Alice sat on the bus, hands firmly grasping her bag. She was travelling into the city and not to the 'so-called' good side.
After her job at the gallery fell though, due to it having to close, the Jobcentre helped her find alternative employment. It was only part-time, but as an art and design technician at Rowshill school, she would at least gain experience.
The area was rough. As Alice glanced about at the signs of urban decay—closed storefronts covered in graffiti and open bins spewing trash—she told herself to quit being a snob. People here were poorer than in her town, but they were still just people.
'You're going to be fine,' she assured herself.
As she wandered through the gates, a group of male students gaped at her. One of them said something she didn't quite catch, so she continued walking to the office, head held high.
By the time she'd found her way to the art department, Alice regretted her choice of clothing. The little tight black dress, although smart, was figure-hugging. She was drawing lewd stares from the guys and the odd bitchy look from the girls.
'It's not my fault I have a decent body,' she thought to herself. Yes, it was vain, but there was no point denying it. Plus she worked hard to stay in shape: eating the right things and doing regular exercise. Why should she hide her beauty from the world?
'Especially now I'm single,' she thought, hanging her head. She's stayed up late for the past few nights, debating whether or not to contact him. He hadn't bothered to message her once, so it was probably pointless to think about him. He obviously didn't care. All he would have to do to get her back was to atone for his actions: to apologise.
'He won't say sorry because he's not sorry,' she thought.
When the head of the art department explained her role in greater detail she nodded along and said yes at the right points, but her mind was still on Adam.
"Since we can't do a lot of practical work right now, the job is mostly cleaning and preparing for next term," Mr Lowe was saying. "The students are meant to be staying in their seats which is making life pretty awkward."
Alice nodded with a sympathetic smile.
"Still, it's good that you stared now, so you get a chance to ease into things at a gentle pace," he said.
"Yes." Alice nodded.
Mr Lowe was a middle-aged man with kind brown eyes and a warm smile. He wasn't exactly boyfriend material, but he seemed like someone she'd get along well with.
"Okay, I have a massive order to complete, so I might just get you to take stock of what's in the drawers and clean up as you go if that's okay?" he said.
"Sure, I can manage that," Alice told him with a confident smile. After he showed her where the cleaning equipment and stock sheets were kept, he left her to get on with it.
The Art and design teacher sat behind the desk as she entered, almost spilling her water as she fumbled with the door.
"You okay, love?" Miss Woodward asked.
"Yeah, sorry," Alice said, placing her bits down. "I just need to do the stock check and clean if that's okay?"
"Sure, no worries," the teacher said. "I've got D7 next. Oh Lord, take me now."
Alice laughed, though she had no idea who D7 were. A notorious class was her best guess.
As they piled in, one of the boys deliberately got in her way.
"Sorry, Miss," he said, pushing up against her as he made his way to the sink. "Am I in your way, Miss?"
"It's fine," Alice said, trying not to act phased as his friends snickered and whispered.
He squirted some hand gel into his hands and repeated the same process on the way back, apologising for quite deliberately getting in her way.
"Don't be annoying, Kai," the teacher barked in her defence.
She cleaned out the drawers and counted up the brushes and other items as she went along the side of the classroom. Most of the drawers had random items stuffed inside—plastic bottles, bits of screwed up blue roll and the worst thing... chewing gum.
As she knelt to empty out the bottom drawer, a wad of tissue fell at her feet.
"You missed a spot," a voice sneered.
When Alice turned to address the rude student, her words got stuck in her throat. She found herself staring into a set of two different coloured eyes.
"Riley."
"The one and only," he said, grinning at her. "How's your boyfriend doing. I heard he got out of the hospital."
Alice took a deep breath. She tried to pry her eyes away from him but found it impossible. "I wouldn't know. Me and him... it's over."
He shocked her by letting out a deep throaty laugh. "He'd not having a good week."
Riley turned to the guy seated behind him. "You hear that Felix?"
"Poor Adam," Felix said, smiling with false sympathy. He crossed his feet beneath the desk and leaned forward, placing his head in his hands. "But lucky for you. How a pretty little thing like you ended up with an awful guy like that is quite the mystery."
Alice looked down, staying quiet. Telling them the whole story wasn't an option. Aside from the fact it was shameful, it wasn't exactly a topic considered 'safe for work.'
She decided to change the topic instead. "You can't really expect Mike to pay you back eleven grand?"
"No." Riley smiled. "I expect him to stop acting like he's above working for me. Is it a coincidence that he decides to go clean after my brother gets put in prison? Hmm? I think not."
"Isn't going clean a good thing?" she asked.
The question made both Riley and Felix snort with laughter.
"She's kind of adorable," Felix said to Riley.
"She's kind of living with her head in the clouds," Riley corrected him. "Life isn't fairy tale."
"It's not a post-apocalyptic horror story either," Alice said, face deadpan.
"Are they bothering you?" Mrs Woodward asked, leaning up from her desk with a questioning look.
Alice shook her head. "It's fine."
She picked up her cloth and went to move but stopped when Riley grabbed her by the wrist. She tried to pull back, but his grip was iron.
