《Still Beating》 : Part 1 – Chapter 1 ¡°You¡¯re incorrigible.¡± I narrow my eyes at the man I¡¯ve deemed worthy of my most treasured insult. Incorrigible.It¡¯s a damn good word. The man in question is Dean Asher¡ªmy sister¡¯s prick of a fianc¨¦. Deanughs, seemingly unaffected by the hostility shooting from my eyes like hotsers. He must be used to it by now. ¡°What the hell does that even mean?¡± ¡°Stupid, too,¡± I say, sipping on my watered-down cocktail with one arched eyebrow. Fifteen years. Fifteengoddamnyears is the amount of time I¡¯ve been subjected to Dean¡¯s teasing, ridicule, and bad attitude. He¡¯s the stereotypical ¡®bad boy¡¯¡ªsurly, well-muscled, always reeking of cigarettes and leather. Pathetically good-looking. Asshole. My sister, Mandy, fell right into his trap. They were high school sweethearts from the start. Mandy was the epitome of poprity with her Prom Queen title, bleached blonde hair, and Abercrombie wardrobe. That was the style back in high school. I, on the other hand, was none of those things¡ªthankGod. Despite the fact that I¡¯m only ten months younger than Mandy, we could not be more different. She¡¯s athletic, bubbly, and vain. I¡¯m a bookworm who would much rather purchase adorable outfits for our family dog than for myself. Mandy is perky, and I¡¯m prickly. I could recite Shakespeare all day, where Mandy likes to quote the gossip headlines off Twitter. Even though we have our differences, our sisterly bond has strengthened over the years, and now I¡¯m preparing to be the Maid of Honor in her wedding next month. I¡¯d like to say that Mandy outgrew everything about her high school years, but, s, Dean Asher somehow made the cut as she enters her thirties. He¡¯s clung to Mandy like a disease. She just can¡¯t shake him. Ican¡¯t shake him. So, now I have the divine privilege of being Dean¡¯s sister-inw in four short weeks. Vomit. ¡°Pretty sure that¡¯s not a word.¡± I swirl the miniature straw around my ss, my eyes raising to the man staring me down with his signature smirk. His gaze is all iron and grit. I shake my head, ashamed I have to call this guy family soon. ¡°Don¡¯t make me Google it, Dean. You know I will.¡± It¡¯s Mandy¡¯s thirtieth birthday party. We¡¯re at The Broken Oar¡ªaid back bar in northern Illinois, right on theke. It¡¯s a fun ce to celebrate, despite the questionablepany. Dean takes a swig of his beer, his pale blue eyes twinkling with mischief. Andnotthe fun kind. ¡°You always were the nerdy type, Corabelle.¡± ¡°Don¡¯t call me that.¡± He winks at me and I shoot him a death re. Dean is the only person, other than my parents, to call me by my full name¡ªCorabelle. Ihatethe name. Everyone calls me Cora. Dean knows this, of course, but he¡¯s always found immense joy in tormenting me. Our banter is interrupted by the birthday girl, who is currently bringing the phrase ¡°white-girl-wasted¡± to remarkable levels. Mandy wraps her arms around both me and Dean, squeezing the three of us together in an awkward, smooshed hug. ¡°I looooove you. You¡¯re my bestest friends. I¡¯m marrying my bestest friend,¡± Mandy slurs, having inhaled at least a dozen Sex on the Beach shots at this point. She turns to me, her head falling against my shoulder. ¡°Andyou, Cora. You are going to marryyourbestest friend really, really soon.¡± I push myself free of the embrace. The smell of Mandy¡¯s overpriced perfume and Dean¡¯s whiskey breath is making me want to hurl. ¡°I¡¯m never getting married, Mandy. Divorce just isn¡¯t on my bucket list. Maybe in another life.¡± I begin to turn away, but Mandy stops me. She pokes a French-tipped finger in the middle of my chest, and I flinch back, scratching at the tickle she leaves behind. ¡°Marriage is sacred. Dean and I are never getting a divorce.¡± Possibly true. Dean seems like the type who would be content staying married, while enjoying his side-chicks along the way. And Mandy is certainly the type to turn a blind eye. ¡°A fairytale. Color me jealous.¡± ¡°Can you guystryto get along? Please?¡± Mandy begs, waving her hands around with an air of theatrics. There is an ounce of sincerity mingling with her intoxication. I sigh, my eyes darting to Dean. He¡¯s still smirking. I tap my fingers along the side of my ss as I pretend to consider Mandy¡¯s plea. ¡°I mean, I would¡­ maybe,perhaps, but¡­ how am I supposed to get over the ¡®spider in the shoe¡¯ incident? How does someone move on from something like that?¡± Dean chuckles as he chugs down his beer, clearly amused with his antics. ¡°That was gold. I¡¯ll never apologize for it.¡± ¡°See?¡± I shove my ss at him, jutting out my pinky. ¡°He¡¯s uncooperative. I tried.¡± Mandy smacks her fianc¨¦ in the chest. ¡°Dean, stop being a dick to my baby sister.¡± ¡°What? She can hold her own.¡± I re at him, and our eyes hold for just a beat. ¡°Well, he¡¯s right about something.¡± Then I storm away, swallowing thest few sips of my crummy cocktail as I approach the bar. I m the empty ss down and perch myself on a stool, eyeing the bartender. ¡°Another one, please. Make it a double.¡± I should have epted the ride home. It¡¯s a little after one A.M., and I managed to find the most boring guy in the bar to get trapped in conversation with. My intoxication is dwindling, so now I¡¯m just tired and crabby as my elbow presses against the bar counter with my head in my hand. I¡¯m staring at the idiot to my left as he thers on about being awyer, his cool car, and something about a reality TV show audition. Honestly, he lost me before he even opened his mouth. He smells like my passionfruit sugar scrub, and it¡¯sreallyunsettling. I feign a mighty yawn, forcing my head further into my palm. ¡°That¡¯s great, Seth. Really great.¡± ¡°It¡¯s Sam.¡± ¡°That¡¯s what I said.¡± I thread my fingers through my long, golden strands of hair as I lift my head and force a smile. ¡°Anyway, I should get going. It¡¯ste.¡± Seth/Sam furrows his bushy eyebrows at me, his thin lips forming into a straight line. ¡°It¡¯s not thatte. I¡¯ll buy you one more drink.¡± Nope. I¡¯ll puke. I¡¯ll definitely hurl all over his ridiculous sweater vest. ¡°No, thanks,¡± I respond, dismissing him with a quick wave. ¡°I¡¯m gonna go.¡± ¡°Do you need a ride?¡± ¡°No.¡± Actually, maybe. Mandy and Dean drove me here, and I couldn¡¯t stomach another car ride with Satan himself, so I turned down their offer to drive me home. But that¡¯s what Uber is for. I push myself off the bar stool, wobbling on my stupid high heels, and snag my purse off the counter. ¡°See ya.¡± Seth/Sam grumbles as I fling my purse strap over my shoulder and saunter outside. I¡¯ve sessfully ruined his ns for the evening, and I¡¯m pretty much okay with it. I wouldn¡¯t mind a night of drunken shenanigans and questionable decisions¡ªLord knows my vibrator is sick to death of me¡ªbut Seth/Sam lost his appeal faster than the Chicago Bears lost their shot at the Superbowl this year, which was pretty freakin¡¯ fast. Maybe I¡¯m just too picky. Mandy says I¡¯m too picky. Oh well. Looks like my vibrator is stuck with me. The cool breeze assaults my lungs when I walk along the side of the bar, my heels cking against the pavement. I tug my cardigan around my navy blue dress, trying to dilute the chill, then reach into my purse for my cell phone. I¡¯ve never actually used Uber before¡ªmaybe calling a taxi would be lessplicated. Do taxis still exist? I continue to fish through the pockets of my purse and locate my phone, but then my eyebrows crease when I realize my purse is feeling a lot lighter than usual.Huh.I shine my cell phone shlight inside to assess further and a tight knot of anxiety starts weaving itself in the pit of my stomach. Well, shit. My wallet is missing. Did that son-of-a-bitch inside take it because he knew I wouldn¡¯t close the deal? I storm back into the bar, my heart thumping like a wild stampede beneath my ribs. My credit cards, my driver¡¯s license, over one-hundred-dors in cash. Photographs, my insurance cards, passwords I¡¯ll never remember. Goddammit. I smack my hand against Seth/Sam¡¯s shoulder with a heaving chest. I don¡¯t even wait for him to turn around. ¡°Did you steal my wallet?¡± He slowly turns in his chair with a look of disgust. ¡°Excuse me?¡± ¡°My wallet is gone. You¡¯re the only person I was talking to tonight.¡± Seth/Sam huffs. ¡°Exactly. You were talking to me all night. When would I have had a chance to steal your wallet?¡± He shakes his head at me, then turns back around and reaches for his beer. ¡°Sleep it off, bitch.¡± I ignore the insult, too wrapped up in my current dilemma to p him. The dude has a point. I was literally facing him the whole time I¡¯d been sitting at the bar¡ªalbeit, half asleep and drooling on my hand¡ªbut I would have noticed him messing with my purse. In fact, my purse was perched on the bar counter, slightly behind my right shoulder. That means someonebehindme would have stolen it. Shit, shit, shit. The bar is almost empty at this point. I question the bartender who only shrugs at me, then puff my cheeks with air, blowing out a breath of frustration. I wander back outside and mentally prepare myself for begging people for rides since I¡¯m suddenly broke. I start with Mandy, already knowing she sleeps with her phone on silent. Voicemail. I try my best friend, Lily. Straight to voicemail. There¡¯s no way in hell I¡¯m calling my parents. I go through my list of contacts, attempting three more people. Voicemail, voicemail, voicemail. My thumb hovers over another name, and I scrunch up my nose and pucker my lips, dreading the mere thought. Walking seven miles home in my high heels sounds more delightful than a ten minute car ride with Dean Asher. The wind picks up, forcing my hair to take flight. The cold almost chokes me. I click on his name and immediately begin muttering profanities into the night. ¡°Corabelle?¡± I don¡¯t know if I¡¯m more annoyed or relieved that he picked up. ¡°Don¡¯t call me that.¡± ¡°Why are you drunk dialing me in the middle of the night?¡± Dean¡¯s voice is raspy,ced with sleep. I probably woke him up¡ªgood. A silver lining. I¡¯m about to exin, but he interrupts. ¡°Let me guess, you had one too many shots of Fireball and you¡¯re calling to confess your undying love. I always knew you had a thing for me.¡± I grit my teeth, regretting my decision with monumental proportion. I can feel his smirk from here. ¡°You know what? Forget it. I¡¯ll walk home.¡± I¡¯m about to end the call when Dean cuts in, ¡°Wait, wait¡ªyou need a ride? I thought you were calling an Uber.¡± ¡°Yeah, well, some jerk stole my wallet and now I don¡¯t have any money. But it doesn¡¯t matter. I¡¯d rather walk.¡± I really want to hang up on him. ¡°Don¡¯t be stupid. Your sister would kill me if I let you walk home.¡± ¡°Your empathy astounds me.¡± He chuckles. ¡°Sensitiveandgood-looking. I¡¯m a triple threat.¡± ¡°You mean a double threat. You only named two things.¡± ¡°What?¡± I pinch the bridge of my nose, searching for a semnce of self-control.Deep breath. ¡°Never mind. Just hurry up.¡± I hit the ¡®end call¡¯ button like it¡¯s my rm going off on a Sunday morning. These are the moments I wish I smoked. I debate heading back inside, but I don¡¯t have any money for drinks and I really don¡¯t want to be sucked into another riveting conversation with Seth/Sam, so I lean back against the brick building instead. Only a few minutes pass before some moron sidles up beside me asking for a light. I nce in his direction and quickly inch away. He¡¯s a balding, pot-bellied man who smells like cooked carrots. I try not to gag. ¡°I don¡¯t smoke. Sorry.¡± I continue to put distance between us, but I can feel the man leering at me from a few feet away. Ugh. ¡°Let me buy you a drink, kitten.¡± I cross my arms when I catch him staring at my cleavage. ¡°No, thank you. I¡¯m just waiting for my ride.¡± ¡°I can give you a ride,¡± he sneers, his innuendo thick and not at all subtle. Cue more gagging. ¡°Again, I¡¯ll pass. Have a nice night.¡± I never thought I¡¯d be wishing for Dean to hurry up and get here. Even that jerk face is more tolerable than John Wayne Gacy over here, boring his x-ray vision through the front of my dress. The man prattles on, making my stomach churn. ¡°You¡¯re a pretty little thing, you know.¡± Ew, ew, and more ew. The man is creeping his way into my personal bubble, and before I decide to head back inside the bar, Dean¡¯s ck Camaroes careening into the parking lot with its beast of an engine and supercharged tires. He pulls up in front of me and exits the car, tossing his keys into the air and catching them with his opposite hand. He nces at me, waiting for me to ¡®ooh and ahh¡¯ or something. So not impressed. My arms are still folded defensively as he approaches, his gaze flickering between me and Gacy. My bodynguage screamsI hate you, but my eyes are sort of pleading for him to get me out of here. ¡°Hey,¡± I mutter with little emotion. Dean frowns at the man beside me, so I turn my attention to the right and notice the creep isstillstaring at my boobs with a scious grin on his face. Dean¡¯s eyes narrow, then cut back to me. ¡°Ready? ¡®Cause I¡¯m tired as hell, and¡ª¡± ¡°She your girl?¡± Gacy interrupts, and we jerk our heads towards him simultaneously. Dean is quick to reply. Too quick. ¡°Hell, no.¡± Jesus. As if I have leprosy or syphilis or the bubonic gue. I re at him, insulted. ¡°Gee, thanks.¡± ¡°What?¡± ¡°Nothing. Let¡¯s go.¡± I stalk forward towards the passenger¡¯s side, feeling Dean close on my heels. Gacy issues us a farewell that makes my skin crawl. ¡°You two enjoy your evening.¡± I hop inside the car and m the door, locking it instantly. Dean follows suit, looking over me and out the window at the stinky carrot man. His eyes are still narrowed and thoughtful. ¡°That creep touch you?¡± I flick my gaze across Dean¡¯s face, annoyed by how attractive he is. He runs a hand over his bristled jaw, scratching at the shadow of stubble, and I catch a whiff of his musky, cedar cologne and a trace of leather. I chew my bottom lip, leaning back against the seat. ¡°No. Not like you¡¯d care,¡± I mumble, turning to look straight ahead. ¡°I care, Corabelle. You¡¯re in our wedding party¡ªcan¡¯t have you chopped into little pieces and hidden under that guy¡¯s floorboards before the big day.¡± I snap my head in his direction, catching the yful smirk on that stupid, handsome face of his. ¡°I hate you.¡± ¡°You know I¡¯m just messing with you,¡± he winks. ¡°I still hate you.¡± Dean¡¯s eyes rove over me, assessing me in some way, as he twists the key in the ignition. The engine howls to life. ¡°You know you¡¯re just opening yourself up to scary dudes when you dress like that,¡± he says off-handedly, his wrist dangling over the steering wheel as he puts the car into drive. I snort at the audacity of his im. ¡°Victim shaming,¡± I supply. ¡°You really are a catch. My sister is so lucky.¡± I blink at him, fluttering my longshes dramatically. ¡°That¡¯s not what I meant,¡± he counters. ¡°I¡¯m just saying, when you look like that, guys notice.¡± ¡°When I look like what? Are you saying I look slutty?¡± ¡°I¡¯m saying you look good.¡± Dean issues the strangepliment with such nonchnce, I almost forget who it¡¯sing from. I fidget with the hem of my dress and cross my legs, unsure of how to reply, but then I remember he was still victim shaming and he¡¯s still an ass. ¡°Yeah, well, you look like a¡­ bonehead.¡±What? A richugh mingles with the roar of the engine, and I slink back in my seat. ¡°That¡¯s the best you got? The alcohol must be getting to you. Yourebacks are suffering.¡± ¡°Shut up.¡± Dean scratches at his jaw again, ncing my way every few seconds. ¡°You¡¯re wee for the ride, by the way. And for saving your life back there.¡± I snort again. I didn¡¯t even realize I was a snorter. ¡°All you did was pull up in your macho car, looking like a tool, and imply that you found me revolting.¡± I smile sweetly at him, cing my hands over my heart. ¡°My hero.¡± He sniffs. ¡°That guy was one coquettish look away from stealing your panties for a trophy. I definitely saved your life.¡± ¡°Coquettish?¡± Dean shrugs, his focus shared between me and the road. ¡°Yeah, so? I got it from the Cora Lawson Handbook. You¡¯re basically a walking dictionary.¡± ¡°I wasn¡¯t giving that guy any ¡®coquettish¡¯ looks,¡± I argue, ignoring the jab. ¡°That was me trying not to gag on my own vomit.¡± Then I raise an eyebrow and clear my throat, adding, ¡°You should be pretty familiar with that look.¡± He tries to hide his smile, but I notice. ¡°No wonder I thought you had a thing for me.¡± Oh, jeez.I shake my head, forcing back my own smile. Dean shuffles in his seat, reaching for his cigarettes in the center console. ¡°You know, I was thinking we could squash this little tiff we¡¯ve got going on. A truce or something.¡± ¡°Little tiff? You mean the seething hatred I¡¯ve had for you for the past fifteen years?¡± ¡°Yeah, that.¡± I gawk at him. ¡°No.¡± ¡°Why not?¡± he questions, his voice muffled through his cigarette as he lights the end. The embers glow bright, a deep orange and crimson. He sneaks a peek at me when I don¡¯t answer right away. ¡°For Mandy. She wants us to be friends.¡± ¡°Unless you n on getting a personality transnt, I assure you that Hell will freeze over before I consider you my friend.¡± Dramatic, but true. ¡°Shit, Cora, I¡¯m notthatbad.¡± His statement forces me upright in my seat, my neck craning backwards in outrage. Is he being for real right now? I huff my disagreement. ¡°You called me ¡®Cor the Bore¡¯ all through high school because I¡¯d rather study than party every night. You set me up on a blind date with Stinky Steve and videotaped my reaction, then posted it on MySpace. You reenactedThe Ringthe night I watched it for the first time and scared me so bad, I actually fainted. Mandy thought I died, and she had a panic attack. I still refuse to have a TV in my room.¡± ¡°High school stuff. That was years ago,¡± Dean dismisses through hisughter. ¡°You reced my sugar jar with salt when you came by to pick up Mandy, so I had some pretty interesting coffee to start my morning.Yesterday.¡± ¡°Well¡­¡± Dean scratches his shaggy, brown hair, half-cringing, half-amused. ¡°You give it right back to me, Corabelle.¡± ¡°You call meCorabelle. You know I hate it.¡± I could go on. I could go on and on and on. I¡¯m tempted to, but it¡¯s only boiling my blood further, and I don¡¯t have the energy to fight. ¡°We¡¯ll never be friends.¡± I¡¯m looking straight ahead again, but I can see Dean gazing at me from the corner of my eye. I swear there is a hint of softness there. A small, white g, waving in the wind. ¡°That¡¯s your name.¡± ¡°My name is Cora. Corabelle is the abomination my parents gave me because they already used the pretty, normal name on their favorite child.¡± Okay.So, I¡¯m taking this to a very personal ce. I need to stop. ¡°Listen¡­¡± Dean is about to respond, but we are both distracted when shing lights pull up behind us, blinding us with their incessant strobes. He slows down, annoyance etching across his features as he stares into the rearview mirror. ¡°Dammit, Dean, what did you do? I just want to get home.¡± ¡°I didn¡¯t do shit. I was going the speed limit. My tes aren¡¯t expired.¡± He pulls over to the side of the gravel road, smacking the steering wheel with his fist. ¡°This is bullshit.¡± The cares to aplete stop and I fall back against the leather seat with a sigh of exasperation. ¡°There¡¯s probably a warrant out for your arrest. Maybe you killed someone. I¡¯m not going down for murder. I¡¯m not your aplice.¡± ¡°You think I could kill someone?¡± Well, no. ¡°Probably. But you¡¯re too dumb to do it right, so now you got caught and you¡¯re taking me down with you. This is just great.¡± ¡°Jesus.¡± Dean swings his head back and forth, scrubbing both palms over his face. ¡°No wonder you¡¯re still single.¡± Oof. I let the barb sink its teeth in me, seeping into every pocket of vulnerability. He knows my weakest link. I think he gets off on toying with my insecurities and giving them life. ¡°Screw you.¡± There is no teasing or yful banter¡ªonly animosity. Dean res at me. I re right back. And then the sound of ss smashing against the side of my face is ringing in my ear, and I let out a scream. Two meaty hands wrap around my neck through the broken passenger¡¯s side window, and I have no fucking idea what¡¯s happening, but I keep screaming on instinct, pushing my feet against the door to keep him from pulling me out as my own hands w at his arms. ¡°Cora!¡± Dean is on me, over me, punching the guy and trying to release the bastard¡¯s hold. I reach for Dean, clinging to his jacket, desperate not to leave this car, desperate not to be taken. I shout through the fear, choking and sputtering, ¡°Drive!¡± Dean is still trying to pry the hands from my neck. ¡°I don¡¯t have you!¡± ¡°Just¡­ drive!¡± My vision blurs as the fingers around my throat cling harder, but then one hand releases me and there is a moment of hope¡ªmaybe Dean hurt him, maybe Dean scared him away¡ªbut the other hand returns. It returns with a shiny piece of metal, and I think it¡¯s a gun, ohGod, I think it¡¯s a gun. More screams. They are mine, I¡¯m sure. And then the butt of that gun collides with Dean¡¯s head with a sickeningthunk. ¡°No!¡± I shout, plead,beg. Dean falls across myp like a ragdoll, and I feel myself being lifted from the seat and yanked through the window as shards of ss tear my dress and skin. ¡°Let me go!¡± A thick palm that smells like gasoline mps over my mouth, stifling my cries, and when I nce up, my eyes widen. It¡¯s him.Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. The John Wayne Gacy look-a-like from outside the bar. No. My muffled sobs slip through the cracks of his fingers, and I keep fighting as he drags me across the gravel. My legs kick and il, my nails digging into his fleshy arms until they bleed. Then I open my mouth as much as I can and bite down. Hard. The man wails in pain as blood seeps from his finger wound, and I try to make a break for it. I pull free for a moment, for just a moment, before something strikes the back of my head¡­ ¡­ and everything goes dark. : Part 1 – Chapter 2 Drip. Drip. Drip. I¡¯m dreaming. I¡¯m dreaming about the ocean. We went to Disnend when I was eight-years-old¡ªme, Mandy, Mom, and Dad. I¡¯d been so excited. I wanted to put my toes in the salty sea for as long as I could remember. We rented a car and made the drive out to the Pacific ocean one afternoon, and I can still recall the way my heart was beating inside my chest with wild abandon when the ocean came into view. I pictured Ariel and her sea sisters swimming beneath the surface. There was magic. There was beauty. And then I choked. I parked my butt in the sand and watched from afar as my sister and parents sshed and giggled and created memories I so desperately wanted to share. But I couldn¡¯t move. I was frozen to the beach, surrounded by sand castles and unfamiliar faces. The water looked so dark and ominous when I¡¯d gotten close. The vastness of the ocean had spooked me, and I was terrified that I¡¯d be swept away. And then it was time to go. ¡°Are you sure you don¡¯t want to dip your feet in? You were so excited,¡± my mother encouraged, gathering up sand toys and colorful beach towels. I swallowed hard, my eyes carefully assessing the waves rolling in. Maybe. Maybe I can do this. I pulled myself to my feet, my toes digging into the soggy sand. Then I moved towards the howling sea with timid footsteps and trembling limbs. I stopped just short of the shoreline, ncing up at the gray clouds overhead. ¡°Let¡¯s go, Cora!¡± my father shouted from a distance. ¡°It¡¯s about to rain.¡± Wait, wait, no¡­ I¡¯m almost there. I just need one more minute. I sucked in a deep, courage-filled breath and continued my sluggish trek forward. That¡¯s when the rain started. I watched the droplets pelt the ocean, water mixing with water. My dream washing away before my eyes. Drip. Drip. Drip. It starteding down fast and furious. I tried to make a run for it, but a strong hand wrapped around my upper arm, pulling me back. ¡°Time to go, Corabelle. There¡¯s a bad storming in.¡± I gulped, my eyes filling with tears as my father pulled me away. I never did feel the way the water sshed at my ankles. I never felt the seaweed tickle my toes. My father promised we¡¯d go back the next day, but we never did. To this day, I still haven¡¯t been back. Drip. Drip. Drip. My eyes flutter open, the steady drips tearing me away from a dream that may forever haunt me. But it¡¯s not rain I hear. And I¡¯m not lying in my warm bed, preparing for a new day in the ssroom teaching high school English. I¡¯m somewhere else. I¡¯m somewhere cold and dark and frightening. There¡¯s a dull ache throbbing at the back of my skull, and I try to bring my fingertips to the source of the pain. It¡¯s then I realize that my wrists are chained together behind my back, shackled and bound like an animal. Oh, my God. My eyes shoot open, wide and alert.Petrified. I rattle my chains that are attached to handcuffs, trying to gather my bearings, trying to remember how the hell I got here. It¡¯s dark, but it¡¯s not too dark. My eyes just haven¡¯t adjusted to my surroundings yet. I blink rapidly, scanning the room I¡¯ve been imprisoned in. I¡¯m in some kind of chamber or cell. Maybe a basement. I squint my eyes, noting a small, narrow window across from me with the faintest trace of light. Sunrise is peeking through my new nightmare, confirming that I am, indeed, awake. That¡¯s when I hear it. A deep, throaty groan. I twist my neck through the pain and discover Dean Asher chained to the opposite corner of the cement room in the same position, his head lolling back and forth as he brings himself back to reality. I don¡¯t know if there is a sense of dramatic irony in the fact that I¡¯ve been taken captive with the one person in the world I hate most, or if there is a semnce of relief in the realization that I am not alone in this. ¡°Dean.¡± My voice is hoarse and weak, hardly a whisper fracturing the heady silence that envelopes us. I watch as Dean lifts his head and it falls back against a hard post, prompting another moan. ¡°Dean,¡± I repeat¡ªthis time a little louder. ¡°Where the hell am I,¡± he croaks out, but it¡¯s more of a statement than a question. It¡¯s a demand. I can see his eyes narrow at me through the hazy darkness, questioning my existence, questioning if his mind is ying tricks on him, questioningeverything. ¡°Cora?¡± ¡°Dean.¡± His name squeaks out through parched lips. I feel tears begin to bite at my eyes as the fear swells in my gut. I feel nauseated. Hollowed out. I start yanking at my restraints, pulling and tugging, shaking the shackles against a steel pipe. Dean follows my lead and does the same, shouting for help and nking his manacles as I scream at the top of my lungs.Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. ¡°What the fuck is this? Where are we?¡± Dean is out of breath, his questions heaving out of him with frantic desperation. ¡°Are you hurt?¡± I think I should be surprised that my well-being is at the forefront of his concerns, but I¡¯m too overwhelmed with terror and anguish to ponder it. I swallow hard. ¡°My head¡­¡± It¡¯s all I can manage before more tears well in my eyes and I¡¯m too choked up to say anything else. ¡°Yeah, me too.¡± I try to pull myself together, sucking frazzled breaths in through clenched teeth. I feel a panic attack edging its way through me, but I can¡¯t let it take over. I¡¯ll panic when hope is lost¡ªwhen everything else has failed, death is imminent, and all options have been exhausted. Right now, I need to stay focused. Level-headed. I need to get us out of here. I watch as Dean rises to his feet, his hands cuffed behind him and chained to his own pipe. Metal screeches against metal as he stands, then he ms the cuffs against the steel with all his strength, over and over again. ¡°Someone, help! Get us fucking out of here!¡± he bellows, his voice echoing through the dank basement, mingling with the nking chains. I lean the side of my head against the wall beside me. ¡°What do you think he wants with us?¡± Dean continues to cause a ruckus, loud and shrill. ¡°Don¡¯t know. Don¡¯t want to know.¡±Ding, ding, ding. nk, nk, nk.¡°I¡¯ll fucking kill you, motherfucker!¡± he shouts. ¡°He knows you can¡¯t kill him. You¡¯re chained to a pipe.¡± Dean ceases his efforts to re at me from across the cer. ¡°So, what, I¡¯m supposed to just give up and rot down here? Not a chance.¡±nk, nk, nk.¡°Help!¡± ¡°Do you think he wants you or me?¡± I can hear Dean¡¯s heavy breaths huffing and puffing from a few feet away. He hesitates before responding, a low hum skimming his lips. ¡°You.¡± God. I close my eyes, forcing back a new wave of tears. A few drops slip through, sliding down my bruised cheeks and stalling at the edge of my jaw. I wipe them away with my shoulder. ¡°I guess you¡¯re the lucky one.¡± ¡°Theluckyone? I¡¯m chained to a fucking wall in a psychopath¡¯s basement. At least you hold some kind of value. I¡¯m a dead man.¡± ¡°I¡¯d rather die than be ofvalueto that sicko. You know what that means, right?¡± I curl my legs to my chest, bile gliding up my throat at the mere thought. ¡°He¡¯s going to rape me.¡± A silence settles between us because, honestly, what is there to say? Nothing. Absolutely nothing. We both know what¡¯s on the agenda for me and there¡¯s nothing either one of us can do about it. Why he kidnapped Dean, I¡¯m unsure¡ªmaybe because he saw the creep¡¯s face? A bitter anger seeps to the surface and I expel it the only way I know how. ¡°I can¡¯t believe I¡¯m going to die down here with you of all people. The Powers That Be must really hate me.¡± ¡°Seriously?¡± Dean is quick to bite back. ¡°We¡¯re probably going to be gutted and sodomized, and you¡¯re holding onto a high school grudge? Jesus, Cora.¡± I try to bnce myself on my high heels with wobbly ankles and pull myself up, sliding my chains up the pipe. My knees are shaking, and I almost copse back down to the rubble. ¡°Why didn¡¯t you drive? I told you to drive.¡± The rising sun continues to spill more light into our hellhole, illuminating the look of outrage on Dean¡¯s face. I look away, my jaw tight. ¡°Are you saying this is my fault? I was trying to save you.¡± ¡°If you would have just stepped on the gas, he would have let me go, and we¡¯d be safe and warm in our own beds right now.¡± My resentment is spewing out of me, and maybe Dean doesn¡¯t deserve it, but it¡¯s easier this way. It¡¯s easier than epting the reality of our situation. I can see him shaking his head at me, clearly insulted. ¡°You¡¯re really something else, Corabelle.¡± I expect him to go on. I want him to say more. I wish he would take the bait and funnel his own fear and frustrations into petty rage and throw it right back at me.Give me all you got, Dean. But that¡¯s it. That¡¯s all he says, and I feel hollow again. I slide back down to my butt, the weight of my body, the weight ofall of it, unable to hold me upright any longer. Dean sits down a few momentster, his legs sprawled out in front of him, leaning back against the pole with closed eyes. My own eyelids feel dry and brittle, almost acidic¡ªlike lemon peels. It hurts to blink. Silence dances between us for a long time. The sun is up, shining its happy, brilliant rays into our dungeon, bringing to light the harrowing truth of our circumstances. I almost wish for the darkness. Most things can be masked in the dark. My chin is to my chest when a door creaks open and bulky boots pound the stairsteps, one at a time. Thunk. Thunk. Thunk. I jerk my head up and nce at Dean, who is looking at me with a simr uneasy expression. Our eyes hold tight as we both rise to our feet once more. ¡°My pets are awake,¡± the man deres when he appears at the base of the staircase. His belly is protruding from the too-short hem of his t-shirt and splotches of sweat stain his armpits. Vomit swirls in the pit of my stomach and I want to wretch. ¡°What the hell do you want?¡± Deanmands, nking his cuffs against the pole. ¡°I have money. I can wire you everything in my ount.¡± The short, stubby man gargles hisughter, then coughs until he¡¯s bending over and wheezing. When he regains hisposure, he straightens and approaches us. His beady eyes hardly spare Dean a swift nce before he¡¯s focused on me. That same leering look from the night before is stered on his face as he drinks me in, toes to top. His gaze settles on my cleavage, and I try to shift my shoulders to cover myself in some way, but my efforts are fruitless. I¡¯m only making the swell of breasts jiggle and I think it¡¯s turning him on. I inch my way backwards, as if I have somewhere to go¡ªsomewhere to hide. ¡°We¡¯re going to have a lot of fun together, kitten,¡± he says to me, puckering his lips like a kiss and making a revolting purring sound. I feel my resolve crumbling. My heart is racing beneath my ribcage, trying to make a break for it, and I have to tell it to calm down.There¡¯s nowhere to run. Dean starts beating his chains again, trying to distract the disgusting pig who is undressing me with his soulless, gray eyes. ¡°This is stupid, man. We both have families. Jobs. Friends. They¡¯re going to start looking for us¡ªyou¡¯ll never get away with this.¡± More gurgledughter erupts from the man, but he doesn¡¯t even look Dean¡¯s way. He¡¯s still eyeing my breasts, his tongue poking out to wet his thin lips. ¡°Tessie Evans and her clown of a stepbrother said the same dumb shit to me,¡± he says, pacing forward. Getting closer. ¡°Their flesh ispost out in my barn. Their bones make good chew toys for the dogs.¡± I scream. I scream and scream and scream, blinded by tears, shaking with terror. ¡°Please don¡¯t do this. I don¡¯t want to die,¡± I force out, kicking my legs at the man as he closes in on me. ¡°No, no, no. Please.¡± ¡°Fuck!¡± Dean shouts from across the room, still going ballistic on his chains, as if that will somehow help. As if that will get us out of this mess. ¡°Save the fight forter, big boy,¡± the man hollers over to Dean, his focus pinned on me. I can feel his foul breath skim my face. He smells like cooked carrots and gasoline mixed with rancid body odor. I squeeze my eyes tight, my shoulders bobbing up and down in time with my sobs. He leans in, further and further¡­ ¡°Gimme a few hours, kitten, and I¡¯ll show you a good time,¡± he mutters with a wink, his nose almost grazing mine. ¡°I have to go make a car disappear first.¡± Oh, God. He steps backwards, cutting his eyes between me and Dean, then whirls around with a whistle and disappears up the staircase. I fall to the ground¡ªhard, crying and trembling. There¡¯s no doubt in my mind he¡¯s going to kill us. He¡¯s going to have his fun first, and then he¡¯s going to slit our throats and feed our bodies to his dogs. ¡°Goddammit. God-fucking-dammit. Jesus fucking Christ.¡± Dean is chanting away beside me, pacing the few steps he¡¯s allowed to pace, then starts pulling forward against the pole, hoping to somehow break free. He tugs and strains through angry growls, and I¡¯m actually worried his hands might separate from his wrists. ¡°It¡¯s no use,¡± I say quietly, my head propped up against the metal post that binds me to this nightmare. This prison. ¡°We¡¯re trapped.¡± ¡°I¡¯m not giving up.¡± I watch him through blurry eyes as he continues his unproductive efforts, groaning and cursing the entire time. ¡°You¡¯re going to hurt yourself.¡± Tug. Twist. Shout. Swear. ¡°I¡¯m sure the thought alone devastates you,¡± he grumbles. I close my eyes as more tears leak out, and I suck in a shaky sigh. ¡°Do you think anybody¡¯s looking for us yet?¡± I wonder out loud, not really expecting an answer¡ªthere¡¯s no way to know. Dean eventually stalls his escape attempts, a sheen of sweat reflecting off his face from the morning light. He looks at me, and our eyes stay locked for a few beats, the raw truth of our predicament spearing us right in the gut. Looking for us. We¡¯re going to be the product of search parties and canine trackers and news reports and gruesome documentaries on Investigation Discovery. Me and Dean Asher. Dean inhales with a shudder, leaning his shoulder against the pole. ¡°You know, I used to joke that we¡¯d probably end up killing each other one day,¡± he murmurs, kicking at a small rock near his sneaker. ¡°I guess I always had a feeling we¡¯d go together.¡± I know he¡¯s trying to make light of our ordeal, but his words sucker-punch me. They knock the wind from my lungs until I can¡¯t breathe.I can¡¯t breathe. I sit there on the cold, hard floor, quietly crying until my tear ducts dry up and I¡¯m too exhausted, too weak, to even move. Dean starts to sing. I¡¯ve always known he could sing pretty well from family karaoke nights at my parent¡¯s house over thest decade. I¡¯d sit on the couch with crossed arms and stony eyes, annoyed by the sound of his rich, gravelly voice. Mandy would swoon. My parents would stare at him with their proud, beaming faces. Even the goddamn dog would watch in adoration, her tail wagging with each perfectly-pitched note. Then everyone would p, except for me, and Dean would take a bow, asionally shooting a smarmy wink in my direction. I¡¯d stick my tongue out or flip him off, brimming with contempt. Mandy would jab me in the ribs with her elbow, and sometimes my mother would scold me for being rude. Ha! Rude. Wrapping my entire car in stic before a life-changing job interview is fucking rude. I try to ignore the sound of his voice and close my eyes, but I find the raspy melodies to be oddly calming. He¡¯s singing one of my favorite songs¡ªHey Judeby The Beatles. And somehow, despite the fear and uncertainty, despite the gravel digging into my thighs and the terror digging into my heart, I manage to fall asleep. : Part 1 – Chapter 3 ¡°Wakey, wakey.¡± I jolt awake, thinking that for one exquisite moment, it was all a dream. A sick, horrible dream. But the man is looming over me with breath that now reeks of tobo and dirty socks, and his lips are curled up into a grotesque smirk. I¡¯m definitely in a nightmare, but it¡¯s not one I¡¯ll be waking up from any time soon¡ªand it¡¯s only just begun. I slither back on the cool cement, the soles of my heels scuffing against the floor. I try to twist my way around the pole, as if he won¡¯t be able to reach me somehow, but he yanks me by the hair and pulls me up to my feet. I shriek in protest, my scalp burning. ¡°Get the fuck away from her,¡± Dean shouts from the opposite corner. I use the temporary distraction to knee the motherfucker in the balls. If I¡¯m going down, I¡¯m going down swinging. The man howls in pain and releases my hair, then ps me hard across the jaw with the back of his hand. The pain radiates through my entire head, and it feels like my brain might start oozing out of my ears. ¡°Silly little cunt,¡± the man barks, then spits at my face. His saliva dribbles down my cheek and I almost puke.Text property ? N?vel(D)ra/ma.Org. ¡°You¡¯re a feisty little kitten, aren¡¯t you?¡± he continues, plucking my chin between his fingers and forcing me to look at him. I return the gesture and spit right back at him, watching it hit him in the eye. Then I brace myself for the inevitable punishment to follow. The man freezes for a solid five seconds,pletely blindsided by my actions. He wipes the spit from his eye, gawking at me, his expression unreadable. And then heughs. He doubles overughing, his voice squeaking and breaking, his butterball hands sped around his knees. I nce over at Dean, who¡¯s watching the scene with cautious interest, a frown etched between his eyes and his arms still tugging at his restraints. ¡°Kitten likes to y.¡± The man lunges at me, tearing my dress straight down the middle. God, no. ¡°You¡¯ve been waiting to y with Earl, haven¡¯t you?¡± he goads, his slimy hands palming my newly exposed breasts sheathed in a turquoisece bra. Earl. The bastard¡¯s name is Earl. My head falls to the side, my gaze catching Dean¡¯s. He¡¯s watching in horror, helpless, as Earl fondles me like I¡¯m a fucking science project. Earl is going to rape me. I¡¯m about to get raped, right here, right now, with Dean Asher as my audience. Nausea swells and swirls inside me, and I force it back, tears trickling from my eyes. ¡°Please don¡¯t do this,¡± I whimper, trying to il my legs to kick him away. Earl forces his huge, obese body against me, pinning me to the pole so I don¡¯t move, his hands tweaking my nipples through thece. ¡°Such a pretty kitten¡­¡± he murmurs, practically drooling all over my cleavage. Dean starts growling again, mming his chains against the pipe with immense force. ¡°I swear to God I will kill you if you fucking touch her. I will find a way out of this, and I will put your fat ass in theground.¡± Earl chuckles, but doesn¡¯t look up. He¡¯s too focused on my breasts, as he leans down and jabs his thick tongue between them. I cry out, squirming back and forth, stomping my stiletto heels against his boots. They hardly make a dent. Nothing is going to stop this from happening. I¡¯ve never felt so helpless. Earl¡¯s hands reach beneath the hem of my torn cocktail dress, sliding up my thighs. I squeeze them together, trying to resist him, trying so hard to fight back. ¡°I bet my pretty kitten has a pretty pussy,¡± he whispers against my ear, his breath curdling my stomach. I whack my chains around, stomp my feet, twist and writhe and scream until my lungs physically ache. ¡°Please,¡± I beg. ¡°Let us go. We won¡¯t tell anyone, I swear. Just let us go¡­¡± My God, I sound like a terribly scripted crime TV show. I always thought I¡¯d be more creative if I found myself in harm¡¯s way. More convincing. But there is no reasoning with this man. There¡¯s no bond I can form with him, no carefully established connection I can fake. My instincts tell me he is too far gone. He has no conscience¡ªno soul. No trace of sympathy I can try to manipte. Earl tugs the panties from my hips until they fall at my ankles. My entire body tenses up, doing everything it can to resist the vile act that¡¯s about to ur. Dean is still protesting beside me, screaming and yelling colorful obscenities and idle threats. They fall on deaf ears. Earl pays him no mind. My eyes make their way back to Dean as everything else starts to fade out. I put up a wall, like a defense mechanism¡ªa mental block. Ipletely zone out, staring at Dean, who is trying so hard to lunge at us as Earl assaults me in the worst possible away. ¡°Look at me, Cora. Keep your eyes on me. Listen to my voice,¡± Dean orders, doing everything he can to maintain my attention. To distract me from the fact that I¡¯m being defiled right before his eyes. ¡°We¡¯re going to get out of here, you hear me? I¡¯m going to get us out of here. Just focus on me. I¡¯m the only thing that¡¯s real right now. It¡¯s just you and me, Cora. Focus, okay? Look at me¡­ focus on my voice¡­¡± Dean¡¯s voice starts to dissolve, my entire mind shutting down and turning to fog. I keep my eyes on him, his movements wayward and clipped. His mouth is still moving, but I can no longer distinguish his words¡ªeverything is murky. Confusing. I think I¡¯m underwater, sinking, drowning, fading away¡­ I think the ocean has finally found me. I think I like it here. Drip. Drip. Drip. I listen to the steady drips from a leaky pipe as I lie sprawled out on the hard floor. My head is resting against the stone wall to my left, my legs syed out in front of me. Seventeen minutes and twenty-two seconds. That¡¯s how much time has gone by since I was desecrated. Used up and tossed to the ground like a piece of trash. I¡¯ve been counting the seconds as they tick by in perfect time with the drips. ¡°Cora.¡± Dean¡¯s voice interweaves with the steady drops, and I blink slow, my gaze fixated on absolutely nothing. ¡°Cora.¡± Drip. Drip. Drip. I don¡¯t move. I force myself to breathe, just so I can stay alive. ¡°Talk to me, Corabelle.¡± What am I supposed to say? Dean knows exactly what happened. He had a front row seat to the y-by-y. I finally work up the strength to pull my head upright, and I stare at the foot of the staircase on the far side of the room. I¡¯m dreading the moment those clunky, ck boots reappear¡ªa prelude to a new set of horrors. ¡°Are you okay?¡± This finally grabs my attention and I force my eyes to the right. Dean is leaning back against his pole, fully facing me, his arms locked behind him. My gaze works its way up from his heather gray running shoes to the mess of tousled, dark brown hair atop his head. It¡¯s starting to curl just below his ears. I remember Mandyining that his hair was getting too long and she was about to trim it herself. I swallow. ¡°I¡¯m fine.¡± I¡¯m usually a terrible liar, so I¡¯m impressed with how honest that sounded. It¡¯s not the truth, of course. It¡¯s the greatest lie I¡¯ve ever told. Dean is fully aware of this. ¡°You¡¯re not fine. You can talk to me.¡± An eyebrow raises on instinct as myzy stare continues to assess him. His jacket was removed at some point, so he¡¯s only wearing a baby blue t-shirt that matches his eyes and faded jeans. ¡°I can talk to you?¡± I release a grating chuckle. My throat feels raw from all the pointless screaming I¡¯ve been doing. ¡°Because we¡¯re such good friends, right?¡± I take in the way his eyebrows pull together, a look of indignation scrawled across his face. ¡°I¡¯m the only friend you¡¯ve got right now,¡± he says tightly. ¡°I¡¯d rather be alone.¡± Another magnificent lie. I don¡¯t want to be alone. But Dean is here, and I don¡¯t particrly like him, so I¡¯m going to take all of my fear and trauma out on him. It¡¯s the only sense of control I have right now. It¡¯s my only power. ¡°Listen,¡± Dean continues, his voice low and splintered. ¡°I know we¡¯ve had our issues, but we need to work together. Once we get the hell out of here, you can go back to hating me, but this is life and death, Corabelle. Get over this fucking resentment you have with me and let¡¯s put our heads together.¡± ¡°Don¡¯t call me that.¡± I pull my eyes away, dipping my chin. A scathingugh fills my ears. ¡°Of course that¡¯s the thing you focus on.¡± I can see him shaking his head out of the corner of my eye, then he ms his cuffs against the pole, and I jump in ce. ¡°You woke me up in the middle of the night toe pick your ass up, after we alreadyoffered you a ride home. But I came anyway, because believe it or not, Cora, I do fucking care about you. We¡¯re going to be family.¡± Tears rim my eyes at his words. Funny¡ªI didn¡¯t think I had any left. ¡°I picked you up at almost two in the fucking morning, and I end up here. Chained to a goddamn post, waiting for whatever that asshole has in store for us. And now you¡¯re giving me attitude?¡± ¡°I was justraped!¡± I seethe through gritted teeth, my voice cracking as it rises in pitch. ¡°Raped by that disgustingpig. Do you have any idea what that¡¯s like?¡± My own derisiveugh slips through as I swing my head to the side. ¡°I can¡¯t deal with you right now.¡± He¡¯s quiet for a moment, absorbing my words, and then, ¡°I told you¡ªyou can talk to me.¡± ¡°I don¡¯t want to talk to you! I don¡¯t like you!¡± ¡°Fine!¡± Dean smacks his chains with a grunt of frustration. ¡°Fucking hell. I¡¯m only trying to help.¡± I sniff back my tears before they break free. ¡°Maybe if you started helping fifteen years ago¡ªstartedcaringabout me like you im you do¡ªI¡¯d be more inclined to open up. But all you¡¯ve ever done is tease me, hurt me, and tear me down. I have no reason to trust you right now.¡± My chest is heaving up and down, burning and stinging, as my anguish mingles with so many years of bottled up bitterness. Dean considers my reply for a long time. The only sounds permeating the space between us are our intermingled breaths and the dripping pipe. Then he scuffs the sole of his shoe against the dusty floor and regards me from the other side of the room. ¡°It¡¯s always been our thing,¡± he murmurs. ¡°I give you shit and you give me shit.¡± ¡°I never had a choice,¡± I counter. ¡°I¡¯m programmed to defend myself around you. My sword is always drawn, ready to fight.¡± ¡°Because it¡¯s fun.¡± ¡°It¡¯s not fun. You wereterribleto me.¡± I spare him a poignant nce, taking in the way his eyes dance away from me. Dean scuffs his shoe again, forward and back, and the faint noise of sole against grit sounds so loud in this empty room. It¡¯s jarring. ¡°I was an ass back then,¡± he finally responds, still looking off to the side. ¡°I was a stupid teenager. But it¡¯s not like that anymore. I mess with you because you give it back just as good, and it¡¯s harmless, and it¡¯sus.¡± Dean nces my way with his piercing blue eyes. ¡°You can¡¯t tell me you don¡¯t enjoy our pranks and our banter and all the dumb shit we do to each other.¡± My reply is quick. ¡°I don¡¯t.¡± ¡°You¡¯re lying.¡± ¡°I¡¯m not lying, Dean. I don¡¯t enjoy getting picked on. I don¡¯t enjoy always having to be on high alert around you, wondering what ¡®dumb shit¡¯ you¡¯re going to pull on me.¡± I pause for effect, simmering on my final words. ¡°Or wondering how you¡¯re going to sabotage my next rtionship.¡± His eyes flicker with something I can¡¯t exactly pinpoint. It¡¯s not guilt or remorse. It¡¯s not enjoyment either. ¡°Whatever.¡± My eyebrows pull up, expecting more than a brush off. ¡°That¡¯s it? That¡¯s all you have to say for the role you yed in ending my four-year rtionship?¡± ¡°Yeah. Whatever.¡± I can feel the mes spreading up my chest like wildfire, lighting up my neck, my ears, my tongue. ¡°You¡¯re a fucking jerk.¡± I twist my body to the left, trying to get as far away from Dean Asher as I possibly can. I curl my body up towards the wall and retreat into the confinements of my own mental prison. I hear him let out a sigh from behind me, and I¡¯m not sure what it means. Then he mutters under his breath, ¡°I¡¯m the only jerk you¡¯ve got.¡± I was wrong. I¡¯d rather be alone. I¡¯m not sure how much time passes, but the sun looks like it¡¯s setting in the sky as an ambient orange glow prates the dusty window above us. I envision myself breaking free of the handcuffs and climbing the wall, punching the window with a determined fist and squeezing out through the narrow opening. I¡¯ll run free, not even caring where I end up. Anywhere is better than here. Dean and I have not spoken since our argument, which must have been a few hours ago. He fell asleep shortly after, his back to the pole and his head against his shoulder. He looks peaceful, and I catch myself staring at him every now and then. I¡¯m jealous that he¡¯s somewhere else right now. I haven¡¯t been able to fall back to sleep¡ªevery time I close my eyes, I can smell my captor¡¯s nasty breath against my cheek as he humiliates me. I also really have to pee, and I¡¯m not sure what to do about it. Are we supposed to just soil ourselves down here? Is getting chained up like animals, raped and tortured, not good enough for that sick bastard? I squeeze my thighs together, knowing I won¡¯t have any choice but to let it out soon. The apples of my cheeks burn just thinking about it. I thought I¡¯d be hungrier by now, but the hollow hole in my stomach just makes me feel queasy instead.What I wouldn¡¯t give to chug a ss of water, though¡­ I daydream about guzzling down ice cold water and it makes my dder tickle. I suck in a deep, calming breath. And then the basement door swings open and those dirty, steel-toed bootse stomping towards us. It¡¯s enough to wake Dean from his slumber, as I hear his chains jangling behind me. I contort myself further into the corner, cowering from whatever horrors are about to unfold. ¡°Potty break,¡± Earl announces, hiking his khaki pants up over his swollen belly. I sit up straight as a tingle of hope sweeps through me. My dder starts doing a happy dance, which isn¡¯t exactly a good thing, considering I¡¯m about to burst. ¡°You¡¯re letting us use the bathroom?¡± I scoot my butt around the pole so I can make eye contact with Dean, who is already standing. His eyes flicker my way, then dart back to Earl. ¡°One at a time. No tricks or I¡¯ll shove my pistol down your throat and watch you paint my walls red.¡± Earl pulls a gun out from behind his back and waves it around for emphasis. ¡°Don¡¯t want you doing your business all over my floor. Smells bad and takes me out of the moment, you know?¡± The moment? Jesus. Our pain and terror is amomentfor him. But I don¡¯t show my disgust for fear he¡¯ll change his mind. I nod my head and inch my way to my feet, my legs weak and shaky as they try to support my weight. ¡°Thank you.¡± Earl unleashes a roar ofughter as he advances on me, tucking the gun back into the hem of his trousers. ¡°Don¡¯t thank me, kitten. You¡¯re still going to die.¡± My gaze shoots to Dean. I¡¯m certain my skin has turned ghostlike and my green eyes have dimmed to gray. He stares back at me, looking equally hopeless, equally distraught, as his eyelids flutter closed and a hard swallow bobs in his throat. Earl mors over me, unfastening my restraints with boorish grunts. I can¡¯t help but contemte an escape attempt. Maybe if I can get the upper hand somehow, grab his gun or steal a sharp object from the bathroom, I can overpower him. But as soon as the thought skips across my mind, the barrel of the gun is pointed at my temple when my cuffs fall loose. The cuffs are attached to chains, which are secured to metal rings in the wall, and they echo through the cer when they hit the cement. ¡°Try anything dumb and you can say goodbye to that pretty little head of yours.¡± Earl jabs the gun against the side of my face as I massage my chafed wrists. I tug my torn dress together to shield my breasts, hugging myself tight. ¡°I won¡¯t.¡± ¡°Good. Maybe you¡¯ll be easily trained, after all.¡± Earl looks at Dean, who is watching us with skepticism and a tense jaw. ¡°You¡¯re next, handsome. Don¡¯t worry.¡± Dean and I lock eyes before I¡¯m pushed forward by a husky hand, and I almost trip on my stilettos. ¡°Cora¡­¡± I nce over my shoulder before I reach the steps. Dean is pulling at his chains like he¡¯s trying to reach me somehow. His eyes are swimming with worry and unease. It¡¯s the same look I saw earlier when he was talking me through the worst moment of my life, trying tofort me in the only way he could. I bite down on my bottom lip as our eyes hold for another beat. Then the cold gun collides with the center of my back, ushering me up the staircase. I can¡¯t help but mull over Dean¡¯s words as I¡¯m guided through the small house with olive green carpet and outdated walls. Believe it or not, Cora, I do fucking care about you. : Part 1 – Chapter 4 He doesn¡¯t vite me againthat night, and it¡¯s a small sce. The basement grows dark, so dark, shadowing everything around me. It takes a long time for my eyes to adjust enough to see Dean¡¯s silhouette perched beside me against his pipe. It must be well past midnight, making it Monday¡ªwhich means, if people haven¡¯t already started questioning our disappearance by now, they will. I rarely call in sick to work, and I certainly never no-show. It would be a huge red g to staff and co-workers. And Dean is a well-respected employee in the union doing road construction. He works first shift. People will definitely start asking questions when he doesn¡¯t show up today. Dean¡¯s foot slides against the floor, pulling my gaze in his direction, despite the fact that I can¡¯t really see him. I hear him sigh as he adjusts himself and tries to getfortable. ¡°You awake?¡± His voice is afort I didn¡¯t know I needed. ¡°Yeah.¡± I roll the back of my head against the pole, back and forth, and tap my bare toes in opposite time. I slipped out of my heels when Earl brought me back downstairs after the bathroom break. The break was short-lived, unfortunately¡ªhe shoved me into a tiny restroom with an oversized t-shirt that reeked of him, then ordered me to change. I climbed out of my shredded dress and reced it with the white shirt, doing my business, brushing my teeth with a pink toothbrush he left out for me, and joining him out in the hallway a few momentster. He handed me a turkey sandwich and a ss of water and told me I had three minutes to eat. He timed it. Then he dragged me back down to the basement, cuffed me to the pole, and did the same thing with Dean. He hasn¡¯t been back since. I squint my eyes through the shroud of darkness, trying to make out Dean¡¯s outline. It looks like his legs are stretched out in front of him, facing me. I wonder if he can see me better than I can see him. I clear my throat, running my tongue along my upper lip. ¡°I lied to you earlier,¡± I tell him, my voice ragged from crying, yelling, andck of proper hydration. Dean makes a low humming sound, then replies, ¡°Which part?¡± ¡°I wouldn¡¯t rather be alone.¡± There is a long pause. A resounding silence. I nibble on the inside of my cheek, wondering if he¡¯s ever going to respond. There is nothing to fix my eyes to, so I just stare off into the dark abyss and wait. Dean eventually sighs. ¡°The fact that he fed us and gave us water is a good sign. It means he¡¯s going to keep us around for a little while.¡± I nce in his general direction, taken off guard by the change of subject. I¡¯m okay with it, though. I¡¯d rather not dive into feelings and grudges and rtionship history. I just wanted him to know that. For whatever reason¡­ I wanted him to know. I nod my head, even though he can¡¯t see me. ¡°I guess. But he¡¯s still going to kill us¡ªI¡¯m sure of it.¡± ¡°Maybe. But we have at least a few days to figure something out. We need a n.¡± A n. What sort of n can we possibly put together down here, bound and restrained? My mind wanders, and I can¡¯t help but think about thest ¡°n¡± we concocted. My mother put us both in charge of Mandy¡¯s twenty-eighth surprise birthday party two years ago. She wanted it to be special. That was my mother¡¯s first mistake: thinkinganythingspecial coulde out of me and Dean Asher working together. ¡°What is it?¡± I poke my chin up at the sound of his voice breaking through my reveries. ¡°What do you mean?¡± I think I see him shrug. ¡°You got quiet. That usually means you¡¯re deep in thought or piecing together a creative insult to throw at me.¡± I look right at him, and I¡¯m pretty sure we¡¯re unabashedly staring at each other¡ªbut since I can¡¯t say for certain, I don¡¯t break away. ¡°I was thinking about the mess we made of Mandy¡¯s party a couple of years ago and how any n wee up with can¡¯t possibly go well.¡± Hisugh startles me because it¡¯s real and genuine. I¡¯m not expecting it. ¡°You were definitely in charge of the invitations,¡± he informs me, as if this argument hasn¡¯t been dredged up a million times before now. ¡°Lies. You¡¯ll never admit it, will you? Ispecificallyput you in charge of invitations because you had more involvement with her social life. Plus, I was already in charge of the catering, cake, and DJ.¡± ¡°I had alcohol duty. I was clearly overwhelmed with responsibility and under a ton of stress.¡± My eyebrows raise with skepticism. ¡°I still don¡¯t understand why your mom wouldn¡¯t just let us create a Facebook event like the rest of the world,¡± Dean finishes. I groan and roll my eyes back. Even though no one showed up to the party becausesomeoneforgot to send out invitations, it was still a memorable night of Chinese takeout and horror movies around the firece. A nostalgic smile sweeps across my face. ¡°At least she got to celebrate this year before¡­¡± My voice trails off as I look away. The lighthearted atmosphere dissipates when the reality of our situation sinks back in. I pull my legs to my chest and press my cheek to my kneecaps. ¡°I¡¯m going to try and sleep. I have a feeling whatever is in store for me tomorrow will mentally exhaust me.¡± I shudder at the memory of Earl between my legs, stealing away my faith in humanity. I¡¯m confident my light will be entirely snuffed out if there is ever an end to this persecution. There is no going back to my former self. Dean whispers at me through the dark after my words leave a foreboding chill in the air. ¡°Goodnight, Cora.¡± My breath catches on the inhale. ¡°Goodnight.¡± The minutes tick by. I count them. Six minutes and thirty-five seconds. It¡¯s too quiet, which means my brain is loud and turbulent. It refuses to rest¡ªand I don¡¯t me it, really. I swallow down my pride, burying my face further into the valley between my knees. ¡°Dean?¡± ¡°Yeah?¡± I wet my lips and close my eyes. I can¡¯t believe I¡¯m asking him this, but it¡¯s easier to be vulnerable in the dark¡­and when you have nothing to lose.¡°Can you sing to me?¡± My belly swims with nerves, and I wonder if my request is too intimate. Too bold. Maybe I¡¯m asking too much of someone who isn¡¯t even my friend. But the sound of his voice, all gravel and grit, singing my favorite song, lulled me to sleep earlier, and I¡¯m desperate for a few hours of peace. I need to dream myself out of this prison. Dean is silent for a few heartbeats, and I¡¯m worried he¡¯s going to ignore me. Shut me down. I¡¯m about to apologize, backtrack, tell him to forget about it, but then he replies: ¡°Any requests?¡± A calming sensation washes over me and my body rxes. ¡°You can singHey Judeagain if you want. It¡¯s my favorite.¡± ¡°I know,¡± he says softly. He knows? We¡¯ve never discussed our favorite songs with each other before. I¡¯ve never cared to know his favoriteanything, and I assumed he felt the same way. But I suppose when you know someone for fifteen years, whether you like them or not, you¡¯re bound to pick up on little things along the way. When his voice infiltrates the darkness and fills the silence with rich music, I find myself drifting away almost instantly. It¡¯s something familiar. Something beautiful. Something good I cantch onto, absorb, and get lost in. I hum the verses into my knees right along with him until sleep eventually takes over and whisks me somece else. I dream about the ocean again. The water ispping at my toes, pulling me in like a ma. Beckoning me with its depth and mystery. Tempting me with its lifeforce.Property ? N?velDrama.Org. I jump in. And I swim away. Before I know it, a beam of light is caressing the side of my face and I begin to stir. My neck is stiff and sore, and I almost cry out in pain as I lift my head from my knees. I instinctively try to raise my hand and massage away the kink, but I¡¯m denied the privilege when my cuffs catch against the pole¡ªa sinister reminder of my predicament. Of my hell. I roll my neck from side to side, my eyelids peeling open to find Dean staring at me from his corner with the faintest smile touching his lips. I make a sour face. ¡°Were you watching me sleep?¡± His chains jingle when his shoulders shrug in reply. ¡°I¡¯m not exactly overwhelmed with better things to do,¡± he quips as that strange, little smile lingers. It¡¯s a curious thing to see given our situation. I don¡¯t think I¡¯m capable of smiling¡ªnot until my chains are lifted and I am free. But¡­ will I ever be free? I shake away the depressing thoughts, stretching out my legs and straightening, then wincing when my muscles protest. The ground is cold and unforgiving beneath my bare legs, adding to the difort. I flick my eyes up to Dean. His smile has dissolved, but his gaze is still soft as he watches me. ¡°How did you sleep?¡± I ask him. I already know the answer, but I¡¯m not sure what else to say¡ªour assortment of conversation starters is fairly scarce. Excited for your pee break today? Ready to watch me get sexually assaulted? How soon do you think they¡¯ll find our bodies? My own morbid thoughts make me cringe, so I swallow them down. ¡°Not as good as you,¡± Dean says. There¡¯s a distinct twinkle in his eyes that matches the smile I already miss. ¡°You were out like a light.¡± ¡°I was drooling, wasn¡¯t I?¡± ¡°Your secret is safe with me.¡± I almost smile.Almost. Instead, I dip my chin, pursing my lips together as I stare at my shell pink toenails. Mandy and I had gotten pedicures after work on Friday to celebrate the weekend festivities. I realize that today is heractualbirthday. My sister will likely discover that her two favorite people in the world are missing¡­ on her birthday. Happy birthday, sis. I got you a Fitbit. I wonder if Dean is reading my mind because he tilts his head to the side, studying me almost fondly. ¡°She was excited for that ice cream cone today,¡± he tells me, and there is a whimsy to his voice. Tears well and burn as I nibble on my lip. Mandy and I always celebrate our birthdays together with an ice cream cone at a downtown caf¨¦. We do our secret handshake, take a selfie in front of the ice cream parlor, and eat our treats on the swings at a nearby park. It¡¯s been tradition ever since we were children when our parents would take us. Mandy¡¯s birthday is in November, so often times we are bundled up like Eskimos, getting strange looks from passersby as we sit on snow-covered swings. But we love it. And there¡¯s nowhere else I¡¯d rather be right now. I wiggle my toes as the memories force a few silent tears down my cheeks. I brush them away with my shoulders and try to suck in a calming breath. Dean is still watching me, taking in my emotions like a film. ¡°You¡¯ll get that ice cream cone. I promise you.¡± I¡¯m not sure why he¡¯s being kind to me. It¡¯s confusing and unsettling, and I don¡¯t know how to respond to him like this. We¡¯re designed to fight¡ªswords of steel, heavy armor, and words that sting and draw blood. Letting my guard down feels an awful lot like surrender. Unsure of what to say, I just offer him a scowl. Dean lowers his eyes to the te gray floor with mild defeat. When he nces back up to me, the twinkle is long gone, reced by the hopelessness that is hovering inside these four walls, closing in on us. ¡°I¡¯m not your enemy down here, Corabelle.¡± His words carry an unfamiliar weight as they continue to disarm me. ¡°I don¡¯t know how to see you as anything else,¡± I admit. He stares at me, unwavering, daring me to look away. Then the twinkle reappears, and Dean replies, ¡°Because it¡¯s fun.¡± ¡°No.