Cruel Intentions: Chapter 2
Cruel Intentions : A High School Bully Romance (Eastern High Series Book 1)
My body feels heavy, weighed down by the haze of last nightâtoo much booze, too many regrets, and the fading warmth of a girl whose name escapes me. The memories stab through the fog in sharp, fragmented flashes: her on her knees, eager, desperate, and the way I took what she offered without feeling. It was roughâtoo roughâbut thatâs the only way I seem to know how to touch anymore. Every girl is just another body to lose myself in, another face Iâll forget by morning.
With two major schools in town, the possibilities are limitlessâgirls eager to offer whatever I want, no strings attached.
Itâs not just for me but for my boys, Jace and Reece, though they always follow the unspoken rule: I get first pick. I decide whoâs off-limits and whoâs worth the risk.
No one dare challenges me, not even the football team. They know better. Crossing me is a mistake you only make once.
But itâs all starting to blur. The faces blend together, the bodies merge, and the emptiness creeps in after every conquest.
Eastern Highâs been played out for a whileâevery girl just another notch, another meaningless fuck. Last night was supposed to be differentânew blood, a fresh distractionâbut even thatâs already slipping into nothing. The thrill doesnât last anymore, and the satisfaction never sticks.
All thatâs left is this gnawing ache, this crushing weight of wanting something moreâsomething real. Something like I used to have.
But now, I donât know how to stop.
The hot water cuts through the numbness, washing away the dull ache in my body but doing nothing for the deeper wounds. I linger too long, hoping the heat will drown the thoughts I shouldnât be thinking.
Twenty minutes later, I emerge with a towel slung low on my hips, the haze in my chest as heavy as the steam clinging to the mirror.
I snatch last nightâs shirt from the floor and toss it into the overflowing laundry basket, my movements mechanical, thoughtless. But, as always, my eyes wanderâdrawn toward the house next door.
Itâs instinct, a pull I canât resist, no matter how pointless. No oneâs there anymore. I know that. But I look anyway.
Aubrey.
Her name is a ghost that clings to the jagged shards of a past I canât escape. She didnât just leave behind an empty houseâshe left me with a bitterness that poisons every memory and regret that festers like an open wound.
I once believed she was everything, that what we had was unbreakable. But she shattered that illusion, walking away as if it all meant nothingâas if I meant nothing.
And now here I am, standing in my room, towel wrapped around my waist, getting ready to drown it all in another night of reckless indulgence. Another night where my dick finds solace in strangers, but my heart remains trapped in the wreckage of what we had.
The bitter irony is almost laughable. Iâve spent years trying to forget her, trying to bury the pain, but it never fully fades. It just lingersâlike a shadowâwaiting for the moment Iâm alone again.
Aubreyâs rejection didnât just break meâit rebuilt me into someone unrecognizable. A man who demands attention, takes control, and never lets anyone close enough to hurt him again. Itâs armor, a defense mechanism so solid Iâve almost fooled myself into thinking itâs who Iâve always been.
But the truth? I owe it all to herâthe girl who shattered my heart and unwittingly gave me the blueprint for survival. She carved the man Iâve become, forged in the fire of her absence.
Sometimes, late at night, when the silence cuts deeper than I want to admit, I wonder if she ever thinks about the boy she left behind. The one who would have done anythingâeverythingâto make her happy. I wouldâve moved mountains, rearranged the stars, if it meant seeing her smile just once more. But to her, I was just a passing memory. Something easy to let go of, something not worth holding onto.
The thought stings, the bitter irony twisting the knife deeper. Sheâs the reason Iâve built this fortress of dominance and detachment. Yet sheâll never know the power she gave me to change when she walked away. Or maybe, if she did, she wouldnât care.
As I glance out the window, a familiar sight freezes me in place.
Aubrey.
Sitting on her bed, her head bowed, hands covering her face as her shoulders shake with silent sobs. The world tilts, disbelief crashing over me like a tidal wave.
What the fuck is she doing back here? And why now, after all this time?
My chest tightens, old instincts roaring to life before I can stop them. That unshakable need to protect her, to shield her from the chaos thatâs always loomed next door, claws its way to the surface. For a fleeting moment, I feel it againâthe boy who wouldâve done anything to keep her safe. But then reality hits, hard and unforgiving.
