the club entirely. But I couldn't force myself to leave her to what felt like a private moment. I also knew that I couldn't force her to talk. I took a breath and I moved towards the back wall where a small settee was shoved next to the furthest sink in an effort to make the bathroom look more elegant. It didn't succeed, but at least it gave me somewhere to sit while I waited.

I watched the girl stare at her own reflection. Her face was tired, though still beautiful. She looked like a watered down regal queen. No one could deny the elegance of her movements, the way the light fell across her perfectly symmetrical face. Despite that, there was a darkness in her features. She stared at herself for a long time, hands white, fists knotted. I didn’t know if she recognized that I was there or if she just didn’t care.

After her initial bout of thanks, she didn't say anything more. She moved closer to the sinks and I watched as she gripped the edge with both hands, her knuckles turning white again. As if realizing for the first time that she wore a tiny purse attached to a gold chain that was slung over her shoulder and rested over her flat chest, the girl began fumbling with the small purse, trying to get it open. I waited a few beats before offering my assistance and she managed to pry it open. Her trembling hands reached inside and retrieved an orange and white pill bottle. I frowned but didn't say anything as she yanked it out and popped it open, slapping a few of the little white pills into her mouth. She turned on the sink with jerking movements where she cupped her hands beneath the running water, and lifted it to her mouth to help her swallow.

"Why are you still here?" she finally asked, her voice sounding slightly stronger than it had earlier. "What do you want?"

I shrugged. "To make sure that you're okay."

"I'm fine."

I waited in silence before sighing. "You don't seem fine," I admitted. "I... don’t know exactly what to do in this situation, but I thought maybe you'd want to talk. So, I'm – "

"I don't want to talk," she cut me off.

Our eyes met, and I knew she was lying. Her face was pale, her hands still shaking even as she put away the suspicious pill bottle. What was I supposed to say? Could I call her out on it?

"Why are you still here?" she snapped again after a few moments more. "I told you I'm fine and I don't want to talk."

"Why don't you leave?" I countered. Her eyes narrowed, and she straightened her posture.

"Fine," she said. "I will leave." She turned to go, and I jumped up.

"No!" I called after her. "I'm sorry, you don't have to go. I'll leave. I'll let you...um...do whatever." I couldn't take away this private, safe place for her. It didn't feel right. I moved to the door despite everything inside of me telling me that I should stay. I couldn't force anything out of her if she wasn't willing. As soon as my fingers brushed the lock above the door knob, she spoke.

"He didn't..." she began. "If that's what you're thinking...he didn't do it...he hadn't gotten that far, yet."

I turned back to her and I leaned against the door with wariness in my expression. Our eyes met and held for several moments. Then, without much fanfare, she turned and moved towards the settee. I relaxed slightly when she sat down and turned to face the door. I let my shoulders sag as I leaned fully against the cold bathroom walls.

When the sniffling started I kept my gaze trained forward, sure she didn’t want me to see her with tears in her eyes. I waited patiently, knowing that if I did so, she might finally open up. I was a stranger to her. Sometimes, it was easier to tell someone you didn’t know the darkest parts of your life. It was getting easier to talk to the guys because they were becoming more important to me, but not everyone operated like I did.

“Sometimes, I can’t talk,” she finally admitted. “It’s even harder to talk around guys.” I wanted so badly to look at her, but I didn’t want her to stop talking. “I don’t know why it happens,” she continued. “I just can’t seem to open my mouth. I shut down and I go away.”

“Somewhere inside?” I asked. I had taken a beginner's human psychology course in high school. I remembered discussing coping mechanisms of people who had experienced some sort of trauma. I felt, more than saw, her nod.

“I can’t...stop myself…” Her voice lowered to a whisper. “I can’t stop anyone else. I just...want to close my eyes and pretend nothing’s happening.”

I finally chanced a glance at her and my heart squeezed at the tears on her cheeks. That red-hot rage from before barreled straight back through my chest again, making me want to both hit something and cry. I held my breath for a beat or two, hoping that it would disperse. The girl cracked when I looked at her, a rushed sob escaping from her chest. I jerked when she leaned over and shuddered as she placed her hands over her face. Her whole body shook with the burden of her grief and pain. My skin felt electrified. I wanted to touch her and comfort her; it was what I knew how to do, but if she had been...raped...I knew she wouldn’t want a stranger to touch her, right? I thought I had read that before in class. An article somewhere?

