Broken World (10 page)

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Authors: Lizzy Ford,Chloe Adams

BOOK: Broken World
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“I said,” she moves closer, “you deserved to get raped. Bitch.”

Something in me snaps. I punch her. Hard. She reels, catches her balance and touches her nose. A look of horror then rage crosses her face as she sees the blood on her hand.

“I just had a nose job last year!” she screams.

“Looks like you need another one,” I snap.

Suddenly, we’re rolling on the ground, screaming and hitting. All the pent up fury inside me is free, and I wail on her then try to avoid her punches. She bites my arm and I slam my elbow into her nose again.

Caught up in the frenzy, I don’t feel people closing in until someone rips me away from her. Two members of the football team are holding her while someone has their arms wrapped around me. I struggle then stop, realizing it’s impossible.

“What is going on?” Deb demands. She looks between us.

Whoever is holding me lets go. I glance back to see Benji behind me. Jenna is a bloody mess, and I want to laugh. It’s not the right reaction. I should feel like crying, but I want to thank her for letting me release the coiled stress that’s been killing me. I feel good for the first time in weeks. Even if my eye is swelling and watering.

Neither of us answers Deb. She waits a moment longer.

“Out of here, both of you.”

I’m not about to object. I turn away. Ari and the others on the squad are all staring in shock. I grin. Ari looks at me like I’ve lost my mind.

Maybe I have. I trot back to the locker room and start to laugh. I laugh so hard, I start to cry. I’m stuck in that laughing-weeping state when Ari enters the locker room and sits beside me on the bench.

“What is …this?” she asks, baffled.

I laugh harder.

“I’ll drive you home.”

I run out of breath and start to calm. My right eye is almost swollen shut. It hurts, more so when I laugh or cry. The look on Jenna’s face is in my mind still, and it makes me want to laugh again.

“Come on,” Ari orders. She’s carrying my book bag and hers.

I stand. Wiping my eyes, I see she’s still staring at me.

“You’ve gone totally batshit crazy, girl.”

“I’m good,” I tell her.

“You started a fight! You know how much trouble you’ll get in?”

“None. Daddy will fix it.”

She rolls her eyes and marches out of the locker room. I follow. I can’t find it in me to care if I get kicked out of school. I had a good day.

No. I had a great day. Best day of school ever. I beat the crap out of Jenna and have the most popular guy in school interested in me.

“Seriously, Mia, what the hell happened?” Ari demands when we’re both in the car. “I turn around and you’re wailing on her. You don’t fight. It’s not in you. I know she’s a bitch but –”

“I don’t know, Ari. She said I deserved to get raped.”

“She did?”

“Yeah. So I punched her.”

“What a bitch. But you just … you went psycho. Don’t you have a shrink for that?”

“God that felt good.”

Ari looks at me.

“I’ve felt so angry since … you know,” I tell her. “There’s been so much just kinda sitting in me and it all just came out when she said that.”

“Kinda like stress release?”

“I think so. Yesterday I … well anyway, I’ve been angry and everyone keeps telling me I’m wrong, and everything is my fault. And I have to be good for Daddy and do what Shea says and now Molly, who’s telling me what to do. I don’t know, Ari. I guess I just … snapped,” I try to explain.

“That makes sense. I mean, I guess you need a physical way to release stress. You’re already going to counseling. Maybe you should like, go to the gym or something. I mean, if you have all this stuff inside just waiting for Jenna to insult you, maybe you could like, start working out in the morning or something instead. Or, here’s an idea,” Ari says. “What about martial arts? That way you can just go somewhere and kick someone’s ass whenever you’re stressed. Daddy made me start going when I was fourteen.”

“That’s a good idea,” I admit. Ari’s daddy is a defense security mogul. I’ve always thought him a bit paranoid for making Ari take martial arts and learn to shoot a gun. “I’m just so tired of all the pressure and feeling bad. I’m sick of feeling this way.”

“Okay, so what happened yesterday?”

“I don’t wanna talk about it.” I sigh. I’m almost relaxed for the first time in weeks.

“Um, ok. You ever think that could be the problem?”

“All I’ve done for weeks is talk. You know everything, Ari. Dr. Thompkins, Chris, my group therapy, Dom. That’s all I do is talk!” I groan.

“Did you dance with Dom Thursday? You didn’t tell me anything about that. You haven’t talked to me in like, days, Mia!”

