The Breakaway (13 page)

Read The Breakaway Online

Authors: Michelle D. Argyle

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Law & Crime

BOOK: The Breakaway
9.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“I’m going to keep going unless you tell me to stop,” he said, inching his fingers up her back to her bra. He leaned in to kiss her neck, his presence closing around her like a drug. She closed her eyes and breathed him in. He could take whatever he wanted, whether she liked it or not. The question was did she want him to? She could feel in his touch how much he wanted her, maybe even needed her. His skin was warm and flushed. His lips were hot on her neck.

“You mean you’ll stop?” she asked, regretting the words the second they came out.

Moving away from her neck, he had that look in his eyes again—the one that willed her to obey him. He almost looked angry.

“I’ll stop if you ask me to, Naomi, but don’t push things around the table hoping they’ll turn out in your favor. I don’t work that way.”

“What do you mean?”

His jaw tightened. “I mean you need to stop fishing around for someone else to tell you what to do, how to feel. I know we’re keeping you here against your will, but there are still things you have control over—whether or not you let me get closer to you, for instance. I’m not going to force you to do this.”

Her breath caught in her throat. He was waiting for her to respond, and she had no idea what to say. She couldn’t wrap her mind around anything. Evelyn was crying downstairs because her father was dead. Everything felt wrong. The kiss was still fresh on her lips. His stubble had scratched her skin, tingling. Brad’s had never been that rough.

“Do you have any idea how much I’ve wanted you since the second I laid eyes on you?” he whispered, touching her face. “I’ve fought with myself for ages to keep away from you, but I think you know by now I won’t hurt you. Based on that, it shouldn’t be hard for you to decide anything.”

The solid look in his eyes intensified. He slid one bra strap down her shoulder, eyeing her hungrily. He reminded her of Brad in so many ways, it made her sick. When she stopped to think about why, she began to understand herself in ways that made her head swim.

The truth was she wanted Jesse to force her.

It was comfortable that way, familiar, just like Brad. It was the only way she knew how things worked, and as he pulled down her other bra strap she felt a small whimper of delight building in her throat. Jesse was the only solid thing she had been able to hold onto for months. She didn’t want him to go away. Still, a question burned in her mind.

“Why won’t you hurt me?” she asked. “Is it because Eric told you not to?”

“What?” He leaned away. “No, that’s not why. I don’t hurt people if I can help it. I’m not like that.”

“Then why did you kidnap me? That’s not normal, you know.” Her body stiffened, guilt sweeping through her at the sound of her words. Jesse let her go and stepped away. His warmth melted from her skin, and suddenly she wanted her shirt back on. Her eyes drifted to a stack of books on her nightstand. On the very bottom was
The Awakening,
the book her mother had tried to get her to read. It was always on the bottom, and it would stay there.

She hung her head and closed her eyes. Her mother. Her dad. Brad. Home. She would have graduated high school next week. She would have made a decision about where to go to college. She would have kissed Brad when he gave her a bouquet of roses for her birthday.

Jesse was silent. She looked up to tell him she would rather be alone, but he was already gone.

 

THAT NIGHT when she went to bed she remembered Brad as she drifted off. College applications were scattered across his bed. They crumpled beneath her shoulders when he pushed her on top of them. His fingers ran through her hair as he kissed her. It was the last time she had been in his room, the last time he had unbuttoned her shirt just as Jesse had. He didn’t get far. She muttered that Berkeley was the only college she was willing to attend and his hands froze.

“Then why am I bothering with all of this?” He pointed to the applications on the bed. “You agreed weeks ago not to go to Berkeley. You told me you were thinking about Harvard.”

“No, I said Harvard sent me an acceptance letter and that my parents would pay for the tuition if I told them about it. But there’s no way I’m going there.”

“Yeah, and there’s no way I would be accepted even if you did,” he grumbled. “Your parents went there. Mine didn’t.”

“That’s not why I was accepted!”

