The Broken Lake (13 page)

Read The Broken Lake Online

Authors: Shelena Shorts

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Science Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #Love & Romance, #Love Stories, #Suspense Fiction, #Mystery Fiction, #Immortalism

I looked away for what seemed like forever, and when I turned back to see if it was over, Chase was still ramming his face into the floor. The guy’s eyes were swelled shut to the point that you couldn’t tell if he had passed out or not. At that point, the expressions on the faces of the crowd began to change from being impressed to somewhat concerned.

It took three guys to pull Chase off his wounded victim. I turned my head as soon as I saw the man’s bloodied face and mouth, both seeping dark, syrupy, thick blood.

“Oh, my God.” Dawn said.

I covered my eyes. “He’s missing teeth. Oh, my gosh.” I felt sick. “I can’t stay here,” I said, starting to push my way through the crowd.

“Me either,” she replied, just as grossed out. “Are you guys coming?” she asked, turning back toward Danny, Jared, and Jackson, who appeared more surprised than anything.

“No, we’re gonna wait to see Chase. We’ll be out in a minute.”

We wasted no time shoving our way through the conversing crowd. Once out in the hall, Dawn said she needed to go to the bathroom. The hall reminded me a little bit of the one where Andy held me. I cringed as visuals of a bathroom with tea-colored toilet water flashed through my brain.

I convinced her to go alone while I waited right there. I stepped back with my shoulders against the wall. The hall started to get crowded with drunken spectators filing in and out. I lowered my head, trying not to make eye contact. I couldn’t believe anyone would come to participate in or watch something like that.

After a few minutes, I started mentally cursing Dawn for taking so long when I felt my phone vibrate in my pocket.

“Wes!”

“Hey, you.” His voice could’ve melted butter.

I pressed my ear to the phone, trying to hear better. “Are you back?”

“Yes. I just landed. What’s all the noise?”

“Oh, my gosh. It’s a
fight
.”

He didn’t sound concerned, and I suppose he wouldn’t be. He was probably envisioning me at a regular arena, and surely there would be noise.

“Is it almost over?”

“Uh, yeah.” The uncertainty in my voice was enough to raise a flag.

Concerned now, he asked, “What’s wrong?”

“Nothing. It’s just that I’m ready to leave and Dawn went to the bathroom, and I’m waiting for everyone.”

“Where’s Danny? Where are you?”

I scrunched up my face. “I don’t know. Some crazy place.”

He was getting agitated now. “Where exactly?”

I didn’t even know where to begin to describe it. “I don’t know. Some club.” I didn’t want to have to explain the situation in a shout over the noise around me so I was glad when I heard my name.

Thank goodness.
“Dawn! She’s back. Okay, we’re about to leave.” I hoped the newfound tone in my voice would calm the storm I’d started within him.

“I don’t like not being there, Sophie.”

“I know. Me either.” I spoke softly and truthfully. At that point, Dawn was pulling me toward the room again. We weren’t done with the conversation, but I knew we didn’t have much time before it got louder. I squeezed in the most important issue at hand. “You’re coming over tonight, right?”

He answered assuredly, “I’m on my way.”

Dawn pulled harder on my arm. “Would you come on already? We have to find the guys. Hi, Wes,” she shouted into the phone. “I know it’s you. She’s been thinking about you all night, but she’s gotta go!”

“I’m sorry, Wes. Ignore her. I’ll see you soon.”

“Not soon enough,” was all I heard, and felt, before he hung up.

Chapter 10
 
ON EDGE
 

O
n the way home, Dawn tried to get me to take her to Jackson’s, but I refused. I was obviously annoyed. After reminding them of her probationary status, they both slumped back in their seats.

“Geez, Sophie. You sound like my mom.”

I hoped I didn’t annoy my mom that much and realized that I was being too harsh with my friends. After all, they weren’t the ones beating people’s brains out.

“Sorry.” I said, sounding sincere, but still firm. “But you’re not getting into trouble on my watch.”

My attention was divided by thoughts of the fight and trying to maneuver my way through side streets, looking for a way out. Dawn was, of course, unconcerned with our safety. I could’ve been driving her down a rat-infested, dead-end alley, and she would have still been focusing on Jackson.

