“I wasn’t going to say anything. I don’t care what you do.”
“What the fuck did you just say to me? You don’t care what I do?” Sebastian went to smash the book over Elle, but she covered her head just in time.
The book smashed into her forearm hard enough to hear a small crack.
“Keep your fucking mouth shut, both of you.” He looked at Chloe and raised the book again.
The invisible hands cuffed her wrists more securely, causing tears to brim her eyes.
“Or it’ll just hurt worse.”
Elle grabbed Sebastian’s leg. “No …!”
“Don’t you tell me no.” Sebastian reared the book back toward Elle again, giving her barely enough time to cover her head. He connected the book to the same arm, but this time, the cracking sound was much louder, solidifying a break in the arm.
A smug look crossed his face as he left.
“You’re one lucky, little girl,” he whispered before his invisible hands slowly disappeared.
“Chloe …? Chloe, are you all right?” Elle’s pained voice finally rang through her ears.
Blinking away the tears in her eyes that rained down her cheeks, making her scars glisten red, she looked down at Elle. She was able to see the destruction Sebastian had caused once again.
“I-I’m s-so sorry. I t-tried to—” She began to violently shake.
“I know you did.” Elle slowly got up off the floor, careful not to put any pressure on her hurt limb. “I’ll be okay.”
She wiped the tears off her face when Elle did the same and then looked around, expecting someone to come help.
Elle used the arm of her black hoodie to wipe some of the blood off her face. “No one’s coming.” Then she zipped up the rest of her hoodie to cover her blood-splattered shirt and put up the hood using her good arm. “No one cares.”
Looking around once more, it looked as if the hallways had been deserted years ago.
She’s right; I couldn’t even care enough to help her.
The tears blurred her vision again, but she tried her best to push them back down. “Why did he do it?”
Holding her broken arm to her chest, Elle winced. “When we came out of class, I saw him buying weed off a senior in the halls. I thought I turned my head away fast enough, but I guess not.”
That was why she had no clue what had pissed him off and why he had wanted them to keep their mouths shut. She always kept her head to the ground, so she never noticed what went on in the halls and didn’t see the faces of those who called her a freak.
Chloe picked up Elle’s satchel from the ground and put it on her shoulder with her own book bag. “Come on. I’ll walk to the hospital with you.”
The hospital was thankfully just a street over from the school.
“But isn’t your mom waiting to pick you up outside?” Elle asked.
“No, she’s always an hour late. I’ll text her to pick me up there.”
Elle nodded. “I’ll call my mom and tell her when we get there that my last indoor soccer game didn’t go so well.”
It was wrong for them to chuckle at that, but the two had to make light of the situation somehow.
Walking through the rest of the school, Chloe noticed how the teachers turned their heads or ducked into a room as they passed. There was one fact Cassandra and Sebastian Ross made clear to the whole school the moment they had first walked through the school doors, and that was how their father had funneled donation money to the school. The principal and the teachers would look away from the murder of Elle Buchanan for a million dollars. The beating of a girl whose parents couldn’t afford to donate a dime came at a much cheaper price.
No one ever fucked with the Ross’s, and no one ever would, because the Ross’s were one of the richest families in Kansas City, if not the richest.
“Why’d you do it?” Chloe quietly asked her.
“Do what?”
“Stop him from hitting me.”
Elle waited until they reached the freedom from the school before she spoke.
“I haven’t been able to sleep since you told me, and I’m hoping now I’ll be able to get one night’s rest without having my own nightmares of what happened to you.”
Thirteen
So Help Me God
Staring at her new bedroom, in her new house, it should have brought her peace to start over fresh with the New Year ringing in. It didn’t. It just solidified what she had lost, and now she added the house she had grown up in to that list.
A knock on the door came a moment before the door swung open.
“Ready?” her dad asked.
Wringing her hands, she tried to give it one more shot. “You can’t tell them that I’m sick?”
The door came to a close as her father stepped into the room. “No. Get fucking used to the spotlight. Now come on.”