¡± My defenses re back to life and I¡¯m grateful for that¡ªbecause it¡¯s easier. Comfortable. Not fun. ¡°You¡¯re such a liar,¡± he persists. ¡°And stubborn.¡± I narrow my eyes at him, my mrs grinding together in the way that they do when I¡¯m preparing to rush into battle with Dean Asher. I cross my feet at the ankles and lean back against the pole. ¡°You sure have a twisted idea offun,¡± I shoot back. Dean runs his tongue along the roof of his mouth, breathing in deep as he prepares to take me down. I can almost feel his dagger poking at my chest. His head cocks to the side, his eyes zing blue. ¡°Remember when my buddy from college came into town to take me out for drinks? You told him I had a secret crush on him.¡± Ah, crap. ¡°Then you slipped me fucking Viagra before we left and I had to hide my dick with a bar napkin the whole damn night. But I¡¯m pretty sure he noticed because I haven¡¯t heard from him since,andhe deleted me on Facebook.¡± Dean is watching my reaction like a hawk. ¡°You can¡¯t tell me you didn¡¯t love that shit.¡± Dammit. Ipletely give myself away when a smile creeps in, pulling at my lips. It¡¯s my first smile in days. I¡¯m not sure whether to be angry and usatory, or to keep on smiling. But Dean already knows he¡¯s won. ¡°I rest my case.¡± I turn my head to the side in an attempt to hide the evidence, but the damage is already done. He sees right through me. We are interrupted when an ugly presence pervades us. Thunk. Thunk. Thunk. Those boots stomp all over me before they even reach the bottom of the staircase. I rise to my feet as my heart thunders in my chest with resistance. I¡¯m already shaking¡ªquivering with fear. Dean stands slowly, his eyes still pinned on me, but missing the yful spark I had seen only seconds ago. I want it back. ¡°Good morning, pets,¡± Earl greets us, wearing some kind of ck work polo that stretches out over hisrge stomach, barely tucking into his pants. ¡°How¡¯s my kitten?¡± His dark eyes shift to Dean. ¡°And the dirty dog.¡± I swallow. ¡°We want to go home.¡± Raucousughter erupts from his mouth, and I feel his spit mist my face. I hold back a gag. ¡°You are home. I¡¯m your master now,¡± Earl says once hisughter has ebbed. ¡°Is kitten ready to y?¡± No, no, no. Earl loosens his belt buckle as he descends on me with a sickening, lust-filled gaze. I start inching away, kicking my legs, swinging my head back and forth in protest. ¡°You sick bastard¡­ you¡¯ll never get away with this,¡± Dean shouts, yanking his chains forward as the veins in his neck bulge and pulsate. ¡°When I get out of here I will beat you into dogmeat if youy another hand on her. Ipromiseyou that.¡± Earl chuckles, unthreatened by the warning. ¡°Don¡¯t be jealous, doggie. You¡¯ll get your turn.¡± What the hell? I jerk my head towards Dean, wondering if he is also going to be subject to Earl¡¯s vile acts.Oh, God. The thought makes my stomach pitch. ¡°Do what you want to me. Leave her alone.¡± Dean¡¯s words only tighten the coil of unease in my gut. Why is this man throwing himself to the wolves for me? He hates me. I hate him. But I don¡¯t have time to sort through the confusion because Earl is tugging up the hem of my t-shirt and fondling my bare breasts in his sweaty palms. ¡°No¡­ please,¡± I whisper. My voice is weak, and my fight is futile. My body still rejects Earl¡¯s advances as much as it can, but eventually I go limp and numb, my eyes searching for Dean. Dean talks me through it like he didst time. Look at me, Cora. Focus on me. Nothing else is real. It¡¯s only me and you. I sink underwater once more and let myself drown. ¡°I¡¯m cold.¡± The sun is setting and our only light source begins to eclipse. A chill has settled in my bones. I¡¯m not sure if it¡¯s the cold cement against my exposed skin or my reality stabbing into me like icicles, freezing my veins. Both, I¡¯m sure. I¡¯m lying against the pole, listless and paralyzed. Thest forty-eight hours, along with all the long, foreboding hours toe, have taken their toll on me. I¡¯m mentally drained. And so, so cold. Dean looks ashen and equally rundown, but he¡¯s spent the entire day talking to me, telling me stories, and trying to lift my spirits. I find that my stone walls are crumbling in the presence of his alter-ego. He casts his sympathetic eyes on me, trailing them along my naked legs. The muscles in his jaw tick. ¡°I meant what I said,¡± he says to me, his tone low and hardened. ¡°I¡¯m getting us out of this. And I¡¯m going to kill him for hurting you.¡± I¡¯m unsure of what to say to such a bold promise, so I force a tight smile that has no intention of reaching my eyes. ¡°You really think we¡¯re getting out of here?¡± I ask timidly. ¡°I know we are.¡± I realize Dean has no way of knowing this and he¡¯s only saying it to give me hope, but I let the words soak into all of my susceptible cracks and crevasses. I cling to them with everything I have left. Before I can reply, I watch as Dean begins to kick off his shoes. One by one, he uses the toe of his left foot to shimmy out of the heel of his right. Then vice versa. When his sneakers are removed, he slides them over to me with his sock-covered feet. ¡°They probably smell like a gym locker, but they¡¯re warm. It should help a little.¡± Our eyes catch and hold, a foreign tenderness traveling between us. I press my lips together, my gaze flickering between the shoes and Dean¡¯s vulnerable expression. He throws me a smile, just as tender, and I wonder how hard it was for him to produce such a thing at a time like this. ¡°I¡¯d give you my socks if I thought you had a way of putting them on.¡± Maybe this is what my sister has always seen in Dean. ¡°He¡¯s not that bad, Cora. Just give him a chance. He¡¯s a decent guy.¡± I used tough in Mandy¡¯s face because Dean never showed me his ¡°decent¡± side. I never understood why. ¡°Because it¡¯s fun.¡± ¡°It¡¯s harmless, and it¡¯s us.¡± ¡°You give it right back to me, Corabelle.¡± ¡°Thank you,¡± I say as the day turns to dusk and the sunlight abandons us. I fall asleep that evening, rattled and bewildered, beaten down and used. But a tiny pocket of hope lingers inside me, buried deep, trying so hard to w its way to the surface. And, above all, I am warm. : Part 1 – Chapter 5 The days go by slowand torturous, but they go by. We are still alive. I¡¯m holding on to that. Dean and I y ¡®Twenty Questions¡¯ to pass the time. He is winning by two games, which grates me. I¡¯m a teacher, and I¡¯mpetitive¡­ especially with Dean. I me it on theck of nutrition and traumatic circumstances. I am raped daily. I expect it now, so the raw, blinding terror of it has subdued as much as it possibly can. I¡¯m getting better and better at zoning out and turning it off. It¡¯s almost like an out-of-body experience. Dean talks me through it every time, and his voice is a sce in the back of my mind as I slip away. We get our bathroom breaks around five P.M. each day after Earl gets home from work. We are allowed to brush our teeth, then we have turkey sandwiches with Miracle Whip on white bread and one full ss of water. And then we are sent back down to our prison, shackled to our respective posts, and forced to survive another night in the dark. Dean sings me to sleep every night, and it¡¯s the only thing I look forward to. Take a sad song and make it better.Property ? N?velDrama.Org. : Part 1 – Chapter 6 As the sun riseson the seventh day and a full week has passed us by, we are no closer to freedom. We are no closer to finding a way out of this barbarous basement and going home. Home. Sometimes I forget what it looks like. I try to picture myvender bedroom walls, bay window, and the vintage mirror that my grandmother passed down to me. It¡¯s a quaint little house with only twelve-hundred square feet and two bedrooms, but it¡¯smine. I worked my ass off for it andid my roots. I was in the middle of researching local animal shelters to adopt a dog¡ªit has been on my bucket list for a solid year now, but it never felt like the right time. Last Saturday was spent scrolling through furry faces and cute canine bios as I narrowed down my search to find the perfectpanion. I found two contenders, though, all of them called to me with their sad eyes and heartwarming stories. But Jasmine and Buffy were the two I was going to meet on Sunday. I printed out their photos and secured them to my refrigerator, excited for this big life change. I got change, all right. Just not the change I ever expected. And part of me is grateful I don¡¯t have a pet at home waiting for me, wondering where I¡¯ve gone, relying on me for things I cannot give. I am the pet now. Dean¡¯s head is back against his pole, but his eyes are on me as I daydream about the two dogs I never got to meet. ¡°Penny for your thoughts?¡± I cut him a nce, pulling my legs up until I¡¯m sitting Indian-style across from him. ¡°You don¡¯t have any pennies. Unfair trade.¡± He blinks as his mouth quirks into a tiny smile. ¡°Name your price, then.¡± ¡°You have nothing to give. My thoughts are extremely valuable, you know.¡± ¡°I¡¯m sure they are.¡± Dean¡¯s eyes are as alight as they can be given the week we¡¯ve battled through. He dips his head to the side, pursing his lips together and considering the bargain. ¡°All right, Corabelle. A thought for a thought.¡± I raise the stakes. ¡°How about a confession for a confession?¡± An eyebrow arches with interest, his smile blooming. ¡°This could be fun,¡± he winks at me. ¡°And dangerous.¡± ¡°Dangerous?¡± I chew on the inside of my bottom lip, my belly doing a forgotten flippy-thing. ¡°What kind of confessions did you have in mind? ¡®I stiffed the pizza delivery guy¡¯or a full-on priest confessional with ten Hail Marys and the Act of Contrition?¡± Dean lets out a gruff chuckle, shifting his weight until his knees are drawn up and shrugging his shoulders. ¡°I would never stiff the pizza guy. Unforgivable.¡± He ponders my question as he studies me, his head still cocked. ¡°But definitely the second one. Let¡¯s go all Last Rites on each other.¡± I stare back at him, wracking my brain for something that is even remotely Last Rites worthy. To be honest, I¡¯m not all that interesting. I pay my taxes, I drive the speed limit, I don¡¯t owe anybody any money. I¡¯ve never cheated or stolen. And Ialwaysput the toilet paper roll in the ¡®over¡¯ position. ¡°Fine. But I¡¯m kind of boring, so you¡¯ll have to go first. Maybe you¡¯ll inspire something sordid and obscene buried deep in my subconscious.¡± ¡°Okay.¡± Dean¡¯s expression turns more serious, the corners of his eyes creasing as he contemtes his confession. His stubble has grown into scruff over the past week. The dark hair lines his chin and jaw, giving him a rougher appearance. Mandy didn¡¯t like the scruffy look when he¡¯d asionally let a modest beard grow out. She said it made him look like a mountain man. I never paid much attention at the time, but now that his face is the only thing I have to look at, I have to say I disagree with my sister. It¡¯s masculine. Rugged. Maybe a little sexy if the face wasn¡¯t attached to Dean Asher. A few more minutes tick by and the suspense is killing me. He¡¯s watching me like he¡¯s questioning his truth bomb¡ªpossibly regretting the whole thing. ¡°Any day now, Dean.¡± A sigh escapes him. ¡°All right. Fine.¡± His eyes look even bluer as they hold mine. ¡°I had a thing for you first.¡± What? I choke on nothing. I start coughing and sputtering, and I have to force my eyes away from him. ¡°What are you talking about?¡± Dean bites his lip with another indifferent shrug. ¡°Before I started dating Mandy. It was freshman year and you walked into Mr. Adilman¡¯s ss wearing that little denim skirt and purple zer. Your hair was all long and gold and had some kind of flower clip in it. I thought you were the prettiest girl I¡¯d ever seen.¡± My heart is doing the Macarena, and my jaw drops like aical cartoon. I think I¡¯m speechless, which is new for me, but words aren¡¯ting out and even my breathing hase to a screeching halt. Dean looks a little amused as he watches me from a few feet away, his eyes dancing over me while he awaits my response. I don¡¯t respond, though. I¡¯m definitely speechless. ¡°Your turn,¡± Dean finally says, his voice soft and lilting. I slow blink my thoughts into actual words, then shake my head. ¡°It¡¯s still your turn. It¡¯s one-hundred percent still your turn. What are you even talking about? Was your turkey sandwichced with all the drugs?¡± Deanughs, sliding his socks across the floor and stretching out his long legs. ¡°I thought I was taking that one to the grave,¡± he admits with a grin. ¡°But I couldn¡¯t let you go on thinking I hated you. That¡¯s so far from the truth.¡± ¡°You sure could have fooled me. You could have fooled everyone. Why were you such a jerk to me?¡± His grin slips. ¡°I told you. I was a kid, and that¡¯s what dumb boys do when they like a girl. They pick on them.¡± ¡°I¡¯ll never understand that.¡± ¡°Yeah, it¡¯s stupid,¡± he says. ¡°Then we both grew up, and giving each other hell was just a part of who we were. There was no going back.¡± Dean is staring at me, almost knowingly. ¡°And you can deny it all you want, but you wouldn¡¯t want it any other way.¡± I set my jaw, my emotions spiraling into a frenzy. I¡¯m not sure what to make of Dean¡¯s confession. I can¡¯t process it. It goes against everything I thought we were. I gulp back more questions and choose to reroute the subject. Dean¡¯s bombdidhappen to trigger something somewhat juicy. ¡°I lost my virginity to Mr. Adilman.¡± He gapes at me. ¡°What the fuck?¡± I crinkle my nose, not entirely proud of that fact. ¡°I was neen. We ran into each other at a bar¡ªMandy and I had just gotten fake I.D.¡¯s. He gave me a ride home, one thing led to another, and¡­¡± I feel my cheeks flush at the memory I¡¯ve kept to myself for ten years. ¡°I¡¯m sure you can figure out the rest.¡± Dean fidgets with his cuffs as he blows out a breath. ¡°Shit, Cora. You gave it up to your high school English teacher? Mandy told me Brandon was your first.¡± I feel my eye twitch at the mention of Brandon¡ªmy first long-term rtionship and a huge source of contention between me and the man I¡¯m staring at. ¡°I¡¯ve never told anyone about it. Not even Mandy.¡± My eyes narrow, irritation with my sister ring to the surface. ¡°I can¡¯t believe she tells you about my sexcapades. Ew.¡± ¡°She tells me everything.¡± I huff at him. ¡°Your turn.¡± Dean parts his lips, about to speak, but he hesitates. His eyes ss over as a mask of uncertainty sweeps across his face. I can see him swallow, and I wonder what else he can possibly throw at me. ¡°Uh¡­ it¡¯s about Brandon.¡± My body freezes up. ¡°What about Brandon?¡± Dean¡¯s ankles are swinging side to side like he¡¯s nervous. He catches my gaze and replies, ¡°He was cheating on you, Corabelle.¡± I stare nkly at him, unsure if I heard him correctly. ¡°Excuse me?¡± ¡°He was cheating on you. I caught him outside The Oar with his tongue down some floozy¡¯s throat. I roughed him up a little and told him to break it off with you or I would break his face.¡± I continue to stare. ¡°I knew it would destroy you, so I told him to me it on me. You already hated me. It was better than letting you hate yourself, or having you think you weren¡¯t good enough for that douchebag.¡± Still staring. Dean releases a long sigh, closing his eyes for a moment and then braving my stare once more. ¡°Say something, Cora.¡± I open my mouth to reply, but only a strained squeak emerges. I¡¯m overwhelmed by the truths spilling out of Dean¡¯s mouth. I don¡¯t know whether to be livid that I¡¯ve gone three years still pining over a disloyal man, thinking Dean sabotaged my rtionship just to hurt me, or touched by the revtion that Dean was trying to protect me in his own screwed up way. I¡¯m about to tell him that I¡¯ve gone fifteen years thinking I wasn¡¯t good enough forhim¡ªfor his friendship. For his respect. For his decency. But I don¡¯t get the words out in time because Earl¡¯s boots are making their way down the creaky basement steps, and I¡¯m about to get raped for the seventh time in a row. Dean and I turn to the sadistic fucker who is advancing on us with a devilish leer. ¡°I have some new tricks up my sleeve for my pets today,¡± Earl tells us, pping his hands together and rubbing his palms. Oh,God. What could he possibly have in store for us? Torture? Sodomy? I feel queasy. I expect him to saunter over to me like he usually does every morning before work, but instead, he approaches Dean. I stand to my feet, anxiety bubbling in my belly. Earl snarls at Dean, ¡°Are you ready to have some fun, my dirty dog?¡± I start rattling my chains around, sickened by the very thought. ¡°No! Leave him alone.¡± Dean remains sitting with a straight face. ¡°Go fuck yourself.¡± ¡°Oh, it¡¯s not what you¡¯re thinking.¡± Earl throws his hands up, shaking his round head back and forth with a brokenugh. Then he pulls out his pistol and ces the barrel at Dean¡¯s forehead. ¡°I¡¯m no homo. Now, stand, pet.¡± Dean rises. We share a perplexed look, both confused. Both frazzled. ¡°I¡¯m going to unchain you now,¡± Earl says to Dean, his gun still pressed hard against Dean¡¯s head. ¡°One wrong move and I¡¯ll blow you to pieces. I¡¯ll find a new doggie for my kitten. Ya hear me?¡± Dean nods. ¡°Good.¡± Earl pulls a key out of his pocket and uncuffs Dean. I watch as the shackles fall to the floor and Dean rubs his swollen wrists as he awaits more orders. Earl is quiet for a few moments, taking three steps back so Dean can¡¯t make any sudden moves. There is a giddy smile pulling at his fat, red cheeks, and the look on his face makes my anxiety swell and churn. Whatever he has nned cannot be good. With one satisfied, drawn-out breath, Earl voices his intentions: ¡°Fuck her.¡± The air leaves my lungs. The room starts to spin. I look over at Dean, who is shaken and visibly paling before my eyes. ¡°What?¡± Dean questions, his voice hardly more than a taut whisper. Earl chuckles, his beady eyes filled with wickedness. ¡°Did I stutter?¡± He points the gun at me, then aims it back to Dean. ¡°Fuck. Her.¡± Dean is shaking his head in disbelief¡ªin abject horror. ¡°No.¡± ¡°No?¡± Earl repeats. ¡°No.¡± ¡°Then you die. Three, two, on¡ª¡±This belongs to N?velDrama.Org: ?. ¡°No!¡± I shriek. ¡°No, no, please. Just do it, Dean.¡± My chest is heaving, weighed down by impossibility. This can¡¯t be happening. This can¡¯t fucking be happening. Dean¡¯s eyes are wide and conflicted as he looks over to me, his brows pulled together, the veins in his temples ticking with quiet fury. ¡°I won¡¯t do that to you. I¡¯d rather die,¡± he says to me. And he means it. I swear to God he means it. Earl grabs Dean by the front of his t-shirt and starts dragging him over to me, the gun smashed against his ribcage. ¡°Kitten wants it. She¡¯s already purring for you.¡± Dean stumbles as he¡¯s shoved towards me, catching himself before our faces collide together. Our eyes unite in a powerful clutch as the palpability of this moment, the terrifying truth, eats right through our withered bones. I can feel Dean¡¯s warmth radiating into me as his hands reach out to touch me for the very first time. He ces his palms against my shoulders, squeezing gently. ¡°I can¡¯t, Cora. Let him kill me. Please.¡± ¡°Stop it.¡± Tears brim my weary eyes, and I lean into him on instinct, craving more warmth. More contact. ¡°I¡¯m not letting you die. Just get it over with.¡± Better you than him. I can¡¯t quite get the words out, though. Dean lowers his hands, his fingers digging into my upper arms. He drops his head as he lets out a hard, pained breath. ¡°Fuck¡­¡± ¡°Let¡¯s go, Romeo. Earl has things to do today. You¡¯ve got one more minute before I get impatient and trigger-happy.¡± We both nce over at Earl, then back to each other. The eye contact proves too much for me, so I twist my head to the right as tears spill down my soiled cheekbones. ¡°Cora.¡± Dean¡¯s tone is urgent. Quiet, butced with a thick heaviness. He takes my chin between his rough fingers and forces my gaze on his. ¡°Cora, look at me.¡± God. The tears fall faster. My lips part, and he nces down at my mouth, his Adam¡¯s apple bobbing in his throat. Then he leans in. Oh, no.No, no, no. He¡¯s going to kiss me. I turn my head to the side again, dodging his kiss. ¡°No,¡± I whisper in a cracked voice, my hair sticking to the tearstains. ¡°Don¡¯t make this something it¡¯s not.¡± Dean sucks in a jagged breath, halting his forward movement. There is a slight nod of his head, telling me he understands, and then he reaches for one of my chained wrists. A frown settles between my eyes as confusion sets in. He massages his thumb along my pulse point, his gaze still pinned on me. ¡°Do you feel that?¡± I swallow. The lump in my throat is dry and brittle, and it hurts on the way down. ¡°Yes,¡± I squeak out. The gesture is somewhat soothing, despite the circumstances. Dean continues the circr motion, his calloused thumb grazing my wrist, almost lovingly. ¡°Focus on that. Close your eyes and zone out. The only thing I want you to feel is my thumb massaging your wrist.¡± I want to cry harder. I want to cry because I¡¯m scared and exhausted and sore anddone. I want to cry because I can¡¯t believe this is happening. I want to cry because my sister¡¯s fianc¨¦, a man I loathed one week ago, is about to fuck me while a freakshow jerks off from a few feet away. I want to cry because it¡¯s awful,so awful, but Dean is still trying to make this better for me. I dip my chin and squeeze my eyes shut, nodding my consent. I hear Dean¡¯s sigh, and it rumbles through me like a white wave. It¡¯s followed by the sound of his belt buckle utching and his pants dropping to the cold cement. A familiar, snarling voice prates the moment. ¡°Yeah, that¡¯s it. Get it nice and hard for her.¡± My eyelids squeeze tighter as I try to filter out everything but the feel of Dean¡¯s thumb against the sensitive underside of my wrist. His motions are soft and fluid. Constant. Whatever he is doing with his other hand¡ªandGod, I don¡¯t want to know¡ªis not affecting his attention to my wrist. I inhale a rickety breath, long and slow. ¡°What the fuck is wrong with you?¡± Earl barks from across the basement. ¡°She¡¯s a hot piece of ass. Fuck her, already.¡± I jolt at the shrill sound of his voice, and my eyes flutter open. I lift them to Dean¡¯s face. He¡¯s staring at me with a hollow expression. ¡°It¡¯s okay. Just do it,¡± I urge him, wanting to get this over with. Wanting to curl up into a ball of shame and cry myself to sleep. Forever. Dean¡¯s jaw ticks and his nostrils re. ¡°I don¡¯t think I can do this.¡± Earl interrupts us again. ¡°What¡¯s the damn matter with you? You y for the other team?¡± Dean whips his head to the right and shoots back, ¡°I¡¯m not a disgusting psychopath who gets off on raping women. It just doesn¡¯t do it for me.¡± And then there¡¯s a barrel of a gun jabbing Dean¡¯s temple, and I let out a scream. ¡°That¡¯s not going to help,¡± Dean seethes, sweat pooling along his dark hairline. He¡¯s trying to y it cool, but I can see the fear in his eyes. I can smell it on his skin. ¡°You have three seconds to figure out what¡¯s going to help, or this bitch is gonna be wearing your brains until I get bored with her and put her bony ass in the ground.¡± A strangled sob escapes me and I rattle my chains, noting that Dean still has not let go of my wrist. I¡¯m not sure what else to say, so I blurt, ¡°Kiss me.¡± He nces at me with his ice blue eyes, troubled and bloodshot. ¡°Kiss me, Dean,¡± I repeat. ¡°Please.¡± It¡¯s evident our situation is not getting him ¡°in the mood¡± quick enough for Earl, so maybe some forced intimacy will help. I shift my gaze to the pistol as it slowly retreats from Dean¡¯s head. I can¡¯t help the tiny sigh of relief that escapes me. Dean¡¯s mouth parts ever so slightly, his eyes drifting to my bruised lips. He looks back up to me, as if to confirm:Are you sure? I nod quickly, gulping down a fear that tastes tangible. ¡°I want you to.¡± When he leans in, I inhale sharply, my eyes closing in anticipation. I release a modest gasp when our lips make contact and Dean does the same. I told him not to pretend this is something it¡¯s not, but maybe wehaveto pretend. Maybe it¡¯s the only way to get through his. I feel his tongue poke through, seeking entry, and I oblige. My body bows forward to meet him further, and I open my mouth wider, encouraging him. ¡°Close your eyes and zone out,¡± I breathe against his warmth, repeating his own request to me. ¡°Focus on kissing me.¡± My words seem to stimte him in some way, and Dean raises his right hand to cup my face as the other continues itszy designs against my wrist. We each have a crux. A survival tactic. His touch, my kiss. A kiss that deepens and deepens, taking us over, disguising this moment for what it really is. My tongue is his veil¡ªhis ck cloak. But it¡¯s also his fuel. Before I know it, his hand has trailed down my cheek, gliding along my waist, my hip, my thigh, until he¡¯s gently parting my legs. I feel the tip of him settle at my entrance and everything bes too real. I make a sound I can¡¯t even describe¡ªa mewl, maybe. Ripped straight from the torrent of disbelief spiraling through my core. ¡°I¡¯m so sorry.¡± He pulls back from my mouth, his head falling against my shoulder as he pushes inside me. ¡°I¡¯m so fucking sorry.¡± Around, around, and around. Left, then right. Slow and careful and kind. Up and down. He¡¯s tracing my vein. Like art. I can pretend this is something beautiful. Dean is kissing me again, his cock filling me, pulsing in and out with hurried thrusts. He feels big and thick, unlike vile Earl who was pumping into me only yesterday. Around, around, and around. Our tongues are battling, desperate to erase everything that¡¯s happening¡ªeverything that¡¯s happened. Justeverything. Dean¡¯s right hand is holding up my leg and perching it over his hip. His fingers are digging into the fleshy side of my thigh, squeezing lightly as he moves in and out of me. In and out. In and out. Around, around, and around. I can hear the putrid monster beside us breathing heavily, groaning in pleasure at the disy. At the fucking entertainment we¡¯re providing. Around, around, and around. I need to focus. I need to block out Earl and this basement and the smell of imminent death in the air. Dean. There is only Dean. And it doesn¡¯t matter that he¡¯s inside me, spearing me deep, forcing tiny whimpers from the back of my throat. He¡¯s here. He¡¯s alive. We¡¯rebothalive. We¡¯re in this together. He¡¯s still kissing me, his tongue getting clumsier as his thrusts quicken and his body tenses. He¡¯s going toe. Around, around, and around. I keep my eyes closed. I don¡¯t want to see his face in this moment¡ªI don¡¯t want to witness his pleasure. And it¡¯s not because I¡¯m angry or meful. I¡¯m envious. I¡¯m envious he¡¯s able to find a pocket of happiness, of joy, of authentic bliss, in the midst of our shared nightmare. We¡¯re in this together, yes, but for a moment¡ªfor a few blinding, potent seconds¡ªwe will be worlds apart. Dean¡¯s hand slides up my thigh and grips my bare ass, his opposite hand still leaving whispers and apologies along my wrist. Around, around, and around. And then he peaks, trying to mask his groan of pleasure as he buries his face into the curve of my neck. Dean clings to me through the aftershocks, holding me like a cherished lover. But I¡¯m not. I am merely a pawn in Earl¡¯s game. We are both pawns. Dean inhales a deep sigh, almost choking on the weight of the breath. ¡°I¡¯m sorry. I¡¯m sorry. I¡¯m so sorry.¡± He repeats it over and over, devastation flooding him. Remorse has reced the euphoria, and my own envy has faded. I can feel his hot tears fall against my corbone. Earl reminds us of where we are and why we¡¯re here¡ªas if we could possibly forget. ¡°That was fucking beautiful. I came so hard I saw stars,¡± he growls, his huskyugh making me want to vomit. Dean is still inside me, softening, yet incapable of leaving me just yet. Maybe he¡¯s still pretending. I don¡¯t me him. ¡°Time¡¯s up, lover boy,¡± Earl snaps. The repugnant scent of Earl¡¯s body odor invades me, and I finally open my eyes to see him approaching us with his weapon. Dean slips out of me, but his left hand is still on my wrist, and his right has glided from my ass andnded on my hip. He¡¯s still holding me, soaking me up for as long as he can. I feel him lift his head from my shoulder, but I twist my body to the side, unable to look him in the eyes. Not yet. Maybe not ever. ¡°This isn¡¯t a romantic morning after, you dumb fuck. Get the fuck over to your corner before I blow you away.¡± Earl¡¯s voice sears me, and I¡¯m left empty and hollow. But nothing leaves a void more than Dean releasing my wrist and stepping away from me. His touch lingers on my skin, and I can still feel him tracing my artery, leaving more of himself behind than he¡¯ll ever know. My wrist tingles and hums in the wake of his absence. When I finally brave a look in Dean¡¯s direction, his pants are newly secured around his waist and Earl is fastening his chains. We have returned to our former positions. But as sticky warmth drips down my thighs and Dean¡¯s tears mingle with the sweat on my skin, I know we are not the same. We will never be the same again. : Part 1 – Chapter 7 ¡°Dean.¡± His name on my tongue echoes loud and grating throughout the quiet room, and yet, Dean pretends he doesn¡¯t hear me. He doesn¡¯t move or blink or flinch. He just sits there, slumped against his pole, facing as far away from me as he can. ¡°Dean,¡± I repeat. Nothing. I sigh with my chin to my chest, my eyes closing. It¡¯s probably been an hour since¡­ well, since it happened. He retreated back to his dark corner, then retreated into himself. He hasn¡¯t said a word to me. He hasn¡¯t even looked at me. ¡°Can you please talk to me?¡± I try. I can¡¯t imagine spending the rest of the day removed and isted from the only other person who understands what I¡¯m going through. Dean finally rolls his shoulders with a soft humming sound. Proof of life, at least. ¡°I¡¯m not mad, Dean. You did what you had to do, and I underst¡ª¡± ¡°I can¡¯t, Cora. Please.¡± The sadness in his tone almost breaks me. He sounds defeated for the very first time. ¡°Don¡¯t shut me out. I can¡¯t do this alone.¡± I choke on thest word and my chest burns with a longing to maintain our blossoming connection. He¡¯s all I have. Dean slowly shakes his head, lowering his eyes to the floor. ¡°I can¡¯t even look at you.¡± I suck in a choppy breath. I can¡¯t reach him right now. He is lost to his own demons and regret and impossible decisions. It¡¯s true that I¡¯m not mad. Dean had a gun to his head and both of our lives were hanging in the bnce. There was only one way out, and I told him to take it. And maybe I¡¯m going just a little bit numb. I close my eyes and lie back, forcing myself to give him the space he needs. There will be time to talk through it¡ªwhen he¡¯s ready. All we have is time. Evening has fallen and our nightlight has been extinguished. It¡¯s been hours.Hours.Property ? N?velDrama.Org. And Dean still refuses to speak to me. The silence bes too much to bear, so I decide to break it as we sit alone in the dark¡ªtrulyalone. ¡°I was going to adopt a dog,¡± I whisper into the shadows. I can hardly see him, but I make out a small motion, alerting me he¡¯s not asleep. ¡°You wanted to know what I was thinking about earlier. I was thinking about the two dogs I never got to meetst Sunday. I wonder which one I would have fallen in love with.¡± Silence. My words linger in the darkness, hovering between us, painfully ignored. I pull my knees up and rest my chin between them. I wiggle my toes inside Dean¡¯s gray sneakers that are far too big for my feet. But they bring me a warmth andfort I so desperately crave, especially now. I close my eyes and whisper, ¡°Goodnight.¡± Dean never does respond to me that night. He doesn¡¯t sing. I fall in and out of a restless, tumultuous sleep, missing the sound of his voice. : Part 1 – Chapter 8 T E N Y E A R S E A R L I E R ¡°Dean, stop the car!¡± There¡¯s an injured dog in the middle of the busy, snowy intersection. She is limping, half toppling over, cowering in fright every time a car zooms past, spraying dirty sludge at her and leaving her to freeze to death. ¡°Are you fuckin¡¯ crazy, Corabelle? It¡¯s a blizzard outside and we¡¯re already twenty minuteste to breakfast.¡± Mandy perks up from the passenger¡¯s side, craning her head to the backseat to look at me with her perfectly lined eyebrows. ¡°Did you forget your purse or something?¡± she asks me. I shake my head, unbuckling my seatbelt and leaning forward, pointing my finger between them. ¡°There¡¯s a dog. She¡¯s hurt.¡± ¡°We can¡¯t stop, sis,¡± Mandy insists, her eyesnding on the pup. ¡°It¡¯s too dangerous. Plus, Grandma is probably going into cardiac arrest worrying about why we¡¯rete.¡± ¡°We can call animal control when we get to the restaurant,¡± Dean agrees. Mandy nods and holds up her ckberry. ¡°I can even call right now if it¡¯ll make you feel better.¡± ¡°Are you serious? The poor thing was probably hit by a car. She¡¯s going to get hit again!¡± I argue, my chest pounding with fear. ¡°Stop the car, Dean.¡± ¡°There¡¯s no ce to pull over¡­¡± ¡°Fine. I¡¯ll get out here.¡± I reach for the door handle like a rebellious idiot, drunk on adrenaline and the need to save this animal. ¡°Christ, hold on.¡± Dean pulls off to the side of the busy road as the windshield wipers squeak, gathering more and more thick flurries with each hurried swipe. The car is barely in park when I kick open the back door and tug my hat over my ears, wincing when the icy wind takes my breath away. A car swerves past me and I jump back, wondering if this was a stupid idea, after all. I stomp my way through the six inches of heavy snow and pause at the edge of the street, looking both ways. It¡¯s rush hour, so there¡¯s a steady stream of traffic. The snowkes are falling down hard, illuminated by the sea of headlights and making me feel dizzy. I decide to make a break for it, thinking I¡¯m probably faster than the carsing up the hill. I dash out into the highway, my heart in my throat and my blood pumping fast and hot. I almost slip on a patch of ice, but I make it to the median strip in one piece, ignoring the ring horns and bending over to collect my breath when I reach safety. The dog is lying t on her stomach, her wet, shivering body pressed up against the curb. ¡°Hey, there. I¡¯m here to help. I won¡¯t hurt you.¡± I pluck the mittens off my hands and tuck them into my coat pockets. Then I hold my fingers out, slow and tender, watching as the cream-colored dog moves in gingerly to sniff me. ¡°That¡¯s it. You¡¯re going to be safe and warm very soon.¡± As I inch forward to get a grip on the dog¡¯s scruff, I¡¯m startled by a new presence. ¡°You¡¯re a goddamn moron. What the hell is wrong with you?¡± I jerk my head to the right to find Dean storming towards me in the snow with a furious look on his face. He pulls his hood up over his head as I re at him. ¡°Besides you?¡± ¡°Hrious, Corabelle,¡± he grumbles. ¡°You¡¯re going to get yourself killed.¡± ¡°I guess it¡¯s your lucky day, then.¡± ¡°Will you stop?¡± We both look at the dog, who is now trying to stand and escape, likely terrified of Dean and his brutish demeanor. ¡°You¡¯re going to scare her away,¡± I scold him. ¡°I¡¯m handling this.¡± Dean huffs under his breath, and it looks like a plume of smoke as it hits the chilly Midwest air. ¡°How were you nning on getting her back to the car? You barely made it over here without bing roadkill. And the animal is at least fifty pounds.¡± Well. I hadn¡¯t really thought that far ahead. ¡°Just leave me alone. I¡¯ll figure it out.¡± I nce across the twone street to see Mandy watching us from the car with wide eyes. ¡°I¡¯m sure my sister is losing her shit without you being within arm¡¯s reach.¡± ¡°She¡¯ll survive. But you¡¯re questionable,¡± Dean replies, his voice growing louder over the howling wind and passing engines. ¡°You¡¯requestionable,¡± I shoot back, and it might just be mymesteback yet. I me the cold. I inch my way closer to the canine, which looks to be some kind of Golden Retriever mix, and coo out more sweet nothings to try and earn this dog¡¯s trust in the middle of a blizzard during Monday morning rush hour. ¡°I¡¯ll get her,¡± Dean intercedes, pushing past me and barreling towards the frightened animal with zero grace and finesse. ¡°Dean!¡± ¡°Come here, buddy!¡± He advances on the dog and she bolts. She straight-up books it across the opposite twones and almost causes a four car pile-up. Panic and anger re as I stare at Dean, ck-jawed. ¡°Look what you just did! I said I would handle it!¡± ¡°Ah, hell,¡± he mutters under his breath. Before I can curse him out further, Dean flees across the highway when there¡¯s a small break in traffic, chasing the dog down a snowy ravine. I stand there on the median strip with nerves bubbling in my gut, unable to see Dean or the dog. Cars are slowing down to gawk at me¡ªthe shivering teenager standing in the middle of an intersection covered in snow. I tap my foot against the slushy cement, slipping my mittens back on to warm my frozen fingers. I watch and wait, anxiety swelling, my chest tightening. And then I see them. Dean is trudging up the steep ravine, carrying the fifty-pound animal in his arms. My sigh of relief hits the air and my body rxes¡ªthat is, until Dean makes a daring sprint across the highway, not noticing a car speeding right at him with its lights off. ¡°Dean!¡± I scream, catching his attention just in time, as the car nearly clips him. I watch him close his eyes and breathe in deep, likely taking a moment to process his near-death experience. Then he finishes the trek across the road without injury, pausing on the median to shoot me his trademark scowl. He¡¯s out of breath and his cheeks are stained pink with wind burn. ¡°I really hate you, Corabelle.¡± I can¡¯t help the smile from sneaking across my face. ¡°Hate you more.¡± We make a safe escape to the car and Dean lets the dog hop into the backseat with me. I situate myself, trying to warm up, and grin wide when she nuzzles right into myp like its going to be her favorite ce in the world. The dog releases a long sigh, her chin resting on my thigh. Safe atst. ¡°I¡¯m naming you Blizzard,¡± I announce to the fluffy dog with matted fur and a sprained paw. ¡°Mom and Dad better let me keep you.¡± As Dean puts the car in drive and veers back onto the main drag, I catch him ncing at me in the rearview mirror. I swear there is an unfamiliar softness in his light eyes¡ªsomething akin to tenderness. Something I haven¡¯t seen before. But it disappears as quickly as it came, and the devious twinkle returns. I stick my tongue out at him. He flips me off. Day eight greets us with warm, tangerine sunbeams¡ªa stark contrast to the murky, muddy feeling of despair living inside my heart. Eight days. It feels like longer. It feels like a lifetime. I wonder when I¡¯ll lose track of the days altogether and everything will blur into one prolonged, endless nightmare. I look over at Dean, and I¡¯m surprised to find him facing me again. He looks worn and rundown. His cheeks are gaunt, his eyes rimmed with dark circles. His skin has turned from a healthy golden bronze to a chalky shade of white. His appearance has shifted dramatically in only twenty-four hours. But his eyes are still the bluest blue, and they are fixed on mine. I¡¯m about to tell him ¡°good morning¡±, ask him how he slept, make idle conversation, but Dean speaks up first. ¡°You would have gotten them both,¡± he says. His voice sounds frayed as I blink at him, processing his words. They take longer than usual to sink in, and I¡¯m not sure if it¡¯s because I¡¯m so exhausted or because part of me doubted that Dean would ever speak to me again. I swallow, my throat cinching. ¡°You would have adopted both dogs because your heart is too big for only one.¡± I thought I was too beaten down and dehydrated to make anymore tears, but I surprise myself when my eyes start to mist. I keep my watery gaze on Dean, afraid to break this contact, afraid he¡¯ll withdraw and leave me all alone again. I offer a small smile. Then I reply, my voice equally raspy, ¡°I didn¡¯t think you ever noticed my heart.¡± It¡¯s a heavy deration, and I hate that it¡¯s true. Dean¡¯s weary face grows even wearier as he absorbs my words. ¡°It¡¯s impossible not to notice, Cora.¡±Copyright by N?v/elDrama.Org. I finally lower my eyes and draw my knees back up to my chin. I don¡¯t hear the dripping pipe anymore and idly wonder if it¡¯s so cold outside that the pipes have frozen. A cold front was supposed toe throughst week. I lift my gaze back to Dean when the silence bes too painful. He¡¯s still staring at me. Still expressionless. ¡°What are we?¡± I wonder aloud. I was not expecting those words toe out, but they have been guing me for days. Dean has always fit into a very specific box in my life. Dean, the asshole. Dean, my sister¡¯s dumb boyfriend. Dean, my mortal enemy. But¡­ ¡°You don¡¯t feel like my enemy anymore,¡± I finish. You feel like my lifeline. I watch a small frown crease his eyebrows as he studies me. Seconds tick by and turn into minutes. Our gazes drift and collide. Drift and collide. He is thinking. Probably wondering the same thing. ¡°I don¡¯t know,¡± Dean finally replies, a certain kind of sadnesscing every word. ¡°But I think you were right¡­ we¡¯ll never be friends.¡± : Part 1 – Chapter 9 F I V E Y E A R S E A R L I E R ¡°Where did you learn howto do this? Never mind¡­ I don¡¯t want to know.¡± Dean is picking the padlock of an old, abandoned house with some kind of small object¡ªmaybe a bobby pin. Maybe a piece of his devil horn. Brandon tightens his arm around my waist, warming me up with his body heat. It¡¯s only mid-October, but the air is unbearably brisk, giving our haunted house adventure the perfect spooky ambiance. Mandy is huddled up next to Dean, watching him work the lock. She bounces her knees up and down while hugging herself with both arms. ¡°Hurry up, babe. Someone is going to see us,¡± she says in a harsh whisper. ¡°Plus, I¡¯m freezing my ass off.¡± ¡°Why didn¡¯t you wear pants?¡± Dean asks. ¡°It¡¯s thirty-five degrees out.¡± ¡°They didn¡¯t go with my dress. Obviously.¡± Leave it to my sister to dress up for a very illegal sleepover in a rundown, three-story Victorian. I shake my head with an exaggerated eyeroll. ¡°Who are you trying to impress, sis? The ghost of Mr. Garrison?¡± ¡°Ha ha,¡± she barks back. ¡°Unlike some people, I enjoy looking my best no matter the asion.¡± Mandy bestows a pointed once-over to my faded blue jeans, baggy hoodie, and scuffed boots. I give my messy bun a quick tug, ignoring the insinuation that my appearance is not up to society¡¯s standards. Breaking and entering was not exactly on my To-Do list for the day¡ªor any day ever for that matter. But Mandy talked me into it. The foreclosed Garrison home is the subject of many twisted tales and sordid rumors in our small town, especially this time of year. Besides, Brandon sounded overly enthusiastic about the prospect of spending the night in the creepy house and I didn¡¯t want him to think I was a coward. I am, of course. I¡¯m practically pissing myself with fear right now. My eyes zone in on Dean¡¯s break-in attempt as I tap the toe of my boot with impatience. ¡°I thought you said this would be easy,¡± I mutter. ¡°You¡¯re a terrible criminal.¡± ¡°Almost got it.¡± Click. The lock slips loose and Dean shoots me a victorious wink. ¡°You were saying?¡± I crinkle my nose and shuffle past him. Brandon guides me forward with his hand on the small of my back. ¡°This is wicked,¡± Brandon deres, shining the shlight on his phone into the darkened entryway. He leans down and kisses the space between my neck and shoulder. ¡°Scared, baby?¡± I shiver. From the kiss¡ªnot from the mental image of fifty-thousand spiders scattering into hiding, waiting for us to fall asleep so they can crawl into our eardrums and build viges. ¡°I¡¯m not scared. Just cold,¡± I lie.Copyright by N?v/elDrama.Org. I suck at lying, so Brandon spins me around and pulls me in for a quick kiss. ¡°It¡¯s okay to be scared. That¡¯s why it¡¯s fun.¡± Dean sneaks up beside us, waggling his stupid eyebrows. ¡°Yeah, it¡¯s fun, Corabelle. You¡¯ve read about fun in your books, right?¡± ¡°Wait. You know what books are?¡± Mandy swats me on the arm, swaying her bleached blonde hair from side to side. ¡°I was worried about the demonic spirits living in the walls taking us out, but I¡¯m pretty sure you and Dean will end up killing each other first.¡± I shrug. She¡¯s probably right. Something tickles the back of my neck, and I¡¯m pretty sure it¡¯s a wolf spider or that demon fromParanormal Activitybreathing on me. I swat at my neck, then swing my head back and forth as goosebumps cover me from head to toe. Yuck. When I nce down to finish unrolling my sleeping bag, I see three huge, hairy spiders pop out of the cotton material, ready to suck my soul. I scream. Loud. Then I feel another tickle on my neck and I jump to my feet, stomping my legs, shaking my arms, my hair, my clothes. I kick the sleeping bag with a shaky foot and back away, ramming right into a hard body. I scream again. Familiarughter assaults my ears. I fly around and spot the feather in his hand, then immediately begin pummeling his chest with furious fists. ¡°You asshole!¡± I shout, my heart spazzing out beneath my hoodie. ¡°I hate you!¡± Dean grabs my wrists, putting a quick end to my attack. ¡°Yeah, yeah, yeah. Hate you more.¡± My chest is still heaving as I narrow my eyes at him. ¡°No, you don¡¯t. There¡¯s no possible way you could hate me more than I hate you.¡± I yank my arms free. He doesn¡¯t respond to that. He knows I¡¯m right. Dean¡¯s smile is broad and devilish. ¡°You didn¡¯t like the spiders?¡± I twist my head around to look at the hideous fiends, only to realize they are, indeed, fake. Jerk, jerk, jerk. I turn back to re at him, and he throws his hands up. ¡°You make it too easy for me, Corabelle.¡± I don¡¯t spare him another nce as I storm away to join Brandon in exploring the second floor. I¡¯ll get him backter. That¡¯s a promise. ¡°Want one, Corabelle?¡± I¡¯m sitting in front of a plethora of candles, trying to stay warm with whiskey and fleece nkets. Mandy is in the bathroom fluffing her hair or something, and Brandon is ying on his new HTC phone in the other room. ¡°Don¡¯t call me that.¡± I look over at Dean who has appeared on my left as he holds out a box of powdered donuts. I love powdered donuts. My eyes narrow in his direction, but his face remains stoic and unreadable. There is no mischief or nefarious intent gleaming out of those blue eyes. I remove one of my arms from the red and ck checkered nket and pluck a donut from the box. I take a bite, then instantly spit it out when I inhale a mouthful of cornstarch. This motherfucker. Dean busts outughing, and I¡¯m about to shout obscenities at him, maybe start punching him again, but an idea pops into my head and I act quickly. I wrap my hands around my neck and start coughing, my eyes watering, my entire body shaking. ¡°I-I¡¯m allergic¡­ to cornstarch¡­¡± I sputter, wing at my throat and wheezing, doubling over with impressive realism. Dean¡¯s face goes white as he kneels down beside me and starts patting my back. ¡°Shit, Cora. I didn¡¯t know. Are you okay?¡± I shake my head, violently gasping for air. ¡°I¡­ can¡¯t¡­ breathe¡­¡± ¡°Fuck¡­ shit!¡± he yells, shaking my shoulders, his eyes popping with terror. I fall backwards onto my sleeping back, my fingers still curled around my neck as I pretend to give up the fight. My eyelids flutter closed and my head drops to one side, my body going limp. Don¡¯tugh. Don¡¯tugh. ¡°Holy shit¡­ Cora!¡± He keeps shaking me. ¡°Cora!¡± I wish I could see the look on his face right now. ¡°Mandy!¡± he shouts, and I hear multiple footsteps stomping into the room, joining us. Dean cradles my face in his hands, lifting my head upright as his thumbs caress my cold cheeks. The gesture is strange and gentle, and it unnerves me as I lie there holding my breath. ¡°She just passed out, Mandy. I fucked up. Jesus Christ,¡± he stammers. ¡°Cora!¡± ¡°What the hell happened?¡± I hear Brandon say as he approaches. Mandy starts to panic, and I picture her pping her arms like a bird in the way that she does when she¡¯s freaking the hell out. ¡°Did you kill my sister?¡± she demands of Dean. ¡°I didn¡¯t know she was allergic to cornstarch!¡± All of a sudden, a hot mouth descends upon mine, and it¡¯s not Brandon¡¯s. I¡¯ve memorized the feel of Brandon¡¯s lips, chapped and rough with a thin upper lip. No, these are full and soft and taste like mint and bourbon. Dean is giving me CPR. As much as I¡¯m relishing in my prank, I have to draw the line at Dean Asher¡¯s mouth on mine, no matter how entertaining this is. Besides, Brandon and Mandy are involved now, and it¡¯s not fair to them. I open my eyes. Dean starts pressing against my chest, puffing bursts of air into my mouth, his forehead glistening with perspiration. My parted lips turn up into a smile against his and he notices, pulling back to look at me. My grin widens and I startughing uncontrobly. ¡°Gotcha.¡± Dean leaps off of me, rising to his feet and scrubbing his face with both palms. He runs his fingers through his hair as he stares down at me while I roll onto my side, drowning in my own amusement. ¡°Are you fuckin¡¯ serious?¡± I can¡¯t stopughing. ¡°I thought you were dead!¡± A few snorts break through and I can¡¯t catch my breath. I worry that I might actually pass out. For real this time. Mandy speaks up, crossing her arms over her ample chest. ¡°Not cool, sis.¡± ¡°Yeah, babe, you scared us.¡± Brandon is crouched down beside me, his hand on my shoulder. I allow myughter to subside as I lift myself up on my hands, my eyes finding a highly unimpressed Dean. ¡°I got you good, and you deserved every minute of it. Your face was priceless.¡± Dean stares back at me, spearing me with callous eyes, his shoulders heaving. It¡¯s apparent he is not sharing in my hrity. In fact, I¡¯ve never seen him look at me like this before¡ªfrazzled, outraged, maybe even a little hurt. Whatever. I¡¯m not sorry. ¡°I need a fucking smoke,¡± Dean says in a gruff tone, fishing through his pockets and pulling out a pack of cigarettes. He shoots me a final dirty look before disappearing into one of the adjoining rooms, the old floorboards creaking beneath each step. The evening proceeds on with far less excitement as I snuggle into Brandon¡¯s chest and sip on a cocktail. We tell ghost stories around the candle arrangements, munch on popcorn and chocte chip cookies, and allow our minds to y tricks on us as we giggle and squeal at every strange, spooky noise. It¡¯s a fun night. A memorable night. But something is off. It could be the ufortable sleeping arrangements. It could be the chill in the air. It could be the tummy ache from all the junk food I¡¯ve consumed. It could be the spiders lurking in the shadows, waiting to breed inside our brains. Or¡­ it could be that Dean doesn¡¯t say a single word to me for the rest of the night. Over a week drags by in this house of horrors. Sixteen sunrises mock us from the frosty window. ¡®Twenty Questions¡¯. Turkey sandwiches. Rape. Hunger pains. Heart pains. Singing. Stories. Despair. Sex with Dean. Sex with Dean. That is something I¡¯ll likely never wrap my head around. It¡¯s happened four times now.I¡¯ve had sex with Dean Asher four times. And it¡¯s not rape¡ªI will never call it rape. Every time, he waits for my consent. Every time, he is willing to die in that moment if I choose to say no. And every time, he dies just a little bit anyway. Earl and Dean alternate days like a goddamn schedule. My body is not my body anymore. But Earl treats me like a piece of trash, tainted and disposable, while Dean massages my wrist to help me cope, whispers his shame into my ear, and spills his tears against my neck before being dragged away and chained back up. Today is Dean¡¯s day, and I¡¯m grateful for that. Dean is holding my wrist between his fingers and thumb, circling around and around and around as he thrusts in and out of me. He doesn¡¯t look at me. In fact, he hardly looks me in the eyes at all anymore. I think he¡¯s afraid of what he might find there. ¡°That¡¯s a good dog,¡± Earl sneers from a few feet away, giving orders in between his disgusting moans. ¡°Kitten loves it.¡± I suck in a breath and keep my head turned to the other side. Dean pulls back, dropping my leg and raising his hand to the side of my face. I fall to my feet due to our height difference, and he slips out of me. He could hold me up with his opposite hand, but he doesn¡¯t. He won¡¯t let go of my wrist. His touch is delicate and kind on my cheek, and my skin sprouts with goosebumps that I hope he doesn¡¯t notice. ¡°Are you okay?¡± Earl interrupts. ¡°I didn¡¯t say to stop railing her, you dumb ass dog.¡± I spare Dean a quick nce, nodding my head and swallowing down the real answer:I¡¯m not okay. I will never be okay. Dean sighs, blinking slowly. He¡¯s unconvinced, but also aware that there¡¯s nothing he can do about it. He lifts me back up with reluctance and situates himself inside me once again, and I release a small gasp when he fills me. There is a strange, disturbing sense of relief at the feel of him between my legs. Maybe it¡¯s a twisted case of Stockholm syndrome. Maybe I¡¯ve gone mad. Or maybe Dean is warm and safe and familiar, and that¡¯s all I have to cling to. I¡¯ll take what I can get. When he finishes, Dean pulls out of me and buries his face against the curve of my neck like he always does. ¡°I¡¯m sorry. I¡¯m so sorry, Cora.¡± His breath tickles my ear and his tears dampen my skin. ¡°Please forgive me.¡± I do. I always do. Dean is shoved back into his corner and shackled like an actual dog. This is normally when Earl leaves for work, but he pauses as he turns around, pinning his dark eyes on me. I shudder. ¡°My turn, kitten.¡± What? No. Please, no. ¡°I-I thought your turn is tomorrow,¡± I squeak out, inching my way back, wishing I could disappear into the pole. Earl lunges forward and backhands me, forcing a cry from my lips. ¡°Hey!¡± Dean shakes his chains, anger radiating from him in waves. ¡°I take what I want when I want it, you stupid bitch. Understand?¡± Earl hisses. I nod my head as tears leak from my eyes, my jaw throbbing. Earl rips off his belt¡­ and as it slides roughly through the loops, I notice a tiny piece of thetch fly loose. It¡¯s so small, it hardly makes a sound as itnds by Dean¡¯s foot¡ªbut Dean notices. I try not to make a scene or give us away, but my eyes widen as they lock on Dean, and I watch as he hides the metal sp beneath his sock. I don¡¯t know what it means or what its purpose may be, but it¡¯s something. It¡¯s all we have. : Part 1 – Chapter 10 ¡°Do you miss her?¡± The sun pokes through the window on the eighteenth day, teasing us. We are facing each other from our respective corners, our legs sprawled out in front of us, our toesalmostable to touch. Dean is slouched back against his pipe, his eyes fixated just over my shoulder. ¡°Who?¡± he wonders absently. He knows who, but I answer anyway. ¡°My sister.¡± Dean blinks, slow andzy. There is a far-off look on his face as a wave of silence passes between us, and I wonder if he¡¯s going through memories in his mind like a film reel. He finally nods his head one time, just as slow. ¡°We were supposed to get married in two weeks. Mandy wanted a winter wedding with velvet shawls, a horse-drawn sleigh, and white Christmas lights.¡± A nostalgic smile breaks through as I reminisce wedding nning together with Mandy. We had ruby red bridesmaid dresses with snow white shawls. It was magical. It would have been magical. I nce at Dean, silently begging him to look at me. Toseeme. To assure me I¡¯m still real. ¡°She was really excited to marry you,¡± I say, my voice a small whisper. Amanda Asher. Myst memory of Mandy was her practicing her future signature on the bar tab that fateful night. I watch Dean¡¯s jaw clench in reaction to my words, his eyes closing as he epts the fact that he might never marry Mandy. He might never get married at all. He might never have children or watch another football game or eat a medium-rare steak or pet a dog or sleep in a goddamn bed with an rm clock waking him up to tell him, ¡®Good morning. It¡¯s early as shit and you have to spend ten hours at work today doing hardbor, but at least you get to breathe in the fresh air and feel the sunshine on your skin.¡¯ Dean¡¯s head falls back against the pole, his eyes still closed. But when he opens them, he finally finds my face. My sad, jade eyes. My pasty skin and matted hair. Heseesme, and it feels like a tiny miracle. I¡¯m real.We¡¯rereal. ¡°We¡¯re getting out of here today.¡± As soon as he says the words that make my heart skip a dozen beats, Earl¡¯s boots can be heard clunking down the wooden steps. It¡¯s Dean¡¯s day.Thank God. ¡°Rise and shine, pets. Ready for a new day?¡± Earl exims, his face beaming with evil joy. He paces over to Dean, the sound of his steel-toed boots against the cement always so loud and antagonistic. Earl unlocks the cuffs, then steps away with the gun pointed directly at Dean¡¯s skull. But instead of walking towards me like he usually does, Dean remains where he stands. He ispletely still, his expression nk, as he stares Earl down with a scathing re. ¡°You¡¯re a fat, fucking bastard,¡± he says, his tone low and levelled. Earl stands stock-still while I watch the scene in terrified silence, my fingers curling around my pole and gripping tight. Then Earl slugs Dean across the jaw with his fist. I flinch, crying out in protest, yanking at my chains to draw Earl¡¯s attention back to me. When Dean slowly pulls himself up from his knees, his fist is closed tight, hiding a small treasure. Earl presses the barrel of the gun against his back and shoves him towards me. ¡°Don¡¯t fuck with me, kid. Next time it¡¯s a bullet in your face instead of my fist,¡± Earl warns. ¡°You¡¯re on borrowed time.¡± My breathing is ragged and quick as Dean approaches me, face to face, blue eyes on green. My gaze drifts to his busted lip, already swelling and smeared with blood. I inhale, almost choking when the breath reaches the back of my throat. Then Dean leans in. He presses those full lips to mine, and I immediately taste the metallic, coppery blood on my tongue, mixed with sweat and a trace of mint from the toothpaste. I part my mouth, allowing his tongue to slip inside, and he breathes in deep,so deep, as if he¡¯s sucking up my lifeforce for survival. As he continues to kiss me, I feel him reach his arm around my body, finding my cuffed wrists. But instead of cing his thumb against my pulse point like he usually does, he pauses. His mouth breaks away from mine, and Dean grazes his lips against my right cheek until they are pressed up to my ear. The tickle of his hot breath makes me shiver. Then he whispers in a scratchy voice, ¡°Don¡¯t let go of your cuffs. Don¡¯t let them fall.¡± Another breath gets caught in my throat as I instinctively curl my fingers around the metal, gripping as tight as I can. Dean takes a moment to unbuckle himself and push his jeans down to his ankles, then lifts me up with both hands. ¡°Wrap your legs around me,¡± he orders. I ignore the tingly sensation those words procure and do as he says, holding myself up so Dean can try to unlock my cuffs with the belt sp. It feels like an impossible feat, butmy God, I¡¯ve never wished for anything more. Dean enters me, averting his eyes like always, unable to witness my reaction to what he considers a horrifying vition. I should agree, I really should, but my guess is that my eyes tell a different tale. It¡¯s better that he doesn¡¯t look. When we get into afortable rhythm, Dean finds my wrists again, pressing his chin into the curve of my right shoulder and hiding his face from Earl. From the other side of the room, it probably appears that he¡¯s really into pummeling me against this pole¡ªwhen really, he¡¯s trying to set me free. I don¡¯t miss him massaging my wrist today because I¡¯m too distracted by the notion of escaping and finally getting out of this prison. Please work. Please, please work. I count down the seconds in my head, trying to keep my face focused and unreadable. It feels like more time is going by than usual and a stir of panic rumbles in my belly. I attempt to keep my breaths even, my eyes closed. I wait and wait and wait. And then Dean pulls his lips back to my ear and says softly, ¡°I need you to moan, Corabelle.¡± Moan? I swallow with uncertainty. ¡°Please,¡± he whispers, the plea muffled against my ear and creating more goosebumps. I nod my head and conjure up my most convincing moan, masking the sound of the cuffs releasing behind me, hiding the evidence of our monumental win. Holy shit, he did it. Dean did it. I clutch the metal in my hands for dear life, making sure they don¡¯t hit the ground and give us away. Dean takes a moment to focus on his ¡°task¡± and finishes inside me a minuteter. He doesn¡¯t say he¡¯s sorry this time. He doesn¡¯t cry or beg for my forgiveness. He pulls back and winks. We wait for what feels like an eternity, when in reality, is probably less than an hour. We wait until we¡¯re confident Earl has gone to work. Earl has a routine. He works Monday through Friday, leaving in the morning and returning shortly after sunset. Today is Thursday, so he should be well on his way to work by now, giving us less than eight hours to get the fuck out of here. My heart is about to burst inside my chest with anticipation and anxiety. There is a lot riding on this¡ªthere iseverythingriding on this. I have no idea how to get Dean out of his chains, so it¡¯s going to take a while to figure it out. I¡¯ve never picked a lock before in my life, let alone professional grade handcuffs. ¡°He¡¯s gotta be gone by now,¡± Dean says to my right, prompting the nerves in my belly to do the Mamba. ¡°You ready?¡± I let out a hard breath. ¡°I¡¯m ready.¡± I finally let go of the metal and feel the cuffs slip from my wrists. It doesn¡¯t seem real at first, so I just sit there, forgetting I can move. I can walk. I can do a freakin¡¯ happy dance if I want to. I pull myself up to unsteady feet, pinning my gaze on Dean. Then I run to him. He¡¯s standing in front of me, his eyes wide and expectant, his chest heaving with fretful breaths. I catapult myself right to him, slinging my arms around his neck and touching him for the first time in weeks. Touchinganyone. My hands are my own. My body is mine. I skim my fingers through his hair, tugging gently, reveling in the feel of the soft strands. Dean doesn¡¯t tell me to hurry up and get moving¡ªno, he gives me this moment. He lets me run my palms down his neck, over his shoulder des, then back up and around to his chest. I nt them there for a few moments, taking in the hurried beats of his heart. He feels warm and safe and alive. This is really happening. I lift my eyes to his, ovee with emotion. A simr sentiment is staring back at me, and it almost stops my breath. I find my bearings and pull my hands away from Dean¡¯s chest, taking a small step backwards. ¡°I don¡¯t know how to get you out of those,¡± I tell him. ¡°I know. I¡¯ll walk you through it. I dropped the pin behind your pole¡ªbring it over here and I¡¯ll tell you what to do.¡± I nod, making my way back to my corner of nightmares and sliding the front of my hands over the dusty floor, my eyes casing every inch as I search for the little gold pin. When I spot it, I pick it up, pinching it between my fingers, and I dart back over to Dean to await instruction. I settle behind him as he returns to a sitting position and take his hands in mine. He starts walking me through the steps, but my mind feels foggy and unfocused, and my hands are trembling, so I keep dropping the sp. He mentions single locks and double locks and stopping points. Clockwise, counter clockwise, springs and bars. It¡¯s so much. It¡¯s too much. ¡°I-I can¡¯t get it, Dean.¡± I feel myself panicking, the metal shaking in my inept hands. ¡°I suck at this. I¡¯m so sorry.¡± ¡°Hey, hey. It¡¯s not easy to do. You¡¯re doing great.¡± I keep going, cursing under my breath as sweat lines my brow. At least thirty minutes drag by, causing my anxiety to swirl and spin. I fall back onto my butt with a cry of defeat, swiping my damp forehead with the back of my hand. ¡°I can¡¯t do it.¡± Dean is silent for a moment as I watch the way his shoulders sag slightly. He must be so disappointed in me. ¡°It¡¯s okay, Cora. Don¡¯t worry about it,¡± he tells me, trying to find me over his shoulder. I scoot forward so we can see each other. ¡°Just get out of here and bring back help.¡± I gape at him. ¡°And leave you here alone? I-I don¡¯t even know where we are. What if I get lost? What if I can¡¯t find help and he discovers I¡¯ve escaped?¡± I ramble, out of breath. ¡°He¡¯ll kill you!¡± ¡°I¡¯ll be fine,¡± Dean says. ¡°Just get the hell out of here. Find a main road and have someone call the police.¡± ¡°What if¡ª¡± ¡°Go, Cora. Please.¡± Our eyes stay locked as his words trickle in and stick to every piece of me. I gulp down my fear and worries and self-doubt, nodding my head with concession. ¡°Okay.¡± I climb to my feet, Dean following suit. My knees are weak and shaky as I lean in for one more hug, memorizing the scent of his skin. ¡°I¡¯m getting you out of here,¡± I whisper against his neck. We hold eye contact for just a moment longer, then I turn away and jog over to the staircase.This belongs to N?velDrama.Org: ?. ¡°Cora.¡± I pause at the sound of his voice, spinning around to face him from across the room. ¡°Yes?¡± Dean pulls his lips between his teeth, mulling over whatever he¡¯s going to say. I watch his throat bob as he swallows, his grown-out hair sticking to his forehead. ¡°I know I said you can go back to hating me when we get out of here,¡± he says in an angst-ridden voice. ¡°But I really hope you don¡¯t.