I fly down the stairs, carrying Kirâs coat. I canât believe he almost tricked me into going out without wearing it.
That little shit and his mischievousness will be the death of me someday.
At our living area, I help him put it on and zip it.
âI can do it on my own,â he whines.
âUh-huh. Like removing it on the way out.â
He grins, then pretends to be pouty. âWeâre late for Elsa.â
âYeah, yeah, thatâs not going to work. Stay still.â
âIâm a grown man.â He stomps his foot.
âOf course you are, Monkey.â
âIâm going to be Superman one day, Kimmy, and fly you out of here. Wait and see.â
âYou will, huh?â His stupid obsession with the superhero would be amusing if Xander wasnât the one fuelling him with it. I really hate to admit that Xanderâs carefree personality is what made Kir come out of his shell and make friends at school.
If heâd followed in my footsteps, he wouldâve become a loner like me, an outcast like me, a nobody like me.
Just me.
And being me is the last thing Iâd wish on my baby brother.
Elsa was the first to approach me. Ronan, too. Iâm shit at approaching people.
Whenever I think about it, that fog surrounds my head with toxic thoughts like no one would want to be friends with the hot mess that I am.
That if they get close enough and see me for who I truly am, theyâll run away, or worse, theyâll use it to torment me harder.
Even with Elsa, Iâm always scared about when sheâll figure out the truth about me and throw me behind her.
She became suspicious during my last visits, and to say Iâm dreading this one would be the understatement of the century.
However, Kir will throw a fit if he doesnât see her and the rest of the âcool guysâ, as he calls them, and Iâm kind of weak when it comes to those puppy eyes and pouty lips.
âCome on, hurry upâ¦â he trails off mid-sentence, his arms hanging limp, and I know who heâs staring at behind me without having to turn around.
âWhere are you going?â Her low voice has a biting edge like those hairy spiders â or rather, snakes, harsh and unyielding.
âTo Elsa,â Kirian says softly.
I swallow hard after finishing with his coat and smother his hair. âGo wait for me by the car.â
He nods, appearing happy to be out of here, but then he stops, turns around, and hugs me. His small arms wrap around my neck in a tight hold, as if he doesnât want to let me go. I stroke his silky hair, biting my lower lip to not break down in sobs.
âGo on, Monkey.â I push him away.
He steps back and stares behind me. âBye, Mum.â
And then heâs running out of the door.
I rise to my feet and slowly turn around to face the woman who gave birth to two children but has no ounce of motherly instinct.
Sheâs taller than me, with a model body that sheâs maintained for decades. Her soft brown curls fall to her shoulders. Sheâs wearing elegant trousers and a camisole that I would never be able to pull off in a lifetime.
Jeanine Reed isnât only known for her magnificent artistic talent that apparently touches souls with bare hands â the magazinesâ critics talk, not mine â but sheâs also a beautiful woman who appears in her late twenties instead of early forties.
She has high cheekbones and thick eyebrows that she passed down to Kirian. I have nothing from her. Not her talent, not her beauty, not her grace, and certainly not her model figure. The only thing we share is the eye colour, but hers are bigger and more striking, like a sparkling tropical sea.
Iâve always felt out of sorts whenever weâve been in public together, and I stopped counting the number of times I wanted to bury myself when someone asked if I was her daughter and she hesitated as if not wanting to admit to the disgrace that I am.
âWe wonât be long,â I say with a forced smile.
Iâm surprised she came out of her studio at all. We rarely see her when she has an upcoming exhibition, and when we do, itâs only so she can parade us around for the press â or parade Kirian, not me.
With this, hereâs to hoping she wonât come out for at least another week.
And yes, my mum looks like a model when sheâs painting, while I resemble a wannabe beggar in my best days.
âStop.â
My feet come to a slow halt.
âTurn around.â Her tone is steel-like, callous and merciless, like a general speaking to his underling, not a mother to her only daughter.
Wincing, I face her.
âHow much do you weigh?â
A lump balls at the back of my throat and I fiddle with the long sleeve of my pullover. âSixty-three.â
âSixty-three?â Her question, although lowly spoken, couldnât have been any more brutal on my mind. âAre you even still on the diet?â
âOf course, Mum.â
âIf you were, you would have lost three more kilos by now.â She motions at me with a finger. âCome here.â
âBut Kir ââ
âCome. Here.â
Iâm reduced to a small child, the one who lost her nana and cried at her grave all day, begging her to come back, to not leave her with this mother, because she hated her, because she didnât want to live with her.
As soon as Iâm within reach, Mum motions at the scale she has near the dinner table. She has planted those all over the house during all these years. Dad told her to get rid of them, and he actively throws them away when he comes home, but thereâs nothing we can do when he isnât around.
âGet on it.â
âMumâ¦â
âDonât make me repeat myself, Kimberly.â Her voice is like a scolding teacher, biting and meant to be obeyed.
The fog surrounds me, thickening and magnifying as I step on the scale. Peopleâs hearts thunder when theyâre waiting for an exam result, when they have a crush. Mine nearly beats out of its place as the electronic numbers of my weight filter in front of me. The thing that defines me as a person in Mumâs eyes are those numbers and nothing else.