Once I made it back to the highway, I let the agitation from what I’d witnessed pour out.

“I can’t believe what we just saw. I mean, it was disgusting. Don’t you think that was the most horrible thing? How can people even watch that stuff?”

Dawn spoke up quickly. “I don’t know. It was pretty gross. I agree.”

I continued my rant. “I mean who does that?”

It was quiet for a minute, but I needed some clarification. “Jackson? Is that, like, something you guys do all the time?”

Sounding much less appalled than I was, he answered, “Nah. We’ve been a few times. The first time we went, Chase got beat down. Then T took him under his wing and he’s been vicious ever since.”

“Who’s T?”

“Oh, he’s the leader.”

My hands squeezed the steering wheel as thoughts of being dragged to that falsely described boxing match resurfaced. “Well, that’ll be my last time. I’ll probably have nightmares just thinking about it.”

Dawn leaned forward. “No, you won’t. Wes will be with you.” She laughed deviously.

I rolled my eyes, but she was right, which did spark a small smile from me.

I got home around 11:30, left my terrace door unlocked, and took a shower. I felt ten notches better just getting the sweaty basement smell off of me. Eleven notches once I came back to my room and saw Wes.

I shut my door, locked it, went straight over to him and climbed onto his lap. I kissed him a hundred times all over his lips and face. He broke away only to press himself against my neck. In a secure hold, I held onto him for a long-overdue reunion.

“I missed you so much,” I whispered.

He squeezed me just a little bit tighter and whispered back, “I’m not leaving you again.”

Selfishness kicked in as I agreed that no matter what else came up, we would not be separated again, even if that meant I had to wear a lab coat and a pocket protector to the next conference. It just wasn’t worth it.

Everything else seemed trivial compared to the time I had with Wes, especially when compared to egotistical guys trying to bloody someone else up just for kicks. I was so glad Wes was different. He was so full of substance, maturity, and purpose.

“You have no idea how much I missed you,” I told him again.

“I think I’m getting a pretty good idea.”

I yawned and that prompted him to carry me to my pillow, which was just for looks. My real pillow for the night was the inside of his bicep. I curled up to my linen of preference—his T-shirt, which smelled extra fresh and clean.

“You took a shower?”

Surprised by my accusing tone, he replied, “Yeah. I’ve been on the go all day. I wanted to freshen up.”

“Please. You don’t sweat. You don’t get
un
fresh.”

“I still need a shower. I deserve one too.”

“Yes, but that meant it took you longer to get here.” Every part of me was pressed against him now. Even my toes. I felt a gentle vibration in his chest as he held in a laugh.

“Aw,” he said, “you really did miss me.” He kissed my forehead. “You mean you didn’t like the boxing?”

“Ugh. You mean fighting.”

He pulled back slowly so he could see my face in the darkness. He wanted clarification.

“Yeah, it was
fighting
. Like back alley, underground, illegal, bloody, sweaty—”

He popped upright. “You went to a fight club? Danny took you to a fight club? Why would he do that?”

Now I had no choice but to spill the beans. Actually, I was looking forward to it. I don’t think I could fully let go of the bad experience without sharing it with someone.

“Well, Chase was fighting. Only Dawn said it was a
boxing
match, and she begged me to go because she didn’t want to be the only girl, and she didn’t want Jackson to think Danny was babysitting her, plus she said Chase might get beat up and—”

He was laughing now. “Okay, okay. I get it. So were you able to see Chase get punched in the face?”

I exhaled the bottled up regret but rolled my eyes.

“What?” he asked.

“That’s the thing, it was weird. He got punched a lot, but he wasn’t fazed at all.”

“Hmm. Tough guy, huh?”

“Yeah, but it was almost like he was on something.” As soon as I said it, I remembered back to the party. His arms had needle marks and his eyes had looked like he was high for sure. “Now that I think about it, I remember needle marks on him at that party.”

“Wait a minute. What party?”

I’d forgotten to mention to Wes that I’d seen Chase before, so I filled him in on my first encounter. Wes didn’t comment, but I could tell he was thinking.

“Go on,” he said, taking note of everything I said.

“So I noticed both those things then, which only heightened the fact that I was not interested in him. And now that I think about it, his arms were covered during the fight.”

“That doesn’t mean anything.”