She left.
She made her choice. Iâve spent years trying to bury the wreckage she left behind, building walls so high not even the memory of her could climb over them. And now, out of nowhere, sheâs back.
Crying.
Alone.
Whateverâs broken her, sheâll have to fucking deal with it on her own. Iâm not that guy anymore, and Iâll be damned if I let her undo everything Iâve worked to become. Let her live with the consequences of the choices she madeâbecause God knows, Iâve been living with them.
I force myself to turn away, to walk back to the life Iâve created without herâbut my feet refuse to obey, frozen in place as if theyâve forgotten how to move. Itâs pathetic, honestly. After everything, after all the walls Iâve put up and the bitterness Iâve buried myself in, just seeing her is enough to break me.
She lifts her head, her eyes drifting to something in her room, and for a moment, it feels like no time has passed. Sheâs still as beautiful as I rememberâlong black hair falling around her face, soft and wild all at once.
My chest tightens with the memories of how I used to run my fingers through her hair, not because she asked, but because I needed to. Just to touch her, to feel close to her in a way words never could. It was the kind of closeness I thought would last forever.
But forever wasnât in the cards for us.
And now, standing here like some ghost haunting her shadow, Iâm reminded of everything Iâve lostâthe girl, the touch, those quiet moments that once felt so damn perfect. And yet, despite it all, I canât make myself move. She doesnât even know Iâm here, and still, she holds me the way she always did.
I drag a hand over my chest, trying to ease the ache thatâs been there since the moment I saw her. Memories I thought Iâd buried claw their way backâher smile, her laugh, the way she made me believe in something I never thought I deserved.
But those memories donât belong here anymore.
Sheâs just like my motherâwalking away without a second thought, without giving a single fuck about what they left behind. I was seven when my mom disappeared, and it felt like the world shattered. I swore Iâd never let anyone do that to me again. But Aubrey? She slipped through all my defenses, made me believe I might actually be worth staying for. And then she left, proving I was a goddamn fool for thinking any differently.
I clench my fists, forcing the anger to drown out the ache. Fuck them both. Neither of them is worth my time, my pain, or the pieces of myself they took when they walked away. Iâve survived without them, and I sure as hell donât need her back now to remind me of all the ways she broke me.
But then I see itâthe way she wipes the tears from her face, her shoulders shaking like sheâs trying to hold herself together. And just like that, something inside me cracks.
It doesnât make sense.
The Aubrey I knew would never have cried. Not even with all the shit that went on in that house. Not even when the world was crumbling around her. She was steel and fire. But seeing her nowâbroken and vulnerableâit feels wrong, unnatural, like the universe is trying to turn her into someone I donât recognize.
A surge of tenderness floods my chest, uninvited and unwanted. And fuck my weak heart for still clinging to a past that almost destroyed me.
Iâve spent too long trying to forget her, trying to outrun the person I used to be. Now, Iâm the king of Eastern Highâuntouchable, ruthless, ready to take whatever I want. If she came back looking for the boy she left behind, sheâs about to find out he doesnât exist anymore.
She turns her head, and for one brutal, soul-crushing moment, time fucking stops.
Our gazes meet, and all the things Iâve been running from, all the truths Iâve been too scared to face, come crashing down. The pain in her eyesâso raw, so undeniableâit cuts through me. I canât breathe, canât think, because seeing her like thisâso shattered, so emptyâmakes something inside me coil tightly, impossible to unwind.
She rises from the bed, hesitant, as if she wants to reach for me but knows better than to try. Her eyes stay locked on mine, her face caught somewhere between hope and despair. God, I want to make it right. I want to run to her, hold her close, tell her everything will be okay, like Iâve done so many times before. But I canât.
The vulnerability in her eyes is so raw it cuts through me. Every inch of her body seems to scream for somethingâsomething I canât give her. I move across the room, each step heavier than the last. That old, hopeful smile tugging at her lips, the kind that used to make everything feel right between us.
She walks toward the window, the place that used to feel like our safe haven, where weâd whisper our secrets into the night, finding solace in each otherâs company when sleep wouldnât come.
But as I get closer, I donât want to remember how we wereâhow weâd sit by our bedroom windows, talking for hours.
