Chapter Twelve - Part Two
The Rules of the Red - 2014 Watty Award Winner |✓|
âI mean, you did go away with him to New York didnât you?â
âYeah, I did.â I said, examining a little black dress for a dark blue cardigan, and a thin brown belt at the waist for measure. âAnd I helped him bring the amulet back too. Sort of.â
The dress and sweater were decided on, and elegant black flats were the last items to leave their home from the closet. I draped them across the bed, selected a comb and began to run it through my wet hair. With breakfast still on the to-do list, I wouldnât have time to blow dry or straighten, so my hair would simply have to dry curly. My only problem lay in detangling it before it could.
âThink of all youâre going out of your way to do for him, Mimi. Shouldnât he return the favor?â
Ethan watched for several moments as I combed wet hair in busy silence, considering.
âHmm, I dunno⦠Tidus seems pretty protective of Claudia and her family. And to be honest, I donât think he would let me get close enough to her to ask those questions. Especially if that would mean doing harm to her own kind.â
âRight.â Ethan said, with some of that old, familiar tightness that I had come to associate with any mentioning of Tidus. âBoundaries and all that â I get it. Heâs protective of her and youâre protective of him⦠But thatâs a lot of respect for a Vampireâ¦â
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â I replied, slowing down on the combing.
âCome on, Mimi, think about it. They drink blood. Not only is that a weird, nasty choice of diet but their track record with anything with a pulse hasnât exactly been flattering either. Tell me you can ignore that and I swear I wonât believe it.â
I sighed.
âYou sound like Addy.â
âGood. For once, that doesnât completely disturb me. At least I know sheâs trying to look out for you when Iâm not around.â
âWell, from what Iâve learned from Lucas, our kind has done just as much damage to the world as the Vampires. We arenât any better, Ethan. No matter how you try to spin it.â
âNaomi, Tidus has you blinded. Donât you get it? Itâs so obvious ââ
âYou know, Iâm starting to get really tired of hearing that question. So I think Iâll pass on the criticism for now, thanks.â I snapped, slapping the comb back on the dresser. âI suppose it might be worth it to you, Ethan, to live stranded beneath that tiny, parochial, rock of yours. But I find that naiveté requires me to live with a lot of space â so feel free to leave.â
Quickly, I scooped up my outfit and underwear, piling them messily into my arms as I retreated to the bathroom. I could take my time in their as much as I pleased, hiding, but I couldnât escape the sorrowful look that had been in his eyes. He sincerely wanted to help, and yet, for some reason, I was only pushing him away further and he just couldnât understand it. And though I owed him the truth, I just couldnât give it to him.
âStill here, Ethan?â I said several moments later, after emerging from the bathroom. âBecause I donât think Iâll be needing that ride from you after all ââ
My fingers were still on the knob when I walked in on Ethan sitting on my bed, reading my fatherâs autopsy report. It was such a blatant intrusion of my personal space and property, that the rage I should have felt was momentarily delayed. Instead, in its place was a rather dull blankness covering any other potential feelings â which was probably for the best, or he mightâve been killed by my bare hands otherwise.
But as it turns out, the emptiness was only brief, and swiftly replaced by a burning, boundless fury. Indignantly, I strode my way over to him and yanked the folder from his hands before giving him a hard shove.
âWhat the hell do you think youâre you doing? This was private ââ
âIâm sorry.â he said, while anything but. âIt was just lying in the nightstand. I didnât realize ââ
âI donât care! I want you to leave! Now! Just go!â
âBut, Naomi, itâs missing pages ââ
ââ the audacity? Because honestly, I donât think Iâve ever come across anyone as rude or intrusive as you. Ethan, you are such an asshole â wait. What did you just say?â
âItâs missing pages.â he repeated calmly.
With another glare, I quickly rifled through the pages. And sure enough, I discovered that a small but significant chunk of them were missing. Four, to be exact.
âI... I donât know how I missed thisâ¦â I said slowly, sinking down on the bed next to Ethan and flipping through the pages again, just to be absolutely sure. But the results were the same. According to the tiny numbers at the top right of every page corner, four pages that should have been there, werenât. The report had been incomplete this entire time and I had never once noticed.
âItâs like I said.â Ethan replied, smugly. âYou arenât as clever as I am, remember?â
âOh shut up.â I replied, and smacked him with the folder. âThis doesnât redeem you.â
Even though it really did.
âYeah, but it still counts for a little bit, right?â his tone was playful, coy, but I had other thoughts on mind my mind.
âThis wasnât an accident.â I declared, standing. âSomebody left out those pages on purpose.â
âWhat? Thatâs crazy. Why would anybody do that?â Ethan asked. âAnd why do you have that by the way? Thatâs so⦠morbid ââ
âNone of your business.â I retorted, pulling out the drawer of my nightstand and depositing the folder with a decisive thud. âYou know, you really ought to learn some manners Ethan. Invasiveness can be very unattractive.â
âNo, uh-uh. Donât do that â donât deflect.â he said, with a smile full of his own duplicity. âI know you, Mimi. You do that when youâre hiding stuff.â
I pursed my lips and looked away, but I knew that it was too late.
âYou think something bad happened to your father, donât you? I mean, besides him dying. You think it was foul play. Iâm right, arenât I?â
Ethan stood now too, but I blocked his path from retrieving the folder. Shaking my head, I put my arms against his chest, holding him at armâs length.
âEthan, if you open your mouth about this â at all â to anyoneâ¦â
âI wonât say anything if you let me come with you to the morgue.â he said simply.
âFor what?â I said with exasperation, finally able to drop my hands.
âTo get the rest of the autopsy report.â Ethan replied. âIf somebody really did take the time to make sure that no one else saw the other pages, then that means they were probably worth hiding, right?â
âYeah.â I agreed. âBut I think I can handle it alone, thanks.â
âOk,â he said with a shrug, raising his hands and backing off. âSuit yourself. But Iâm sure Charles could probably handle it too. Well, if he were to find about