Watch me fall, p.1
Watch Me Fall

Watch Me Fall, page 1

 

Watch Me Fall
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Watch Me Fall


  -WATCH ME FALL-

  A Dark Romance

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Watch Me Fall

  - Chapter One -

  - Chapter Two - | Three Years Later

  - Chapter Three -

  - Chapter Four -

  - Chapter Five -

  - Chapter Six -

  - Chapter Seven -

  - Chapter Eight -

  - Chapter Nine -

  - Chapter Ten -

  - Chapter Eleven -

  - Chapter Twelve -

  - Chapter Thirteen -

  - Chapter Fourteen -

  -Epilogue-

  Also By Nora Flite

  Nora Flite

  Copyright © 2014 Nora Flite

  All rights reserved.

  Watch Me Fall is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Join Nora's mailing list!

  - Chapter One -

  Carter Braeburn

  “Carter.”

  I didn't react; I knew what was coming. I expected the slaps, the kicks, the spitting on my hunched body. I certainly wasn't stunned when Mom shoved me against the edge of my bookcase.

  Distantly, I knew I used to be scared of the pain. At some point, after every day of disappointing my parents, reality had gone fuzzy and cold on the edges.

  Even my own name sounded hollow to me.

  “Carter!”

  My dad, that time. He lifted me up, crushed me against the wall. My body vibrated on impact, but nothing fell to the floor. I didn't hang art or photos. I was smarter than that.

  “Are you listening?” Which of them had asked? I didn't know, my head was throbbing. Looking up, I found my mother's sour glare. Her arms were wrapped violently around herself. If she let go, I suspected she'd crumble into small pieces. “They called today. Of course, you already knew the results, didn't you?”

  Yes, I'd known. I'd been sure at the audition, noting how the judges frowned, feeling every mistake I'd made. I'd still hoped, though. I'd begged inside and outside that this time I'd be accepted into an elite ballet school; the cream of the crop. My parents changed their preferred program every year. It should have given me a hundred opportunities. I should have passed one audition.

  It never happened.

  Not for me.

  My dad let go, wiping his palms on his stick-thin legs. I didn't blame him; I disgusted myself. “You don't care anymore, do you, Carter? We do everything to pay for these classes, these lessons, and you still let us down every single goddamn time!”

  He was screaming, spittle flying. Despite the noise, I still heard the tiny whine. My hearing had always been good.

  Covertly, I peeked out into the hall. A small, fuzzy dog—Midnight, named for his color—looked back at me. You want to help, I thought sadly. Don't bother trying. You're as weak as I am.

  “Nothing gets through to you anymore,” my mother sobbed. Her tears were dry, I was familiar with her desire to martyr herself. “Oh, God! I'm a terrible mother, aren't I?”

  “No dear, no!” Dad hugged her, comforted her through her shivers.

  “Then why doesn't he try harder?”

  “He will,” my father promised. His eyes narrowed on me, then trailed towards the hallway. My dog offered a small wag of its tail. “He just needs the right motivation.”

  Motivation? Yes, I knew how they liked to motivate me. The beatings, the abuse, had become so normal... it did nothing to me anymore. It was like brushing my teeth.

  But my father was a clever man. He knew an opportunity when he saw one. I'd witnessed his conniving side enough to spot it instantly. Clenching my teeth, I faced him with the first flicker of dread—such a weird feeling—that I'd felt since I was little. “Don't you dare touch him.”

  A stillness came over my father's face. “It's only because we want the best for you.”

  “I said don't touch him!”

  Shit, that raw emotion. Scalding hatred crawled up my throat, smoldered in my clenched fists. They both saw it; only my father recognized the signs.

  I was smaller than him, a lean fourteen year old who had accepted every casual attack since the roots of my memories. Right then, I didn't feel small or numb or weak.

  In my eyes, I knew my dad saw blood lust.

  Murder.