“I know, but I’m sure it helped.” He narrowed his eyes. “You’ll go to the college we choose together, and that won’t be Berkeley.”

Oh, she would, would she? She rolled onto her side, turning her back to him, and stared down at one of the creased applications beneath her elbow. The reason she wanted to go to Berkeley was because Brad had told her that night on the beach that it was out of the question. It was because of Damien. It had to be. Brad could tell she was interested and would do anything to keep her away from him. He wasn’t stupid.

“That’s where I want to go,” she grumbled, picking at a thread on the sheets. “You can’t change my mind.” She couldn’t believe she was being stubborn.

He grabbed her arm and pulled her to him. “I thought you would follow me anywhere. You said you would.” His eyes were jealous even then, as green and jealous as they were a month earlier at the party. Now they were getting angrier by the second.

“I’ve been thinking that maybe ... maybe ....” Her mouth was dry. She had belonged to him for so long, been
his girl
for what felt like forever. Was there more out there? Something she was missing? Somebody better?

“Maybe
what?

“Would you be mad if I said maybe we should date other people when we’re in college?” Her heart pounded. The anger in his eyes exploded and his grip on her arm tightened so much she was sure a bruise would form, but before she could pull away he slammed his fist against her cheek so fast it took her a full minute to realize what had happened. When she did, her reaction was unlike anything she had ever done before.

She left.

She stumbled off the bed, gave him a horrified glare, and marched out of his room, slamming the door behind her.

She didn’t cry until she was safely in her own bed. It wasn’t the physical pain that made her cry. It was because Brad’s anger was her fault. She had never shown defiance like that before, and it hurt that he hadn’t immediately followed after her. But she knew he would find a way to make everything better. Somehow. That was more frustrating than everything else combined.

She woke and realized she was still inside a prison with her kidnappers, sweat dripping down her chest. Brad was gone. He could never hit her again if she didn’t want him to. Then again, she missed the way he held her, the way he had come over the next morning and iced the bruise while she cried in his arms. He told her he would never hit her again, and even now a part of her believed him. But it didn’t matter if she never saw him again. The night they went to the park to capture the fog, he told her he would take her home as soon as she finished, but she had dared to stand her ground and tell him she would be fine on her own. So much for that faith in herself.

She turned to the stack of books on her nightstand, ready to turn on the lamp and lose herself in a novel. Something new caught her eye. Someone had left her a leather-bound notebook and ballpoint pen.

 

 

XIII

 

June

 

IT TOOK HER A MONTH TO OPEN THE journal. She didn’t want to write about how she had been kidnapped or how scared she had been at first. That seemed pointless. Instead she wrote about her birthday gift. They had given her an iPod. Pink. Jesse bought music for her off the Internet, all her favorite stuff from home. Maybe it was a bad idea to keep those ties to home. Maybe not.

She kept the ribbon from the package and put it in her nightstand drawer right next to
The Awakening
. She didn’t want to read it. Everything inside of her cringed at the thought of absorbing words her mother loved, but her curiosity got the better of her. Finally, she opened it and read it in one sitting. Then she read it again a week later. She didn’t know why. She wrote in her journal about how it made her think of her mother outside of an office and a courtroom. A real person.

She wrote about the dragons and her dreams.

She wrote about Jesse.

She was sure he was the one who gave her the notebook. If he ever read it, she wanted him to know she wasn’t scared of him. She just couldn’t wrap her head around opening herself to him yet. She could hardly stand writing on those stiff, white pages, the tangy smell of ink filling her nose. Every time she opened the journal and smelled it, she felt like something inside of her might break.

 

 

XIV

 

July

 

SHE ROLLED OVER IN BED AND SQUEEZED her eyes shut. Today was Brad’s birthday. Even in Colorado in an air-conditioned house, the heat was beginning to swelter just like it did in California. That always reminded her of Brad’s birthday, of humid nights in his car and ice cream after a movie. She wouldn’t have remembered his birthday if it weren’t for the calendar on her iPod.