"Come find me at lunch," he said, an amused look on his face.
"Why?" Alice frowned.
"Because I said so," he replied.
As Alice tried to pull away from him, his smile only grew.
"Okay," she conceded, not wanting to make a scene on her first day of work. "Just... let go."
With a smug look, he released his grip.
"See you soon... Alice," he said, reading from her lanyard.
Alice turned away. She had no intention of meeting him at lunch. He was a student, so it would be weird for her to sit with him. She'd prepared a lunch box and was planning to eat it in the canteen with the rest of the art department.
'I'm sure he'll forget about it,' Alice thought.
Bonus Chapter Alice shuffled, shifting her feet beneath her on the soft sofa cushions. It was hard to move with the weight of the now fully grown Ivy planted across her lap. Adam, seeing her struggle, laughed but did not offer any help. Knowing him inside and out, she wouldn't expect or want any different. That was Adam. Her Adam. Ste and Jamie sat opposite. Both had fussed the dog for a while before settling in front of the television, entangled in each other, and arguing about the contestants of the show 'Glow Up.' "She's a total stuck up bitch, but I like her," Jamie was saying. "She won't last." Ste shook his head. Zoe was also engaged in the television, but Gary was focused purely on his phone. "Look!" Gary raised his phone to show the others a picture. 'A baby.'Alice frowned, puzzl
Alice sat opposite Jamie as he preened himself in front of a mirror. He moved about the same piece of hair multiple times before deciding it looked better in the first place."Got a date?" she asked.Jamie glanced up from his mirror for a second and nodded. "I didn't think I'd ever get feelings for Ste, but since he rescued me... it's just... different."Alice nodded. She had similar feelings toward Adam. The annoying thing was, he wasn't making any sort of moves on her. If she wanted him, she was going to make it blatantly obvious before he would pick up the hint."I'm glad things are going well for you two," she said, smiling at her brother. It was nice to see him in a happy and healthy relationship.Putting down his mirror, Jamie tutted, sighed, and gave her the saddest smile. "Alice, you're just too nice. I was awful to you, and you're still rooting for me."
"Are you sure you're okay to come back to work?" Hannah asked for the umpteenth time. She'd been fussing over her all morning, making her drinks and going out of her way to make as little work as possible."Honestly," Alice reassured her. "I'm completely fine."Standing on her tiptoes, Alice glanced over the teacher's shoulders at the classroom. The seat where Felix had always sat was now empty. There was something ominous about the way it was angled and edged away from the table—almost as if it were waiting for his return."I always knew he was a wrong'un." Hannah shook her head. "I still can't believe you aren't pressing charges, though. He's going to get away with it."Her mother had said the same thing repeatedly, the thing they didn't understand though, was the trouble she'd be causing for Riley, Adam, Mike, and all the other lads if the prosecution started asking too many questions.
The pain in Alice's stomach would intensify every so often before tapering off and becoming ignorable for a time. It emitted a grumbling sound, making her blush and apologise.Damien laughed. "I just watched you pee in a bucket. There's no need to worry about a few bodily noises.""You said you weren't looking." Alice narrowed her eyes, giving him an evil stare.Damien laughed and shrugged. "These might be my last hours. I should make the most of them, don't you think?""Okaaay." Alice let out a strained chuckle, unsure what to say to that. If looking at her bum made his last day even a tiny fraction better, she would allow it, as weird and perverted as it seemed to her. "Knock yourself out."Without warning, he took her hand and spun her into his side. Licking his lips, he stared down at her. "Since we have nothing else to do..."Alice pulled away, feeling h
Jamie listened to the sounds of their footsteps crunching down the driveway, waiting until they were well out of earshot before moving toward Felix.First, he wandered off into the kitchen and poured some warm water into a bowl. Then he went upstairs to get the first aid kit from under his mother's bed. Their kit was pretty extensive and well-stocked—one of the perks of having a nurse for a mother.Returning to Felix, he paused halfway down the stairs to still his heart. Seeing the way the smaller boy had defeated Adam so completely and utterly was...Jamie smiled to himself.It was... euphoric.The more he learned and remembered about his adversary, the more in awe he became.This guy was a genius who couldn't feel pain. He seemed to feel nothing at all, which made him godlike in Jamie's eyes.After gathering his senses
"I don't care what you do to me. I'll never tell you." Felix spat blood into Adam's face and grinned, showing a row of broken and red-smeared teeth. "I'm not like you, Adam."'He's right,'Adam surmised.'I was begging for mercy at this point, and he's not even broken a sweat.'Becoming frustrated, Adam grabbed the hammer. He raised it in a tight fist, gearing it toward Felix's skull before turning and bashing the molars he'd painstakingly extracted.'Good luck reattaching these now.'He smirked to himself, feeling his recently removed teeth with his tongue. They felt different to before, and he couldn't stop pushing his tongue into the gap."How is this not hurting him?" he muttered to Jamie. "I remember it well. It was torture.""One sec," Jamie uttered. His fingers tapped away at his laptop keyboard as his eyes darted about the s