  He actually backed away, flustered. In a burst of angry shame, he pushed me aside and went for Midnight. It didn't matter how much I wanted to stop him; he was big, I was small, and that was my reality.

  Weak, frail, worthless.

  “Please don't hurt him!” I cried, real tears—the last tears I would ever remember shedding as a kid—dripping down my chin. My mother did nothing, just watched as he grabbed my whimpering pet. “I'll work harder, I swear! I'll train more, I won't mess up anymore!”

  Their hard eyes rested on me. Had I fallen to my knees? I didn't remember doing that. My parents were giants, towering so that their voices came from miles above. “You care more about this animal than you do about us. We love you, we just want you to succeed. Isn't that obvious?”

  “Yes,” I sniffled. No, I thought in bitter resentment. But what did I know about love? Maybe this was love. It was all I'd known.

  In Dad's hands, my dog looked so fragile. “Pass the next audition. Understand?”

  The 'or else' wasn't spoken. It didn't need to be. “I will, I really will.” My voice was strained. I'll do it, because if I don't, they'll hurt my dog. The world wasn't fair. No, worse than unfair. It was cruel and cold.

  Inside of me, something was strangling, shredding at my innocence. It was the first sign of what lay in wait for me. What I would eventually become.

  We tell kids about monsters. We warn them with stories and tease them about dark corners.

  We never talk about the rancid parts they can't see.

  What it feels like to have a monster growing right inside their own heart.

  ****

  I passed the next audition. I nearly killed myself, but I did it.

  I passed them all, every single one, for the next two years.

  It wasn't until the summer I turned seventeen that I failed another. By then, the joke was on my parents. They couldn't punish me. Midnight had already passed on, hit by a car while I wasn't home. Their trump card was gone.

  There were no tears from me. As I buried him by myself, tamping down the dirt in the backyard, I felt a little envy. I didn't want to die, I knew that... but I tried to picture what it was like for him. That instant, realizing his existence was just... finished.

  How freeing that must have been.

  You'd think that after putting me through so much hell, that with my eighteenth birthday drawing near and my ability to abandon them both on the horizon, that my parents would have eased up on me.

  You'd be wrong.

  They hit me more than ever, and when that didn't satisfy, they started to openly hurt themselves. When I was younger, I didn't think about where my parents got their money. I was out of the house so much with ballet and dance and education, I spent very little time under my own roof.

  I had memories of people, faces I rarely saw again, visiting us at odd hours. They'd see me sometimes, looking away like my existence was too wretched to witness. Then, there were the men who stared at me.

  I hated them in a way I couldn't grasp as a child.

  Over time, though, the facade came down. My parents openly did their drugs in the kitchen, sold and traded and used with their customers. There was no shame. Often, they'd accuse me of being thankless when they were high on whatever mix, their noses bleeding, teeth yellowed.

  Like all of the horrors in my life, I adapted to this one, too.

  I'd grit my teeth when I saw them unconscious on the floor. There was a prickly, jagged thing in me that loathed who they were—no—what they were. Selfish people who had shoved me at arms length, then pulled me close just to hurt me with glee.

  I was becoming no better.

  They'd made me into a heartless machine who chased perfection, and it was all I knew.

  While they withered away and sank deep into their own dark mistakes, I kept up in my studies. I attended every ballet class, I practiced hours and hours a day. I didn't fear them anymore. I didn't have time for their judgments.

  I was quite busy with judging myself.

  Failure, I would think in wretched despair. Anytime I turned my leg out wrong, didn't land right, didn't spin fast enough or smooth enough... anytime I wasn't perfect, I fed the monster in my chest.

  It was always hungry.

  There was only one vice that I had, something that distracted me and gave me a place to run to when I wasn't able to train but didn't want to return home.

  Women.

  There were plenty of them who pursued me. Classmates, other dancers, they chased because I wasn't attainable. My aloofness attracted them. I didn't understand it, and the meaningless sex never satisfied me. Each of them broke up with me or avoided me when it became clear I couldn't let them inside. I didn't know how to. I'd built my walls so long ago, I didn't know a world without them.

