Sick Boys: Chapter 58
Sick Boys: A Dark Bully RH Romance (Spine Ridge University)
A few days later
I sift through the pages of the diary, wondering if I missed something about those boys. There must be. Why else would she hide this one page?
I donât understand why Dylan, Ali, and Felix would say it was a joint decision.
Her words looked like she was desperate and distraught. Who would write these words and then still want to break up? It doesnât make any sense.
I swallow as I come across the same text.
At the bottom is a number. 303.
Why would she put this here?
Was it a mistake?
I saw it before, but I didnât think it mattered.
What if it did?
I sift through more of the pages until I get to page 303, but there doesnât appear to be anything significant on it besides a picture of her and the guys taped on top of the page, adorned with hearts and smileys.
What does it mean?
She wouldnât just put those numbers there for no reason, right?
This book wasnât just a diary. She hid that page on purpose so the guys wouldnât find it, which means it contains a message. A message she wanted me to find.
âWhat are you trying to tell me, Eve?â I mutter in the bathroom stall.
âPenelope?â
I hold my breath.
âPen? Itâs me. Kayla.â She knocks on my door.
I sigh and get up, closing the diary before I turn the lock.
âHey,â she says, peeking through. âAre you okay?â
I shake my head and walk out of the stall to take a much-needed drink at the sink by sticking my head under the faucet. After Iâve swallowed my sip, I say, âYou were right about those guys. I shouldâve stayed away, and I didnât.â
âIâm sorry. I donât want to be. I just didnât want you to get hurt.â She rubs my back.
âThey never told me they fucked around with my sister and then broke up with her right before the bonfire.â
She rubs her lips together. âIâm sorry. I didnât know they were an item too. Her death bothers you a lot, doesnât it?â
I nod at her through the mirror. âI canât stop looking through the diary, wondering what I missed. If I could â¦â I rub my forehead. âIf I could just talk to her and ask.â
She pulls me in for a hug.
âIâm sorry, girl. I know itâs been rough on you,â she says. âThose guys play with everyoneâs heads. Itâs what they do. They destroy everything in their path, starting with your sister and ending with you.â
I suck in a heavy breath. âI was there when she jumped.â
âYou couldnât have stopped her. Sheâd made up her mind already,â she says.
âHow do you know?â I ask.
She pulls me back and looks me in the eyes. âTilda told me she heard Eve crying in the bathroom before the bonfire.â
I frown. âTilda? Tilda was there that night?â
She nods. âNot at the bonfire, but at the sorority. From what Tilda told me, it sounded like Eve just had a huge argument in the deanâs office.â
My pupils dilate. âWait ⦠the deanâs office? Youâre sure?â
âTilda doesnât lie about those things. It broke her to realize she mightâve been one of the last ones to talk to Eve.â She averts her eyes. âBefore she â¦â
I swallow and turn toward the mirror again, staring at myself.
At the image of my own sisterâs face reflecting right back at me.
303.
The numbers.
My eyes widen.
I slam the diary onto the sink and open the first page, where I placed the torn paper.
303.
âWhatâs that?â Kayla mutters as she peeks over my shoulder. âIs that ⦠Eveâs?â
I flip through the diary until I find the warning written on the pages. The warning I thought was meant for me.
Donât stop.
Donât look back.
Donât fall.
Run.
303.
It wasnât just a warning.
Itâs the fucking key.
I turn and grab Kaylaâs arm. âWhat room is the deanâs office? Whatâs the number?â
She looks distressed. âI donât know. Uh ⦠three? Maybe?â
âWhat floor?â
âThird,â she says.
And itâs all I need to know.
I peck Kayla on the cheek. âThank you, thank you, thank you!â
âYouâre welcome, I guess?â she mutters, confused.
I shut the diary and stuff it into my bag, then run off.
âPenelope!â Kayla yells as she follows me out of the bathroom. âWhere are you going?â
âI need to know something. Iâll talk to you later,â I holler over my shoulder. âThank you!â
I run through the hallways of the main building, pushing past people who obviously seem pissed off that Iâm butting in. But I canât wait any longer now that I know my sister left these clues in there on purpose. She wanted me to find out about her being in the deanâs office that night.
But what happened in there?
What did he say to her?
Or did something else occur?
The thought of him hurting her sets me off as I rush up the stairs as fast as possible. First floor. Second floor. Third floor.
My heart is racing in my throat, and I take a moment to catch my breath before I walk toward his office. The number 303 sits on a plaque on top of the wood, drawing me in like a moth to a flame as my hand curls around the door handle.
To my surprise, itâs not locked.
Maybe Dylanâs father forgot the last time he was here.
I open the door and step inside. The musty air invades my nostrils as I close the door behind me and look around. Dust covers the shelves of his bookcase, and I look through them to see if I can find any reports on my sister. So far, none match her name.
I go over to his desk and sit down behind it, turning on the computer. Sweat beads roll down my back as I wait for it to start. When the home button appears, I immediately open his mailbox and search for my sisterâs name to see if heâs had any contact with her.
But to my surprise, there are none.
Zero emails carrying her name.