“I told him to leave me alone,” I say.

“What? Why?”

Grudgingly, I tell her about seeing Robert at the ball. And Tanya. And the baby ward. And how Dom doesn’t hate me, but should. I don’t even get to the point about deciding to get an abortion. I’m sobbing again, and we’re parked in front of my house.

“No, shit?” she exclaims. “But Dom texted you anyway.”

I give a surprised half-laugh, half-sob. Ari giggles then starts to laugh. I don’t know why, but soon we’re both laughing.

“You’re the batshit crazy one,” I tell her, gulping down deep breaths. “Did you hear anything else I told you?”

“Yeah. I see why you snapped,” she replies.

My car door opens suddenly, and we both peer up at Chris.

“I didn’t believe you got in a fight when the administrator called to tell me.” His gaze settles on my swollen eye. “Do we need to talk?”

“No,” I say and climb out. “Bye, Ari. I’ll see you tomorrow.”

“Call me!” she orders.

I nod and close the door. The release I felt fades, and the heaviness of my world returns. I look up at Chris. He’s not happy.

“I’m just stressed out. You didn’t help by setting me up yesterday,” I say, walking up the stairs past him.

“That reminds me. Where else did you go yesterday?”

I stop. “Are you tracking my every move?”

“Robin called when you left the ward. The driver was waiting for forty-five minutes. I just wanted to make sure everything is relatively okay. It’s not like you to fight.”

“I was upset. I spent the time throwing up in the bathroom.”

Chris studies me. He’s not buying it, but I can’t bring myself to tell him about Tanya.

“Dr. Thompkins will be here in thirty minutes then you’re due at the center at six. Go get cleaned up.”

“Okay.” Relieved he’s not going to grill me, I run up the stairs and slam my door. I’m not sure how I’ll make it through my first week of school. I go to the bathroom and look in the mirror. My chest seizes. I see the same image I saw the day after I was raped.

I close my good eye and suck in a deep breath. I sink onto the floor of my bathroom, not ready to look again. I text Ari to call me when she gets home then text Dom.

Know any good jokes?

His response is quicker than normal.
None that I can repeat to a member of the opposite sex.

I smile and rest my forehead on my knees. My eye stings. I’m surprised that I want to talk to him. I don’t like to talk to anyone but Ari, but Dom is like an escape from the crushing feeling. I just don’t know what to say. Or if I can trust him. Letting him in has ended badly twice.

Letting him in means I can’t escape from the rape, from Robert Connor, from the guilt of being helpless that night and not being able to shake that helplessness. Letting him in means I lose control of the few things I can still control. I’m beginning to think I can’t escape those things anyway. Something always drags me back to that night.

I pull up the pic I took the day before at the hospital. The image of Tanya and her mother at her side make me feel ill. Her mother’s pain is on her face. I wish my mom or daddy cared enough to cry for me. Tanya is lucky not to have a family like mine.

I Google her to see how she is. There’s only one article dated today, and the rest of my world crashes. My eyes water again, but I feel too numb and cold and dead inside to cry. I don’t even feel the pain. I stare at the wall across from me. I don’t know how long I’ve been sitting in the bathroom before someone knocks.

“Mia?” It’s Chris.

“What.”

“Dr. Thompkins is here.”

“I don’t want to talk to him.”

“Mia.” He opens the door.

He takes one look at me then kneels in the doorway. There’s more than concern on his face; there’s alarm, too. The idea that my uncle actually cares about me filters through me. I realize that of everyone in the house, he’s been the only one who helped me every step of the way this summer.

“Mia, sweetie, do I need to get you to the hospital?” he asks in a hushed voice. He pushes loose hair away from my face.

I hand him my phone with the pic of Tanya.

“Who is it?” Chris asks.

“Her name is Tanya. She’s number eight. I went to see her yesterday after that fucked up trip you made me take to the natal ward,” I whisper. “They took her off life support this morning.”

Chris looks at me.

I start crying. “Why do I get to live, and she doesn’t? Why do I have to remember every day of my life?” I take my phone back and clench it, staring at the picture. “I deserve to die, Chris. That should be me in that bed, not her.”

I expect him to walk off and leave me for Dr. Thompkins to fix. Instead, Chris settles against the wall opposite me. There’s compassion in his eyes, warmth unlike any I’ve seen from him. I didn’t know Abbott-Renous knew what that was.