My mind drew a connection – thinking of Mr. Spencer and his stepdaughter, of everything I had talked to Marv about. This girl wasn’t acting out. She was coping, or trying to, at least. I wondered if I should mention the pills. Something told me that even though they came in a prescription bottle, they probably weren’t meant for her. If she was here, in a dance club, where guys like the perv I’d left outside the bathroom could corner her and hurt her, I wondered if she had sought any kind of professional help. I decided to ask.

“So,” I began, “am I the first person you’ve talked to about this?” She nodded, her sobbing easing minutely. “Have you thought about talking to a therapist?”

“My parents have suggested it,” she admitted, sniffing hard. “God, my mom would be so fucking pleased if I did.”

“Maybe you should,” I replied. “Talk to someone, I mean.”

"I can't," she said.

"You're talking to me," I pointed out gently.

She shook her head quickly. "No, this is different. You don't know me. If I told a therapist everything, they'd...well, the police would get involved and I can't...they can't..." Her breath came faster, and she hiccupped once before closing her mouth and breathing heavily through her nose, trying to calm herself. She was hyperventilating, I realized.

"Why would the police get involved?" I asked. "Is it because...of the person who hurt you?" I hoped I wasn't botching my attempt at being understanding and gentle. I had no clue how to comfort someone like this. I couldn't touch her, hold her, hug her. My arms hurt from trying to keep myself from doing so. That’s what I knew. This wasn't. I had no clue how to help except to just be there.

"Yes," she said. "Sort of. I–" She paused and looked at me. I think this was the first time that she actually met my gaze and I realized her eyes were the palest shade of blue. Her face was blotchy from crying, but her eyes were extraordinary – like colored diamonds set into the saddest of faces. "You're not going to tell anyone," she stated firmly. I don't know if she was trying to convince herself or if she was giving me an order. I hadn't said anything about keeping her secrets, though it was an unspoken trust she put in me and I knew that. Unless it was absolutely necessary to break that trust, I would keep them.

She took a long shaky breath and then sat back, leaning against the wall like I was, clutching her purse in her lap. "My family's rich," she said. "They're not Bill Gates rich or anything like that, but I won't have to worry about college–" She flinched before continuing. "If I even go to college, but if I do, I won't have to worry about it. We go on vacations once or twice a year. Last winter..." she paused again, closing her eyes. "I'm sorry," she said. "I can't look at you while I... while I..."

"It's okay," I assured her. "I understand."

She nodded once. "Last winter my mom sent me to this debutante prep course. She's a southern lady, born and raised – my mom. It was supposed to be this two-week course for how to eat, sit, and dance properly in front of gentlemen. It's one of those old etiquette things, you know?" She kept talking, not waiting for me to answer. My heart rate picked up the moment she said the word "etiquette" and I knew whatever she was hiding – or revealing – was important. This was too coincidental, I thought. There was no way...

"Ms. Enders' is supposed to be this elaborate camp meant to churn out debutantes and social elites. I didn't care for it, but my mom was ecstatic that I even got in. It's very difficult. I couldn't say no."

My blood turned cold and as I stared at her, all I could see were the edges of my vision turning steadily darker. I sucked in breath after breath. Her words poured into me as she kept talking.

"Everything was fine," she said. "For the first week, everything was great. The other girls were surprisingly nice. It's a smaller group in the winter course. Most girls take the summer course."

She seemed to be rambling, telling me every little detail as it came to her. She took a pause that echoed throughout the cold bathroom. The silence was stifling and overwhelming. A part of me wanted to stand up and leave. Just unlock the door and slip away and forget she ever existed. I didn't want to stay to hear what happened to her. I knew it wouldn't be good, and like a child watching a horror movie, I wanted to close my eyes and plug my ears and still pretend like the world was a safe place. My hands shook, and I squeezed them together so hard that my fingers turned pale against the dark fabric of my shorts.

“It was the last night there,” she said. “There’s always a big party on the last night. It’s supposed to be a practice cotillion because a lot of girls leave and go off to become debutantes. Those things are big with debutantes – the cotillions, I mean. Those dresses…” she trailed off, pinching her lips closed in an effort to hold back a stronger emotion. A shadow crossed over her expression and I knew it was something dark. It takes her another moment before she’s able to continue. “The dresses are to represent young women being presented into society. Ready for marriage.” She spat the last word as if it was vile and distasteful in her mouth.