¡± A solemn silence hangs between us, thick and palpable. I blink. Then I smile and reply, ¡°But it¡¯s fun.¡± Dean¡¯s mouth tips up into his own smile, taking in the words I¡¯ve adamantly denied for so long. I cling to that smile, using it as fuel as I make my way up the wood steps, hoping and praying the basement door is unlocked. If it¡¯s not, I guess I¡¯ll be squeezing myself through that tiny window that has taunted me for the past two-and-a-half weeks. I bite my lip, reaching out a tentative hand towards the doorknob. It twists. The door squeaks open. There is a God. There is a freakin¡¯ God. I blow out a slow breath, my body rxing just a bit. I¡¯ve made it out of the basement. Out of the dungeon. Out ofHell. Now¡­ to feel the crisp November air against my skin. I want to swallow it down and let it cleanse me, washing it all away. Every rape and sleepless night. Every stab of hunger and insatiable thirst. Every teardrop, every nightmare, every hollow thought. I take cautious steps down the narrow hallway, passing the small bathroom on the left and heading towards the main living room. The house reeks of mold and urine. There are a few crooked pictures lining the walls, showing me that this monster isn¡¯t anactualmonster. He¡¯s human. He has a life. A family. They have no idea what he has be. I keep walking, noting a 1970s kitchen on the right and a musty living room on the left. There is an oak door off the living area. An escape. But before I make my exit, a calendar catches my eye. It¡¯s pinned to the wall in front of me with a red thumbtack. There arerge exes made in ck Sharpie across the dates starting from November 8thand ending yesterday, November 25th. There is a scribble next to the number eight that reads: ¡°New Pets¡±. A shiver crawls up my spine as my feet make their way towards the calendar. It¡¯s surreal to think that almost the entire month has been wasted in captivity. I flip through the preceding months, my curiosity getting the better of me. Nine days prior to the eighth are nk¡ªthest ex is etched onto the square of October 29th. My stomach coils with dread at the realization that another couple likely died that day. I count the previous exes:there are twenty-two. The couple before us survived twenty-two days in that basement. Our time was almost up. A strangled sound escapes me as I bring a hand to my mouth, holding back my queasiness. My insides feel sick, and I want to puke. And cry. And scream. But I don¡¯t. I¡¯m almost there. I¡¯m almostout. On instinct, I snatch up a few envelopes lying in a stack of mail on the kitchen table. They are addressed toEarl Hubbard.His address is listed. Perfect. I spin around, uncaring that I¡¯m only wearing Dean¡¯s too-big shoes and a t-shirt that barely touches mid-thigh. All I care about is finding help for Dean. All I care about is ending this nightmare and putting Earl behind bars for the rest of his life. I run to the front door and whip it open. The cool air assaults me, and it¡¯s much colder than I anticipate. Probably freezing. I look around, realizing we¡¯re tucked away on some kind of farm, far, far away from civilization. The acreage stretches farther than my eyes can see. Part of me wonders how long I¡¯ll evenst out here before sumbing to hypothermia. No. Dean is counting on me. His life depends on me. I can do this. I dart out the door and start running straight ahead, hoping there is some kind of road or town behind the line of trees. The icy leaves crunch beneath my feet as the cold wind already begins to freeze my limbs. But my escape is cut short when I feel a hand wrap around my mouth, while a thick arm encircles my waist, pulling me back. The envelopes fall from my grip. No, no, no. Earl snarls against my ear as I kick my legs and scream into his filthy palm. ¡°Nice try, kitten. You¡¯re going to pay for this.¡± ¡°No!¡± I scream and scream and scream, my efforts muffled by Earl¡¯s hand. As he hauls me back towards the house, I notice a charcoal grill off to the side with a turkey sitting atop the grates. I blink, struck by a cruel twist of fate. It¡¯s Thanksgiving. It¡¯s a national holiday. We blew our escape attempt on the one day he didn¡¯t have to work. Tears rim my eyes as I fight with everything I have left. When Earl pulls me through the threshold and into the living room, I spot andline phone on the far wall. Oh, my God. Why didn¡¯t I think to look for a phone? I¡¯m so used to my cell phone. No one hasndlines anymore. But if I¡¯d paid attention, I could have called the cops and waited for rescue, avoiding this utter disaster of an escape attempt. Soon, we¡¯ll be back at square one. Soon, we¡¯ll be dead. As he yanks me forward towards the hallway, I swing my head back and forth until I¡¯m able to open my mouth. I take the small window to chomp down on his hand, drawing blood. Earl howls in pain and releases me on instinct, giving me an opportunity to race towards the phone. I reach it. I pick it up and start to dial with quivering fingers. 9-1- ¡°You fuckin¡¯ bitch.¡± Earl smacks the phone out of my hand before I get thest number in, then clubs me over the head with some kind of metal pipe. I drop to the kitchen floor in a daze and he begins kicking me in the ribs. I scream in pain, in fear, in hopelessness. I can hear Dean yelling for me from down below as I lie across the stained yellow tiles, curling my body into itself while Earl¡¯s steel toe breaks my ribs in two. When I feel myself on the verge of passing out, Earl grabs a handful of my hair and drags me down the hallway. I twist and resist, digging my fingernails into his arm, but it¡¯s no use. He opens the basement door and throws me down the flight of steps. I hear Dean shout my name right before my skull hits the cement and everything goes ck. : Part 1 – Chapter 11 I think the wavesare whispering my name. Maybe they are singing to me and my name is the ocean¡¯s favorite song. ¡°Cora.¡± It sounds so beautifuling from the mouth of the magnificent sea. Every letter is a perfect note. Every syble is a melody, harmonious and pure. But as the water kisses my toes, a howling wind blows through and plucks my name right from the ocean floor. The song turns hard and loud, like a base drum pounding in my ears, stomping on my ribs and squeezing my head until I cry out. It hurts¡­it hurts. It¡¯s not supposed to hurt. ¡°Cora.¡± I open my eyes with slow, painful blinks as my surroundings begin to take shape. My reality. The evidence of my failure. I start to cry instantly, my cheek pressed against the gritty cement, my hands locked behind me in a position that is all too familiar. I sob, hysterical and weak, realizing my eyes are unable to produce tears. I can¡¯t even fucking cry. ¡°Cora¡­ fuck, Cora, I thought you were dead,¡± Dean says, his voice threaded with impetuous relief. ¡°Talk to me, Corabelle. Tell me you¡¯re okay.¡± I continue to wail, shake, and moan, my body racked with hopeless defeat and more pain than I can even process. ¡°I failed. I failed you. I¡¯m so sorry,¡± I choke out through tearless sobs, drawing my knees up to my aching chest. I¡¯m not sure what¡¯s more broken¡ªmy ribs or my heart. ¡°I¡¯m so sorry, Dean. I just want to die.¡± ¡°Don¡¯t you dare say that,¡± he tells me in a desperate plea. ¡°It¡¯s not your fault. It¡¯s not over. Please don¡¯t give up, Corabelle. I need you.¡± I can¡¯t bear to look at him. He¡¯s living proof of my fatal fuck-up. ¡°Remember the day Blizzard got hit by a car? Remember what I said to you?¡± Dean continues. I sniffle, my chin to my knees, as I lie sideways on the ground. ¡°You said if she dies, I can always get another dog.¡± ¡°Not that part.¡± Dean¡¯s sigh travels over to me and I hear him adjust his chains. ¡°I told you her heart was still beating. As long as it was beating, she was okay.¡± I do remember that. It was four years ago. I had stopped by my parent¡¯s house on my lunch break to take Blizzard for a walk. Somehow, her cor broke loose and she darted out into the street chasing a squirrel. The guilt I felt almost destroyed me¡ªI was certain she would die and it would have been all my fault. But Dean was the first person to arrive at the animal hospital. I figured it was because he¡¯d always had a soft spot for the fluffy, ivory dog he carried to safety in a snow storm all those years ago, but I remember him being unusually kind that day. He sat with me until my sister and parents showed up, trying to calm me down. He even rubbed my back, shushing away the tears. The foreignness of his disposition was enough to distract me from the grief, and his words always stuck with me: ¡°You just need to stay in the moment,¡± Dean told me in an unfamiliar, soothing voice. ¡°Her heart is still beating¡­ as long as it¡¯s beating, she¡¯s okay. Just take it one second at a time, Corabelle. Blizzard is okay and there is no reality where she¡¯s not okay.¡± Blizzard survived and Dean returned to his usual obnoxious self the following day. We slipped right back into our familiar banter and old,bative routine. ¡®Compassionate Dean¡¯ was a distant memory, quickly forgotten, and I figured he was only being nice because Mandy had been giving him extra shit that week for almost sabotaging my teaching interview by wrapping my car in stic. I swallow down my spastic breaths, trying to apply hisforting words to our current situation. It¡¯s not over yet. We¡¯re both still alive, and as long as we¡¯re alive, there is hope. I need to be present¡ªstay in the moment. It¡¯s not over. I force myself into a sitting position, wincing through clenched teeth as the pain engulfs me. I¡¯m certain I have cracked ribs, along with a concussion. But I¡¯m not dead. I¡¯m still okay.This belongs to N?velDrama.Org: ?. I finally nce at Dean, breathing heavily as I try to block out the burning difort sailing through my shipwrecked body. I don¡¯t speak, but I notice his eyes soften as I stare at him¡­renewed hope. I don¡¯t need to say anything for him to know¡ªI got up. I pulled myself together. We¡¯re going to fight until ourst breath. : Part 1 – Chapter 12 Day twenty is upon usand our time is running out. Earl didn¡¯t feed us or give us water the previous day¡ªall he did was allow us to use the bathroom, brush our teeth, and then I was subjected to a beating with his leather belt, amplifying my already broken body. It was a punishment for my ¡®misbehavior¡¯. I sucked up giant handfuls of water as I brushed my teeth over the sink, so I won¡¯t be dying from dehydration just yet, but I feel my body getting weaker every minute. I keep thinking about how the couple before us only made it twenty-two days, and I wonder if that¡¯s the deadly number. Then I force myself to push those unproductive thoughts away because it¡¯s not day twenty-two. It¡¯s day twenty. We¡¯re okay. Dean and I are in the middle of discussing a possible escape n during our bathroom breakter, when those boots make their way down the stairs and stomp over to us, each step sending a wave of nausea right through me. ¡°Is my kitten ready for her doggie¡¯s bone?¡± Earl snarks, then bursts out into hoarseughter, entirely amused with his sick, stupid pun. ¡°Hope my pets enjoy it today¡ªmight be thest time. My own dogs are hungry for some fresh meat.¡± Oh, God. I hold back my terrified cry. It¡¯s not over. We¡¯re okay. It¡¯s not over. Dean approaches me after his restraints are removed, looking weary and haggard and so unlike the man I once knew. I used to loathe that mischievous gleam in his eyes, the one that loved to instigate me and push my buttons¡ªnow, I would do anything to get it back. Something tells me that even if we manage to make it out of here alive, I¡¯ll never see those eyes again. Earl barks his orders from the other side of the basement, as if we don¡¯t know what to do by now. He waves his shiny gun around, but I don¡¯t hear any of the wordsing out of his mouth. Everything sounds muffled and far away, like I¡¯m underwater. I¡¯m only focused on Dean. Nothing else exists. Dean closes in, reaching for my wrist and beginning his slow, circr motions over my skin. He then presses his opposite hand to my chest and lets his forehead fall against my own. I inhale a sharp gasp, not expecting the gesture. There is something intimate about it¡ªsomething different. I force my eyes shut because I find myself unable to look at him while we¡¯re in this strangely personal position. Odd, considering he¡¯s beeninsideme. It doesn¡¯t get more personal than that. He pushes his hand against the crown of my breast, but not in a sexual way. He sighs so deep it resonates right through me. ¡°It¡¯s still beating,¡± he whispers, his words a soft kiss against my lips. ¡°As long as it¡¯s beating, you¡¯re okay.¡± With his hand to my heart and his thumb trailing along my pulse point, he leans in. I meet him halfway, eager to feel his warmth, desperate for that human contact¡ªthatconnection. His tongue invades me, and our kiss feels hungrier than usual. It¡¯s more than routine. It¡¯s more than survival. Maybe he¡¯s craving that connection just as much as I am. Dean trails his hand down my breast, slowly, sying his fingers along my abdomen. His touch is gentle and soft against my sore ribs, merely a tickle. A small whimper escapes my throat, and I instinctively raise my leg to wrap it around his waist, our tongues in a frenzy and our lips devouring one another. Dean¡¯s hand leaves me to unbutton his jeans and yank them down his hips, and then I feel him at my core, seeking more of my heat. We¡¯re both warm and breathing and alive, and it¡¯s intoxicating.Lifeis intoxicating when you¡¯re on the brink of death, day after day. I inhale a tapered breath when he pushes inside me, my hands gripping the pole. My eyes are still closed as I try to zone out to my usual, happy ce¡ªthe one that¡¯s far, far away from here. But I keep being pulled back to Dean. I¡¯m too aware of him today, too drunk on the feel of another human body filling me up and breathing life into me. His cock thrusts deep as his forehead touches mine again, but I keep my eyes shut, too scared to look at him. Too scared to see if his blue, blue eyes are reflecting everything I¡¯m feeling right now. His movements are slower than usual. Slow, but steady. Intense. Usually he¡¯s quick and hurried, eager to get this over with. But not today. Today, it¡¯s different¡ªalmost like he¡¯s savoring every inch of me. And I¡¯m not sure why, I¡¯ll never know why, but my body starts to respond. I block everything out, except for Dean, and I feel a pool of heat surge between my thighs¡­ an ancient buzz of pleasure. Pleasure. What a thing to feel when you¡¯re chained in a basement with a madman waving a gun at you in one hand and beating off in the other, while your soon-to-be brother-inw fucks you against a pole. But I go with it. I go with it because it¡¯s better than feeling like I¡¯m dying inside. I think Dean notices, too. He palms my ass with one hand beneath my t-shirt, my unwashed hair falling over our faces like a curtain. I¡¯m dirty and gross, and I probably smell like a sewer, but that doesn¡¯t stop Dean from burying his face into my neck and breathing me in, inhaling my scent like it¡¯s sweet, beautiful oxygen. He picks up speed, and I realize my other leg has wrapped around him, holding myself up and pulling him close as his cock drives in and out of me. He lifts his head. I can feel him looking at me. Watching me. Begging me to open my eyes. I do. My eyelids flutter open and the air catches in my throat when our gazes meet. He¡¯s staring at me like I¡¯m the only goddamn thing in the world, and I suppose, right now, I am. A soft moan passes through his lips and I want to know what it tastes like, so I lean forward to capture his mouth in another searing kiss. He kisses me back with everything he has left, everyst ounce of life and hope, his tongue tangling desperately with my own. Then his thumb halts its calming designs along my wrist. My security nket is gone. My way out has turned to dust. And I hardly notice. I don¡¯t even care because I¡¯m so wrapped up in all of the strange, powerful feelings coursing through me, swallowing me whole. Dean trails his hand up my arm and cradles my neck, pulling back from my mouth to find my eyes again. He doesn¡¯t want to give me an escape this time. He wants me to behere, in this moment, with him. My breathing is heavy as tiny sounds crawl up my throat with each hard thrust of his cock. I want to reach for him. I want to touch him like he¡¯s touching me. I want to feel his skin beneath my fingertips, assuring me he¡¯s real. I¡¯m not alone. I¡¯m not alone. Dean¡¯s hand disappears from my neck and falls between us, and I almost choke on a gasp when I realize what he¡¯s doing. The thumb that has been tracing my wrist, giving mefort, is now pressed up against my clit, massaging me as our bodies crash together. His eyes don¡¯t leave mine. My eyes don¡¯t leave his. We¡¯re locked together, something silent and unspoken but all-consuming passing between us. It doesn¡¯t take long before the telltale sparks begin to scatter and climb, an orgasm building. My breath hitches with tiny gasps and whimpers, and my God, the look on Dean¡¯s face when he realizes what¡¯s happening¡ªwhen he realizes I¡¯m going toe¡­ Shock. Disbelief. The space between his eyes creases, his brows furrowing, his pupils dting. His gaze is wide and full of something I can¡¯t even begin to unravel. And then I feel myself peaking, bursting, so he kisses me, devouring my moan with his mouth and plunging into me three more times before his own orgasm takes over. He lets out a primal groan, shuddering and digging his fingers into the underside of my thigh as hees. And then it¡¯s over. We bothe down, our lips and teeth pressed together, our breathing low and heavy. Dean¡¯s grip on me loosens, and my legs fall from his hips. I¡¯m absolutely terrified to look at him, partially disgusted by what just transpired, but mostly confused. I duck my head the moment our mouths separate, forcing back the hot tears of shame. What the hell was that? A slow p rings out beside us, echoing right through me, and I realize I had forgotten he was even there. ¡°Well done. My little ythings put on quite the show,¡± Earl sneers, a gurglingugh erupting from him. Dean quickly pulls out of me, and I can see that his chin is to his chest as he steps backwards. He can¡¯t look at me either. He¡¯s shuffling with his pants when Earl lurches forward and pushes him to the opposite corner with the barrel of the gun. ¡°Intermission time,¡± Earl says as Dean pulls up his zipper. ¡°Fuck you¡­ you vile, filthy,inhumanepiece of shit.¡± A beat. Oh, no, Dean. What are you doing? Dean must have a death wish because he continues. ¡°You¡¯re a sick, twisted piece of garbage. You¡¯ll never get away with this because you¡¯ll keep doing it. You¡¯ll keep kidnapping women because there¡¯s not a single fucking reality where you could evenpaya woman to touch your tiny, impotent dick. You¡¯re going to get caught, and then you¡¯re going to rot in a prison cell where Carl shoves his enormous cock up your ass every night until you drop dead, you fat, fuckingfuck.¡± Earl is silent for a moment, his pistol positioned right at Dean¡¯s chest. My heart all but stops as I wait, my insides twisting with dread. He¡¯s going to kill him. He¡¯s absolutely going to kill him. I can¡¯t let that happen. Before the trigger is pulled, before a shot rings out and Dean drops in front of my eyes, I let out a mighty, shrill scream and shake my chains at the same time. It¡¯s enough to pierce the silence and force Earl¡¯s attention in my direction for the briefest moment. It¡¯s enough to give Dean a tiny, pivotal window to make his move. It¡¯s our one and only chance of getting out of here alive, and Dean takes it. He follows through on his promise. With a guttural growl, Dean lunges at Earl and knocks him right off his feet. They both tumble backwards onto the hard ground, Dean on top, Earl grabbing for his pistol that slipped from his meaty paw. Dean gets to it first and shoves it away with a quick swipe of his hand, and I watch it slide across the floor and out of Earl¡¯s reach. ¡°You motherfucker,¡± Dean spits out, slinking one palm around Earl¡¯s neck as he rises to his knees and straddles our captor, beating him with his opposite fist. Dean pummels him. He¡¯s violent and angry andpletely zoned out. ¡°You sick piece of shit. This is forying yourdisgustingfucking hands on her.¡± Thwap. Thwap. Thwap. The sound of fist against face is sickening as blood spatters up at Dean and all around us. I¡¯m holding my breath, squeezing the pole with all my might, watching the horrific scene in front of me. ¡°You bastard. You fucking bastard.¡± Dean is focused. Determined. He¡¯s using both fists now to wreak havoc on Earl¡¯s face until the monster bes unrecognizable. ¡°How dare you fucking touch her. I¡¯ll fucking kill you.¡± Thwap. Thwap. Thwap. Blood, flesh, bone. It¡¯s everywhere. Earl¡¯s limbs quiver in shock as he loses the fight and goes limp on the cement. ¡°You¡¯re dead. You¡¯re fuckingdead,¡± Dean seethes, spitting through his teeth, his punches hard and brutal. He¡¯s an animal¡ªout of control. ¡°I¡¯llkillyou.¡± But he already did. It¡¯s done. It¡¯s over. I hear skull cracking, and I clench my eyes shut, shouting, ¡°Dean, stop!¡± ¡°Fuck you, motherfucker.¡± Thwap. Crack. Thwap. ¡°He¡¯s dead, Dean!¡± I cry. ¡°He¡¯s dead. He¡¯s dead. Please stop.¡± My voice finally infiltrates the vengeance-fueled haze that has consumed him, and Dean stills his fist mid-air, his chest surging with weighty breaths, his body shaking with rage. His eyes widen as he takes in the gory scene in front of him¡ªa horrifying, ugly mess he created with his own, bare hands. A life taken. End scene. Dean propels himself backwards when the image sinks in, scooting himself away from the blood-spattered body and pulling himself to faltering feet. ¡°Fuck¡­ oh, Jesus¡­¡± He holds his hands out in front of him, staring at the bloodbath, his breathing intensifying and bing unhinged. I want to run to him, console him in some way, but I¡¯m still chained to this goddamn pole. I tug at my manacles. ¡°Dean, please get me out of these. I want to go home.¡± He snaps his head up, and the look of incredulous horror on his face will be ingrained in my mind forever. Dean looks back down at his hands, then starts scrubbing them against the front of his jeans. ¡°Yeah, okay. Fuck¡­ okay¡­¡± He¡¯s out of sorts, pacing around in a circle, tugging at his hair. ¡°Dean.¡± His name breaks on my tongue, and I bob my knees up and down, desperate for freedom. ¡°Please.¡±Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. He swallows, blinking at me and nodding his head. ¡°I¡¯m sorry¡­ yeah, okay¡­¡± Dean jumps into action, putting the grisly truths aside until we are out of here. He pauses to nce at Earl¡¯s body, and I think he¡¯s going to search him for the key to the handcuffs. Instead, he runs back to his pole and slides down to his knees, his hands roving over the cement to find the pin of the belt. He locates it, then stumbles over to me with wild eyes and blood-stained skin. ¡°This might take a few minutes.¡± I nod, closing my eyes so I don¡¯t have to look at the mangled body lying in front of me. I can feel Dean¡¯s breaths beating against my hair as his hands shake and quiver while they try to unchain me. It takes a long time. Ten¡ªmaybe fifteen minutes. But when the cuffs finally slip loose and tter against the cement floor, I pull my arms free with a cry of relief. I hear the pin follow with a tiny nk, and Dean¡¯s forehead falls against the pole beside me while he takes a minute to regroup. I turn to him, watching his eyes close as he tries to control his breathing. His sticky hands cling to the pipe¡ªthe same piece of metal that has held me captive in this hellhole for almost three weeks. I reach out my own unsteady hand, cing it against his shoulder, stepping forward until we are almost fully touching. Dean¡¯s jaw clenches and unclenches as he twists his head to the side, still leaning against the pole, finding my face. I rub my hand along his back, much like he had done at the veterinary hospital that dreary afternoon with Blizzard. Our eyes hold as I try to quiet the demons so clearly wreaking havoc on his mind. And then, in one fell swoop, Dean tugs me towards him as he stands up straight, crushing me to his chest, his arms wrapping around me and holding tight. My own arms slink around his middle, my face buried against his racing heart. I can smell blood and fear and terror and victory. I feel him trembling in my embrace, his bodying down from the massive adrenaline spike. He hugs me tighter and tighter, and I don¡¯t even care that my ribs are screaming in resistance¡ªhe could never hug me tight enough. Our emotions begin to settle and we slowly pull apart, our eyes lingering for one potent beat before he takes my hand and pulls me to the staircase. I don¡¯t spare Earl, or whatever¡¯s left of him, a final nce as we race past his body. He¡¯s not worth another second of my life. We won. Dean is scrubbing his hands and arms in the kitchen sink with a bristled brush, erasing all remnants of Earl off his skin. He¡¯s relentless and harsh, washing and cleansing until his flesh is pink and raw. I watch the water run red as Dean¡¯s eyes stayser focused on his task. Even when all of the blood has disappeared down the drain, he keeps scrubbing. Swish. Swish. Swish. ¡°Dean,¡± I say gently,ing up behind him in an attempt to distract him. He doesn¡¯t hear me. Swish. Swish. Swish. ¡°It¡¯s okay, Dean.¡± He keeps scrubbing. Dean is trying to cleanse more than just his skin. Tiny specks of blood begin to form along the surface of his arms, and I finally reach my hand out and ce it against his shoulder. ¡°Dean, stop. You¡¯re hurting yourself.¡± He pauses his movements, turning around and ncing between me and the blood-tinged bristles. He swallows. ¡°Sorry, I just¡­¡± Dean trails off, but he doesn¡¯t need to finish the sentence. We both know exactly what he¡¯s doing. I jump in ce when police sirens sound in the distance, and I waste no time running to the back door off the kitchen. ¡°Cora, wait. They¡¯lle inside to get us,¡± Dean says, trying to keep me from darting out into the subzero weather in nothing but a blood-stained t-shirt. But I can¡¯t listen to logic or reason right now. Safety is roughly four-hundred yards away, and I¡¯m desperate, reckless,aching, to have a taste of humanity. I can¡¯t wait. I¡¯m done waiting. The door ms against the wall as I whip it open, and the icy air sts my face. I gasp at the intensity of it, but it doesn¡¯t stop my feet fromunching me forward, pulling me closer to freedom. There¡¯s a dirt road behind the house, and I try not to think about the fact that if I¡¯d gone out this door two days earlier, I probably would have made a sessful escape. We¡¯d have two extra days with our families in our warm beds, eating real food. I could have spared Dean from a grisly crime that he will likely carry with him for the rest of his life. But I try not to think about that. There¡¯s no room for what ifs right now. As I stumble forward, I clutch my throbbing ribs as they scream at me to go slow. My head is pounding, my body is crumbling, my limbs are numbing from the cold, and I realize I¡¯ve barely made it a few feet. I see the shing lights ahead, though, and it¡¯s too tempting¡ªtoo seductive. I need to keep moving. I press on, holding back my cries of pain as I push forward across the crunchy leaves and frost-tipped grass. It¡¯s then that I feel him behind me, his warmth touching me before his hands ever do. ¡°I¡¯ve got you.¡± Dean throws a jacket over my shoulders and picks me up off the ground, one arm around my back and the other tucked under my knees. We pause for a moment, our eyes catching, and I wrap my own arms around his neck, allowing him to carry me the rest of the way. Iy my head against his shoulder, and I swear I could fall asleep. Even though I¡¯m half-naked with broken bones, caked in blood and dirt and semen, being trekked through an open field in the arms of my sister¡¯s fianc¨¦¡ªI¡¯m at peace. I feel safe. I¡¯m exhausted. My soul is exhausted. I listen to Dean¡¯s arduous breaths as he totes me through the property in his strong arms. I concentrate on his heartbeats, quick and steady. I can¡¯t help but wonder what the future holds for us now. It¡¯s impossible to go back to the way we were because we aren¡¯t those people anymore. We¡¯ve been through too much. We¡¯veseentoo much. I¡¯ve witnessed the deepest, darkest parts of Dean. I¡¯ve seen him cry and kill ande. He¡¯s been inside me. When we finally reach the dusty, blocked-off road where police cruisers, ambnces, FBI, media, and firetrucks are all lined up, I burrow my face deeper into the crevice of Dean¡¯s shoulder. After three weeks of surviving the bowels of Hell with this man, I realize I don¡¯t even know how to process life beyond our nightmare. Dean sets me down, gingerly and careful, and we stand there for a moment facing our new reality together. A fresh start. A second chance. shing lights, noise, cameras, faces attached to people who will never understand. I inhale a splintered breath, closing my eyes, feeling overwhelmed and panicked and relieved all at once. And then his knuckles graze against my own like a soft kiss, a knowing touch, apromise. I feel his fingers intece with mine. We stand there, hand-in-hand, watching as EMTs and police officers move towards us like a slow-motion movie. I hold onto him. He¡¯s still my lifeline. He¡¯s still all I have. We¡¯re in this together. : Part 2 – Chapter 13 I stare at a ckantcrawling along the toe of my shoe. It¡¯s weaving itself into confused circles on the dark suede, looking lost and unsure. It dances across my interwovences, likely searching for food and warmth. I can¡¯t help but wonder how it¡¯s surviving these brutal winter temperatures. It¡¯s so small and fragile¡ªso insignificant. It doesn¡¯t stand a chance. ¡°Dean.¡± Cora and I were ants. Small and fragile¡ªlost in a cold, scary world. Set up to fail. We had each other, though. The ant is all alone. ¡°Dean.¡± I register my name catching on a sharp gust of wind that sails by, almost knocking me off my feet. I look up from my ce on the sidewalk to find Mandy spearing me with those worried eyes I¡¯ve be so familiar with over the past two weeks. ¡°Yeah?¡± ¡°Are you ready to go inside?¡± Her microded eyebrow arches with concern, and I realize I zoned out in front of her parent¡¯s house, sympathizing with an ant. I nce down at the insect, only to find that it has since left my shoe and disappeared into the cement cracks. I hope it beats the odds. Mandy nts a smile on her crimson lips when I nod my head, then she steps over to take my hand in hers. She is warm, and yet, a chill sweeps through me. ¡°It¡¯s going to be fine,¡± she says idly, sensing my resistance as she threads our fingers together. ¡°It¡¯ll be good to have a little normalcy again.¡± Normalcy. Nothing about thest five weeks has been normal, that¡¯s for sure. And I can¡¯t imagine this forced family dinner with her parents will feel anything close to normal. ¡°Yeah. I guess.¡± Mandy blinks her fakeshes at me, trying to mask her apprehension with another smile. ¡°Do you need a minute?¡± ¡°No.¡± A minute won¡¯t change anything. A minute doesn¡¯t erase the damage done. A minute isn¡¯t going to teleport me back to the safety of my own bed, where I canfortably avoid my current reality and battle my demons in private. ¡°Let¡¯s go inside.¡± I move forward because it¡¯s the only choice I have. We walk up the cobblestone pathway to the bright blue Colonial-style house in a picture-perfect neighborhood. I¡¯ve walked this path thousands of times before, but today I spot a little gnome statue next to the row of shrubs lining the front of the house. He looks rusted¡ªworn from the elements. ¡°Is that a new statue?¡± I inquire of Mandy as we reach the porch step. ¡°Richard the Gnome?¡± She scrunches up her nose. ¡°He¡¯s been there for, like, two decades, Mr. Observant.¡± Mandy shoots me a wink, attempting to be yful. ¡°Cora named him Richard because she said he looked like Richard Marx.¡± I nibble on the inside of my cheek. I can¡¯t help but wonder how many other day-to-day things I walked right by without ever affording a nce or a thought. We step inside the all-too-familiar home and are greeted with the smell of garlic, rosemary, and a hint of pine. I turn to see a magnificent, fresh tree in the sitting room to our left, decorated in golds and reds and priceless, homemade ornaments. Most of the time, I don¡¯t even know what day it is, let alone the fact that it¡¯s almost Christmas. ¡°Oh, Dean.¡± My head snaps up to find Bridget and Derek Lawson rushing towards me from the kitchen. Bridget¡¯s long, brown skirt trails behind her as tears well in green eyes that bear a striking resemnce to Cora¡¯s. Her blonde hair is cropped into a pixie cut, her crow¡¯s feet creasing as she casts her worry and love all over me. Derek is behind her, his salt-and-pepper hair telling his age despite his youthful appearance. He has Mandy¡¯s eyes¡ªhazel, more nted, adorned with thick, brownshes. They are my second parents. My own father passed away almost twelve years ago from a heart attack, and my mother is in the dementia ward at Sunrise Assisted Living. I spent most of my high school afternoons here, studying with Mandy, ying board games,ughing our way through karaoke nights, and eating home-cooked meals. Bridget and Cora loved cooking together. Their meatloaf was one of my favorites. Bridget ces her kind hands against my cheeks, cradling my face like I¡¯m her very own son. I should have been five days ago. December 5thwas supposed to be our wedding day¡ªinstead, I spent thirteen hours buried beneath my bed covers, ignoring Mandy¡¯s phone calls and only getting up to take a piss and munch on stale, saltine crackers. ¡°You look better,¡± Bridget says, her watery smile impressively veiling the obvious lie. The Lawsons visited me at the hospital in those strange, hazy forty-eight hours post-rescue, but I haven¡¯t seen them since. I haven¡¯t seen anyone except for Mandy, who stops by my townhouse unannounced more than I¡¯d like her to. She has a key, though, so there¡¯s not much I can do about it. I¡¯ll never tell her I thought about stealing that key and flushing it down the toilet. ¡°I feel a little better. Still adjusting.¡± I go with the lying theme. It feels simpler. ¡°Thanks for having us over tonight.¡± ¡°Mom, give him some space. He¡¯s not an exhibit,¡± Mandy scolds, pulling her snowy white hat with a furry pom-pom off her head, sending her hair into a static-infused mess. Bridget reluctantly steps away and Derek paces over to me, squeezing my shoulder with a firm, affectionate hand. ¡°It¡¯s great to see you up and about. The girls made meatloaf¡ªyour favorite.¡± The girls? I hear the patio door slide open from the back of the house, squeaky and familiar, followed by the sound of exuberant paws skidding across the hardwood floors. Blizzard must sense my presence because she careens towards me in the entryway, all sixty-five pounds of her, and promptlynds on my feet, rolling over for a tummy rub. I crouch down to scratch her belly, releasing my first genuine smile in weeks. Blizzard¡¯s tail wags furiously beneath her. I can¡¯t believe this old girl still has so much energy¡ªshe¡¯s got to be twelve or thirteen by now. But her excitement at seeing me walk through that front door has never wavered over thest ten years. Not even a little. As I rise to my feet, my eyesnd on the figure standing in the kitchen and my breath hitches in the back of my throat. Corabelle. Mandy hangs her coat up on the nearby coat rack and clears her throat, leaning in close to her mother. ¡°You said Cora wasn¡¯ting tonight,¡± Mandy mutters in a low voice as she tames her flyaways, her eyes dancing over to me with apology. It¡¯s true I wasn¡¯t ready to face her yet. Maybe I¡¯ll never be ready. ¡°Sorry, sweetie, but your sister texted me a few hours ago and said she changed her mind.¡± Their conversation begins to fade away as my eyes lock on Cora¡¯s from across the foyer. Memories flow through me, making me feel itchy and slightly panicked, but there is also a profoundfort that stabs at my heart. She is a vision of life and light and survival. Her hair is golden blonde, shiny and healthy again, curled loosely over her thin shoulders. She¡¯s always been petite, but her frame looks even more frail and willowy in a deep purple dress that probably fit her better five weeks ago. The neckline hangs low, revealing her bony corbone and remnants of a few lingering, faded bruises. Cora twists her hair over one shoulder and my eyes drift to her exposed neck. The same neck I peppered with sorrowful kisses and soaked with my tears of shame. My jaw clenches and my heartbeats elerate, my hands turning mmy as I swipe them along the front of my blue jeans. I¡¯m not sure what to do, so I merely acknowledge her with a quick nod and swallow down all the things I cannot say. But I don¡¯t miss the sh of hurt and dismissal in her eyes before she spins around and busies herself in the kitchen. I flinch when Mandy¡¯s fingers begin tugging the sleeve of my winter coat, yanking me out of my messy thoughts. ¡°Take your coat off. Stay a while,¡± she beams at me, then follows her parents into the family room, chattering on about her shift at the hair salon like it¡¯s another ordinary day in Normalville. I stay rooted to the snowman wee mat, staring at Cora¡¯s back as she leans over the kitchen counter, facing away from me. Her head is bowed, her shoulders taut. She is gripping the edge of the countertop as her hair falls over the sides of her face in waves. I want to run to her. I want to take her in my arms and whisper into her ear that everything is going to be okay. We survived. It¡¯s over. But I don¡¯t. I can lie to Mandy and her parents and my friends and my boss and my therapist¡­ but I can¡¯t lie to her. We all sit around the formal dining table, and for a moment, everything feels like it used to. It¡¯s easy to pretend between four walls adorned with pretty paint colors,ce drapes, recess lighting, and holiday decorations scattered throughout. It¡¯s easy to pretend in thepany of the family I¡¯vee to care about over the past fifteen years while they discuss politics and trending Netflix shows as if nothing is amiss. But the fa?ade cracks when my eyes float over to Cora, sitting across from me, smashing her meatloaf into something unidentifiable with the tines of her fork as the candlelight illuminates the dark circles under her eyes. I push my own mushy meatloaf into my mashed potatoes, realizing I¡¯m doing the exact same thing. I reach under the table to give Blizzard my dinner roll so it appears that I¡¯m actually eating the meal that probably tastes delicious. ¡°¡­ about the pregnancy.¡± Mandy¡¯s voice pushes through my fog, and I lift my head, turning towards her.Pregnancy? A silence washes over the dinner table, and I feel incredibly out of the loop. ¡°What?¡± I nce from face to face, but everyone is looking down at their tes like they¡¯re in the midst of a riveting crossword puzzle. My eyes shift back to Cora, but she¡¯s not looking at her te. Her eyes are wide and usatory as she stares down a sheepish-looking Mandy. Mandy presses her lips between her teeth, flipping her hair over one shoulder. ¡°Sorry. I-I didn¡¯t mean to blurt that out. We were talking about our cousin¡¯s new baby, and it just triggered¡­ you know. I suck at thinking before I speak.¡± I blink. Cora¡¯s fork clinks against the dinner te as she folds her hands in herp, but she refuses to meet my eyes. I don¡¯t think she¡¯s looked at me once since our stare-down from earlier. I run my tongue along the roof of my mouth, putting two and two together with a hard knot twisting in my gut. ¡°Are you pregnant, Cora?¡± Her head finally jerks towards me, rmed by the sound of my voice addressing her for the first time in weeks. I watch her haunted eyes swirl with grief and confusion and sadness and everything in between. But the eye contact doesn¡¯tst, and she ducks her head with flutteringshes. ¡°I was,¡± she says softly, so soft I almost don¡¯t hear her. Then she pins her eyes back on Mandy. ¡°I didn¡¯t want to talk about this. I didn¡¯t want to talk about any of this.¡±This belongs to N?velDrama.Org: ?. Cora pushes back from the table and stands up, scratching at her wrist and making a quick escape from the dining room to the staircase. I follow, not caring if it looks strange or inappropriate¡ªmy instincts tell me to follow her. I can feel their eyes boring into my back, trying to understand why I¡¯m chasing Mandy¡¯s sister up the stairs, but they have toknow. They have to know we¡¯re different now. The image of Cora and me standing together, our hands interlocked, dappled in blood stains and dirt with an identical far-off look in our eyes, has made the rounds on the inte. In fact, it went viral as soon as the photo was released by the media. It has over two-million shares and hundreds of thousands ofments ranging from, ¡°Sending prayers to those poor souls¡± to ¡°This looks like the movie poster for the next Quentin Tarantino film¡± to ¡°Following for future wedding announcement¡±. Mandy delicately questioned me about the photo, hoping for insight into our shared nightmare. Hoping for answers I wasn¡¯t able to give her. She doesn¡¯t know all the details of what transpired in that basement¡ªonly what she¡¯s seen in news articles and TV broadcasts. All I told Mandy was that we formed a friendship out of survival and fear and boredom and loneliness. It was necessary. It was inevitable. It was all we had. She¡¯ll never know the things I was forced to do, the lines that were crossed, or the guilt I¡¯ll carry with me until the day I die. And she¡¯ll certainly never know how those lines blurred inexplicably on that final day. I take the stairs up two at a time, passing through the loft and poking my head into each room. I find her sitting on the edge of the guest bed of her old bedroom, pinching the bed covers between white-knuckled fingers. Her breathing isbored and her hair is blocking her face. ¡°Cora.¡± She looks up, surprised that I followed her. I watch theplex emotions flicker in her eyes as she tries to read me¡ªtries to make sense of why I¡¯m standing in front of her, looking just as lost and vulnerable as she is. Cora rises to her feet, smoothing down the fabric of her slightly too-big dress, then tucking her hair behind her ears. My eyes dance across her face, drinking in her pink cheeks and those soft, full lips that I should not be so familiar with. Then we each take a step forward. Then another. Then one more. And before we¡¯ve thought anything through or had time to ponder our next move, our arms are wrapped around each other, her hot breath against my neck, her hair that smells like daffodils tickling my nose. I pull her close, breathing in every ounce of her, savoring her warmth. She feels like home. ¡°Dean,¡± she whispers, her voice breaking on my name like it split her in half. I squeeze her tighter, my hand cradling the back of her head, my fingers tangling in her hair. I breathe in and out, slow and deep, trying not to go back to that basement where she was all I had to hold onto. ¡°I¡¯m sorry I haven¡¯t called you,¡± I apologize, and I trulyamsorry. ¡°I didn¡¯t know what to say.¡± I¡¯ve spent an embarrassing amount of time over thest two weeks just staring at my phone, telling myself to dial her number or send her a quick text. Just to check in. Just to make sure she¡¯s okay. Instead, I¡¯ve been a coward, getting my inside information from Mandy and avoiding Cora just like I¡¯m avoiding everything else in my life. Cora¡¯s handsnd on the back of my neck as she pulls back, our eyes bound, our connection still palpable. The look on her face is too familiar, too reminiscent of thatst day¡ªthe moment everything shifted. The moment our rtionship or friendship or whatever the fuck we were was stripped down to bare bones and raw truths and more questions than we¡¯ll ever have answers to. I break away. I turn away from her, my hands linked behind my head as I try to sort through the murk and muck swirling around my brain. When I spin back around, Cora¡¯s arms are folded across her breasts, her armor up, her gaze pointed at her freshly painted toenails. I inhale sharply. ¡°You were pregnant?¡± Cora sucks her bottom lip between her teeth as she scratches at her wrist and spares me the smallest nce. She looks flustered as she replies, ¡°Yes.¡± I crack on the exhale. ¡°Jesus. Are you okay?¡± A shoulder shrug. That¡¯s all she gives me. ¡°Cora¡­¡± ¡°My HCG levels were high enough to indicate a pregnancy had urred. But there was nothing on the ultrasound, so they told me it was either a chemical pregnancy or I miscarried early¡ªlikely when Earl kicked me until he broke six of my ribs, then tossed me down a flight of stairs like I was a bag of trash.¡± She keeps scratching her wrist. ¡°Fuck, Corabelle¡­¡± I run a palm over my face, reeling from the knowledge that our three weeks of hell created alife¡ªas fleeting as it was. A thought pokes me and I add, ¡°Do you know if it was¡­ mine?¡± I watch her cheeks burn as she stares off behind my shoulder, bobbing one knee up and down. ¡°No. There¡¯s no way to know,¡± she says, refusing to look me in the eyes. Refusing to acknowledge what that question implies. ¡°It wasn¡¯t viable.¡± I look down at the cream-colored carpet, zoning in on a matching tuff of dog hair. ¡°You should have told me when you found out.¡± I feel her eyes on me again, but I don¡¯t look up. ¡°Told you? When, Dean?¡± Her tone is strained¡ªusatory. ¡°When you were shutting me out? When you decided to abandon me after everything we went through?¡± ¡°I just needed time, Cora.¡± ¡°How much time? I noticed the look on your face when you saw me standing in the kitchen tonight. You looked like you saw a ghost,¡± she says, heated and ready to break. ¡°You didn¡¯t want me to be here.¡± ¡°That¡¯s not true¡­¡± ¡°It is true. You probably would have avoided me forever.¡± I spare a quick nce over my shoulder to make sure no one is standing outside the door, then I take a step forward and whisper harshly, ¡°Irapedyou.¡± Cora presses her lips together, her eyes glossing over. ¡°You did what you had to do to get us out of there. I told you to do it. That¡¯s not rape.¡± ¡°You didn¡¯t want it. Thatisrape,¡± I counter. We avoid the elephant in the room: the fact that maybe we both wanted it that final day. ¡°I wanted tolive,¡± Cora insists, taking her own step closer to me, her voice low. ¡°I would have done almost anything to survive at that point.¡± ¡°Everything okay?¡± We spin around, moving away from each other in the process, to find Bridget standing in the doorway, her hand against the frame as she leans into the room. I swallow, bowing my head. Cora clears her throat. ¡°We¡¯re just catching up, Mom. Sorry I bailed¡­ we¡¯ll be out in a minute.¡± I raise my chin, watching as Bridget gives us a tight-lipped smile and that ¡®worried mother¡¯ look before retreating back down the hallway. Catching up. Like we¡¯re two old friends reconnecting over margaritas. Nope¡ªjust chatting about rape and abuse and miscarriages, wondering how the fuck we¡¯re ever going to move past this and just beusagain. Cora releases a long sigh, dropping her arms to her sides and ncing up at me. ¡°We should get back to dinner. I¡¯m sure Blizzard is eyeing my dissected meatloaf.¡± I¡¯m about to ask her,What now?Where do we go from here?When can we talk again? But she sweeps past me, daffodils and passionfruit and so many unknowns lingering on my skin as she disappears out the door. I watch her go with gritted teeth, hopelessness swimming through my veins. We are bound, chained, tied¡ªto our trauma and to each other. We¡¯re in this together. And yet, I¡¯ve never felt more alone. : Part 2 – Chapter 14 I zone out as I stareinto my refrigerator, eyeing the assortment of fresh groceries Mandy just dropped off. I told her she didn¡¯t need to do that¡ªI¡¯m more than capable, and I sure as shit don¡¯t have anything else to do since I¡¯m not back to work yet. But she insisted, carrying inside two brown paper bags filled to the brim, tucked under both arms. Mandy is now wiping down my countertops as she fixes me a sandwich. ¡°How are you feeling? Did your appointment with Dr. Dryden go well?¡± I blink into the yellow light, not fully registering her question even though I heard it. I stare at the head of broli, fairly certain I can make out a vague outline of Pat Sajak. If I just tilt my head a little to the left¡­ Is he still alive?IsWheel of Fortunestill a thing? ¡°Dean, did you hear me?¡± I nce up. Mandy is standing in front of me, holding out a sandwich on a paper te. Her heavily painted eyes are narrowed, slicing me with concern. I close the refrigerator and force a smile. ¡°Yeah, it went okay.¡± She sighs with relief, her worried lips turning up into a toothy grin. ¡°Good. You¡¯re being honest with him?¡± Honest? Well, I¡¯m not outright lying. But I¡¯m certainly not revealing everything. Dr. Dryden knows I killed a man, but he doesn¡¯t know it was her face I envisioned, the images of her dignity being dismantled, that drove my fists into those savage, fatal blows. He knows I was forced to watch Cora get raped and abused, but he doesn¡¯t know that I, myself, was forced between her legs with a pistol to my head. Dr. Dryden knows a lot, but he doesn¡¯t know about the real ghosts that haunt me and keep me up at night. So, I guess I¡¯m lying by omission. ¡°Yeah,¡± I reply, taking the te from Mandy¡¯s outstretched hands. ¡°I¡¯m being honest.¡± Now I¡¯m lying to my fianc¨¦. Mandy nods her head, her perfectly coifed hair bobbing over her cashmere sweater. More relief. More smiles. ¡°I¡¯m proud of you, Dean. I know it¡¯s not easy to¡ª¡± I spit out the bite of sandwich as soon as it touches my tongue, dropping the te and wiping at my mouth with the back of my hand. ¡°This is turkey?¡± Mandy gapes at me, her glossy lips parted with rm. ¡°Y-Yes. You love turkey.¡± ¡°I don¡¯t love turkey.¡± ¡°I thought¡­¡± I close my eyes, shoving the painful shbacks away as I shake my head. ¡°I don¡¯t love it anymore.¡± I trek backwards out of the small kitchen, trying to control my breathing. ¡°I think I need a nap.¡± ¡°Dean¡­¡± Mandy follows me to the couch, sitting down beside me, closer than I¡¯d prefer, and grazes her super-sized fingernails that resemble talons along my knee. ¡°I¡¯m here for you, babe. What can I do?¡± I think over all the things she can do, but she won¡¯t like any of them. Go home. Stay home. Give me some fucking space. I pinch the bridge of my nose, guilt soaring through me in waves. I hate that I¡¯m pushing away my girlfriend of fifteen years¡ªI know she¡¯s only trying to help. I know she cares and wants me to get better. But I feel like an entirely different man, and I¡¯m not even sure this man wants to marry this woman anymore. I¡¯m fucking broken. The thought stabs me like the edge of a dagger as Iy my head back against the leather couch cushion. I feel Mandy slide up even closer, her hand trailing higher and higher until¡­ I grab her hand before it reaches its destination, trying not to crack under the weight of the rejection in her eyes. ¡°Dean¡­ please. We haven¡¯t been intimate in almost six weeks.¡± Mandy¡¯s eyes begin to mist, her nails digging into my palm. ¡°I miss you.¡± Jesus, I feel like the biggest goddamn asshole. Mandy and I always had a pretty normal sex life¡ªa little vani, but I had noints. She¡¯s sexy and willing and mine, and yet¡­ I can¡¯t fucking do it. I¡¯m not ready. ¡°I just need a little more time,¡± I say, letting her down as gently as possible. I have no idea how much more time I¡¯ll need. All I know is that it¡¯s too soon. I just can¡¯t. Mandy scoots backwards, dropping her chin to her chest as the rejection manifests into anger. ¡°I figured after weeks of celibacy, you¡¯d be all over me.¡± A prickling heat crawls up the back of my neck and settles in my ears.Fuck. ¡°You were only down there for three weeks, Dean,¡± Mandy continues, still avoiding my eyes. ¡°I thought you would¡­ you know, bounce back by now.¡± Only three weeks. Mandy and I once took a vacation to Cancun for three weeks. It¡¯s funny¡ªI hardly remember any of it. That could have something to do with the unlimited drink packages and the spoiled pozole that knocked me on my ass for a few of those days, but¡­ the memories are vague and fuzzy. Only bits and pieces stand out. I remember every vivid detail about that basement. The dripping pipe. The cracks and ridges in the stone wall on my right. The pink foam instion overhead, peeking out of the wooden beams in the ceiling. The way the sunrise cast a radiant beam of light into our dungeon, magnifying all of the little dust particles in the air. I tried to count them one morning, but the light kept shifting and I¡¯d lose track. I remember the Daddy Long Leg spider in the cobwebbed corner that never seemed to move. I thought he was dead until I caught the tiniest twitch of one of his thin legs. I wondered how long he could go without food. I bet he wondered the same thing about me. I remember the gaudy, floral wallpaper in that moldy bathroom and the way it peeled from every corner, revealing decayed walls and water damage. I recall looking in the dusty mirror, not recognizing the man reflecting back at me. Cora. I think about the way she chewed on her lip while we yed ¡®Twenty Questions¡¯ to pass the time. She took the game seriously, like she was up for the grand prize on a cheesy game show. I remember the golden glints in her emerald eyes that seemed to fade which each passing day. I recall the asional smile I would pull out of her. They felt so magical¡ªso beautifully out of ce. Her smile was the closest thing I felt to being rescued over the course of those twenty days. I remember the goosebumps on her skin when I¡¯d gently caress her cheek, or her hip, or her thigh, trying to bring as much tenderness to the moment as possible.It¡¯s just the cold, I told myself. But sometimes a small sound or squeak would apany the goosebumps and she¡¯d give herself away. It was only three weeks, but it¡¯s burned into every cell, every vein, every tainted pocket of my soul. Forever.This belongs to N?velDrama.Org: ?. And so is she. I break down the following Saturday morning and send her a text message. Me:Can we grab coffee? We should talk. I pace back and forth through my living room in just my sweatpants, staring at my phone screen and scratching the back of my neck, noting that I really need to get a damn haircut. She reads the message fairly quickly, and I hold my breath, bracing myself for a shut down. Cora:I suppose. But only because I¡¯m standing at your front door right now. I blink at the response, processing her words. Well, shit. I jog over to the front of my townhouse, pulling open the door to reveal a bundled-up Cora, sprinkled with snowkes, her hands in her pockets. Her eyes drift downward as the icy wind sts me, and I remember that I¡¯m shirtless. She brings her gaze up from my naked chest with a sharp swallow. ¡°You forgot your shirt.¡± ¡°You forgot to tell me you were dropping by unexpectedly.¡± ¡°Then it wouldn¡¯t have been unexpected.¡± Faint smiles creep onto both of our faces, almost as if we forgot how but we¡¯re trying to remember. I take a step back, encouraging her to enter. Cora hesitates for a moment before moving forward and stomping her snow-covered boots against my wee mat. I watch her shake the flurries from her hair and notice that one sticks to her eyshes. I want to lean in and swipe it away, but I keep my arms at my sides. ¡°What brings you by?¡± I stuff my hands into the pockets of my sweats, rocking on the heels of my feet. ¡°Same reason you texted me, I¡¯m guessing.¡± Cora unzips her coat and slips out of her boots, sweeping her fingers through damp hair as she takes tentative steps through my entryway. Her eyes dance across the messy living area littered with empty potato chip bags and beer bottles, random piles ofundry, and my bedforter I¡¯ve been using for when I fall asleep on the couch at random hours watching mindless television shows. Her eyes are brimming with sympathy as she cuts them back to me, pulling her arms out of her coat sleeves. I take the jacket from her and hang it over the back of my recliner. ¡°Sorry for the mess.¡± I scratch the scruff along my jawline¡ªI still haven¡¯t shaved. ¡°I wasn¡¯t expectingpany.¡± Cora shrugs her shoulders, a gray, oversized sweater dipping off one of them, and continues her idle perusal. ¡°My house isn¡¯t any better.¡± Her gazends on my side table where a book is being used as a coaster for my Miller Lite. ¡°Of Mice and Men,¡± she mutters quietly. We make eye contact and it lingers, and the longer it lingers, the harder it is to break away. But I¡¯m the first to lower my head, massaging the back of my neck with my hand. I reach for a stray t-shirt that luckily only smells like my cedarwood deodorant, then pull it on while Cora watches from a few feet away. I clear my throat. ¡°Coffee?¡± She nods. ¡°Sure.¡± I bring two full mugs out of the kitchen a few minutester and find Cora on my couch with her feet pulled up. She¡¯s flipping through the book, but sets it back down when I approach. ¡°Thank you,¡± she says, cradling the warm ceramic between both palms. She stares down over the rim for a few moments as I situate myself beside her. ¡°It¡¯s the little things I missed the most, I think. Hot coffee. Slobbery dog kisses. My music ylist. The sun on my skin.¡± Cora takes a sip, sighing as she leans back against the cushions. I face her, resting my mug on my thigh. Her words are all too rtable. ¡°It¡¯s weird,¡± I muse. ¡°I thought the first thing I would do after I got home was gorge on cheeseburgers and french fries. Greasy fast food. I was craving a fuckin¡¯ Big Mac something fierce down there.¡± I watch her mouth tip into a soft smile as she turns her head towards me. ¡°But I¡¯m finding I don¡¯t have much appetite for anything. I munch on shitty snacks and drink beer all day. I¡¯m always hungry, but I also feel kind of sick inside¡­ you know?¡± ¡°Same here. It¡¯s this strange, hollow feeling¡ªlike a hungry hole that needs to be filled, but food isn¡¯t the answer.¡± Cora averts her eyes to just beyond my shoulder, drifting away before I can catch her. She finds her way back after about ten seconds, shifting on the couch and picking at the hem of her sweater. ¡°Are you seeing a therapist?¡± I wonder. She nods, still avoiding my gaze. ¡°I¡¯m pretty sure my therapist needs a therapist at this point.¡± I observe the way she gnaws on the inside of her lip, scratching at her wrist as she stares at the far wall. ¡°Have you told them¡­ everything?¡± Have you told them your sister¡¯s fianc¨¦ was forced to fuck you six times, and one of those times you got off? I keep the fucked up truths to myself as she nods and replies, ¡°Mostly.¡± I want to know which part she omitted, but I¡¯m pretty sure I already do. Cora changes the subject. ¡°Did they ever find your car?¡± My motherfucking car. If I could kill that piece of shit all over again, I probably would. I spent two years saving up for a down payment on my dream Camaro with all the bells and whistles¡ªI only had it three months before Earl ¡°made it disappear¡±. I shake my head, my anger simmering. ¡°Nope. I¡¯m going back and forth with my insurancepany, seeing if there¡¯s anything they can do. I¡¯ve been taking an Uber to my therapy appointments.¡± ¡°That sucks. I¡¯m sorry.¡± ¡°Yeah, well, it¡¯s receable. Eventually. He took a hell of a lot more from you.¡± We both let that dark cloud hover over us for a minute, and I kind of wish I could take it back. I didn¡¯t mean to give her wounds life. Cora seems to mentally retreat, and I can only imagine what she¡¯s thinking about. I hope she¡¯s thinking about me talking her through it, begging her to focus on me, to only see me, to only hear me¡­ But I know she¡¯s not. ¡°They¡¯re searching for more bodies,¡± Cora says in a low, shaky breath. ¡°They¡¯ve uncovered a bunch of bones buried on his property. They¡¯re trying to identify the victims.¡± I close my eyes. ¡°Fuck¡­¡± I haven¡¯t been keeping track of the story unfolding. It¡¯s too much for me to deal with. It¡¯s too soon, too fresh, too personal. I¡¯ve already recanted the story to the police, the doctors, my therapist. I was grilled by detectives who were wondering if they had a goddamn murder case against me. While it was obviously self-defense, there wasn¡¯t a clean bullet wound or a quick stab to the heart. No¡ªI fuckingpulverizedthe bastard with my bare hands. It was violent and savage and out of control. He had to be identified by dental records. But given the circumstances, there were no charges brought against me. ThankGod. Thest thing I wanted was to leave one prison and go straight to another. Then again¡­ I have to wonder if I¡¯ll always be in some sort of prison. ¡°It¡¯s so messed up,¡± Cora continues, setting her coffee down on the wooden table beside her. She lifts her teary eyes to me as she twists back around. ¡°That was almostus, Dean. That was¡­¡± I hear the panic in her voice and I see it in her wide, green eyes, so I inch my way closer to her on the couch. ¡°Shh, hey¡­ it wasn¡¯t us. We got the fuck out and we survived.¡± I reach out to graze my knuckles against her cheek, watching as a tear slides down and copses on my finger. Cora¡¯s eyelids flutter closed as she sucks in jagged breaths. ¡°We¡¯re alive, we¡¯re breathing, and we¡¯re never going back.¡± Cora raises her hand to touch mine, cradling my fingers. The contact makes something inside me spin and buzz and squirm. I grind my teeth together while she brazenly nuzzles her face against my hand like it¡¯s the most natural thing in the world. She kisses the heel of my palm, and I almost fucking lose it. ¡°I go back there every night.¡± Hell. I pull her in, clutching her to me and letting her head fall against my chest like a lost lover. I wrap both arms around her, twining my fingers through her silky strands of hair, inhaling her familiar, calming scent. ¡°Is this okay?¡± She nods against my t-shirt, slinking her own arm around my midsection. ¡°It¡¯s okay.¡± Cora is silent for a long time, her breathing more even and steady. I almost wonder if she¡¯s fallen asleep until she murmurs, ¡°It doesn¡¯t feel like Christmastime.¡± I continue to stroke her glossy locks, massaging her scalp with the tips of my fingers as I try to alleviate her pain the best I can. I slide my opposite hand into the pocket of my sweatpants and pull out my phone, scrolling through the stations until I find the one I want. I turn the volume up and lean back, holding Cora in my arms as Christmas music begins to serenade us through my cell phone speaker. I feel her rx almost instantly, burrowing her tear-stained cheek further into my chest. Cora falls asleep a few momentster withI¡¯ll Be Home For Christmasechoing in our ears, warming us up, taming our tortured souls¡­ and I know I¡¯ll be perfectly content if this is all I get for Christmas this year. : Part 2 – Chapter 15 O N E Y E A R E A R L I E R ¡°You¡¯re probably going to thinkI¡¯m a weirdo, but I sorta got you a Christmas present.¡± My brow furrows in confusion, my eyes zing over with equal parts curiosity and spiked eggnog. Then I feel like a giant dick because I didn¡¯t get her anything. Cora and I have never exchanged gifts before¡ªwell, except for that one year I gave her a vibrator shaped like Santa use that said, ¡®Ho, Ho, Ho¡¯ as it vibrated. She, in turn, gifted me with a sharp punch to the shoulder. ¡°Shit, Corabelle. I didn¡¯t get you anything.¡± Cora sits on the couch, one bronzed leg draped over the other as a champagne flute dangles from her hand. I¡¯m sitting across from her on the floor, leaning back on my hands. The sequins of her red cocktail dress sparkle against the Christmas lights, a festivepliment to her bright, green eyes. It¡¯s honestly annoying how pretty she looks. ¡°It¡¯s probably for the best that you didn¡¯t.¡± I¡¯m certain we¡¯re both thinking about the Santa vibrator when a rosy blush kisses her cheeks. I shoot her a sly grin. ¡°Well, hand it over. Is it a car? Tell me it¡¯s a car.¡± Mandy shoves her pointy fingernail into my arm. ¡°Why would Cora get you a car?¡± ¡°Because she loves me.¡± ¡°Ew.¡± Cora sets her champagne down on the coffee table in front of her, bending over just enough to reveal a dangerous amount of cleavage. I look away. ¡°Only you would confuse love and hate. I¡¯m sure it¡¯s veryplicated for your itty-bitty pea brain to keep straight.¡± ¡°You two are ridiculous,¡± Mandy mutters through a slow breath. ¡°I need more brownies.¡± Mandy stands up on her wobbly heels, and I can¡¯t help but wonder why she¡¯s been wearing stilettos all night in her parent¡¯s living room. She disappears into the kitchen, leaving me alone with the more aggravating sister. Not that I mind. Sparring with Cora Lawson is pretty high on my list of preferred activities. She thinks I¡¯m an idiot, and I let her think it. I get a rise out of the incredulous look in her eyes when I say or do something stupid. It¡¯s part of our game. ¡°Whatever, Corabelle. Show me what you got.¡± ¡°Don¡¯t call me that.¡± Cora delivers her ssic, irritated re, then leans over the armrest of the couch to retrieve a gift hiding underneath the tree. ¡°Catch.¡± She tosses me the present wrapped in colorful twinkle lights, and I catch it with skillful ease, winking at her as I start to open it. ¡°You¡¯re pretty good at wrapping. Did you take a ss on it?¡± Another re. I continue to peel back the paper and discover a book. I¡¯m not a reader¡ªI prefer podcasts and audiobooks. But I suppose it¡¯s the thought that counts. ¡°Of Mice and Men,¡± Cora states, reaching for the spine of her wine ss and bringing the rim to her lips. ¡°It was required in sophomore English ss, but I think it¡¯s safe to assume you never read it. It¡¯s a good one.