TW: self-harm (cutting; aftermath only), hypersexuality, past child sexual abuse, domestic violence/murder, gun violence [these three are discussed in some detail], complicated feelings towards asexuality, trauma, consent to sex discussed
I tried to distract myself from the static in my brain any way I could. Texting people was out. I had a few messages on my phone from a strange number thatâfrom the few words my notifications had given meâI figured was Jaylie. So at least she was safe. But I didnât want to deal with Jaylie, or Cassandra, orâgod forbidâMrs. Chaudhury. People were more than I could handle at the best of times, andâ
(that must have been hard)
Dishes. I was going to put away dishes from the drying rack. That would work.
Avery hadnât specified what was hard for me, which made me wonder. Theyâd said Iâd saved both of their lives, but did they know? Did they care? Were they choosing sides or did they, like me, think that was pointless? Kiera was a murderer. Butâ
There shouldnât be a but to murder. I was just⌠going in circles.
(âwe â re just bodies to youâ and the forced, twisted smile on Kiera â s face, the desperate attempt to brush it off)
I wasnât supposed to be able to read people. I kept making mistakes, when I was involved. But it wasnât thatânobody actually wanted you to read them. They wanted you to play by the rules. They told you they were fine, and there were different rules depending on who you were in their life, what gender you were, what they wanted you to believe, the way they said it, how much you knew and didnât know. What you actually felt or thought didnât matter. You followed the rules, and you werenât supposed to acknowledge that there were rules. And me? Half of why I got in trouble was because I didnât know the rules. Or more to the point, I knew the rules, but I cared more about the truth. It was why Iâd thought being a private eye would work. Romantic, sure. Also a great way of hiding from my lack of social skills.
But this time aroundâ
So much for distractions. If I kept thinking about this, I was going to grind my teeth into paste. Because what was bothering me wasnât that something was wrong with Kiera, with the whole situation as presented. It was that nobody else seemed to notice or care. It seemed obvious to me that this wasnât about some⌠psycho with a sword chopping up people for shits and giggles. This wasnât Criminal Minds. But then nobody else seemed to see it any other way, and I kept questioning myself, wondering if I was just making excuses for somebody I liked for stupid reasons.
It took me a moment to notice Will leaning on the doorframe, and I waited until Iâd put the last of the plates away to acknowledge her. I was still pissed. No, I wasâ
âDisappointed,â she offered in a quiet voice. I didnât correct her, mostly because she wasnât wrong. âIâmââ She stopped before the word sorry, face pale.
âYou gonna stop holding out on me now?â I said quietly.
âAbout what?â
âDonât play dumb with me, Will. You and Kiera knew each other. Exes?â
âWe fucked. If you want to call that exesââ
âSure. Whatever.â
Will moved to stand a little closer to me, leaning on the kitchen counter. She wasnât highâat least, I didnât think she wasâbut she was kind of moving like it anyway. The aftereffects of adrenaline on her body, probably.
âShe⌠was lost. Middle of nowhere. I didnâtâI donât turn tricks anymore. Uh, do sex work.â
âI know what tricks are.â
Will snorted. âItâs not that. Avery hates me calling it that. Anyway, I do some modeling and stuff, but no more, yâknow, full stuff. Canât do it safelyâfor myself, I mean. But I thought maybe she did. I offered her some space out of the cold.â
I raised an eyebrow, still not looking at her directly. âThat innocent, huh?â
âI didnât know who she was! And you gotta understand, she wasnât even speaking English at first. She started speaking English again after a bit, but she still wasnât really making sense. Sheâs crazy most of the time, but thereâs crazy like she is now andâuhââ Will shrugged, but there was a sadness in it, her eyes fixed on the linoleum floor where her feet twisted against each other. âShe couldnât remember things from one minute to the next. Talked to the air. Didnât know what year it was. I thought it was drugs at first.â
I swallowed, but it didnât take the sudden horrified lump out of my throat. âWe donâtâwe donât have to talk about this.â
âYeah, thatâs alright. Sheâsâsheâs different now.â Will took the lifeline almost too desperately, the tightness around her eyes haunted and strung-out. âThatâs alright.â
It wasnât. But I didnât want to talk about this either. Talking about it meant we had to answer the question looming behind itâwhat next?