I looked down at her clothes and noticed for the first time that she wasn’t wearing a speck of white. No filigree or embellishments on her dress, no pinstripes, and nothing on her heels. Everything she was wearing was dark colored and, somehow, I knew that was purposeful.

“About halfway through, I started not feeling well. They let girls have sparkling water and juices for the most part, but some of the girls that were there spiked their drinks and I had some. I thought I had just had too much. One of the guys – a couple of family members of the girls and, I don’t know, sons that were from wealthy families were invited. They escorted some of the girls. My escort took me back to my room and I fell asleep.”

“Or so I thought. I had the worst nightmare.” Her breath sped up again and this time, I reached over to take her hand. She squeezed it in hers, not bothering to look at me, and clutched at it like it was the only thing keeping her in the present. It felt good to finally be able to do something for her. “Someone came in,” she inhaled deeply, “and he undressed me. I-I couldn’t really move my legs or arms. My escort had practically had to carry me to my room. I was so limp. He just pulled down the top of my dress and slid the bottom up until I was bare.”

My eyes burned and then it was I who was squeezing her hand. I held her like my own lifeline as she did me. Two girls sitting in a dance club bathroom each holding onto the other like we were all that was left in the world. There was something beautiful in our connection in that moment as more tears sprang to her eyes and began to roll down her cheeks once more. Something beautiful...and something tragic.

“I faded,” she admitted, “I don’t remember most of it. I didn’t see his face. It was dark in my room. Usually, I would have kept it locked, but Cal – my escort – he didn’t have the key to lock it from the outside when he left. I laid there and sometimes I could feel cold hands on my thighs, around my neck...on my…” She gasped, her chest shuddering for air, and I couldn’t resist anymore. I grabbed her shoulders and jerked her towards me. She collapsed with heaving sobs against my chest, clutching at my shirt, at my hand. “I-I didn’t remember his face,” she cried. “I thought it was just a bad dream, a nightmare.” I leaned my head back and closed my eyes as I held her. “I wish it had been…”

Her last words broke my heart and scattered the pieces over the bathroom tile. I clenched my teeth so hard, my jaw hurt. My nostrils burned. My eyes watered. I needed to ask her the question hanging in my mind...there was something missing.

“How did you find out it wasn’t a dream?”

She was quiet. So quiet, I thought she wouldn’t answer. Then, in the smallest voice, she whispered, “They sent me pictures.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Alexa Riley, Claire Adams, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Bella Forrest, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Dale Mayer, Jenika Snow, Michelle Love, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Sloane Meyers, Piper Davenport, Delilah Devlin, Penny Wylder,

Random Novels

What He Reasons (What He Wants, Book Twenty-Five) by Hannah Ford

Unlawfully Yours by Ellie Danes, Tristan Vaughan

Wild for Him by Elizabeth Lennox

Alpha's Bad Boy: An Mpreg Romance (Trouble In Paradise Book 3) by Austin Bates

The Ties That Bind 2 by D. A. Young

Grudge Puck: A Hockey Romance by June Winters

SEALed (A Standalone Navy SEAL Romance) (A Savery Brother Book) by Naomi Niles

Veins of Magic (Otherworld Book 2) by Emma Hamm

Devon: House of Wilkshire ― Erotic Paranormal Dragon Shifter Romance by Kathi S. Barton

The Virgin Promise by Penny Wylder

How to Marry a Werewolf: A Claw & Courship Novella by Gail Carriger

The Billionaire's Twisted Love Book 2: Trapped by You by Rosie Praks

Stone Cursed: A Zodiac Shifters Paranormal Romance: Taurus by Lisa Carlisle

Fighting for You (Lifesworn Book 2) by Megan Derr

The Game: A Billionaire Romance by Kira Blakely

Betting the Bad Boy (Behind the Bar) by Stefanie London

Just Between Us: A Friend's to Lover's Romance by Bri Stone

The Healing Power of Sugar: The Ghost Bird Series: #9 (The Academy Ghost Bird Series) by Stone, C. L.

Two Kinds Of Truth by Lynette Creswell

Scarred (Ruthless Rebels MC #3) by Ryan Michele, Chelsea Camaron