She clocked you, Boss.â
âNo shit. Can you carry her?â
âI can try.â
I squirmed away, but Artâs spicy aftershave drowned out the smell of alcohol and pond scum. One big arm snaked around my shoulders, the other behind my knees. He lifted me up. âSheâs shaking so badâI can hardly hold on to her.â
âThis way. Iâll take her home.â
Warm air moved past my face. I didnât open my eyes, because he would be there.
The truck door creaked open. I cracked my eyes open to see Art buckling me into the passenger seat.
âGo back to the party.â Miles climbed in the driverâs side. âDonât tell anyone about this.â
No, Art! Donât leave me alone with him!
But Art nodded and turned away. Miles started the truck.
âAlex.â
I stared out the window. Where was he?
âAlex, please look at me.â
I didnât.
âWhatâs going on?â His voice rose and cracked. âWhat are you afraid of? Just look at me!â
I glanced at him out of the corner of my eye. I could smell pastries and mint soap, crisp and sharp in the cold air. Miles let out a quick breath, but didnât relax. His glasses slipped down his nose. A bruise already bloomed across his right cheekbone. His eyes flickered back to the road.
âWhatâs wrong?â he asked again. âWhat did you see? There was no one out there besides you and me and Art.â
I shook my head.
I couldnât tell him.
He could never know.
Chapter Sixteen
M y mother opened the door.
âShe just . . .â was all Miles got out before she yanked me from his arms.
âWhat happened?â She pushed me into the house. âWhat did you do?â
âHe didnât do anything, Mom.â She pushed me onto the bench in the hall. The room spun, threatened to disappear. I realized sheâd been talking to me, not Miles.
âWe were at the bonfire, and she said . . . she started talking to someone else,â said Miles. âShe fell down screaming, and we got her up and I brought her here.â
My mother stared at him. âWhatâs that mark? Did she hit you?â
âYes, but . . .â
She rounded on me, eyes flashing. âThank you,â she said over her shoulder to Miles. âIâm very sorry for your trouble. If thereâs anything I can do for you, please let me know.â
âBut waitâis she okay?â
My mother closed the door in his face.
âMom!â
âAlexandra Victoria Ridgemont. You havenât been taking your medicine, have you?â
âMom, IâI thought I wasââ
She stormed into the bathroom and returned with my prescription bottle, thrusting it into my hands. âTake them. Now.â She bent down and pulled my shoes off like I was four. âI trusted you to take those on time. I thought, after years of this, I could count on you to do it yourself.â One of her nails scratched my heel. âI canât believe you hit him. What if his parents decide to press assault charges? I canât believe you were so irresponsible. Are you still seeing things?â
âHow am I supposed to know, Mom?â I had to force the words through the knot in my throat. I wiped tears from my eyes. I clawed open the pill bottle and choked down the medicine.
âGo into the living room. Iâm calling Leann.â
Leann Graves, my therapist. The Gravedigger.
My stomach convulsed.
âIâm fine, Mom, really,â I said, voice wavering. âIâm okay now. It snuck up on me.â
But she already had the phone in her hand, her thumbs flying over the buttons. How did she not have the Gravedigger on speed dial? She smashed the phone against her ear.
âIâm calling your father after this,â she said in her most severe, threatening tone.
âGood!â The strength of my voice surprised me. âHe listens better than you
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