Total pages in book: 206
Estimated words: 207638 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 1038(@200wpm)___ 831(@250wpm)___ 692(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 207638 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 1038(@200wpm)___ 831(@250wpm)___ 692(@300wpm)
I’m a fool.
A fool, a fool, a fool.
But he makes it so easy. He makes it so easy to be stupid and reckless and thoughtless.
He makes it so easy to be foolish.
“Good.” He approves with a short nod. “So you’re going to be careful now, aren’t you? You’re going to wear your daisy fresh dresses and your ballet flats. You’re going to braid your hair like a good girl and you’re going to stop begging for my attention. You’re going to stop making me look at you.”
His words, almost snarled from his mouth and dripping in condescension, penetrate my drugged-up mind and make me frown. They make me stand a little taller in my stupid heels when he moves away from me.
And I tell him with as much authority as I can muster right now, “Then you have to stop watching me.”
Reed was in the process of taking another step back and dismissing me. But my words stop him. They make him frown. “What?”
Good.
I’m glad.
If he can give me ultimatums, then I can issue them too.
I raise my trembling chin and say, “You have to stop coming to my practice every day.”
Because that’s what he does.
He comes to my after-hours practice and he watches me dance.
Every day after school, when I practice in the auditorium because I still haven’t nailed down my routine, he comes in.
He sits in the third row, not too far away from the stage and not too close. I don’t know why. And he watches me spin and turn and leap around the stage with my wings on my back.
He watches me like he did the first night at the party.
All eager and intense and at the edge of his seat.
And I dance for him in the same way as well. All restless and excited.
After the pact I was afraid that he’d stop. I was afraid that he wouldn’t watch me dance anymore. But he didn’t and thank God for that.
Because somehow, I’ve gotten addicted to dancing for him.
Somehow, I’ve become addicted to the way he looks at me. Addicted to the way his shoulders seem to loosen up the longer I dance. How he sits back and sprawls out on the seat as if this is the best part of his day, me dancing for him.
So sometimes I dance for him just because he wants me to.
I abandon my practice, pick a song that I love and spin for him like the ballerina I am.
His ballerina.
But it’s stupid, isn’t it? And dangerous.
He’s right.
He’s the worst asshole of all, the biggest villain that my brothers have warned me about.
And I can’t betray my brothers – Ledger – no matter what my heart keeps telling me.
So this is the best course of action, staying away like we always have.
“And why’s that?” he challenges.
I press my hands harder on the Mustang. “Because you’re right. This is stupid. I never should’ve worn this stupid dress.”
Yeah, everything happened because of this stupid freaking dress.
If I wasn’t wearing this, then I’d be safely tucked away inside Tempest’s room, watching something silly on her laptop instead of standing out here in these torturous heels under his torturous scrutiny.
“Why did you then?”
“Because I wanted to see what it felt like…” I trail off when I realize what I was going to say.
Of course, he hones in on that and his features grow alert. “Felt like what?”
Well, I was stupid enough to bring it up, wasn’t I?
I can be stupid, stupid, stupid enough to finish it too.
What do I have to lose anyway?
I fist the dress and stand tall in my heels. “I wanted to see what it felt like to be sexy. To be tempting for a day. To feel like all the girls at school. All the girls you hang out with.”
There. I said it.
It’s over. My humiliation is complete.
Can I just go home now and never ever come back here, to his house?
“You wanted to feel like the girls I hang out with.”
Oh, so it’s not complete yet. My humiliation.
Fine.
Whatever. I can deal with this.
“Yes.” I sigh. “I wanted to feel sexy and confident and, I don’t know, just not like a good girl all the time. But I am a good girl, aren’t I? Because I hate this dress. And I hate these heels and I hate you too. So from now on, I’m not going to dance for you and you can’t come watch me like it’s your right or something. I’m not for your personal entertainment, okay?”
Then I throw my hands in the air and snap, “In fact from now on, you should ask one of your girlfriends to dance for you. I’m sure they’d be happy to accommodate your every whim like they always are. So, is there anything else you need to say to me, because I’d like to leave now.”