I didnât want to think at all, actually. And so my body made the decision for me. I pushed her against the counter, and I kissed her. I had to go up on my tiptoes a little to do it, but I put my hand on the back of her neck to pull her into it, pushing my tongue into her mouth. I didnât just want a kiss. I wantedâ
–a distraction-
I wanted more. I wanted to stop thinking. I wanted her. I wantedâ
Will was kissing me back. I wasnât imagining that. But her hands slid down my neck to my shouldersâthen she broke the kiss, pressing her forehead against mine, and whispered with a little laugh. âYou donât want me.â
âWhat?â
âNot me. Not now.â
âYou donât get to tell me what I want,â I replied, trying not to get angry, even though I could feel the bitterness rising in the back of my mouth.
âI can hear all of the red flags, Jamal. Every single one of them.â It wasnât a laugh. It was a tiny, little sob. âI canât not hear it. You donât want me. You want to get fucked up and wrecked and retraumatized and I amââ I AM NOT GOING TO DO IT FOR YOU
I was still angry. I was angry because she was still listening to my thoughts and I was angry because if I wanted that it was my responsibility and not hers, and I was angry right up until the bathroom door slammed shut and I was standing alone in the kitchen.
ââ
Realistically, I only sat out in the hallway staring at the bathroom door for about ten, fifteen minutes. Nathan was locked away in his room, and I was pretty sure he had his headphones on, playing some video game or another. That was fine. It meant I had the space to bang my head (gently) against the banister, in exactly the same place Iâd been sitting before, and go through exactly why I was an asshole.
Hereâs the thing. Iâm asexual. To everybody else, to the vast majority of people, that means I donât want or like sex. Thatâs fine. Thatâs easy. That makes my life nice and simple. I can explain it to people that way, and it means I want to date and hold hands with girls and be all fluffy and romantic. Except⌠Iâm not really the romantic type, either. And thatâs also fine, because it means Iâll figure it out. It still means people leave me alone.
And that would all be fine, if that was all being asexual was. Tumblr had all sorts of subtypesâdemisexual, gray-asexual, whatever. I have a hard enough time keeping the days of the week straight, so I never got very good with those. But the thing is, it doesnât mean not wanting sex. It means, I donât know. Instead of wanting sex with girls or boys, you just kind of. Sit there and donât particularly want sex with anybody. It doesnât mean your libido shuts up. It doesnât mean your brain doesnât occasionally decide, hey, letâs do something stupid and self-destructive. It doesnât mean youâre suddenly incapable of making bad choices because of your sex drive.
I didnât usually sit around and dwell about this. Itâd made high school annoying, sure. My âfirst timeâ had been an incredibly badly-thought-out and poorly-remembered fuck with my exâs brother after she dumped meâthe first ex, to be clear. The second one was pretty nice, and also didnât have a brother. But most of the time, it didnât matter. Most of the time, I wasnât⌠Ugh. Letâs be frank. Most of the time, I wasnât showing myself up as a fucking prick and hurting somebody I actually liked.
Enough feeling sorry for myself. My issues werenât the point. So I took a deep breath, and knocked on the door. âUh. Hey. Will? You alright?â
Silence. Then, a mumbled, almost-whispered, âShit, shit, shitââ
âIâm coming in.â I opened the door, peering around the edge before opening it the whole way.
Will glanced balefully up at me, attempting a smile. She was standing over the sink, both faucets opened to full, andâ
Oh.
âDonât,â she mumbled, still clumsily trying to blot away the blood from her wrist. She had the tape out, but hadnât gotten around to actually covering the wounds, which were still dripping into the sink.
I swallowed, trying to shove my immediate reaction away. My emotions hadnât been useful tonightâand, I reasoned, I could be angry all I wanted, but if sheâd been actually trying to kill herself, she would have tried harder.
Willâs drawn face broke into a grin as she struggled not to laugh. âAlright, you can stay,â she said with rolled eyes.
âDo youâumâwant some help?â Youâd think by now Iâd remember.
She looked a little defeated at that. âWhat kinda house doesnât have any fuckinâ Band-Aids?â
I wordlessly moved into the bathroom and opened the mirrored front of the medicine cabinet. Which, in her defense, was embedded into the wall.
âYou know, Iâm impressed,â she commented dryly, âbut also annoyed I didnât think of that.â
âYou had other things on your mind.â I blinked away a few tears that had, annoyingly, showed up. I still felt like an asshole, but helping I could do. Helping I was good at. At least when it was simple stuff like this.
I focused, instead, on taking the half-dressing off her wrist, cleaning the cuts properly with some rubbing alcohol. There werenât many, luckily. None would have been better, butâ
I didnât really know what to think.