¡± I purse my lips together. She¡¯s right about that. I never read it. ¡°Well, thanks. That¡¯s actually kind of nice of¡­¡± My voice trails off as I start flipping through the pages. They¡¯re all nk. Every single one of them. My head snaps up and I twist the book around, feeling bad that she ordered a defective one. ¡°Uh, slight issue,¡± I tell her. Cora sits up straight, blinking slow. She stares at me in what looks to be utter confusion before replying, ¡°Crap. I didn¡¯t think you¡¯d notice.¡± Ah, hell. Next Christmas? It¡¯s on. ¡°Goodnight, Mr. and Mrs. Lawson. Merry Christmas,¡± I say, waving to my second parents, my arm slung around Mandy¡¯s waist. ¡°Thanks for the great dinner.¡± And for the delicious eggnog with a fantastic amount of rum. I sway from one foot to the other as Mandy tries to hold me steady. I see her mouth ¡®I¡¯m driving¡¯to her parents as we head towards the front door. I notice Cora slipping on her winter coat, gathering her bag of gifts as she follows us out. Before she sweeps past us, she pulls something out of the giant bag and ps it against my chest. ¡°For you,¡± she mutters, her face unreadable. I look down at the book¡ªOf Mice and Men. Only, this time there are words. ¡°Read it. You might like it.¡± Cora spares me a final nce, then blows a kiss to Mandy as she moves to the door. ¡°Merry Christmas.¡± She disappears outside, her sugar cookie scented body mist trailing behind her. Mandy puckers her lips, studying the book in my hand. ¡°We can donate it. She¡¯ll never know.¡± I trace my fingers along the cover, smiling at my very first Christmas present from Cora Lawson. I shrug. ¡°Nah. I think I¡¯m going to read this one.¡± I stare at her across the kitchen ind while she helps her mother slice the ham. Her hair bounces back and forth along her back in champagne waves, her emerald dressnding mid-thigh, and a serrated carving knife shaking in her right hand. ¡°Want me to finish up, sweetheart?¡± Bridget proposes, and I wonder if she sees what I¡¯m seeing. Cora dismisses the offer with an abrupt shake of her head. ¡°I got it.¡± Slice. Slice. Slice. Back and forth. Careful and slow. I want to slide up behind her and wrap my arms around her petite waist, whispering in her ear that it¡¯s okay. Everything¡¯s okay. But I can¡¯t do that because my fianc¨¦ is standing beside me posting Christmas memes on Facebook and she wouldn¡¯t understand. ¡°Oh, my God. Allie is engaged!¡± Mandy announces, beaming with excitement as she taps away at her keypad, reindeer ears bobbing atop her teased head of hair. ¡°She better ask me to be a bridesmaid.¡± Slice. Slice. Slice. ¡°Ooh. I forgot Allie¡¯s brother is recently single¡ªdo you think Cora would go for him?¡± My eyes shift from Cora¡¯s careful cuts to Mandy sipping on a ss of holiday punch. ¡°What?¡± ¡°Jason. Remember we went to his Superbowl party? He was dating some chick then, but Iswearhe kept checking my sister out.¡± Mandy slurps her punch through a red straw. ¡°Cora thought he was cute.¡± I don¡¯t realize I¡¯m tensing my jaw until it starts to ache. ¡°It¡¯s a little soon, don¡¯t you think?¡± ¡°She¡¯s been single for three years, Dean, and she¡¯s almost thirty.¡± ¡°Yeah, but she¡¯s still recovering from a trauma. She¡¯s probably not looking to date.¡± I chew on my cheek as I avert my eyes back to Cora, who sessfully finished carving the ham and is now transferring the slices to a festive serving te. ¡°She needs more time.¡± Mandy nces up from her phone and her cocktail, a knowing grin blooming on her face. ¡°You¡¯re protective of her now, aren¡¯t you? That¡¯s so stinkin¡¯ sweet. You¡¯re like a worried big brother.¡± She releases a whimsical sigh. ¡°I always knew you two would work out your issues.¡± Fuck. The term ¡®big brother¡¯ makes me want to gag. ¡°Yeah, I guess.¡± ¡°Well, as her sister and primary wing-woman, I¡¯m going to set something up. Maybe we can do a double date to ease her into it.¡± My jaw keeps ticking, and I want to p it. ¡°I don¡¯t think I liked Jason.¡± Actually, I don¡¯t even fucking remember Jason, but I¡¯m confident I don¡¯t like him. Mandy gives my chest an affectionate pat. ¡°You don¡¯t have to like him. You¡¯re not the one who¡¯s going to get naked with him.¡± She shoots me a teasing wink and chugs down the rest of her punch. My stomach feels queasy as my mind shes with images of Cora getting naked with some douchebag. It¡¯s way too soon. And maybe I am protective, but how can Inotbe? I¡¯m the only one who understands what she endured during those three weeks in Hell. If anyone is going to have her back, it¡¯s me, and I won¡¯t apologize for it. I make my way over to the alcohol cart adorned with a bowl of spiked punch and rum-infused eggnog. Mandy and Cora¡¯s little cousins are running around, chasing each other with red and green glow sticks, while the adults mingle in the living room awaiting supper. I spoon myself some punch with thedle and chug back the entire ss in a four gulps. Then I serve myself another ss, then another, until I¡¯m feeling well-past buzzed by the time dinner is over and we¡¯ve made our way to the Christmas tree for the gift exchange. I¡¯m sitting on the floor with my back to the front of the couch, my legs syed out in front of me as Mandy sits behind me and rubs my shoulders. I¡¯m nursing my sixth, and hopefully final, ss of punch, watching with bleary eyes as Cora unwraps one of her gifts across from me. It¡¯s a sweater. She forces a smile that doesn¡¯t reach her eyes. No one seems to notice but me. It¡¯s my turn to open a gift. It¡¯s a sweater. I also force a smile. When one of the little cousins tears through a gift bag and pulls out a police officer costume, he jumps up and down with excitement. He keeps digging through the tissue paper and shouts, ¡°Cool! Handcuffs!¡± My stomach pitches and my gaze settles on Cora, who starts scratching at her wrist and fidgeting in her chair. Her eyes dance over to me, but only for a moment before she excuses herself from the festivities and disappears up the staircase. Shit. I wait a few minutes until it doesn¡¯t look obvious that I¡¯m following her, then I announce to Mandy that I need to use the bathroom. But Mandy is too absorbed in a conversation with her aunt about weighted nkets, so my escape goes unnoticed. I find Cora in the same ce I found her the night of our reunion¡ªsitting on the edge of the guest bed in her childhood room, squeezing the covers between her fists. She notices my presence before I speak, and I wonder if she anticipated me following her up here. ¡°I¡¯m fine, Dean.¡± I click my teeth together as I stand in the doorway, noting how she doesn¡¯t look up at me. I decide to approach, stepping into the bedroom and closing the door behind me. The sound makes her flinch. ¡°Merry Christmas,¡± I say in a low voice. I can almost feel some of the tension leave her as I sit down beside her on the bed, the mattress sinking beneath my weight. Cora finally nces up at me, finding my eyes with a tiny frown. ¡°You smell like vodka and Skittles.¡± A grin pulls on my lips. ¡°You didn¡¯t try the punch?¡± ¡°No. But I can see that you did.¡± She assesses me up and down, as if the stripes on my shirt will give away the number of sses I¡¯ve inhaled over the past two hours. ¡°Be careful. You look like a hot mess.¡± I run a hand through my mop of brown hair, noting that the top two buttons of my dress shirt are unhooked and only one sleeve is rolled up past my elbow. I think Mandy made me wear a Santa bowtie, but I have no idea where that went. ¡°You look sad,¡± I counter, taking in her vacant eyes that are missing the sparkle I¡¯vee to love so much. ¡°I said I¡¯m fine.¡± ¡°Well, maybe I can help you be more than fine.¡± I nudge her shoulder with my own. ¡°I sorta got you a Christmas present.¡± Those eyes widen in surprise, her lips parting, pink and glossy. ¡°What? Why?¡± ¡°Because you got me somethingst year. It¡¯s my turn.¡± Cora lowers her chin to her chest, picking at the threads on theforter. ¡°I didn¡¯t do much shopping this year, so I didn¡¯t get you anything. I feel like a jerk.¡± ¡°It¡¯s okay. One of these years the stars will align, and we¡¯ll both get each other something at the same time.¡± She nibbles on her lip. My gaze drifts to her mouth on instinct before I redirect it back up, suddenly very aware of the way her bare thigh is smashed up against my cks. I should probably scoot away, but the alcohol keeps me rooted in ce. I reach into my pocket and pull out a small box. ¡°The wrapping isn¡¯t as good as yours. Don¡¯t judge.¡± ¡°I always judge.¡± Cora finally allows a smile to slip as she takes the gift from my hand. ¡°Well, it¡¯s too small to be an embarrassing holiday vibrator, at least.¡± ¡°Is it, though?¡± Sheughs. She fuckingughs and it¡¯s the best gift ever. ¡°Is something going to jump out at me?¡± she questions, twisting the box between her hands as she studies it over herp. ¡°Does it bite?¡± ¡°No and no.¡± Cora doesn¡¯t look convinced, but she begins to peel away the paper, corner by corner, with careful fingers. When she pulls the top off the little white box, her breath catches as she stares down into the cotton stuffing. She¡¯s staring at the gift inside, but I¡¯m staring at her. I¡¯m watching the emotions climb up her chest, then her neck,nding in her throat and releasing with a squeaky sigh. Her red-tipped fingers graze the heart pendant attached to a gold chain. ¡°It¡¯s beautiful, Dean. It¡¯s¡­ too much.¡± Cora nces up at me with misted eyes, then looks back down at the ne. She removes it from the box, letting the delicate chain dance over her fingers as she holds it up and gazes at the gilded heart. ¡°Open it. It¡¯s a locket.¡± Cora blinks, surprised. I can see her fingers tremble as she unsps the two pieces of gold and fixes her eyes to the inner contents. Still Beating. She doesn¡¯t say anything. I wonder if maybe she doesn¡¯t understand, so I start to exin. ¡°I was thinking you can wear it over your heart as a constant reminder of everything you survived. As long as it¡¯s still beating, you¡¯re okay.¡± She is still silent. I¡¯m starting to doubt the gift, thinking maybe itistoo much. Maybe it¡¯s too personal. Too triggering. But then Cora throws herself into myp, her arms around my neck, and I feel her tears slip underneath my shirt cor. ¡°Thank you,¡± she whispers in a ragged breath. ¡°It¡¯s perfect.¡± The ne remains clutched in a tight fist as her tears continue to fall, hard and relentless, wracking her body with everything she tries so hard to keep inside. She doesn¡¯t need to pretend with me, though. She doesn¡¯t need to hide. I¡¯m here, and I see her¡ªevery scar, every w, every broken, hollow piece. And I understand. Blood. Blood everywhere. So much goddamnblood. I feel it spatter my skin and I taste it in my mouth, but I keep going. Flying fists, cracking skull, brain matter. Dreadful, painful moans¡­death. He needs to pay for what he did to her. He needs to die. I promised I would snuff his worthless life away for touching her, and that¡¯s exactly what I¡¯m doing. No remorse. No going back. It¡¯s over. I think I hear her voice, far away, calling for me toe back to her. ¡°Stop. He¡¯s dead.¡± Cora breaks through and reality sinks its teeth into me as I stare down at the grisly crime I¡¯ve justmitted. Dear God, it¡¯s like something out of a horror film. A fitting end to a gruesome tale. I did this. I fucking did this. I murdered a man in cold blood with nothing but my tattered, dirty knuckles. The motherfucker deserved it. I¡¯m about to jump back, get as far away from this bloodbath as I can, but then his eyes fly open. Terrifying white eyes with irises so ck, so barbaric, they almost skin me alive. Earl lifts himself up on his haunches, his wide, bulbous eyes sunken into mangled flesh. Then he reaches out his hands and curls them around my throat, his grip vice-like. Imprable. He snarls through broken teeth, blood misting my face as he smothers me. ¡°That¡¯s a very bad dog.¡± It¡¯s not over. It¡¯s not over. It will never be over. Iunch myself into a sitting position, slicked head to toe in sweat, my breathinging quick and uneven. I throw my legs over the side of the bed, my hands squeezing the bedsheets, and I vaguely hear my ringtone going off in the distance as my thoughts begin to find their way back to reality. As I search for my cell phone, lost amongst the dampened sheets, I realize my head is still spinning from the alcohol. Mandy dropped me off at home around eleven P.M., and I promptly chugged a quarter bottle of vodka before passing out well after midnight. Fuck, I feel like shit. I locate the ringing phone and see that it¡¯s Cora¡¯s name lighting up the face. It¡¯s also two o¡¯clock in the morning. My heart starts to race as I ept the call and slur into the receiver, ¡°Cora? Where¡¯re you?¡±This belongs to N?velDrama.Org: ?. ¡°Dean.¡± Oh, hell. She sounds like she¡¯s crying. ¡°Are you okay, Corabelle?¡± Her sniffles are evident on the other end, apanied by small whimpers. ¡°I had a horrible nightmare. I can¡¯t shake it and I¡¯m scared.¡± ¡°Do you need me?¡± I don¡¯t even hesitate to ask. If she needs me, I¡¯m there. There¡¯s a catch in her breath, and then, ¡°Yes.¡± ¡°Gimme fifteen minutes.¡± Fifteen minutester, I¡¯m stumbling out of an Uber in front of her small bungalow, almost tripping over my feet as I jog clumsily up the stone walkway. My forehead falls against the turquoise door, and I start pounding my fist against it as I call out, ¡°Cora, it¡¯s me. Open up.¡± I hear her footsteps on the other side, and when she flings the door open, I almost fall forward. I catch myself on the frame, drinking in the sight of her standing there in nothing but a braless, white tank top and cotton panties. But she doesn¡¯t seem to give a shit that she¡¯s half-naked in front of me, because she steps backwards to allow me inside, her eyes red and bloodshot, her feet as unsteady as mine. I close the door behind me, unable to keep my gaze from roving over the body I¡¯vee to know so well. She doesn¡¯t try to hide from me. She knows I¡¯ve seen her far more stripped down than this. But it¡¯s her eyes that do me in. They look ssy and lifeless and utterly haunted. ¡°Corabelle¡­¡± Her bottom lip quivers as we stare at each other, only a few feet apart. ¡°I took sleeping pills. They¡¯re supposed to help me pass out and forget, but¡­ the nightmares, Dean. I can¡¯t even¡­ God, they¡¯re so horrible.¡± I start to move forward, her tears a ma to my aching heart. ¡°Come here.¡± Cora doesn¡¯t falter. She runs towards me, closing the gap between us and weaving her arms around my neck. I don¡¯t hesitate either. Like instinct, like it¡¯s the only thing to do, I reach under her thighs and lift her up until she wraps her legs around my waist and buries her face into the crook of my neck. I start walking. I carry her through every darkened room, down the short hallway, and into her bedroom. We copse onto the bed, still holding on, still desperate for that spark of warmth that only seems to ignite when we¡¯re together. We situate ourselves onto the queen-sized bed, and I only let go of her to pull the nkets up over our bodies, then my arms envelope her once again. She¡¯s stoned on sleeping pills and I¡¯m drunk off my ass, and we¡¯re messy, damaged humans clinging to each other as we battle through the storm together, but it¡¯s okay because we¡¯retogether. Cora curls herself into me, close enough that I¡¯m certain she can feel my heartbeat radiate right through her as she drifts to sleep. I wonder if she can feel how broken it is. As the alcohol haze consumes me and I begin to fade out, I lean down to kiss her forehead, chasing away a rogue strand of hair with my fingers, then grazing them down her cheek, her neck, and the front of her chest. I fall asleep with her heart pendant clutched in my hand. : Part 2 – Chapter 16 Earl Timothy Hubbard. I finally find the strength to research the case. My case. Ourcase. It¡¯s made international headlines, branding Earl with the nickname ofThe Matchmaker. He¡¯ll be going down in history as a renowned serial killer after eleven bodies were discovered buried beneath his vast acreage. His victims were taken in pairs¡ªmale and female, with no blood rtion or romantic connection. Earl had boxes and boxes of trophies, trinkets, and evidence stored in his attic, including Cora¡¯s wallet and my leather jacket and car keys. He had journal entries devoted to each ¡°couple¡±, though, none of the detailed contents have been released to the media. It¡¯s been alleged that, based on the diaries discovered, Earl groomed his victims into developing feelings for one another¡ªand when he felt like they had sessfully fallen in love, he would murder them in cold blood. He got off on watching his victims mourn over their lover being tortured to death. Sick fucking shit. I think back to that fateful night, dwelling on every little thing I did wrong. Each wrong turn and fatal slip of the tongue. ¡°She your girl?¡± Earl¡¯s question seemed harmless at the time. I had no idea I¡¯d be sealing our fate when I replied with a firm, ¡°Hell, no.¡± I should have fucking lied, but getting under Cora¡¯s skin was more important. Pissing her off was more fun. I had no idea I put the nails in our goddamn coffins. Turns out the guy was a run-of-the-mill sales clerk for apany that makes power tools. I had thought at first he was a dirty cop, but the shing lights on his vehicle were only there to trick his victims into pulling over. You hear about this shit in crime show documentaries¡ªyou never even dream about it happening in real life. I close out of the news articles as my skin heats up with prickling anxiety. I feel physically ill. I¡¯m cursing myself for reading this crap¡ªI¡¯m clearly not ready, and the wounds are still too fresh. Too raw. And I sure as fuck hope that Cora isn¡¯t reading any of it. I lean back against my couch cushions, closing my eyes as I try to get a handle on my breathing. Two dogs were confiscated off the premises and are being held at animal control. One was a German Shepherd and the other was a Yorkie mix. Neither dogs looked threatening from the photographs. In fact, they looked terrified and malnourished¡ªa far cry from the rabid beasts I¡¯d pictured gnawing on our skeletons. I wonder what kind of horrors Earl subjected those poor animals to. At least they had each other. I grab my cell phone off the side table when it starts to vibrate, not overly excited to see Mandy¡¯s name staring back at me. And that makes me feel even shittier than I already do. Mandy:Can¡¯t wait to see uter babe! Pick u up at 7 ?? ?? Mandy is hosting her annual New Year¡¯s Eve bash tonight. Usually, we host it at my townhouse because it¡¯s bigger than her modest two-bedroom apartment, but given my current state of harrowing misery, we both agreed it would be better if she took care of the festivities this year. I honestly had no intention of going¡ªringing in the new year with a handle of vodka and my progressive rock ylist sounded far more appealing. But Cora will be there. I haven¡¯t seen her since that confusing, hangover-infused post-Christmas morning, but we¡¯ve talked on the phone every night since. We don¡¯t talk about how we woke up in each other¡¯s arms, spooning, our legs impossibly entwined and my hand up her tank top. The timeline of those early morning hours is hazy at best. I vaguely recall an Uber ride with a driver I was convinced was Kurt Cobain, and I kept asking for his autograph, followed by the smell of Cora¡¯s daffodil hair quieting my demons and her warm breath against my neck lulling me to sleep. I remember a nightmare forcing me awake. And I remember eventually falling into the mostfortable sleep I¡¯ve had in almost two months¡­ despite the raging migraine I woke up to at almost noon the next day. When Cora finally untangled herself from my arms and our eyes met, there was an unspoken promise that we would never speak of it again. So, we haven¡¯t. And sometimes we don¡¯t speak much at all¡ªsimply knowing the other one is on the opposite end of the line, breathing and alive, safe and warm, is a sce in itself. ¡°Oh, my God, Dean!¡± ¡°You look good!¡± ¡°Thank goodness you¡¯re okay!¡± I wouldn¡¯t say I lookgood, but I did manage to find a clean shirt that didn¡¯t smell likest week, and I finally made the effort to shave, leaving just a shadow of stubble along my jaw. And I wouldn¡¯t say I¡¯mokay. But I¡¯m here with a fake-as-fuck smile on my face, so I suppose it¡¯s a step in the right direction. As familiar faces and curious strangers crowd me with questions andpliments, I clench the spout of the beer in my hand, wondering if I could crack the ss with just my fist. After all, my hands have broken far worse. Mandy slides up behind me, snaking her arms around my midsection and holding tight. I feel her press kisses into the middle of my back, and I raise my unupied hand to pat her sped palms. ¡°Good party,¡± I mutter. I¡¯m lying. The party is awful and my head is pounding, and I feel like everything is spinning. There are people here I used to consider good friends that I haven¡¯t given a single thought to over the course of thest seven weeks. Are they even my friends? Am Ipletely desensitized to human connection? I turn to see Cora walk through the door with her friend, Lily, bathed in sparkly silver and skinny jeans, her hair glowing with fresh highlights and a look in her eyes that resembles a cornered animal. My heart does a funny flip inside my chest, and I know that I¡¯m nopletelydesensitized. Cora puts the brakes on after stepping through the threshold, grasping Lily¡¯s hand and tugging the brte backwards. The music is too loud to hear what they¡¯re saying, but Lily scrubs her hand up and down over Cora¡¯s arm,forting her in some way. Likely telling her that it¡¯s not so bad. It will be just fine. She¡¯s a liar, Cora. It¡¯s a trap. Mandy notices her sister¡¯s arrival and unlinks her arms from my waist, making a tipsy, enthusiastic jog over to Cora, who still appears frozen and ashen in the entryway. I sip my beer, watching the scene from afar, taking in the way Mandy pulls Cora in for a hug like life is raining down with sunshine and puppy dogs. Cora¡¯s eyes meet mine over Mandy¡¯s shoulder and I lower my beer, offering her a small, understanding smile. She sends the same one back to me. But before I¡¯m able to approach her to say hello, I¡¯m sucked into a conversation with one of my good friends, Reid. He ps my shoulder, looking genuinely happy to see me, and we spend about fifteen minutes catching up¡ªwell, he catchesmeup. I¡¯m certain Reid has no desire to hear what I¡¯ve been up to since west saw each other in October. When I break away to grab another beer, I find Cora in the kitchen clinging to her red stic cup, engaging in conversation with Lily and a familiar looking guy I presume to be Jason. I pull a fresh beer out of the cooler and nce in their direction, deciding that I was absolutely correct: I don¡¯t like Jason. He¡¯s wearing a turtleneck for fuck¡¯s sake. And he keeps reaching out to touch her¡ªher arm, her hand, her hip. He even pulled a piece of invisible lint out of her hair. Cora is all smiles and niceties as she nods at him, but I can see her grip on the cup is tightening and her knee keeps bobbing up and down. Lily isughing at whatever bullshit he¡¯s spouting off, and hey, I think Lily and Jason would be perfect for each other now that I think about it.Let¡¯s make that happen. I decide to insert myself into the conversation. Cora¡¯s eyes dance over to me, lighting up when I push my way into their little three-way circle. ¡°Dean,¡± she greets, a big smile pulling at her perfect, cherry-stained lips. ¡°There you are,¡± Lily says, leaning in for a one-armed hug, while her other hand clutches her own beverage. ¡°Cora said you¡¯d probably be here. How are you?¡± ¡°I¡¯m doing good. Things are getting better.¡± It¡¯s easy to lie when it¡¯s all you ever do. ¡°What¡¯s new with you?¡± Lily chatters away about her job as a pharmacy technician, but my eyes keep darting over to Cora. Jason is ying on his cell phone as he nurses a beer, asionally looking up to nod and smile. I¡¯m only half listening to Lily when I decide to blurt out, ¡°Cora¡¯s not interested.¡± Lily stops talking. Everybody stares at me. Jason clears his throat, sucking down the rest of his beer and tossing the bottle into a nearby trash can. ¡°If that was directed at me, I¡¯m pretty sure the woman can speak for herself.¡± ¡°I¡¯m sure she can, but as her soon-to-be brother-inw, I have a responsibility to look out for her, and she¡¯s in no way ready to jump back into the dating pool. So, it¡¯s my strong rmendation that you take your flirtation elsewhere.¡± Jason lets out augh that sounds anything but amused, while Lily tries to stifle her ownughter¡ªhers definitely sounds amused, though. Cora crosses her arms over her chest, ring daggers at me. Her cheeks are flooding with color, her jaw tight. ¡°What the hell, Dean? I¡¯m standing right here.¡± ¡°I know.¡± Jason turns to me, his hands nted on his hips. ¡°Listen, man. I know you two went through some shit together, and I get that you¡¯re looking out, but¡ª¡± ¡°Someshit?¡± I repeat, twisting around to face him. This flippant motherfucker. ¡°We were chained up like dogs for three goddamn weeks, kept alive with turkey sandwiches and well water, forced to do fucked up shit, while Cora¡ª¡± ¡°Dean!¡± Cora interrupts. Jason holds his hands up. ¡°I¡¯m not trying to downy anything. I was just talking to the girl.¡± Before I can get another word in, Cora snatches my hand and starts dragging me away from the kitchen. ¡°Excuse us,¡± she says over her shoulder. She pulls me into Mandy¡¯s bedroom and ms the door shut, pressing her back up against it. ¡°What. The. Hell.¡± I let out a sigh, feeling a little regretful. Maybe those four beers hit me harder than I thought they would. ¡°Sorry, I was just trying to protect you.¡± She sets her cup down on Mandy¡¯s dresser and takes a step closer to me, her eyes stony, her features taut. ¡°Youembarrassedme.¡± ¡°I wasn¡¯t trying to.¡± ¡°Jason is a nice guy. He¡¯s always been polite and respectful. Besides, my sex life is none of your damn business.¡± ¡°Sex life?¡± I arch an eyebrow as my insides spike with something that feels like jealousy. ¡°You want to have sex with him?¡± Her cheeks tinge brighter, her eyes floating away from mine. ¡°Whether I do or I don¡¯t, it doesn¡¯t concern you.¡± I swallow. ¡°You looked ufortable. I was trying to help.¡± ¡°I don¡¯t want your help, Dean. You don¡¯t need to protect me anymore.¡± She releases a slow breath, tipping her gaze to the ceiling. ¡°And maybe I was ufortable. Beingheremakes me ufortable. I¡¯m still trying to get limated to people and noise andlivingagain,¡± Cora exins, her tone strained with telltale emotion. ¡°But I don¡¯t need a babysitter. I just need to rip the band aid off.¡± ¡°You think of me as a babysitter?¡± I try to downy the audacity in my voice by looking at my feet. Cora is silent for a long time, prompting me to nce up. I find that her eyes are fixed on me. We hold for a beat before she replies, ¡°I have no idea what you are to me.¡± At first, I¡¯m offended. I¡¯m outraged.After all we¡¯ve been through.I¡¯m about to respond, flustered and angry, when I realize¡­ she¡¯s absolutely right. What the fuck are we? We¡¯ll never be friends. We¡¯re no longer enemies. We can¡¯t be lovers. Where does that leave us? Soldiers at war. Kindred spirits. Two lost, wandering souls with nothing, and everything, inmon.Property ? N?velDrama.Org. Or¡­ maybe not. Maybe we aren¡¯t something meant to bebeled. We transcend titles. And that, I fear, is the most powerful thing of all. I lower my gaze to Cora¡¯s chest, noting the locket dangling between her breasts. She carries a piece of me with her. She carries a lot of my pieces with her. I chew on my cheek, scuffing my foot against the tan carpeting. ¡°Have you seen the recent updates on the case?¡± Cora looks taken off guard by the change of subject and starts scratching her wrist, her knee bobbing once again. ¡°Yeah. It¡¯s all over my newsfeed.¡± Dammit. I was hoping she hadn¡¯t. ¡°It¡¯s all sorts of fucked. He was grooming these couples to fall in love or some shit before he killed them¡­ it¡¯s sick and twisted.¡± Her eyes are wide and zing over, her breath hitching on the inhale. ¡°He said our time was almost up. Did he think¡­?¡± Our eyes meet. And I¡¯m dead certain we¡¯re both thinking about what happened against that pole before I tore Earl¡¯s face off. We both jump, startled, when there¡¯s an incessant pounding on the bedroom door. ¡°Cor? You in there?¡± It¡¯s Mandy. ¡°Be right out,¡± Cora says, her voice clipped. ¡°You little hussy! Are you with a guy?¡± Mandy teases, then barges in, apparently not giving a crap if Cora is getting it on with some guy. She stops in her tracks when she spots me. ¡°Oh. Hey, babe.¡± I stuff my hands into my pockets. There¡¯s a sh of suspicion in her eyes and it makes me feel itchy. I know Mandy has seen the news reports about Earl¡¯s true motives, but she hasn¡¯t interrogated me yet. I gulp. ¡°Hey. We were just talking.¡± A weird, awkward silence settles between the three of us, and I kind of want to just fall over and y dead like those goats do. ¡°Sorry, I didn¡¯t mean to interrupt,¡± Mandy says, coughing into her hand as she tugs down her hot pink dress with the other. ¡°We¡¯re about to y flippy cup.¡± I used to love flippy cup. I used to love a lot of things. ¡°Okay, that sounds fun,¡± Cora says, reaching for her discarded beverage and sparing me a nce. ¡°Count me in.¡± The women walk out, and I stand there alone in the middle of the bedroom¡ªin the middle ofmy fianc¨¦¡¯sbedroom¡ªconfused, rattled, and out of sorts. What the hell did Earl see? It¡¯s almost midnight and I can¡¯t find her. I know it¡¯s wrong, I know it¡¯s twisted, I know I¡¯m beyond wasted at this point, but it¡¯s almost fucking midnight. It¡¯s almost a new year. And I know, Iknow, I should be looking for Mandy right now, the woman I¡¯ve rang in thest fifteen years with. But I need to find Cora. We went to Hell and back this year¡ªtogether. When the clock strikes twelve, it¡¯s a clean te. A metaphorical new beginning. ¡°Ten¡­ nine¡­ eight¡­¡± I scan the partygoers who are chanting and smiling, their drinks sshing around in their hands as they wave their noisemakers. ¡°Seven¡­ six¡­¡± I turn to the small balcony off the kitchen, and that¡¯s where I find her. She¡¯s leaning back against the rail, facing me. ¡°Five¡­ four¡­¡± I make my way towards her, pushing through a mass of bodies, and reach for the sliding door handle, pulling it open. ¡°Three¡­¡± A wave of cold air hits me, and I watch as her hair is set in motion from the wind. The sparkles on her blouse twinkle beneath the moonlight, her eyes doing the same. She¡¯s waiting for me. ¡°Two¡­¡± I¡¯m about to step out onto the balcony when I feel fingers curl around my elbow. ¡°There you are!¡± I¡¯m spun around in a circle. ¡°One!¡± A mouth meets mine as celebratory cheers ring out around us. Mandy links her arms around my neck, pulling me in for our traditional midnight kiss, and my body wants to protest, push back, disengage¡­ but I just stand there, my arms at my sides, and I allow her to kiss me. I¡¯m too drunk to put up much of a fight, and besides, what would be the point? Sorry, babe. I kind of wanted to have some one-on-one time with your sister instead. Maybe next year. I¡¯m a fucking asshole. Mandy smiles as our lips part and she taps our noses together. That was our first real kiss since her birthday party on that fateful Saturday night. ¡°Happy New Year, Dean. This one will be better¡­ I promise.¡± She leans in for one more peck before adjusting the cor of my shirt and stepping back. ¡°Want another drink?¡± I want to say yes, but I¡¯m already seeing double. ¡°I think I¡¯m good. I¡¯m going to get going.¡± ¡°Okay, I¡¯ll drive you.¡± ¡°No, I¡¯ll call an Uber. You¡¯re the party host, Mandy.¡± She¡¯s about to argue, but Cora is suddenly beside me, her shoulder brushing up against my arm. ¡°I can drive him. Lily¡¯s hitching a ride with Todd, and I¡¯m getting tired anyway.¡± Mandy puts on her gossip face. ¡°Ooh, scandalous. I¡¯ll need details.¡± Then, as if remembering our encounter in the bedroom earlier, her face falls and her eyes dart between us. ¡°Are you sure, Cor? I don¡¯t mind.¡± ¡°Don¡¯t be silly. You can¡¯t leave your apartment unattended.¡± Mandy nibbles her lip, looking conflicted, until one of her friends starts calling her over for jello-shots. ¡°Yeah, okay. That works.¡± She nces over to me. ¡°Call me in the morning?¡± I nod. Cora fishes through her purse for her car keys, then tips her head to the door, encouraging me to follow. It¡¯s a silent ride to my townhouse, five miles on the other side of town, and I almost fall asleep. But I¡¯m too preupied with thinking about thest time we were in a car together, and every time we hit a stoplight, I half expect the window to be smashed open and for a new nightmare to begin. She helps me into the house a few minutester because things are starting to spin at this point, and I make my way to the bedroom on stumbling legs, unbuttoning my shirt as I walk. ¡°Come on,¡± I say to Cora, who is lingering in the doorway, quiet and unsure. ¡°I should get going. It¡¯ste.¡± I pause to face her. She looks nervous, but not the ufortable nervous¡ªnot the Jason nervous. It¡¯s something else. ¡°Lie down with me.¡± A bold request. Goddamn alcohol controlling my tongue. ¡°Dean¡­¡± ¡°It¡¯s not like we haven¡¯t before.¡± She blinks. ¡°That was a mistake.¡± I take a step towards her, my shirt hanging open. ¡°I guess if you want to call the best sleep we¡¯ve had in almost two months a mistake, then sure. Okay.¡± Cora ducks her head, lowering her eyes to the gray rug in my entryway. ¡°You know what I¡¯m talking about. It¡¯s not appropriate. Especially because we¡¯ve been¡­¡± She clears her throat. ¡°Intimate.¡± ¡°Those were fucked up circumstances. We didn¡¯t have a choice.¡± ¡°I know, but we have a choice now. We have our free will back, and it¡¯s telling me it¡¯s not a good idea to get in bed with my sister¡¯s fianc¨¦. It¡¯s wrong, Dean.¡± She lifts her eyes back to me. ¡°I¡¯m sorry.¡± I can¡¯t argue with her. I can¡¯t argue with any of that. I¡¯m being torn in two directions, my mind telling me it¡¯s not right and that Mandy would never be okay with it, and my fucking soul wanting nothing more than to feel Cora pressed up against my chest, the sound of her beating heart singing me to sleep like a goddamn luby. I¡¯m so fucked. I nod my head slowly, pressing my lips together. ¡°Yeah, you¡¯re right. Happy New Year, Cora.¡± I shoot her a jaded smile and begin to turn around¡­ but something stops me. Something that has been bugging me for weeks. I stop her before she slips out the door. ¡°Hey, wait a sec.¡± Cora turns to me with curious eyes. ¡°Yeah?¡± I scratch the back of my head. ¡°That thing I said in the car that night¡­ about the way you were dressed. About opening yourself up for unwanted attention¡­¡± I force my eyes up, noting a perplexed frown etched between her brows. ¡°That was shitty. I don¡¯t ever want you to think that what happened to us was your fault or that you brought it on yourself. It was a fucked up thing to say, and it¡¯s been bothering the hell out of me. I just¡­ you looked so fuckin¡¯ pretty, and I guess I¡¯ve always felt this weird protectiveness over you. I see the way men look at you and it drives me crazy.¡± Cora is wringing her hands together, biting her lip so hard I¡¯m afraid she might draw blood. ¡°Oh. Um¡­ thank you.¡± ¡°Yeah, you¡¯re wee.¡± I massage the nape of my neck, my chin to my chest. ¡°Well, goodnight.¡± ¡°Goodnight, Dean. Happy New Year.¡± I look up at her just as she shoots me the sweetest smile that makes my heart do things itreallyshouldn¡¯t, and then she¡¯s gone. I think about that smile as I crawl into bed a few minutester, and I know I won¡¯t sleep well tonight, but I¡¯ll definitely sleep a little easier. : Part 2 – Chapter 17 T H R E E Y E A R S E A R L I E R Mandy¡¯s fingers are dancingacross my knee under the table, making their way up my thigh. I catch her hand before it makes contact and shoot her a wink. Little minx. The Oar is noisy with rowdy patrons watching the game, slinging back beers and shouting obscenities at the big screen TVs. Cora and Brandon sit across from us, making googly eyes at each other as they try to decide on an appetizer. My friend, Reid, stops by the table with his new girlfriend to chat, while a waitress appears to collect our orders and refill our drinks. Life is good. I have a beautiful woman who I think I want to marry someday, job security, a new townhouse, and pretty damn good friends. I¡¯m not sure why it hits me in that moment, hanging out at our favorite bar on a random Friday night in the middle of winter, but asughter fills my ears and Mandy¡¯s hand presses warm against my thigh, I feel content. ¡°Do you think the waitress is hot?¡± Reid says his goodbyes and I turn to Mandy, who is leaning on her palm and twirling a piece of light blonde hair around her finger. ¡°Huh?¡± ¡°Her boobs are really big. And her extensions look great.¡± Mandy puckers her lips with a sigh, deep in thought. ¡°You¡¯re crazy. I didn¡¯t even notice her.¡± It¡¯s true¡ªI didn¡¯t. Cora is convinced I sleep around because I¡¯m a ¡®giant jerk face¡¯, and I guess cheating goes along with being a giant jerk face, but the truth is, I¡¯ve only ever been with Mandy. We were each other¡¯s firsts when I was a sophomore and she was a junior, and we¡¯ve been together ever since. We took a three month break in college, but I still never strayed. It didn¡¯t feel right. Honestly, the only other woman I¡¯ve ever eventhoughtabout in that way is Cora¡­ which is a secret I¡¯ll take to my grave. Neither of them can ever know I had eyes for Cora Lawson first when she ambled into English ss as a doe-eyed freshman, radiating innocence andvender. The Lawson sisters are still the two most beautiful women I¡¯ve everid eyes on, and one of them is currently ring at me from across the table. ¡°What?¡± I question, leaning back in my chair. ¡°Is my breathing getting on your nerves?¡± ¡°That¡¯s a given,¡± she shrugs. ¡°And you¡¯re such a liar. You obviously noticed the waitress.¡± ¡°I didn¡¯t, and why would you assume that?¡± ¡°Because you¡¯re a straight male.¡± Cora pauses, a wicked gleam settling in her green eyes. ¡°Well¡­ that¡¯s up for debate, I suppose. We can¡¯t forget that embarrassing incident with your college buddyst year.¡± I can¡¯t believe she went there. ¡°You mean when you slipped me your dad¡¯s Viagra after I mentioned I had a headache? Real cute, Corabelle. I thought it was Advil.¡± She almost spits her drink out as she erupts withughter. Damn her. That was the most humiliating night of my life, and I still have no idea how I¡¯m going to get her back for it. Everything I think of falls short. The waitress returns with our wings and cheese fries, and I keep my hard gaze on Cora, refusing to humor her with even the tiniest nce in the waitress¡¯ direction. But I can see Brandon out of the corner of my eye practically drooling into his craft beer. ¡°Anything else I can get for you guys?¡± ¡°Nope,¡± I say, still staring at Cora. She narrows her eyes at me. The waitress walks away, and I reach for the wings, dipping one of them into the little cup of ranch dressing that was set in front of me. I take a big bite¡­ ¡­and literally almost Exorcist-vomit all over the table. ¡°What the fuck? Is this mayonnaise?¡± I hate mayonnaise. Despise it. Even the smell of it makes me want to puke. Cora¡¯sughter reemerges, and I zero in on the culprit. She¡¯s getting way too good at these pranks. ¡°Cor, you¡¯re such a bitch,¡± Mandy says beside me, but her ownughter breaks through as she tries to hide it with her hand. I fold my arms across my chest with payback in my eyes as Brandon leans into Cora, kissing her head and muttering, ¡°That¡¯s my girl.¡± Mandy and Cora left about fifteen minutes ago. Brandon and I decide to stick around and have a few more beers since the game is still going on, and we¡¯re both eager to see who wins. ¡°I¡¯m gonna take a piss. Be back in a few,¡± Brandon says, sliding off his stool and weaving his way through the busy bar and grill. I take a sip of my beer, my eyes on the game, when I notice the faint scent of flowery perfume floating over to me. I nce to my right. Our waitress is leaning her elbow on the bar, holding up her notepad and tapping it with her pen. ¡°Can I get you anything, sugar?¡±Copyright by N?v/elDrama.Org. There¡¯s no mistaking the flirtation in her tone, nor the intent in her eyes as she checks me out, biting on her bottom lip and thrusting her cleavage in my face. I look away, bringing the rim of my ss to my lips. ¡°Pretty sure you saw me with my girlfriend all night.¡± ¡°She¡¯s not here now,¡± she replies boldly, tilting her head to the side and fluttering her longshes. I respond by pulling out my wallet and pping a twenty-dor bill on the bar counter, then rising from my stool. ¡°Have a nice night.¡± I don¡¯t indulge her with a parting nce. I breeze right by and head out the doors to have a smoke before I leave. I can finish the game at home. I pull out my cell phone to text Brandon that I¡¯m taking off, when I hear a familiar male voiceing from the left side of the parking lot. I squint my eyes through the darkness and spot Brandon leaning back against his Jeep¡­ with his arms around a mysterious raven-haired woman. Heughs as he leans in and starts making out with someone who clearly isn¡¯t Cora. I see red. I waste no time in storming over to the cheating bastard, my hands forming into fists at my sides. Brandon pulls away from the woman when he sees me closing in, looking flustered and fuckingcaught. I nce at the brte and nod my head over my shoulder. ¡°Leave.¡± ¡°Excuse me?¡± she demands, hands on her hips. ¡°Or you can watch,¡± I shrug. ¡°That¡¯s cool, too.¡± I grab Brandon by his shirt cor, yanking him forward, then throw him back against the hood of his Jeep. ¡°You slimy piece of shit. Four years¡ªfour fucking years with her, and you¡¯re throwing it all away for shiny, new co-ed pussy?¡± Brandon raises his hands in defense. ¡°Shit, man, I was just messing around. Don¡¯t tell her, okay? It¡¯ll kill her.¡± I slug him across the jaw. ¡°You¡¯regoing to tell her.¡± Brandon grabs his face in pain, howling into his hands. ¡°I think you broke my damn jaw.¡± He tries to push me off of him, but I hold tight. ¡°You don¡¯t even like Cora. Why the hell do you care, anyway?¡± I m him against the car and he cries out again. ¡°I always knew she was too good for you.¡± I watch the mystery brte scurry away in her high heels, then I return my attention to Brandon. ¡°You scum bag. You¡¯re going to end things with her or I¡¯m going to break your jaw for real. I promise you that.¡± Brandon finally shoves me away and pulls himself up, breathing hard. He shakes his head. ¡°It¡¯ll break her heart, man. Thest guy she was with cheated on her and she hasn¡¯t gotten over it. C¡¯mon, just let this go. It won¡¯t happen again.¡± I run my tongue along my teeth, letting his words sink in. Then I blow out a slow breath. ¡°Say it was me.¡± ¡°What?¡± ¡°Tell her you¡¯re breaking up with her because I threatened you. She already hates me. She¡¯ll believe it.¡± Brandon stares at me, dumbfounded. ¡°You¡¯re fucking crazy. Are you secretly in love with her or something?¡± I lunge at him, mming him back against the hood. ¡°Do it, or I swear to God you¡¯ll be at the stic surgeon¡¯s office tomorrow getting a new goddamn nose.¡± I lift off of him, pping at his already bruising jaw as I stand. ¡°Then I never want to see your face again.¡± A double date. Fantastic. Things are just as awkward as I expected them to be, considering what transpired with Jason at Mandy¡¯s partyst week. I tried to talk Mandy out of setting up this disaster, but she insisted it would be ¡°good for Cora¡±. I¡¯m not sure going back to the same bar that Earl hunted us down in with the intention of setting Cora up with a guy only six weeks after she was raped for twenty days straight is what¡¯sgoodfor her, but there was only so much protesting I could do without looking suspicious. Besides¡­ Cora agreed, despite my grievances. And now we¡¯re trying not to make eye contact with each other over the table as she sits across from me, only pretending to eat her mozzare sticks. ¡°So, when do you go back to work?¡± Jason asks Cora, leaning back with his hands on his knees, looking far too interested in the way the spaghetti strap of her camisole top slips down her shoulder. Cora pulls it back up, tucking her hair behind one ear. ¡°Monday, actually. I¡¯m a little nervous, but it¡¯ll be good to get back to normal and have a routine again.¡± Mandy and I share a tbread pizza, and I return the smile she sends me when we reach for the same piece. ¡°Do your students know what happened to you?¡± My eyes cut to Jason, then Cora. Cora makes designs in her marinara sauce with the end of the mozzare stick, clearing her throat. ¡°I¡¯m sure they do. It¡¯s still the number one trending story.¡± ¡°Shit,¡± Jason says in a low breath, shaking his head with sympathy. ¡°That¡¯s so rough. Well, the upside is maybe you¡¯ll get a movie or Netflix deal out of it. You know Hollywood is going to want to tell your story.¡± Jason reaches for his beer and takes a few sips. ¡°Have you been asked to do any interviews yet?¡± Cora is scratching at her wrist, and I notice the delicate skin looks raw and irritated. ¡°Yeah, but I¡¯m not ready yet. Maybe someday.¡± We share a look, but she nces down by ducking her head. Without thinking, I stretch my leg out under the table until I find her foot, linking my ankle around hers and prompting her eyes to go wide. I stare at her with a soft expression, grazing my ankle up and down her calf, trying to soothe her anxiety the only way I can. She doesn¡¯t pull away. And she stops scratching her wrist. Fuck. I think we¡¯re ying footsie under the table next to our dates. ¡°That¡¯s pretty cool, though,¡± Jason says absently. ¡°You¡¯re basically famous.¡± My head shoots up and I drop my foot. I¡¯m done with this train wreck. ¡°Cool?¡± I repeat through clenched teeth, trying to keep my voice calm and collected. Mandy reaches out to touch my thigh, a gentle warning not to make a scene. I can see Cora¡¯s eyes spearing me with her own warning as she tucks both feet underneath her chair. Jason cringes at his choice of words. ¡°Sorry, that came out wrong. I was just trying to find a little positive in the negative.¡± ¡°There is nothing positive about what happened to us.Nothing,¡± I bite back. I realize I¡¯m gripping my fork like I¡¯m about to use it as a weapon. I don¡¯t even remember picking it up. I drop the utensil with a nk, then fall back against my chair while everyone goes quiet. I tap my hand against my thigh and bob my leg, desperate for a cigarette. I haven¡¯t had a smoke since the night of the abduction¡ªI figured I had gone three weeks without it, so there was no point in starting up the habit again. But I¡¯m finding myself easily agitated and low on patiencetely, and the nicotine always helped calm me. Maybe I should just start smoking. Hell, I¡¯m already a borderline alcoholic at this point¡­ what¡¯s another vice to add into the mix? I decide to pick up a few packs after this shitty double date, and in the meantime, I¡¯ll just try to get drunk. The night goes on painfully slow with Jason asking dumb ass questions, Cora ying with her food, and Mandy trying to seduce me with coy winks and thigh grabs. I sling back five beers over the next hour, grateful when I finally feel the telltale buzz creep in. Jason and Cora are talking about some book I¡¯ve never heard of, and Cora looks into it. She¡¯s rxed and engaged,ughing at something he says with a genuine smile. At one point, Jason wraps his arm around her shoulder and leans in to kiss her on the cheek. ¡°You¡¯re such a sweetheart,¡± I hear him whisper against her ear. It takes all of my lingering willpower to keep my ass in my seat and refrain from lunging across the table to throttle him. Jason announces he needs to use the restroom a momentter and ventures away from our table. Mandy immediately perks up. ¡°Oh, my God, sis. He loves you,¡± she beams, reaching over to squeeze Cora¡¯s hands in hers. ¡°What do you think?¡± I don¡¯t miss the way she nces at me before replying. ¡°He¡¯s nice. I think there¡¯s potential.¡± ¡°He seems like a douche,¡± I mutter under my breath in between chugging down my sixth beer. Cora jerks her head towards me. ¡°Why? He¡¯s been a total gentleman.¡± ¡°It¡¯s obvious he just wants to screw the damaged local celebrity.¡± I regret the words instantly, closing my eyes and waiting for the well-deservedeback. But all I feel is Mandy ramming her elbow into my ribs. I wince. When I open my eyes, Cora is simply staring at me, wounded and teary-eyed.Fuck. ¡°Is that what you think of me, Dean?¡± She swallows, her hands trembling. She hides them in herp. ¡°You think I¡¯m damaged, and men only want me for one thing?¡± I try to backpedal. ¡°No. Shit, I¡¯m just¡­ feeling drunk and out of my head right now, and I don¡¯t like Jason. I just meant thatheprobably sees you like that.¡± ¡°Because I have no other redeeming qualities¡­¡± There is still no anger, no bitterness, no animosity in her words. Only pain. Which is so much fucking worse. I can¡¯t say what I want to say with Mandy sitting next to me, watching the scene unfold with questioning eyes, and I sure as hell can¡¯t stand to see that look on Cora¡¯s face for a second longer, so I push myself from the table and rise to my feet. I storm away, not looking back, and head towards the bathrooms. Jason is exiting as soon as I¡¯m about to enter. He pauses, looking somewhat rattled by my presence. I hadn¡¯t nned on starting anything, but fuck it. ¡°Just stay away from her, okay?¡± I get in his face, watching a frown crease his brow. ¡°She¡¯s been through too much. She doesn¡¯t need you fucking her all up again.¡± Jason swings his head back and forth, folding his arms defensively. ¡°You¡¯ve got balls trying to cock block me from a woman you¡¯re clearly in love with, while your fianc¨¦¡ªher goddamnsister¡ªsits right next to you.¡± What the hell? I almost choke on his words. They send me into a frenzy and I feel myself spiraling, so I snatch his t-shirt between my fists and spin him around, mming him up against the opposite wall. ¡°You don¡¯t know what the fuck you¡¯re talking about.¡± ¡°It¡¯s clear as day, asshole, and I want no part of it.¡± Jason shoves me away, smoothing out the wrinkles in his shirt. ¡°You can have her.¡± I try to get my tapered breaths under control and reply, ¡°I¡¯m not in love with her. You¡¯re delusional.¡± ¡°Keep telling yourself that.¡± Jason ps my shoulder, then runs a hand through his dirty blonde hair and turns away, mumbling under his breath, ¡°Fucking dick.¡± I watch him leave, my blood boiling, and notice Cora standing there at the end of the hallway, clutching her purse strap in a firm fist. Her eyes dart between us, looking upset. Confused. I¡¯m a few feet away, but I hear Jason mutter before he breezes out the front door, ¡°Sorry, but I¡¯m not up for apetition. Take care of yourself, Cora.¡± And then we¡¯re left staring at each other from across the hall, both of our chests heaving, our eyes locked and loaded, the words on the tips of our tongues. But Cora walks away, pushing out through those same doors and disappearing into the night. I follow her. ¡°Cora,¡± I call out, watching as she makes a quick escape to her car, hitting the unlock button multiple times until her headlights blink to life. ¡°Leave me alone.¡± I catch up to her and slide into the passenger¡¯s seat as she enters the driver¡¯s side. ¡°I¡¯m sorry.¡± She doesn¡¯t look at me. ¡°Get out of my car, Dean.¡± Cora turns on the ignition, mascara streaks etched across both cheeks, and even though my head is starting to feel loopy from the beer, I realize I fucked up. Big time. I made her question her worthandI sabotaged her date. And for what? Why? ¡°Corabelle, please. Talk to me.¡± Her shoulders are trembling as she nts both hands on the steering wheel, squeezing until her knuckles go white. More tears spill from her eyes. ¡°Fine.¡± She sniffles, looking up at me with eyes made of emerald mes. ¡°We¡¯re done. Whatever this is, whatever is between us¡ªit¡¯s done. Over. I thought I needed you to heal, but this is toxic¡­ all you¡¯re doing is holding me underwater and I can¡¯t breathe. I can¡¯t heal when I¡¯m constantly reminded of my trauma every time I look at you.¡± Cora inhales sharp, ragged breaths as she finishes. ¡°I thought you could fix me. But you¡¯re killing me, Dean.¡± I¡¯m stunned into silence, my heart shattering into a thousand fucking pieces. All I can do is gawk at her, and I know she doesn¡¯t want this, Iknowshe¡¯s just upset and pissed and confused. I find myself feeling entirely vulnerable and at a loss for words. I nce down at the center console, swallowing my pride. ¡°I don¡¯t know how to get through this without you.¡± ¡°You need to try. We¡¯re not in that basement anymore. We¡¯re on our own now.¡± ¡°No, Cora, wearestill in that basement¡ªwe never got out. And we¡¯ll stay down there, trapped, chained to steel pipes, drowning in darkness, until we can fix our shit.Together.¡± ¡°No!¡± Cora ps one hand against the wheel, releasing a gasping sob. ¡°No¡­nottogether. I can¡¯t be calling you in the middle of the night toe over, we can¡¯t be sharing a bed, we can¡¯t be talking on the phone every night until we fall asleep.¡± She shakes her head furiously. Adamantly. ¡°I can¡¯t let you hold me and touch me and look at me the way you do. It¡¯s not fair to Mandy. I feel like my soul isrotting.¡± ¡°We haven¡¯t done anything wrong,¡± I insist, trying to get through to her. ¡°We¡¯ve doneeverythingwrong.¡± I gaze at her through the dim-lit car, her tears illuminated by the dashboard. She looks worn down, defeated, and lost. All I¡¯ve tried to do is build her up, put her pieces back together, and quiet the ghosts that haunt her day in and day out. I had no ideaIwas the reason for the look in her eyes right now. It guts me. I nce down at the chain around her neck, the heart locket hidden beneath her red camisole. Her top matches the color of her mouth, even though her lipstick is smudged from the tears still raining down her cheeks. While staring at her lips, I¡¯m reminded of thest time I was pressed against them and how warm and soft they felt¡ªsomething good and pure poking through the ugliness. I find her eyes and ask, ¡°What happened between us thatst day?¡± I finally said it. I brought life to the single most confusing moment of my existence, and up until now, up until this very second, I could still pretend it was a dream. A mirage. Maybe a fucked up fantasy. It wasn¡¯treal¡ªas long as we never acknowledged it, it never happened. But it¡¯s real now. And it¡¯s hovering between us, thick and potent, tearing away our armor and walls and carefully assembledyers. Cora¡¯s breath hitches as she locks her eyes on mine, blinking back more tears. ¡°I wasn¡¯t myself¡ªI zoned out and my body was confused. It didn¡¯t mean anything.¡± I frown, taken aback by her words.Bullshit. ¡°You¡¯re lying. You weretherewith me, one hundred percent. I saw it in your eyes.¡± ¡°No.¡± ¡°Yes, Cora.¡± ¡°No,¡± she grits out, her chin quivering. ¡°Please go.¡± I lean forward until our faces are only inches apart and I can smell the flowers in her hair. I clench my jaw and say in a low, low voice, ¡°You can lie to yourself all you want, but I was there. Iknowyou felt it. And I¡¯m not saying I understand it, or can exin it, or know what the fuck to do about it, but it wassomething, Corabelle.¡± She pulls her bottom lip between her teeth, her breathing uneven and her body still shivering, but not from the cold¡ªno, not from the cold. Cora leans into me, her eyes dancing to my mouth for a fleeting moment, then right back up again. She sucks in a breath. ¡°Don¡¯t call me that.¡± Her voice is deadly calm and full of icy warning. She falls back against the seat, still cutting me with her sharp gaze. ¡°Now¡­ get out of my car.¡± The flickering light I¡¯ve carried with me since the day this all began, the hope of better days, the glimmer of promise that someday, one day, everything will be bright again, extinguishes right then and there. I feel cold and dark and empty. And so very alone. I nod, slow and sure, silently admitting my defeat, then I turn to exit her vehicle without looking back. If this is what she wants¡ªif this is what sheneeds¡ªI have no other choice but to walk away. And even though I hear her crying, sobbing her heart out into the starry night through the cracked car window, I keep on walking. I walk straight towards Mandy, standing in the middle of the parking lot hugging herself, her own tears of betrayal slipping down flushed cheeks. ¡°Mandy¡­¡± I say, picking up my pace so I can reach her, get to her, try to exin something I can¡¯t even exin to myself. But she whips around, her hair flying over her shoulder like a curtain closing. Mandy gets into her own car and speeds out of the parking lot as Cora¡¯s car follows behind a few momentster. I¡¯m left abandoned in The Broken Oar parking lot on a frosty January night. It¡¯s fine, I say, stumbling back until my foot hits a curb, and I copse onto a patch of grass. It¡¯s okay. I¡¯ve slept in worse ces. : Part 2 – Chapter 18 My head is poundingwhen I wake up the next morning to a muted light trickling in through a nearby window. At first, I think I¡¯m back in that basement. It¡¯s day number sixty-three and the endless cycle of torture and mind-numbing madness continues. I instinctively begin tugging at chains that don¡¯t exist, and when I snap back to reality in a cold sweat, I realize that the chainsdostill exist¡ªthey are the invisible kind. Those might be the worst kind. I rub the sleep from my eyes with the heels of my palms, sitting up on my elbows and taking in my surroundings. I¡¯m in Mandy¡¯s bedroom. ¡°Good morning.¡± My head flicks to the right. Mandy is sitting beside me, holding a ss of water and a bottle of Advil, her expression somewhat mncholy. Mandy drove back to the bar to pick me up five minutester, too wracked with guilt to leave me there. I was grateful¡­ though, I wonder if I truly deserved the courtesy. She brought me back to her apartment, and I plowed through the leftover alcohol from her New Years party, passing out a few hourster. I sit up all the way, leaning back against her blush pink, upholstered headboard. I pop three pills and drink the water she hands to me, then set the ss down on the nightstand, sighing as I run a hand along my face. ¡°I¡¯m sorry.¡± I¡¯ve been saying that word a lottely. I¡¯m sorry I¡¯m still fighting a battle I can¡¯t win. I¡¯m sorry I¡¯m a mess, drinking away my problems. I¡¯m sorry my head is filled with dark, depressing thoughts that often consume me. I¡¯m sorry I can¡¯t touch the woman I¡¯m supposed to marry. I¡¯m sorry I can¡¯t fix the woman who won¡¯t let go of my heart. I¡¯m sorry I keep fucking up. I¡¯m sorry I¡¯m wasting my second chance. Mandy looks over at me with her roon eyes and mess of blonde hair. ¡°You left me alone in the bar, stuck paying the dinner bill, to chase my sister into her car, Dean.¡± Shit. I¡¯mreallysorry for that. ¡°It¡¯s not what you think, Mandy. It¡¯s not¡­ it¡¯s not like that. We¡¯re trying to get through this shit together, and I¡¯m not handling it well.¡± I puff my cheeks with air and let out a hard breath. ¡°There¡¯s no handbook, or guide, orSurviving Life After Earl¡¯s Torture Chamber For Dummies. There¡¯s literally no one else out there like us because he murdered them all. We¡¯re an anomaly¡ªwe¡¯re not supposed to be here, and it¡¯s fucking me up.¡± Mandy reaches out a tentative hand, resting it atop my own. ¡°I¡¯m trying to be patient, I really am. But when you¡¯re always running to her and away from me, it hurts. I should be the one helping you through this. I should be your anchor.¡± ¡°I know,¡± I say, my voice pitching. ¡°Trust me, I know.¡± She squeezes my fingers in her warm hand, offering me a wistful smile. ¡°Maybe you need medication¡­¡± she suggests. ¡°I¡¯m not sick, Mandy.¡± ¡°Youaresick. You have PTSD¡­ you were tossing and turning all night, sometimes yelling and shaking the bed. You haven¡¯t figured out your car situation, or when you¡¯re going back to work, or how you¡¯re going to pay for anything when your savings runs out. You drink all day, every day. You haven¡¯t said a word about the wedding. You won¡¯t touch me or kiss me¡ªin fact, it seems like you don¡¯t even want me around.¡± Mandy ducks her head, biting back tears. ¡°You¡¯re not okay, and I don¡¯t know how to help you.¡± I don¡¯t know how to help me, either. ¡°I think I just need time.¡± I can see her scanning my face, trying to read me, out of the corner of my eye. Mandy pulls back and starts wringing her hands together, inhaling sharply. ¡°Do you need time away from me? Do you need space?¡± I run my tongue along the roof of my mouth, rolling my jaw. ¡°I just need time to think, I guess. I don¡¯t know.¡± ¡°To think about if you want to spend the rest of your life with me or not?¡± Her voice sounds scared, edging on panicked. I nce at her. ¡°I don¡¯t know, Mandy. I don¡¯t know what I want anymore.¡± I thought I knew what I wanted. I had my future all set up, locked in, ready to go. Mandy and I have always been good together. It¡¯s been easy and low key. No drama. Minimal fighting. Maybe a little stale at times, but that¡¯s bound to happen when you¡¯re with the same person for one and a half decades. But now I feel like something¡¯s always been missing. Thatspark. A profound connection. Fun. I feel like I¡¯m a different person and Mandy hasn¡¯t changed at all. I¡¯m evolving, and she¡¯s stagnant. I¡¯m picking apart all the things that make us different, all of our ws and missing parts. I care about Mandy, absolutely, but do Iloveher? Have I ever? Maybe¡­maybe, but it¡¯s always been a shallow kind of love. Comfortable. Surface deep. We have no scars, no battle wounds. We haven¡¯t been to Hell and back, or clung to each other in the shadows, crying, shaking, expelling the dirtiest pieces of our soul together. Is that what I want? Fuck. I throw my legs over the side of the bed, feeling mixed up and shaken. I bury my face into my hands, flinching when Mandy ces her fingertips against the small of my back. ¡°Think about what you really want, Dean. I¡¯m not going anywhere.¡± She rubs my back in soft and steady motions, up and down, back and forth. ¡°I have a bridal partying into the salon for updos in an hour, so I¡¯ll drop you off at home on the way. Feel free to take a shower or eat or something. I¡¯m going to get dressed.¡± I feel the mattress lift up as she stands, her footsteps making their way out of the room, the door shutting gently behind her. I tent my fingers and stare at the wall. What the fuck do I want? I¡¯m sitting in front of the television that evening, keeping my eyes away from the kitchen where a brand new bottle of vodka beckons me from the top of the refrigerator. I¡¯m torn between throwing it over my balcony into the wends and polishing off the whole damn thing, just so I can go numb and pass the fuck out. Or die. I¡¯d probably die, and it¡¯s concerning how unaffected I am by that prospect. Maybe Mandy was right about the medication thing. I¡¯m still deciding what to do when I hear my phone buzzing beside me on the little wooden table. I reach for it, surprised to see Cora¡¯s name attached to a long string of text messagesing through. Cora:I¡¯m sorry about what I said.This belongs to N?velDrama.Org: ?. Cora:I think. Cora:The truth is I had a few sses of wine so now I¡¯m a little loopy and confused and normally we would be talking on the phone right now but we¡¯re not because I told you to leave me alone and I kind of regret that. Cora:Don¡¯t judge me for that awful run on sentence. My eyes are bleeding just looking at it. Please delete it. Cora:Anyway, I¡¯m going to try and sleep. I don¡¯t hate you. I know I said you¡¯re holding me underwater but you¡¯re the only thing keeping me afloat. Cora:Goodnight. Cora:Delete that run on sentence please. I find myself smiling down at my phone, debating if I should reply, or if I should call her, or if I should Uber it over to her house and hold her until she falls asleep. Maybe I should ignore her. Maybe she was right about everything. I tap my thumb against the side of my phone, pursing my lips together as I consider my next move. Then I shoot her a quick reply: Me:Goodnight, Cora. I head to bed, minus the vodka. : Part 2 – Chapter 19 My first day back to workthe following week is a train wreck. I¡¯m a Heavy Construction Equipment Operator for the roads, which basically means I need to be lucid and clear-headed as fuck. I operate tractor trailers, bulldozers, cranes, and a variety of other big ass vehicles to patch concrete, repair highways and bridges, and haul toxic materials around. The heavens decided to rain down an ice storm today in honor of my first day back, so I had triple the anxiety. It was nearly impossible to stay focused as I tried to remember controls and protocols, while also having to fake-smile my way through the day and answer a thousand questions pertaining to my close encounter with a serial killer. But I survived. The weather is clearing up as I pull off my hard hat and hop into the rental car provided by my insurancepany. It¡¯s a shitty Honda, but it¡¯ll do for now. I let out the sigh it feels like I¡¯ve been holding in all day and copse into the driver¡¯s seat, drained and exhausted. I¡¯m also fidgety and edgy from my alcohol detox. I haven¡¯t touched a drop of liquor since the double date from hell over a week ago at The Oar. I¡¯m trying. I¡¯m really fucking trying. As I¡¯m about to put the car in drive, my phone starts to ring, and Cora¡¯s name and number pop up on my Bluetooth screen. I squint my eyes to make sure I¡¯m seeing correctly and that impaired vision isn¡¯t a side effect of the withdrawals. Cora and I haven¡¯t spoken much over thest week, aside from a few casual text messages and some Facebook engagement. She filled me in on her first days back to work teaching at the school, and I told her about my uing start date, which was today. Basics. Normalcy. Nothing that would indicate we barely escaped death two months ago, and certainly no reference to our emotional encounter in her car when she told me to leave her the hell alone because I was killing her. Even though she took it back, I¡¯m still giving her space. For her, and for me. I click ept, thinking she¡¯s calling to inquire about my first day back. ¡°Hello?