"What's the criteria for joining the body?"
The question had their expressions darkening noticeably but it wasn’t enough to elicit further response from them. I’d shocked them. It was a question none of them had been expecting, one they evidently hadn’t been asked in far too long. They were hoping I would back down, that if they stared hard enough I would bend; instead I doubled down in my silent wait. They weren’t going to push me aside like they did everyone else and by now I was making as much of a social statement as I reckon anyone had in a while.
Before I left my table, I’d said it was time for things to change and a small part of me liked the idea that someone else would be given courage by my ill-advised pursuit. With any luck, these five would start being approached more often and others would feel emboldened to pursue their own ambitions of student body leadership. I would be the social revolutionary they were waiting for and in turn they would put me at their helm.
It was amazing how well the plan was coming together despite the initial setback.
Speaking of setbacks, one by one the members of the body got up, deciding it was time they were anywhere else. The crippling tendrils of rejection began their steady creep through me, intrusive in their quest to shut me down. It brought me to my most primal self, the one that was tired of not being good enough, the one that was tired of being looked down on, the one that broke that little girl’s teeth for pointing out the inadequacies in her. I wouldn’t take a swing at any of the retreating body members—certainly not—but it did ignite a fire in me that seldom led to rational thought.
"Fine. Fine. I'll find out the criteria myself!" I spat indignantly. Who were they to put themselves above me and everyone else? Who were they to think they didn't owe any explanations to anyone? It was their duty to serve the students of the school—something they seemed quite keen to forget. "You think you can keep me away from the body and Jayden? Gimme a month and you’ll find out who I am.”
The last part hadn’t come out right—hell it shouldn't have come out at all, but in the moment the rage that coursed through me fended off any shame.
It was all the talk from Madelyn. Hearing how highly they held themselves, how untouchable they seemed to the common man, it was more than I currently felt like ignoring. In my annoyance, I'd drawn for all the cards they'd laid before me and one happened to be something that would ruffle the feathers of at least one member; Jayden. Did I mean to have them as annoyed as they had made me? Absolutely. Never mind how I’d done it; I had their attention now. I had everyone’s attention.
It took another moment for me to I realize how quiet the cafeteria had become. They’d all heard my declaration and were intrigued by this new girl who didn’t know her place or the war she was beginning.
The body stopped dead in their tracks. They all turned to me, the boyish grin from earlier finding its way back to Jayden’s face.
"Well then,” he quipped, “I wish you all the best."
Finally, the hints of playfulness were starting to return. Laughter danced around in his eyes, his secret joke from earlier returning, but it was all fleeting. They turned as one unit and made their way out of the lunchroom just as the bell began to ring signalling the end of the lunch period.
I walked back to the table I’d been sitting at, my heart racing a hundred miles a minute and my legs wobblier than freshly made Jell-O. Coming down from my earlier irritation, I couldn't believe I’d done any of that. I'd been working on my impulse control and thought I’d gotten it better in check but my foolhardy outburst just now proved otherwise. The last time I'd had an outburst that was even remotely as questionable might have been a whole year earlier. It was also the last time I'd been provoked to such strong emotion.
"Girl, do you have a death wish or something?" Madelyn demanded as I reached down to collect my book bag.
"No…why?"
She looked at me as if I’d grown two extra heads, incredulous at my own ignorance of whatever matter she was trying to raise. "You’ve basically challenged the body and declared war on Erin!"
“I didn’t,” I countered, thinking my actions—while rash—were warranted and well within the purview of what should’ve been a democratic process. I shouldered my bag but rather than walking away, I found myself waiting around for the others to begin grabbing their own things.
"You obviously don't listen to yourself when you speak."
"All I said was I’d find out the criteria, and Jayden’s a big boy. I doubt I could force him into anything he didn’t want." In which case Erin would have to back off—or provide the plot antagonist every romance protagonist needed. I wasn’t picky; a good performance was a good performance.
She shook her head, pitying me for the bigger picture I was clearly missing. "Yeah, but there's a reason no one knows the criteria. They don't want anyone else on it. By saying you’ll definitely find out—and presumably ‘join’ them—you're going against them.” We started toward the door, following the crowds that whispered and chattered as they made their way from the room. Some spared the occasional glance my way thinking I wouldn’t notice but hypervigilance had always been the order of my day. “You're also the only girl any of us have ever seen who was dumb enough to publicly declare her interest in Jayden—and in case you don't feel dumb enough already, you did it right in front of Erin!"