Instead of opening it like I used to, I reach up and pull the curtains closedâsharp, cold, and final. Itâs as if Iâm shutting the door on everything we were, on everything I can never be for her. A move to push her away, to lock away the last remnants of us that still remain. And I canât tell if Iâm doing it to protect her⦠or to protect myself.
I throw on some clothes in a hurry, not bothering if they match, and head downstairs. I push thoughts of her to the back of my mind, focusing on the one thing that matters nowâpartying, the booze, finding some distraction to drown out the memory of her.
Walking into the kitchen, I find my dad sitting at the table, eyes glued to his phone. The second I step in, he flips it face down, like heâs hiding something.
âHey, Dad,â I mutter, grabbing a piece of fruit from the bowl and biting into it, barely tasting it.
âHey, son,â he says. âHeading out?â
My dad has always been my anchorâthe one thing that kept me grounded when everything else fell apart. Not in some clichéd âheâs a great guyâ way, but in the kind that makes you believe in something unshakable, even when your world is falling to pieces. When my mom left, she didnât just walk out on me; she walked out on him too. He carried it allâher absence, my anger, the heaviness of a home that felt too quiet without her. I could see it in the way his shoulders slumped when he thought I wasnât watching. But he never let me see him crack. Not once. He turned himself inside out trying to keep me safe, trying to keep me whole. And for a long time, I thought he was invincible.
âYeah, the guys and I are meeting up, then thereâs a party across town,â I say, my words muffled by a mouthful of food. I toss the half-eaten apple into the bin without a second thought, then head to the fridge to grab a bottle of water.
His phone rings, and I expect him to pick it up, but he silences it quickly. Heâs been doing that a lot lately. The buzzing and ringing have been constant these past few months.
âSee ya later, Dad,â I say, heading for the door.
âYeah, be safe, son,â he says, like always.
As I yank open the front door, my thoughts spiral to Aubrey.
We were two halves of a whole, spending endless hours together, roaming each otherâs backyards, finding peace in the secret refuge of my treehouse. I can still feel the echo of that kiss I pressed against her lips on her thirteenth birthdayâsoft and innocent, but somehow it haunts me now. Iâve loved her for as long as I can rememberâfrom the sweet, naïve days of childhood to the tangled mess we became. I swore Iâd love her forever, whispering promises into her ear like time was on our side. And sheâshe promised the same, vowing no one would ever take my place in her heart.
We were each otherâs firsts in everything, growing up side by side. But then⦠I watched her change, blossom into something so beautiful it terrified me.
Every day, my love for her grew, pushing against the walls Iâd built around it, afraid that even a whisper of what I truly felt would shatter the fragile thing we hadâour friendship. I thought I could protect it. Protect her from the life in that house.
But now?
Now that same friendship I tried so hard to preserve is twisted beyond recognition, morphing into a cruel reminder of what we once were.
I slide into my car, the engine rumbling to life, desperate to get the hell away from hereâaway from her, away from everything that threatens to tear me apart. My hands are already gripping the wheel, my mind racing, counting down the seconds but as I press my foot down on the brake, ready to shift into reverse, something stops me.
Itâs not fear.
Itâs something far worse.
A pull I canât name, an invisible force holding me in place. My hand hovers over the gear shift, trembling, as though it knows, deep down, I canât drive away. Itâs her. I can feel her presence next door, a shadow that clings to me, refusing to be ignored. It tugs at my heart and and I fucking hate it.
I should just leave. Put her behind me, lock her away in that box where I donât care. But for some reason, I canât. And the longer I stay there, the clearer it becomesâI canât drive out of this driveway, not yet. Not until I figure out why the hell sheâs back here.
Why does she still have this hold on me? And why canât I shake her, no matter how hard I try?
âFuck!â I mutter, slamming my fist against the steering wheel, pissed off at myself for being so goddamn weak. I shouldâve left by now, shouldâve gotten the hell out of here. But instead, Iâm still sitting here, stuck in her orbit.
Irritation claws at me as I kill the engineâReece is waiting, and Iâm already late. But I canât ignore this. I need to get her out of my head before it drives me crazy. Without thinking, I push open the car door, my feet already moving, dragging me toward her house like I donât have a choice anymore.
