First Bitten: Chapter 26
First Bitten (The Alexandra Jones Series #1)
I open my eyes up to the white ceiling in yet another hotel room in another part of Scotland. The silence is all around me as I breathe in the stale, warm reproduced air the air conditioning system is funnelling out.
This is how itâs been for the last week, Nathan and I staying in hotels night after night, big enough and generic enough so we go relatively unnoticed as we move around Scotland, going to places Iâve never even heard of before where the accents are so thick I struggle to understand what people are saying. Not that I actually have any interaction with people, or Nathan, for that matter.
He still barely talks to me. He never talks about Sol and he drinks, a lot. Nathan has always liked drinking but this is something else entirely. Heâs not drinking for enjoyment now, heâs drinking to forget. And I wonder for just how much longer we can both continue this way.
I rub the sleep from my eyes and sit up in bed, resting my back against the wall. The TV is still on from earlier; I must have fallen asleep watching it.
The TV is always on. I canât bear to sit in silence. If I do, I start to think about the things I want to forget, and the TV is the only real company I have nowadays.
I pick the remote up and turn it over to the music channel. Glancing in the direction of the window, I see itâs getting dark outside. I look at the clock â its 7pm. The last time I saw Nathan was at lunchtime when he brought me some food.
Iâm surprised weâre still here. Weâre usually out of the hotel and moving onto the next one by now.
I listen into Nathanâs room. Nothing. Maybe heâs in the bar. Thatâs not unusual, but this is, being here this long.
I start to get an uneasy feeling in my stomach.
What if heâs drunk too much and passed out somewhere? No, thatâs not Nathan, he can hold his drink. What if something worse has happened? What if the Originals are here and theyâve somehow figured out heâs with me. What if theyâve taken him to get to me?
I sit up on my haunches.
My stomach is rolling with unease. What should I do? I should go look for him. No, Nathan will be mad if he knows Iâve left my room. Well, he wonât be mad if heâs in trouble and needs my help, will he?
I jump up and pull my hooded sweatshirt on over my T-shirt. Iâm just about to put my trainers on when I hear Nathanâs door open. Heâs back. Thank god.
Relieved, I sit down on the bed and remove my sweatshirt again.
Realising I havenât fed for a long while, I go get some blood out of the fridge. I look at the fridge contents. I havenât got much left â a couple of daysâ worth, max. Iâve been trying to limit my intake. Itâs not easy. I still have a nagging ache inside me for something a little better, a little stronger.
Iâve just unscrewed the cap when Nathan walks into my room through the interconnecting door without knocking.
We always stay in rooms with connecting doors. I donât know why. I like to think itâs because he wants to be close to me, to be still connected to me in some way, but in reality I think itâs just so he can have easy access to me if he needs to, you know, in case the Originals find me.
Actually, Iâm a bit annoyed heâs just walked into my room without knocking. I could have being changing my clothes for all he knows. He doesnât usually just walk in, though. He always knocks. Somethingâs different.
I watch him with interest as he crosses my room and sits down on the bed, facing me. He reeks of alcohol. Well, he does to me. A normal person probably wouldnât be able to smell it, but to me he smells like an old drunk whoâs just had the time of this life with a bottle of cheap whiskey.
He runs his hand through his hair. âYouâre leaving the country,â he states. Pulling a passport out of his pocket, he drops it on the bed.
âWhat?â I look at him aghast.
âItâs necessary for your safety. The sooner youâre out of here the better.â
My insides take a steep dive. I donât want to go but I know itâs pointless arguing. This isnât debatable; I can tell by the set of his jaw and the low tilt of his eyebrows.
My eyes drift to the passport. âWhen?â
âTomorrow. Iâve just been waiting for Craig to sort you out a fake passport. He sent it out yesterday and I just picked it up earlier today.â
âAnd youâre only telling me this now?â
âI was busy.â Thereâs a gravelly edge to his voice.
âYeah, busy getting drunk,â I say derisively, the words out before I can stop them.
He gives me such a hate-filled look that I may as well be something heâs just scraped off the bottom of his shoe.
I look to the floor, ignoring the ache it creates in me. You think Iâd be used to it by now.
So this is it. This it when I go it alone. Tomorrow heâs going to put me on a plane and walk away. Canât say I blame him but the thought of being without him is doing all kinds of awful things to my heart.
I put my bottle down on the bedside table and go and sit next to him. I feel his body tense up at my nearness. It makes everything hurt just that little bit more.
âWhere am I going?â I ask, unable to keep the sadness from my voice.
âFrance, to start with,â he says to the wall. âWeâre gonna take the ferry over. Weâll drive down to Dover first thing ⦠â
But Iâm not listening anymore. He said âWeâreâ.
âYouâre coming with me?â My words come out a mess, all tangled and stuttery.