A lazy shrug rolled off my shoulder, conveying a nonchalance I wasn’t truly feeling. It didn’t matter what she’d explained; the damage had already been done. It wasn’t as if I could take it back, not now. I could only move forward and commit to the work I’d started.
“Like I said, it’s time things changed.”
And so it began.
“There’s…there’s something I need to tell you.” I only needed the courage to find the words.Jayden’s brows creased as he took me in. “What is it…?”“You’ll be angry.”“I won’t.”“You can’t promise that; you don’t even know what it is…”“And you can’t be sure I will be until you’ve told me and given me a chance to react.”We sat at a silent stalemate as several minutes trickled by. I knew he was patiently waiting for whatever bad news I would spring, and I knew it would hurt him. The fear I harboured had nothing to do with ending the new fairytale I’d taken on and everything to do with the hesitation I felt following everything he’d done for me and now my brother.He didn’t deserve what I’d done, and it had been all for naught. I never got pregnant and didn’t h
Three weeks later, my brother and I dutifully attended our mother’s funeral. There were only a handful of people in attendance and even then, they were mostly family. The genuine friends my mother had made were no more than a handful and only one of them shed any tears.Aunt Rebecca was the only immediate family member to cry with even Nana maintaining a wall of stoicism while the pastor carried on with his final sermon. I didn’t hear most of his words. My eyes locked on the casket waiting to be lowered with a detached sense of disbelief. At any moment, it would open, and my mother would come out barking her laughter at all the fools who’d thought a single bullet would be enough to keep her from her children. She would hug Matt and promise she would never leave him then offer me a plastic smile as she assured me we would talk about it all when we got home.I’d spent the better part of the earlier service with my eyes fixed on the woman while the
It was another seven minutes before the paramedics arrived and when they did, there was a race against time to get me stable. I’d already lost too much blood and kept slipping in and out of consciousness. I learned later that the police had also been called but in the haze I’d fallen into, I couldn’t say when they arrived on our usually quiet street.I was loaded into the ambulance with my brother and an officer accompanying us. It was Detective Charles, the man who’d promised my mother he would find out the truth about her ex-husband’s sudden, tragic death. He didn’t know what to make of the scene he’d come onto but knew there was a deep well that buried secrets so dark that two children had no business holding onto them.Conversations carried on around me, but they were too muffled by my fading consciousness for me to hear. The next time I awoke, I was on a hospital bed with my brother asleep on the chair that sat in the corn
“No!” I answered quickly. I hurried to hold the note I’d written up for her to see but she gave it only the shortest of cursory glances before pulling back then throwing her entire weight into the smack she landed on my cheek. The force sent me toppling to the ground faster than I could right myself and by then, she’d begun kicking.“I bet you think you’ve found something, huh? HUH? Think you’ve got the upper hand now; that you can blackmail me because of what you’ve seen? Do you know who I am, little girl? Don’t you know that I will kill you?”I shook my head frantically as I curled into a protective ball. “I didn’t—I didn’t see anything, I swear!”“Don’t fucking lie to me!” Her next kick landed in my face, causing blood to gush from my nose.“I won’t say anything; I won’t, I promise!”“I shoul
I set to decline Adam's offer but, in a flash, he was on his feet pulling on his own pants. “The bus might be a while. I don’t want you standing out by the bus stop waiting for however long.” He pulled for his shirt and slipped it on. “You hungry? We can hit up a drive-thru on the way.”The rumbling of my stomach betrayed any answer I could’ve given. Adam nodded his understanding then led the way from the house. He got me my usual off the menu then dropped me off in front of my house.Adam had tried to fill the ride with small talk, in what appeared on the surface to be a sincere interest in catching up, but I’d already begun to shut down. I didn’t want to talk. I didn’t want to feel, to see, to be.“Hey,” he said as I set to walk away from his car. “Remember what I said, alright? I’m here for you.”I nodded, seeing no need to argue and not wanting to prolong the conversat
I swallowed my pride, understanding the role I would have to play. It wasn’t an unfamiliar one and would require no great effort for me to slip into. I dropped the pitch of my voice, forcing it into a sultry invitation I knew he wouldn’t refuse.“Your pay’s built into this favour.” I hated myself.Adam pulled away to look at me, his eyes glistening hungrily. “I’m listening.”I took a deep breath to steady myself. “Emily’s…dead.”“Who?”A surge of hot anger rose in me at his ignorance, but I was forced to swallow it. Adam’s lack of knowledge was in large part my fault. I’d never allowed him to meet her, nor had I ever told him anything about her. She may as well had been a stranger to him—as she truly was—and in that moment, I realised the small stake he had in the decision I’d made…how…insignificant my plight was been for