She was gazing at me, I noticed through my eyelashes, and I tried not to blush. âThanks,â she said after a little while of silence broken only by the dripping tap.
âFor what?â
âI mean, if I had to list everything, weâd be here all night. But youâre not, uh. Lecturing me or anything.â
âLecâis that what people usually start with?â
âYou would not fucking believe. Itâs all, what are you doing to yourself, and how could you, and this is terrible, and meanwhile Iâm just like. Gimme some better drugs and then weâll talk.â
âDrugsâ?â
âMedication drugs,â she amended. âTried the other kind, not my jam. Or too much my jam. It really shouldnât be harder to get Adderall than K or E.â
I blinked. âIâactually know what those mean. Weâre finally speaking the same language.â
âWere we not before?â she teased, or at least, I thought she was teasing.
âOh, shut up.â I put the Band-Aids carefully in place. Iâd only needed two, and I felt the tension drain out of my shoulders once the wounds were covered up. ââŚYou okay?â
âWhy wouldnât I bââ
âWill.â
âSorry. Donât let my dumb jokes fool you. I donât recommend this particular coping method. Zero out of ten, all I got was a ton of unfortunately-placed scars.â
I noticed, wryly, that Will sounded more like Cass when she was upset.
âI just⌠I get overwhelmed. And I usually have better ways of dealing, but shitâs been a lot lately, and IâŚâ She sank back into silence, still gazing at me. âTurns out I like you a lot.â
I swallowed, mouth dry. It was me. Iâd beenâ
I wasnât that stupid. It wasnât that Iâd been upsetting her, and not just that Iâd been an asshole. She was stressed out because of me, worrying about me. I knew that because if I stopped and thought for more than two seconds about how much Iâd run around and put myself in danger, how much shit I pulled on a regular fucking basis⌠It wasnât just Jo who kept giving me trouble. But Will hadnât. Will had kept it to herself.
Not entirely.
You know people trying to protect you arenât mad at you?
Minutes before holding a gun to Kiera.
I didnât realize I was going to start sobbing until it ripped itself out of my throat, and I covered my face in humiliation, because I couldnât stop.
âItâs okay, itâs okay. Hey, come on.â Will wrapped her arms around me, and there was some comfort in knowing that she was better, she was stable, because I could feel it. Not clearly, not well. But I wasnât⌠feeling the energy drain out of me, like levels equalizing in a lake. âItâs not you. Okay? Itâs not your fault. Thatâs not what I meant.â
âIf youâre hurting yourself because of me, then thatâs not okay, itâs not, Iââ
âDonât start with that,â she groaned, irritation creeping into her voice. âI hurt myself because I have a fucked up brain and handle stress like, insanely badly.â
I nodded, closing my eyes and trying to get a hold of myself. She was right to be annoyed. Iâd managed to keep my cool and focus on her, then Iâd fucked it upâ
Suddenly, I found myself in the air, and I squeaked in surprise as Will dumped meâgentlyâinto the bathtub. âTake a deep breath.â
Why am I in the bathtub?â
âBecause if you keep being a self-destructive dumbass Iâll turn the water on.â
ââŚI hate you.â
Will grinned, getting down on her knees next to the bathtub and folding her arms on the side. âTake some deep breaths, chill the fuck out, and please remember that I am a whole three years older than you.â
âThree years older,â I repeated in a mocking voiceâand then shrieked as she turned the cold water tap on over my socks.
âI did warn you.â
I reached down and pulled my wet socks off with a shiver. âIf I catch a cold, Iâm blaming you.â Then I stared back at Will. âHowâhow are you fine so quickly? I donât get it. You were a mess fifteen minutes ago.â
She looked a little rueful at that, tucking her hair behind her ear then resting her cheek on her palm. âI have a ton of shit wrong with my brain, but one of âem is BPD. I can go from suicidal to tea party in about two seconds flat. Stuff likeâŚâ She vaguely indicated her wrist. âIt helps make sure I donât totally implode during the first bit.â
âBPDâŚbipolar?â
ââI mean, Iâm that too. Borderline personality disorder. Otherwise known as crazy bitch disease.â
I raised an eyebrow.