“It’s not your fault, Mia,” he says gently. “You don’t deserve to die.”

“I c…can’t live like this,” I stammer.

“Like what?”

“I can’t live knowing … I could’ve saved her.”

“The people who did this to you and to her are responsible for their actions, not you,” he tells me in his no-nonsense tone.

“But I know who they are!” I shout at him. “I know, but I’m a fucking coward. I didn’t want … I didn’t want to lose everything. I listened to Daddy. I did what he wanted me to. I did what was best for the family. But I can’t … I’m not Molly or Joseph or Mama. I can’t …” My throat is too tight to finish, and I sob quietly.

He says nothing for the longest time. I run out of tears. Ari tries to call, but I reject it, unable to handle anything more than sitting on the floor.

“You need to do what you feel is right, Mia,” Chris says at last. “I don’t want you to spend the rest of your life trapped in the closet or bathroom.”

I wipe my face with shaking hands. “Will you hate me, Chris?” I ask.

“Mia, I’ll never hate you.”

“Daddy will. Why won’t you?”

Chris wipes his face. “I can’t speak for my brother. However, I will support you, no matter what you choose to do. I owe you that, Mia, if not much more.”

Always careful with his words. He’s hiding something. His face is tight, and he looks worn down. He’s upset about more than me. Maybe he already knows Daddy will disown me. They both know I could bring down two families and cost Daddy an election. Yet somehow, I believe Chris when he says he’ll support me.

“Even if Daddy hates me, I don’t want to lose him. I don’t want to lose you, Chris.”

“You won’t lose me,” he promises. “I’ll handle Gerard. You forget how good I am.”

I almost smile. “Ari’s dad is afraid of you.” The man who looks like Fabio shouldn’t fear anything, but her dad has told us both he’d never tangle with Chris’s legal team.

“The DA subpoenaed you Friday. I buried him in paperwork,” Chris speaks slowly, pensive. “It’ll take him months to get to you, if he does at all.” He rubs his face again. “Mia, are you sure this is what you want to do? You won’t change your mind tomorrow?”

“I don’t know what else to do.”

“The nightmare will get worse before it gets better.
If
it gets better. You’re pitting my team against one of the best in the country. It may never get resolved, when two teams like ours are at court. It’ll be messy.”

“I just know I can’t live with her death. I won’t back out, Chris. I swear it,” I whisper.

Chris rests his head against the wall behind him. He holds my gaze for a long moment. I’m terrified, but I have to do it.

“It appears as though I submitted the wrong response to the DA. I’ll send him the appropriate one and let your father know,” he says. “Mia, this will not be easy on you.”

“I want to do the right thing.”

“Even if I can’t talk Gerard out of kicking you out of the house, if not the family? You might lose everything,” he says.

I swallow hard, but I nod. He’s quiet for another long moment.

“About this Saturday …” he says. “Molly’s fitting and what happens after.”

“I’m going to do it,” I tell him.

“Molly told me. I just want to be sure. These are two huge decisions. There’s no going back from either of them.”

“I know.”

“I’ve got to talk to Shea and Molly. We’re going to have to craft a press release for Monday. The world knows you’re pregnant. We’ll say your fight at school triggered a miscarriage,” Chris says. “Which will fix the issue of Jenna Saunders’s legal team calling to press charges for you punching her.”

I stare at him. I always thought Shea was the mastermind behind fixing issues. I had no idea so many people knew things my father didn’t. I wonder if Shea and Chris helped cover up Molly’s indiscretion, too.

“I’ll hold off contacting the DA until Monday. I have a feeling he’ll want you in his office two seconds after my call. Make it through the weekend, then we’ll deal with the next issue,” Chris says.

“Okay.”

“Once this ball is rolling, it can’t be stopped,” he warns me.

His words scare me. The idea of months or years at court – of losing my family and destroying Daddy – terrify me.

“I have to do it,” I tell him. “Is it selfish of me to hurt Daddy like this?”

“Mia, I think this is the most un-selfish thing you’ve ever done. I’m proud of you,” Chris replies, standing. “I’ve got a lot of work to do. I’ll send Dr. Thompkins home. Don’t be late for your community service. Keep things quiet until Monday. No more fights.”

I manage a small smile.

“You gonna be relatively okay?” he asks, studying me.

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