I step into her yard, walking along the side of the house, my pulse pounding in my ears, drowning out the sound of my footsteps as I reach her window.
I glance inside, and there she is, sitting on the bed, her face empty, eyes hollow. No tears, but a silence that screams louder than anything.
This isnât her. Not the Aubrey I rememberâthe one whoâd laugh in your face and tell you to go fuck yourself if you even looked at her the wrong way.
Part of me wants to turn around, walk away, let her deal with whatever shitty mess sheâs got going on. I donât owe her a thing. It should be easy to leave.
Hell, she did it without a second thought, without looking back. But something claws, a darkness that tells me if I donât figure this shit out now, itâll eat me up for the rest of the nightâmaybe longer.
I ball my fist, ready to knock on that glass, ready to tell her exactly how it is. Iâm done playing the game. Iâm ready to tell her she means nothing to me. That whatever this isâwhatever we wereâis nothing more than a mistake.
As I knock, she jumps at the sound, her eyes wide as she scrambles to get off the bed. What the hell does she have to cry about, anyway? Wasnât she the one, chasing some âbetter life,â acting like I wasnât enough to keep her here? Like none of thisâusâmeant a damn thing?
I canât stop looking at her as she moves closer, my eyes drinking in every detail. My cock stirs at the sight of her, and I hate myself for it. Her tits are bigger now, fuller, and those long legs in denim cutoffsâdamn. I shouldnât even be looking at her like this, but I canât stop. Sheâs always been beautiful, but now⦠Now sheâs mesmerizingâtoo perfect, too real. Every inch of her is a sirenâs call, dragging me under.
I hate that my body reacts to her. I donât want to feel anything anymore, especially not this.
I try to tear my eyes away, but every curve, every detail pulls me in harder. Itâs like sheâs taunting me, reminding me of all the things I tried to forget. I remember the way she moaned and how she felt beneath me, so perfect. The memory hits like a goddamn drug, and Iâm fighting it, fighting her, but fuck, itâs useless. She still has this hold on meâthis pull I canât shake, even if I hate myself for it.
She reaches the window and slides it open like itâs the most natural thing in the world.
âHey, Noah,â she says, her voice smooth, almost too calm.
Hearing my name on her lips again⦠it stirs something deep, something raw and ugly. I used to love the way she said it, the way it felt when she screamed it loud in the heat of the momentâwhen I buried myself deep inside her, when she begged for more.
But now? Now, it hits like a goddamn punch to the gut.
âWhat the fuck are you doing here?â I snap, my voice sharp, the words coming out like a warning.
My irritation flares hot and fast, a reflex more than anything else. Nothing but silence since she left and now she just pops back into my life like itâs nothing.
Her casual âheyâ feels like a slap in the face, and it makes my skin burn with rage.
Her demeanor shifts instantly at the irritation in my voice. There she isâthe Aubrey I knowâthe one who doesnât take shit from anyone, whoâs never afraid to call you out. Her eyes go serious, intense, as she crosses her arms over her chest, pushing her tits up, like sheâs taunting me on purpose. Itâs a goddamn trap, and I walk right into it.
I canât stop my gaze from dropping to them, and the memories flood backâvivid and overpowering. How I used to suck on those tits, kiss them, touch them. I shove the thoughts down, locking them away, pushing against the craving thatâs rising in my gut.
âJust so weâre fucking clear, you donât belong here anymore,â I spit, the words coming out like venom, thick with emotion Iâm too pissed to hide. âIâm not your goddamn friend anymore. So go back to where you belong. You mean nothing to me.â
I turn away before she can speak, knowing if I donât, Iâll fall apart. I keep my back to her, walking to the car without once looking back. She needs to see itâthat Iâve changed so much that the guy I used to be is now a complete stranger every time I look in the mirror. Now Iâm just someone whoâs closed off, chasing any warm pussy or willing mouth to fill the emptiness, drowning out the need for anything real.
I slide behind the wheel, firing up the engine, its growl matching the storm ripping through my chest. I slam the accelerator, reversing out onto the street, trying to outrun the shit inside me.
As I drive, my grip tightens on the wheel, a desperate attempt to hold myself together.