¡± I can make out the faint sound of sniffles on the other end of the line. ¡°Dean?¡± ¡°Cora?¡± My heart goes into overdrive, my chest flooding with thousands of harrowing scenarios. ¡°Are you okay?¡± ¡°I-I¡¯m sorry to call you. I know it¡¯s your first day back to work, and I was just going to leave you a voicemail, but¡­¡± She tries to catch her breath, small sobs breaking through. ¡°It¡¯s Blizzard.¡± I blink, absorbing her words. Oh, shit. ¡°Blizzard? What happened?¡± ¡°She had a seizure or something. It was bad, Dean¡ªwe couldn¡¯t snap her out of it. I¡¯m at the emergency clinic and they say she¡¯s totally unresponsive.¡± Cora starts crying, hupping through her words. ¡°They said we need to consider euthanasia.¡± Fuck. This can¡¯t be happening. I pinch the bridge of my nose, then trail my fingers through my hair, tugging at the roots. ¡°Shit, Corabelle. Tell me which hospital and I¡¯m on my way.¡± ¡°Are you sure? I know you¡¯re working¡­¡± ¡°My shift is up. I want to be there.¡± Her sigh of relief kisses me through the Bluetooth. ¡°We¡¯re atCare.¡± ¡°I¡¯ll be there in twenty minutes.¡± I disconnect the call and drive at least ten over the speed limit, my mind reeling, until I careen into the lot and park like a jackass, taking up two spaces. I run through the main entrance and find Cora and her parents huddled together in the waiting room. Cora stands as soon as she spots meing towards her and we¡¯re yanked together like mas, pulling each other into a tearful embrace. I smile at the Lawsons over Cora¡¯s shoulder. Derek has his hand on Bridget¡¯s knee, while Bridget blows her nose into a tissue. ¡°I¡¯m so sorry, Cora,¡± I whisper against her ear, feeling the way she tightens her hold around my midsection in response. ¡°How much time do we have?¡± ¡°They¡¯re waiting for us in the¡­ room,¡± Cora sniffs, pulling back to nce at me through red-rimmed eyes. She swipes at the tears along her cheekbone. ¡°Mandy¡¯s at work. She said it was too hard to be here. Mom and Dad are going to wait out here, but¡­ did you want toe in with me? To say goodbye?¡± ¡°Of course.¡± I don¡¯t hesitate. We rescued this dog together, and I¡¯ll be damned if I¡¯m not with Cora when Blizzard takes herst breath. Goddamn. Cora gives a tight nod, then alerts one of the staff that we¡¯re ready to go in. I follow her, a solemn silence settling between us. It¡¯s a quiet, peaceful room, adorned with electronic candles and soft music. Blizzard is lying very still on a dog bed in the center of the floor, her fluffy chest heaving ever so slowly with each breath. I feel my emotions get stuck in my throat when Iy eyes on the dog that has felt like my own for thest ten years. I¡¯d dog-sit her when the Lawsons took family vacations. I¡¯d take her to the dog park with Mandy and Cora, watching her chase tennis balls and make new friends. Blizzard always greeted me first when I¡¯d walk through the front door with Mandy, copsing onto my feet and rolling over for belly rubs. She always sat beside me at the dinner table, waiting for the snack I¡¯d inevitably offer her, and she always wagged her tail in adoration as I sang karaoke in the Lawson¡¯s living room. Her tail never seemed quite as enthusiastic when everyone else sang. The technician talks us through the process in a kind voice, letting us know to take as much time as we need. There¡¯s a button we need to press when we¡¯re ready. When we¡¯re ready to let her go. Cora kneels beside her dog, resting a shaky palm against Blizzard¡¯s ivory fur. I kneel down next to her, doing the same, our shoulders melding together as our own respective memories sail through us. ¡°She was acting funny the night Mandy and I were getting ready for her birthday party. Bumping into things, walking in circles, panting more than usual,¡± Cora whispers, our fingers brushing together as we stroke Blizzard¡¯s tummy. ¡°Do you think she was sick and waited for us toe home?¡± Cora looks up at me with big eyes as tears track down her rosy cheeks. I swallow, holding back my own grief, trying to be strong. ¡°Yes. She couldn¡¯t go without saying goodbye to her favorite people.¡± Cora links her index finger with my pinky, resting her head against my shoulder as her body trembles with fresh tears. I snake my other arm around her, bringing her as close as I can, then twist my head to nt a kiss against her hair. ¡°I¡¯m d you¡¯re here,¡± she murmurs, wiping her tears away with her sleeve. ¡°I never thought I¡¯d hear you say that.¡± I relish in the small, hoarseugh that escapes her as her finger squeezes mine. I press the button a few minutester and the veterinarian steps inside with her cart. It¡¯s a cart of death. The doctor exins what¡¯s going to happen, that it will be peaceful and painless, that the medicine will stop Blizzard¡¯s heart and she will fade away. I can¡¯t help but feel like that¡¯s a perfect way to go. It¡¯s an emotional few minutes as we watch the dog¡¯s chest rise and ebb until she releases her final breath, surrounded by her rescuers¡ªsurrounded by love. Fuck, I think I might lose it.Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. The doctor issues us her condolences and begins to drag the cart out of the room. ¡°Blizzard was a wonderful family member, Miss Lawson. I¡¯m very sorry for your loss. I¡¯ll let you and your boyfriend say your final goodbyes now. Feel free to step out whenever you¡¯re ready. There¡¯s no rush.¡± Boyfriend. I suppose we do look like two grieving lovers, pressed up against each other, fingers intertwined. Cora doesn¡¯t correct the mistake as the door clicks closed. When an eerie silence fills the room and I nce down at Blizzard, lifeless and unmoving, something in my heart clenches. My bones physically ache and my lungs fill with impossible grief. I lean back against the wooden bench behind me, inhaling a few shuddering breaths, and then I let go. I press my palm over my face as tears sting my eyes, spilling out, depositing into the cracks of my fingers. Cora immediately scoots backwards on the floor, sliding up beside me and leaning in. She wraps both arms around me and presses her cheek to my chest, holding me as I cry my fucking heart out over this fluffy little friend I¡¯m going to miss the hell out of, and so much more. ¡°Shit, I¡¯m sorry,¡± I breathe out, hating the way my voice splits and wavers as I scrub a hand over my face. ¡°You loved her,¡± Cora whispers against my neon work vest, her fingers clutching the shirt underneath. ¡°It¡¯s nothing to be sorry about.¡± She raises her head to look at me and our eyes lock together, something heavy and potent andmanding passing between our souls. Cora touches the pads of her fingertips to the side of my face, that is still damp with my grief. I grit my teeth together, unsure of how to process the moment or the strange, bewitching energy hovering in the air. I stare at her, taking in her runny makeup, glossy eyes, and pink mouth. Her cheekbones are flushed with sadness and her hair is a mess, sticking up like she just got zapped by something. Maybe she did. Cora leans up on her knees, then ever so softly, without warning, presses her lips against my mouth¡­ just barely. It¡¯s a feather-light kiss. A flutter, a buzz¡ªlike hummingbird wings. Beautiful and curious. She pulls back, her eyes widening slightly, a frown creasing her brow like she¡¯s dazed and bewildered. Her tongue pokes out to wet her lips and she breaks eye contact, falling back to the floor and clearing her throat. ¡°Sorry. I don¡¯t know why I did that.¡± I draw my knees up to my chest and scratch at my shaggy hair, running my palm down the back of my neck. We¡¯re friends, in a way¡ªI think¡ªand that¡¯s what friends do sometimes during life¡¯s shitty, heartbreaking moments. Right? I nce down at Cora, who is leaning against the bench beside me, her eyes closed and her lips pressed together as if she¡¯s reying how they felt against mine. I let my fingers dance their way over to her hand and Ice them through hers, grateful she doesn¡¯t pull away from me. Her hand squeezes mine as I look back to Blizzard, so peaceful and loved, and say, ¡°It¡¯s nothing to be sorry about.¡± I offer to drive Cora back home as the snow starts to fall. It¡¯s Martin Luther King Day, so she didn¡¯t have to work today. She was grading papers at her parents¡¯ house when Blizzard had a prolonged seizure she wasn¡¯t able to recover from. I asked her before we left the hospital, just to be certain, ¡°Are you sure you don¡¯t want to go with your parents? I don¡¯t want you to be alone when you¡¯re so upset.¡± Cora shook her head. ¡°I won¡¯t be alone,¡± she said. I took that to mean she wanted me to stay with her a while, so when we pull into her driveway, I follow her inside. The snow is falling hard now, having only beening down in soft flurries when we pulled out of the parking lot. Fat snowkes nket our hair and jackets as we make our way up the snowy pathway to her front door. I pause in my tracks before going inside, ncing up at the sky, blinking at the sheet of white raining down on my face. I can¡¯t help a smile from breaking through my somber haze. ¡°It¡¯s a blizzard.¡± Cora falters on her porch step, twisting around to look at me with the widest, most enchanted eyes I¡¯ve ever seen. She steps down to join me on the walkway, holding out her arms and looking up with me. ¡°Oh, my God. Do you think¡­?¡± Her voice trails off and she starts tough. Shughs. Deliriousughter pours out of her as she spins around in circles, her nose pointed towards the heavens. ¡°It¡¯s her, Dean. She¡¯s saying goodbye.¡± I think my goddamn heart might explode. I suck in my emotions, blowing them back out into the chilly air. I¡¯m not sure what¡¯s got me more choked up¡ªBlizzard¡¯s parting gift to us or watching the way Cora is floating around and around in clumsy circles, sheathed in white, looking utterly enraptured and lost in the moment. Healing. She looks like healing. We find our way inside and strip out of our soggy winter wear, copsing onto the couch, mentally and emotionally drained. Blizzard always used to sit right between us on the couch¡ªalways. It became a running joke that she was trying to prevent us from killing each other. Now I wonder if she was trying to tell us something. I shake the thoughts away and lean my head back against the cushions, my eyes closing on instinct as the long, tiring day takes its toll. I almostpletely pass out when I feel a hand squeezing my knee. ¡°Go lie down. You look exhausted.¡± I make a ¡®hmmph¡¯ sound which is code for,¡®that sounds great, but I don¡¯t want to move¡¯. Cora seems to decipher the noise and starts tugging on my legs, stretching them out until I¡¯m sprawled out, taking up the full length of the sofa. Fleece envelopes me and I tuck the nket around me, noting the faint aroma of daffodils as I tug it up to my chin. I start to drift away when I feel her lips against my cheek, just as light as before. A tickle, a whisper, a fleeting kiss. Healing. She feels like healing. A scream forces me upright on the couch, disoriented and bleary-eyed, as I try to figure out where the fuck I am. Mint walls, a coral couch, a shag rug beneath my feet. Daffodils. Cora. I¡¯m on Cora¡¯s couch. Cora is screaming. I jump to my feet and sprint down the hallway to her dimly lit bedroom, where I find her tossing and turning, kicking at the covers, gripping the bed post between both fists behind her head. She screams again. ¡°No! Please, no¡­¡± Her eyes are closed, squeezed tight, but I know she can see. She sees all the same horrors I see when I close my eyes at night. I rush to her bedside and cautiously slide myself onto the mattress, careful not to startle her. ¡°Cora¡­ Corabelle, you¡¯re dreaming.¡± I slip my arm around her waist and pull her close, whispering into her ear, ¡°Come back to me.¡± She¡¯s still writhing on the bed, her expression pained and terrified, so I try again. ¡°Cora¡­¡± She whacks me across the jaw. ¡°Fuck,¡± I mutter, massaging the side of my face as Cora whips herself into a sitting position. Cora¡¯s eyes fly open, her chest heaving with strained breaths. ¡°Dean? Dean¡­ oh, my God¡­¡± She grabs my face between her hands and starts peppering kisses along my tingling jawline. ¡°I¡¯m so sorry. I was dreaming. I¡¯msosorry.¡± ¡°It¡¯s okay. You¡¯re safe.¡± Cora slings her arms around my neck, pulling me as close as she possibly can, and sobs against my shoulder. ¡°Are you real?¡± she cries, tilting her head until her warm lips are pressed to the side of my neck. I freeze for a moment, a shiver sweeping through me. I¡¯m unsure of what to do or say or how to console her, but instinct takes over, and I lower her back onto the bed, cradling her in my arms as I situate myself beside her. ¡°I¡¯m real. You¡¯re real. Everything¡¯s okay, Corabelle. It was just a dream.¡± Her arms are still linked around my neck and her tears are still flowing. ¡°I feel like I need to keep touching you¡­ it was so vivid¡­¡± Cora slides her hands up and down my back, then over my chest, much like she had done the first time I released her from her chains. ¡°Did I hurt you?¡± I shake my head, nting a soft kiss on her forehead. ¡°I¡¯m fine.¡± ¡°God, Dean¡­ I¡¯m so sorry. I¡¯m such an idiot.¡± Her face is cupped between my palms in an instant as I force her eyes on mine. ¡°You arenotan idiot. You¡¯re the strongest fuckin¡¯ person I know.¡± Cora¡¯s chin quivers as I swipe her stray tears away with my thumbs. ¡°I¡¯m not strong. I¡¯m falling apart.¡± ¡°You¡¯re strong as hell. Youamazeme.¡± How can she not see what I see? How can she not know? ¡°Don¡¯t you ever say that again, you hear me?¡± She sniffs, still trembling, still misty-eyed and vulnerable. ¡°I feel like it was all my fault. On top of all the shbacks and nightmares and madness, I have this coil of guilt in the pit of my stomach. You shouldn¡¯t have been there, Dean.¡± Cora sucks in a fractured breath, her leg sliding up over mine. ¡°I shouldn¡¯t have called you that night¡­¡± I frown, thrown by her admission. Rattled by the absurdity of it. ¡°That¡¯s crazy talk. I was the one who set it in motion. That bastard asked if you were my girl and I should have fucking lied. I should have said,¡®Hell fucking yes, she¡¯s my girl¡¯because I¡¯d be lucky as shit to have you.¡± She stares at me with the most astonished look swirling in her emerald eyes, and her lips part, her gaze slipping to my mouth for the tiniest second. ¡°Cora, listen to me,¡± I say, still holding her face in my hands, still clinging to her like it¡¯s the veryst time. ¡°Those were the worst three weeks of my entire goddamn life and they will haunt me forever.¡± I swallow. ¡°But I¡¯m d I was there. And I¡¯d do it all again, a thousand times over, just to keep you from going through that shit alone. I¡¯mdI was there with you.¡± A gasp-like whimper escapes her. I¡¯ve never seen her look at me like this before. I close my eyes, dropping my forehead to hers. ¡°And don¡¯t ask me what that means, Corabelle, because I don¡¯t have a goddamn clue. All I know is that I¡¯d kill that son-of-a-bitch over and over again just to keep you safe¡ªhell, I¡¯d kill a hundred men if I thought that would chase away your nightmares and bring you peace. And I know how fucked that sounds, trust me, Iknow, but I can¡¯t let you go another minute feeling guilty or responsible orweak. You¡¯re a warrior.¡± Jesus Christ, I¡¯m spouting out these raw, unfiltered truths like I¡¯m delirious, drugged¡ªout of my minddrunk. But I¡¯ve never felt more sober or clear-headed. Orterrified. Cora is gaping at me, speechless. ¡°Ah, shit¡­ say something, Cora.¡± Our foreheads are still melded together, our noses touching. I feel her peppermint breath against my mouth as I close my eyes, waiting for her to tell me thatI¡¯mthe idiot. Cora is silent for a long time. The woman who has always been quick to bite back, sling her insults at me, use her words as ammo, is uncharacteristically quiet. Her hands are on my chest, one right atop my heart, and they fist the material of my shirt as her leg entwines with mine. Our bodies are close, too close, our groins almost touching, and my hands are cupping her jaw like she is something to be cherished. Why isn¡¯t she talking? Cora finally intakes a long, unsteady breath, then inches down the bed until her face is smooshed against the front of my chest. ¡°Sing to me.¡± For a moment, I¡¯m brought back to that basement. I travel back to those dark November nights when I could hardly see her through the ck hole between us. It killed me that I couldn¡¯t touch her. I couldn¡¯t reach out and grab her or hold her in my arms, bring herfort, or whisper into her ear that it was going to be okay. My voice was all she had. I singHey Judeas I cradle the back of her head with one hand, feeling her tiny hairs tickle my chin with every breathy note. We fall asleep curled up together, clinging to one another, heartbeats aligned, but this time there are no sleeping pills. There is no alcohol. There are no vices or excuses or things to me except ourselves and the confusing feelings that have burrowed inside our hearts. And while there are still so many questions swimming around my brain, I finally feel like I have an answer to one of them. I know what I have to do. : Part 2 – Chapter 20 F I F T E E N Y E A R S E A R L I E R Mr. Adilman is such a douche-nozzle. I flick the eraser side of my pencil up and down against the nk page of my notebook with a giant yawn, resting my head on my opposite hand. Mr. Adilman is prattling on about some book we were supposed to read as he simultaneously checks out Miss French when she stops in to give him a message about a new student. Gross. ¡°Listen up, everyone. We have a new student joining us today. Let¡¯s make her feel wee here at Cary-Grove High,¡± Mr. Adilman announces. I nce up from my seriousck of note taking and my mouth goes dry. In walks an angel. Seriously. I think she¡¯s a real-life angel with wings and a halo and maybe even a harp. There¡¯s definitely a harp. Her hair is spun with gold, partially pulled up with a flower barrette. Her denim skirt almost touches her knees, and avender zer sits over her baby blue tank top. She¡¯s wearing chunky sandals and the sweetest smile I¡¯ve ever seen. I¡¯m tantly staring, possibly drooling, as Mr. Adilman directs the petite blonde to a desk much too far away from mine. She clutches her books to her chest with nervous hands, quietly taking a seat. ¡°ss, say hello to Corabelle Lawson. Her family just moved here from Rockford.¡± She clears her throat. ¡°Um, it¡¯s Cora.¡± ¡°Oh.¡± Mr. Adilman looks down at his notes. ¡°I¡¯m sorry. This says Corabelle.¡± ¡°Yeah, but I go by Cora.¡± The ss mutters a bored ¡®hello¡¯ as I continue to n out our future in my mind. Homing and Prom are a given. It would be great if we end up going to the same college together, but long distance rtionships aren¡¯t so bad. We¡¯ll make it work. We¡¯ll be married by thirty, buy a big house in the suburbs, and have three blonde-haired babies by thirty-five. We¡¯ll travel a lot, then move right by the ocean when we retire. I wonder if she likes the ocean. Cora nces over in my direction and our eyes meet for the very first time. Green. Angels have green eyes. She smiles at me, that same sweet smile, and this one is all mine. It fills me up and lights me on fire, and I know, I just know¡­ I¡¯m going to marry this girl one day. I¡¯m sitting on Mandy¡¯s couch after work that Friday, guzzling down a water bottle as I try to collect my thoughts. I squeeze the bottle in my fist, listening to the crinkling stic mingle with the sound of Mandy¡¯s chipper voice floating through the apartment.Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. ¡°¡­and I can¡¯t believe Margo is retiring¡­¡± I open and close my hand around the empty bottle. Crinkle. Crinkle. Crinkle. ¡°¡­she¡¯s basically our mama bear¡­¡± Crinkle. Crinkle. Crinkle. ¡°¡­definitely going to¡­ Dean? Are you listening?¡± I snap my head up as Mandy saunters into the living room, wiping her hands on a dish towel. ¡°Yeah. Sorry.¡± ¡°Everything okay?¡± She cocks her head to one side, her hazel eyes shimmering with concern. ¡°You look a little pale.¡± That¡¯s probably because I¡¯ve been holding back my vomit for thest fifteen minutes. My throat bobs as I swallow. ¡°We need to talk, Mandy.¡± I set the bottle down next to me and wipe my hands along the front of my denim pants. Mandy stares at me for a moment, registering my words. She nibbles on her top lip as she wrings the towel between her fingers. ¡°About what?¡± She knows about what. I can see it all over her face. Fuck. ¡°Shit¡­ this is the hardest conversation of my life.¡± ¡°Dean.¡± My namees out as a tiny cry¡ªa plea. ¡°Don¡¯t do this.¡± I stand from the couch, stepping towards her with outstretched hands. She moves back to avoid my reach and I pause my feet, my arms falling at my sides, defeated. ¡°I don¡¯t want to hurt you¡­¡± ¡°Then don¡¯t. I don¡¯t want you to hurt me.¡± She folds her arms across her chest, her body already trembling. ¡°We can work through this.¡± ¡°We can¡¯t. And it¡¯s not because I don¡¯t care about you¡­ we¡¯ve had an amazing run, and I don¡¯t regret a single moment of thest fifteen years.¡± ¡°Please stop¡­¡± ¡°But I feel like apletely different person right now. I know it was only three weeks. I get it, but I can¡¯t exin what happened to me. I just¡­ I don¡¯t feel that connection, that spark, and youdeservethat. You deserve so much more than what I can give you.¡± God, I hope that didn¡¯te off like I¡¯m feeding her bullshit because it¡¯s the fucking truth. Mandy closes her eyes, holding them shut as her emotions begin to peak. I see her hands curl into fists, and she asks, ¡°Is it because of her?¡± ¡°What? Who?¡± ¡°Mysister.¡± The word spits out between clenched teeth, like it was nearly impossible to say. My jaw ticks in reply. This isn¡¯t about Cora. This is about me and Mandy. We¡¯re not well-suited. It doesn¡¯twork. Not anymore. ¡°No,¡± I say. ¡°You¡¯re a liar. Something happened between you two in that basement,¡± she says. ¡°That guy was calledThe Matchmaker, Dean. I¡¯ve tried to tell myself that you two hated each other and nothing would have happened, but now I¡¯m just feeling like a huge idiot¡­¡± I sigh. ¡°I¡¯m not saying I don¡¯t have a strong connection with Cora¡ªI do. We went through a horrible trauma together, and it¡¯s impossible not toe back different from that.¡± I run a hand along the nape of my neck, scratching at my hairline as I try to piece together words and sentences that make sense to both of us. ¡°We were forced to do some fucked up shit, and¡­ it bonded us.¡± She swallows, almost choking on the words. ¡°Do you have feelings for her?¡± Feelings. God, of course I have feelings for her. She makes me feel a lot of things¡ªshe always has. But I realize Mandy is referencing something more specific. More destructive. She wants to know if I have romantic feelings. Sexual feelings.More than friendsfeelings. ¡°It¡¯splicated.¡± Mandy res at me. ¡°It¡¯s notplicated, Dean! You either want to fuck my sister or you don¡¯t.¡± Jesus. I look down at my work boots, realizing I should have taken them off at the front door. I probably tracked mud and sludge through her apartment. ¡°I¡¯m going to be sick.¡± I nce back up as Mandy¡¯s hand hovers over her mouth, holding back her horror. I shake my head. ¡°This isn¡¯t about Cora. I told you that.¡± ¡°Then what is it? You just fell out of love with me in a matter of twenty days? All the other thousands of days didn¡¯t mean anything?¡± she demands. I hesitate before blowing out a breath. ¡°You don¡¯t feel like there¡¯s always been something missing between us? Like, we just haven¡¯t been able to dig deep enough?¡± She grits her teeth. ¡°What the hell does that mean? You asked me tomarryyou, Dean. I assumed you had done your digging.¡± ¡°Fuck, I don¡¯t know. I think I was justfortable¡­ everything had be routine and easy, you know? I¡¯m close with your parents, we have the same friends, Blizzard¡­¡± I trail off, closing my eyes for a moment to regroup. ¡°Change is fucking scary, Mandy. I cared about you, we had history, and on paper we fit just fine. It didn¡¯t seem worth it to throw it all away.¡± ¡°So, what¡¯s different?¡± ¡°Change wasforcedon me. I was forced to rot for three weeks in a serial killer¡¯s basement, and it really put shit in perspective.¡± Mandy taps her foot against the carpet restlessly, her long nails digging into the flesh of her arms. ¡°It¡¯s great to know you were down there thinking about how you couldn¡¯t wait to break up with me.¡± ¡°You know that¡¯s not what I mean.¡± I take a small step closer to her. ¡°Jesus, Mandy, I¡¯vetriedto give this time. I thought I just needed to clear my head and work through all the bullshit. I¡¯ve spent countless hours wondering how I can fix this and make it work. Iwantit to work, but¡­¡± I throw my hands up with defeat. ¡°We don¡¯t fit anymore.¡± Tears spill from her eyes, smudging her perfectly applied makeup. Her eyes are level with my chest, unable to meet my guilty gaze. Mandy runs her fingers through her hair, tugging it back and cradling the nape of her neck as she tries to control her grief. ¡°Fifteen years.Fifteen yearsof my life wasted on you.¡± God. I¡¯m an asshole. A giant, fucking asshole. ¡°You want to know what I was doing while you were down in that basement, thinking about how much we don¡¯t fit and ¡°bonding¡± with my sister?¡± She finally lifts her eyes to me and they narrow with disdain. ¡°I was making flyers. I was leading search parties. I was on the phone with police, with friends and rtives, with your mortgagepany and utility providers letting them know your payments might bete¡­ with fucking wedding coordinators begging them not to cancel our date because you wereinghome.¡± Her cheeks are bright red, flushed with scorn. ¡°I was driving around town looking for your carevery single day. I didn¡¯t eat. I didn¡¯t sleep. All I did was cry and look for you, praying for you to be okay¡­ picturing you standing at the end of that aisle.¡± I squeeze my eyes shut, cupping a hand over my mouth and breathing deep. I know there¡¯s nothing I can say to make this better. I know there¡¯s nothing I can do to lessen her pain or make her understand. I can¡¯t go back in time and tell her to stay the fuck away from me because I¡¯m only going to break her heart one day. All I can do is trust that this is the right thing for both of us and hope she sees it, too. She deserves better than this. She deserves more than half-assed kisses and hollow conversations. She deserves better thanme. ¡°I¡¯ll always care about you, Mandy.Always. And I know you¡¯ll fall in love again and walk down that aisle someday. I know you¡¯ll find someone who sees the scariest, darkest parts of you and loves the shit out of you anyway. Someone who presses your buttons, gets under your skin, makes you crazy in all the best ways. Someone who makes you feel so alive, you can¡¯t imagine going back to the shell of a human you were before you met them. Someone who sees you, reallyseesyou, stripped down and raw, and wants to collect all your broken pieces and cherish them like they are something beautiful.¡± I take a deep breath. Then another. My heart is pounding against my ribs, my vision blurring. Mandy is staring at me like I was momentarily possessed by Nichs Sparks. Fuck. I close the gap between us and grab her face between my hands, pulling her forehead in for a kiss. ¡°Mandy, Mandy, sweet as candy,¡± I whisper, echoing the rhyme I¡¯d sing to her when we were teenagers. ¡°I don¡¯t regret you. And I pray you can forgive me someday and we can be friends, because my heart won¡¯t be the same without you in it. But I understand if you can¡¯t, and I respect that.¡± Her eyes are shut tight, weighed down by the burden I am handing her. ¡°I know this isn¡¯t the happily ever after you imagined. I¡¯m so sorry for that. But Ipromiseyou¡¯ll get it, and when you do, you¡¯ll look back and this will all make a hell of a lot more sense.¡± I ce onest kiss against her hairline, watching as her tears silently dampen her cheeks. Then I pull away and walk out her front door. : Part 2 – Chapter 21 Cora:I did a thing. I¡¯m sitting at my kitchen table that Saturday afternoon, eating one of those frozen macaroni and cheese dinners, when Cora¡¯s textes through. Me:How outrageous are we talking? Cora:Hmm. Upper medium? Me:On a scale of ¡°I cut my own bangs¡± to ¡°I bought a ma farm¡± Cora:Let¡¯s just say I bought the ma from the farm. Two of them. Me:Wtf? I¡¯m about to just call her when a picture textes through and I almost choke on a noodle. It¡¯s a selfie of Cora holding a scraggly Yorkie mix in one arm, while her other arm is draped around a German Shepherd, hugging the animal to her chest. Me:¡­ ¡­ Cora:I sort of adopted a serial killer¡¯s two dogs. Meet Jude and Penny Lane. Twenty minutester, I¡¯m standing in her living room. ¡°Are you nuts?¡± I nce at the two dogs curled up together in one giant dog bed as the miniature bed sits empty. ¡°You adopted Earl¡¯s dogs? The ones who were going to eat us?¡± She stands up straight after refilling their water bowls, pulling her hair up into a ponytail and raising an eyebrow at me. ¡°I doubt they were going to eat us. Earl was just trying to scare us.¡± I blink. ¡°The guy was pretty honest and forting, if I recall.¡± ¡°They needed homes, Dean. Nobody else wanted them. I already nned on adopting a dog, and this just seemed like the right thing to do. Look at them.¡± We both turn our heads to admire the undeniably adorable disy. Penny Lane, the little one, is curled up into a tiny ball against Jude¡¯s chest. They are both fast asleep and content. ¡°Fine, they¡¯re fuckin¡¯ cute. I¡¯m not a stone cold monster. I¡¯m just confused.¡± I scratch my head, cocking it to the side as I try to process it all. ¡°Aren¡¯t they¡­ messed up?¡± I realize that was the wrong terminology when Cora¡¯s head snaps back over to me. ¡°Not anymore messed up than us. Are you saying we don¡¯t deserve to be loved and cared about because of what happened?¡± Shit. She got me there. I fill my cheeks with air and shrug my shoulders, letting out a slow breath. ¡°Yeah, I guess you¡¯re right. I just thought they might be aggressive or have some issues, you know?¡± Cora swings her head back and forth, ncing at the resting animals. ¡°They had a full assessment and the vet doesn¡¯t think they were abused. Just severely neglected. They¡¯re very attached to each other, so they came as a bonded pair.¡± A bonded pair. They aren¡¯t the only ones. She smiles, wistfully. ¡°I guess you were right about me getting two dogs.¡± My own smile stretches across my face. Her heart is even bigger than I thought. ¡°I guess so.¡± ¡°They¡¯re the sweetest. I¡¯ve only had them for a couple of hours, but I think they knew everything was going to be okay the second they stepped inside the house,¡± Cora says. ¡°It¡¯s like they knew they were home.¡± My smile turns contemtive as I watch her, her bare toes curling into the shag rug, a far off look in her eyes. It¡¯s funny how home can mean one thing one day and something entirely different the next. I think that¡¯s because home isn¡¯t a ce¡ªit¡¯s a feeling. ¡°Have you talked to Mandytely?¡± My daydreams disintegrate at the mention of Mandy¡¯s name. I chew on my tongue, realizing Cora doesn¡¯t know yet. ¡°Uh¡­ yeah.¡± Cora begins busying herself around the living room, fluffing pillows and folding a nket. ¡°She was supposed toe overst night to watch a movie with me, but she never showed up. She hasn¡¯t replied to my texts either, which is weird. She¡¯s usually glued to her phone.¡± Cora breezes into the kitchen for a bottle of ss cleaner and starts spritzing the coffee table, wiping it down with a fresh rag. ¡°Maybe she had to workte and forgot.¡± ¡°She didn¡¯t tell you?¡± Cora stands up straight to face me, adjusting her tunic that dipped down her chest. ¡°Tell me what?¡± Damn. I was hoping I didn¡¯t have to have this conversation twice. I¡¯m still recovering from that look of utter devastation in Mandy¡¯s eyes, and I have no idea how Cora is going to react to the news. ¡°I broke up with her yesterday.¡± Cora stares at me, unblinking, and the rag slips from her hand. ¡°I figured she told you. It was a rough night, and she didn¡¯t handle it well¡ªobviously. And I just think¡ª¡± ¡°Undo it.¡± I frown as I meet her eyes. ¡°What?¡± Cora pulls her cell phone out of her waistband and storms over to me, pping the phone against my chest. ¡°Undo it.¡± I catch it and hand it back to her. ¡°No. What are you talking about?¡± She spins away, her shoulders heaving up and down as emotions consume her. Cora is silent for a few beats, her ragged breaths the only sound permeating the air around us. I reach out to touch her shoulder. ¡°Cora¡­¡± Cora flies back around on her heels with wild eyes. ¡°Is it because of me? Did you break my sister¡¯s heart because of me?¡± ¡°No.¡± I have no idea why she¡¯s so pissed off. ¡°This has nothing to do with us.¡± ¡°You¡¯re lying.¡± I stare at her, confounded. ¡°Jesus, Cora, what the hell? I just¡­ we don¡¯t work anymore. I can¡¯t pretend there¡¯s something there when there¡¯s not. It wouldn¡¯t be fair to either of us.¡± She hugs her arms around her chest, stepping towards me with icy purpose. ¡°You¡¯re so stupid.¡± ¡°Excuse me?¡± Cora storms away down the hall, and I follow, my anger ring. ¡°Cora!¡± ¡°I said you¡¯re stupid!¡± she repeats over her shoulder. ¡°Why are you acting like this?¡± I call after her, pushing against her bedroom door just before she ms it in my face. I barge inside. ¡°You¡¯re being ridiculous!¡± ¡°Fifteen years!¡± she shouts, whirling around, her ponytail following and catching on her lip gloss. She shoves her hair aside, tears brimming in her eyes. ¡°You just gave up fifteen years.¡± ¡°You¡¯d prefer I give up twenty? Thirty? If Iknowit¡¯s not meant to be, why would I string her along when she can start over and find happiness?¡± I counter, throwing my arms up. ¡°You¡¯re a coward.¡± ¡°What?¡± I shake my head with a contemptuousugh. ¡°First I¡¯m stupid, now I¡¯m a coward. Thanks.¡± ¡°Yes,¡± she spits out, stepping right up to me until we¡¯re toe to toe. ¡°You¡¯re a stupid coward, too scared to put in the work. Did you go to couple¡¯s counseling? Anything? Did you eventry, Dean?¡± ¡°Fucking stop it. You don¡¯t get it.¡± ¡°You were supposed to marry her! How could you do this?¡± Cora cries as the flood gates open and her tears begin to fall. ¡°You were happy. You were happy before¡­¡± She trails off, rolling her jaw and dropping her eyes to the floor. I scrub my palms over my face with a sigh. ¡°I was happy, but I wasn¡¯thappy. When you spend three weeks convinced your life is about to be over, you tend to do a lot of soul searching and reevaluating. Mandy and I were getting by, but we weren¡¯t thriving. There was nopassion.¡± ¡°Passion? You¡¯re throwing away fifteen years forpassion?¡± ¡°I didn¡¯t throw away shit!¡± I yell back. ¡°They were a good fifteen years and I have no regrets, but we ran our course.¡± ¡°Because ofme.¡± ¡°No, Cora, because I¡¯m not in love with your sister anymore.¡± ¡°Stop lying!¡± she shouts, her voiceced with desperation, almost panicked. ¡°I was right about what I said in the car that night. This is toxic. This iswrong. We shouldn¡¯t even be contacting each other. Mandy¡¯s life is ruined and it¡¯s all my fault.¡± Cora starts to sob into her hands. ¡°I can never forgive myself.¡± ¡°Corabelle, stop¡­¡± I try reaching for her again, but she pulls away like I¡¯m going to burn her.Property ? N?velDrama.Org. ¡°Don¡¯t touch me. I can¡¯t even look at you.¡± ¡°Why not?¡± ¡°Because it¡¯s true, okay?¡± Her voice breaks, shuddering and quivering and full of defeat. ¡°Something happened between us thatst day. I felt it, too. And I thought it was just some screwed up defense mechanism that I¡¯d leave behind in that basement¡­ but dammit, Dean, it followed me. I still feel it.¡± She looks up, boldly finding my eyes. ¡°It¡¯s destroying everything, and Ihateyou for it.¡± My hand cups her face as my heart constricts inside my chest. ¡°Corabelle¡­¡± She ps my arm away. ¡°Don¡¯t call me that. Don¡¯ttouchme. Just leave me alone.¡± ¡°You don¡¯t hate me.¡± ¡°Yes, I do!¡± Cora¡¯s pitch rises as new tears break through, then she shoves me backwards. ¡°I hate you. I always have.¡± ¡°No.¡± ¡°Ihateyou!¡± She shoves me again, her palms nting against my chest, causing me to stumble. ¡°I hate you¡­ I ha¡ª¡± ¡°No.¡± I grab her wrists and walk her back towards the far wall until she¡¯s pressed up against it, shaking and crying. I cradle her wet cheeks between my palms and nt a kiss on her mouth, tender and soft. ¡°You love me. You fuckingloveme, Cora.¡± Her cry bes a gasp as her body arches into me, and I kiss her again¡ªjust as soft, just as sweet. Then again, lingering longer, and again, until she curls her fingers around the nape of my neck and pulls me hard against her mouth. Ikissher, and this time, there is no mistaking what it means. There are no apologies. Our lips fuse together with madness and chaos, missing and yearning, our tongues tangling like we¡¯re starving for each other. I angle my head to taste her deeper, but it¡¯s still not enough¡ªnever enough. Moans mingle together, bing one, and I grasp her thigh, yanking it up and around my waist. So familiar¡­ so instinctual. Cora sifts her fingers through my hair, then drags them down my neck, my chest, my abdomen, forcing a groan from the back of my throat. I trail my lips along her jawline, still christened with tears, my tongue tasting her as I find the curve of her neck. Cora grinds her groin against my erection as her hands w their way up my shirt. ¡°I don¡¯t love you, Dean.¡± I kiss my way back to her perfect mouth, warm and soft, and she whimpers when I tug her bottom lip between my teeth. ¡°Yes, you do.¡± ¡°No,¡± she breathes out, a strangled sob, like she¡¯s begging for it to not be true.Pleasedon¡¯t be true.¡°I can¡¯t¡­¡± ¡°It¡¯s okay,¡± I whisper, framing her head between my hands when she starts to twist from side to side, rejecting the very thought. ¡°It¡¯s okay.¡± Cora yanks my face back down and our mouths crash together, teeth colliding, tongues hungry and violent. I grasp the side of her face, then force her jaw open by pushing my thumb between her teeth. She squeaks in surprise, and I take her mouth in mine, filling her with my tongue and tasting every inch of her. It¡¯s sensual and erotic, and I can¡¯t get enough. I¡¯m fuckingdrowning. She pulls back to catch her breath, crying out, as if she¡¯s still trying to deny what seems abundantly clear. ¡°This isn¡¯t real,¡± she gasps, grazing her ankle up and down the back of my thigh. Her fingers are fisting my shirt sleeves with white knuckles, scared to let go. ¡°It¡¯s real.¡± I kiss her forehead, then her nose, then her heart-shaped upper lip, as I intertwine our fingers and raise our hands above her head. I press our foreheads together, feeling the way our bodies meld so effortlessly.A perfect fit. I¡¯m about to kiss her again, I¡¯m about to lose myself to her mouth and tongue and glorious heat, when my eyes catch sight of her wrist peeking out of her long sleeve. It¡¯s been scratched raw, swollen and irritated, possibly infected. Reality hits me like a bucket of ice water, and I grab her arm, cradling her wrist between my fingers and inspecting the damage. Cora tries to pull away, tries to erase what I¡¯ve already seen, but I hold tight. ¡°Corabelle, you¡¯re hurting yourself.¡± ¡°Don¡¯t¡­¡± she sighs, her voice hitching. Her tears inevitable. ¡°I¡¯m fine. It¡¯s fine.¡± ¡°God, Cora.¡± I graze my thumb over the marred skin of her wrist, the exact spot I would massage beneath her cuffs to make her forget, then I bring it to my lips, trying to kiss away her pain. I pepper delicate kisses up and down the length of her arm, paying extra attention to the wound. ¡°Please don¡¯t.¡± Cora tries to tug herself free and redirect my mouth to hers, but I don¡¯t let her. She copses against the wall with frustration. ¡°Let me go, Dean.¡± I close my eyes, kissing my way up to her fingertips. ¡°Tell me you don¡¯t hate me.¡± ¡°No.¡± She moves to escape, but I pull her to me, pressing our foreheads together once more. ¡°Tell me.¡± Cora locks her eyes on mine, trembling in my grip. She shakes her head. ¡°I do hate you.¡± ¡°Dammit, Cora.¡± I clench my jaw as my fingers curl around her upper arms, clinging to her. Begging for a different answer. ¡°Please.¡± ¡°I¡­¡± She¡¯s still looking me in the eyes when her breath catches and her face crumples. ¡°I hate myself.¡± Cora goes limp in my arms with a heart-wrenching sob. I don¡¯t catch her before she falls¡ªno, I let her fall, and I fall with her. Our legs buckle and we hit the floor, Cora in myp, her face buried against my chest. I hold her so fucking tight I¡¯m afraid I might break her, feeling her tears seep through my shirt and bleed into my skin. She clings to me, raining her own kisses along my torso in between her tears and hups, and I glide my fingers through her hair, down her back, letting her release. ¡°I¡¯ve got you,¡± I whisper into her hair. ¡°Always.¡± She can pretend to hate me. If it diminishes even a fraction of her pain, she can fucking pretend all she wants. But I know it¡¯s love¡­ ithasto be, because if this isn¡¯t love¡­ Then I¡¯m certain it does not exist. : Part 2 – Chapter 22 I walk down the long hallway, passing closed doors on either side of me. All of them are adorned with artwork, pretty wreaths, or homemade crafts. Most of the art is childlike, made by grandchildren and great grandchildren and disyed with pride. My feet stop at the one door that is nk and empty. Cheerless. Sad. She doesn¡¯t have any grandchildren. She doesn¡¯t have anyone except for me, and I¡¯m too much of a coward to visit her more than once a year. I knock against the frame as I let myself in, spotting her across the small condo, watching television from the foot of her bed in a nightgown. ¡°Leave it by the door, Frank,¡± she says without looking away from the TV screen. I swallow, taking hesitant steps inside the room. ¡°It¡¯s me, Mom.¡± She doesn¡¯t move. Doesn¡¯t blink or flinch. Holly Asher was a strong woman. Kind and soft in so many ways, yet there was always fight in her eyes. Her spirit burned bright with fierce protection for her family and love for those she deemed worthy. My mother loved my father with the fire of a thousand suns, and he loved her back just the same. My childhood is riddled with vivid memories of them madly in love, kissing, chasing each other around the house, tickling, and dancing in the kitchen to Hootie and the Blowfish. I¡¯d get embarrassed when my friends came over because I knew my parents would act like fools with their terrible dance moves and off-key singing. Mom would always try to pull me into the dance party and I¡¯d run away, shouting, ¡°You guys are so weird!¡± They wouldugh andugh, immune to my humiliation, and then they¡¯d kiss, not giving a damn. But they would fight, too.Oh, they would fight, and I¡¯d hear them from the other side of the house in the middle of the night as I clutched the bed covers to my chin. ¡°You¡¯re an idiot, Mark!¡± ¡°You drive me crazy, Hol!¡± Their stomping feet and hostile words would vibrate right up to my room and tickle my heart. It always sounded sobad, like I¡¯d wake up the next morning and Dad would be gone. But that never happened. Things would go back to normal by sunrise, as if I¡¯d dreamt the whole thing. Then there was the day I woke up and Dadwasgone. It was two days after my high school graduation¡ªI was yanked out of bed by my mother¡¯s horrified screams that still linger in my mind to this day. He¡¯d passed away in his sleep from a heart attack. So sudden. So quick. So fucking unfair. My mother never really recovered from the loss and her mental state deteriorated over the next few years. Her memory began to decline at only fifty-two years old, and I always thought to myself,¡°How horrible it must be to forget the love of your life.¡± Now, I can¡¯t help but wonder if it was the only way for her to cope. Maybe there is no recovering from something like that. Maybe there is no healing or moving on. There is no forgetting. Not unless you trulyforget. I approach my mother, her light brown hair dappled in silver and cut just above her shoulders. She nces up when I¡¯m standing a few feet away, my hands in my pockets. ¡°You look good, Mom.¡± Holly smiles, a warmth washing over her baby blue eyes, almost like she recognizes me. ¡°Randall. I¡¯m so d you came to visit.¡± I try not to take it personally. The doctors all say she can¡¯t help it. My father could be standing here, fresh from his grave, and she¡¯d still be all mixed up. ¡°Mom, it¡¯s Dean. Your son.¡± She nods her head. ¡°Come sit.¡± Holly pats the embroidered quilt beside her, encouraging me to join her. ¡°Frank brought tea. It¡¯s by the front door.¡± ¡°Thanks.¡± We sit in silence for a moment, my mother¡¯s attention back on the television. She sighs wearily. ¡°It¡¯s such a shame the way those towers fell down. So much fire and destruction. So much loss.¡± Holly shakes her head from side to side, her eyes glistening as images y out on the screen. I nce at the TV. It¡¯s amercial for dish soap. My fingers weave through my dark hair, recalling the way my mother used to stroke my scalp with her fingertips to alleviate my stress or calm my nerves. I miss that sometimes. I clear my throat, shifting my weight on the bed. ¡°I know you¡¯re not going to understand what I¡¯m saying, but I think I just needed someone to listen. I went through some pretty crazy stuff a few months ago, and I don¡¯t think I¡¯m handling it very well. I¡¯m confused about a lot of shit. I still have nightmares. It¡¯s taking all my willpower not to drink myself to death. And¡­¡± I close my eyes, grinding my teeth. ¡°I think I¡¯m falling in love with the only damn woman in the world who¡¯spletely off limits. I know she feels it, too, which should be great, right? This is the shit people write books about.¡± Holly sits very still, staring at the television screen as if she didn¡¯t hear a word I said. ¡°But there¡¯s no story like ours, Mom. People don¡¯t write about what we went through. They don¡¯t write about how we were abducted in the middle of the night by a sick motherfucker, handcuffed to pipes for three weeks, hungry, dirty, and scared out of our damn minds while I was forced to vite her with a gun to my head. ¡°They don¡¯t write about how I shredded a man¡¯s face with my bare hands until I cut my knuckles on his skull. They don¡¯t write about what the hell we¡¯re supposed to do after something like that, when life goes back to normal and everyone around us is smiling and happy, but we¡¯re still stuck in that hellhole, clinging to each other because we¡¯re all we have.¡± I lower my hands to my face as I try not to break. ¡°And the real kicker is that I was engaged to hersister. What the hell kind of twisted shit is that?¡± Jesus Christ. What a goddamn mess. Part of me is d my mother has no clue what I¡¯m saying. I breathe deeply into my hands, my elbows on my knees. I jump when I feel familiar fingers trail up the back of my neck and into my hair, massaging my scalp, quelling the pain that¡¯s tearing me apart inside. I inhale a shaky breath, sitting up and looking over at my mother. Her focus is still on the screen, but her fingers continue their soothing trek along my scalp, forcing my eyes to close in contentment. ¡°Every love story is worth writing, no matter how messy it might be,¡± Holly says absently, still stroking my hair. ¡°I would like to read your book.¡± My brow creases into a frown, confused, wondering if she was absorbing my words, after all. My mother used to have many moments of rity, but they have be few and far between. Thest time I visited her¡ªin March for fuck¡¯s sake¡ªshe wasn¡¯t at all lucid. She called me Gator the entire time, which was the name of our Beagle who died ten years ago. Holly reaches for my hand resting on my thigh, sping it inside her cool palm, still enamored by the pictures on the television. ¡°I had a terrible nightmare once. It was a lot different than yours, though.¡± She squeezes my fingers and releases a small sigh. ¡°I was all alone.¡± I wait for her to continue. I wait for the story to unfold, the horrors to y out, the nightmare toe to life. But she doesn¡¯t say anything else and I realize¡­ thatwasthe nightmare. We sit in silence as her words pinch me. My insides ache and twist with something I don¡¯t exactly understand. And then my mother lets go of me, smiling pleasantly as she folds her hands in herp. ¡°I should have the paperwork all filled out by the end of the day. I do appreciate youing by.¡± As I drive home that afternoon, I think about the things I said, about the thingsshesaid, and about how sometimes all we need is a good dose of perspective. There are worse nightmares than this. I could be all alone. I decide right then and there that I will start visiting my mother more often. No more hiding. No more fear. No more guilt. Because as sad as my mother¡¯s condition is, there is nothing sadder than walking up to that nk, empty door. It¡¯s a little after nine P.M. when the power goes out. My television flickers off, as do the lights, and I¡¯m left sitting on the couch inplete darkness. The first thing I think about is Cora. She doesn¡¯t like the dark. She keeps the lights on at night, even in her bedroom, and I don¡¯t me her. I¡¯m on the other side of town, but I reach for my phone just in case. Just to check on her. Me:Did your power just go out? I wait for her reply. It¡¯s been another week since Ist saw her¡ªsince we kissed and cried and held each other on her bedroom floor until reality crept back in and I drove myself home. And that was it. We haven¡¯t spoken since, and it fucking sucks. I¡¯m not sure what to say to her now that she feels responsible for my break-up with Mandy. I¡¯m not sure what to think after she told me she hated me over and over, even though I know it¡¯s the furthest thing from the truth. And I sure as hell don¡¯t know what to do now that we¡¯ve tasted each other again, voluntarily,desperately, and were likely one more kiss away from doing a lot more than that.Property ? N?velDrama.Org. It¡¯s a mess. My phone buzzes in myp, and I quickly open the message. Cora:Yes Shit. She¡¯s probably terrified. Me:Do you have candles or something? Cora:I can¡¯t find my lighter. I¡¯m using my phone¡¯s shlight, but my battery is almost dead. Shoot me. I run my tongue along my teeth, weighing my options. There are only two options, and it doesn¡¯t take long for me to pick one. Me:On my way Cora:That¡¯s not necessary. Me:You¡¯re afraid of the dark. Cora:I¡¯m afraid of a lot of things. You¡¯re one of them. I stare at her text, my heart sinking into my stomach. She¡¯s scared of me? What the hell? Me:Wow. Ok then. A few minutes tick by before her responsees through. Cora:I didn¡¯t mean it like that. I¡¯m afraid of the way you make me feel. I should have figured that¡¯s what she meant. I tap my finger against my phone and shoot back a reply before grabbing my shoes and coat. Me:I get it. But I¡¯m starting to realize there are things much scarier than that. See you in 15 mins. Cora opens her front door in a tank top and cotton shorts that I can hardly make out through the veil of darkness. I hold my phone screen up for light, illuminating the hesitant look in her eyes. ¡°You didn¡¯t need toe over, Dean.¡± I offer a small smile. ¡°I didn¡¯t want you to be alone.¡± She steps aside, sighing softly, and allows me to enter. I take tentative steps inside, holding out my hands so I don¡¯t bump into anything. ¡°Shit. It¡¯s really dark.¡± ¡°That¡¯s generally the consequence of no light.¡± I make a humming sound, turning towards her when the door clicks shut. We stand there in silence for a few beats as our eyes adjust and find each other¡¯s faces. Cora clears her throat and sweeps past me, heading towards the kitchen. ¡°It figures the power goes out the same day I drop a small fortune on groceries. Do you want anything?¡± The moon is our only nightlight, and I can make out her vague outline reaching into the refrigerator to pull out a bottle of something. ¡°I¡¯m good.¡± ¡°Well, I¡¯m going to have a ss of wine and try to pass out.¡± I make my way into the kitchen, only bumping into one side table along the way. I hear the jangle of a dog cor from across the room and nce over to see four eyes glowing at me through the dark fog. ¡°How are the dogs doing?¡± I hear Cora rummage around a drawer, likely looking for the wine opener. ¡°Really great, actually. Jude already knows how to give me his paw. Penny follows him around everywhere¡ªit¡¯s adorable.¡± ¡°That¡¯s awesome, Cora. I¡¯m d it¡¯s working out.¡± ¡°Yeah, I definitely haven¡¯t gotten any vibes that they want to turn me into puppy chow. I think I¡¯m in the clear.¡± I quirk a smile, sidling up beside her and watching as she pours the wine. She sets the bottle down and cups her ss, bringing the rim to her lips and flicking her eyes up to me as she takes a sip. Cora nibbles on her bottom lip, lowering her ss. ¡°I didn¡¯t hear from you all week.¡± Her tone is using, but her eyes spear me with something softer. ¡°Oh¡­¡± I scratch my head, then rub my hand down my face. ¡°I didn¡¯t know you wanted to hear from me.¡± She blinks over the ss, then dips her chin. Cora turns away and ambles into the living room, plopping down onto the couch without responding. I follow, sitting down beside her. ¡°Cora, you told me you hated me¡ªlike, a dozen times. Then you told me you hated yourself, which I can only assume is because of me.¡± She shrugs her shoulders and takes another sip. ¡°I was upset.¡± ¡°Well, I didn¡¯t want to make you more upset.¡± ¡°We kissed, Dean.¡± Cora nces at me through flutteringshes. If I could see her better in the dark, I¡¯m almost certain her cheeks would be flushed pink¡ªand not from the wine. ¡°A real kiss. You didn¡¯t have a gun to your head.¡± ¡°I know.¡± Cora starts picking at her sock, averting her gaze. ¡°I figured that would warrant a follow-up call, or a text or something.¡± I study her shadowed outline. Her waves of hair spilling over her shoulders. Her eyes lowered to the wine ss she¡¯s spinning between nervous fingers. Her lips pressed together in contemtion. Her nipples pebbled through her cotton tank top. Damn. I lean back against the couch, my hands on my knees. ¡°If it makes any difference, I wanted to call you. I wanted to see you.¡± I wait until she¡¯s returning my gaze before finishing, ¡°I wanted to kiss you again.¡± There¡¯s no mistaking the way her fist grips the spine of the ss and a small gasp escapes her mouth. ¡°That¡¯s not a good idea.¡± ¡°No,¡± I agree. ¡°It¡¯s not.¡± But my eyes cut to her mouth anyway, and hers trail to mine. We look back up at the same time. Cora chugs the rest of her wine and ces the empty ss beside her. I think she¡¯s going to start scratching her wrist, but a fresh bandage provides a barrier, so she runs her hand along her arm instead, almost like she¡¯s cold. ¡°I should get to bed. I haven¡¯t been sleeping welltely.¡± She nces at me, and I¡¯m not sure if that was supposed to be an invitation or not.Shit. I realize I have no idea what I¡¯m even doing. But I came here for a reason, so I reply, ¡°I can lie with you until the lightse back on.¡± Cora bites her lip, grazing her teeth back and forth as she processes the offer. Then she gives me a small, agreeable nod and rises from the couch. I must not scare her quite as much as the dark. Standing up, I watch as Cora saunters down the hallway, her white tank and shorts the only thing visible as she heads towards the bedroom. I make my way over to the bed, careful not to trip on anything in the process, and roam my hands across the sheets as I slide in. I feel her body heat from the center of the bed, so I scoot my way to her and slink my arm around her middle. Cora stiffens for a moment, as if she¡¯s surprised by the contact. ¡°Sorry¡­ is this okay?¡± She responds by moving in closer, nuzzling into my chest like she¡¯s done so many times before, and letting out a long breath. ¡°It¡¯s okay.¡± I can almost feel the tension leave us both, my nose nestled in her soft hair, her warm body pressed into me like she¡¯s the missing piece to my puzzle. Cora lies on her back with my lips to her ear, and I feel her shiver every time I exhale. She dances her fingers up my arm as we embrace the darkness together. ¡°Do you want to know the worst night of my whole life?¡± she asks suddenly, her voice merely a whisper, yet so loud in the silent room. The truth is, I don¡¯t think I want to know¡­ but I assume she wants to tell me. ¡°What was it?¡± Cora tickles my arm as her fingers glide back down, inciting goosebumps to sprout all over my skin. ¡°It was the night after we¡­ well, the first time you had to¡­¡± She swallows. ¡°You didn¡¯t talk to me. You didn¡¯t sing. And it was so dark.¡± God, she¡¯s going to rip my heart out. I close my eyes and squeeze her closer to me, my fingertips unconsciously dipping beneath the hem of her tank top. She lets out a squeaky sound when I trail them along the skin just below her belly button. ¡°That was the worst day, and night, of my whole fucking life, Corabelle. I didn¡¯t know what to say to you.¡± I inhale her freshly washed hair, burying my face into the crook of her neck. ¡°What could I say?¡± ¡°I wasn¡¯t mad,¡± she responds in a breathy tone, pressing herself even closer to me. ¡°I understood.¡± ¡°No.¡± I shake my head, her golden locks tickling my nose. ¡°You couldn¡¯t possibly understand. I spent the whole night wishing I¡¯d let him kill me.¡± Cora jerks her head to her left, pinning her eyes on me. ¡°Don¡¯t say that.¡± ¡°It¡¯s the truth.¡± ¡°No¡­ Dean, don¡¯t ever say that again. Don¡¯t even think it.¡± She twists around until we¡¯re facing each other, and my hand slides up behind her top, caressing the small of her back. Cora maintains my gaze for a long time before dipping her chin and sucking in a choppy breath. ¡°Remember when we were trading confessions?¡± she asks, still avoiding my gaze. I nod, and our noses almost kiss. ¡°I remember.¡± Her tongue slicks over her lips and her eyes close as she pieces together her words. ¡°You told me two confessions and I only told you one.¡± My hand instinctively rises up her back, massaging her spine, then curves around to her front. I sy my fingers along her stomach, feeling her body melt into me, and my breathing picks up to match my racing heart. ¡°Do you have another confession?¡± Cora nods timidly, her lips parting as she arches into my roving hand. I slide it up her middle until my fingers graze the underside of her breast. Fuck, I¡¯m getting hard. I should probably stop touching her. But I want to keep touching her. Thest time we were trapped in the dark, we couldn¡¯t even touch our toes together. ¡°Tell me,¡± I whisper, lowering my hand and curling it around her waist. I leave it there, waiting for her to speak. Cora¡¯s eyes flutter open, and it almost feels like it takes all of her courage to let them meet mine. She inhales sharply, then lets it out, her breath skimming my lips. ¡°The only time I felt safe was when you were inside of me.¡± Her words shoot straight to my groin. My cock twitches in my jeans, remembering exactly how it felt being inside of her. Only¡­ I thought she was repulsed. Outraged.Horrified. ¡°Me, too.¡± I manage to get those two words out as my hand crawls back up her body and cups her breast, forcing a moan from her lips. Her pelvis thrusts against mine, and I grab her face in my hands and start kissing the fuck out of her. When my tongue pushes past her lips, it¡¯s just as desperate as before. Just as wild and untamed. We are pulled together, fueled by our memories and trauma and desire andneed. Cora hoists her leg up around my hip as her arms epass my neck, pulling herself impossibly close. Her tongue is in my mouth, hot and demanding, and her hands start fisting my hair, tugging it until I moan. I roll her onto her back, our mouths only parting so I can slip her tank top up and over her head, her long hair falling down to the pillow like a golden halo. Like an angel. I capture her lips again as I tug down her shorts and panties until she¡¯s wearing nothing but the ne I gave her for Christmas. Cora grips my t-shirt, her legs linking around my hips. ¡°I need to feel you¡­¡± She discards the shirt, and her hands drift up and down my bare chest, over my shoulders, along my arms, then back up again. She leans up to kiss my neck, nicking her teeth on my skin¡ªlike a im. It fucking does something to me. A sound pitches in my throat, almost a growl, and I loosen my belt buckle and kick off my boxers and jeans, descending on her again with maddening urgency. My mouth takes hold of her nipple, dusky and taut, and my tongueves over each one as I feel her writhing beneath me. Her hands are in my hair again, her nails digging into my scalp, and it only drives me more wild. ¡°You¡¯re fucking beautiful,¡± I murmur against her skin, trailing my lips down over her t stomach, then lower, until I¡¯m between her legs. Her scent alone fuels me, but the way she bucks her hips against my face, still pulling my hair, has me diving into her heat with a hunger I¡¯ve never felt before. Cora arches her back and lets out a cry of pleasure that electrifies me. I palm her inner thighs, then push her legs further apart, spreading her as wide as I can. I want her to be fully exposed to me¡ªutterlyvulnerable. I push two fingers inside her as my mouth works her clit. The sweet, intoxicating taste of her mixed with how goddamn wet she is, has my cock throbbing, yearning to be inside her again. I nce up at the stretch of her body, bowed and trembling, and reach up to palm her breast as she rides against my face. I thrust my tongue over her slick folds, sucking her clit, until she¡¯s chanting, ¡°Dean, Dean, Dean¡­¡± Jesus. I¡¯ve heard my name expelled from her mouth so many times, in so many ways: anger, annoyance, outrage, humor, audacity, fear, confusion, grief, heartache¡­ and I swear to God,love. But not like this. Never like this. I crawl back up her body before she spirals, and Cora squeaks in surprise when I leave her unfulfilled. But before she can protest, I hook her thighs around my waist and whisper against her ear, ¡°I want you toe when I¡¯m inside you.¡± Cora pushes at my chest and flips me onto my back, climbing on top of me and straddling my hips. My cock grazes the crease of her ass, and I want to lift her onto me, but she reaches behind her and starts stroking me. She drags her fingernails down my abdomen with her opposite hand, then leans down to kiss me. Feeling her hand grip my cock as her tongue plunges into my mouth is too fucking much, so I flip her again until she¡¯s on her back, like we¡¯re in some sort of powery. But I want to be in control. I kneel in front of her and grab one of her legs, tonguing and nipping along her thigh before hooking it over my shoulder. My other hand reaches up to grab her breast, tweaking her nipple between my fingers until she whimpers. Then I situate myself between her thighs, my cock just teasing her entrance. Cora moves her hips downward and releases a gasp-like moan when the tip pushes inside. Fucking hell, this is really happening. We¡¯re going to have sex. By choice. There are no guns, no chains, no shackles, no evil eyes watching us from across the room, tainting us like poison. It¡¯s justus. I lean forward as Cora¡¯s ankle curls around my upper back, her leg still draped over my shoulder. She¡¯s spread wide and waiting. A trace of moonlight brightens her face, and I can see that her eyes are closed. I pull all the way out of her, and she lifts her hips with frustration. ¡°Look at me, Corabelle.¡± Cora¡¯s eyelids flutter open beneath her longshes, and we are face to face. Chest to chest. Heart to heart. I could never look her in the eyes when I entered her before¡ªthere was too much shame and guilt. Too much heartbreak. Too much I was afraid I might see. Now I want to see it all. When our gaze is fixed and holding tight, I push my cock inside her. We both cry out with a tapered groan, and I watch her eyes ze over, widening slightly, as we are swept up together in the culmination, thepinnacle, of thest fifteen years. We are frozen for a heartbeat, taking it all in, absorbing it for everything it is. And then we let go. I pull out and push back in, hard and demanding, and it¡¯s teeth and nails and moans and sweat. Cora scratches at my arms, meeting me thrust for thrust, her neck arched back against the pillow as she whimpers and gasps. I glide my hands up her chest to her neck, my fingers catching on her ne and gently curling around her throat as I plunge into her. My lips caress her ear, biting the lobe, and I whisper, ¡°Did you miss my cock?