Sixty-four kilos.
I nearly stop breathing. Shit, what did I do wrong? I ate nothing, or at least nothing I couldnât vomit back up. Was it that diet cola?
âDidnât you say it was sixty-three?â
âIt was this morning.â I slowly step down, as if the disappearance of those numbers will save me from the lashing of my motherâs tongue.
âI expect you to be sixty by the end of the week and fifty-seven by the end of next week.â
âBut ââ
âNo buts, Kimberly.â She taps her Louboutin heels on the ground. âIâve been patient with you, but youâre not watching your weight. Youâre not even tall, so you canât afford the extra kilos. I expect results or else Kir will go to that boarding school.â
âN-no, Mum. You promised!â Itâs as if someone took my heart and pierced it open with sharp knives.
The fact she could and would send Kirian away to have more space for her art as soon as Iâm in college has always given me nightmares.
I wonât allow her to ruin his childhood like she destroyed mine.
âOnly if you keep your promise.â She flips her hair as she ascends the stairs.
âIâll do it.â My voice is brittle. âIâll do it, Mum.â
She doesnât even look back. I stopped expecting my mum to glance back at me, acknowledge me, me.
I know I should stop asking for her attention by now, but the small child in me wonât let go.
With one final glimpse at the scale, I step outside.
Moisture pools in my eyes as I search for my keys on the counter.
The fog wonât get to me. Not today, not tomorrow. Not until Kir is all grown up and can handle himself.
âWhere are the stupid keys?â I groan in frustration, fighting the need to crawl into a dark corner and allow those morbid thoughts in.
They would devour me in no time and the next thing, Iâll be in the bathroom and â
âTheyâre in your hands, Kim.â Marianâs soft voice wrenches me out of my thoughts.
âOh.â I stare at her kind face with a faint smile, then back to the keys which are, indeed, dangling from my pinkie. âThanks, Mari.â
âAnytime, honey.â She smiles a little. âWhat do you want for dinner?â
âBroccoli and a small portion of mac and cheese for Kir.â
âHow about you?â
âSalad â actually, forget about it. Iâll grab something on the way.â
I wonât.
This will be another day without dinner. Itâs harder to vomit my food at night. It leaves me jittery with a stomachache and the inability to sleep, and if I canât sleep, that fog will eat me in a matter of seconds.
After bidding Mari goodbye, I step outside, plastering a smile on my face. No matter what happens between me and Mum, Kirian canât and will never find out about it. Not that he doesnât suspect it, but I want to protect him as much as I can.
My smile falls when I find him dragging Xander by the hand from across the street. The freaking boy next door appears. His sun-kissed hair is tousled, bedroom style. His white hoodie contrasts against his tanned skin and his black jeans hang low on his hips as if Kir found him in bed and he barely had the time to button his clothes.
Shit. I wouldnât be surprised if that were the exact case. Kirian has free access to the Knightâs mansion â sort of like I did in the past. Ahmed opens the door for him, even if no one is at home. Lewis always dotes on him and the shit, Xander, treats him well.
âHold on, Superman.â Xander rubs his fingers through his hair as if submitting it, but itâs only making it hotter.
Wait. No. Thereâs nothing hot about Xander.
My blood still boils from the way he called me a slut earlier. How he said heâll make me watch as he fucks other girls.
Screw him a million times over and all the other girls he screws.
A prickling sensation has been digging at my skin since he said those words. I meant it, though â heâs the last person I would ever want.
I might have been stupid enough to wait and hope for his forgiveness once upon a time, but now, heâs just the boy next door.
The arsehole who lives across from me.
âYou said youâll help, Xan.â
âOf course.â
Kir wraps both his small hands around Xanâs bigger one, tugging him in my direction. âKimmy is with Mum. You have to bring her out.â
My heart warms so hot, I can feel the remnants of the fog withering away, condensing into water and falling in the distance.
My baby brother is thinking about me. I underestimated his ability to feel the tension between me and Mum.
He shouldnât have sought Xander for help, though. Heâs part of the problem, not the solution.
Heck, heâs the worst part of the problem.
âKimmy!â Kir shrieks upon seeing me and runs in my direction, his little feet carrying him slower than he likes.
I watch the street for any cars, even though we donât have traffic around here.
âHey, Monkey.â I ruffle his hair, completely erasing Xander from my surroundings. âAre you ready to go?â
He nods several times, then stops as if remembering something. âCan Xan come with us?â
Abso-fucking-lutely not.
I plaster a fake smile and direct it to said arsehole. âIâm sure he has things to do.â
I think I imagined it, but his jaw tics before he offers me his golden boy smile that causes his cheeks to crease, and there they are. Dimples. Deep, attractive as hell dimples.
He really shouldnât have dimples. That should be exclusive to the good guys, not to bastards.
His smile and those dimples are a couple of the reasons why the girls fall all over him at school like heâs some sort of Casanova.
