Glass: Chapter 15
Glass: A why choose Cinderella retelling (Forbidden Fairytales)
I hear her before I see her.
Hesitating, I debate just turning around and going back to my room. Iâve managed to successfully avoid any face-to-face interaction with the delightful Angelica and her scrawny daughter since their arrival, aside from the uncomfortable family dinners enforced by my father.
But the twins are enamored by her. Wonât leave her side. Itâs a miracle that sheâs alone at all.
Their obsession is enough to make me at least a little curious about the girl. So I slowly approach the end of the hall. Sheâs tucked away in the empty space, almost invisible apart from the quiet sobs. Her head shoots up, and she wipes away the tears frantically. âSorry. I was justâ,â
âWhy are you crying?â
The words slip out, and she shakes her head in blatant denial. âI wasnât crying.â
A tear plops off her chin with perfect timing, and she reaches up to swipe it away, her chin lifting into the air.
âSure,â I say shortly. âYour eyes appear to be leaking, in that case.â
She stares up at me, and I blink at the directness of her gaze. âFeel free to turn around, walk away and continue ignoring me, if it bothers you so much. You do it very well already.â
My head tilts to the side in curiosity. She balks when I take a seat next to her on the floor instead, my back resting against the wall. âWhat are you doing?â
âNot ignoring you.â Not looking at her, I stare at the art across from us. âCome on, then. Out with it.â
I wait for a few minutes, until she gives in. I can almost feel her wrestling with her words. âMy⦠my father died. Five years ago today.â
I glance down at her, mildly surprised. âI didnât know that. That heâd died. Iâm⦠sorry.â
I assumed heâd left. Anastasia shakes her head. âMy mother⦠she doesnât like to talk about him. Or acknowledge him at all, really.â
âWhy not?â Iâm genuinely curious. Dad talks about our mother all the time. Even though none of us really remember her, since she died when the twins were born. All I remember is her voice. But he keeps her memory alive enough for me to feel that I have a sense of who she was. I donât feel as if Iâm missing parts of her, even though she isnât here.
And I know that she was nothing like cold, greedy, grasping fucking Angelica.
âThings changed,â she whispers. âWhen he died. Iâ¦. I should go.â
But when she moves to get up, I stop her with my hand over hers. âTell me.â
I donât feel sorry for her. If anything, Iâm wondering if the information Iâm about to learn might free us from the curse of Angelica. I canât stand the woman, and the twins arenât keen either.
But theyâll put up with her, for Anastasia. Weâve already had that discussion.
I rake my eyes over her face. Sheâs by no means the prettiest girl Iâve ever seen, although I suppose her eyes are nice enough. âWhy are my brothers so obsessed with you?â
A hint of color appears on her cheekbones. âTheyâre not obsessed with me. But⦠I like them.â
She sounds like she means it. And I watch her closely.
âIf you hurt them,â I say finally, âI will destroy you.â
She stiffens. âYour social skills could use some work, you know that? And I have no plans to hurt them.â
âI mean it.â I stare down at her. She swallows, but she meets my eyes.
And the faintest thread of respect works its way into my chest when she nods. âWarning received.â
I shift. Iâve said my piece. Sheâs had her warning. I can leave now.
But I donât actually move. My fingers tap restlessly against the floor, my eyes flicking down.
âTell me about you.â
As she begins to speak, I realize that I like the sound of her voice. And I donât like many people. Too shrill. Too much. But Anastasia â Stasi, she reminds me â her voice is husky. Soothing.
She tells me about her childhood. About her father, and his travels. How heâd bring her back a book from every place he went, until one day he didnât come back at all. Her voice begins to shake, and I quickly change tack.
âYou enjoy reading?â I ask her. My voice is a little softer this time, and she grasps onto the change in subject even as her eyes flick to mine in awareness, a silent communication that she knows what Iâm doing.
âI do. I prefer to write, though.â
My eyebrows raise in interest. âWhat do you write?â
She flushes. âAnything. Everything. Poetry. Fiction. I⦠thatâs what I want to study, when Iâm old enough. At college. It sounds stupid, I know.â
âNothing sounds stupid with enough conviction behind it,â I say and she laughs, leaning against me. âTrue.â
âI would like to read something youâve written.â She doesnât strike me as someone who would waste her words on frivolity. I wonder if her directness bleeds into her writing. What more it will tell me about this girl.
âMaybe Iâll show you. You have to promise not to laugh, though.â
Time ticks away. We talk for hours, until the twins find us tucked away in the corner of the hall. Even then, I find that Iâm reluctant to stop, reluctant to give up the time that Iâve spent listening to her. Even for them as they tease her away from me with promises of an afternoon picnic by the stream.
She turns to me before she leaves. Hesitation lingers in her brown eyes as they scan my face. âSame⦠same time tomorrow?â
My eyes jerk to hers.
Slowly, I nod.
And somehow, over the weeks and months we spend in quiet corners, talking and laughing and sharing our fucking souls, Anastasia works her way into my heart, right alongside the twins.
And then she rips it apart, from the inside out.