Twist My Heart Brooke Taylor (classic books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Brooke Taylor
Book online «Twist My Heart Brooke Taylor (classic books to read .TXT) đ». Author Brooke Taylor
Who was she to make all the choices? All the rules? They were supposed to be a partnership, not a dictatorship. At least, heâd always been assured they were. âSavanah has done valiantly taking Aimeeâs place. She was more than ready for her rise.â
âSheâs risen without my approval?â Sera hooted. âSoon sheâll be six feet underground with or without her magister.â
The world and everything in it slammed to a stop at Seraâs terse threat. Perhaps now hadnât been the time to deal with Seraâs petty control-freak tendencies. Her threats were real enough and it wasnât like he had any allegiance to this Aimee.
âDonât worry, she wonât make it out of this cabin alive.â Clayâs eyes went to Thea. No need tipping Aimee off to Seraâs blistering death sentence when both girls would be dead soon enough.
Sera knew better than to misread his ambiguity. âBury Savanah and bring Thea to me, alive, or never return again!â
âI will fix this.â
âYou canât fix anything! Youâre useless! Bring her to me!â
Chapter Forty-Two
Seraâs verbal assaults continued on repeat after Clay hung up the phone. The endless string replaying in his head sounded all too similar to the ones his father used to lash at him. Eventually the stinging, whipped words became a crash of white noise burying Clay in a wash of long-stifled memories.
The sound of the water filling a thermos, the crinkle of the lunch sack as his father rolled the top down, the smell of freshly plowed earth between Nannyâs farmhouse and the old hunterâs shed.
His fatherâs returns from the shed came with glassy gazes and angry decrees not to look at him. If eyes werenât averted fast enough than fists would do a fine job of shutting them quickly. Clay suspected the olâ man had alcohol stashed there. Nannyâs strict religious code frowned upon its use to the point sheâd abolished it from the house. Clay had snuck out to the shed, hoping to find the reason for the olâ manâs hatred and violence was because he was a drunk.
Peeking through the shedâs dirty windows, Clay didnât see any booze or even cigarettes. What he saw was far, far worse.
Margaret Ann Miller, the little girl whoâd gone missing a few weeks before.
Clay remembered seeing her and her blonde friend at the fair a couple months earlier. âIsnât she one of those Gale girls?â his father asked, referring to the blonde one. âWhy donât you go out with her big sister? Seems like she says yes to a lot of boys your age. Invite them to dinner. If Amanda says yes to you, Iâll keep an eye on the little one,â heâd joked with a harsh laugh. At the time, Clay had assumed his father had been laughing at the unlikelihood of Clay going out with a girl like Amanda Gale. It wasnât the first time the olâ man had insinuated Clay had been too slow to start acting like other boys his age. And so heâd pursued Mandy to make his father proud. Surprisingly, she actually liked him, understood him. She comforted him. Told him that his fatherâs anger wasnât because of Clay at all, but a sign of his fatherâs own sins and weaknesses. And upon learning the terrible secret his father had locked in the hunting shed, Clay believed her.
He knew he had to help his father rid himself of his sin. When his father slipped out of the cabin, Clay snuck in.
He wasnât proud of what heâd done. Heâd becomeâŠa sinner. A killer. A monster, like his father. But it was done.
Clay had watched the olâ man bury her body deeper into the woods, never even suspecting the death had been at his pathetic sonâs weak hands and not his own. With the sin buried, it would be over. No more beatings and anger. No more monster.
Except it hadnât been over. For Clay it had only been the beginning of his own sin.
Clayâs focus came back to the present, his eyes landing on Theaâs lifeless body.
It was supposed to have been her all those years ago. Maggieâs little friend, the one whoâd initially attracted his fatherâs eye. The one his father had wanted but never had. And now here she was lying on the cabin floor at his feet, ripe to pick.
* * * *
Iâd fought the pain from Clayâs kick to my already tender ribs. But as it had started to subside, he grasped the collar of my shirt. With a hard, strangling twist, he jerked me semi-upright. His palm exploded into my cheek. âWake up!â
A pained noise ripped from my throat on the second slap. Playing possum no longer an option, my eyes popped opened on the third.
My gaze shot to Aimeeâs, seeking her compassion and finding only stone.
âDonât look at her. Look at me.â Hard ice chilled his voice, but I didnât comply. He wanted my fear. I wouldnât feed it to him. Keeping him irritated, on edge⊠Son of a bitch⊠Slap four had a sting in it the others hadnât.
Warm blood pooled on my tongue. It was a wonder my teeth werenât rattling around my mouth. I fought for breath as I turned my eyes to his, keeping them blank. Clayâs violence wasnât about him. It was about meâwhat he could make me feel, make me do. My fighting him off had aroused him. In the car, Iâd caught the twirl of light in his pale eyes, the surge of his energy. He didnât simply enjoy my terror. He needed it.
Clayâs threats from the Subaru rang through my mind, his voice so rich with
Comments (0)