Unraveling You Page 17

Lyric swallows hard. “Ayden … I …”

“Can we please talk about something else now?” I plead in desperation, barely able to breathe. “Please. Something happy.” I need my happy Lyric back. Need my happiness before I fall back into the darkness that I carried around for two years after that day.

Silence stretches between us before Lyric says, “Did you hear about Maggie?”

I exhale, my muscles loosening. “No, but I’m guessing she’s dating someone new now.”

She smiles as she rests back in the chair, making the shift of attitude so breezy. “How’d you guess?”

I give a half shrug. “Because she dates someone new every day.”

Lyric giggles, but her laughter silences as she opens the desk drawer. She squints at something inside it, and a pucker forms at her brow. “What on earth?” She pulls out a bottle of scotch along with a pack of cigarettes and an ashtray. “Dude, I know my parents drink”—she shows me the pack of cigarettes—“but I never knew they smoked.”

“I’m not surprised. I’ve smelled it on your dad before.” I stretch my legs out and slant my head back at the ceiling decorated with hundreds of guitar picks. “It must have been so cool growing up here,” I remark as I spin the chair around, imagining what it was like living here. Probably pretty great since she’s so damn happy all the time.

“Yeah, I guess it was pretty fucking awesome.” Lyric unexpectedly starts hacking.

My gaze darts to her. I have to bite my lip to restrain my laughter. “Did you just take a drink of that?”

She wipes her lips, shuddering as she stares at the bottle of scotch in her hand. “Yeah, so what?”

“Have you ever drank before?”

“No.” She twists the cap back on. “Have you?”

I shrug. “A couple of times.” That’s all I say, not wanting to relive the things I’ve done when I was losing it, like fighting, drinking, and stealing stuff. “You shouldn’t start with scotch. That’s strong shit right there.”

She meticulously eyes me over. “You want a taste?” She extends her arm across the desk, with her fingers enclosed around the bottle.

Even though I probably shouldn’t, I snatch the bottle from her and swallow a gulp or two as Lyric watches me with inquisitiveness. When I remove the mouth of the bottle from my lips, she grins.

“You didn’t even gag.” She grabs a cigarette, along with a lighter that’s inserted into the pack.

“I wouldn’t do that if I were you. He’ll be able to smell it.”

“I’m just curious.” She relines back in the chair and pops the end of a cigarette into her mouth.

“Well, you shouldn’t be. That stuff is bad for you.”

“I’m not curious about smoking,” she says, cupping her hand around her face as she flicks the lighter and tries to light the end, “but about you.”

“What are you talking about?”

“I can never figure stuff out about you.”

“Like what? If I know how to light a lighter?”

She shakes her head, still struggling to light the cigarette. “No. Like what you like to do. If you really are a bad boy at heart. If you’ve ever smoked before.”

I elevate my brows at her. “That’s what you want to know about me? Out of all things?” After the conversation we just had?

Giving up on the lighter, she rises from the chair and ambles around the desk toward me with the cigarette still resting between her lips. “Well, I have this theory that this good, obedient guy I know isn’t the guy who pulled up in that sedan a month ago.” She leans over me and taps the hollow of my neck. “I mean, the collar’s gone. You took it off at day three, and I could never figure out why—why it was so easy for you to give up your Goth side.” She slides her hand to my ear and traces her finger across the lobe, moving her body close enough that I get a straight view down the front of her shirt. I try not to look, but my eyes stray more than a few times, my heart rate quickening. “And the gauges, too. All you have now are these tiny scars.” Her hands travel down my arms, causing goose bumps to sprout across my skin as her fingers come to a rest on the tops of my hands. I start to panic, thinking she’s going to ask me about the scars there; instead, she grazes the pad of her thumb over my fingernail. “I really do kind of miss the black nail polish.”

I shiver from her touch. “I don’t.” My voice cracks as her fingers graze my knuckles, and I quickly clear my throat.

It’s just a simple touch.

A lyrical brush of fingers.

Nothing that can hurt you.

Anymore.

All thoughts vanish, when she straddles my lap. My heart slams forcefully against my chest. I can’t figure out what to do with my hands. Definitely not touch her; otherwise, I might lose it. But I look awkward with them out to the side, so I drape them on the armrests and fold my fingers inward.

“How much of that did you drink?” I inspect her face to see if she could possibly be drunk, but I’m feeling a little woozy myself and my vision is a bit hazy.

“A few swallows.” She hands me the lighter, places the cigarette in between her lips again, and waits for me to light it for her.

“This is going to teach you a lesson.” I drag my thumb across the top of the lighter and bring the flame closer to the cigarette.

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