Art. I marched back, planting a finger in the middle of Milesâs chest. âWhat the hell do you think youâre doing? You torch someoneâs hair and let her blame me? Because apparently Iâm jealous? What kind of retribution is that? The books were one thing, and the desk, and all that other stuffâbut this is ridiculous.â
Miles rolled his eyes. âWould you shut up and stop assuming you know everything?â
âWould you stop being such a jackass?â
It came out of my mouth too quickly, a reflex reaction to the guilt flooding my stomach. I had no proof, but I wanted him to stop talking. It workedâhis mouth snapped shut, his hands balled into fists. A muscle worked in his jaw. I glared at him as he floundered, but I floundered, too; I couldnât think of what to do next.
Home. Had to get home.
I kept picturing a Celia-led mob chasing me down the street, screaming about my devilish crime like Puritans at a witch trial. I hadnât done anything wrongâI never did anything wrongâit wasnât my fault. . . .
âAlex, I can take you home,â Art said.
Always be polite. âNo, thank you.â
I turned and started walking again. I didnât care where. Anywhere other than here. Art said something else. The words hit me and bounced off. I kept my eyes forward. The street went very quiet.
Ahead of me, Miles stepped out from behind a tree.
How had he gotten there so hellishly fast? Heâd been standing behind me not ten seconds ago, and now he emerged at least three houses down the street. He ambled toward me with his clothes in tatters, like heâd gotten mauled by a bear. When he got close, the smell of alcohol and pond scum invaded the air.
Where his freckles had been, a hundred little holes pulsed blood down his pale cheeks.
âI donât want to talk to you.â I tried to walk past him, but he loped backward, keeping his eyes on mine. His hands hung limp at his sides. His fingers looked longer than usual, like he had too many knuckles. My stomach knotted. I didnât know what heâd done to his freckles, but I couldnât let him see how much they creeped me out.
He wouldnât leave.
I wanted him to leave.
âGo away!â I yelled at him. He didnât blink. His eyes were bluer than ever, bluer than they should have been in the darkness. The sun glowed behind them, melting themfrom inside like candle wax. The color seeped from his skin.
âAlex!â
Someone grabbed my arm. Spun me around.
Miles was there, too. Except not bleeding. And his clothes werenât torn. And his eyes were the right shade of blue. I pulled my arm away and backed up. And ran into Miles.
âWho are you talking to?â Milesâregular Milesâ asked. Art was right behind him.
âI . . . I donât . . .â
Oh no. There were two of him. I knew it was wrong, I knew there shouldnât be, but he reached up for my face, and I felt the cold roiling off his skin.
The roots of my hair screamed as I tugged on them.
âBoth of you stay away from me.â I pointed to both Mileses, backing up onto the nearest lawn. One Miles was bad enough. Two was unbearable.
Regular Miles frowned. âWhat are you talking about?â
Keep your mouth shut, idiot! the little voice in the back of my head screamed. It wasnât supposed to be this bad.
Heâs not real.
He is.
Heâs not heâs not.
A cold finger brushed down my cheek.
Then how can he touch you?
Bloody Miles stared at me, his mouth curving into a wide grin. The blood stained his teeth, too. Miles never smiled. Not like that.
I dropped to the ground as Bloody Miles lunged at me. The world went dark. I heard footsteps. Art yelled something I couldnât understand.
Fingers grabbed my shoulders and tried to pull me up. I balled my hand into a fist and lashed out, connecting with something fleshy.
A groan.
The fingers released me.
âDamn.
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