  Honestly, I thought it was better for them. Safer.

  Inside of me, curled around and swimming in my warm blood, there was a creature as awful and deadly as cyanide. I'd let it near the surface the day my father had threatened my dog. It had grown to big to ignore then—hell, maybe it was s
till growing.

  It was dangerous to them, the girls who tried so hard to get too close. I'll admit that also, for me, it was also a terrible allure... the idea of letting it out. What would happen—to me, and the unlucky woman? If I allowed myself to act freely, gave in and dove into my passion, I might finally enjoy the sex.

  But that poor girl...

  No. It was better to keep my walls up.

  As quick as the flood of attraction had started, they began to ignore me. Word had gotten around. I was emotionless, empty and unfeeling. No one wanted that, not long term. The temptation of 'changing' me was erased.

  That was fine.

  It was better for everyone this way.

  ****

  The news wouldn't shut up about the damn fire.

  Days later, and still, the people on TV babbled about the violence, the scandal, of the drug ring right under their nose.

  I bent over the floor, reached for my toes, tried to focus. I didn't need to listen to the details. I knew everything; more than all of them.

  The police had been blunt when telling me how my parents had been killed. They'd hoped I could give them information, lead them on the right track. I'd had nothing to say.

  Around me, I felt the eyes. Again, I tried to concentrate. They all know. Everyone here has to know. But who were they to judge me? How could they understand?

  If anything, what I was doing...

  My parents would have wanted it this way.

  “Everyone,” a strong voice called, leaning into the room. The man held a sheet of paper, eyes rolling on us—all twenty optimistic hopefuls—before pausing on me. The way he hesitated, it dug spider-claws deeper into my veins. “They're ready for you now.”

  In the lights of the studio, I saw myself in the mirrors. I was no longer the small, tiny thing my father had once found so easy to control. The years had shaped me, made me tall and lean with muscles running under my flesh like rocks under a rushing stream. Black leggings reminded me of charcoal. My home that fucking drug gang had set ablaze.

  I could still smell the burnt flesh in my nose.

  On the stage, all of us lined up. The judges sat behind their table, sentinels waiting to decide if we were fit to go further. This was nothing small; I was planning to snatch one of the few positions in the San Francisco Ballet school.

  Everything I'd endured, it had been preparing me for this. I had no other plans. I would get in.

  I had to get in.

  We were told the combinations, shown them only twice. There was no kindness here. The judges needed to know we could follow instructions and waste no time.

  In the corner, someone began playing the piano.

  It was our moment—my moment—to prove myself.

  Power exploded from my heels, vaulting me up so I could make smooth flutters. Down, up, fly. I dug myself into the stage. The wood was my earth, toes curling in my socks. When I leaped, I could nearly touch the ceiling—no, the moon.

  Everything extended from me, out of my fingertips. When I danced, the monstrous tumor of hate and disgust clung to my guts less and less. I was lighter than light itself...

  A pure flame.

  Like the flames that ate my home and cooked my parents. They'd already been shot dead, of course, so they hadn't felt the heat that charred them and left them for me to find later and—and—and.

  The image was in my skull. It painted itself behind my eyes, haunted me and made me think about how—right at that moment—the funeral was happening.

  It wasn't fair, making me choose between that and my audition.

  God, why was life so fond of fucking with me?

  When the music ended, I was covered in sweat; only some was from the performance. I was glad I could blame it.

  Around me, I saw the faces of my competition. Their calm poise, how they looked everywhere but at me until they were sure I had turned away. None of them could understand. They would judge me for my decision, find me guilty of being selfish and heartless, but they could never know. They hadn't been through the same hell.

  I was jealous of that—and it made me heavier. Inside, my heart thumped and screamed and allowed the gift of freedom—the thing I still danced for—to fade.

