Bully: Chapter 12
Bully (The Fall Away Series Book 1)
âSo why havenât I seen you in the two weeks Iâve been home?â I asked Katherine after weâd discussed my trip and plans for senior year.
She poured more coffee for herself. âWell, I met someone a few months ago, and I stay with him a lot.
I raised my eyebrows in surprise, and she mustâve seen it. She shook her head and gave me a contrite smile.
âI guess it sounds bad,â she offered. âMe leaving Jared alone so much. Between my job, his school and job, and then all of the things heâs involved in, we just donât run into each other a lot. I figure heâs happier on his own more and wellâ¦â
Her over-explanation and inability to finish her thought said more about her disappointment over her relationship with her son than anything else.
And why was he so busy that her being home was unecessary?
âWhat do mean âall the things heâs involved inâ?â I asked.
She knitted her brows. âWell, he works at the garage a few days a week, races, and then has other obligations. Heâs hardly ever home, and when he is, itâs just to sleep usually. But, I do keep tabs on him. When I bought us both new phones for Christmas last year, I installed a GPS app on his so I always know where he is.â
Okay, thatâs not weird.
âWhat other obligations did you mean?â I asked.
âOh,â she said with a nervous smile, âaround the time you left last year, things got pretty bad here. Jared was out at all hours. Sometimes, he didnât even come home. Myâ¦drinkingâ¦got worse with the stress of Jaredâs behavior.â She paused and shrugged her shoulders. âOr maybe his behavior got worse with my drinking. I donât know. But I entered rehab for about a month and got detoxed.â
Since Iâd lived on this street, eight years now, Jaredâs mom had had a drinking problem. Most of the time sheâd been functional, able to go to work and handle Jared. After he came back from visiting his dad that summer three years ago, heâd changed, and Jaredâs mom had sought escape in the bottle more often.
âHe got into some trouble, and then he got it together. But steps needed to be taken, for both of us.â
I continued to listen, unfortunately too interested into this rare peek of Jaredâs life. She still hadnât explained the âother obligationsâ, but I wasnât going to pry further.
âAnyway, a few months ago I started seeing someone, and Iâve been staying with him on the weekends in Chicago. Jared has a lot going on, and I just donât feel like he needs me. I stay here most school nights, but he knows to stay out of trouble on the weekends.â
Yeah, instead of taking his debauchery elsewhere, he brought it home with him.
Some people might see her reasoning as logical, since Jared was almost an adult, but I let my judgment form. As much as I liked her, I blamed her for a lot of Jaredâs unhappiness growing up.
I didnât know the whole story, but Iâd heard enough to figure out that Jaredâs father wasnât a good man. He had left when Jared was two, before I even lived in the neighborhood. Katherine raised her son almost completely alone, but she had developed a drinking problem during her marriage. When Jared was fourteen, his father called and asked if Jared could come and visit him for the summer. Happily, Jared agreed and left for eight weeks. After the visit, though, he returned cold and cruel. His motherâs problem got worse, and he was utterly alone.
Iâd always known, deep down, that Jaredâs problem with me was tied to that summer.
The truth was I resented Katherine. And even though Iâd never met Jaredâs father, I resented him, too. I would take responsibility if Iâd hurt Jared, but I had no idea what I couldâve done to deserve his hatred. His parents, on the other hand, had clearly abandoned him.
It was one the tip of my tongue to ask her about his scars, but I knew she wouldnât tell me.
Instead, I asked, âDoes he see his father?â
She glanced at me, and I instantly felt like Iâd invaded Top Secret territory. âNo,â was all she said.
***
The next day in first period, I sat taking notes about linear approximations when I got a text from K.C. Covertly sliding the screen to bring up the message, I completely lost my attention to Calculus.
Jared texted me last night.
I swallowed hard. Before I had a chance to respond, sheâd sent another message.
He wanted to make sure I was o.k. See? Heâs not all bad.
What the hell did he want with her? K.C. was pretty. Definitely. She was also my best friend, and that had to factor in somewhere with him.
I texted back: Heâs up to something!
Maybe, maybe not. was her response.
That was the last I heard from K.C. until lunch. Physics, P.E. and French passed in a blur as I fought the urge to text her again.
âHey,â she said as we met in line to grab our lunch.
âHey, so talk to me.â
âWell, like I said, he texted to see how I was doing, and we exchanged a few more texts after that. I just thought it was nice that he checked up on me.â
She thought he was nice? We exited the line after paying and made our way outside, while I tried to sift through how the hell K.C. went from agreeing with that Jared was a dick to thinking he was ânice.â
âWell?â I was trying hard to seem like I didnât care. âWhat could you two have talked about after that?â
âOh, not muchâ¦other than you cut the electricity to his house?!â She laughed it off, but I could tell she wasnât as amused as I thought sheâd be. Maybe she was pissed that I didnât tell her myself.
âUm, yeah.â I was fighting for words. Jared complained about me to her? âThe assholeâs party was too loud, so I shut it down.â I cleared my throat. It didnât sound as good saying it out loud.
We took our seats at a picnic table and began digging into our food. She stayed quiet, but I caught her glancing at me between bites.
âWhat?â I asked, annoyed. âYou told me to play the game, remember?â
âDid you at least ask him to turn it down first?â
âNo.â It came out more like a squeaky question. âWell, yes. On a different occasion I did.â It started to feel like I was on trial.