¡± Cora grabs my ass, spearing me with her fingernails, tightening her legs around me while she moans, ¡°Yes¡­¡± Goddamn. I pull outpletely, flipping her around until she¡¯s on her stomach, and reenter her from behind. She cries out, fisting the bedsheets as I slink my arm under her stomach and yank her up, driving into her with zero restraint. I tug her hair back until she¡¯s fully flush against me, back to chest, moaning and mewling. One of my hands roves over her breasts, twisting each nipple, while the other finds her throat and tilts her face towards me. Our mouths collide over her shoulder, and I can taste every beautiful fucking sound I¡¯m ripping out of her, our tongues tangling and hungry as our bodies crash together. My lips make their way to her ear again as my right hand slides between her legs and finds her clit. ¡°You¡¯re mine, Corabelle,¡± I breathe out, iming her, branding her, marking her as my own. Her wetness slicks my fingers as I massage her into a frenzy, feeling her shuddering, spinning, begging for release. ¡°Say it. Tell me you¡¯re mine.¡± Cora snakes one arm behind my head, holding my face to the crook of her neck where I pull the tender flesh between my teeth and bite down. She gasps, squeaking out more sounds that drive me fucking mad. ¡°I¡¯m yours,¡± she says, whispery,ced with lust. ¡°You know I am. You¡¯ve always known it.¡± ¡°Fuck¡­¡± Does she really believe that? DoIbelieve that? I¡¯m ovee with the need to look her in the eyes, so I pull back out and spin her around, pushing her down onto the mattress. I climb over her until we¡¯re face to face, my arms resting on either side of her head. My cock grazes her entrance, and Cora jerks her hips up, craving me, needing me to fill her. ¡°Please,¡± she tells me, grinding herself against my length, making me crazy. I love teasing her. I always have. ¡°Please what?¡± She whimpers. ¡°Please fuck me. Please make mee.¡± Jesus. I curl my hands around her wrists and press my forehead to hers, pushing in slowly, our eyes locked. Desire is the color green, and it floods me, bathing me in emeralds and jades and the waves of the sea. I lean down to kiss her mouth, puffy and pink, and Cora arches up, wrapping her legs around my waist and locking her ankles. I reach down to grab her thighs, palming and squeezing, as she rakes her nails down my back, then back up to tug handfuls of my hair. I pick up the pace, drowning in the madness. Drowning inher. I never honestly believed we would be in this position again, voluntarily. Not really. I thought about it, of course¡ªfuck, I thought about it a hell of a lot more than I care to admit. And when I pictured this moment, being inside her again, feeling her pulsate around me, I envisioned something softer. Slow, gentle lovemaking that wiped us clean of all that violence. Of all thatdarkness. But this is anything but soft. This is rough and raw and dirty, and we¡¯re animals wing at each other, biting, all primal growls and desperate thrusts. It¡¯s fitting, I decide. After all, we were created in darkness. It¡¯s in our blood. I angle my hips so I stroke against her sensitive bundle of nerves as my fingers dig into her thighs. I ram into her over and over, quicker and harder, until I feel her body tense beneath me, her breaths hitching and halting as she begins to peak. Thest time she moaned with pleasure as she came, my mouth found hers before the sound could touch the air. As much as I wanted to hear it, as much as I wanted it to sweep right through me and w its way inside my bones, I couldn¡¯t lethimhear it. I couldn¡¯t let him have it. So, I kissed her instead and swallowed it down. But this time I watch her let go; I let her cry out with shameless abandon, and she¡¯s so fucking loud and wild and stripped down, I can¡¯t hold back any longer. My orgasm takes over and Ie inside her, burying my face into that perfect, familiar curve of her neck and groaning as my body shudders and releases. We cling to each other, her legs stretching out underneath me, her toes tickling their way down my calves. I bring my hands up to her hair and weave my fingers in the soft strands, breathing in her scent with a long sigh. I feel her arms wrap around my middle as she pulls me close, and I lift my head to meet her eyes. And then the lights flicker back on, like a spotlight, illuminating our tangled limbs and flushed skin. Our bite marks and scratches and sweat. Disheveled hair and wide eyes. All of our ws and cracks and weaknesses are spread out between us, visible and raw. We don¡¯t speak. I pull out and roll beside her, sliding my arm around her waist and tugging her towards me. She curls up against me, her back to my chest, and we lie there silent and spooning, wondering what the fuck happens now. But then I feel her start to tremble, shivering in my arms as she tries to hide her tears from me. I hold her tight, kissing her shoulder and whispering soothing words into her ear. I told her I would stay with her until the darkness passed, and I did not lie. : Part 2 – Chapter 23 Morning afters are confusingwhen you have no idea what¡¯s supposed toe after. The sun shines in through a nearby window, setting her milky skin aglow as she rests a few inches away from me. After watching her fall in and out of sleep so many times in that basement, I can tell she¡¯s awake just by the way her body swells and detes with every uneven breath. I stare at the expanse of her slender back, the bedsheet dipping off her hip, and I vividly recall every glorious detail from the night before. But considering she¡¯s pretending to still be asleep after slipping out of my embrace, I¡¯m wondering if she¡¯s trying toforgetthose same details. I decide to brave the inevitable and slide my way over to her, scooping her up with one arm and pulling her to my chest. ¡°Morning,¡± I whisper, noting the shiver she produces when my lips graze her ear. I trail my fingers up and down her belly, in between her breasts, and stop just short of her neck. I y with the heart pendant on her ne as I wait for her response. Cora stiffens at the contact. ¡°Hey.¡± ¡°You don¡¯t seem quite as excited to see me as I am to see you,¡± I tease, nudging my growing erection against her bottom as I kiss her shoulder. Silence. I go still, trying to read the mood. It¡¯s feeling more like an awkward one-night stand and less like the best night of our lives. ¡°Cora?¡± Cora rolls onto her back and peers up at me with tired eyes. She scans my face, worrying her lip between her teeth as she pulls the bedsheet up over her chest. ¡°I have some errands to run today.¡± ¡°What?¡± I blink at her, not expecting such flippant words to be the first thing out of her mouth after the night we just shared. ¡°Right now?¡± ¡°Yeah,¡± she shrugs. ¡°It¡¯s Sunday. It¡¯s errand day.¡± ¡°It¡¯s also the day after we had mind-blowing sex, and we should probably talk about it.¡± Cora sits up, her cheeks staining pink, and begins to move herself to the edge of the bed as she drags the nkets with her. ¡°I don¡¯t want to talk about that, Dean.¡± What the fuck? ¡°Seriously?¡± ¡°Yes. Seriously.¡± I watch her collect her discarded clothes from the floor, slipping the tank top over her head and looking around for her bottoms. I do the same, pulling on my boxers and jeans as my heart clenches in my chest with rising emotions. ¡°You can¡¯t just pretend that didn¡¯t happen.¡± Cora nces at me over her shoulder, just briefly, and steps into her cotton shorts. ¡°I¡¯m going to hop in the shower. I forgot to pick up more dog food yesterday, and the store opens at nine.¡± Ouch. I gape at her, standing on the other side of the bed, shirtless and gutted. ¡°Cora¡­ you¡¯re killing me.¡± She falters mid-reach for her cell phone charging by the side of her bed. Her shoulders heave up and down with a weighted sigh, and she sits down, tugging her hair back with her fingers. ¡°We weren¡¯t even¡­safe.¡± My fingers curl around my hips as I stare at the back of her head. I can¡¯t argue with that¡ªshe¡¯s absolutely right. ¡°I¡¯m sorry. That was my fault.¡± I approach her with hesitant feet,ing up beside her on the bed. ¡°Are you on the pill?¡± ¡°Yes, but¡­ I¡¯ve missed a few doses. I¡¯ve been forgetful with a lot of thingstely, and I wasn¡¯t expecting¡­¡± She sighs again, and this time, tears spring to her eyes. ¡°It¡¯s my fault, too. I should have stopped it from getting that far.¡± I scratch my cheek. ¡°I¡¯ll give you money for the morning after pill. Just in case.¡± Cora swallows, sparing me another quick nce. ¡°Are you¡­?¡± ¡°Am I what?¡± My eyebrows go up. ¡°Clean?¡± She nods. Normally, this question wouldn¡¯t offend me¡ªit¡¯s a responsible question to ask your sexual partner, albeit, a littlete. But this isCora. She knows I was with her sister for thest fifteen years. Plus, I got tested after our captivity and everything came back clean, so I know that fuckhead didn¡¯t giveheranything. ¡°Of course I¡¯m clean. Do you think I cheated on Mandy?¡± A shrug. A fucking shrug. ¡°Wow. I never thought youactuallybelieved that shit.¡± I spin away from her, trying to hide the hurt creeping onto my face. ¡°I was faithful throughout our entire rtionship, Cora. Even when we separated for those few months back in college. I¡¯ve literally only had sex with one person my whole life¡­ until you.¡± I turn back to see tears quietly tracking down her cheeks as she keeps her gaze fixed in front of her. ¡°My tests came back normal, too. Shockingly. They sent me home with antibiotics just in case, but¡­¡± Cora ducks her head as she lets out a breath. ¡°This is such a mess.¡± She pushes her hair back, revealing multiple pink splotches along her neck, along with a colorful bruise from where my mouth had been. I swallow. ¡°Yeah.¡± ¡°I¡¯m a horrible human being. Mandy will never forgive me for this.¡± A wave of guilt pinches my gut as reality starts seeping in. One week after breaking off a fifteen yearmitment to Mandy, I sleep with her sister. There¡¯s not a single exnation we coulde up with that would make this sound even remotely eptable. Then again, there¡¯s not a single exnation that would adequately describe our rtionship either. Our dynamic. Our history. Our connection. None of it¡¯s normal; none of it¡¯s rtable¡ªall of it¡¯s confusing as fuck. I take a seat beside her, and Cora¡¯s breath catches when my bare arm grazes hers. ¡°Corabelle, I¡¯m sorry for not being stronger. I hate that you¡¯re feeling like this, and I hate that it¡¯s my fault. I just¡­ I¡¯m fuckingcrazyabout you.¡± She tips her head to me, her eyes swelling. ¡°I can¡¯t turn it off. And I can¡¯t stop caring about you just because the circumstances aren¡¯t ideal.¡± ¡°It¡¯s more than ¡®not ideal¡¯, Dean. It¡¯swrong. It¡¯s beyond the realm of appropriate.¡± ¡°But it¡¯sreal, and it¡¯s intense, and it¡¯s swallowing us whole.¡± ¡°Is it, though?¡± Cora inhales a shuddering breath. ¡°Is it real?¡± ¡°What?¡± I frown, thrown by the question. ¡°Of course it is.¡± She looks away, fisting the hem of her tank top between sweaty palms. ¡°Maybe this was simply born out of trauma and survival. We think we still need each other even though we made it out. We wouldn¡¯t be having this conversation if we didn¡¯t go through what we went through.¡± ¡°I disagree,¡± I say, shaking my head. ¡°Maybe not right now, but¡­ I think this was inevitable.¡± ¡°No. When the trauma fades away,wefade away. This is temporary.¡± My anger flickers. ¡°That¡¯s not what you saidst night when I was inside you. You said you¡¯ve always been mine.¡± Cora sets her jaw, her cheeks ming. She rises to her feet and storms away. ¡°I was in the heat of the moment, Dean. I can¡¯t believe you brought that up.¡± I stand to follow, grabbing my shirt off the floor and tugging it over my head in the process. ¡°Why not? You said it.¡± She whirls around with a fresh set of emotions ready to fly. ¡°I can¡¯t do this!¡± ¡°Cora¡­¡± ¡°No! Don¡¯t try to change my mind or feed me that fairytale, always-meant-to-be bullshit. You were engaged to my sister as of aweekago. You were with her forfifteen years.¡± Her tears spill out, catching on the corners of her mouth. ¡°Then you dumped her forme, and now I have to live with that.¡± I reach for her hands, but she yanks them away. ¡°I already told you. Ending my rtionship with Mandy had nothing to do with you. Or us.¡± ¡°Lies.¡± ¡°Stop, Cora. You could walk away from me right now and tell me it¡¯s over, and I wouldn¡¯t go back to Mandy. It ended becauseweended. You don¡¯t change that.¡± Cora stares at me with flushed skin and crossed arms. She nods her head slowly, deliberately, and pins her eyes on mine. ¡°I guess we¡¯ll see.¡± She takes a step back and drops her arms to her sides. ¡°It¡¯s over, Dean. I can¡¯t do this to Mandy.¡± She continues to walk backwards, away from me, and I shake my head with a bitterugh.Unbelievable. I reach into my pocket, pulling a wad of cash out of my wallet as I pace over to her. I lean in close, then tug her wrist towards me and open her palm. ¡°You probably should have thought about that before you fucked me.¡± I p the money into her hand, trying to ignore the pain that shes in her eyes. ¡°For the pill.¡± I grab my coat off the back of the couch, slip on my shoes, and m the door shut behind me as I walk out of her house. Morning fades to night, and I don¡¯t hear from Cora all day. I¡¯ve been pissed off and resentful since I left her house, alternating between taking power naps to try and forget all the bullshit swimming through my head, and binging Netflix to try and distract me from all the bullshit swimming through my head. So far, neither have worked. I¡¯m gued with bullshit. I never thought this would be easy. I never assumed we¡¯d hop into bed, wake up the next day, and our magical, new life would begin. Fuck, no. There is nothing easy or magical about any of this. It¡¯s messy and dirty and confusing andhard. But Iknew that. I¡¯d considered all the bumps and curves we¡¯d hit along the way, and I was willing,prepared, to brave each and every fallout with her. We¡¯ve already survived so much together. We¡¯ve weathered through the most turbulent storms. We¡¯ve faced things that would keep the most fearless person up at night. We¡¯ve looked death in the eye and persevered. And yet, she runs from this. Fromme. But I suppose matters of the heart can be the scariest thing of all. I stretch out on the couch, pulling up my nket and calling in an order for Chinese food. I nce at Cora¡¯s name and ourst string of messages, and I notice a text from her that I never opened. It was in response to me telling her that I¡¯d be at her house in fifteen minutes: Cora:That¡¯s not a good idea Would that have stopped me from driving over there in the middle of the night to try andfort her in the dark? Probably not. But she tried. She tried to stop it. I feel like a guilty asshole, even though I know what happened between us was real and inevitable and consensual. We both wanted it. We bothcravedit. But I know her heart¡ªI know that her loyalty to her sister will always be a jagged wedge between us. Maybe I pushed too hard. Maybe it was too soon. I swipe at her name on my screen and type out a message I¡¯m sure I¡¯ll regret instantly.N?vel(D)ra/ma.Org exclusive ? material. Me:I don¡¯t want to fight with you. I understand why you¡¯re scared and I totally fuckin get it. But whatever is between us isn¡¯t gonna go away. Last night was everything, and I know you felt it too. We can go slower. We can start over. Just don¡¯t shut me out¡­we¡¯re in this together ?? I add the smiley face because Mandy always said it was the key to texting in order to get your proper feelings across. One time she had an entire conversation with me using only emojis, and it was strange and confusing. The message shows ¡®read¡¯ almost immediately, so I hold my breath and wait. I wait for those little bouncing dots to appear, telling me she¡¯s thinking, telling me she¡¯s responding¡­ but they nevere. I check my phone periodically in between my Kung Pao Chicken andSons of Anarchymarathon, but there¡¯s still no response. Dammit. I nce at the time on my phone, noting it¡¯s already after ten P.M. I have to be up for work in six hours. Groaning with frustration, I toss the phone beside me on the couch and run both hands through my hair, letting out a weary sigh of defeat. I stand up, dragging my nket to the bedroom with me, when I hear my phone ring from the couch. I pause. Then I drop the nket and jog towards my cell phone, my heart thundering with anticipation and relief when I see Cora¡¯s name light up the face. I swipe to ept. ¡°Hello?¡± It¡¯s silent for a beat, and then her groggy, slurred voice reaches my ear. ¡°You¡¯re¡­ incorrigible.¡± ¡°I suppose I am.¡± I bite down on the inside of my cheek, a tingle of concern poking at me. ¡°You okay, Corabelle?¡± ¡°No¡­ no, I¡¯m not okay. But I thinkyou¡¯repretty okay. Even though you¡¯re incorrigible.¡± Her voice is raspy. Sluggish. She sounds drunk. ¡°Have you been drinking?¡± ¡°I¡¯ve beenthinking.¡± ¡°Okay¡­¡± Cora sighs, and I hear tter in the background like she knocked something over. ¡°I think we could have been the best thing to ever happen to me.¡± I zone in on her use ofcould have been. ¡°We still can, Cora. This doesn¡¯t have to be over.¡± ¡°It does have to be over, Dean, because you¡¯re a lion and I¡¯m a mouse.¡± ¡°What?¡± A stretch of silence passes, and I wonder if she spaced out or fell asleep, but then she replies softly, ¡°You¡¯re a lion, fearless and strong, and I am just a mouse.¡± Cora pauses again, then continues, ¡°I¡¯m small and weak, afraid of everything lurking in the dark. The things I want are disguised in deadly traps, and yet, I¡¯m still tempted.¡± ¡°Cora¡­¡± I start pacing around my living room, my stomach unsettled. She sighs, long and lingering, her heavy breaths like an ominous soundtrack to her words. ¡°The trouble with mice is you always kill them.¡± I recognize that quote from the book,Of Mice and Men. It sends a chill down my spine. ¡°That¡¯s not true. Are you sure you haven¡¯t been drinking?¡± Coraughs a little, and it¡¯s just a fleeting, foreboding chuckle. ¡°Goodbye, Dean.¡± ¡°Wait. I¡¯m worried about you, Corabelle. Talk to me.¡± ¡°I do think we could have been great,¡± she finishes. ¡°If you weren¡¯t a lion, and I was not a mouse.¡± The call disconnects, and I¡¯m left staring at my phone, my insides twisting into knots and my heart telling me that she is not okay. Something¡¯s off. Something¡¯swrong. I realize I mighte off like a stalker driving to her house in the middle of the night to console a woman who clearly wants her space. But I¡¯m willing to take that risk because my instincts are screaming at me togo. I¡¯m knocking on her front door ten minutester, after speeding my way over here, blowing two stop signs. The happy, turquoise door is a deceiving camouge to the dejected woman residing on the other side of it. ¡°Cora!¡± I call out. My knuckle taps turn into pounding fists when she doesn¡¯t open the door. ¡°Cora, open up. I¡¯m worried about you.¡± All I can hear on the other side is animal ws pacing the entryway, mingling with squeaky whines. I try the doorknob and heave in a breath of relief when it opens. But then I realize Cora never leaves her doors unlocked, and my relief fades back into concern. Jude and Penny Lane greet me at the door for the first time, pacing around in circles. As I step through the threshold, both dogs go running down the hallway towards Cora¡¯s bedroom, like they are beckoning me to follow. ¡°Cora?¡± I try to make my presence known, so I don¡¯t startle her. ¡°Cora, it¡¯s me. I¡¯m just here to check on you.¡± Nothing. Fuck. I make my way through the living area, down the hall, and stop short of Cora¡¯s room. Her light is on, but she¡¯s clearly not awake. She¡¯s lying on her back on top of the covers, one arm hanging off the edge of the bed, while the other is sprawled across the mattress, still clutching her cell phone. Both dogs are pawing at the side of the bed and whimpering. ¡°Cora.¡± I step inside the room, my feet cautious at first. Unsure. ¡°Corabelle.¡± She doesn¡¯t move. She doesn¡¯t flinch. Is she even fucking breathing? ¡°No, no, no, no, no¡­.¡± I feel like the air leaves my own lungs the moment the thought crosses my mind, and I dash over to her bedside, shaking her. ¡°Cora. Cora!¡± She doesn¡¯t respond. ¡°Holy fuck¡­. Jesus¡­¡± My eyes catch sight of an empty bottle of sleeping pills tipped over on her nightstand and I fucking lose it. I climb on top of her, straddling her waist with my knees, and I press my ear to her chest as I continue to shake her. This isn¡¯t real. This is a prank¡ªa practical joke, just like that time I gave her the cornstarch donut and she pretended to faint. She¡¯s about to wake up and say,¡°Gotcha¡±.Then she¡¯llugh andugh, and I¡¯ll be so pissed off at her, but so,sorelieved that she¡¯s okay. But that doesn¡¯t happen. She is still, lifeless, and I sh back to Blizzard lying on that dog bed in the middle of the hospital room looking eerily simr. ¡°No¡­ God, no, Cora. Come back to me. Fuckingpleasedon¡¯t do this¡­¡± I pull my phone out of my pocket, almost dropping it as my hands start violently trembling. I punch in the numbers 9-1-1 and ramble off the situation to the dispatch operator, sounding like a crazed, desperate man. And I am. I am. I¡¯m instructed to perform CPR. I carry her from the bed andy her down on the floor, pressing against her chest like I¡¯ve seen in the movies. Then I tip her head back, pinch her nose, and breathe my life into her mouth. ¡°Is she breathing?¡± the operator asks over the speaker. I reach for her wrist and try to find a pulse. I ce my ear to her heart again. God, I can¡¯t tell. ¡°I don¡¯t know. I don¡¯t fucking know¡­.¡± ¡°Okay. Just stay on the line and help will be there soon. Continue the chestpressions, fast and hard¡­¡± The voice fades out as I continue to press against her chest, asionally stopping to search for a sign of life. ¡°Don¡¯t you leave me, Corabelle. I fuckingloveyou. Don¡¯t you dare leave me.¡± I gather her petite frame in my arms, bringing her up to my chest, sobbing into her hair. I cling to her, trying to zap her with my lifeforce, trying to bring her back to me with nothing but my tears and words and love. ¡°Come back,¡± I whisper through my grief, theny her back down to continue the chestpressions. The sirens sound in the distance as I break down on top of her, weeping and shaking. What have I done? What the hell have I done? : Part 3 – Chapter 24 ¡°You probably should havethought about that before you fucked me.¡± Dean smacks a handful of money into my palm like I¡¯m some kind of hooker. I stare at him, wide-eyed and wounded. ¡°For the pill,¡± he adds. I watch him storm out my front door, and he ms it so hard, it rattles on its hinges and the dogs leap up from their ce on the giant dog bed. My feet remain frozen to the wood nks of my living room floor, and my eyes are glued to the door, secretly hoping it will swing back open and he¡¯lle running through. And secretly hoping it doesn¡¯t. I swallow down the acrid lump in my throat before I choke on it. A tiny paw jabs my bare calf, and I¡¯m reminded that I¡¯ve been staring at the door for at least five whole minutes with a wad of crumpled bills in my hand that Dean gave me to purchase the morning after pill. Because we had sex. Because I had sex with Dean. The reminder almost knocks me off my feet. I realize he¡¯s noting back, but I haven¡¯t decided if I¡¯m okay with that or not. I blow out a slow breath, making a humming sound. It¡¯s the sound I make when mind-numbing pain is crawling its way up my throat, looking for a way out. Dear God, I had sex with Dean Asher. And then I told him it was over because I¡¯m weak and unprepared to deal with the consequences of my own selfish actions. I pace backwards until I reach the couch, copsing onto it as the paines spewing out. I toss the money on the coffee table and draw my legs up to my chest, burying my face between my knees. Sobs pour out of me in waves and my ribs start to ache. Jude appears in front of me, sitting at the edge of the couch with perky ears and a swiftly moving tail. Penny hops up beside me with her little legs, resting her chin against my hip bone. This only makes me cry harder, knowing these sweet animals are trying to console me when I don¡¯t deserve it. I made my bed. I made my bed, and then I screwed my sister¡¯s ex-fianc¨¦ in it. Andholy crap, it was good. So, so good. Hot, intense, rough¡ªunlike anything I¡¯ve ever experienced before, physically and emotionally.Mind-blowingis the term Dean used, and I wholeheartedly agree, despite the fact that I couldn¡¯t tell him that because even acknowledging what happened between us feels like a p in the face to Mandy. And to my own dignity. I run my fingers between Jude¡¯s ears as I scoop Penny onto myp, stretching my legs back out. I¡¯ve never been so torn like this before, so split in half, pulled in two different directions. I¡¯ve never wanted something so badly, while rejecting it at the same time. Dean is like the ocean. Compelling, calling to me, within reach¡­ So much magic. So much beauty. Something I want with every achingyer of my soul. But I¡¯m that little girl again, frozen in the sand, afraid of the dark waters in front of me. There¡¯s so much uncertainty. There¡¯s so much I can¡¯t see. I¡¯m scared I¡¯ll lose myself to the tumultuous waves and drift away, barely treading above water, hardly able to breathe. I¡¯m scared I¡¯ll lose everything¡ªmy sister, my parents, myself. I¡¯m scared I¡¯ll drown. It¡¯s safer here at shore. I tell myself this as I go about my day, running out to grab dog food and n B. I try not to die of embarrassment as I keep my oversized sunsses on at the pharmacy, while tugging my beanie down as far as it will go in case I have the words ¡®Totally Banged Dean¡¯ scrawled across my forehead. I don¡¯t check my phone as I clean the houseter. I already cleaned yesterday, but I vacuum again and wipe down the windows just to distract myself. I don¡¯t text him. I don¡¯t call him. I don¡¯t go near the bottle of wine in the fridge in fear of texting or calling him. I can do this. But when my sister shows up unexpectedly with Mexican food that evening, I almost faint from crippling anxiety. ¡°You look like hell.¡± Mandy breezes through the entryway also looking like hell, and I can¡¯t help but feel like there is onemon denominator that is responsible for our mutual hells. ¡°I brought a shit ton of tacos. Cntro has cleansing powers.¡± ¡°That¡¯s because it tastes like dish soap.¡± Mandy scoffs at me as she slips out of her knee-high boots. She saunters through the living room to the kitchen, tossing the brown paper bags of food onto the dining table. Then she wavers, taking a few steps back, and nces towards the corner of the room. She looks up at me. ¡°You have dogs.¡± I shrug, my arms crossed. ¡°You would have known that if you hadn¡¯t dodged my calls and texts all week.¡± A bleak silence stretches between us. I take in the way Mandy¡¯s eyes lower to the floor,cking their usual sparkle, rimmed with dark circles. Her hair is pinned up in an ultra-messy bun, her roots growing out. She blows back a strand of hair that hase loose from her bun and leans her hip against the back of the couch. ¡°I¡¯ve been avoiding you.¡± ¡°I noticed.¡± I dig my fingers into the fuzzy fabric of my sweater, my insides clenching with unease. I¡¯m not sure how I¡¯m going to get through this night without confessing all of my dirty sins to Mandy. I clear my throat, braving a few steps forward. ¡°How are you?¡± Mandy flusters a bit and shrugs her shoulders, her eyes flickering back to me. ¡°I¡¯m guessing Dean told you?¡± Just the mention of his name makes me flush. ¡°It¡¯s all over Facebook. You changed your rtionship status to ¡®single¡¯ and have been posting sad, depressing quotes every few hours.¡± ¡°Helps me cope. So, you¡¯re saying he didn¡¯t mention anything about it?¡± Something in my chest pitches and my cheeks re with heat. ¡°I didn¡¯t say that.¡± ¡°I figured as much,¡± Mandy says tly, turning back to the kitchen to sort through the food. ¡°He said you had a connection. A bond. He said you were both forced to do fucked up shit.¡± Oh, God. Bile rises up my esophagus, and I choke it back down. ¡°I-It¡¯splicated.¡± ¡°He said that, too.¡± Mandy spins around, holding out something wrapped in tinfoil. ¡°Two steak tacos, notro.¡± I swallow, taking a few more hesitant steps toward my sister, and reach for the tacos. ¡°Thank you.¡± Her smile is strained. Forced. Mandy unwraps one of her tacos and takes a bite, nodding her head at Jude and Penny curled up in the corner. ¡°What made you get two dogs?¡± she asks, swiping a dollop of sour cream from her lip. ¡°Protection?¡± I set my food down on the kitchen ind, feeling too queasy to eat. ¡°Companionship, I guess. I nned on getting a dog before¡­ well, before everything happened.¡± I scratch the back of my head. ¡°They¡¯re the dogs that were confiscated from his property.¡± Mandy pauses mid-chew. ¡°That psycho¡¯s property? You adopted your kidnapper¡¯s dogs?¡± ¡°Sort of.¡± ¡°That¡¯s fucked up, Cor.¡± She resumes her chewing and hops up onto my table, swinging her legs back and forth. ¡°You seem to be having a hard time letting go of the things that connect you to that basement.¡± Her eyes cut to me, knowing and pointed. She¡¯s not just referring to the dogs. I slink back like the coward I am. ¡°It¡¯s not like that. They needed a home, and I needed a distraction from the pain.¡± ¡°There¡¯s a million other dogs out there you could have taken.¡± Pretty sure she¡¯s still not talking about the dogs. Shit. ¡°Mandy¡­¡± She hops off the table. ¡°Your food is getting cold.¡± I watch my sister parade around the kitchen, pulling a wine ss from the cab and digging through my refrigerator. I feel hysterical tears stabbing just beneath the surface, ready to blow. I gather a slow, calming breath, trying so hard to rein in my fear and nerves and guilt as Mandy saunters back over with a full ss of wine. She leans forward against the kitchen ind, elbows to countertop, facing me as I stand behind the opposite side. I wring my hands together as she stares at me over the rim of her ss. There is only a small kitchen ind between us, but it feels like a continent. ¡°I appreciate you stopping by with dinner. That was nice of you.¡±God, I¡¯m pathetic. Mandy arches an eyebrow, sipping on her wine. ¡°You haven¡¯t touched your food.¡± ¡°I¡¯m not that hungry. I¡¯ll bring it to work tomorrow for lunch.¡± I smile as sweetly as I can, but I¡¯m pretty sure I look like I¡¯m about to start ugly crying. Mandy taps a perfectly painted fingernail against the ss, her gaze shifting between me and her beverage, as if she¡¯s trying to string together her next sentence. Her eyes are hazel and hollow as they linger on mine, her head tilting slightly to one side. ¡°So, what fucked up shit were you forced to do?¡± She asks the question so casually¡ªso nonchnt. But it thunders through me like a typhoon, wreaking havoc on all of my fragile insides. My skin tingles, my hands m up, my legs start to wobble in ce. Itch onto the edge of the countertop to keep myself steady as I hold my breath. I hold it for a long time, afraid that my oxygen alone will spill out all of my secrets. I hold it until I feel dizzy and sick and lightheaded, and then I let it out like a harrowing confession. ¡°I-I don¡¯t want to talk about it, okay? It¡¯s personal and traumatic, and I¡¯m trying to forget those three weeks ever even happened¡­¡± I bite down on my lip to stop the words from flowing. Mandy¡¯s eyes narrow as she chugs down the rest of her wine. Then she ms the ss down on the counter, making me wince. ¡°Something happened down there, Cora. I need to know.¡± ¡°Nothing. It doesn¡¯t matter.¡± ¡°Tell me.¡± ¡°I can¡¯t!¡± The tears start spilling, my voice catching and breaking. ¡°I can¡¯t.¡± Mandy is about to bite back when my cell phone vibrates between us on the ind, resting only a foot away. We both look at it. Dean¡¯s name lights up the screen with a text message. I nce at Mandy. She nces at me.Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. Then we both lunge for the phone at the same time, with Mandying out victorious. I practically scream in defiance. ¡°No!¡± I race around the ind to where Mandy is reading the message with her back turned to me. I wait for her to face me, my shoulders heaving, beyond horrified and nauseated by what she may be discovering right now. Mandy lets out a gasp that sounds an awful lot like betrayal. She whips around, her eyes watering, gleaming with rage. ¡°Youbitch.¡± I rip the phone away from her, my hands shaking as I skim over the message in a panic. Don¡¯t want to fight. Scared. I get it. Last night was everything. Slower. Start over. In this together. Last night was everything. ¡°What happenedst night, Cora?¡± Mandy demands, her tears erupting like rainfall. ¡°Did you sleep with him?¡± Her voice changes in pitch, sounding more desperate and shrill with each word. ¡°Did you fuck my fianc¨¦?¡± ¡°I¡­¡± ¡°Tell me!¡± I shake my head, a cry breaking through my lips. ¡°I want to hear it from your lying, filthy mouth.¡± I¡¯ve never seen Mandy so upset. I¡¯ve never seen her radiating blindhatelike this. I feel like I¡¯m going to throw up or keel over and die from abject humiliation and all-consumingguilt. ¡°We¡­ we were forced to have sex in that basement.¡± Mandy pales, her eyebrows creasing. ¡°What?¡± My chest expands, up and down, hard and fast. ¡°Earl put a gun to Dean¡¯s head and made him do it. We didn¡¯t have a choice. We¡­¡± I dig my fingers into my scalp and tug my hair back. ¡°It was awful and sick and beyond depraved, but¡­¡± ¡°But¡­ ?¡± Mandy sounds horrified. Appalled. As she should. ¡°But something happened, okay? Something changed between us, and I can¡¯t exin it. I thought the feelings would go away when we returned to our normal lives, but the connection is still there. We can¡¯t shake it. I never wanted this to happen, Mandy¡­¡± I continue to crack and break and splinter, my entire body shutting down. ¡°I never wantedanyof this!¡± Mandy¡¯s eyes assess me with a quiet rage. Her chest is beat red, the heat climbing up her neck and staining her cheeks and ears. ¡°Did you have sexst night?¡± I pull my lips between my teeth to keep them from quivering. Then I lower my chin, unable to look her in the eyes as I whisper, ¡°Yes.¡± Only a heartbeat passes when her hand flies out and connects with my face. I inhale a sharp, startled breath, the sting of her p rattling my bones. Mandy has never hit me before. I¡¯ve never hit her. We¡¯ve argued and bickered and not spoken for weeks, but¡­ this is different. This isunfixable. My eyes are zed with disbelief as I look up at her, wishing I could erase the heartbroken, forsaken expression staring back at me. My fingertips lift to brush against the welting hand print on my cheek, my remorse and regret eating me alive. ¡°I¡¯msosorry, Mandy.¡± She takes a step back, shaking her head furiously. ¡°I can¡¯t believe you¡¯re my sister. I can¡¯t believe you were going to be mymaid of honor.¡± Mandy wipes at the stray tears lingering on her cheekbones. ¡°You¡¯re disgusting. You¡¯retrash. You¡¯re the most selfish person I¡¯ve ever met, and I never want to see you again. Mom and Dad will disown you over this.¡± I gape at her, my mouth parted with incredulity. Mandy spits out one final barb before storming away: ¡°I hope his dick was worth it.¡± The front door ms for the second time that day, another person I care about walking away from me, angry and betrayed. I copse onto the kitchen tiles, a panic attack creeping into my lungs and taking over. I sob hysterically, manically, ashamed and astounded by the damage I¡¯ve caused. I¡¯m a broken pile of bones and failure, crumpled on the ground, wanting to die. I just want to die. All those weeks fighting so hard to live, and for what? Hell followed me home. It lives inside me, housing all of my demons and ghosts and unforgivable ws. Two wet dog noses tickle my cheeks, and then my tears are kissed away by worried tongues. I stare up at the ceiling fan spinning in circles above me. Around, around, and around. It could spin forever, spiraling out of control, until I decide to turn it off. I try to catch my breath, choking on ugly hups as I wipe at my nose and rise to unsteady feet. The dogs follow me around the kitchen while I fill their bowls with food and water. I don¡¯t bother to lock the front door as I head towards the hall bathroom, flipping off the ceiling fan before I round the corner. I open up the mirrored medicine cab and reach for my sleeping pills. I snap the door shut, gazing at my reflection, feeling totally numb. My eyes are red and swollen, my nose puffy. I¡¯m marked and bruised all over. Dean¡¯s teeth and tongue carved into my neck. Mandy¡¯s p of scorn across my face. I blink slow, then nce down at the pill bottle sped inside my fist. My whole life I¡¯ve been terrified of the ocean. I¡¯ve been scared of being dragged down into a cold, dark sea, swallowed by waves, clutching my chest and gasping for air. But this sea is not made of water. And maybe drowning is the only way out. : Part 3 – Chapter 25 ¡°Corabelle.¡± I can hear my name being called from the other side of the shoreline. I hate that dreadful name, and yet, it sounds so much sweeter flickering across his tongue. My hands wave around in the air, trying to grab his attention. ¡°Dean!¡± His head twists in every direction, until he spots me running towards him in the sand. ¡°There you are,¡± he says, a devilish grin lifting on his mouth. ¡°I thought I lost you.¡± I leap into his arms and he catches me right beneath my thighs. Our noses kiss, my smile matching his. ¡°You can¡¯t get rid of me that easily.¡± ¡°Promise?¡± My head bobs as I lean in to caress his lips with mine. I pull back, searching his eyes. ¡°Are we going to be okay?¡± Dean nts another kiss against my forehead, then sets me back down, my toes disappearing into the sand. He ces his hand over my heart, while reaching for my own hand and cing it against his. With my hand to his chest, and his to mine, our heartbeats vibrating through our fingertips, he whispers down at me, ¡°They¡¯re still beating. As long as they¡¯re beating, we¡¯re okay.¡± My smile broadens as tears coat my eyes. I¡¯m about to reply when I hear my name being echoed across the beach again. ¡°Corabelle.¡± Dean releases a sigh, and it evaporates on a salty breeze that sweeps through. ¡°It¡¯s time to go,¡± he says wistfully. ¡°But I like it here.¡± He cups my cheek in his palm, grazing his thumb along my skin. ¡°We¡¯lle back.¡± ¡°Corabelle.¡± My eyelids flutter, rejecting the artificial light spilling into my irises. The poetic sound of ocean waves transforms into angry beeps and buzzes, humming machines, and jumbled voices. My lips are dry and chapped as I part them to speak. ¡°Dean?¡± I¡¯m met with a moment of silence before a familiar touch strokes my hair back. ¡°It¡¯s me, sweetheart.¡± ¡°Dad?¡± Another presence nears the edge of my bed where I¡¯m lying beneath itchy sheets, hooked up to needles and monitors. ¡°Oh, Cora, baby,¡± my mother says as she sits beside my father. I blink, willing their blurry faces toe into view. ¡°How did I get here?¡± I try to remember the events leading up to this moment. I try to recall the reason I¡¯m lying in a hospital bed with my parents looming over me with tearful faces. ¡°You overdosed on your sleeping pills. Dean went to your house to check on you and found you unconscious. He called 9-1-1,¡± my mother tells me. ¡°Oh, sweetie.¡± She drapes herself over my stomach and starts sobbing as nurses begin to filter in, poking and prodding me. Oh, God. Memories trickle through me, and I feel sick. I wanted to die. I genuinely wanted todie. Tears brim in my eyes, and I can hear my heart monitor start to climb as my breathing esctes. I lie there, dazed and horrified, while a nurse rys information to my parents in a voice that sounds like the adults inCharlie Brown. I wonder if I¡¯m still underwater. After the nurses check my vitals and file out, I nce up at my mother standing at my bedside. ¡°I-I¡¯m sorry. I¡¯m sorry for everything.¡± ¡°Honey, none of that matters right now,¡± she replies, cing her hand against my shoulder. ¡°We¡¯ll talkter. You just need to get better.¡± ¡°Where¡¯s Mandy?¡± I ask, my voice fracturing. ¡°Did she want me to die?¡± My father lets out a long sigh, somber and weighty. ¡°Of course not, Cora. Your sister has been worried sick. She¡¯s just down getting coffee.¡± I swallow back an acidic lump. I want to ask my next question, but I can¡¯t get the words out¡ªthey don¡¯t seem at all appropriate. But the words must be written in my eyes because my mother dips her head, squeezing me gently. ¡°Given the situation, we thought it would be best if he weren¡¯t here, honey. But he¡¯s extremely worried about you.¡± My cheeks burn with shame. I shouldn¡¯t be wanting him here with me. I shouldn¡¯t be silently begging for Dean to be holding me in his arms, kissing away my tears, and singing away the darkness. My parents shouldn¡¯tknowthat¡¯s exactly what I want, just by looking at me. My father takes my hand in his. ¡°Your sister filled us in on what happened. She feels responsible. I know this is going to be an uphill battle for both of you, and your mother and I are not taking anybody¡¯s side here. We love you both. Our hearts are breaking for each of you.¡± He kisses my knuckles. ¡°We¡¯re just so grateful you made it through.¡± Tears streak my cheeks, moistening my parched lips as I inhale a choppy breath. ¡°How long have I been here?¡± Panic sets in, and I wonder how much time has slipped away. Is it a new year? A new decade? ¡°You¡¯ve been unconscious for four days,¡± he responds. I soak up the fact that it hasn¡¯t been longer, but then my eyes widen with dread. ¡°M-My dogs. Jude and Penny. Are they okay?¡± My mother quickly nods. ¡°They¡¯re just fine. Lily has been house-sitting for you.¡± Thank God. I¡¯m nodding my relief when Mandy walks in with a cup of coffee. She does a double take when she notices I¡¯m awake. ¡°Oh, my God¡­¡± I turn my head to the opposite side, unable to look at her. My father clears his throat. ¡°Bridge, let¡¯s give them a few minutes.¡± I¡¯m still looking out the window at the dreary winter day, listening to my parents shuffle out of the room. It¡¯s a fitting backdrop to my new nightmare. I feel the bed shift as my sister takes a seat to my left. Mandy leans down to hug me, her cheek pressed to my covered chest. ¡°I never wanted you to hurt yourself,¡± she murmurs against me. I close my eyes, swallowing down a fresh set of tears. I never used to cry much, but now I feel like it¡¯s all I do. ¡°You said you never wanted to see me again, and I don¡¯t me you.¡± ¡°That doesn¡¯t mean I wanted youdead,¡± she insists, straightening with a sniffle. ¡°I can¡¯t believe you did that.¡± ¡°We can just add it to the growing list of fucked up things I do now.¡± Mandy¡¯s sigh reverberates through me. She hesitates before saying, ¡°Dean was here that first night. He was a mess.¡± My heart picks up speed, involuntarily. ¡°The doctors said he found you just in time. A few minutes longer and you¡¯d be dead.¡± Dean saved my life. Again. I wipe at my wet cheeks. ¡°I¡¯m so sorry, Mandy. I¡¯m so sorry I hurt you.¡± A few silent beats pass by, and I¡¯m afraid to look at her. I¡¯m afraid to see her wounded, scornful eyes. The bed moves as Mandy rises to her feet, and I finally spare a small nce in her direction. She tucks her tangled hair behind her ear, twirling her coffee cup between tense fingers. ¡°I love you, Cora, and I¡¯m d you¡¯re okay, but¡­ this doesn¡¯t wipe the te clean. I¡¯m still processing everything. It¡¯s¡­ a lot.¡± She squeezes the cup, her eyes closing. ¡°A lot of damage was done, and I¡¯m not sure when I¡¯ll ever be able to forgive you.¡± I nod, tears falling free and dampening my shoulders. ¡°I understand,¡± I squeak out. Mandy opens her eyes and pins them on me, her expression sober. ¡°But seriously, Cor, don¡¯t you ever pull that shit again. Get help. Find a new therapist if you need to. Join a support group. Get on medication. Just¡­ don¡¯t ever feel like we¡¯d be better off without you.¡± I nod again. Mandy ducks her head. ¡°I¡¯m trying to understand, trying to put myself in your shoes, trying to sympathize with everything you went through that could have led to¡­¡± Her jaw tightens and she swallows. ¡°But I¡¯m still mad. I¡¯m so mad at you, Cora.¡± ¡°I know,¡± I sniff. ¡°You have every right to be furious with me. I¡¯ll never be able to exin what happened because I don¡¯t even understand it.¡± Mandy nibbles her lip, ncing my way, then dips her chin. ¡°I¡¯m sorry I hit you. I had no right to put my hands on you.¡± ¡°I deserved it.¡± ¡°No,¡± she says. Then she sighs, dropping one arm to her side and taking a slow sip of her coffee. ¡°Anyway, I¡¯ll let you rest. I¡¯m d you¡¯re okay¡ªdon¡¯t ever think otherwise.¡± A watery smile breaks through. ¡°Thanks, sis.¡± She doesn¡¯t return the smile, but her eyes aren¡¯t ring with hate, giving me hope that maybe there is hope for us someday. Maybe we can fix this. Mandy takes a few steps backwards and turns to leave the room¡ªbut her feet falter. She looks back at me over her shoulder, her eyes glossing over, glowing with fresh pain. ¡°I¡¯m not sure if this makes it better or worse, but¡­ I think he really loves you.¡± Mandy walks out, a small cry escaping her lips, and I start sobbing into the itchy bed covers. I have no idea where I am for a moment when the mattress sinks with a new weight and an arm slinks around my midsection. I have one foot in a dream and the other in reality as I breathe in the familiar scent of cedar and leather. My body recognizes him, and I instinctively snuggle in closer to the warm body on my left, still not sure if he¡¯s real or not. ¡°My sweet Corabelle.¡± His breath against my ear makes me shiver. I blink myself awake as the roomes into focus, and my head tilts to the side, finding his eyes. He¡¯s real. ¡°Dean.¡± His name tumbles out like a broken whisper, our gaze locking, our emotions rising.God¡­ to think I would have never seen these eyes again if he hadn¡¯t found me. ¡°I¡¯m sorry.¡± Dean touches his fingertips to my temple, then glides a loose strand of hair behind my ear. He looks tired and distraught¡ªbut there¡¯s a distinct glimmer of relief swimming in his baby blues. His hand settles against my neck, his thumb skimming my jaw. ¡°I thought I lost you.¡± His words are familiar and they cause my brows to pull together. I force a smile. ¡°You can¡¯t get rid of me that easily.¡± ¡°Promise?¡±Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. My breath catches as d¨¦j¨¤ vu tickles me from head to toe. I think this is the part where I¡¯m supposed to lean in for a kiss, but I press my lips together in resistance and nod instead. ¡°You scared the hell out of me, Cora. I had no idea you felt like that¡ªwhich fucks me up even more because the signs were all there. I feel like I failed you.¡± Dean tightens his hold on my neck, desperationcing his words as he swallows back his grief. ¡°If you need space, I¡¯ll give you space. If you need time, I¡¯ll give you time. If you never want to see me again, I¡¯ll pack my bags and move to fuckin¡¯ Mexico, all right? But don¡¯t youevertry to take away the one thing you fought so goddamn hard to keep.¡± Dean ces his hand against the swell of my breast encased in a hospital gown, closing his eyes as he revels in the feel of my heartbeat against his palm. I touch my hand to his, tears welling in my eyes.So many tears. I roll onto my side, trying not to tangle myself in cords, and press our foreheads together. ¡°Mandy found out about us. She saw your text. She¡­ she wassomad, so furious, and I flipped out, Dean. I was out of my head.¡± I inhale a rickety breath. ¡°It was the lowest moment of my life. I thought I¡¯d lost everything.¡± He exhales slow and deliberate, pressing his hand further into my chest. ¡°You only lose everything when you lose this, Corabelle.¡± I nod, and it takes all of my willpower not to lean up and capture a kiss. We lie like that for a while, pressed together, face to face, his lips trailing tiny kisses along my hairline, my eyes, my nose, my chin. He avoids my mouth, and eventually we hold each other in silence, just staring and thinking. I ask him at one point, ¡°How did you get in here?¡± Dean smiles softly. ¡°Your mom texted me. She said you were awake.¡± ¡°My mom was okay with you seeing me?¡± I wonder through a frown. ¡°She saw what a wreck I was. I was losing my damn mind the night they brought you in. I thought you were gone.¡± He shifts on the bed, pulling me closer. ¡°Your mom took me aside and said it would be better if I stayed away for Mandy¡¯s sake, but she¡¯d keep me updated on your condition. Trust me, Cora, if it were up to me I wouldn¡¯t have left your side.¡± I raise my hand and press the pads of my fingers to his cheek, grazing them down his jawline. I watch his eyes flutter in contentment. I¡¯m ovee by the feelings sweeping through me, wondering how something so beautiful, so powerful, soright, could be so very wrong. But right or wrong, I know one thing is for certain. ¡°This is real, isn¡¯t it?¡± I¡¯ve been trying to deny it. I¡¯ve been pushing away the blinding truths, telling myself we¡¯re still trapped in that emotional prison of Earl¡¯s basement. These feelings aren¡¯t genuine, they aren¡¯treal¡ªthey were manufactured by trauma and istion. This was all a part of Earl¡¯s twisted n, and he seeded tenfold. Only¡­ it¡¯s getting harder and harder to believe that. The truth is in the way Dean holds me, the way he sings me to sleep and silences my demons with a gentle stroke of his hand. It¡¯s in the way my heart beats differently when he¡¯s near. It¡¯s in the way I envision a future, a future I can never have, and he¡¯sthere. He¡¯s always there. It¡¯s in the way he¡¯s looking at me right now. Dean studies me, his eyes darting over my face, memorizing every fine line, every crack and crease. A smile touches his lips, as if we¡¯re finallying to terms with what we both already knew. ¡°Yeah, Corabelle. It¡¯s real.¡± I bury myself into his chest, nuzzling my nose to his shirt and breathing him in. ¡°Can you hold me until I fall asleep?¡± ¡°Of course.¡± He hums a song against my hair like a soothing luby as I soak up his warmth and let it fill every cold, empty pocket inside me. I cling to what will never be mine. As my eyes close, my body calm and my mind in a temporary state of peace, I find myself drifting out to sea. I¡¯m back on that beach, running into his arms, watching the seagulls fly overhead as he spins me around beneath the setting sun. I¡¯m still not sure where the words came from. Were they a whisper on the wind in a magical dream? Or were they spoken into my hair, a soft confession, a haunting promise of everything that will nevere to be? Either way, I let the words sink in. They breathe new life into me as I fall into a restful sleep. ¡°I love you.¡± : Part 3 – Chapter 26 ¡°You shoulde outwith me tonight.¡± I¡¯m sitting with my best friend in our favorite local coffee shop, sipping on atte like I didn¡¯t just attempt suicide two weeks ago. I nce up at Lily, cupping the warm brew between my palms, considering her offer while nibbling my lip. ¡°I don¡¯t know. I go back to work on Monday¡ªI should probably just rest up and rx this weekend.¡± Lily fiddles with her long, dark braid hanging over one shoulder. ¡°I think it will be good for you. You¡¯ve been a hermit ever since¡­¡± She lowers her eyes. ¡°Well, you know. I feel like it¡¯s only been taking you down a ck hole of despair. You need fun and friends.¡± I instinctively reach for my wrist, catching myself before I start scratching at it. I finger my ne instead. ¡°I¡¯m sorry, but I don¡¯t know those words. Are they new?¡± She shakes her head with augh. ¡°Come on, Cora. I¡¯m meeting Amy and the guys at the new brewery downtown. Everyone would love to see you.¡± ¡°I¡¯m a mess, Lily. This morning was the first time in weeks I put on pants that didn¡¯t have an stic waistband and nautical dog patterns.¡± ¡°Exactly. It¡¯s time to put yourself back out there.¡± Lily shoots me a mischievous wink from across the bistro table. ¡°Jason will be there.¡± Ugh. Jason. ¡°That¡¯s not a good idea. I know you¡¯re just trying to help, but¡­¡± I squeeze my coffee cup a little too hard and cappino starts leaking out the top. ¡°I¡¯m kind of emotionally involved with someone else right now.¡± Crap. I finally said it. I finally admitted my awful, scious truth. Lily doesn¡¯t know about Dean. She¡¯s about to flip out and do that thing with her mouth. ¡°What? Who?¡± she wonders, craning her neck back with disbelief. I cough into my hand. ¡°Dean.¡± ¡°Irene?¡± She blinks. ¡°The science teacher with the sideburns?¡± I cough again. ¡°Dean.¡± ¡°Stop coughing!¡± ¡°Dean,¡± I finally say, loud and clear, then slink back into my seat with reddening cheeks. Lily does that thing with her mouth, gaping at me with her eyes bugged out. ¡°Please tell me this is aSupernaturalreference. I know those Winchesters seem so real sometimes when we¡¯re all alone at night with our vibr¡ª¡± ¡°Dean. Dean Asher. Dean, my sister¡¯s ex. My almost brother-inw, my long-time nemesis, the source of nearly every single migraine I¡¯ve ever had over thest fifteen years, the reason I have aplex about spaghetti¡­ and the only reason I¡¯m still alive right now rambling off my sinful secret to you.¡± I say it all in one breath, cing both palms against my flushed face. I inhale deep, both shame and longing battling it out inside me. The shame is for dodging his calls ever since I was released from the hospital, even though he¡¯s the only person in the world I long to hear from. I¡¯ve sent him a few texts to let him know I¡¯m doing okay so he doesn¡¯t worry, but I keep them brief and unemotional. And Ipletely ignored his text fromst night asking if we could grab lunch this weekend and talk. Lily is rendered speechless, which is umon. She stares at me with copper eyes, processing the absurdity I just spewed at her. ¡°Wow.¡± ¡°Yeah. Wow.¡± ¡°That¡¯s¡­¡± She blows out a breath. ¡°I¡¯m broken.¡± I slouch further into the chair, hoping it¡¯ll swallow me up. ¡°I¡¯m broken, right?¡± ¡°Maybe a little.¡± Oof.I pick at the fuzzy snags on my sweater, then pull the sleeves down over my hands. ¡°I don¡¯t even know how it happened,¡± I whisper softly. Lily takes a sip of her chai tea and sets the cup down on the table. ¡°I got some vibes at Mandy¡¯s New Year¡¯s party, but I figured it was just tension bubbling over from everything you guys went through. I never thought¡­¡± She fills her cheeks with air and lets it out, then averts her eyes with consideration. ¡°I mean, I guess I can see it. He¡¯s hot as sin and he¡¯s always been weirdly protective of you.¡± I frown. ¡°No, he hasn¡¯t. He¡¯s always been an ass.¡± ¡°Yeah, but in a cute way.¡± ¡°No.¡± ¡°Come on, Cora. You guys have always had chemistry. You just acted on it by torturing each other.¡± Lily shrugs, tapping her nails against the side of her paper cup. ¡°And obviously, circumstances wouldn¡¯t allow for much else.¡± My jaw starts to ache from gnashing my teeth together. I look down at mytte, hoping the little design made in foam will reach out and pull me in since the chair was a disappointing failure. ¡°This wasn¡¯t supposed to happen.¡± A sympathetic smile pulls at her lips, and Lily leans forward on her elbows. ¡°Is this the point in our friendship where youe to me with a terrible dilemma and I¡¯m supposed to offer you super sage wisdom and give you all the answers?¡± ¡°Yes. Definitely.¡± She shrugs. ¡°Well, shit. I¡¯m not prepared at all. I¡¯ve got nothing.¡± I groan as my face falls into my hands. ¡°Awesome.¡± ¡°It could be worse?¡± she offers, giving me a triumphant thumbs up. I peer at her through the cracks in my fingers, shaking my head, and grumble, ¡°No, it can¡¯t. This isliterallyrock bottom.¡± ¡°Ooh, so¡­ it¡¯s only up from here.¡± ¡°You would make a terrible therapist.¡± Lily falls back against her chair with a soft smile, and I know she¡¯s just trying to cheer me up and make a horrible situation lighter. She crosses her arms over her V-neck sweater and sighs. ¡°You really want my advice?¡± ¡°I¡¯m not sure anymore.¡± She chuckles, reaching for her tea. ¡°I would go for it, woman. Get the guy, have some hot sex, and forget about everything else.¡± ¡°That¡¯s terrible advice,¡± I say, pursing my lips together with narrowed eyes. ¡°Yeah, well, that¡¯s why you¡¯re my only friend.¡± I gawk at Lily for a moment, then burst outughing, the sound of it startling me. Lily winks at me over her cup. ¡°You know it¡¯s true. But for real, Cora, do what makes you happy. You¡¯ve gone through stuff I can¡¯t even imagine and you deserve a little happiness. Dean might not be the smartest choice on paper, but it¡¯syourlife. You can¡¯t tiptoe around your heart in fear of pissing people off or hurting their feelings. Sometimes we need to be a little selfish in order to avoid a life ofcency.¡± My fingers curl around my beverage, tightening their grip. ¡°That was a little bit profound.¡± ¡°Right? I think I nailed it.¡± Lily performs a dramatic bow, then smiles over at me. ¡°Also¡­ just between you and me? If roles were reversed, Mandy wouldn¡¯t hesitate.¡± This grabs my attention and I jerk my head back up. ¡°What makes you think that?¡± ¡°Call it a gut instinct.¡± Lily flips her braid over her shoulder with a shrug. ¡°Let¡¯s put it this way: did she or did she not sleep with that guy you were crushing on during those few months her and Dean split up?¡± I scrunch up my nose. ¡°Benjamin, the attorney? That was different. I was neverwithBen¡ªit was just a crush. Mandy has been with Dean for half her life.¡± ¡°I get it,¡± Lily replies, holding up her hands. ¡°It¡¯s not exactly the same¡­ I¡¯m just saying. She never even considered your feelings and sheknewyou liked the guy. I always thought it was shady.¡± I twist the hem of my sweater between my hands. ¡°That was also a long time ago. She¡¯s grown up a lot since then.¡± ¡°Okay,¡± Lily says dismissively. ¡°You¡¯re right. My point is, no one is perfect. Everyone is a little selfish sometimes when ites to matters of the heart.¡± I lower my head, my chest constricting. ¡°Speaking of¡­ I¡¯m going to be selfish and drag you out tonight. I miss you.¡± I wasn¡¯t ready for this. The lights, the noise, the music, theattention. Everyone is looking at me. Everyoneknowsme. My facees up in their newsfeeds. I¡¯m on their television screens. My name slips from their mouths in casual conversation. My trauma is a trending story on their social media ounts. My body freezes as I look around the crowded bar, squeezing my wrist with my opposite hand and massaging my pulse point. Hurried breaths escape my lips and I can hear my heart beating in my ears. Lily links her elbow with mine, tugging me forward. ¡°You okay?¡± I lie with a nod. ¡°I¡¯m fine.¡± ¡°You seem tense.¡± We approach a group of friends, and I know all of them except for one: Amy and her boyfriend, Trevor, and a nameless man with ebony eyes and long, ck hair. ¡°Where¡¯s Jason?¡± Lily wonders, leaning into Amy for a hug. Amy is a petite tomboy, dressed in a baggy t-shirt and ck leggings. She smiles bright as she embraces Lily. ¡°He canceledst minute. I¡¯m not sure.¡± She shifts her attention to me with wide, curious eyes, her smile lingering. ¡°You look great, Cora. I¡¯m so happy to see you.¡± Amy doesn¡¯t give me a hug, and I wonder if it¡¯s because she thinks I¡¯m dirty. Tainted in some way.Contagious. I force a pleasant expression and offer a wave. ¡°Thanks. It¡¯s definitely been a tough few months.¡± I shake Trevor¡¯s hand, having met him a few times in the past, then face the mysterious man to the right. ¡°That¡¯s Lars, one of Trevor¡¯s friends,¡± Lily introduces. ¡°Hi, I¡¯m Cora.¡± I hold out my hand and he takes it, his gaze flickering to my chest, then drifting back up. ¡°Nice to meet you.¡± ¡°Hey,¡± he says. I tug my blouse up. I tried to wear something cute since I¡¯ve been slumming it in sweatpants and pajamas for weeks on end, but I didn¡¯t want anything too revealing. However, my sweetheart blouse is hanging low on my frame due to the weight I have yet to put back on, revealing more cleavage than I¡¯d intended. The evening presses on with idle conversation and a few rounds of drinks. I nurse a rum and Coke the entire time, trying to be invisible as the friends catch up and joke around. Lars is quiet, not saying much, but his stare is piercing¡ªand often fixed on me. It makes me nervous, prompting me to start scratching my wrist again, even though I told myself I would stop. ¡°I like your eyes. They look like lily pads,¡± Lars says at one point, earning my full attention. Lily perks up at the sound of her name. ¡°What about my pads?¡± ¡°Not you, girl,¡± Amy says, swatting at her arm. I send Lars a half smile, clearing my throat and forcing a smallugh. ¡°Thank you. That¡¯s sweet.¡± Something tells me Lars is anything but sweet. ¡°Wanna dance?¡± he asks, not waiting for my reply and snaking his fingers around my wrist. I jump back and drop my ss. Everyone stops talking to stare at me, and I wonder if they would forget I was ever here if I made a mad dash to the exit right now. ¡°S-Sorry, I¡¯m such a klutz,¡± I mutter. I lean down to pick up the ss, but a bartender is already headed over with a broom. Lars¡¯ fingers are still curled around my wrist. My reaction didn¡¯t seem to phase him, and he pulls me over to the dance floor with an impish smile stretched across his wide jaw. I catch Lily winking at me as I blindly follow the stranger out into the crowd, hisrge palm reaching behind my back and resting there. Tension and nerves sweep through me as the music res louder, the crowd grows bigger, and the lights sh around me like a strobe, making me dizzy. ¡°Rx, doll,¡± Lars whispers, his voice buttery smooth. It¡¯s just a dance. You¡¯re fine. You¡¯re safe. I rein in a sharp breath, trying to let go of the apprehension. This isn¡¯t me. I¡¯ve always been fun and flirty, unafraid of male attention. I¡¯m social and outgoing. I¡¯ve never shied away from dancing, or casual touches, orpliments. ¡°I heard about your story,¡± Lars says, pulling me to his barreling chest. He¡¯s a huge man, well over six-foot, with muscles and tattoos. ¡°You¡¯re a fighter.¡± I inch back, keeping a gap between us. ¡°It¡¯s been hard,¡± I respond, feeling his hand squeeze mine. ¡°Sorry if I seem like a spaz. I¡¯m still adjusting.¡± ¡°No need to apologize, kitten.¡± My blood runs cold, and I nce up at him through timidshes. Lars smiles down at me, his fingers skimming up and down my spine with sensual strokes. Suddenly, I¡¯m in that basement again. Earl is viting me while Dean talks me through it. Look at me. Focus on me. It¡¯s just you and me, Cora. These hands on me feel strange and unfamiliar. His eyes are much too dark, his voice missing that yful edge. His skin is too rough and his hair is too long. This is wrong. It¡¯s all wrong. I feel like everything is spinning, and I¡¯m not sure if I should hold on for dear life or run away. ¡°You all right?¡± Lars asks, tipping his head back to study me. I¡¯m certain I¡¯ve gone ashen, and my chest feels like it¡¯s going to explode. ¡°I-I can¡¯t do this.¡± ¡°Need some water?¡± I shake my head, taking hesitant steps backwards. ¡°I think I need to go.¡± I don¡¯t wait for Lars to respond. I make a quick stop over to Lily to let her know I¡¯m not feeling well, then I call an Uber and get the hell out of there. Ten minutester, I¡¯m standing on his front stoop. I knock four times before the door swings open and Dean is standing in front of me, tired and disheveled, with a look of utter confusion creasing his brow. ¡°Cora? Are you okay?¡± My gaze trails over him and I feel safe again. He¡¯s only wearing sweatpants, no shirt, and his hair is tousled from sleep. His eyes,his eyes, they are beautifully blue like a summer sky, and his hands are perfect and soft and reaching for me. ¡°Dean¡­¡± I whisper, and I¡¯m not sure what it¡¯s supposed to mean. Relief? Longing? Sadness? Love? Those hands graze up and down my upper arms, the worry in his face etched tight. ¡°Are you hurt?¡± I shake my head as my eyes fix on his bare torso, well-muscled and lean. Smooth to the touch, yet rough and powerful when he¡¯s holding me, moving with me, our bodies intertwined. I nce back up to him and note the sh of desire that flickers across his face when he catches my unabashed perusal. It¡¯s all I need. I ce my palms against his chest, pushing him back gently until we¡¯re both walking inside his townhouse. I kick the door shut with my heel, and then I¡¯m all over him. Dean intakes a gasp of surprise when my hands sp his face, pulling him to me, and my mouth collides with his. I kiss him hard, furious, full of need and want and everything inside me I¡¯m able to give. When our tongues meet, it¡¯s like I¡¯m home. Dean pulls back slightly, one hand cradling the back of my head, his fingers threading through my hair, and the other grasping my upper arm. ¡°What are you doing?¡± he asks through a stunned breath. My palms skim up the expanse of his chest, curling over his shoulders. Our eyes lock and I respond, ¡°Being selfish.¡± I don¡¯t miss the subtle frown, the hint of perplexity, but I capture his mouth again before he can reply. I keep walking him backwards through the living room, my hands in his hair, tugging and pulling, my tongue going to war with his. His groans only make me want him more. I remove my hands from his skin to discard my coat and my shoes, then unbutton my pants, sliding my jeans and underwear down my hips and kicking them off as we continue our trek to the nearest piece of furniture. We find the couch first. I give him a small shove until he copses back onto the cushions, then I crawl on top of him, straddling his thighs with my knees. My fingers hook inside his waistband and he raises his hips on instinct, allowing me to yank the sweatpants down. His erection springs free, and I take him in my hand, drowning in the sounds he makes when I stroke him up and down, swirling my thumb along the wet tip. I kiss him hard as I pump my hand. ¡°Fuck, Cora¡­¡± We pull back to breathe, but our lips stay connected, our teeth pressed together as his hands slide up and down my back, long fingers dipping beneath my blouse. ¡°I missed you so much.