Every time I make even the tiniest of movements, the ache between my legs consumes my body.
I both hate it and love it. I love the reminder that Carter came for me; I hate that Iâm again faced with the reality I canât outrun.
Iâve been watching the news and listening to the guards. I know blood has already been spilled. Yesterday I got a glimpse of it, but I wasnât sure. Today Addisonâs kept the news on and I know for certain the war has begun.
I recognize the names of some of the men in my fatherâs army. The soldiers. Men who have gathered in my kitchen late at night. Men who have shared dinner with my family from time to time.
Men who have been kind to me.
Men who have looked after me when my father wasnât there.
Men who have children and wives.
And the names I donât recognize from men who live on the east side of the state⦠I imagine they have families too. Or did. Before this happened.
My father made me go to the funerals whenever someone died. Always. Iâve never missed any of them. He said they were family and deserved that respect. As much as Iâve hated my father and as much as I think Iâm nothing but a bother to him, or maybe a bad memory of my mother, I always respected the dead and their families.
This time I wonât be able to, and for some reason that hurts me deeper than I think it should.
Two names that havenât come up are Nikolai and Mika.
The first, a man who Iâve loved in more way than one.
And the second, a man Iâve dreamed of killing myself.
In this world, there are men who are good, and there are men who are evil. I wonât be convinced otherwise. In war, both types of men die. And both types of men populate every army.
âHow are you doing this morning?â Addisonâs question pulls my gaze from the coffee maker to her. I meant to turn it on and never did. I canât concentrate on anything else but the war.
She looks like she didnât get any sleep at all. The dark circles under her eyes are a dead giveaway. âI came in to check on you last night, but you were already asleep.â
My lungs seize thinking how grateful I am that she didnât come in while Carter was there. Iâve never felt so torn in my life as I did last night. Itâs an impossible situation.
âYeah, I passed out.â I offer the lame excuse and it feels fake on my tongue knowing Iâm hiding the truth from her. I finally hit the button to start up the machine but then have to check to make sure I added water. I did.
All the while, Addison heads to the fridge as if itâs any other kitchen, knowing Eli fully stocked it last night.
I almost tell her Carter came over purely out of guilt, but I swallow my words. She wonât understand. She clears her throat and speaks before I can confess though.
âI saw Daniel⦠thatâs what took me so long.â
Unshed tears shimmer in her eyes and she slams the fridge door shut before tossing the butter on the counter so she has both hands free to press her palms to her eyes. âIâm sorry.â
âYou have no reason to be. Out of everyone involved, you have no reason to be,â I say and wish she could understand how empathetic I am to her. âI get it. Let it out,â I tell her while putting my hand on her shoulder and running it back and forth to try to soothe her.
âI just canât believe heâd be okay with the way Carter treated you. That he would do nothing.â
I let out a long breath, understanding why sheâs standing so strongly against Daniel, but hating that Iâm a part of that reason.
âIâve come to terms with two things,â I tell her, hoping it will help her. âOne, I love Carter even if he hates me.â The first confession brings her eyes to mine. âTwo, Iâm not going to sit back and do nothing. I wonât ever let him do something that will hurt me or my family without fighting him.â
âHow can you be with him, knowingâ¦?â She doesnât finish, but she doesnât have to.
âI donât know how. I honestly donât. And I donât know if any of it really matters.â I lean my back against the counter and grip on to it from behind. âI canât stop this war. I canât protect everyone. I canât stop the people I love from dying.â As I say the last part, my mother comes to mind and I try to block her out. Iâm already spent with emotion and trying to balance right and wrong, love and war, that any mention of her will be my undoing and itâs not even ten oâclock in the morning.
âThis life is brutal,â I whisper and then clear my throat to face Addison again. âBut itâs my life. And I want to be in control of my own decisions.â
âYou know weâre still locked up, right?â Judging by the hint of a smile on her lips, her words are meant to make me laugh and they do, a small breath of a laugh.
Reaching for the butter and content to let the conversation die, she adds, âLetâs eat before we think of how weâre going to escape.â
âI can hear you,â a voice says from behind us and scares the shit out of me. Eliâs in the doorway, a smirk on his lips and if he was closer Iâd be tempted to smack it off his face.
âIâm sure you all can,â I answer him and look toward the ceiling. âI havenât found the cameras yet.â
He doesnât respond to my jabs as I watch the coffee maker sputter the last bit of my caffeine addiction into a ceramic mug. Instead, he tells me, âYou have a message.â
Heâs so tall, it only takes four strides for him to close the gap between us and reach me, holding out a folded piece of paper.
âDid you read it?â I ask him before taking the small piece of parchment.
His stare is hard and unforgiving as he answers, âYes.â Pissed off from the lack of privacy, I easily toss the precious piece of paper onto the counter. I have no idea who itâs from, but I continue moving around my warden to look for sugar in the cabinets.
âDoes Carter know?â I ask him when I finally find it. I close the door slowly, holding the box of sugar tighter than I should.
âYes.â
I nod and then ask, âIs it from him?â
I would be surprised if it was, since he didnât have much else to say last night, and Eli proves my assumption correct with a single word.
âNo.â
I swallow down the sudden pang of anxiety, wondering who itâs from and what it says, but I donât dare let on to Eli.
âYou donât have to hate me,â he says as I continue to walk around him and Addison as she fries something on the stove.
âYou donât have to hover,â I answer him immediately.
Without another word, he leaves, and I feel guilty although I know I shouldnât.
âWhat are you cooking?â I ask Addison after heâs left, staring at the piece of paper without reaching for it.