She listened to his favorite song and waited for tears to come. They didn’t, so she stood in the shower and thought about the bonfire and her sweatshirt that smelled like fish. Brad had thrown it on his floor that night when she crawled into bed with him. His mother was a nurse and worked graveyard shifts. That was why he didn’t worry about her spending the night all the time.

“She’ll never find out,” he said when she told him it wasn’t a good idea. “She works and comes home and crashes. She never knows when I come and go. She never even looks in my room. I don’t think she’d care, anyway. Hell, we’re almost in college.” He pulled her into his strong arms and kissed her until she forgot about worrying.

Now she stared at the grout between the tiles in the shower and traced the little lines she had dug with her fingernails months ago. There were thirty-five of them. She had stopped after that because it seemed pointless to count the days. Now she counted months, and even that was starting to seem pointless. They flew by so quickly now, the days blending into one another like spilled paint until only a dark smudge covered the floor. Sleep, shower, breakfast, books, dinner, Jesse, over and over and over. Sometimes she watched a movie with the four of them downstairs, curling herself into a corner of the couch. She lost herself in another world on the television screen until the credits rolled and Eric or Evelyn asked if she wanted to go to bed.

She would be with them forever. She belonged to them.

She got out of the shower and went back to bed.

 

“YOU SHOULD read Hemingway,” Jesse said when they finished a game of pool and settled themselves on a sofa. She picked up the book she had been reading earlier.

“I’m not a big fan,” she muttered. “My teacher made us read
A Farewell to Arms
when I was a junior. I hated it.”

“You mentioned that your mom liked classics. Don’t you think you’d like them more if you gave them a try?”

“I have given them a try. I read a whole stack of them, and then all that Shakespeare, remember?”

He grinned and stretched his arms across the back of the sofa. “I just thought you should try even more. Open your mind.”

She tried to keep her jaw from dropping. “Open my mind? What do you mean by that? I read lots of classics before I came here. Stop pushing the issue.”

Nobody had ever referred to her as closed-minded before. She had an open mind. She had read what he had given her. Just because she didn’t like it didn’t mean she had a closed mind.

He shrugged, leaning over to look at the book in her lap. “I mean just that. What are you reading right now?” She attempted to hide her book from him, but he grabbed it and looked at the cover. “Fluffy fantasy again. See? You’ve already read this one three times. You could at least pick up some serious fantasy.”

She tried to grab the book from him, but he held it away from her, laughing. All of this closed-minded stuff was his way of kidding with her. That was his odd sense of humor coming into play again. She softened and let herself enjoy it. He knew which buttons to push, and he wanted to see how she would take it. She would show him.


A Farewell to Arms
,” he urged as she kept reaching for her book. “Come on. You’ll like it this time. We can talk about the parts you hate.”

“I hated the whole thing!” She laughed and leaned into him, still reaching for the book. The feel of him against her made her heart beat faster. She loved the way he smelled. She loved his freckles and red hair. She wanted to kiss him, but she didn’t know what he would do if she tried. He had only kissed her the one time. She still remembered the taste of him, and the memory made her all soft inside.

She smiled when she finally got hold of the book. He stopped laughing when she moved her mouth closer to his.

“Naomi, don’t.”

“Don’t what?” Her heart fluttered. The book fell from her fingers.

“I said don’t.” His eyes focused on hers as he touched the small of her back. He looked upset, but that only made her want to kiss him even more. He leaned closer.

“You’ve never hurt me,” she whispered. “You’ve been nicer to me than anybody ever has, even Brad.”

It was true. He had never hit her, and he had never forced her to do anything except stay in the house. His mouth opened and closed like he wanted to say something. She could tell he wanted her. She could see it in his eyes.

Other books

Hate Fuck Part Three by Ainsley Booth
Unsure by Ashe Barker
Giri by Marc Olden
Consequence by Eric Fair
Letters From Rifka by Karen Hesse