He gives me a look. âWhat? You thought I was gonna stick you on a boat and just ship you off?â
Well aeroplane, actually, but â¦
I look at my feet.
âIs that what kind of bastard you think I am?â
Heâs trying to pick a fight with me. I figured that from the moment he walked through the door. I know itâs just the alcohol. Well, for the most part it is, anyway.
I look up at him, meeting his eye. âI donât think youâre a bastard. Far from it. I just think ⦠look, I donât know what I think.â I shake my head. âI just didnât expect youâd give your life up for me.â
âHavenât I already?â
Yes, and thatâs the problem. Iâve been trying to ignore the voice in my head telling me what I needed to do, what the right thing to do is, but now I donât think I can ignore it anymore.
I stare at the wall ahead. I canât look at him when I say this. I take a deep breath and let the words out. âI donât want you to put your life on hold for me anymore.â
âWhat are you saying?â His words come out edgy.
I turn to look at him. Thereâs no expression on his face, just a whole lot of anger in his eyes.
âIâm saying I want to go to France alone.â
Iâve finally said it. I canât believe how strong Iâm being but itâs conflicting. I know itâs the right thing to do but that doesnât stop it from hurting in the worst possible way.
He stares at me for a long, cold moment, then gets up and walks over to the desk. Leaning forward, he rests his hands on it and looks out of the window.
I stare at his back, troubled. âSay something.â
âWhat do you want me to say?â His response is icy.
âAnything.â Stay. âTalk to me, about ⦠Sol.â
âDonât,â he warns, turning to face me. His body rigid.
âWhy wonât you talk about what happened that night?â
âWhy do you want to talk about it?â
âBecause itâll help.â My words come out sounding as weak and inefficient as they truly are.
âWill it?â He grips the edge of the desk with his hands. âI donât see all the talking youâve done since Carrie died doing you any good. Youâre still as fucked up about it as you were the day it happened.â
He might as well of just punched me hard in the stomach. Angry and disappointed I get up from the bed and start to walk away from him with absolutely no idea as to where Iâm going. âYouâre drunk,â I mutter.
âI might have had a drink but Iâm far from drunk. You just donât like the truth because it hurts.â
I turn around, resigned. âNo, Nathan, you do. All the time.â
He looks confused. I can see him quickly trying to work through my words. His expression clears. âProblem is, Alex, you expect too much from me.â He sounds bitter. Heâs every right to. âYou always have. You want what I canât give you.â He rubs his hand over his face, hard, like he hopes it will erase me from his memory. âWhat Iâm not willing to give you.â
That hurts. âIâve never asked for anything from you!â Okay, so thatâs not strictly true.
Anger overpowers his features, distorting them. âNo?
, â he mimics, gesticulating angrily. â
He would still be alive if it wasnât for ⦠â he cuts off abruptly, his breathing coming in hard.
âIf it wasnât for what?â I demand. I need to hear him say it.
He looks at me defiantly. âYou,â he simply utters, âyou.â
And there it is. But still, the words cut into me so deeply Iâm sure I must be bleeding out right now. I grip a hand to my stomach, resting my back against the wall for support.
Then, without warning, Nathan picks the TV up off the stand and hurls it clear across the room. It smashes into the wall, dropping to the floor with a loud thud.
I stare at him, shocked.
Without a word or a glance, he storms out the room, slamming the door behind him, heading down the hall and far, far away from me.
I sink down to the carpet and bury my head in my hands.
A minute later the room phone starts to ring. I nearly jump out of my skin. I leap over the bed in my haste to answer it. âNathan?â I say, breathless.
âNo, madam, itâs reception,â comes a deep Scottish male voice down the line. âIâm just calling to check that everything is okay.â
âOh, erm, yeah everythingâs fine.â
âItâs just ⦠we, er, received a call saying there were loud noises coming from your room.â
âOh,â I fiddle with the phone wire, âI must have had the TV on too loud.â
âNo, madam, they said thereâs was, erm ⦠shouting and loud banging noises.â
âOh, sorry.â I think fast on my feet. âI er, fell off the bed. The bang was me. Iâm sorry I didnât mean to be noisy.â
âNo, madam, of course. Are you okay? Do you need to see a doctor? I can call one for you now ⦠â
âNo,â I say quickly, cutting him dead, âIâm fine. No need for a doctor.â
âYouâre sure?â
âYes.â
âOkay ⦠well if you change your mind, or need anything at all, please do call reception, wonât you?â
âI will. Thank you.â I hang up the phone and go over and pick the TV up off the floor, putting its broken shell back on the stand.
I trace my finger around the dent it has left in the wall. Nathan has a temper but this is something else entirely. We canât go on like this. Itâs tearing him apart being here with me. Iâm destroying him. I need to let go of him once and for all, let him finally be free of me so he can have the life he deserves.
Pushing all my fear and reservations aside, I reach for my bag and start to fill it with my things. One of the first is the passport.