I enter the house quietly, glancing around the darkened living room, looking for any sign of life. I realized as I approached the house that the light is actually coming from the kitchen, the little lamp that sits on our table that my dad uses sometimes when he pays bills and has trouble reading the fine print. I donât remember leaving that light on when I left this morning, but maybe my dad did because itâs awfully quiet in here.
Thank God heâs not home.
Shutting the door, I turn the lock and am about to switch on the lamp when I hear my fatherâs voice break through the silence.
âWhere the hell have you been?â
I flick on the lamp, shocked when I see my father sitting in his recliner, his head tilted to the right, his intense gaze locked on me. Heâs leaning forward, his elbows resting on his knees and his hands clutched together, his expression stormy. I remain rooted to the spot where I stand, clutching my backpack strap so tight my fingers start to ache.
âUmââ
âWere you with that boy? Arch Lancaster?â
Hereâs my chance. I told Arch I didnât like lying to my dad and I meant it.
âYes.â I lift my chin, trying to look strong, though I feel like I could crumble completely apart inside.
A ragged sigh leaves him and he leans back in his chair, staring up at the ceiling as if heâs asking for help from God. I donât know what to say. Or how to act. Iâd give anything to take a hot shower and wash my troubled feelings away, but I know heâs not going to let me go without an explanation or a lecture. Most likely both.
âYou had sex with him, didnât you?â Itâs more a statement than a question.
âIââ
âDonât bother denying it. Look at you.â The disgust in his voice is obvious.
I clamp my lips shut, fighting the humiliation that spreads all over my skin. The guilt. Iâm eighteen and itâs normal to be a teenager who has sex with her boyfriend, which Iâm pretty sure is what Arch is to me now. We havenât made anything official yet, but I know in my heart, itâs true.
It is.
âYou really believe youâre in love with him?â he asks, when I still havenât said anything.
I stare at my father, ready to answer yes, despite knowing that will upset him even more when he interrupts me yet again.
âBe careful if you say yes, sweetheart. Because if you do, Iâm going to do everything I can to convince you to stay away from him,â he spits out.
âWhy?â I ask incredulously, hating how confused I feel. How can my father make this seem so wrong when being with Arch feels so incredibly right?
âHeâs reckless. Foolish. Selfish. A taker, Daisy Mae. Thatâs all heâll doâtake and take and take until youâve got nothing left to give and then heâll move on to someone else and forget all about you. Look what heâs already done! He got you suspended. You donât ever get in trouble, Daisy, and now youâre getting suspended and sneaking around behind my back. Lying to me. I donât even know who you are anymore.â
I flinch at his cruel words. His opinion of Archâeven of meâis so awful and I donât know what Arch ever did to him to make him feel that way.
âYouâre being unfair,â I tell him. âIâve never had anyone in my life but you since Mom died, and now I finally find someone I care aboutâsomeone who cares about me, and youâre telling me Iâm not allowed to go out with him? Iâm eighteen years old! Itâs okay if I have a boyfriend.â
âYou can have boyfriends. You can choose any kid at Lancaster Prep, but you had to go and choose that one? The richest one? Frankly, Arch Lancaster is an asshole, sweetheart. He doesnât have any feelings. None of the Lancasters do.â
âThatâs not true,â I start to tell him, but heâs not listening to me.
âThat boy doesnât know what he has in you. Youâre just like your mother. Special. Bright. Brighter than sunshine. You light up every room that you walk in, just like she did, and I knew it from the start. I cherished her from the very first time I met her. I knew she was special.â
I think of how terrible Arch was to me when we first met. He didnât think I was special and he definitely didnât cherish me. If I were ever to tell my father that, he would just use it as evidence against Arch.
âNo one is special to him. Arch is the center of his own universe. And when heâs through with you, heâll just discard you like trash and diminish your brightness, Daisy. Do you want that? Is that what you want for your life? Because you deserve so much more.â He slumps against the chair, as if heâs exhausted by his own speech.
âYou donât even know him and youâre already judging him. Canât you just let me have something for myself for once?â With a childish huff, I march out of the living room and head for the kitchen, hating how ridiculous heâs being.
Heâs treating me like a child. As if I canât make my own decisions. Heâs coddled me for far too long and Iâm over it.
âYouâre my daughter and if youâre living under my roof, you will do as I say!â he screams after me.
Ignoring his outburst, I flick on the kitchen light, desperate to get something to drink to ease my dry throat when I pause, staring at whatâs sitting on the table next to the lit lamp. I didnât even notice when I first walked into the room but now itâs all I can see.