This doesnât make any sense because I can see he definitely emails about his other students.
Did he delete them so no one would find any evidence?
My eyes momentarily skitter away to the notes on his desk, but they fixate on a particular small stack of papers inside a box. Because itâs yellow, same color as the paper tucked underneath my door.
I grab one and feel it.
Same texture too.
On the corner of the desk lies a book with personal notes, and curiosity forces me to open it. His handwriting is all over each date, outlining all of his business for the rest of the year.
But what strikes me the most is the letters and the way theyâre written. The loop on the E and the curl at the bottom of the letter F â¦
I fish out my phone and find the photo I took of the note shoved under my door, and my hand begins to quake.
Itâs the same.
The same handwriting.
The same paper. The same color. The same texture.
My heart skips a beat.
It came from here.
Did Dylanâs father threaten me?
But that doesnât make any sense. Heâs the dean. Why would he stoop so low as to get multiple students to shove notes underneath one girlâs door when he could just call her into his office and talk to her? He has all the power. He could kick me out of this school any time he wanted. I donât understand.
Suddenly, the door slams open, and I stare right into the eyes of the man whose office Iâve raided.
âYou,â he asks, his voice accusatory. âWhat are you doing here?â
âWaiting for you,â I reply.
Itâs part lie, part truth. Even though I hate to even look at this man, I need to know the truth.
He puts his briefcase on the table next to the door. âYou broke into my office?â
âYour door was open,â I retort as I get up from his seat.
âImpossible,â he scoffs.
I shrug.
âYou realize itâs illegal to barge into my office, right?â He narrows his eyes as he takes off his coat like heâs about to get busy with work. âI could expel you just for the audacity.â
I cross my arms. âIs that what you threatened my sister with?â
He pauses while hanging his coat and stares me in the eyes.
âYeah, I know about your little âtalkâ right before the bonfire.â I make air quotes with my fingers.
His nostrils twitch as he approaches the desk, but Iâm not afraid of him or the consequences of being here. Because if even an inch of it is true, heâs in deeper shit than I am.
âTell me, what do you think it is you know?â he mutters, approaching the desk.
I grab one of the yellow papers off his desk and hold it up. âSomeone pushed a note underneath my door. The same paper.â
He snorts. âWhat does that have to do with anything? Thereâs a ton of this kind of paper on the market.â
âYour handwriting was on it.â
His pupils dilate, and he leans in. âListen here, I donât know what youâve got into your head, butââ
I hold up my phone and show him the picture of the note.
He canât deny it now.
âYou sent some fucking students to send me a threat.â
He snorts. âRidiculous.â
âNo wonder he wouldnât tell us,â I snarl. âWhy?â
The dean suddenly slams his fist onto the desk. âThis is my office. Do you hear me? Get. Out.â
I stare right back at him, determined not to budge even an inch. âNo. What did you tell my sister?â I interject. âI have a right to know.â
A wicked smirk forms on his face, and itâs the first time I see Dylan in him. But this smile ⦠itâs far more sinister than Dylan could ever be.
âYouâre just as meddlesome as she was. Always up in everyoneâs business where you donât belong,â he seethes.
âSo you admit you made Nathan put that note under my door,â I growl.
âI told my son he shouldnât involve himself with the likes of you, and now look at what youâve doneâbreaking into my office like you own the fucking place,â he retorts.
âAnswer me,â I say.
âOr what? You gonna threaten me with that little knife of yours?â
My eyes flicker.
How? When? Where?
âYeah, Iâve seen you toy around with that thing,â he scoffs. âYouâre a child. You have no clue how dangerous that is.â
âWhat are you talking about?â I mutter.
His eyes darken in a terrifying manner. âMy son is not your fucking plaything,â he grates, slamming both hands onto the desk now. âYou are a threat to him. Just like your fucking sister.â
My face tightens as I lean in, almost crushing my phone in my hand. âIs that why you sent that note?â
âStay. Away. From. Him,â he reiterates.
I stand up straight, unable to keep my emotions from taking over. âShe jumped because of you.â
His face contorts. âHow dare you?â
My nostrils flare. âYou made her break up with those boys, didnât you?â
He snorts. âI donât care what you call it. I told my boy he needed to quit before it got out of hand, and he didnât take my advice until it was too late.â
Wait ⦠the dean made the boys break up with her too?
His jaw barely opens up as he grits, âI gave that girl a choice, and she didnât take it.â
My eyes widen.
What?
A choice? As if dying was a fucking choice?
âYou threatened her just like you threatened me,â I growl. âYou wanted her gone.â
âShe was toying with my son, messing with his heart and his head,â he growls, leaning over the desk like he intends to grab me. âI allowed her to leave the school. Quietly.â He pauses. âBut she decided to make a fuss.â
A fuss.
A fucking fuss.
Thatâs what he reduces her suicide to.
âAnd if you do not stop engaging with my son, I will require you to leave as well,â he warns. âUnless you want your parents to have zero children left.â
My eyes widen as I step away from his desk, my heart palpitating, and I run out the door, not even once looking over my shoulder.