Actually, he is one. Iâve lost count of the number of times heâs disappeared with a girl â or two â in one of Ronanâs parties, only to appear some time later with lipstick all over his shirt and neck and the girl, hair messy and lipstick smudged, grinning like an idiot as if she ascended to heaven and is now returning.
Once again, itâs not me. Itâs my ability to notice everything. If it were up to me, I would erase him completely from my existence. Or maybe, if I had some sort of a time machine, I would go back seven years in the past and not do what Iâve done.
But time machines donât exist. This is what weâve become and thereâs no changing it, no matter how much I want â or rather, to. I no longer yearn for his forgiveness.
Heâll never grant it, and Iâll just be hurting myself.
âDo you have things to do, Xan?â Kir asks him as he pulls me so the three of us are standing near the middle of the street.
âDepends.â Heâs speaking to my brother, but his entire unnerving attention is on me.
His light eyes are drawing a dark path into my soul, all paved with thorns. When we were kids, I thought magic was the reason behind the colour of his eyes. Turns out, itâs black magic.
It used to be easy when I had the habit of averting that punishing gaze, when I pretended that this would be over soon. Itâs never happened. And now that Iâve sworn to meet him head-on, itâs getting exhausting.
Keeping eye contact with him is like drowning into the ocean of his irises. The harder I stare, the closer I am to the bottom.
âWeâre going to Elsa.â Kir clutches Xanderâs hand with his free one. âCome with us, please?â
âSure, Superman.â He musses Kirâs hair.
âYay! Hear that, Kimmy? Xan is going.â
âNo, heâs not.â I lean over to hiss to Xander, âSince when do you go out with us?â
âSince I decided I can.â His shit-eating grin never disappears. âBesides, Iâm going to Aiden.â
âGo to him in his damn home.â
âOr I can go to him at Elsaâs since he never leaves her side.â He steps closer and it takes everything in me not to push back. His body heat mingles with mine and I inhale him in, mint and fresh clothes out of the dryer and⦠Is that a hint of alcohol?
Heâs still smiling, but his tone is biting as he murmurs. âAnd lose the fucking attitude.â
âCan we go in your car, Xan?â Kir jumps, oblivious to the tension brewing between us. âCan we?â
âNo.â
âOf course.â
Xander and I speak at the same time. I shoot him a glare. âI have a car, letâs go separately.â
I pull on Kirâs hand, but he refuses to budge. âI want to go in Xanâs car. Itâs cool.â
âYou little ungrateful brat.â I stare down at him, incredulous. âWhose car drives you to school every day?â
He pouts, blinking up at me with those puppy eyes. âBut today, we can go in Xanâs car. Please, Kimmy, please?â
The resident arseholeâs lips tug in a smirk as he watches me fighting the Kirian pleading effect and losing miserably.
Still, thereâs no way in hell weâll go in Xanderâs stupid car. I just have to find a way to convince my baby brother of that fact.
As if sensing my intentions, Xander retrieves his keys from his pocket and throws them in Kirianâs direction. The latter clutches them with both hands, staring at them with wild eyes.
âGo ahead.â
âReally?â
At Xanderâs nod, Kirian runs towards the dark blue Porsche, trotting and grinning like an idiot. Iâd hate to put an end to that joyful expression and I hate that this bastard is the reason behind it.
Maybe if I werenât such a chicken shit, I would ask Dad for a sports car instead of my safe MINI Cooper.
âYouâre a wanker, okay?â I sigh in both frustration and resignation.
Xander kills the space between us until his face is mere inches from mine. His mint breath intertwines with my shaky one as his eyes darken to a bottomless blue colour.
Iâm so taken aback, it takes me a moment to realise the proximity.
He hasnât been this close since that time at the beginning of the year when he cornered me in the garden and told me â or rather, snapped at me â to stop wearing short skirts.
It was the first time heâd gotten close after so many years of tormenting me from afar and blatantly leaving the room whenever I came in as if I had a contagious disease.
He cornered me a few times after and they all had to do with my dress code.
Fuck him. Itâs not like heâs my dad.
Like every time he gets close, I canât control my breathing. I know itâs inhale, exhale.
In. Out.
But sometimes, even those simple steps are the toughest thing to do. For one, I keep breathing him in with every inhale and breathing my confusion out with every shaky exhale.
Itâs as if Iâm about to vomit my heart, not my food. His lips twitch and I nearly faint, stopping the breathing struggle altogether.
Is he going to kiss me?
Shit. Shit.
âWhat are you doing?â I hiss, pulling my head away.
âI wasnât doing anything, but if you keep the attitude, Iâll do things you wonât like.â
My lips part, then I quickly clamp them shut at the thought he might consider that as an invitation.
Damn him and damn me.
âKimmy! Xan!â Kirian hops in front of the car. âCome on!!â
I raise my hand in a small wave, using the chance to pull out from Xanderâs orbit. Itâs like a magnet that keeps dragging me in despite my attempts to stay away.
When I chance a glance back at Xander, heâs not intimidating me with his gaze as he was a moment earlier. Heâs staring at my hand, my wave, and then his focus slips for a moment.
I drop my hand to my side and pull down the sleeve of my woollen pullover as I brush past him towards Kir.
He didnât see.
He