¡± ¡°I missed you,¡± I reply, the words escaping like a rogue whimper. I lift up and position him at my core, squeaking out a moan when he grazes my entrance. I need this. I needhim. He¡¯s the only calm to my madness, the only light to my dark, the only sweet to my bitter remains. Hetames me. Hehealsme. I lower myself onto his cock, watching his head fall back, his eyes closing, his jaw tightening. His hands drop to my hips, holding me firm, feeling the way I slide down on him, taking him all the way in.God, he feels good. He¡¯s big and thick, filling mepletely.In every way. I rock up and down, sping my hands behind his neck and fusing our mouths back together. Dean opens willingly, digging his fingers into my waist when my tongue brushes against his. It¡¯s tender for a moment,nguid and soft, but my movements pick up as desperation floods me, and our mouths go hungry. His teeth nick my lips, and I clench my internal muscles as I ride him, causing him to tug my hair back and devour my neck. He sucks and bites as I cling to him, my pace increasing. His mouth travels up to my ear and he nibbles the lobe, asking breathily, ¡°You still mine?¡± ¡°Always.¡± I don¡¯t hesitate. I probably should, but I don¡¯t. A raspy growl escapes him, something possessive and raw, and he drags his fingers backwards until he¡¯s cupping my ass, squeezing me as I cry out from the pleasure of it all. His cock is hitting all the right ces, sending euphoric tingles through me, pushing me towards the edge. I skim my fingers through his hair and drop my forehead to his, locking our eyes as I grind against his groin until my body begins to shudder. Ie hard, mewling and whimpering as shockwaves light me up and send me spiraling. ¡°Dean, Dean¡­ Oh, God, Dean¡­¡± I chant through my climax, inciting him to squeeze me harder, pull me closer, and ram his hips up, spearing me deep with his hard cock. ¡°I fucking love it when you say my name like that,¡± he says raggedly, strained and heady. He thrusts into me three more times before tensing up and releasing, pulling me to him and clinging hard, his hands in my hair as hees. I hold him tight, my mouth pressed to his neck as his body tremors, a throaty groan escaping him. I kiss him then, tasting how much he wants me and burning it into every aching part of me. Wee down together, our bodies slicked with sweat and the evidence of our lovemaking. Dean wraps his arms around my middle, linking them behind my back and sighing deep into my mouth. ¡°Goddamn, you¡¯re sexy. You drive me crazy.¡± I smile against his lips, giving him a quick kiss before pulling back. I reach for the box of tissues on the side table to clean us up, then I drag theforter towards us, lifting myself off of him and wrapping the big nket around my shoulders. Dean lies down and pulls me with him, and I spread the nket over both of us as I snuggle into the crest of his arm. My legs intertwine with his, my hair haloing his chest and shoulder, and I feel him press a kiss to the top of my head. Peace. This is what peace feels like.Copyright by N?v/elDrama.Org. And as our bodies rx and melt together, I realize I don¡¯t need him to sing to me or massage my wrist, or offer any kind of escape from the dark cloud that hovers over me. He is enough. His heartbeat is all I need. : Part 3 – Chapter 27 Dean:¡°Umm¡­ ?¡± I wake up the next morning with a fluffy dog tail in my face as my phone vibrates on the nightstand beside me. I stare at the text message that just came through, nipping the inside of my bottom lip with my teeth. Me:Good morning ?? Dean:Where are you? Me:Home. I had to let the dogs out. Dean:Ok. You should have woken me up to say goodbye. I swallow, inhaling a heavy breath. Me:You looked so cute and peaceful. I didn¡¯t want to wake you ?? A few minutes pass by without a reply, so I start scrolling through Facebook as I roll onto my side. Jude scoots over to the opposite pillow, and I prop my head up on one hand, idly skimming my newsfeed. Dean:You could have left a note or something. I wasn¡¯t expecting to wake up alone. I blink slow, my eyes staying closed while I string together my response. Guilt cinches my gut as I recall waking up in a panic, half naked and entangled with Dean Asher. I booked it. Me:I¡¯m sorry. I wasn¡¯t expecting to stay out sote and I panicked. I didn¡¯t mean to worry you. Dean:Panicked because of the dogs or panicked because of me? Shit. I turn off my phone and roll back over, my fingers running through my hair as I fill my cheeks with anxious breaths. I want to tell him that everything feels so perfect, so right, when we are wandering through the dark nights with our walls down. But in the cold light of day, reality pinches me, waking me up like a bucket of ice water. The walls go back up¡ªbrick by brick,yer byyer, protecting me and keeping me safe. However, walls are manmade. They crack and they crumble. They are destined to fall. And I¡¯m terrified to see who is still wing their way through the rubble when the dust settles¡­ and who has just given up. ¡°Man escapes abductor after twenty-two years in captivity¡± The headline stops my breath as I sit with my parents around the dinner table, distracting myself with my phone. ¡°The partially nude man discovered on the side of Abbington Road near Pembrooke has been identified as thirty-year-old Oliver Lynch, the Libertyville boy who went missing on the Fourth of July almost twenty-two years ago.¡± The article is apanied by a photo of a man lying shirtless on the side of a snowy street in the fetal position, covered in blood. My heart clenches. Twenty-two years. Twenty-two years. ¡°Cora, sweetheart? Are you okay? You¡¯ve hardly touched your food.¡± I swallow, ncing up at my mother with wide eyes. Bile sticks to my throat as I try to form words. ¡°Did you see this news story about the missing boy who was found after twenty-two years?¡± My parents pierce me with empathetic eyes and my father clears his throat. ¡°We saw that on the news this morning.¡± ¡°How awful,¡± my mother adds, scooping peas onto her fork. ¡°It¡¯s a miracle that boy survived.¡± I blink. Is it, though? I can¡¯t help but wonder if he wishes he never survived at all. I was only gone for three weeks, and I still can¡¯t shake the nightmares and haunting memories. I tried to take my own life. How can he ever move past his trauma and have a normal existence? ¡°Excuse me,¡± I mutter, pushing myself away from the table and making a hasty retreat upstairs to the guest bedroom. I curl up under the covers and screenshot the article, sending it to Dean. I never replied to hisst text and it hovers between us like so many other unanswered questions and frightening unknowns. He reads it right away, but I don¡¯t get a response for another ten minutes. Dean:That¡¯s fucked. Really puts things in perspective. Me:To him, we would be the lucky ones ?? Another few minutes pass before my phone zings again. Dean:Speaking of¡­..Did you see the new development in our case? I freeze as I stare at his question, my body going numb. I haven¡¯t seen anything¡ªin fact, I generally scroll right past all posts and articles that have the name ¡®Earl¡¯ attached to them. Me:No¡­ Only five seconds pass when a screenshotes through, the picture slowly loading. I zoom in to read the headline: ¡°Victim of Earl Timothy Hubbard, also known as ¡®The Matchmaker¡¯,es forward¡± I read it again. Then again. My insides churn with disbelief. There¡¯s another victim out there¡­alive? I don¡¯t even read the corresponding article. I call Dean immediately. He picks up on the second ring. ¡°Hey.¡± ¡°Oh, my God.¡± My hand flies up to grasp my neck, scratching at my corbone as I try to regain myposure. ¡°Holy crap, Dean.¡± ¡°Yeah. I was reading all about it right before you texted me.¡± I swallow. ¡°What did it say? Did she give an interview? How did she escape?¡± I hear him moving around on the other end with a faint rustling in the background. ¡°Her name is Tabitha Brighton. She ims she was abducted by Earlst spring, along with her college professor. They were kept in the basement for two months before Earl killed the guy and let her go.¡± ¡°Let hergo?¡± I repeat, dumbfounded. My heart is rattling my ribs and I start to tremble. ¡°She¡¯s lying. She¡¯s got to be lying. That man didn¡¯t have a single shred of decency inside him¡ªthere¡¯s no way he¡¯d let one of his victims go.¡± ¡°I don¡¯t know, Cora. It¡¯s still a developing story, but the professor checked out. His name was Matthew Gleason and he was one of the confirmed bodies found on the property.¡± ¡°I-It can¡¯t be true. There¡¯s no one else¡­¡± My breathing esctes as I lean back against the decorative pillows, staring up at the ceiling and clutching my chest. ¡°There¡¯s no one else.¡± ¡°I mean, it makes sense,¡± Dean replies. ¡°There were eleven bodies found, yet he took his victims in pairs. I just figured there was either someone they hadn¡¯t discovered, or he¡¯d practiced his sick shit on someone solo first.¡± ¡°But¡­ why wait all this time toe forward? So many victims could have been saved.Wecould have been saved.¡± I stand from the bed and start pacing the room. ¡°She must be lying. She¡¯s looking for attention, o-or money, or to see her name in history books one day. She¡¯s a fraud, Dean.¡± ¡°Corabelle¡­¡± His voice softens, trying to soothe me through the speaker. ¡°I¡¯m sure more details wille out, but why does it even matter? What¡¯s done is done. There¡¯s no changing anything.¡± ¡°Because!¡± I exim. ¡°Tessie and her stepbrother would still be alive, along with countless others. We wouldn¡¯t have been abducted from your car in the middle of the night, shackled like dogs, forced to do¡­¡± My breath hitches, my fingers still curled around my neck, my emotions peaking. ¡°Everything would be like it¡¯s supposed to be. We¡¯d still hate each other, you¡¯d be married to Mandy, and I wouldn¡¯t be standing here wondering how the hell I¡¯m supposed to stop falling for you.¡± I cup my hand around my mouth as a small cry breaks out, my eyes squeezing out hot tears. My strangled breaths echo throughout the small guest room, and I wish he¡¯d say something,anything, just so my anguish isn¡¯t the only sound humming in our ears. ¡°Cora¡­ everythingisthe way it¡¯s supposed to be. This is how the cards fell. And the sooner youe to terms with that, the sooner you can heal.¡± I suck in a calming breath, allowing his words to sweep through me. He¡¯s right, of course. I¡¯ve been stuck in a perpetual state of ¡®what if¡¯ and ¡®what should be¡¯ instead of eptingwhat isand working through it. This new development of a surviving victim is only heightening my warped thought process. I exhale through my nod. ¡°Yeah. You¡¯re right,¡± I whisper. I smooth back my hair and finish, ¡°I should get going. Goodnight, Dean.¡± Dean pauses, then lets out a sigh that sounds like disappointment. ¡°You don¡¯t think we should talk aboutst night?¡± My cheeks burn from the memory. ¡°Not tonight. I¡¯m sorry.¡± ¡°Cora, I can¡¯t do this.¡± I bite down on my tongue and fiddle with the pendant on my ne. ¡°Do what?¡± ¡°This. Whatever this is.¡± ¡°I don¡¯t know what this is,¡± I admit. ¡°Well, I can¡¯t do it¡ªthis push and pull with you. It¡¯s fucking me up.¡± I close my eyes, processing my response, when my mother appears in the doorway, tapping her knuckles against the frame. She mouths to me, ¡°Are you okay?¡± I nod, swallowing down my words, and reply to Dean. ¡°I have to go.¡± Another sigh of frustration filters in my ear, and it feels like a dagger to my heart. ¡°Yeah. Goodnight.¡± He disconnects the call, and it takes all of my willpower not to break down. My mother is quickly by my side, rubbing her hand up and down my back. ¡°Are you okay, honey? Do you need to talk?¡± Yes. I probably do. My parents have been nothing but supportive, despite the heinous crime Imitted against their favorite daughter. But I¡¯m not sure if it¡¯s because they truly sympathize with me, or if they¡¯re afraid I¡¯ll attempt to take my life again if they ostracize me. Ishouldtalk¡­ Lord knows I could use some motherly advice right about now.Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. But I¡¯m not ready. ¡°No. I¡¯m fine,¡± I murmur with a shake of my head. Her grip tightens as her palm moves up to my shoulder. ¡°Sweetheart, I know we did everything we could to avoid inpatient treatment after you were released from the hospital, but if you think that¡¯s what you need to help you through this, please let me know.¡± ¡°I don¡¯t need to be thrown in the loony bin, Mom. I¡¯m just trying to adjust.¡± I was grateful I wasn¡¯t transferred to an inpatient facility post-release. Since it was a first time offense with no history of mental disorder and no suicide note or indication of premeditation, I was allowed to go home. And I know I won¡¯t ever do something like that again¡ªas low and scary as things might get, Idowant to be alive. That night will forever be a stain on my memory. It will always be my biggest regret. ¡°Cora, there¡¯s no shame in needing help. That¡¯s what those services are there for. You¡¯ve suffered immense trauma over the past few months¡ªnot just the abduction and the overdose, but you werepregnant, sweetie. It¡¯s all so much¡­ so heavy.¡± I stiffen. I try not to think about the pregnancy. I bury it down, along with every other inconceivable blow I¡¯ve been dealt since November. I don¡¯t think about how it could have been Dean¡¯s. I don¡¯t think about how it could have beenhis. I want to be a mother more than anything one day, but not like that. No child deserves to be born out of the horrors of that basement. ¡°I told you, I¡¯m fine. I just need to get some rest,¡± I insist, escaping my mother¡¯s grasp and moving past her. ¡°Thank you for dinner.¡± ¡°Cora¡­¡± I shuffle through the loft and down the stairs, grabbing my coat and keys. ¡°Goodnight,¡± I shout, disappearing out the front door. When I pull out of the driveway and head towards the main intersection, I hesitate before I choose a turnne. My heart starts to thump with nervous beats as I contemtenotgoing home. The sun has set and darkness is hovering, disguising what I know is wrong. I don¡¯t think too hard and swerve to the left, heading to the opposite end of town. For the second night in a row, I¡¯m walking up his cement sidewalk, unable to stay away. Only, this time he¡¯s sitting on the front stoop smoking a cigarette. I halt my steps when our eyes meet and he blows a plume of smoke up towards the stars. ¡°You¡¯re smoking again,¡± I note softly, stuffing my hands into my coat pockets. His jaw sets as he takes a long drag, the embers flickering to life. Thest time I saw him smoke was in his Camaro that night, right before Earl shattered my window. And my soul. ¡°I need something to take the edge off.¡± I duck my head, pressing my lips together. ¡°Am I the edge?¡± Dean stares right at me as puffs of smoke trail from his nostrils, then he kicks at a loose stone. ¡°Yeah, Cora. You¡¯re the edge.¡± He watches carefully as I take a few slow steps towards him. ¡°Why are you here?¡± I was really hoping he wouldn¡¯t ask me that question. I offer a shrug in response. He blinks through another drag. ¡°What the fuck does that mean?¡± ¡°Can we go inside?¡± ¡°No. I¡¯m smoking.¡± I quell my defenses and continue to approach him on the stoop. I perch myself between his legs, pushing his knees apart and reaching for his cigarette. I pluck the rolled paper from his loose grip, recing it with my lips. Dean melts into me for one brief, exquisite moment, before pulling back and standing to his feet. ¡°I can¡¯t¡­ it¡¯s gettingte. You should go home.¡± He turns to head inside, not expecting me to follow, but I do. I stomp out the cigarette and trail him through the entryway, closing the door behind us. ¡°I missed you.¡± This seems to trigger something in him and he whirls around, storming over to me frozen in the doorway. ¡°Bullshit. You¡¯re here to scratch an itch.¡± I jerk back, thrown by that assumption. ¡°You know that¡¯s not true.¡± ¡°We both know thatistrue, otherwise you wouldn¡¯t have skipped out on me this morning. You wouldn¡¯t have ignored my texts all day. You wouldn¡¯t have declined my invitation to talk.¡± Dean tosses his arms in the air with aggravation. ¡°I won¡¯t be your dirty, little secret, Cora. I won¡¯t be your fuck toy or your goddamn escape.¡± Hurt sparks inside me, prickling my skin, but I shove it back down. I unbutton my peacoat and let it fall off my arms as I step out of my boots. I approach him standing there in the middle of his living room, hands set loosely on his hips, chest expanding and deting with each arduous breath. When I¡¯m only a foot away, I tug my blouse up and over my head. His jaw ticks as he watches, his eyes casing me, darkening and curious. I reach behind my back and unsp my bra, letting it slip to the floor, my eyes still hooked on his. His nostrils re and his fingers dig into his hip bones, but he doesn¡¯t drop his gaze. ¡°Stop.¡± ¡°You don¡¯t want me?¡± I¡¯m ying with fire, but the mes are the only thing keeping me warm. Dean sucks in a deep breath. ¡°I want all of you, Corabelle.¡± I close the gap between us, grasping his hands in mine and cing them over my breasts. I release a tiny moan when his thumbs graze my nipples. ¡°I¡¯m right here.¡± ¡°No.¡± The wordes out forced, almost painful. His right hand slides up my chest until it¡¯s directly over my heart. ¡°I wantallof you.¡± I want that, too. I want dinner dates and movie nights and homemade breakfasts after long, magical nights of lovemaking. I want to hold hands in public. I want to go on road trips, see the ocean, andugh until our bellies ache. But he¡¯s Dean. And I¡¯m Cora. And we are not meant for any of those things. I drag his hand back down until he¡¯s cupping my breast. I arch against him, my head tipping back as our groins touch together and he starts to palm my breasts, his desire taking over. ¡°Please.¡± This puts him over the edge and he growls out, ¡°Fucking hell.¡± His arms link underneath my thighs and he hoists me up, my legs curling around his waist. He carries me to his bedroom, our mouths locking together, our bodies ready to go, but our hearts desperate for so much more. This is enough. This is okay. I tell myself this as Dean fucks me doggie-style on his bed, pulling my hair, nicking my skin with his teeth, and whispering dirty words into my ear. If I can¡¯t have all of him, I¡¯ll settle for some of him. : Part 3 – Chapter 28 ¡°Miss Lawson?¡± I straighten out my pencil skirt and turn from the white board, discovering far too many eyes on me. Questioning eyes. Curious eyes. Some worried, some fascinated. I give a tug to my ponytail and force a smile. ¡°Yes, Jenna?¡± It¡¯s my first day back in the ssroom.Again. First it was an abduction, then it was a suicide attempt. If my students learn anything from me, I hope it¡¯s some valuable life lessons¡ªthat, and the greatness that is Gatsby. ¡°You¡¯re bleeding.¡± I suck in a breath and nce down at myself. My white button-down blouse is dappled with red droplets. My eyes shift to my wrist, where I notice blood is dripping out from beneath my bandage. I didn¡¯t even realize I was scratching it. I clear my throat, flustered and embarrassed, as I reach for a tissue on my desk. ¡°Goodness, I didn¡¯t even realize. Thank you, Jenna.¡± I excuse myself for a moment to clean up, the whispers and chatter lingering in my ears long after I¡¯ve walked out of the ssroom. I lock myself in a bathroom stall to collect my bearings, pressing my palms against the door and leaning forward, taking in deep, steady breaths. My gaze drifts to the blood stains seeped into the white fabric of my blouse, branding me with a sinister reminder of my pain. Itughs and mocks me, telling me this will never be over. Deep breath. Deep breath. Before my tears break through, the bathroom door creaks open and two fellow teachers march inside, gossiping amongst themselves. I go still when my name escapes their lips. ¡°¡­feel sorry for her. It¡¯s got to be tough getting back to normal after something like that.¡± ¡°Suicide, though? I mean, really. Way topletely botch up your second chance at life. I can¡¯t imagine surviving something like that and then trying to throw it all away.¡± I watch through the stall crack, clutching my ne in a mmy fist as the two women fluff their hair in the mirror and reapply lipstick. ¡°You¡¯re being way too harsh. I can¡¯t imagine surviving something like that,period. I have no idea how I would cope.¡± ¡°With alcohol and ice cream like normal people? Besides, Maryann heard from Kara that it wasn¡¯t even about the kidnapping. She started banging her sister¡¯s husband, the guy who was trapped with her, and the sister found out. She went psycho and OD¡¯d.¡± ¡°Whoa. Seriously?¡± ¡°That¡¯s what I heard.¡± ¡°Shit¡­ Cora doesn¡¯t seem like the type. She¡¯s so sweet.¡± ¡°Well, you heard about her liaison with Troy Adilman years back. The girl gets around.¡± The women share augh, and I think I might get sick. ¡°I don¡¯t me her, really. That guy Dean isdelicious. I totally creeped his Facebook page. Honestly, I wouldn¡¯t say no to being chained up with him for three weeks¡­¡± The conversation fades out as the teachers retreat from the bathroom, leaving me heaving into the toilet bowl. My ne remains in my hand, tears streaking down my cheeks, and I tell myself over and over,¡°I¡¯m okay. It¡¯s still beating. I¡¯m okay.¡± I didn¡¯t n this. Call it insanity, call it some kind of twisted closure¡ªregardless, it wasn¡¯t nned. I park my car along the side of Hawthorne Lane, an older subdivision with no sidewalks and an abundance of leafless trees. My boots crunch against the thinyer of snow turned icy from the colder temperatures. I wrap my scarf around my neck as I saunter up the walkway, my nerves the only thing warming me up. When I reach the front door, my hand stops mid-air before my knuckles reach the metal screen. There¡¯s still a Christmas wreath mounted, proudly disyed, even though it¡¯s the end of February. She is still holding onto something cheerful, long after it has passed. My eyes close tight and I grit my teeth together, my arm falling to my side. I can¡¯t do this. But before I can make a quick escape, the door pulls open, revealing a beautiful, young woman with long hair made of obsidian silk. Her skin is as white as the snow beneath my boots, and her chocte eyes sh with something akin to recognition, despite having never met her before. And then I see somethingelsein those eyes¡ªsomething I am all too familiar with. Something haunting, raw, and painful¡­ something that tethers and binds us like blood. I know right then that her story is true and guilt eats away at me for even doubting it. ¡°I had a feeling you would find me. Come in.¡± My lips part to speak, but only my breath escapes me, hitting the frosty air like a puff of smoke. I nod my head and step through the threshold as she holds open the screen door. ¡°I¡¯m so sorry to drop by unannounced. I wasn¡¯t sure how to contact you. My name is¡ª¡± ¡°Cora Lawson. I know.¡± Tabitha offers a small smile, closing the door behind us. We share a poignant look, a knowing look, and she guides me to a brown loveseat in the main living area. ¡°Sit down. I¡¯m sure you have questions.¡± I pluck my mittens off, one by one, then slide the beanie from my head as my hair spazzes out. I smooth it down and take a seat. ¡°I¡¯m really sorry. This is probably so inappropriate.¡± ¡°Nothing is too out there for me,¡± she says, her smile still lingering. Tabitha sits across from me in a rocking chair. ¡°I thought about reaching out to you, but I know your wounds are a lot fresher than mine. I didn¡¯t want to hinder your healing process.¡± I pucker my lips, feeling like a jerk. I had no problem showing up on her doorstep, barging into her life, hindering away.Oof. Tabitha catches my eyes, her head tilting slightly. ¡°Don¡¯t feel bad, Cora. Maybe it will be good for us to talk through it. Therapeutic, you know?¡± She wrings her hands together in herp, releasing a sigh. ¡°No one really understands what we went through.¡± I study her with a nod. Gosh, she¡¯s pretty¡ªlike a porcin doll or Snow White¡­ if Snow White had eyes like pain. A thousand questions swim through my brain, but I bite my lip and ask first, ¡°Did you fall in love with Matthew?¡± Tabitha¡¯s almond eyes widen and gloss over, startled by my initial question. ¡°Oh, um¡­¡± She heaves in a jagged breath and bobs her head, averting her gaze. ¡°Yes. Very much so.¡± Oh, God. I want to start crying and I¡¯m only one question in. ¡°I¡¯m so sorry.¡± ¡°Me, too,¡± she whispers softly, her own eyes tearing up. ¡°Matthew was my rock the whole time. He gave me hope. He made me feel safe. He was truly my¡­¡± We say the word at the same time: ¡°Lifeline.¡± Our eyes meet, hollow and bereaved. Tabitha pulls her lips between her teeth, taking a moment to regroup before she faces me again. ¡°This is going to sound awful, Cora, so please forgive me, but¡­ when your story broke, I was incredibly jealous of you.¡± ¡°You were?¡± ¡°Yes. Youbothmade it out. Together.¡± Tabitha pushes her hair behind her ear and nces just over my shoulder. ¡°I saw that picture of you holding hands. It looked like the end of something terrible, but the start of something beautiful.¡± I don¡¯t even realize tears are sliding down my cheeks as I shake my head back and forth. ¡°He¡¯s my sister¡¯s fianc¨¦¡ªorwas, at the time. There¡¯s nothing beautiful about that.¡± I inhale a painful breath. ¡°It¡¯s been a nightmare.¡± ¡°I would give anything to live in your nightmare. Mine is very lonely.¡± She dips her chin, her emotions climbing. ¡°I can still hear him whispering¡®I love you¡¯over and over as he bled out on the cement, chained to that pole. I waspletely helpless to save him.¡± No. I rise from the sofa with a strained gasp. ¡°I-I don¡¯t think I can hear this.¡±Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. ¡°I¡¯m just trying to show you how itcouldbe. You¡¯re truly blessed, Cora. You both survived.¡± I feel queasy and lightheaded, and all I want to do is throw my arms around Dean and hold him tight. I imaginehimlying on that basement floor, his life slipping away. It¡¯s too much. I try to reroute my thoughts and center myself. ¡°Did¡­ did you have feelings for each other prior to the abduction?¡± Tabitha watches as I sit back down. ¡°Not really. I mean, he was my teacher and he was gorgeous. He wore these ck-rimmed sses during our lessons that made him look like rk Kent. All the girls swooned over him.¡± She smiles wistfully, reying memories in her mind. ¡°We shared a few stolen nces here and there. There was a connection. A chemistry, you know? But he was off-limits. He was walking me to my car one night after I stayedte working on an assignment, and that¡¯s when¡­¡± She goes quiet and I close my eyes. ¡°How did you get out?¡± Tabitha wraps her arms around herself, hugging tight. ¡°Earl developed feelings for me. He couldn¡¯t kill me.¡± ¡°God¡­ I never got that impression from him. He seemed entirely void of feelings.¡± ¡°I thought so, too, but I worked hard to establish a connection with him. I pretended to enjoy it when he would¡­¡± She clenches her jaw. ¡°Well, you know. I developed a rapport with him. I manipted his emotions¡ªwhat little he had, anyway. He told me I was his favorite pet.¡± My stomach twists with nausea. ¡°Why didn¡¯t youe forward sooner?¡± She fiddles with the gold fringes on her long-sleeved tunic, a silence settling between us for a few beats. ¡°I did. I tried.¡± ¡°What? They didn¡¯t believe you?¡± Tabitha leans back in the chair, rocking it with her feet. ¡°Earl never told us his name, so I had nothing to go on. I had no idea where I was¡ªhe knocked me out and dropped me on the side of the road thirty miles away. I gave my story to detectives and did aposite sketch, but they didn¡¯t have any leads. The only thing I had was that basement.¡± I lower my head, nodding, feeling awful for branding her a liar and a fraud before I even knew her story. I think back to those two teachers in the bathroom, women I¡¯d formed a friendship with over thest few years, passing misinformed judgements over me. Belittling my trauma to fit into their petty gossip train. I look up at Tabitha, finding her zoned out as she stares at her colorful area rug. ¡°You¡¯re very brave,¡± I tell her gently, waiting for her eyes to lift to mine. ¡°I couldn¡¯t go through this alone.¡± Tabitha slips a faint smile, then nods her head over my shoulder to the corner of the room. ¡°I¡¯m not entirely alone.¡± A frown pinches my brow and I twist around, gasping out loud when I catch sight of a baby swing. A tiny infant lies perfectly asleep, quiet and still, bundled up in a pink teddy bear nket. I swipe away tears with my fingertips, my chest burning with both joy and anguish. ¡°Is she¡­?¡± ¡°She¡¯s Matthew¡¯s,¡± Tabitha confirms. ¡°Matthew told me he¡¯d always be with me, no matter what. He was telling the truth.¡± Her watery smile blooms as she admires her daughter. ¡°Her name is Hope.¡± I crumble. My face copses into my palms, my tears leaking through my fingers. I shake and sob without breaking for air, not even when I feel Tabitha slide up beside me on the loveseat and wrap her arms around my shoulders. I cry for this brave woman, raising her lover¡¯s baby alone. I cry for Matthew who never got to meet her. I cry for little Hope, a product of something so horrible, yet so tragically beautiful. And I cry for my own baby who never came to be. Tabitha fingers my locket as I harness my breaths and wipe my face with the back of my hand. I nce down at her careful touch as she pops open the heart. ¡°Still beating,¡± she voices, her tone somewhat whimsical. I sniffle with a smile. ¡°Dean got it for me for Christmas. He would tell me that as long as my heart is still beating, I¡¯m okay. It¡¯s a reminder when things get hard.¡± ¡°Wow,¡± Tabitha beams, grazing her finger over the engraved letters. ¡°What an amazing gift.¡± My sights shift to the little bundle on my left. ¡°We both have some pretty amazing gifts.¡± We spend the next hour sharing stories¡ªsome heartbreaking, some sweet. I have made a friend in this young woman, so strong and brave. A vision of healing and perseverance. A kindred soul. We exchange phone numbers and promise to keep in touch, and it¡¯s a promise I intend to keep. As she walks me to the door and we say our goodbyes, Tabitha calls after me. ¡°Hey, Cora. Can you give Dean a message for me?¡± I turn to face her on the snowy pathway. ¡°Sure. What is it?¡± ¡°Tell him I say thank you for pulverizing that evil son-of-a-bitch.¡± We lock eyes, and I can¡¯t help but smile. : Part 3 – Chapter 29 Avoidance has bemy new favorite word. Parents want to see me? Avoid. Lily wants to go out for drinks? Avoid. Mandy posts ambiguous memes about broken trust and betrayal all over Facebook? Avoid. Dean wants to talk? Well¡­ Nope. Utterly avoid. It¡¯s Friday night and there¡¯s a knock at my front door. I¡¯m wondering which one of my avoidances has had enough of my shit and ising over to smack me. The dogs follow me to the door as I peer out through the small, square window to see Lily with her heart hands pressed up against the ss. She blows into her palms, leaving behind a fog-shaped heart. I pull the door open, nning to look irritated, but my smile betrays me. ¡°I thought you were going to a party tonight.¡± ¡°I am.¡± Lily reaches for the bag resting near her feet and holds it up proudly. ¡°You¡¯re the party, Cora. I¡¯ve got cheap Aldi wine that will give you such a bad headache, everything else in your life will seem like a magical fairytale, consisting of Henry Cavill riding on a unicorn naked through fields of endless cookie dough ice cream and orgasmic bliss.¡± I blink. ¡°The unicorn is naked? That¡¯s awkward.¡± ¡°No, dumbass.¡± ¡°Okay, well, you should have worded it like, ¡®a naked Henry Cavill riding a unicorn¡¯.¡± Lily swings her head back and forth as she pushes through the entryway with her migraine bag. ¡°Dude. Don¡¯t English teacher me.¡± ¡°I mean, that whole mental image sounds very unsettling if I¡¯m being honest¡­¡± She smacks me with the bag, slipping off her boots. ¡°I also brought microwavable popcorn and a box of Kleenex for when we inevitably give into our wine emotions.¡± I watch as Lily traipses through my living room to the kitchen, setting the bag down on the table and pulling out wine bottles. I can¡¯t help but soften at the gesture, secretly grateful for thepany. Avoidance has the unpleasant side effect of extreme loneliness.Shocking. After three sses of wine and two episodes ofDead to Me, Lily turns to me on the couch and gives me her gossip eyes. I nce at her, then quickly avert my attention back to the television, tossing a handful of popcorn into my mouth. ¡°Stop looking at me like that.¡± ¡°Like what?¡± ¡°Like you¡¯re ripping secrets right out of my soul.¡± Lily pulls her feet up onto the couch, still staring at me. ¡°So, you¡¯re saying you have secrets.¡± ¡°No.¡± ¡°Liar. Tell me what¡¯s going on with Dean.¡± I shovel more popcorn into my mouth. Avoid. I try to distract myself with the show, but James Marsden kind of resembles Dean with the hair and the gorgeous blue eyes, and dammit, Lily is still staring at me. ¡°No. Go away.¡± ¡°Fine. But I¡¯m taking the wine with me.¡± ¡°Fine.¡± She groans in protest, nudging my knee with her toes. ¡°I¡¯m not taking the wine. I wouldn¡¯t do that to you. And I¡¯m too invested in the show to leave right now, but still¡ªtell me.¡± Avoid. ¡°Cora, I swear to God¡­¡± ¡°Okay, whatever, fine.¡± My cheeks start to warm as thoughts of Dean poke through my armor. ¡°What do you want to know?¡± ¡°Um, did yound feet first in the boneyard?¡± I spit out my wine. ¡°I have no idea what that means, but it sounds depraved.¡± ¡°Are you doing the mattress mambo?¡± ¡°Just stop.¡± ¡°Is he throwing the hotdog down?¡± ¡°I literally hate you.¡± Lily breaks out into a fit of wine giggles, tipping over, her head colliding with my shoulder. ¡°Don¡¯t be such a prude,¡± she teases, smacking me with her free hand. I let a grin slide across my face, my eyes drifting to my friend. ¡°I wouldn¡¯t say I¡¯m a prude¡­¡± ¡°Okay,nowwe¡¯re getting somewhere.¡± Lily sits up expectantly, fully facing me. ¡°You are, aren¡¯t you? Holy shit, Cora. You and Dean? Holy shit.¡± ¡°You said that twice.¡± ¡°I¡¯ll say it again:holy shit.¡± She bounces up and down like we¡¯re two teenagers swapping our first kiss experiences. ¡°You know I need all the gory details, starting with penis size. Go.¡± I just can¡¯t with her. I shake my head through a sigh, riddled with giddy nerves. ¡°It¡¯s a mess, Lily.¡± I duck my head, stretching a smile. ¡°Ahotmess.¡± ¡°Lord, it¡¯s probablyfire. All that built up sexual tension with life and death situations thrown into the mix?¡± She releases a slow breath, fanning herself dramatically. ¡°So, are you guys together? Like, official?¡± Cue the ice water. ¡°No.No. Of course not¡­ it¡¯s just sex.¡± ¡°How can itjustbe sex after all you went through together? There¡¯s no feelings?¡± Oh, there¡¯s feelings. A crap ton of feelings. In fact, those feelings are climbing up my chest right now, lodging in my throat. ¡°It¡¯s¡­ reallyplicated. There¡¯s definitely feelings, but there¡¯s nothing I can do about them. I¡¯m sort of keeping him at arm¡¯s length.¡± Lily squints her eyes at me, as if she¡¯s trying to read between the lines. ¡°So, you just bang and bolt?¡± ¡°Your vocabry concerns me,¡± I joke, avoiding the question. Avoid, avoid, avoid. But it¡¯s kind of hard to avoid someone sitting a foot away, staring you down in Taylor Swift socks. ¡°I guess that¡¯s one way to put it,¡± I relent. ¡°I basically show up on his doorstep a few times a week and we have crazy, amazing, rough sex. Then I skip out before sunrise and avoid him until the next time. In the beginning, he would try talking about it, but I think he¡¯s just epting our fate at this point.¡± I worry my lip between my teeth, sounding like a giant hooker when I word it like that. I¡¯m far from slutty¡ªnot that there would be anything wrong with that, really. I enjoy sex, but I¡¯ve only been with three guys prior to Dean. Two of them were serious rtionships with men who cheated on me, and then there was Troy Adilman, who was just kind of a drunken, weird, virginity-losing one-night stand. And Dean¡­ well, he¡¯s in his own category. Lily¡¯s eyes are getting extra squinty, which means she¡¯s still trying to read meandtrying to conjure up some kind of best friend advice that will probably be terrible. ¡°That sounds equally hot and depressing,¡± she says after a few minutes of consideration. ¡°Does Mandy know?¡± My stomach pitches at the sound of Mandy¡¯s name, sending waves of nausea right through me. ¡°She knows we had sex, but not that we¡¯restillhaving sex. I haven¡¯t even spoken to her since the hospital. I¡­ don¡¯t really know what to say.¡± ¡°What about your parents? Who¡¯s side are they on?¡± I shift ufortably on the couch. ¡°They im to be Team Both Daughters, which I¡¯m sure is code for Team Mandy But Can¡¯t Tell Cora. I¡¯ve only seen them once over thest few weeks and it was an awkward dinner without much conversation.¡± ¡°You¡¯ve always thought your parents loved Mandy more than you, but I¡¯ve never gotten that impression and I¡¯ve known you a hell of a long time. They probablyareon both of your sides.¡± I try to squash the bitterness that tickles me. ¡°Mandy can do no wrong in their eyes. She was the perfect prom queen with the perfect high school sweetheart, and I¡¯ve always been the stubborn, nerdy kid who refuses to conform. Mandy always got thevish birthday parties and the over-the-top praise: ¡®Congrattions! Mandy learned to tie her shoes even though she¡¯s nine. Oh, my God! Mandy got a B minus on her final exam. Wow! Mandy got her driver¡¯s permit and only crashed once, and it was just a little crash¡¯.¡± I pause to catch my breath, my resentment bubbling to the surface. ¡°All I ever got was a pat on the back. Now, I¡¯m the stain on the family¡ªthe daughter who gets kidnapped by a psychopath, the daughter who sleeps with her sister¡¯s ex, and the daughter who overdoses on sleeping pills.¡± Lily cowers away, holding up her hands. ¡°Touched a nerve. Got it.¡± ¡°Sorry.¡± I cringe at my oversharing rant. ¡°It¡¯s the wine talking.¡± She holds up the Kleenex box. ¡°That¡¯s why I brought these,¡± she quips. ¡°And for the record, literally your only w has ever been liking N*SYNC over Backstreet Boys. Otherwise, you¡¯re pretty perfect.¡± We share a smile, thepliment washing away all of my inner turmoil for the time being. Before I can reply, my phone starts vibrating in my pocket. It¡¯s a text from Dean. Dean:I miss you. Lily yanks my phone away and reads the message, swooning instantly. ¡°Dear God, that¡¯s adorable. Guys only text me when they miss my vagina.¡± ¡°I¡¯m sure that¡¯s what he¡¯s implying,¡± I shrug. ¡°It¡¯s not.¡± Lily starts texting back a reply and I panic, lunging for the phone. ¡°Absolutely not. Give it back.¡± She dives from the couchughing, her thumbs frantically swiping over the keyboard. I chase her around the living room and almost tackle her like a linebacker. ¡°Okay, okay. Don¡¯t be such a psycho. Here.¡± Lily tosses me the phone and I check for damage. Lily:I need your baloney pony. ¡°Lily! Damn you!¡± I curse, ring at the message, then watching as my friend doubles over withughter. ¡°I hate youso much.¡± A zinges through and I force myself to open the message. Dean:Hi Lily My head is shaking back and forth, embarrassed by her immaturity, as I text my own reply. Me:Sorry. She¡¯s awful. Dean:It was kind of funny Me:No Ugh. I toss my phone onto the sofa cushions as Lilyes down from herugh attack. ¡°How are you the worstandthe best at the same time?¡± I ponder, plopping back down with a huff. Lily shrugs, joining me. ¡°One of my many talents, along with singing the alphabet backwards and gardening.¡± I try to return my attention to the TV show that we¡¯ve beenpletely missing when Lily¡¯s elbow pokes me in the ribs. ¡°Ouch. What?¡± ¡°Well?¡± I stare at her, unblinking. ¡°Are you going to invite him over?¡± I scoff, returning my focus to the screen. ¡°No. It¡¯s a bad idea.¡± ¡°So is drinking Aldi wine, but we do it anyway.¡± ¡°One bad decision is enough for me tonight.¡± Lily lets out a sigh but doesn¡¯t push the matter, curling up with one of my throw pillows and whispering, ¡°If you say so.¡± An hourter, Dean has me bent over the kitchen table, pounding into me from behind as my fingernails scratch along the wood. He tugs my hair back, twisting my face to his, and I chant his name against his lips¡ªI know it drives him wild. He snakes his hand around my middle, sliding it down my stomach until it reaches its destination between my legs. With my sweatpants around my ankles, I arch into his touch, moaning when his fingers find my clit. ¡°Oh, God¡­¡± Dean works me into a frenzy, trailing his lips from mine and attacking my throat with his tongue. ¡°You¡¯re always so wet. I fucking love it.¡± I gasp out loud, already edging towards release as I press myself against the table. Dean sweeps his fingers up the nape of my neck, collecting my long hair between them and squeezing his fist, ramming into me harder, while still fingering me with his other hand. Holy, holy, holy crap. This shouldn¡¯t feel this good. Why does this feel so good? ¡°Come for me, Cora,¡± he demands, leaning forward on top of me, his chest to my back, thrusting his hips with impossible intensity. I shatter. I dig my nails into the kitchen table, surely leaving marks, as my body convulses around him, a cry escaping my lips. Dean whispers against my ear as Ie down, brushing my hair aside and slowing his pace, ¡°That¡¯s my girl.¡± I¡¯m hardly recovered when he pulls out of me and spins me around, lifting me onto the table and settling between my legs. He kisses me as he pushes back inside, hands nted on either side of me as I link my ankles behind his back. His thrusts are slow and even, and I already feel the pressure building again when he breaks the kiss to hold my eyes. God, his eyes. They will be my undoing. I look away, the feelings swirling inside me proving too much. Too intimate, too powerful, tooreal. This can¡¯t be more than sex. Dean pinches my chin between his thumb and finger, gently turning my face back towards him. ¡°Why can¡¯t you look at me, Cora?¡± He¡¯s still moving inside me, but not as hard. Not as fast. His strokes arenguid and deliberate, almost like he¡¯s trying to tell me something. But thest thing I want to do is talk about our feelings when he¡¯s balls deep inside of me, so I sp his face between my palms and crash our mouths back together. I push my tongue between his lips and he lets me in, his hips moving quicker when our tongues begin to dance. I¡¯m an arrow to his heart¡ªa dagger to his defenses. He knows what I¡¯m willing to give and he takes every piece, every breath, every idental crumb. And then we¡¯re grinding against each other, nails scratching, tongues vicious and angry, bodies full of raw desperation. I open my mouth to speak, suddenly craving more. I¡¯ll never know if it was the goddamn wine, or maybe I¡¯m just irrevocably fractured, but three words spill from my mouth that make Dean go still: ¡°Tie me up.¡± He looks at me, a light sheen of sweat casing his brow, his blue eyes wide and troubled. He halts all movement, and even his breathing goes shallow. I stare up at him, wishing I could swallow those words back down. He detes then, like a child¡¯s balloon or a wounded animal. Like I stole something precious right out of his hands. Dean pulls out of me and drops his forehead to mine as I sit there in silence, my legs still wrapped around him. ¡°Fuck,¡± he mutters, but not out of anger¡ªnot out of spite. It sounds like hopelessness. He untangles himself from me and steps back, tugging his jeans up over his hips. Heat mes my cheeks as I rest propped up on my elbows, spread eagle and exposed. I feel like he can see right through me, right into my tormented center, where my guts and ghosts and darkest parts are utterly vulnerable. I snap myself into action and slip down from the table, pulling up my sweatpants without meeting his eyes. ¡°What the hell, Cora?¡± I spare Dean the tiniest nce as I smooth out my hair. He¡¯s facing me, fingers perched on his hips, his gaze riddled with heedful regard. ¡°It was nothing. Forget it.¡± I storm past him, making my way to the bedroom. ¡°I assume we¡¯re done here, so feel free to let yourself out.¡± He¡¯s hot on my heels. ¡°No. We need to talk about this.¡± ¡°There¡¯s nothing to talk about.¡±Copyright by N?v/elDrama.Org. ¡°Are you kidding me?¡± He grabs my wrist, spinning me around as we enter the bedroom. His tone turns sober, his shoulders dropping. ¡°This isn¡¯t okay.¡± ¡°Then, go. I¡¯m not keeping you here.¡± Dean¡¯s jaw clenches as he tries to hold back his frustration. ¡°I thought I could do this. I thought I could live with whatever the fuck this is, whatever scraps you were willing to give me¡­ but this iskillingme. It¡¯s killing both of us.¡± I repeat my statement slower, putting emphasis on each word. ¡°Then, go.¡± ¡°Is that what you want?¡± His hands rise, resting on my shoulders, and his breath catches. ¡°Because when I walk out that door, I¡¯m noting back.¡± His words do something to my heart. They wrap around the bleeding organ, squeezing the life out of it. ¡°I can¡¯t have what I want,¡± I say, my voice weak and frayed. Dean lets out a breath, dipping his chin. ¡°This isn¡¯t healthy, Corabelle. We can¡¯t thrive like this. We can¡¯theallike this. You told me in your car that night at The Oar that I was holding you underwater, that you couldn¡¯t breathe, and I made myself believe it wasn¡¯t true¡ªI wanted to believe that weneededeach other. That we had to cling and fight and w our way out of this together.¡± He shakes his head with surrender in his eyes. ¡°But you were right. We¡¯re drowning here¡­ and I¡¯m gonna fuckin¡¯ lose you if we don¡¯te up for air.¡± My emotions start to soar like waves crashing down, drenching me in bitter truths. ¡°I don¡¯t want to lose you, but I don¡¯t know how to keep you.¡± My tears fall fast,nding on my lips, tasting like the salty sea. ¡°I¡¯m just sinking.¡± ¡°That¡¯s why we have to stop, Cora.¡± Dean tightens his grip on my shoulders and the pain is evident in his eyes. ¡°I need you healthy. I need you put back together, smiling and alive and glowing. I think you¡¯re still living in that basement, and as long as you¡¯re tied to me, you¡¯re tied toit. You need to get the hell out of there. You need to be free.¡± I¡¯m shaking my head, my face a mask of heartache. ¡°I can¡¯t let go of you.¡± ¡°Then letmelet go ofyou.¡± ¡°No. Dean¡­ please.¡± I reach for his shirt, clutching the fabric in my fists. Holding on for dear life. ¡°You said we could start over. Maybe we just need a few days to think and regroup, and then¡­¡± ¡°It¡¯s toote.¡± He kisses my forehead, inhaling deep. ¡°It¡¯s toote to start over.¡± I lift my chin, finding his lips and pressing a kiss to his mouth. ¡°But I¡­¡± I trail off. I drift away, choking on the words. Dean frames my face with his hands, kissing me again, light and tender. ¡°You what?¡± He pulls away to search my eyes, smoothing back my hair. ¡°I love you.¡± I think both of our hearts skip a beat¡ªthesamebeat. And I feel like that must mean something. Dean¡¯s eyes slowly close, as if he¡¯s absorbing those words, reying them over and over in his mind. Carving them into the deepestyer of his soul. ¡°Shit,¡± he mutters quietly. ¡°You¡¯re making this so damn hard.¡± I inch up on my tiptoes to capture another kiss, only this one is brimming and burning with everything that¡¯s in my heart. Passion, possessiveness, love, desire,need. I can taste his hesitation as he goes to battle with himself. Right and wrong. Yes and no. Stay or walk. Dean envelopes me in a fierce hold, his arms wrapping around me and pulling me to him, our mouths feasting and yearning. His tongue kisses mine, and for a moment, we are lost. We¡¯re okay. We¡¯re still swimming. But he jerks back with a heaving chest, scrubbing both hands down his face as he retreats. ¡°Goddammit. I need to go, Cora. I need to fuckin¡¯ think about this.¡± I step forward. He steps back. ¡°Dean¡­¡± ¡°I have to think. I¡¯m sorry.¡± I lower my eyes, forcing back an ugly meltdown. I fold my hands together, my knee bobbing with anxiety. ¡°Fine. Just go.¡± ¡°Cora, don¡¯t make this harder. I¡¯m trying to do the right thing here.¡± ¡°Go,¡± Everythinges bubbling to the surface¡ªrage, disbelief, sorrow, rejection. I confess my love and he still wants to walk away. I feel shredded. Dismantled. ¡°Go, go, go! Just get out.¡± I try to avert my gaze, try to keep my eyes off his, but I can¡¯t help myself. I nce up as Dean takes two steps backwards. His head is swaying side to side, his features pinched with conflict, and I swear I see tears rimming his eyes. But he keeps backing up. He keeps going. He keeps walking away. And when the front door closes shut, I break down. Dean said we needed toe up for air, but I don¡¯t understand. It doesn¡¯t make sense. He¡¯s gone¡­ and I can¡¯t breathe. : Part 3 – Chapter 30 The ensuing week is a blur.I put my brain in autopilot mode to get through work without a breakdown, pping an overly forced smile onto my face. My students are restless and distracted with Spring Break quickly approaching, which works in my favor, because I don¡¯t think they notice the dark circles under my eyes and my hands that are constantly shaking. I make my way through the school parking lot that following Friday afternoon, releasing a long breath when I hop inside my car. My fingers clench around the steering wheel as the tension I¡¯ve been holding onto all day¡ªthefa?ade¡ªbegins to dissolve. It¡¯s just me and my emotional demons now. But we are interrupted when my phone lights up with a new text message. I¡¯m taken aback when I see Mandy¡¯s name. Mandy:Meet me at the ice cream shop @ 4:30 My brows furrow, my knees starting to tremble as I sit and stare at the screen. I nce at the time, noting it¡¯s already quarter after four, then turn the car on and head into town. I spot my sister¡¯s Kia Soul parallel parked in front of the familiar building, so I pull into the space behind it. I haven¡¯t spoken to Mandy in over a month. She¡¯s refused dinner invitations from our parents, and has ignored the few texts I¡¯ve sent her since my hospital release. I don¡¯t me her. Not at all. Which is undoubtedly why I¡¯m terrified to face her right now. I inhale a breath of courage as I slide out of the driver¡¯s seat and make my way inside on shaky legs. The sun is shining warm and bright today, melting the lingering patches of sidewalk ice and offering a wee taste of spring. I can¡¯t help but hope for another change of season today. Mandy is sitting at a corner booth on her cell phone, her eyes lifting when the little bells on the door chime, alerting her of my presence. She stands to face me, then approaches the counter to order our ice cream cones¡ªthe birthday tradition we missed in November when I was busy being kidnapped and falling in love with her fianc¨¦. My throat tightens as we stand shoulder to shoulder and give the clerk our orders. We wait in silence while the treats are made, then handed to us over the counter. Like always, we take a quick bite¡ªhers, strawberry, and mine, cookie dough¡ªand head outside towards the nearby yground. We skip the secret handshake and the selfie in front of the building. Our go-to swings are vacant as usual, likely due to the melting ice chunks dampening the seats. We swipe our hands over the puddles and sit down, then I wait with nervous anticipation for what happens next. I want to say something to break this belly-churning silence, but words are being elusive, stuck inside me like bubble gum. I nce over at my sister who is swinging at a leisurely pace to my left. Her hair is in a perfectly coiffed bun on top of her head, her makeup impable. Her beauty has always taken my breath away. I never understood why she wanted to hide behind all the heavy foundation, loud colors, and fake eyshes. ¡°I cheated on him, you know.¡± I almost drop my ice cream cone. ¡°What?¡± ¡°Last summer at Allie¡¯s birthday party. Dean had the flu, so I went by myself. I had too much to drink, and¡­¡± She licks her hand as melted ice cream drips between her thumb and finger. ¡°It was a huge mistake. I felt like shit. I betrayed a person I truly loved, all because of stupid insecurities¡ªbecause of this desire to feel wanted and appreciated, even though I already was. I don¡¯t know why it wasn¡¯t enough¡­ I don¡¯t know whyhewasn¡¯t enough.¡± I¡¯m staring at her, my mouth open wide as ice cream spills onto myp. I¡¯m stunned by her confession. I don¡¯t know what to say. ¡°I feel like all of this is karma smacking me in the face. And part of me knew, deep down, I had sealed our fate with that one, stupid decision, even though Dean never found out about it. I just¡­ I never thought it would beyou.¡± Mandy looks over at me, her eyes glossed over and spearing me with both guilt and disappointment. ¡°You¡¯ve always been the strong one. The lucky one. Thegoodone. Everything you worked for, you got. Everything you put your mind to, you seeded. You had the smarts and the good grades, the quick wit and sense of humor, the respectable job, thehouse. You have your own house, Cor¡­ you¡¯re not even thirty and you¡¯re killing it. ¡°I had to take a GED just to pass high school. I¡¯m barely making ends meet at the hair salon. I¡¯ve lived in the same crappy, two-bedroom apartment since college.¡± ¡°Mandy¡­¡± ¡°All I had was Dean. He was my only trophy¡­ my only sess story.¡± She inhales a quick breath, then finishes, ¡°I couldn¡¯t handle the fact that you had him, too.¡± God. I¡¯m absolutely dumbfounded, sitting ck-jawed on the swing with ice cream dribbling down my arm. I have to look away before my emotions boil over. ¡°I-I never knew you felt like that. I¡¯ve always had theplete opposite perspective. I¡¯ve envied you my whole life¡ªyour beauty, your poprity, your bubbly personality. You always got your way. You were always celebrated and adored¡­ the center of attention. I¡¯ve just been hiding in your shadow.¡± An abruptugh escapes her. ¡°It¡¯s funny how different things look on the other side.¡± I¡¯m not sure how to respond to that, so I sit quietly and process it instead. This whole time, Mandy has been jealous ofme? The thought alone is preposterous. Mandy continues a few minutester after our truth bombs have sunk in. ¡°This isn¡¯t me forgiving you, Cor,¡± she says, biting her lip as she stares down at the patches of grass peeking through the meltingyer of snow. ¡°Not yet, anyway. I¡¯m not ready¡­ just like I¡¯m not ready to forgive myself for my own actions. But I can recognize the fact that we¡¯re all human and we all screw up. We all make big, messy, life-altering mistakes, and sometimes it¡¯s for selfish, superficial reasons like what I did¡­ and sometimes it¡¯s because the universe throws you a curveball, forcing you in a direction you never sawing. ¡°And while I can understand that, Cora, I really can, I just can¡¯t ept it yet. I can¡¯t handle the thought of family dinners with Dean at the table byyourside, holdingyourhand, kissingyourlips. I can¡¯t imagine holidays or social gatherings or double dates, orGod, bing an aunt when I thought I was about to be a mother.¡± Tears mix with ice cream as I close my eyes, sucking in a breath that singes my throat. Mandy¡¯s own tears leak out, streaking down her pink cheeks. ¡°But what Icanept is the fact that we weren¡¯t meant to be and what¡¯s done is done, regardless of how or why. Dean deserves to be happy, and if that¡¯s with you, I won¡¯t stand in the way. But I can¡¯t stand by your side either¡­ not now. Not yet. Not until my heart fully heals.¡± She raises her chin, ncing up at the cloudy sky, one hand holding her cone and the other gripping the swing. ¡°Maybe someday.¡± Maybe someday. I fiddle with the heart pendant around my neck with sticky fingers, swallowing hard, letting her words fill me up. Maybe someday sounds a lot like hope, and hope is all I have right now. It¡¯s seven P.M. and I¡¯m cuddled up on the couch watching HGTV with Penny in myp and Jude curled into a ball beside me. It¡¯s almost like I¡¯m expecting his text toe through as I reach for my phone at the same time it zings to life with a new message. Dean:Can we talk? We¡¯ve seen each other every Friday night for the past few weeks. Only, there hasn¡¯t been much talking involved. Me:Sure. I was thinking the same thing. Can I call you? Dean:I¡¯d rather talk in person. Oh. Well, maybe talking is code for sex, after all. Me:Okay. Dean:I¡¯ll be over soon I run into the bathroom to freshen up, taking my hair down, brushing my teeth, and spritzing a few pumps of perfume onto my neck. The dogs alert me of his arrival fifteen minutester, pawing at the door when he knocks. ¡°It¡¯s open,¡± I call out, applying a touch of lip gloss before joining him at the front of the house. Dean is crouched down in the entryway, scratching Jude¡¯s stomach like he always did with Blizzard. Penny is circling his leg, begging for attention that he quickly provides. I can¡¯t help but smile at the image. ¡°Hey.¡±N?vel(D)ra/ma.Org exclusive ? material. He nces up, his expression disguising whatever it is he may be thinking, then he rises to his feet. ¡°Hey.¡± Usually, this is the point where we pounce on each other, but since I actuallydowant to talk first, I¡¯m not sure how to proceed¡ªso, I just kind of stand there, awkwardly ying with my hair and tapping my bare foot against the wood floor. Dean takes the lead, letting out a sigh as he approaches me. ¡°Thanks for letting me stop by. There¡¯s some stuff I wanted to discuss with you.¡± ¡°Me, too¡­ I was actually going to text you about grabbing coffee this weekend. But this works.¡± Our eyes are holding tight, making me nervous. I gulp. ¡°Um, have a seat.¡± We make our way to the couch, Dean trailing behind me and sitting farther away from me than I¡¯d prefer. All I want to do is jump into his arms and kiss him senseless. We lock eyes again, both of us out of our element. Neither of us fully prepared to face the fallout fromst week. I lower my head and we both speak at the same time. ¡°So, I¡ª¡± ¡°I wanted to¡ª¡± Dean clears his throat. ¡°You go first.¡± I gather up my courage and nod, twisting on the couch so I¡¯m facing him, one leg pulled up in front of me. I curl my fingers around my ankle as my heart thumps wildly in my chest. Just be honest. Tell him what you want. Don¡¯t hold back. ¡°I, um, just wanted to say how sorry I am for dragging you down into my dark hole for the past few weeks. Hiding you in the shadows. Keeping you at a distance. Letting you in, then pulling away. It wasn¡¯t fair because I know you wanted more¡­ I¡¯ve just been so ashamed, so confused, and I haven¡¯t been handling it right.¡± I watch as his eyes float over my face, his jaw tight, his eyebrows creased. He doesn¡¯t say anything, so I keep going. ¡°I talked to Mandy today. She invited me out for ice cream¡ªour traditional birthday cone at the park. We had a long talk, and I think it¡¯s going to be okay.¡± I scoot closer to him on the couch, reaching for his hand. ¡°I¡¯m not saying it¡¯s going to be easy, but I¡¯m hopeful Mandy will ept everything one day. She even said she was talking to this new guy and there¡¯s a spark, and maybe someday we can both move on and¡ª¡± ¡°Cora, I¡¯m leaving.¡± His words flip me upside down and I drop his hand. ¡°What?¡± A look of pain stretches across Dean¡¯s face as he blows out a hard breath. ¡°A job transfer opened up and I¡¯m taking it.¡± Disbelief rips through me, cinching my chest. I turn away from him, pulling my lips between my teeth as I try to process what he¡¯s telling me. The heart that was beating so rapidly from nerves, from excitement, from the possibility of actuallybeingwith the man I love, is now cracking in two. ¡°Oh.¡± It¡¯s hardly a whisper, barely a breath. ¡°Where are you going?¡± He pauses, ncing away. ¡°Bloomington.¡± I feel blindsided. ¡°That¡¯s three hours away.¡± ¡°I know.¡± ¡°When?¡± I¡¯m almost afraid to ask. Dean replies, still gazing off over my shoulder, ¡°A week. I start next Monday¡­ I¡¯m putting my townhouse up for rent and getting an apartment until I¡¯m settled.¡± A small sob breaks through, despite my best efforts to hold it in. Dean takes my hand, but I pull away as if he struck me with a match. ¡°Please don¡¯t try tofort me when you¡¯re the one breaking my heart.¡± I rise from the couch and walk over to the bay window, desperate to get away. Desperate to hide how much he¡¯s hurting me. ¡°Corabelle¡­¡± I whip around, finding him standing a few feet behind me. ¡°Don¡¯t call me that.¡± ¡°Listen to me,¡± he says, taking cautious steps toward me, like I¡¯m either going to bite or run. ¡°This is the hardest decision I¡¯ve ever had to make and I¡¯m doing it because I know, Iknow, it¡¯s for the best. I¡¯ve tried so hard to be the one who pulls you through this, but I¡¯m only holding you down. I¡¯m preventing you from healing.¡± ¡°That¡¯s bullshit. You¡¯ve been the only thing keeping me going.¡± Dean paces forward, closing the gap, and reaches out his hands to cup my face. ¡°You¡¯re right. And that¡¯s why I have to go.¡± He lowers one of his hands until it¡¯s pressed up against my splintered heart. ¡°Youneed to keep yourself going. It¡¯s the only way.¡± I pull back sharply. ¡°You don¡¯t get to touch me anymore.¡± He looks wounded, like I just shoved a de through his chest. ¡°Cora, please. Try to understand.¡± ¡°Oh, I understand. You¡¯ve made yourself perfectly clear.¡± My legs are trembling as I wipe away the fallen tears. ¡°You¡¯ve had your fun, and now you¡¯re moving on.¡± His face shes with fury. Shit. I move back on instinct, afraid of the words he¡¯s about to cut me down with. ¡°Fun?¡± Dean repeats, advancing on me, his eyes alight with incredulity. ¡°You think being abducted by a serial killer, shackled to a pole for three weeks, forced to rape my fianc¨¦¡¯s sister at gunpoint, and murdering a man in cold blood with my bare fuckin¡¯ hands has beenfun?¡± His fingers are balled into fists at his sides, his face a mask of anger. ¡°Or do you think falling for you has been fun? Falling in love with the only woman in the world I can¡¯t have, watching her slip through my fingers, little by little, day by day, only to find her nearly dead from an overdose? ¡°Or maybe you¡¯re referring to the sex. Sex is always fun, right? It¡¯s been so fuckinggoddamnfun trying to reach you the only way I can, making love to you while you can¡¯t even look in me in the eyes, and trying to collect all the little bones you throw at me without ever trulyhavingyou. It¡¯s been loads of fun waking up every morning to an empty bed with my sheets reeking of you, mocking me with the reminder that you¡¯re not there. And it¡¯s been especially fun having to uproot my whole life because I care about you so damn much, I can¡¯t bear to keep watching you suffer.¡± I¡¯m breathing heavy, almost as hard as he is, my guilt battling it out with shock and rage. I used the wrong word, yes, but this still feels like a p in the face to everything we¡¯ve been through. ¡°Don¡¯t y the martyr, Dean. If you really loved me, you would stay.¡± ¡°Idolove you.¡± He¡¯s on me again, his hands on my shoulders. ¡°I love you.Madly. But with mad lovees madness, and what you need right now ispeace. Don¡¯t you get it, Cora? Don¡¯t you see?¡± His grip on me tightens, his face directly in front of mine. ¡°I¡¯m leavingbecauseI love you.¡± I don¡¯t get it. I don¡¯t see. All I see is him not choosing me. All I see is abandonment. ¡°I¡¯m a big girl. You don¡¯t get to decide what¡¯s best for me.¡± Dean drops his head, breathing out through his nose. ¡°You asked me totie you up.¡± ¡°So?¡± I push him away and cross my arms. ¡°A lot of couples do that.¡± ¡°Not us. Not you and me.¡± He runs both hands through his hair, linking them behind his neck. ¡°Jesus, Cora¡­ that was a huge fucking red g. How could you ask me to do that after what we went through? How could youwantthat?¡± ¡°I don¡¯t know!¡± I throw my hands up. ¡°It just came out. Why is it such a big deal?¡± ¡°Because¡­¡± Dean closes in on me again, tears in his eyes, hands still behind his head as if he needs to hold himself back from touching me. ¡°Because you have a hole you¡¯re trying to fill. A void. And this is going to sound totally messed up, but I think a part of you misses that basement.¡± My eyes widen. My stomach drops. ¡°How dare you.¡± ¡°I¡¯m serious, Corabelle. Nothing else mattered down there but you and me and trying to survive. I was all you had, and we clung to each other, and we wereallowedto. We had to. But now we¡¯re back in the real world and everything¡¯s different, and I think you miss that.¡± I¡¯m shaking my head through his words, rejecting every single one. ¡°That¡¯s sick. You don¡¯t know me at all.¡± ¡°I do know you. I know you pretty damn well.¡± Dean sighs, pinching the bridge of his nose as a look of defeat washes over him. ¡°I don¡¯t want to end things like this. I don¡¯t want you hating me.¡± ¡°Well, you don¡¯t get a choice in that, Dean,¡± I say through a bitterugh. ¡°You¡¯rethe one ending it¡ªyou don¡¯t get to control the fallout, too.¡± He steps back, running his tongue along his teeth and shoving his hands into his pockets. ¡°Yeah. I guess that¡¯s fair.¡± ¡°It¡¯s probably best if you leave now.¡± So I can go sob into my dogs for the next decade. Dean flicks his eyes up to me. There is so much pain there, so much uncertainty. But he¡¯s doing it anyway. He¡¯s leaving me alone to pick up the pieces of our shared trauma. I turn away, afraid I¡¯m going to copse with grief if I keep looking at him. And then he¡¯s scooping me into his arms, holding me tightly to his chest, his mouth against my ear. ¡°God, I¡¯m so sorry. I didn¡¯t want to walk out your door without making you understand why Ineedto do this¡­ but I realize you won¡¯t understand until I¡¯m gone. And I¡¯m so fucking sorry, Cora. Thest thing I want to do is give you more pain, but Ipromisethis is the right thing to do.