âAnd howâd that turn out?â She paused, water bottle in hand.
âWell, he wasnât cooperating. Soâ¦I incited a panic and yelled âcops.â People kind of left after that.â I tipped my head back and gulped some water to keep from meeting her eyes. I was still proud of that night, but K.C. clearly didnât find it funny.
Instead, she rolled her eyes. âTate, when I said to play his game I meantââ
âYou meant play his game!â I blurted out. âYou didnât say to kill him with kindness. Youâre defending him?â What had happened here? It was like I was in the Twilight Zone, and K.C. had been body-snatched.
âAll Iâm saying is that Jared has talked to you.â Her voice was calm, the opposite of mine. âThatâs it. You look like the bully now. Youâve broken up two of his parties, broken his friendâs nose, and kneed that same friend in the balls.â
Great! Fucking great! Heâs coming off looking like the victim?
âHeâs not telling the whole story,â I sputtered. âHe broke into the girlsâ locker room while I was getting dressed.â
K.C. frowned, looking confused. âHe just talked to you, though, right? He didnât touch you?â Thankfully, she showed some concern for me, finally. I was ready to rip her head off.
âWell, he didnât attack me, of course,â I snapped defensively. For a moment, I considered telling her that heâd broken into my house, but that would just send her back to him with questions that heâd answerâ¦his way.
âHe has issues,â K.C. conceded, âbut I told you, thereâs something going on between you two that you havenât dealt with. Iâm just not convinced that heâs such a bad guy after all.â
Sweat beaded my brow, and I took a deep breath. âK.C., Jared is bad news. You know this. I mean really, heâs a jerk, and I donât want you making excuses for him. Heâs not worth it.â
She shrugged, probably not wanting to argue but definitely not wanting to give in. The discussion was over, and for the first time, I wanted to throttle my best friend. My only friend, pretty much.
âSo, have you talked to Liam at all since Saturday night?â I changed the subject before ripping a bite out of my chicken sandwich.
âNo, and I couldnât care less,â she snipped and concentrated on her phone.
âUh huh,â I muttered, not convinced. Liam and K.C. had been together longer than any other couple I knew. I had a difficult time wrapping my head around the idea that K.C. didnât care about his betrayal and losing him. If I were her, I probably wouldnât be able to forgive him, but that didnât mean it wouldnât hurt.
âHey, Tate. How are you?â Ben Jamison plopped down on the bench next to me, looking as good as always. We had zilch in common, but he was cute and made me laugh.
âHi. Iâm good. You?â I had spoken to Ben a few times lately. He seemed not to notice the rumor about Jared and me in the locker room.
âIâm goodâ¦â He strung out the âgoodâ like he was nervous and looking for what to say next. âThereâs this Mexican restaurant, Los Aztecas, that opened up while you were away, and I was wondering if youâd let me apologize for being a dick and not asking you out a lot sooner by taking you to dinner this week?â He raised his eyebrows and waited.
A surprised laugh jumped out of my throat. Well, he was refreshingly honest.
âUm, wellâ¦â I searched for words. âHow do I know you wonât be a dick on our date?â I challenged him. K.C. giggled beside me.
Benâs eyes smiled, and he bit his bottom lip, clearly turning over something in his head. He took out a piece of paper from his notebook and started writing. After about a minute, he handed the paper to me and walked off. Looking over his shoulder just once and offering a winning smile, he turned and disappeared into the cafeteria.
âWhat does it say?!â K.C. peered down at the note in my hand before taking a bite of her chicken wrap.
Opening it up, I immediately smiled. He had written a contract.
To Whom It May Concern,
I promise to take Tatum Brandt to dinner. She is pretty, smart, and lovely. I should consider myself lucky if she says yes.
If I act like a dick, then I am a stupid, brainless asshole. All who see this note have my permission to retaliate in any way necessary.
The Most Attractive, Humorous, Wealthy Superhero in School,
Ben Jamison
I passed the note to K.C. and watched as she tried not to spit out food during her laughter. Not three seconds later I got a text.
Tonight, pick u up at 7?
He wasnât giving me much time to think about it, was he? I had been using my dadâs car since returning, so I texted him back and told him I would meet him there. Iâd rather have the option to leave when I wanted.
Sounds good! he shot back right away.
I couldnât keep the smile off my face, and K.C. was looking at me curiously.
âWell?â she asked with her mouth full.
âHeâs taking me to dinner tonight.â Even though I was excited to be on an actual date, my tone was cavalier. Ben seemed like nice guy, but I noticed that my heart didnât beat faster when he was around. Wasnât it supposed to? âIâm meeting him at seven.â
There had been a few dates while I studied abroad, but none of them turned out to be more than friends. Ben and I had different interests, but it wasnât like guys had been pounding down my door lately. I could go on one date with him. Hey, maybe heâd surprise me.
âThatâs awesome. Call me tonight after you get home. I want to hear how it goes,â K.C. probably knew I was still apprehensive about the attention Iâd been getting. After so long of not trusting people and being ignored outside of my small circle, my head fogged at the idea of one of the best looking guys in my class asking me out.
Paranoid! I chastised myself.
After the latest rumor, things seemed to have calmed down, though. Apparently, Mr. Fitzpatrick, the Drama teacher, was caught in a rendezvous with senior Chelsea Berger, so I was old newsâ¦for now.