  “Carter Braeburn,” the man with the papers said. It was my turn to solo in the center of the stage. It should have been my moment, it should have made me feel something. Fear, excitement... anything.

  There was no question that my moves lacked soul. I could tell from the judges, just scanning their tight frowns. Only one of them watched me curiously; a face I thought I recognized, but the low lights made it hard.

  I wanted to fly again. Bitterness weighed me down. My body didn't belong to me, it belonged to the scaled monster in my core.

  It was over too soon; the music erasing into the air. Swaying to a halt, I stepped off the stage at the end of my turn. I kept going, heading into the empty hallway. There was no question in my mind. I'd fucked up, failed again!

  I'd missed my parents funeral for nothing.

  Waiting to be rejected was too much. I didn't want to hear critique, didn't want to see the eyes full of pity or scorn. Yanking on my sweatpants and sneakers, I shoved out the backdoor and into the wet night.

  I walked for some time. Rain pelted my face, legs close to running. My intestines wrapped around my lungs, my breathing a strained grunt. There was no destination, I just had to keep moving. Anything less would let whatever was growing finally catch up with me.

  My world was crumbling.

  I had nothing anymore.

  Gone. Everyone, everything. I stepped over a puddle. I'll have no where to stay, no money. The police had explained to me, the day after my parents' death, that their money was from 'illicit' sources. That was code for 'none of this money belongs to you.'

  I really had nothing left. Getting a scholarship into that school had been the epitome of my existence. My last hope. Again, the snake coils tightened. Maybe, if I just kept running... I'd vanish. Just dissipate into the wind. I could learn how Midnight felt before the end.

  “Hey.”

  Jerking my head up, I saw the group of men. They were standing in front of me on the empty street, like they'd been waiting for me. That made no sense; I didn't even know where I was.

  One of them threw a cigarette at the muddy ground. “You're Carter Braeburn, yeah?”

  A tingle of warning started in my brain. “Why?”

  “That's him,” a heavy-set guy with red hair said. He spit over his shoulder. I saw the orange streetlight glint off a pipe in his fist.

  The man who'd been smoking looked me up and down. “You're sure?”

  “Yeah. Few times I was there, I seen him. While back, he was scrawnier, but it's him.” Greasy cheeks parted, silvery teeth glinting. He must have had fillings on every tooth—and it made my breath catch.

  I'd seen this guy before.

  In the ghosts of my memory, I saw that awful smile peering at me while my parents snorted white lines off the kitchen table.

  The final man, shorter than the others, tilted a squashed hat down his forehead. “Fine. Make this fast.”

  They rushed me, a pack of hyenas with their grins jagged in the night. A fist hit me in the temple, faster than I could react. Red burst behind my eyes. The night became wobbly behind a bloody filter.

  They're going to kill me, I thought. I don't know them and they plan to fucking kill me. My dulled senses turned into a roaring torrent of fury. No, I did know one of them—knew him from the back corners of my memories. Shiny Teeth there, he'd been in my house. He'd known my parents.

  It all snapped into place like the most gruesome of puzzles.

  The murderers. These men had ruined my parents, burned my home and their bodies and put the lead inside their skulls. I had no doubts. It was them. Why would they be looking for me?

  To finish the job, I realized. Whatever my parents sins, I was being punished for them. It had been that way my whole life. This gang, they'd planned to shoot all of us when they'd visited. They wanted to burn me to ashes in my bed.

  Just like my parents.

  Just like my future.

  It was pure chance that I hadn't been sleeping at home that night.

  Something broke. It resonated from my core to my tendons, left scratching insect legs and primal screams in its wake.

  Around me, the echo of rain faded. Everything faded. In a rush that made me gasp, I suddenly saw the world for real. Saw the cells, the colors, the wrongs and twists and bitter rotten insides. Nothing had ever, ever felt so good. I'd finally done it.

 
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