âEggs, do you want some?â she asks, peeking at me and then at the paper. Iâm surprised she doesnât ask about it; I can see the question in her eyes.
âSure,â I answer just to be friendly. I donât think I could eat if I tried though. Iâm already sick to my stomach.
âHow do you like them?â she asks before flipping her own in the pan.
âOver easy, please, and thank you,â I tell her, trying to keep my voice upbeat and waiting to open the note until Iâm alone.
âYolk?â Addison makes a face. âEww. Really I donât know if we can be friends anymore.â Sheâs only joking though. I know she is, but the thought of losing her sends a wave of nausea through me.
âFine,â I tell her back in as playful of a voice I can manage, âIâll eat them however youâre making them. I like eggs however they come,â I lie. Iâve only ever had eggs over easy. I donât even eat hard-boiled eggs. I canât justify why I lie to her or why Iâm so nervous and feeling so alone. But I do and am.
âI can make them how ever.â Addison shrugs and then adds, âOver easy is the easiest way anyway. I just donât like the taste of yolks.â
Her easygoing reply settles the nerves still racing through me, but I glance back at the note and notice when her gaze follows me there. Still, she doesnât ask questions and I get the feeling thatâs a learned habit of hers.
I watch as she cracks two eggs on the side of the pan, then takes a bite of hers from a plate on the right side of the stove.
âI can totally cook them if you want to eat,â I offer, feeling guilty. I canât shake all these awful feelings running through me.
âI like it,â Addison tells me and then takes another bite. The pan sizzles as the tension runs through my shoulders and the note stares back at me.
âCan I tell you something else?â Addison asks me, scraping her fork on the plate rather than looking at me. When I donât answer she peeks up at me and Iâm quick to nod my head.
âI like that theyâre here in a way.â
âWho?â I ask her, feeling my forehead wrinkle with confusion.
âEli and Cason.â She doesnât hide the guilt in her tone. âI know theyâre basically keeping us hostage but seeing all those people on the TV this morning,â she pauses and visibly swallows. âHearing the update on the death toll in this gang war?â She rolls her eyes as she repeats what the reporter called it. Looking over her shoulder at me and then reaching for another plate, she tells me, âAt least I know weâre safe.â
I can only nod and accept the plate. Iâve been âsafeâ all my life. Thereâs no such thing as safe, only the illusion of it. Telling Addison that wonât help her though.
My fork shuffles the eggs around on the plate while Addison watches, but she doesnât say anything about it. I try to take a bite and then another, but itâs flavorless and it only makes the pit in my stomach feel heavier.
âAre you going to read it?â she asks me and then tilts her head toward the note.
I nod once and finally reach for it, but after I read it, I donât tell her who itâs from. I donât tell her what it says either.
All I know is that Eli read it and I donât know what that means for me.
Aria,
Meet me tomorrow night. I just need to see you. I need to know youâre all right.
Meet me at the candy shoppe on Main Street. You can walk there; Iâll be there. I promise.
Tomorrow. Eight at night.
Yours,
Nikolai
âAre you all right?â she asks me as I feel the blood drain from my face.
The sound of my fork abruptly scraping against the plate drowns out my answer to her. I mutter, âI just need a second,â as I walk past her with the note clenched tight in my hand. It feels like a betrayal of Carter to see Nikolai. But I need to. I have to see him. I have to know heâs all right.
My steps are deliberate as I walk as quickly as I can toward the stairwell, intent on searching out Eli. I donât have to look far; heâs waiting for me at the top of the stairs.
âEli,â I speak his name quickly like I canât get it out fast enough. The uncertainty Iâm feeling makes my skin tingle as I hold up the note.
âAria,â he says my name back easily and as if nothingâs wrong.
âYou read this?â I ask him even though he already told me he did.
He only nods.
âAre you going to stop me from seeing him?â I ask him, the strength in my voice threatening to vanish at any moment.
âIt depends.â
âOn what?â I ask him with no patience at all.
âOn what Carter tells me to do,â he answers, and I stand here helplessly in front of him.
âAre you going to kill him?â Itâs the next logical thought.
He hesitates, and I plead with him, âI wonât run from you if you let me go to him. I need to see him.â
He only takes a moment to respond, âIâm waiting to hear Carterâs decision,â and I canât contain my frustration any longer.
âYou go ahead and wait. My decision is made.â I know my words mean nothing to the cadre of soldiers surrounding me. Itâs a false threat, but Iâm done playing these games where Iâm some damsel trapped in a tower.
âBefore you storm off,â Eli begins with a straight face before I can turn my back on him and do exactly as he thought I would, storm off.
He holds out a package and I stare at it cautiously rather than take it. âWhat is it?â I ask him.
âYou donât trust me now?â he asks with a hint of an asymmetric grin.
I donât respond. This isnât a game to me, itâs my life.
âItâs from Carter.â He holds it out to me and I finally accept it, reeling with emotions I canât even begin to describe.
âWhat is it?â I ask him, but he only shrugs. The box isnât particularly big or small, so I canât even begin to guess what it contains.
âTell him I want to see Nikolai⦠please.â
With a short nod, he puts his hands behind his back and takes his position as if guarding the stairwell was what he was told to do. And maybe he was. Maybe Carter thought Iâd run down the stairs and out the door the moment I got a note from Nikolai.
I donât wait to get to the bedroom to open the package. I peel back the tape as I walk, and force open the box.
Inside is a phone, simple and black, and art supplies, a drawing pad, and colored pencils.
Such little things, but I stare at them on the bed for far too long in silence, wishing I hadnât grown up in this world.