A vase sitting in the middle of the table, filled with roses. From my rose bush. The orange ones my mom liked best.
I blink at the arrangement, shock coursing through my blood, leaving me cold. I stare at the vase, at the roses. Theyâre going to die now.
Theyâre going to die. In a vase instead of outside where they belong.
Like a zombie, I turn and slowly walk back into the living room, my heart in my throat, my head pounding. I stare at my father, unable to form words, my heart threatening to fly out of my mouth.
âDaisy, what in the world is wrong withââ
âWhy did you cut my roses?â My voice is eerily calm.
He blinks at me, his brows lowering. âWhat do you mean?â
âThe roses, on the table.â I inhale, but itâs not deep enough. I canât catch my breath and I fight the panic that wants to overtake me. âDid you cut those? Why?â
âI knew that the storm was coming and when I came home for lunch, I clipped some to take to Kathy when I went to her place. And then I forgot them. Iâm going to take them to her tomorrow.â
âNo.â
âNo? You canât tell me whoââ
âNO!â
The scream rasps at my throat, making it hurt, but I donât care. I donât care about anything. I canât feel anything. My head, my heart, my everythingâ¦
Numb.
I march back into the kitchen and grab the vase, clutching it in both hands, the water jostling out of the top, itâs so full. I canât believe he cut my roses. No one ever does. He knows this. He knows how I feel about them and for him to want to take that specific color to stupid Kathy when it was Momâs favorite, I justâ¦
I canât believe it. I canât believe him.
âDaisy, calm down right now!â
I glance over my shoulder to see my father approaching me and I turn toward the sink once more, lifting the vase and throwing it into it with all my might. On impact, the glass shatters everywhere, water splashing in my face, the roses scattering, petals shaking loose. Iâm screaming at the top of my lungs, over and over, and when my father tries to grab hold of my shoulders, I shake him off.
âGet away from me!â
I fall to the ground sobbing. My vision blurred, my head swimming. âThose were Momâs flowers. You canât just give Kathy my momâs roses. They donât belong to her! You know how I feel about cutting them!â
âDaisy. Sweetie. I knew the storm was going to bring cold temperatures this week and that your roses wouldnât live much longer outside, so I thought Iâd bring a few inside. I didnât think youâd mind,â Dad pleads.
âYou brought them inside for Kathy, not for me or for you. For her. Theyâre not yours to cut, Daddy. Theyâre mine. And they deserve to live. Everything deserves to live.â Iâm sitting in the center of my own destruction, rocking back and forth, unable to stop the tears. My stomach hurts and I curl my arms around my middle, clutching myself, my hair hanging in my face, sticking to my cheeks because theyâre wet with my tears.
When I reach up to push my hair out of the way, I wipe the tears from my eyes, glancing down at my hands.
My fingers are streaked with blood.
I touch my cheek, wincing when I feel the gash in my flesh. And when I draw my hand away, blood coats my fingers, bright red and thick.
I cut myself. Most likely on the glass from the broken vase when it shattered everywhere. And I donât even care.
âIf this is some sort of distraction to make me forget what you just did with that Lancaster boy, itâs not working,â Dad starts out, but I leap to my feet with a shriek, thrusting my face in his.
âThis has nothing to do with Arch and me. It has everything to do with you.â I burst into tears again, the salt getting in the cuts on my face, bringing me pain. Everything hurts. All of it. It feels like a betrayal, what my father did, wanting to give the roses to his new girlfriend. She doesnât deserve them. He barely knows her. I donât even know her, not that well.
How dare he do this? Iâm probably being completely irrational, but I donât care.
What he did, how thoughtless he wasâit cuts to the bone.
âMe? Youâre upset because I cut roses for Kathy?â
âYou cut my roses and didnât ask for permission. You chose the exact color that was Momâs favorite, and planned on giving them to another woman. You say Arch is thoughtless and careless, but you just proved to me tonight that youâre exactly the same way,â I tell him, surprised by how calm I sound.
How calm I suddenly feel.
I exit the kitchen without another word and Dad lets me go, also remaining silent. I keep my posture rigid, my steps slow as I make my way to the bathroom, shutting the door behind me and turning the lock before I hit the light switch.
My reflection nearly takes my breath away. Iâm a mess. My hair is everywhere, my face bleeding in multiple spots. My eyes are swollen and I close them for a second, hoping itâll all go away because itâs just a dream.
But when I open my eyes again, Iâm still in my bathroom and Iâm still a disaster. This isnât how I thought the night would end.
At all.