I shook my head. “Yeah, but you should’ve seen and heard him. He was insane. He actually laughed at the pain. Then he beat up that guy relentlessly until some guys pulled him off.” I stopped. I felt myself getting all worked up, and I didn’t like it. “I’m just never going to one of those again.”

Wes started rubbing my arm with his palm, as if warming me up, but it was calming me down. “I wish I could’ve seen your face,” he said.

“Oh I’ll show you what it looked like.”

I raised my face to demonstrate what I was sure it had looked like. It was a cross between how I imagined a person would look when a complete stranger puked on their shoes (disgust) and when someone realized they ran over someone’s dog (horror). All of those emotions bottled up into one expression. That’s what I showed him in the darkness.

“That bad, huh?”

“Yeah.”

He pulled me close, still chuckling at my horrible evening.

The next morning I woke up to my mother on the phone in the kitchen. By the time I fixed myself a bowl of cereal, I figured out she was revisiting the idea of an alarm system. Apparently, Tom had knowledge of different types and was recommending a company to her.

As soon as she hung up, I jumped right on it. “Mom, we don’t need an alarm.”

“Yes, we do,” she stated matter-of-factly.

Did I miss something?
I knew she had been throwing the idea around, but now she seemed set on it. “Did something happen that I don’t know about?”

As if I’d opened the flood gates, she shifted in her chair, looking at me head-on. “Well, I have a strange feeling I can’t shake.” That was nothing new. I kept eating. “I think I hear things at night.”

“Like what kind of things?”

“Like noises on the terrace.”

I almost coughed up my cereal. My mom’s room was on the main level, right under mine. The only noise on the terrace would be Wes coming to the second-level deck to my room. But he was too quiet for her to hear anything. Plus, if there had been any noise, other than him, he would’ve surely heard it from my room.

“It was probably just animals.”

She sipped her coffee, but still leaned intently toward me. “That’s what I thought, but last night I heard a noise outside my window, and I got up. I didn’t see anything, but I went to check all the windows and when I looked out the front, I saw a gray car drive by real slow.”

She was so intent in her description that even I started to suspect something evil. Then I snapped out of it.

“Mom, a lot of cars drive by.”

“Not at 2:30 in the morning.”

I really didn’t have anything to say after that. The only thing I was thinking about was that if my mom got an alarm, I’d be locked in at night, and Wes would be locked out. Even if we punched in the code, it would make enough noise to wake her. That thought was not how I wanted to start my day.

It put me in a grumpy mood, and I had a ton of homework to do. I had missed two online lessons with my teachers last week, so I needed to watch the recorded lessons to get caught up. It took me just a few minutes to log on and pull up the links. Still in my pajamas, I cuddled up in my chair and watched a lesson on Jonathan Swift’s essay
A Modest Proposal
.

By the time I finished reading it myself, and submitting the assignments, I was ready for a nap. I’d been on the go for a few weeks by then, and exhaustion was catching up with me.

With dragging feet, I went over to my bed and wrapped myself in my sheets. My brain was feeling funny with all the thoughts that were bouncing around. Between my mom and her alarm, Wes and the police, me and my life, and work and its drama, I was amazed that it had taken me this long to crash.

The next thing I remember was popping up, wondering how long I’d been asleep. I was supposed to go to Wes’ house around noon and was positive it was later than that. I just knew it.

I glanced at the clock—1:30. “Crap.”

I threw off the covers and reached for my cell. Quickly dialing his number, I just hoped he wasn’t too worried. I closed my eyes to block the light when I heard a familiar ringtone coming from my reading chair.

Confused, I opened my eyes again. “Wes! Holy crap.”

He was sitting right there. “Sorry. I didn’t mean to startle you.”

“I fell asleep.”

Smiling softly, he said, “I know.”

“Why didn’t you wake me?”

He moved over to the bed now. “Because I didn’t want to.”

“Because I was completely out of it?”

“That too.” His hand was on my knee.

We were both holding back smiles. I was hesitant to fully commit to mine because of my disappointment in a wasted afternoon. His hesitation was different.

“What?” I asked. “Why are you looking at me like that?”

“You are just the most perfect thing ever. Even with huge circles under your eyes.”

My hands went up to them immediately. “What kind of compliment is that?”

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