Stain (Stain #1)(21)



He isn’t for me. I’m not for anyone. I can’t want more than what I have now because I’m too filthy. I don’t want anyone to touch me for fear of them ending up in this cesspool I’m in. With the mess all cleaned, I pick up my sketchpad and place it back on my windowsill. Climbing into bed, I draw the down comforter over my head. It’s in the sweltering heat of my blanket that I restlessly find sleep.





Chapter 7


Aylee


Monday morning creeps in slow like a fog. After getting ready, I head downstairs. Every step I take is a blistering reminder of what I did last night. No regrets. Only the subtlest hint of satisfaction. I did something I wasn’t supposed to do and I’m going to get away with it. It’s a dark, little thrill. Breakfast is waiting for me. Sarah murmurs a greeting but her eyes remain glued on the book next to her plate of pancakes. Rachel is still in her bathrobe. Singing softly, she turns in my direction with a, “Good morning, sweetheart.” The smile on her face is unrivaled. Tim must’ve paid her extra attention. I know this only because it’s routine. When he’s drunk enough to haunt my doorway and is denied access, he transfers his frustrations onto Rachel. Sometimes he’ll beat her. Other times, he’ll actually do the normal thing and show her the sort of affection a husband would a wife. Locking my bedroom door has become a necessity, and he hasn’t been bold enough to tell me to leave it unlocked at night. Not since I tried to carve the stain of his depravity out of my flesh.

He’s absent this morning. More than likely at work but I don’t really care, so long as I don’t have to deal with his presence.

“Do you want a ride to school?”

I shake my head. “I’ll just take my bike.”

She tsks. “I don’t know why you insist on riding around on that thing. You have a license. Your dad and I are willing to get you a car. A used one, but at least it’ll be more reliable than that rickety bike. Just think, you’ll actually have a place to put your bags instead of lugging them on your back and in that basket.”

It’s a lecture I’ve heard one too many times before and listening to her now, I wonder if she ever gets as tired of giving it as I get of hearing it. “I don’t need a car.” I don’t want the car to be yet another way for Tim to manipulate me. I want to give him as little control over my life as I can from now until graduation in June. I’ve been waiting. Biding my time until I finish high school. I have SATs in just a few months. That’s all I need to apply to colleges for early acceptance. Any liberal arts college, as long as it is as far away from here as possible is what I dream of. I just need to wait a little longer. “Can I head over to Mallory’s house after school?” Taking a few mouthfuls of scrambled eggs, I grab my wheat toast and come to my feet. “We have a sociology project to work on.” I look at her, waiting for an answer.

“That should be okay. Just be home in time for dinner.”

“I will.”

I’m out of the kitchen and heading toward the back patio after we say our good-byes. My school and canvas bags are waiting for me by the French doors. The bike isn’t anything special. I got it at the thrift store on Main sophomore year for twenty-five dollars. It needed a new chain and air in the tires before I could ride it. It took watching a few YouTube videos to figure out how to replace the chain and filling the tires had been a no-brainer. It’s served me pretty well so far. Setting my canvas bag inside the teal wicker basket I attached myself, I slide the straps of my backpack onto my shoulders before pulling the bike away from the side wall of the house. I use my Converse-covered toe to kick away the kickstand and slide my leg on the opposite end to hop onto the seat. Brigham High is roughly a twenty-minute ride from my house by car. It takes me ten minutes longer with the bike.

The day drags, not surprising considering it’s Monday. Getting back into the weekday flow doesn’t kick in until after lunch.

The first warning bell for fifth period rings just as I enter biology class. Walking down the aisle bisecting the twelve black-topped tables with faucets and sinks at the center of each, I head to my assigned seat in the third row on the left side of the room. Sliding my bag on to the floor next to my chair, I take the seat closest to the window. Mallory isn’t here yet but I know she won’t mind. She prefers the aisle seat anyway. According to her, it makes it easier for Mr. Hammond to check her out. She has a thing for our biology teacher. But then that could be said of most of the girls at school. I guess you could call Mr. Hammond handsome, if you are into the all-American, blue-eyed, blond-haired sort of look. It’s not my type. I don’t think I have a type. But then my mind swiftly evokes a pair of intense gray eyes and I don’t really know what it means. A frown pulls my brows together as I try to work out the implication, except the loud ring of the second warning bell accompanied by Mr. Hammond’s voice saves me from delving any deeper than I feel comfortable with.

Fifteen minutes into class and I’m wondering where Mallory is when the door opens and she walks in. In typical Mallory fashion, what she has on barely constitutes as clothes. The black and white Converse low-tops and my track-and-field sweatshirt she borrowed doesn’t cover up the fact that the micro jean shorts she’s wearing barely have enough material to cover her ass. Her thick mass of pitch-black hair falls in tousled waves around her oval face. Beauty queen beautiful with sparkling green eyes, flawless golden skin, and curves she developed in grade school; Mallory Peters is every guy’s wet dream.

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