Famished by Meghan O'Flynn (most popular novels txt) š
- Author: Meghan O'Flynn
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The top floor was another worldāleather armchairs and cherry wood furniture, and abstract art. Doubt seeped into my chest like a river of burning oil. Desperation burned hotter.
Whatās the worst that can happen?
Heāll think youāre crazy.
So what?
Heāll fire you.
Jokeās on himāI quit!
The secretary had steel gray hair and black-rimmed glasses like an old-fashioned schoolmarm. Her bony fingers kept typing away on her keyboard even as she stared me down.
I smoothed my hair. āI need to speak to Mr. Harwick, please.ā
āName and appointment time?ā
āHannah Montgomery. I donāt actually have anāā
She smiled, but her gaze was one youād give a naughty child. āThen, I am afraid he cannot see you.ā
My body felt suddenly heavy like I was wrapped in a wet blanket of hopelessness. Of course, he canāt see me. I was an idiot. āCan I make an appointment to see him today?ā
The woman punched a few buttons on the keyboard and squinted at her screen, eyes flat and disinterested. āHow about three weeks from tomorrow?ā
I put my hands on the desk to steady myself. I couldnāt breathe.
Iāll be gone by then.
Or gutted like a fish.
āPlease, I justā¦pleaseāā My voice rang shrill, foreign, hysterical. Black spots floated around the edges of my vision. My lungs were on fire.
āMaāam, youāre going to have toāā The secretaryās voice grew distant. My fingers, splayed on the cherry wood, slid toward me in slow motion as I gasped nonexistent air and fought the haze at the edges of my vision. Everything went black.
He held me, cradling me like a child as he walked me to my bedroom.
Shhh, itās ok, babyā¦
I opened my eyes with a start. I was half lying, half sitting in a leather armchair, knees over the arm. Near my feet, a sculpture made of colored glass reached toward the ceiling with intertwined bands of red and yellow.
āYouāre awake.ā Mr. Harwick rose behind an enormous desk of glass and stone.
I tried to pull myself up, but my sweaty hands slipped on the leather.
āJust relax for a moment.ā
I stopped struggling and wilted in the chair.
āAre you hurt?ā
I shifted in the seat. My legs were asleep, but I only felt pins and needles, not pain. My elbow stung with what was probably rug burn. My lungs were working again. Nothing felt too sore or wrong, though I did seem to have a mass of creepy crawly things teeming in my stomach.
Then everything came back to me.
I need help. My father killed my boyfriend, and itās all my fault.
Shit! Donāt say that!
He perched on the arm of the other chair, concern etched across his features.
I swung my feet to the floor.
Tell him.
I donāt know what to say.
āIā¦need help.ā It came out a whisper.
āWhat can I do for you?ā
His cologne was biting, earthy, masculine. āUhā¦ā In all the hoping Iād done, I had not thought to plan out what to ask of him. I wanted to punch myself in the head.
You canāt tell him.
You have to tell him. You can always deny it later if he tells anyone.
āIā¦my umā¦fatherā¦ā I looked down. āHe wasnāt very nice when I was growing up. I ran away.ā Why are you still protecting him?
I took a deep breath. āIā¦Iām afraid he may be trying to find me. I amā¦ I donāt know what to do, but I canātā¦ I think heās been following me.ā
āDid you call the police?ā
My heart caught in my throat. Theyāll arrest me for not telling them who killed Jake.
āNo. I mean, I think I might be in trouble too. Iā¦uhā¦I took some things from the house when I left.ā Yeah, like your clothes. Look at you, super thief! First, your clothes, then an old cafeteria table, and tomorrow a bank so you can actually manage to avoid homelessness wherever you end up.
His forehead wrinkled. āI see.ā
āMaybeā¦maybe I can take out a loan against my next paycheck? Or I can just borrow a little bit so I can get started in another state? Iāll pay you back, every cent. Iāll work two, three jobs if I have to. I just need enough to get away and set up somewhere else.ā
Here it is. Now heāll tell me to get out, and I can go pack my apartment.
āI can help you.ā
You canā¦what? I blinked at him.
āYou donāt have to leave, Hannah. If he found you here, heāll find you there. Then in another year youāll be back in the same position. Letās give it a week or so to assess the situation.ā
āButāā
āDid he come to your home?ā
Not yet. āHe will.ā
āI can help you get an apartment in another name.ā
āHeās been following me. He knows my car.ā Oh, God. He probably knew where I ate dinner, where I shopped for groceries.
āIāll drive you, or I will have a car sent.ā
I did a double take, heart twitching. āWhat?ā
āOr you can stay with me for a few days. Iāve got an alarm and a big dog.ā
You canāt help me; no one can help me. Youāll die just like Jake did. āMr. Harwick, Iāā
āDominic.ā
āDominic. We donāt evenā¦ I mean, we donāt know each other all that well.ā
āI know youāre scared, but I can help you. And if in a week you still want to run, I will give you some cash and a new license plate.ā
Something was obviously wrong with my ears. He doesnāt understand the gravity of the situation. If he didā
āAre you sure you donāt want to call the police? We can do it from here.ā He reached for the phone.
āNo! I meanā¦ I donāt know.ā
Theyāll lock me up too, just for knowing about Jake. Theyāll blame me.
Would Dominic?
I had nothing to lose anymore. My eyes filled with tears. āI just feel soā¦broken. Like I donāt even know what to do to be normal anymore.ā
His eyes were far away. āMy dad always used to say, āPretending to be normal is the best way to make people think you are.āā
I wrung my hands, every nerve in my body twitching. Pretending, I could do. It was what came after the pretending that worried me.
āYouāre strong. Youāll get past this.ā He touched my arm softly. āEverything will be okay.ā
Everything will be okay. Was that true? Everything encompassed so very much, and it felt like it was all flowing through me in that momentāthe unrelenting stress of the past few months, the pain of my childhood, the guilt and the grief and the panicāuntil I feared I would burst or lose my mind completely. Everything. I needed everything to be okay, if only for a moment.
His eyes bored into mine. āHannah, youāre shaking. Itās all right. Iāll help you.ā He was soā¦confident, his eyes calm, patient, understanding.
I threw myself into his arms and sobbed into his shirt as he stroked my hair.
āIā¦ Thank you.ā
Iām safe here.
Then, there was more than gratitude. It began like a fire in the pit of my stomach and crept lower, heating the space between my thighs. Somethingās wrong. I pressed my legs together, but the smoldering ache swelled and spread.
I tilted my face upwards, and he captured my mouth with his, silencing the remnants of fear. But then the fear reemerged, burning panic mingling with something feral, clawing at me to get out.
I canāt do this.
I put a hand on his chest, prepared to pull away, but he wrapped an arm around my back, and liquid warmth spread through me.
Heāll hurt me too.
But his hand in my hair was soft, gentle, kind. He did care for me. Maybe he always had. I could hear my heartbeat in my ears, feel the throbbing of it between my legs, sweet and unrelenting.
He had come to the funeral. Not for Jake, not for just another employee, but for me. Heād sent me flowers. Came to see me in the office. He cared, and not because I was an employee, not even because I was prettyāI surely hadnāt been ten minutes ago with snot streaming down my face. No, he cared aboutā¦me.
I clutched his shoulders as if letting go might cause him to disappear, and I would be left desperate and lonely again. I was so focused on his mouth, his scent, the hardness of him against my pelvis that I
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