âOkay, uh, imagine your fight or flight instincts, but like, all the way to a hundred. And then no impulse control. It meansââ Will pulled a face. âYou know. Stuff like pulling a gun on your dangerous ex makes perfect sense.â
âOh no you donât. That wasnât an impulse thing. Why did you fucking have it?â
Will rubbed her forehead. âIâUgh. You think I was planning this.â
âI donâtââ I sank deeper into the empty tub. âI donât know,â I mumbled. âI donât know what to think.â
Will watched me for a little, then dropped her eyes to where her fingers were drawing lazy patterns on the porcelain lip, black nail-polish only slightly chipped at the edges and showing traces of purple underneath. ââŚYou said you, uh, read about me in the paper. Back when it happened.â
âI think so, but itâs been a long time. I donât remember the details, just that it was bad.â I remembered a little more than that, but Will clearly wanted to talk about it, and I didnât trust my memory enough to volunteer anything.
âCass and I are twins. Middle kids. Older brother, younger brother, rich snob parents who hated each other but stayed married for the papers and to support the whole Family Values platform bullshit.â Will snorted. âNo wonder my dad hated me so much. I was a fuckinâ sissy long before I came out. But he mostly just ignored me. Jason was the problem.â
âJason was your older brother?â
âYeah. Lovely guy. Played sports, liked cars, dealt drugs and thought nobody knew, sexually abused his siblings and made sure we were too scared of him to tell anybody.â
I stayed silent, even though my heart was racing in my chest. I didnât need Will to stopâI was okayâI was just shocked at how easily Will had said it. Although perhaps easily wasnât the right word. She was nervous, moving back and forth on her knees, shifting her posture, fingers moving on the porcelain, still not looking at meâ
âI came out. Well, sort of. I got outed. It was a big mess, and of course all the other dirty secrets came out too. I donât even remember who said itâme, or Cass, or Alex, but one way or another, it came out. And my parents made a big deal out of how they were going to make sure they sent Jason away and just. All this bullshit that I knew, I knew they wouldnât do. Of course they knew! But, uhââ Will swallowed. âJason didnât. Or maybe he just wanted an excuse. I donât know if he really believed that Mom and Dad were going to send him to the army or whatever they were threatening to make us feel better, but he wasnât exactly the most stable guy to begin with, you know?â
Oh god. Oh god, I remembered now. Iâd heard parts of it, read about the aftermath almost a year after thisâbut I knew what had happened next.
âWe were sleeping in the living room, because we were worried, you know? Trying to stay safe. I was talking about running away, but Cass and Alex were pretty scared. One night couldnât hurt.â Will closed her eyes, taking a long, shaking breath. âHe shot Alex first. Thatâs what woke me up. The gunshot first, and then his thoughts. He was thinking about how he was going to kill us in orderâAlex, then Cassie, then me.â Will laughed suddenly. âYou know, I was so confused, for years, why that was in order, because thatâs exactly how he thought about it. I thought it was age. But it wasnât. It was which of us heâd fucked first. And he went for Cassie, and–“
I could see the rest reflected in her eyes. But she needed to get it out. I wondered if sheâd ever actually told anybody before. Somebody new, somebody who hadnât been around for it. She puffed out her cheeks, exhalingâ
âI told him to shoot himself instead. He was always planning to, at the end. But I told him, and I grabbed his mind so hard I think I broke it before the bullet got anywhere near it.â She glanced back up at me, the bitter mask starting to crack. âI thought Kiera was⌠harmless. Weird, sure. I think sheâd just gotten here when I ran into her. I tried to help her, and I did⌠too much.â
I wasnât entirely following, and I sat up from my slouched position in the tub, frowning a little.
âI donât know. She wanted help. She kept asking for somebody to help her, and she wasâgod, she was talking to the air, and kept doing things over and over worried she wasnât doing it the right way, but she couldnât decide what the actual right way was. I didnât think I could make it worse. And IâI should do something good with this awful thing, right? Something other than shooting my own fucking brother. So I went into her head and I tried to help.â
The bottom plummeted out of my stomach.
Shit.