¡± Dean clutches me, squeezes me, his hand cradling the back of my head and threading through my hair. He peppers kisses along my neck as I start to cry uncontrobly. ¡°Don¡¯t cry. Don¡¯t cry, my sweet Corabelle. I love you so goddamn much.¡± I can¡¯t stop crying. I don¡¯t know if I¡¯ll ever stop. Dean pulls back slowly, his hands lifting to my cheeks and wiping away my tears. He kisses my forehead, my nose,nding on my lips with a final goodbye. ¡°You¡¯re still my girl. You¡¯ll always be my girl.¡± Then he releases me, turning around and heading to the front door. I¡¯m ovee with emotion¡ªwith love and sorrow and regret and anger¡ªand I call out to him as his hand reaches for the doorknob. ¡°Wait.¡± Dean hesitates and faces me. I reach behind my neck and unsp my ne chain, moving towards him. His eyes drift from my face to the gold locket I¡¯m holding out as I approach him. He¡¯s shaking his head, not wanting to believe what he¡¯s seeing. I take his hand in mine and outstretch his fingers, delicately cing the locket into his palm. He closes his eyes, fisting it, and heaves out a deep breath. I leave him with parting words before I turn away: ¡°I wish you fought for me as hard as you fought to get out of that basement.¡± I should have turned around sooner, walked away faster, and disappeared down the hallway¡­ but I waver. I nce at him before I retreat, catching his reaction. I have seen my fair share of horrors, and many of them still keep me up at night. But I fear nothing will ever haunt me quite like the look I see in Dean¡¯s eyes before he steps out my front door and walks out of my life. : Part 3 – Chapter 31 I make it through the week, just barely. I called into work on Monday because I hadn¡¯t quite recovered from the bomb that was dropped on me Friday night. Now, after days of self-istion and ignoring all of my texts and phone calls, I finally venture out andnd on my parents¡¯ doorstep that following Sunday afternoon. My mother opens the door and I quite literally copse into her arms. ¡°Cora¡­ sweetheart,¡± she says in that familiar, soothing tone as she strokes my hair. ¡°What happened?¡± Oh, nothing much. Just suffered through the worst four months of my entire life, only to have my heart smashed to smithereens just when I finally see a break in the clouds. I blubber like a sobbing idiot against her shoulder as she pulls me into the house and shuts the door. ¡°He left,¡± I croak. I shouldn¡¯t be doing this. I shouldn¡¯t be falling apart in front of the woman who was almost Dean¡¯s mother-inw¡ªthroughMandy. It¡¯s twisted, and it just makes me cry harder. But I really need my mom right now. ¡°Cora, honey, let¡¯s go upstairs and talk.¡± I collect myself enough to wobble up the staircase and dive beneath the covers of the bed in the guestroom. My mother slides in beside me, wrapping her arms around me and just letting me cry for a while. It feels good to be stripped down andforted after a week of braving the storms alone. Dean used to be thoseforting arms, but he¡¯s gone now. My hair is damp from tears as she brushes it away from my face, whispering words of sce against my forehead. ¡°Do you want to talk about it?¡± I nod. I do, Ireallydo¡ªbut I don¡¯t know how. ¡°I¡¯m just not sure how to talk to you about this. I¡¯ll sound like a huge hussy.¡± ¡°I¡¯m your mother, Cora. I would never think of you like that. Dad and I are very aware of the situation that unfolded, and while it was an unexpected shock, we never judged you or thought any less of you.¡± ¡°How?¡± I nce at her through bloodshot eyes. ¡°Ijudged me. I¡¯m still judging me.¡± ¡°Because we love you¡­ unconditionally.¡± I swallow a sticky lump in my throat, nuzzling against her warmth. ¡°None of this was supposed to happen. It¡¯s not supposed to be like this.¡± My mother continues to caress my hair, my cheek, all the way down my arm and back up again. The motions tame my erratic heart. She lets a few moments slide in silence as I soak up the temporary peace, and then she speaks. ¡°This reminds me of your junior year of high school when you were bedridden for six days with mono,¡± she reminisces, her hand continuing its climb and descent. ¡°You were so sick. You could hardly get out of bed.¡± ¡°You would hold me like this every night and sing me lubies. I was so embarrassed and told you to leave because I wasn¡¯t a baby anymore, but I secretly loved it.¡± A wistful smile washes over me. ¡°It made me feel better.¡± She nods. ¡°And every day at dinner time, I¡¯d bring homemade chicken noodle soup up to your bedroom.¡± I still remember that soup. It wasso good. I began to look forward to it every day. Even on the days I had no appetite, that soup warmed me up and made me smile. ¡°I remember that. I loved it.¡± My mother pulls back to find my eyes, a knowing smile stretching across her pretty face. She leans in to kiss my hairline, then whispers, ¡°That soup was from Dean.¡± My chest tightens, the air escaping me with a sharp gasp. ¡°What?¡± ¡°He woulde over every day after school to study with Mandy, and he¡¯d bring you soup. He never made a big deal about it¡ªhe acted like it was nothing.¡± She squeezes my arm, noticing my watery, wide-eyed stare. ¡°He¡¯s always cared about you, Cora.¡± My mind is spinning and reeling, careening back in time to our early days of teasing and loathing. The only things that stand out during my high school years with Dean are borate pranks, like when Dean stole the tarant from the scienceb and hid it in my gym shoe. That was on myfirst day. That was after sharing a sweet look with him across the room in Mr. Adilman¡¯s ss, thinking maybe he would be my friend. Nope. Cue the hairy spider in my shoe that traumatized me so hard, I spent half the day in the nurse¡¯s office recovering. There were no heroic gestures or kind words. There was no soup. I slick my tongue along my dry lips, feeling confused. ¡°Why didn¡¯t you tell me?¡± My mother nces up, leaning back onto the pillow with a sigh. ¡°I¡¯m not sure.¡± She turns her head to look at me and I¡¯m still staring. Processing. ¡°But I started noticing things after that. Little things. Just the way he¡¯d look at you sometimes¡ªhis eyes held such¡­ I don¡¯t know. Admiration. Endearment. I don¡¯t think he even realized it. Neither of you did.¡± ¡°You think¡­ you think we¡¯ve always had feelings for each other?¡± No. That can¡¯t be true. Ihatedhim, and he hated me. ¡°Subconsciously, I think there has always been a special connection between you two,¡± she says with a thoughtful expression. ¡°I never questioned his loyalty to Mandy¡ªI know they cared about each other very much. But as the years went on, I noticed the differences between them. They grew into different people who were not as well-suited as they were in the beginning. Of course, I never expected anything like this, but¡­ I can¡¯t say I¡¯m entirely surprised by the oue.¡± I blink, my stomach in ropes. ¡°You don¡¯t hate him?¡± My mother tucks a strand of hair behind my ear. ¡°I don¡¯t hate him, honey. Dean has always been like a son to me, and your father and I both know none of this was intentional. This wasn¡¯t a nefarious plot to hurt your sister. It¡¯s been a horrible situation for everyone, and we knew there would be tough roads ahead with even tougher choices. Your sister and I have had plenty of long talks, and it¡¯s going to take time, but I¡¯m confident you will all find your way.¡± She kisses my forehead. ¡°We hurt for Mandy. We hurt for you. We hurt for Dean.¡± Tears track my cheeks in quiet streams, and I roll onto my back with a deep breath. ¡°He left, Mom. He said he was holding me back from healing, so he took a job transfer in Bloomington, just to get away from me. He imed it was because he loved me, but that doesn¡¯t make any sense¡­¡± Those quiet tears turn loud as reality hits me once again. ¡°I don¡¯t know how to get through this without him.¡± Her arms tuck around me once more, pulling me in. ¡°Cora, sweetheart¡­ love doesn¡¯t exist without sacrifice. Sometimes those sacrifices are waking up ten minutes early to make your partner coffee. Sometimes it¡¯s taking on a second job to support your family. Sometimes it¡¯s staying up all night with a newborn so your significant other can finally sleep. Sometimes it¡¯s shoveling the other person¡¯s car out of the driveway after a snowstorm.¡± She ces her palm against my wet cheek and smiles softly. ¡°And sometimes it¡¯s making the ultimate sacrifice and walking away for the greater good.¡±Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. I shake my head through the gut wrenching sobs. ¡°I don¡¯t want to be the ultimate sacrifice. I want to be the coffee one.¡± ¡°Oh, honey.¡± My mother holds me tight, a chuckle slipping out. ¡°You need to think of it as an act of love, and not as an act of betrayal. And I think you should take this time to do some soul searching and put the pieces of your life back together. I¡¯m here to help with whatever you need, and so is your dad. This isn¡¯t necessarily an end¡­ think of it as your chance to start over.¡± I sniffle, thinking back to my final conversation with Dean in my living roomst Friday. Thinking back to that look in his eyes when I returned the locket¡ªthe most precious gift I¡¯ve ever received¡ªand hurled my angry words at him. That was our final moment together. Ourst dance. And I allowed my demons to take over and strike him down when he was hurting just as much as I was. Maybe my mother is right. Maybe thisisall about love. Maybe love is singing her favorite song in the dark, just so she can sleep. Maybe love is giving away the shoes on your feet to help keep her warm. Maybe love ising over in the middle of the night when the power goes out because you know she¡¯s afraid of the dark. And maybe love is walking away because it¡¯s the only way she¡¯ll find the light again. I wanted to believe our situation was thereasonour feelings changed¡ªshifted and swayed like a high tide. But feelings like this cannot be built in the course of three weeks. They are created over time, blooming and growing, manifesting into something bigger than us both. Our ordeal may have opened a door, but it opened a door that was already cracked. Dean and I have always had a connection¡ªa unique chemistry. It was disguised with banter and jokes, hostile words and silly pranks, but there was alwayssomething. And if I were to y thest fifteen years out like a film reel in my mind, I¡¯d see the signs. I¡¯d notice the things I¡¯d tantly ignored due to circumstances, ignorance, and our battle of wills. I¡¯d recognize the look in his eyes in the rearview mirror after we rescued Blizzard in the middle of a snowy highway. I¡¯d see his mask of horror and guilt when he thought he¡¯d hurt me with the cornstarch donut. I¡¯d pick apart his winks and smirks and the twinkle in his eyes whenever I was around. I¡¯d feel his careful arms around me at the animal hospital as he filled me up with hope. I¡¯d recall the way he came to pick me up that fateful night in November at almost two A.M.¡ª no hesitation, no questions asked. I¡¯d hear his noble words in that basement: ¡°Do what you want to me. Leave her alone.¡± I¡¯d go back to my living room on Friday and listen, trulyhearhim, and I¡¯d do it all so much differently. A desperate whimper escapes me and I sit up in bed, wiping both eyes with my wrist and facing my mother. ¡°I-I have to go.¡± She strokes her fingers through my hair onest time, giving my shoulder a tender squeeze as she pulls away. ¡°I know.¡± I lean in for a hug, holding her tight with both arms, burying my teary face into her neck and soaking up her vani perfume¡ªa scent that is entirely my mother. ¡°Thank you. I¡¯m sorry for everything I¡¯ve put you through.¡± ¡°Oh, Corabelle¡­¡± She kisses my cheek before she lets me go. ¡°Just get better. There¡¯s no shame in the struggle, but you can¡¯t stay there forever. We¡¯re all here for you.¡± We share a final hug before I race down the staircase, out the door, and hop into my car. It¡¯s a little after one P.M. and there¡¯s a chance he hasn¡¯t left yet. I want to say goodbye. Arealgoodbye. I fly across town, likely breaking at least eleven trafficws, and park in front of his townhouse, my car door left hanging open as I jump out. I run up the familiar walkway, peering in through the side window as I knock on the door. I squint my eyes through the dusty ss, but everything looks empty. It all looks vacant. Hollow and cleared out. No. I¡¯m toote. I turn around and slide my back down the door until my bottom hits the cement stoop. I think about calling him. Texting him. But I don¡¯t even know what I would say. I¡¯m afraid everything woulde out sounding like, I want you. I need you. Come back. And I know now, Iknow¡­ the one who really needs toe back is me. I wander through my front yard fifteen minutester like a zombie, drained and exhausted. I¡¯m so distracted by my emotional distress, I almost miss the envelope taped to my turquoise door with my name scrawled across the front. Corabelle. I lose a breath as I reach for the white envelope, plucking it off the door and grazing my forefinger along my name written in ck ink. I swallow hard as I tear open the seal, then a gasp squeaks out between my lips. My locket is tucked inside, along with a handwritten note: It¡¯s still beating. You¡¯re still okay. And I still love you. ¡ªDean The words blur through my tears as I choke on a sob. I reach into the envelope and pull out the familiar, golden chain with a trembling hand, pressing the envelope between my knees as I fasten the ne behind my hair. The pendant falls between my breasts, heart to heart, and I smile at the feel of the tiny weight against my chest. Then I press my fingertips to my ribs and close my eyes, letting my heartbeat vibrate through me and fill me with peace. Love is so many things I never thought about, never expected, neverknew¡­ and one of those things is being the best version of yourself you can possibly be, no matter how many obstacles stand in your way. No matter how dark, how hard, or how painful the road to recovery may be. No matter how many blows or setbacks try to drag you back down into the mud. We can¡¯t give our heart to another without loving our own first. And that¡¯s exactly what I n to do. : Part 3 – Chapter 32 E I G H T M O N T H S L A T E R I¡¯m grateful for the mild November, so I can still get on my bike and feel the breeze hit my face as my hair whips around me, tickling my nose. It¡¯s the little things that make me smile. I pull up to the quaint, downtown coffee shop, locking my bicycle to the metal rack and smoothing down my windblown hair. It¡¯s been an exhausting week at work, wrapping up first quarter assignments and prepping for exams before we head into Thanksgiving break. I¡¯ve been looking forward to our monthly coffee date ever since my rm clock tore me from an idyllic dream this morning, consisting of sand in my toes and hisughter dancing off each rippling wave. I shake the reverie away, adjusting my sweater dress and plucking a rebel leaf from my knee-high boot. I sling my purse strap over one shoulder and push through the entry door, casing the small caf¨¦ for my dates. ¡°Cora!¡± I nce to my left, spotting them in a corner booth, and I wave with a smile. ¡°Sorry I¡¯mte,¡± I say, still slightly out of breath from the five mile trek. ¡°I hopped on my bikest minute¡ªthe weather was too nice.¡± Tabitha beams up at me as I approach the cozy booth. ¡°Only you could pull off looking like a movie star after a twenty-minute cardio session.¡± ¡°Hardly. I shed a dozen people on the way over and ate half my hair,¡± I tease. I tug my V-neck sweater dress down, regretting the fashion choice, as I slip into the seat. I shift my gaze to baby Hope, who is still secured inside her car seat, ying with the dangling rattles and toys in front of her. ¡°She¡¯s getting so big.¡± ¡°She just turned ten months on Tuesday. It¡¯s wild, right?¡± ¡°Wow.¡± The baby is absolutely gorgeous with tuffs of silky ck hair, just like her mother¡¯s. Her eyes are like sapphires, her cheeks round and pink. I look back to Tabitha across the table and find her gazing at me with a thoughtful expression. ¡°What? Is there a bug in my hair?¡± I frantically swipe at my golden blonde tresses, while Tabithaughs at me. ¡°You¡¯re bug-free. I was just admiring you.¡± I lower my arms, my features rxing. ¡°Oh.¡± ¡°You¡¯re absolutely glowing, Cora. You look incredible,¡± she tells me, folding her hands around her coffee cup and tilting her head to the side, studying me further. ¡°I¡¯m proud of you.¡± I let her words wash through me like a calming cleanse, my own smile blooming. The truth is, Ifeelincredible. Lighter. Softer. Free and weightless. Thest eight months have been nothing short of challenging, filled with uphill battles, hours upon hours of counseling and mental health struggles, and a promise to myself every single morning that I will be better than I was the day before. I joined a meetup group for PTSD survivors and have made an abundance of new friends and kindred spirits. I took up bike riding as a form a therapy and have put on a healthy amount of weight and muscle mass, spiking my confidence levels and prompting me to splurge on a new wardrobe. I have monthly coffee dates with Tabitha, weekly dinners with my parents¡ªalong with Mandy and her new boyfriend¡ªand regr girly movie nights with Lily and the asional coworker. I take my dogs for a long walk every morning. I picked up summer hours at the school to keep myself busy and distracted. I listen to inspirational podcasts and audiobooks. I drink smoothies. I take my vitamins. I even got a tattoo. I won¡¯t lie and say things are perfect now. I still have nightmares. I still sleep with the light on because the dark makes me uneasy. I still jump when someone touches me in an unfamiliar way, and I still mentally retreat sometimes, zoning out in the middle of a conversation when I don¡¯t even realize it. And¡­ I still miss him. But I¡¯m healing. I¡¯m learning. I¡¯m growing. And there¡¯s no going back to the person I was eight months ago¡ªnot ever. ¡°Thank you,¡± I reply softly, tucking a lock of recently highlighted hair behind my ear. ¡°You look great, too. I swear you get prettier every time I see you.¡± Her cheeks fill with rosy blush as she ducks her head, then nods to the lone coffee sitting beside me. ¡°I ordered for you.¡± ¡°Ooh, thank you.¡± I reach for the drink, bringing it to my lips and sighing deep. ¡°Vani cappino with an extra shot of espresso. You¡¯re my hero.¡± It really is the little things. Tabitha fiddles with one of her loose bracelets as she eyes my wrist. ¡°Your tattoo looks great. It healed up nicely.¡± I nce down at the simple design peeking out from under my long sleeve. I lift my arm to give her a better look, grazing the pad of my thumb over my pulse point. It¡¯s a heartbeat tattoo, a little EKG symbol, etched across the tiny scars I carved into my wrist with my own fingernails. It¡¯s drawn along the exact spot Dean wouldfort me, giving me a daily reminder of everything I¡¯ve suffered through and have ovee. It¡¯s trained me to stop scratching myself¡ªan anxious habit I picked up post-rescue. And, well¡­ it makes me think of him. ¡°Thanks,¡± I say. ¡°I love it. It keeps me present¡ªin the moment, you know?¡± She nods. ¡°I¡¯ve been thinking about getting a tattoo to honor Matthew. Maybe Hope¡¯s name weaved into a butterfly. Butterflies make me smile.¡± Tabitha takes a sip of her coffee, swallowing it down and braving her next question. ¡°Have you talked to Dean recently?¡± My heart beats faster at the mere mention of him.Oy. ¡°Here and there,¡± I tell her, shifting back into the booth and fidgeting with my dress belt. ¡°He texts me sometimes to see how I¡¯m doing. He left me a nice voicemail on my birthday in August.¡± I chuckle then, thinking about ourst interaction on social media. ¡°He recently tagged me in this article showcasing the world¡¯s greatest pranks and practical jokes. He said he was taking notes.¡± Tabitha grins over her cup, tickling Hope¡¯s toes when the baby squeals beside us. ¡°That¡¯s great, Cora. I¡¯m d it hasn¡¯t beenplete radio silence.¡± Me, too. I wasn¡¯t sure what to expect in those initial months after he left¡ªI wasn¡¯t even sure what Iwanted. They say ¡®out of sight, out of mind¡¯ is the key to healing, but I never felt like I needed to heal from Dean. I needed to heal from myself. And I couldn¡¯t imagine a future in which he simply didn¡¯t exist anymore. So, the asional contact has been refreshing. We never let our conversations get emotional or veer into any intimate territory. He checks in. I check in. We send a funny meme here and there. We stay connected. Tied, but with a loose grip. It¡¯s enough for now. I¡¯m just not sure if it always will be. Tabitha gives Hope a wafer to gum when the baby begins to fuss, and we continue our chat over coffee and giggles. Time runs away from us, as it usually does during our monthly get-togethers, and Tabitha needs to head out for a doctor¡¯s appointment. When we hug goodbye, I feel her arms epass me in an extra tight squeeze, her breath whispering against my ear. ¡°You¡¯re such an inspiration, Cora. The true meaning of hope.¡± Tears rim my eyes as we pull back, and I offer her a watery smile. ¡°The feeling is very mutual.¡± I watch the two girls depart the caf¨¦, returning the wave Tabitha sends me as they disappear down the sidewalk. I grab my purse, about to follow her out, when I remember I wanted to bring home two puppinos for Jude and Penny¡ªwhich is basically a cup filled with whipped cream. What to know what else is whipped? Me. Iugh at the absurdity of carrying home cups of whipped cream in my purse for my dogs, and shuffle over to the counter. I hear the door jingle behind me as I order, then I move off to the side and wait. When I collect the two cups and make sure the lids are sealed tight, I spin around and collide into a hard body. ¡°Oh! I¡¯m so sorry.¡± ¡°Shit. Sorry.¡± That voice. We both look up, making eye contact, and I freeze. Then I drop one of the two puppinos, sending a spattering of whipped cream all over my boot. I feel like I should probably clean it up, but I can¡¯t seem to take my eyes off him, and moving in general is definitely out of the realm of possibility. Dean¡¯s face is a mask of surprise, a little bit of wonder, and a hell of a lot ofoh, shit. ¡°You dropped something.¡± I blink, registering his words very slowly. When they sink in, I can¡¯t help but release a small smile that only brightens when his own smile begins to stretch. ¡°Did I?¡± I squeak out, feeling a strange mix of disbelief, awe, confusion, and potent familiarity. ¡°ording to my pant leg, you did.¡± I nce down, my face flushing with embarrassment as I take in the whipped cream dappling the leg of his jeans. When I look back up, the humor has faded, and neither of us make any attempt to clean up the mess. ¡°You look amazing, Cora,¡± he breathes out, his eyes scanning over my healthy curves, shorter hair, and settling on the renewed sparkle in my eyes. ¡°I didn¡¯t even recognize you when I walked in.¡± I duck my head, somewhat bashfully. ¡°You¡¯re just not used to seeing me in anything other than sweatpants,¡± I joke. Dean is still studying me head to toe, but not in a sleazy way¡ªit¡¯s almost like he¡¯s soaking me up. Reveling in all of my put-back-together pieces. ¡°It¡¯s not that.¡± We both know it¡¯s not that. I swallow, trying to find the words I¡¯ve so desperately wanted to say to him for eight long months, but now that he¡¯s here, I feel tongue-tied. I nibble my lip, our eyes drawing back together. ¡°You look good, too.¡± Well, he does. Hereallydoes. He¡¯s wearing a crisp, ck button-down over a white band t-shirt with dark jeans. His hair is mussed and slightly overgrown, and a light stubble shadows his jaw. And I think his eyes are even bluer¡ªis that possible? I clear my throat when he doesn¡¯t reply and attempt more words. ¡°What are you doing back in town?¡± Dean finally seems to be swept from whatever daydream he was lost in, and he scratches the back of his head, shuffling from one foot to the other. ¡°I was visiting my mom. Also, my buddy, Reid¡­ he had something he wanted to talk to me about, so I¡¯m on my way over to meet him.¡± I hate that I wish his answer had simply been¡­you. I flick my fingers through my hair, brushing it over to the opposite side. I have a feeling I know what Reid wants to talk to him about, but it¡¯s not my ce to tell, so I just nod and stand there in awkward silence. I seem to have run out of words. ¡°I wanted to see you, Cora.¡± Dean presses his lips together, his cheek ticking as he lets out a low breath. ¡°A lot. I just¡­ I didn¡¯t know if you wanted to see me, and I didn¡¯t want to disrupt your life. I didn¡¯t want to pass through and shake you up, only to walk away again. It seemed easier to keep my distance.¡± ¡°I get it,¡± I quickly nod, forcing an agreeable smile as my hand clings to the surviving puppino cup. My sweater sleeve slips to my elbow, catching Dean¡¯s attention, and he stares at the small tattoo along my wrist. I don¡¯t miss the sharp intake of air he sucks in when he spots it. I hold it out to him, proudly disying my new piece of art. ¡°Do you like it?¡± Dean seems to drift for a moment, somewhere far away, and I wonder if it¡¯s the same ce I go to sometimes. He clears his throat through a nod. ¡°Yeah. I like it a lot.¡± I can tell he wants to touch it. He wants to reach out and press his thumb to the sensitive underside of my wrist, tracing the little design, sending goosebumps up my spine. I see it in his eyes. But he resists the temptation and slides his hands into his pockets instead.Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. ¡°Well, I won¡¯t keep you. I¡¯m sure you¡¯re not in town long,¡± I blurt. Those were literally thest words I wanted to say to him, but they just spilled out. Judging by the tensing of his jaw and the shift in his gaze, I think they were thest words Dean wanted to hear, too. ¡°Right,¡± he says, tousling his dark hair with one hand and dipping his chin to his chest. ¡°I should get going.¡± ¡°Okay.¡± I chomp down on my lip, keeping it from releasing more lies. He strains a smile. ¡°This was a nice surprise. You really do look good.¡± ¡°You, too.¡± This isn¡¯t us. We¡¯re more than trivial conversation and superficial dialogue. Dammit. But then he starts walking away with his whipped cream jeans and eyes full of missed opportunity, and my feet stay glued to the coffee shop floor, unable to do much more than watch. I feel helpless. Stuck. Conflicted. Dean nces over his shoulder at me before he steps out the door. So many unsaid words pass between us with that one, striking look. It¡¯s brief. It¡¯s here and gone within a blink, and yet, it clenches my heart like a tight fist. I let out a hard breath and lean down to pick up the fallen cup, reaching for a napkin to swipe the mess off the tile. I toss the garbage into the trash can near the door, watching Dean saunter down the sidewalk, pausing just once. He stands there for a moment, faltering, his hand massaging the back of his neck as he nces down at his boots. Then he keeps on walking. I close my eyes. I take a deep breath. Then I say,screw it. I force my feet into action and push through the doors, jogging down the busy sidewalk with my hair and my inhibitions trailing behind me. ¡°Dean!¡± He stops in his tracks, spinning around, his mouth tipping up into a grin when he sees me running towards him. There is a distinct relief mingling with his surprise. Ie to a slow stop in front of him, fluffing my hair back andughing lightly. ¡°Can we do that over?¡± ¡°Please,¡± he chuckles, his hands on his hips, his eyes twinkling beneath the autumn sun. ¡°Should I drop the whipped cream again?¡± Dean pretends to ponder this, scratching his jaw. ¡°I think we can skip that part.¡± I nod, then lean up on my tiptoes to circle my arms around his neck, pressing my chest against his, my heart against his, my mouth grazing the skin of his throat. I breathe him in, and I feel like I am home. And holy hell, what is that cologne he¡¯s wearing? Is it new? Is it legal? ¡°Hi,¡± I whisper, feeling the way he shivers against my lips. Dean¡¯s arms wrap around my waist as he pulls me closer, his tension draining with mine. He inhales deeply, exhaling his doubts and regrets against my temple. ¡°Hi.¡± It¡¯s a hi. It¡¯s a hello. It¡¯s a wee back¡ªI missed you. We don¡¯t pull apart right away. We savor the feel of our warm bodies melded together in a way that makes my knees tremble and my belly flutter. I try to memorize the way he feels in my arms, hard and safe, buzzing with heat and energy and undeniable chemistry. I only step back when my toes feel like they¡¯re going to fall off from leaning up on them for so long. I straighten out my dress, unable to hide the tiny smile that feels permanently engraved into my cheeks. ¡°That was better.¡± His smile matches mine as we stand there toe to toe. ¡°Much better.¡± ¡°Do you want to go to dinner tonight?¡± Oh, hello, word vomit. There you are. I inch backwards just a step, my face heating up from the bold request. Dean¡¯s eyes sh with something yful, something almost wicked. ¡°Are you asking me out on a date?¡± ¡°Ew, no. Never.¡± I look away, pursing my lips, before ncing right back at him. ¡°But do you?¡± ¡°Yes.¡± I grin. ¡°Okay.¡± ¡°Okay.¡± We stare at each other, enchanted and bewitched, temporarily speechless as we absorb the implication of my invitation. A date. With Dean. We¡¯ve gone from mortal enemies to two people thrown into the ck pits of Hell together. We¡¯ve shared tears, trauma, angry words, and a lot of hot, toxic sex. We¡¯ve been through it all, and yet, we¡¯ve never gone on a date before. Such a simple thing is filling me with a plethora of tiny sparks, like lightning bugs fluttering around inside my heart. I smile up at him¡ªa little shy, a little nervous, a little flirtatious. ¡°Pick me up at seven?¡± Dean nods, pacing backwards with a wink. ¡°See you then, Corabelle.¡± I watch him turn around and head down the sidewalk once again, but this time, there is a bounce in his step. There is no hesitation. This time, he knows he¡¯sing back. : Part 3 – Chapter 33 Lily is hogging my hair straighteneras we squeeze together in my tiny bathroom. She has her own date she¡¯s getting ready for¡­ with Lars. The towering tattoo guy from the brewery the night I tweaked out andnded on Dean¡¯s doorstep. I can see it. He was dark and brooding¡ªa little intimidating, maybe, but Lily can hold her own. I think they would make a sexy couple. ¡°Okay, so, underwear or no underwear?¡± Lily wonders, running the wand through her chocte tresses. I crinkle my nose. ¡°How frisky are you nning on getting on the first date?¡± ¡°You tell me. I was asking you.¡± I smack her shoulder, snatching the t iron from her hand. ¡°I¡¯m nning on taking things slow, for your information. I don¡¯t want to jump into bed with him right away, only to have him drive home to Bloomington tomorrow and settle back into his new life.¡± ¡°Oh, please,¡± Lily counters, reaching for the makeup bag and skimming through it. ¡°You ended a hot and heavy sexual rtionship cold turkey, then haven¡¯t seen each other for eight months. There¡¯s no way you¡¯re not getting freaky tonight. Insertion is inevitable.¡± ¡°Insertion is inevitable? You frighten me sometimes.¡± She puckers her lips in the mirror, debating on a lipstick color. ¡°I vote no underwear.¡± ¡°Noted. Thanks.¡± I shake my head, half irritated, half amused¡ªmy general reaction to every word thates out of Lily¡¯s mouth. Then my insides start to warm at the prospect of¡­ insertion.This belongs to N?velDrama.Org. Dammit. That¡¯s a terrible word. And a terrible idea. I flip off the straightener, fluffing out my hair and gauging my appearance in the bathroom mirror. My makeup is natural but ttering, entuating my champagne slip dress and my still lightly bronzed skin from the warmer months. I touch my finger to the locket around my neck as a nervous energy climbs up my throat. Then I turn to Lily and ask, ¡°Is this a bad idea?¡± My friend doesn¡¯t hesitate as she pops the cap back on her cherry red lipstick choice. ¡°Nope. You need to getid, girl. You¡¯ve been in vagina limbo.¡± Oy. ¡°I¡¯m not talking about sex, Lily. I meant¡­ spending time with Dean. Reconnecting.¡± I shoot her a warning re. ¡°Do not make a joke about the reconnection of body parts, please.¡± ¡°Jeez. How immature do you think I am?¡± She winks, then turns to face me, giving me her full attention. ¡°You want honest?¡± ¡°Of course. I know you¡¯re good for it.¡± Lily runs her tongue along her teeth, leaning her hip against the sink. ¡°I think it¡¯s been a long timeing. You two aremeantfor each other, Cora. And you¡¯re in such a better ce now¡ªGod, I can¡¯t wait to be a godmother to your adorable babies one day.¡± ¡°Okay, that escted a bit,¡± I frown, but a grin peeks through despite myself. ¡°You really think so? You think there can be a happily ever after for a story like ours?¡± ¡°Are you kidding? A story like yours just makes the happily ever after that much sweeter.¡± I smile. Then I picture it: me and Dean. A future. Dinner dates, cuddling, movie nights, vacations by the beach. Children. Dogs. More dogs. Even more dogs. I can picture it all¡ªand for the first time ever, I can trulyseeit. The knock at my front door makes the butterflies in my stomach take flight. Lily left twenty minutes ago, and I¡¯ve been sitting on the couch practicing how to breathe. Breathing is good. Breathing is important. Breathing keeps us alive. Jude and Penny beat me to the door as I traipse across the living room in my ck pumps, repeating the mantra to myself. I close my eyes for just a beat, collecting my nerves, then I pull the door open. Dean goespletely still when his eyes find me, his gaze trailing me up and down, slowly and purposefully. His Adam¡¯s apple bobs in his throat as we stare at each other for a few moments, unsure of what to say. Finally, Dean sucks in a deep breath. ¡°Holy shit. You look¡­¡± Penny skips out onto the porch and starts pawing at his ankle, circling both of his legs. This seems to snap him out of whatever daze he is in, and Dean crouches down to give both dogs attention. But his eyes keep flicking up to me as I linger in the doorway, biting my lip. I clear my throat, calling for the dogs to retreat, so Dean can step inside. ¡°Hey, you,¡± I mutter with a smile, happy to have found my voice. ¡°Looks like they missed you.¡± He rises to his feet and steps through the threshold, his stare still hot and pinned on me. He swallows again, sliding his hands in his pockets. I feel my skin start to singe from the fire in his eyes, so I turn away, wringing my hands together and walking towards the coat rack to grab my jacket. ¡°So, where did you want to go? I¡¯m up for anything. We can even do The Oar for old time¡¯s sake, even though I¡¯m¡ª¡± My breath catches in my throat, possibly indefinitely, when I feel two warm hands capture my waist from behind with a feather light touch. And then his lips are up against my ear, his heartbeat pressed into my back, his proximity a painful reminder of everything I¡¯ve been missing for thest eight months. ¡°I promised myself I¡¯d be good tonight, but I feel like you might make a liar out of me.¡± His low, gravelly voice tickles my ear, sending the butterflies in my belly into overdrive. In fact, they may have exploded. My stomach is now a butterfly graveyard. Breathe. Breathe. Breathe. Those breathing exercises were garbage. I force myself not to shut downpletely and slowly turn to face him. His hands fall from my waist when he takes a step back. Dean shoots me a grin and a wink, likely to lighten the mood, but all it does is murder more butterflies. ¡°The Oar sounds good to me.¡± ¡°O-Okay. Great.¡± Lord. It¡¯s going to be a long night. Or a very short one. I manage to slip my coat on, all too aware of Dean¡¯s eyes on me as I fasten the buttons and reach for my purse. I suck in a replenishing breath and lead him back to the front door, giving Jude and Penny ear scratches before we step outside. Dean ces his hand against the small of my back, then points through the dark veil of night. ¡°Check it out,¡± he says, averting my attention to the vehicle in the driveway, parked behind mine. ¡°I got my baby back.¡± His hand gives my hip a tiny squeeze before he pulls away, and I can¡¯t help but wonder if he¡¯s still talking about the car. My eyes widen as we approach the ck Camaro. ¡°Oh, my God. Is it¡­thecar?¡± ¡°Nah. I¡¯m pretty sure that asshole liquified it somehow, but she¡¯s an identical recement.¡± I make my way to the passenger¡¯s side, sliding in as Dean hops into the driver¡¯s seat. My senses are inundated with leather, nicotine and cedar, and a torrent of haunting memories that zap me right in the gut. ¡°It¡¯s a beautiful car,¡± I whisper through a breath, clicking my seatbelt into ce. Dean hesitates before cing the key in the ignition. His shoulders dete as he presses his lips together, turning his head to look at me. ¡°Monday is November 8th,¡± he says softly. I nod, our eyes holding, the air charged with emotion. ¡°Yeah. The timing is not lost on me.¡± It¡¯s almost our one-year anniversary. But we¡¯re not celebrating an engagement, or a marriage, or some kind of superficial milestone. We¡¯re celebrating survival. And Iwillcelebrate on Monday. I¡¯ll celebrate by waking up extra early, watching the sunrise with my dogs and hot cup of coffee in hand, and breathing in the crisp, November air. Then I¡¯ll smile. Because I have a hell of a lot to smile about. Dean reaches over the console to myp, sping my hand inside his palm. He brushes his fingers over my knuckles and says, ¡°We fuckin¡¯ made it.¡± A grin spreads across my face¡ªa real, big, genuine grin. ¡°Hell yeah, we did.¡± He returns the smile and lets go of my hand, starting up the car and reversing out of the driveway. Fifteen minutester, we pull into the familiar parking lot of The Broken Oar. We both stall as we stare at the front of the building, swarming with groups of people, smokers, and loudughter. I worry my lip between my teeth, remembering my first interaction with Earl against the building. I think about that uneasy feeling in the pit of my stomach as he leered at me. I recall Dean¡¯s car cruising into the lot while I watched him hop out with a glimmer of mischief in his eyes, totally unaware of the horrors we were about to face. I exhale a choppy breath, my anxiety spiking, when Dean finds my hand again. He squeezes it gently. ¡°You know what? I¡¯ve got a better idea.¡± Twenty minutester, we¡¯re sitting at the edge of a grassy ravine, looking out at theke with bags of fast food scattered around us. We¡¯re side by side, shoulder to shoulder, munching on greasy cheeseburgers and french fries, feeling totally ridiculous but even more liberated. ¡°I¡¯m a little overdressed for this date, Dean,¡± I tease, popping a fry into my mouth and nudging his shoulder with mine. He eyes my bare legs stretched out beneath my peacoat, and they flicker with heat. ¡°You are a little overdressed.¡± Another wink. Another dead butterfly. Dean chuckles as he continues. ¡°I¡¯m not usually such a cheap date. I just figured the asion called for something¡­ simple.¡± ¡°It¡¯s perfect,¡± I smile up at him, truly meaning that. These are the things I took for granted one year ago¡ªfresh air, ripples on theke, des of grass between my toes, cheap fast food. I would have given anything to experience even one of those things. I gaze out at the dark water, hugging myself when a breeze sweeps through. ¡°Penny for your thoughts?¡± Dean asks, wiping his hands along his jeans. I turn to him, blinking through the memory. ¡°Do you have a penny this time?¡± ¡°No.¡± ¡°Unfair trade,¡± I say, quirking a grin. ¡°A thought for a thought, then.¡± ¡°Or a confession for a confession¡­¡± Dean leans back on the heels of his hands, his leather coat parting and falling to his sides. He spears me with a devilish look, his eyes dancing beneath the moonlight. ¡°I got myself into all sorts of troublest time.¡± ¡°Ah, yes,¡± I agree, pretending to conjure up the memory, even though it has never left my mind. ¡°You fell in love with me when I walked into Mr. Adilman¡¯s ss looking like a deer in headlights, wearing a hideous purple zer that I may have burned.¡± My eyes narrow. ¡°Then you showed your love by hiding Terrance the Tarant in my gym shoe.¡± ¡°Shit.¡± Dean can¡¯t hold back hisughter. ¡°I was such a fuckin¡¯ idiot, Cora. I¡¯m sorry.¡± ¡°Yeah, well, I feel like I¡¯ve gotten you back just as good,¡± I sigh, lying down, my hair sying out across the grass. ¡°You have. I¡¯m not sure if I had more fun pranking you or anticipating your retaliation.¡± Dean leans back all the way, resting beside me and twisting his head to face me. We nce at each other, his expression soft and thoughtful. ¡°You go first.¡± ¡°Okay¡­¡± I avert my eyes, rolling a thin button on my coat between my thumb and forefinger. My heart rate increases when I meet his gaze again, and I whisper softly, ¡°I haven¡¯t been with anyone else.¡± Dean studies me, unblinking, and replies, ¡°Neither have I.¡± My eyebrows raise up, startled by the admission. I was certain he was out there enjoying the bachelor life. ¡°Seriously?¡± ¡°Of course I¡¯m serious,¡± he says, rolling onto his side to face me fully, propping his head up with his elbow. ¡°I don¡¯t give a shit about other women.¡± ¡°Oh.¡± I gulp, turning to look up at the starry sky. I can¡¯t deny the relief that washes over me, even though we were neverofficiallytogether¡ªDean had every right to date around and sleep with other people. We both did. But we didn¡¯t. Dean continues, returning to his back and linking his hands behind his head. ¡°I saw Reid today. He said he wanted to talk to me about something personal. Something he was afraid I¡¯d get pissed about.¡± I know exactly what Reid wanted to talk about, but I let him finish. ¡°He told me he started seeing Mandy back in May. Things got serious pretty fast and he¡¯s thinking about proposing, but he wanted my blessing first.¡± Oh, my God¡­proposing? I knew they were dating and that Mandy was over-the-moon happy, but I had no idea they werethatserious. It¡¯s only been six months¡ªit took Dean fourteen years to propose to Mandy. They never even moved in together. I can¡¯t help but wonder if those were red gs. Maybe there was always some uncertainty there. ¡°I knew they were together,¡± I reply, taking a moment to process his words. ¡°I had no idea Reid wanted to propose. That¡¯s so exciting.¡± ¡°I know,¡± Dean says. ¡°I¡¯m happy as hell for him. For both of them. He honestly thought I¡¯d punch his lights out¡ªhe said it goes against ¡®bro code¡¯ or some shit like that.¡± ¡°I think we¡¯re all pastcodesat this point.¡± He chuckles, catching my eyes. ¡°Yeah. We are.¡± We lie like that for a while, silent andfortable, watching the stars twinkling above us as the wind picks up, sending the tree branches into a mesmerizing dance. Then we talk about thest eight months, swapping stories andughs, somehow inching closer and closer to each other on the grass. At one point, my head makes its way to the crook of his arm, and I take sce in the feel of his voice vibrating through me as he speaks. Before we know it, two hours have swept by and my legs are starting to freeze from the crisp air. We collect our bags and wrappers, discarding them in a nearby trash can, and Dean hands me a piece of nicotine gum as we make our way back to his car. ¡°You¡¯re not smoking anymore?¡± I wonder, plucking the piece of gum from his fingers and studying it. ¡°I quit a few months back. Just doing the gum now.¡± I pop it in my mouth. It tastes pleasant at first, but then my throat feels like I swallowed a beehive. ¡°Ack, it burns. It¡¯s awful.¡± Deanughs, holding open the passenger¡¯s side door for me. ¡°It¡¯s a good burn. It¡¯ll give you a little buzz,¡± he winks, then closes the door after I¡¯m situated inside. Damn him and his winks. Like I need anymore of a buzz right now. When we pull into my driveway, my nerves reappear, uncertainty looming in the air. We nce at each other at the same time, and I lower my head, gnawing my lip between my teeth. ¡°I¡¯ll walk you to your door,¡± Dean says, that raspy edge returning to his voice. Walk me to my bedroom, you say? I shake my head, knowing we shouldn¡¯t. Knowing my stitched wounds will only rip wide open when he heads back to Bloomingtone morning. We saunter up to my front door, dead leaves crunching beneath our shoes. My heart starts to thump inside my chest as we linger on the porch, turning towards each other. The porch light illuminates the conflict in his eyes and the heady unknowns that are surely reflecting in my own. Dean raises his hand to my face, his thumb skimming along my cheekbone and causing me to inhale a sharp breath. ¡°What do we do now?¡± I wonder out loud, nuzzling my cheek into his palm. The gesture seems to awaken him and he moves in closer, until our bodies are almost touching. His hard gaze caresses my face, trying to read me. Trying to pull answers out of my eyes¡ªlike if he looks close enough, he¡¯ll find them. He will. Dean lowers his hand to my neck, his fingers catching on my hair. He leans down to press a light kiss to my forehead, his lips hovering against my hairline as he whispers, ¡°I¡¯m not sure, Corabelle. All I know is that I want to kiss you more than I want air.¡± My knees start to quiver and I tip my chin up to meet his eyes. ¡°I don¡¯t usually kiss on the first date.¡± He tightens his hold around my neck, his fingers curling around the nape. ¡°Would you consider making an exception?¡± he asks, inching forward until I¡¯m leaning back against the brick pir and Dean¡¯s chest is pressed to mine. I lick my lips, grateful for the support behind me. ¡°I suppose I can be persuaded.¡± ¡°Yeah?¡± Dean moves in, dipping his mouth to my neck, breathing in my scent and peppering heated kisses up along my jawline. Our groins are touching, prompting a whimper to escape my throat. Dean lets out a small groan near my ear. ¡°Tell me what I have to do.¡± ¡°You¡¯re doing it.¡± He raises his other hand until he¡¯s cupping my face, then he pulls our mouths together, arching me back against the brick post. I cling to him for support, out of necessity, out of desire, and his tongue pushes past my lips, invading me and making me mewl. I expect the hunger and raw need to overtake us, but Dean remains soft and careful. His tongue kisses mine with gentle strokes, his hands sped along my jaw, cradling gently¡ªlovingly. Dean pulls back and presses our foreheads together. ¡°Inside?¡± he suggests breathily, my fingers curling around his leather coat. I nod, taking him by the hand and leading him to the door, my own hand trembling as I insert the key into the lock. Dean hovers behind me, so close, brushing my hair aside and kissing the curve of my neck as I try not to copse. The door pushes open, happy snouts and tails greeting us as we stumble through the threshold, then wee back together like a ma as soon as the door closes. I unbutton my peacoat with shaky fingers, Dean¡¯s lips on mine, and let it slide from my arms before they encircle his neck. Dean moves back to look at me, taking in my slip dress that resembles a sexy nightgown. He makes a possessive, growly sound, his fingers reaching down to fist the hem of the silk fabric. ¡°Fuck, Cora¡­ you almost killed me when I saw you in this dress.¡± My head drops back as he ravishes my neck with more kisses, his hand trailing up my inner thigh. I part my legs instinctively, desperate for his touch. ¡°Mmm¡­¡± That¡¯s all I got. Dean stills his movements when his hand reaches between my legs, letting out a groan. ¡°No underwear?¡± I shoot him a naughty grin that has him kicking off his shoes, yanking his coat off, and diving back into me. I try to tug him towards the couch, but he picks me up instead, carrying me down the hall to my bedroom. ¡°I want to make love to you in your bed.¡± I kiss him as we shuffle into the room,nding clumsily on the mattress, our mouths still fused. We only break apart to discard more clothes, until the only thing between us is my gold locket. Dean fingers it for a moment, his eyes drifting up to mine as he hovers over me, a tenderness seeping in. I sift my fingers through his hair, my touch soft and delicate. ¡°Thank you for bringing it back to me,¡± I say, rising up to press a sweet kiss against his lips. Dean kisses my nose, then my forehead, his arms resting on each side of me. He pulls my gaze to his, holding it as he says, ¡°You said I didn¡¯t fight for you, but that¡¯s so far from the truth.¡± I almost choke on a breath, my wrists linking behind his neck, trying to pull him back to me. He resists, keeping our eyes locked and stroking his knuckles along my cheek. ¡°Corabelle¡­ thatwasme fighting for you. That was me fighting for your healing, your joy, your smile, yourughter¡­ your beautiful, broken spirit. I never stopped fighting for you and I never will.¡± My heart swells, my eyes water with tears, and my soul surges with absolutelove. A small cry passes through my lips and he catches it with a kiss. We lose ourselves in each other, in the moment, in the time lost¡ªin the possibility of a real future. And when he pushes inside me, his mouth raining kisses along my face, my neck, my breasts¡­ it¡¯sdifferent. He¡¯s slow and steady. I don¡¯t look away. Our bodies move together with a perfect certainty. There are no desperate touches or fear-infused kisses, and we aren¡¯t clinging to each other, holding on tight to theidea of something more. We just are. And maybe we always have been. Dean holds me that night in steadfast arms, our bodies exquisitely entangled, rxed and content. He holds me like a lover. Like my own, personal defender. Like my savior. After all, he saved me from a serial killer. He saved me from an overdose. He saved me from myself. : Part 3 – Chapter 34 Corabelle. A single sunbeam peeks through herce drapes, lighting up the golden glints in her hair. She¡¯s still asleep, as peaceful as I¡¯ve ever seen her, and my heart constricts with each quiet breath. I¡¯m trying not to be a total creep and stare at her, but I¡¯m hypnotized by the rise and fall of her chest, her slightly parted lips, and the way her eyshes flutter as she dreams. I¡¯m painfully in love with this woman and I¡¯ll be damned if I don¡¯t soak up every fleeting moment with her while I¡¯m here. Her hands are tucked beneath her cheek and I swear there¡¯s a tiny smile creasing her mouth. I can¡¯t help myself¡ªI lean in, cing a soft kiss against the corner of her lips. Cora stirs, nuzzling into her hands, her hair dipping down across her face as she moves. I brush it aside with my fingers, my touch lingering until her eyes blink open. It takes a minute, but then her smile brightens as recognition and relief fill her eyes. ¡°Hi,¡± she whispers, her voice cracked and sleepy. ¡°Hi.¡± Fuck, I could get used to this¡ªwaking up every morning to her drowsy, loveced stare and rosy cheeks. ¡°What were you dreaming about? You were smiling.¡± Cora stretches out her arms, the bedsheet falling further down her hip and catching my attention. ¡°Shakespeare.¡± I squint at her. ¡°Hmm. Is that code for all the new ways I used my tonguest night?¡± She blushes, burying her face into the pillow with augh. I pull her to me until her nose is pressed to the top of my chest, her head right beneath my chin. Then I whisper against her hair, ¡°Shall Ipare thee to a summer¡¯s day?¡± Cora lifts her head with a grin. ¡°You know Shakespeare?¡± ¡°We¡¯ve never met. But I do know a sexy English teacher who often quotes him.¡± Her smile widens and she pecks a kiss to my chin. ¡°I always used to think you were dumb, you know.¡± Iugh as my hand trails down her arm andnds on her hipbone. ¡°Yeah. You would get so fired up when I¡¯d pretend not to know something. It was cute as hell.¡± ¡°You were the worst.¡± ¡°Incorrigible.¡± Cora giggles as she wraps her leg around my thigh, her eyes twinkling. ¡°We should make love. Then we should take the dogs for a long walk,e home and cook breakfast, and crawl back under the covers until you have to drive home.¡± All of that sounds fucking fantastic¡ªminus thest bit. The thought of heading back to Bloomington to my eerily quiet one-bedroom apartment all alone, reeking of Cora Lawson, seems unfathomable. But I realize there¡¯s no way around it right now. And I sure as hell don¡¯t regret the choice I made eight months ago to ept the job transfer, uproot my life, and put distance between me and the woman who desperately needed it. It washard. It was the hardest thing I¡¯ve ever had to do. It was harder than everything we went through during those fateful twenty days in a madman¡¯s basement, because it was a choice. It wasmychoice. And I had the power to say ¡®fuck it¡¯ and be weak and stay, and it would have been so damn easy to do that. Iwantedto do that. But the only thing I wanted more was to see her smile. I wanted to see her glowing and thriving and truly living her life. I wanted to see her just like this, just like she isright now, happy and healing and learning to love herself again. So, it¡¯s all been worth it¡ªI just don¡¯t know where the hell we go from here. I swallow, trying not to let the unknowns spoil this blissful morning after. Thest time we woke up together ended up being the worst day of my life.Content is ? 2024 N?velDrama.Org. I reach for her arm that¡¯s entangled around my neck and tug it down, turning it palm-side up. I gaze at the small tattoo inscribed onto her wrist, brushing my thumb over the heartbeat symbol. Her skin is soft and lightly puckered from the tiny scars beneath the design, a permanent reminder of her past. I massage my thumb over her pulse point in the same way I used to do when my touch was the only sce I could give her. Cora inhales a quick breath, her eyes closing as she lets the feelings sweep through her. The memories. The shbacks. The thoughts and sensations. When her eyes open, hazy and glossed over, I press my lips to her wrist, sprinkling soft kisses along her vein. She lets out a sigh of contentment and says, ¡°I love you.¡± I¡¯ve reyed those three words over and over in my mind for eight, torturous months, wondering if I¡¯d ever hear them again. Nothing beats the real fucking thing. I squeeze her to me, inhaling her daffodil hair and skin made of citrus, still lingering with remnants of our lovemaking. ¡°I love you so damn much, Corabelle. I¡¯ve thought about you every single day since I left, craving your kiss, your touch, the smell of your hair. You never left my mind. I drove myself crazy not knowing if you were really okay, or wondering if you¡¯d moved on with someone else. It¡¯s been hell.¡± I kiss her forehead, hesitating before I pull back. ¡°But seeing the light in your eyes again iseverything. And even if you had moved on and found happiness with some other guy¡­ it would have fucking sucked, but it still would have been worth it to see you like this.¡± Cora ces her fingertips against my cheek, trailing them down the stubble along my jaw. ¡°I¡¯ve thought about you, too. Every day. Every night. I dream about us at the ocean sometimes, listening to the waves roll in, feeling the water mist our faces.¡± She kisses my lips, wrapping her leg tighter around me and hitching it over my waist. ¡°It¡¯s my happy ce.¡± I smile against her mouth. ¡°My happy ce is wherever you are. And I want to make this work, Cora. No more hiding, no more holding back. I¡¯ll wait for a job position to open back up here, and I¡¯ll put in for a transfer. It might be a few months¡ªit could be a year. But I¡¯ll spend every goddamn weekend with you until I¡¯m back for good.¡± Tears well in her green eyes, her lips parting with wonder. ¡°You¡¯reing back?¡± ¡°If you want me to. If you want this like I want this.¡± She quickly nods. ¡°I want this, Dean. I wantyou. I want everything I told myself I didn¡¯t deserve.¡± ¡°You deserve it all, Corabelle, and I¡¯ll spend my whole damn life giving it to you.¡± She kisses me again, then again and again. ¡°I¡¯ll talk to Mandy this week. There might be tension at first¡­ it might still be weird. But we¡¯re in a better ce now, and she¡¯s moved on and is crazy happy with Reid, and I just know it¡¯s going to be okay. My parents still love you.¡± Cora pulls herself even closer to me, tears trickling down her cheeks. ¡°I know we can do this.¡± I grin, my heart flipping the fuck out inside my chest. I wrap her up in my arms, whispering against her neck, ¡°We escaped from a serial killer, Cora. We can do anything.¡± Cora pulls my face to hers, capturing a kiss that tastes somehow different from all the rest. It tastes like a new beginning. After we finish making love that morning and lie basking in the afterglow, I have one more question to ask her. I catch her eyes, drunk with happiness, and I twirl a soft strand of her hair around my finger as she faces me on the bed. ¡°Are you still mine?¡± Cora doesn¡¯t hesitate. She reaches for my hand, cing it above her heart. ¡°It¡¯s still beating,¡± she says. Her face lights up with a radiant smile that looks exactly like how her heartbeat feels. ¡°As long as it¡¯s beating, I¡¯m yours.¡± : Epilogue ¡°Aunt Mandy and Uncle Reidare here!¡± Aiden and Brooklyn charge towards the front door, the dogs trailing behind them. I frantically try to zip my suitcase, sitting on it, then bouncing up and down as Dean saunters up behind me pulling a t-shirt on over his head. ¡°Shit, Cora. It looks like you packed for the end of days.¡± ¡°Well¡­¡±Bounce. ¡°¡­you know I just like to¡­¡±Tug. ¡°¡­be prepared.¡± ¡°For Armageddon?¡± ¡°For vacation with two children.¡±Bounce. ¡°Who knows how many outfit changes we¡¯ll need, and I packed the good camera because, you know, memories, and then the books take up a ton of space.¡± ¡°How many books are you bringing?¡± ¡°Five.¡± ¡°Jesus¡­¡± I huff. ¡°It¡¯s a series, Dean.¡±N?vel(D)ra/ma.Org exclusive ? material. Dean chuckles, relieving me of my struggle and nudging me off the suitcase. He ces his palm against the top and presses down, sessfully zipping it on the first attempt. I flip my hair back, puckering my lips together. ¡°That was kind of hot.¡± ¡°Only you would get turned on by me zipping up a suitcase,¡± he winks. I narrow my eyes teasingly. ¡°Let¡¯s hope so.¡± We¡¯re about to lean in for a kiss when Mandy and Reid shuffle up behind us with four dogs at their feet. ¡°Sorry we¡¯rete,¡± Mandy says, scooping Penny Lane into her arms and peppering kisses along her snout. ¡°Are the beasts ready for us?¡± Jude, Lucy, and Rigby sit patiently, tails wagging, as Penny is ced back down between them. Mandy is the resident dog-sitter. She and her husband, Reid, take the animals back to their house once a year when we go on our annual vacation. Mandy and Reid have been married for seven years now. Reid proposed on New Year¡¯s Eve, just a month after his conversation with Dean, and Mandy walked down the aisle one yearter. I finally got to stand up in my sister¡¯s wedding as her maid of honor and with Dean as Reid¡¯s best man, and there was a hell of a lot tears, joy, forgiveness, and full circle. Then Mandy and Reid stood up inourwedding six monthster, and we all cried some more. ¡°The beasts look ready,¡± I smile, reaching for the leashes hanging along the wall and turning around to look for the kids. ¡°Speaking of beasts, where did Aiden and Brooklyn disappear to?¡± Dean slides over to us, giving Mandy a quick hug and fist bumping Reid over her shoulder. ¡°They¡¯re in the kitchen grabbing snacks.¡± ¡°Mom!¡± The sound of my name pulls me into the kitchen of our two-story house, locating both kids carrying hot mugs of coffee around the ind in their unsteady hands.Yikes. Aiden, our six-year-old son, holds up the cup as hot liquid sshes over the rim. ¡°We got your coffee ready. It¡¯s already after eight o¡¯clock, and I know how you get.¡± Well. He¡¯s not wrong. I try not to panic as the dark roast seeps into my hardwood floors and ept the offering. ¡°This is so thoughtful of you. It¡¯s very hot, though, so grab me or your dad next time.¡± Our five-year-old daughter, Brooklyn, sets her mug down on the table. ¡°Here¡¯s yours, Dad!¡± Dean steps away from his football-infused conversation with Reid and joins us, shooting me a wink as he reaches for his mug. ¡°Thanks, princess. Such service.¡± Dean and I take a sip of our respective coffees. Then we simultaneously spit it out. Everywhere. I start gagging as Dean wipes at his shirt. We both look at each other usingly, our eyes brimming with me, when both children break out into hystericalughter beside us. ¡°Gotcha!¡± they shout, doubling over in a fit of giggles. Dean and I share another nce. Our mouths tip up into a smile, growing bigger and brighter, as we absorb the fact that we have raised devious little pranksters, much like ourselves. Then we race to the sink and start wiping the salt coffee off our tongues with paper towels, while chugging down water. I wonder if Mandy and Reid would mind taking an extra two beasts with them. ¡°Do you think we can bring some seashells home for Nana Asher?¡± Brooklyn skips over to me across the shoreline, her arms full of delicate seashells. On the way to the airport, we made a quick stop at the assisted living facility to visit Dean¡¯s mother and to deliver homemade masterpieces from the children. Aiden and Brooklyn love spending time with Holly, despite her memory loss. Her door is nowpletely covered in construction paper, crafts, and love notes created by the kids. We spend hours with her a few times each month, singing songs and telling stories. Holly has moments of rity here and there, more sotely, especially when we sing. She knows every single word toHey Jude, and I can¡¯t help but wonder if the song helps her cope with the darkness like it did for me. I smile down at my daughter, bobbing my head. ¡°I think that¡¯s a wonderful idea. She¡¯ll love them. Make sure to grab some for Gram and Gramps, too.¡± ¡°Yes! Gram loves shells. We can make nes with them.¡± She scurries away to join her brother in the sand, her auburn hair floating behind her and catching on a breeze. I¡¯m taken by the moment, lost in a daydream, as I study my two babies filling buckets with sand on the scattered beach towels. And then I feel his arms slide around my waist, his fingers dipping just slightly into my bikini bottoms. I melt into him, my back to his chest, his chin finding the crook of my shoulder. We stand like that for a long while, both soaking up the feel of each other, both reminiscing, both being fully present in the blissful moment. I turn in his embrace, grazing my fingertips down his bare chest. The sight of him alone, shirtless and lean, all toned abs and broad shoulders, has me swooning as I teeter on both feet. Dean ducks his head, nting a kiss onto mine. ¡°You have that look in your eyes,¡± he whispers against my hair. My arms snake around his midsection, clinging tight. ¡°What look?¡± ¡°Like you¡¯re falling in love with me all over again.¡± I grin into his chest, pressing soft kisses to his sea-swept skin as his hands travel dangerously low on my hips. He¡¯s very familiar with that look. Dean reaches for my hand and tugs me towards the water. ¡°Ready?¡± My heart dances inside my chest, my nerves tingling. I follow him to the edge of the sea, where sand touches water, and we slow our steps, gazing out at the roaring waves. It¡¯s November 8th. Every year on this day we go to the ocean. I still recall our very first trip together one year after we made our rtionship official. Dean was finally able to secure a job transfer back to his original union location after eleven, agonizing months of waiting and only seeing each other on the weekends. But the distance just made us stronger and more certain of our future. Three weeks after moving in together, we hopped on a ne and headed out to Santa Monica, so I could finally dip my toes in the sea. It was an emotional moment, made that much more potent with Dean by my side. We ran into the waves, hand in hand, side by side, and I screamed when the cold water engulfed me. And then I broke down. I copsed against his chest, ovee by the power of it, thebeautyof it¡ªthe reality of finally conquering my lifelong fear. And as I sobbed in his arms, shaking from the cold and from the sheer intensity, Dean dipped down onto one knee and proposed. Right there in the middle of the ocean as I cried my heart out, tears mingling with seawater, and my skeletons washing away for good with the crest of each wave, disappearing to the ocean floor. I jumped into his arms, my legs wrapping around his waist as I shoutedyesover and over and over into his neck, holding onto him as the waves tried to take us down. But we held tight, fighting each surge, standing strong like we always do. Like we always will. Dean and I both inhale a sharp breath as we stare out over the horizon at the setting sun. And then his knuckles graze against my own like a soft kiss, a knowing touch, apromise. I feel his fingers intece with mine. We stand there, hand-in-hand, much like we did all those years ago as we awaited rescue, unsure of what our future held. I nce at Dean, soaking up the smile lighting up his face as his eyes linger on mine. He squeezes my hand with his trademark wink. ¡°Happy anniversary, Corabelle.¡± ¡°Happy anniversary,¡± I whisper back, the tears already threatening to spill. I reach for my locket with my free hand, fisting the heart pendant between my fingers as my other hand clings to my husband. And on the count of three, we rush into the ocean, tears mixing withughter, love swelling higher than the tide, and we jump into the water. Together. The Novel will be updated first on this website. Come back and continue reading tomorrow, everyone!