He wipes the slight injury with his thumb slowly then stares at it as if it’s a wonder.
Or a curse.
“You and I are over, King,” I announce loud enough for everyone in our surroundings to hear. “Stop being a clingy, annoying ex.”
A few gasps erupt around us.
While he’s still watching the blood on his thumb, I hit my shoulder against his and walk out with my head held high.
7
Elsa
Kim and Knox find me outside running down the street from Ronan’s house. They decide to call it a night, too.
I’m thankful Kim doesn’t ask questions and just stays by my side in the back seat as Knox drives us home.
Once I’m in front of my house, Kim switches places to the passenger seat and rolls the window down. “Are you sure you don’t want me to stay the night? We can watch some cheesy rom-com?”
“Kir needs you more than me.”
She winces, then smothers it with a smile. “Text me?”
“You bet.” I bend to meet Knox’s gaze. “Thanks for everything, Knox, and I’m sorry.”
“You did nothing wrong.” He winks and the car revs to life.
I stand at the threshold, crossing the coat over my chest until Knox’s Range Rover disappears down the road.
“I’m back,” I say to no one as I step into the door.
The house is empty and… cold.
As usual when Aunt and Uncle aren’t here.
Maybe I should’ve been selfish and asked Kim to stay the night.
For some reason, I don’t want to be alone tonight.
Once in my room, I remove my coat and throw it on the desk’s chair, open the balcony, then drop on my bed headfirst.
Since I left the party, there’s been this crushing weight on my chest. It’s suffocating my air and making me feel claustrophobic in my own skin.
I won tonight.
Not only did I stop Aiden, but I also humiliated him in front of the entire school like no one did before.
He’s the king after all. No one would dare to look him in the eye for more than five seconds, let alone disrespect him while the entire student body is in earshot.
But I did.
I won.
Then how come I feel no sense of victory? If anything, it’s a bit emptier inside.
Rolling on my back, I stare through the balcony at the rain.
It’s barely a drizzle, but I feel it in my bones. The scent of the earth after rain fills my nostrils and a sigh rips from me.