âI asked her first, I swear, I just didnât realize she didnât⌠I donât think she knew what she was agreeing to. Sometimes with suggestions andâand Sulfur shit, something goes wrong. A suggestion hits the wrong nerve or the wrong button and it causes an echo.â Will wasnât crying, but that was almost worse. She just looked completely miserable and also not quite here. Not destabilizingâjust not fully here. âAnd I didnât even realize it was the same person until after we started finding bodies.â
I didnât know how to respond, but I knew now that I had to say something. âIâI can understand wanting to help her, I guess. I justâwhy didnât you tell somebody?â
âGod. I kept trying, but then Iâd stop and tell myself that maybe they were different people, maybe I was worrying too much.â
âYou still havenât told me why you have the damn gun.â
âBecause I got more and more paranoid, after the morgue. You went missing. People who Iâd thought were just being quiet were in the unclaimed section of the fucking morgue. I didnât know if Iâd use it on her, and if I did, I figured itâd be self-defense. And thenâI saw her with you and I couldnâtâfuckingâstopâthinking about Jason.â She rubbed her face. âChrist, the fact that I can even say this out loud. Suck it, Distress Center, I am coping fine.â
âI honestlyââ I sat up fully, wrapping my arms around my legs. âFrom how you were supporting me when Cass and Jaylie were talking about killing herâI thought you liked her.â
âOh, I do. Or did, or something. You think I didnât love Jason? Thatâs exactly the problem.â She gave me a crooked smile, bitten lips looking particularly ragged. âKiera isâsheâs not a monster. I donât like it when people try to make things that easy, or simple. I mean, like I said. Crazy bitch disease, right here. But thatâs the problem. What do I do? This is my fault. And I canât call the cops. Sheâs not even human. I canât lock her up, or have her arrested, or any of the ways youâre supposed to handle this. Sheâs a murderer, so we canât just shuttle her off somewhere else and hope she learns a lesson. I know you want me to sit here and feel bad and I do and I donât want to be the kind of person who executes somebody in cold blood. Thatâs not me. But even with my head more together, Iâm⌠I donât have any answers.â And Will leaned on the side of the bathtub, still looking miserable, but somehow moreâalive, because sheâd said it, now. âAnd if somebody has to be a murderer to get rid of a murderer,â she added, not quite looking at me but still deep into the past, âmight as well be me, right?â
âYou donât really believe that it has to be you.â
âGod no. Not right now, anyway. But sometimes, I do. And the real answer is that somethingâs gotta happen.â
I pressed my cheek against my knees, chewing on the inside of my lip. Will was right. What I actually felt or believed was besides the point. What were we going to do?
âSheâs only killed Salts,â I said quietly. âSo at least we know who to keep an eye on. Me, Isaiah, and Jaylieâwho I still donât get where she fits in, but sheâs important somehow.â
âAveryâs already on it. You need to rest.â
âI guess. I donât really know how.â I paused. âWhat did â you tell her? I mean, what was the â what exactly did you say?â
Will sighed. âIt seemed harmless. Therapy shit, you know? I mean, I havenât been to therapy, but Iâve gotten the usual 101 through friends. I just-â She pulled a bit of a face. âSuggestions are easiest when theyâre short. So all I said was âYou deserve to be lovedâ.â
âReally? How does that get her to⌠that?â
âNo clue.â
I chewed it over. I really did need to rest, but I wondered if Will wasnât responsible at all â if it was just a coincidence.
Will interrupted my thoughts. ââŚEver seen Black Swan?â
âThe movie?â
âYeah. Keira Knightley makes out with Mila Kunis in it.â
I squinted at her. âIsnât it a horror movie? Am I going to hate the context?â
âOh, probably. But itâs still Keira Knightley and Mila Kunis.â
ââŚFair.â I paused. âIâmâIâm sorry. For, um.â How did I even word this? âI donât usuallyâIâmââ
Will smothered a giggle with her hand- then leaned forward, kissing my cheek in a way that seemed chaste at firstâuntil her teeth grazed my earlobe, and I shivered. âIf you want sex, you want sex. And if you donât, you donât. Just donât claim you do when itâs something else youâre after.â
âWhat if Iâm not sure?â
âMm. I can work with that. Just be honest.â
Ha. Like it was so easy. But then she stood up and offered her hands to help me get out of the bathtub, and I was so, so tempted. ButâŚ
âAny chance youâll take a rain check until I get an actual bed?â I said, slightly morosely. âI can even take you on a real date.â
She looked so pleased at the idea that I would have taken a job at the freakinâ McStabs just to afford it. Turned out I was a little more romantic than I thoughtâonly a little, though.
â
I donât remember falling asleepâsometime during the credits, I think, with Will sprawled on the floor next to me and her cherry-flavoured gloss still sweet on my lips. But I donât expect to find myself here again, in the place Iâm starting to realize is more a part of my unconscious than Iâve given it credit for.
The opening and closing doors. The linoleum floor.
âWhy here? Why again?â
I donât expect an answer. But the little girl whoâs still there, whoâs always there, just shrugs, and stares at me, and saysâ
âBecause you canât stop.â
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