“Just go,” I hear her say. Jonah’s footsteps fade down the hallway.
She knocks on the door again. “Clara, please open the door. You don’t understand. It’s . . . just open the door.”
I flip off my light. “I’m going to bed! I don’t want to speak to you tonight! Go! Away!” I fall onto my bed. The knocking against my bedroom door finally stops. Not even two minutes later, I hear the front door slam shut.
My mother tries one more time to get me to open the door, but I roll onto my side and ignore her, covering my ears with a pillow. After a few minutes of attempting to regulate my breathing, I release the pillow. The knocking has ceased, hopefully for good this time. I hear her bedroom door close across the hall, which means I have until morning to talk myself out of murdering her.
I push myself off the bed. I begin to pace my room, my skin buzzing with anger. How could she do this? They just died two months ago.
A thought rips through me and causes me to fall back onto the bed. How long has she been doing this?
I start to think back on the last several weeks. Jonah has been over here so many times since my father and Aunt Jenny died. My memory is awakened with an entirely new perspective of every moment—the night they were outside in the dark when I got home, the night he came to fix the door, the excuse he made that he needed to come back the next day to finish the door. That time they left the house together, and when I looked on the app, it showed my mom’s phone had been at the Langford Hotel.
That was only a week after their deaths.
I feel like I might be sick.
How long have they been having an affair?
I feel so stupid. Jonah is always asking about her in class—pretending it’s concern.
Did Elijah really even have a fever this morning? Hell, Jonah probably stayed the night last night and I had no idea because I was in my bedroom. It would explain why he was here so early. Why my mother finally cooked breakfast for the first time since before my father died.
I pray my father had no idea. This whole time I’ve been feeling so guilty for possibly having a hand in ruining everyone’s lives, but Jonah and my mother have been ruining everyone’s lives since before the accident!
How could my mother do this to Jenny? I don’t have a sister, but what kind of human would do that to their own flesh and blood?
I hate her so much right now. I hate her so much I’d be fine if I never even spoke to her again. I hate her so much I sit on the edge of my bed and think of all the ways I can get revenge for what they’ve been doing to our family.
I’m running out of ways to rebel. I’ve done drugs, I’ve gotten detention, I’ve lied, I’ve missed curfew. The only thing left I could do that I know would upset her is if I were to have sex with Miller. She’s always begged me to wait until I was at least eighteen, which I probably wasn’t going to do anyway, but if she knew I lost my virginity at sixteen, and to Miller Adams, it would destroy her.
I look at my alarm clock. It’s not even eight o’clock yet. I still have four hours to make it happen before my birthday tomorrow. And I really need Miller right now, anyway. His presence is very calming, and I could use some calming vibes.
I grab my phone and call Miller.
“Hey,” he says, answering right away. “What’s up?”
“What time do you get off work?”
“Not for another half hour. You can still come kiss me good night before your curfew, though.”
“Will you come to my house when you leave?”
“Your house?” he pauses. “Are you sure?”
“Yeah, but use the bedroom window.”
“Oh, are we being sneaky?” I can hear the grin in his voice. “Okay, but I’ve never been inside your house. I don’t know which window yours is.”
“First window, right side of the house.”
“Facing the house?”
“Yes. And . . . bring a condom.”
He pauses for several long seconds. “Are you sure?”
“Positive.”
“It’s . . . Clara, we don’t have to.”
“You promised you weren’t going to talk me out of it.”
“I don’t know that it was a promise. And I assumed it would be a while before we . . .”
“I changed my mind. I don’t want to wait until prom.”
He’s silent again. Then he says, “Okay. Yeah. Be there in less than an hour.”
I turn on my radio to help drown out any noise Miller or I might make. I light two candles and put one by my bed and one by the window so that he can make his way around my dark bedroom. I take a shower while I wait for him. I try to get all my tears out before he shows up. Surprisingly, there aren’t that many. I’m too angry to cry, I think. I didn’t know I was capable of reaching this level of anger, but I’ve reached it, and there might even be room for more anger. Who knows? Guess I’ll see what I’m really capable of when my mother and I come face to face tomorrow.
I get out of the shower and wrap a towel around myself. I blow-dry my hair a little so that it’s not dripping wet. I apply some mascara and pinch my cheeks because I look pale right now. Realizing your own mother is not the person you thought she was can really drain the color from your face.
I’m looking for lip gloss when I hear a light tap on my window. I rush to my closet to find something to put on, but then I remember why Miller is here in the first place. He’s here to get me naked. The towel will do just fine.
I open my bedroom window while Miller takes off the screen. When he climbs inside, he glances around the room before he takes me in. When his eyes finally land on me, I can see his realization sink in. I’m pretty sure up until this point, he didn’t think I was serious about losing my virginity to him tonight. But now that I’m standing in front of him, wearing nothing but a towel, his reaction becomes physical.
He bites his fist and winces as he looks at me from head to toe. “Holy shit, Clara.”
I would laugh, but I’m still too angry. I don’t want him to feel my mood, though. I need to shake it off long enough to get this over with.
Miller cups my face in his hands. “Are you absolutely positive this is what you want?” He’s whispering, thank God. The last thing I need is for my mother to ruin this part of my life too.
I nod. “Yes.”
“What about your mom? Where is she?”
“She’s in her room. My door is locked. We’ll be quiet. Plus, my music is on, so she won’t hear us.”
Miller nods, but he seems nervous. I didn’t expect him to be nervous. “I’m sorry I keep asking if you’re sure. I just wasn’t expecting this to happen for a while, so . . .”
“Seventy percent of couples have sex on the first date. I think we’ve been really patient.”
Miller laughs quietly. “Did you just make up a fake statistic to try and get in my pants?”
“Did it work?”
He pulls his shirt over his head, and it falls to the floor. “It would have worked without the fake statistic.” He kisses me then. A full-body kiss—the kind where our legs and bodies and arms are pressed together so close not even air could pass between us. He backs me up to my bed but stops before my legs meet my mattress.