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Authors: Christopher Smith

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chapter twenty-four

 

 

And what a firestorm school was.

I transported myself behind a stand of trees and emerged on the sidewalk as if I’d walked to school.
 
I looked around me and saw what I knew I’d see.
 
Everyone was talking about Ginny Gibson and her naughty photo and video expose.
 

iPad’s were out and being handed around on the lawn in front of the school.
 
Some with laptops were leaning against each other in a semi-circle, howling at the mayhem I’d created for her.
 
As I passed the group, I heard somebody say, “She’s up to 700,000 hits.
 
Bitch is going down.
 
Hard.”

I decided to test the waters.
 
I stopped beside them and asked what they were looking at.
 
They all looked at me and then at each other, and then one of the guys, Scotty Anderson, said:
 
“You’ve got to check this out.
 
Ginny Gibson is all over Twitter and YouTube.
 
She’s being spanked by her step-father.”

I leaned forward to have a look.
 
Yep, that’s pretty much how I imagined it.
 
It was all very PG-13, but it was funny.
 
I looked up at the guys, who had never spoken to me before, and said, “Who wants to bet she doesn’t show for school?”

“Me,” Scotty said.
 
“We just saw her a few minutes ago.
 
She’s already inside with her parents.”

“No, shit.
 
Well, she ought to be careful what she puts on the Web.
 
Nice to see has a tight bond with her father, though.”

As I walked away, I heard them laugh at that and it occurred to me that this was perhaps the first time someone wasn’t laughing at me.
 
They had included me, even if they did pause before letting me in.
 
Were things changing?

I looked above the crowd and caught Joe Whitehill looking at me near the row of buses.
 
And then Rebecca Ward and Rob Maxwell joined him.
 
They looked furious.
 
I decided to walk over to them.

“What’s up, guys?”

“Fuck you, Moore.”
 
It was Maxwell, one of my former friends from grade school who was fortunate enough to have not grown up with a face full of acne and a body so skinny that it lent itself to being teased.
 
When he saw that I wasn’t turning out as attractive as he was, he dumped our friendship.
 
But now, it was different.
 
Now, I saw him looking at my body and face with something that looked a whole lot like envy.
 

“Rob,” I said.
 
“That’s no way to treat a former friend.”

“We were never friends, asshole.”

“Really?
 
Because I seem to remember a time when we were kids that you wanted to become blood brothers.
 
I got freaked out by the idea and refused to do it, which turned out to be a good thing.
 
With all the shit going around these days, you never know what you’re going to catch, even from a good Catholic like you.”

I turned to Rebecca, who obviously was addicted to tanning because her face looked like a leather bag dragged through the gutter.
 
“And how are you, Rebecca?
 
Sleep well?
 
I slept like a baby.”

“We’re telling Principal Roberts what you did, Moore.”

“I encourage you to.
 
I also encourage you to prove it.”

“There are ways,” Joe said.

“Really?” I whispered.
 
“How about letting me in on them?”

“Top secret,” Rebecca said.
 

“What are you, a fucking spy?
 
Who even says that?”

“Whatever.
 
And besides, for someone who somehow managed to delete our accounts, you’d think you’d already know.”

“Well, you keep me informed, Rebecca.
 
I’ll be eager to see how it plays out—
if
it plays out, which I doubt—just as I’m eager to take on each and every one of you.”
 
I leaned forward and they surprisingly leaned back.
 
“What you did to my parents?
 
You’re going to pay for it.
 
Trust me.
 
In ways that you can’t even imagine.”

“What kind of freak are you?”

It was Rebecca who said that.
 
So it was Rebecca who suddenly lost the ability to make any sense when she tried to communicate.
 

“What did you say?”

“She sucked dirt on me and on you when the tide was blue.”

I screwed up my face at her.
 
So did the others.
 
I hadn’t taken away her ability to hear herself and suddenly she blanched.
 

She tried again.
 
“Solar inept in my pointed bull on the shuttle where apples are monkeys farting doo-doo.”

“Rebecca,” Joe said.
 
“What the hell?”

Her eyes grew wide.
 
“Bark!
 
Bark, bark!
 
Bark, bark, bark!”

Maxwell and Whitehill stepped away from her.

“In the growth, hapless glances and saucers fly out to kick the motherfucking shit out of the doorbell with no name.”

“I think you might have Tourette’s, kiddo.”

And with that, she covered her mouth and ran toward the school, likely thinking she’d be able to tell the administration what I’d done to her.
 
But what she didn’t understand is that even if she was asked to put pen to paper, she also would write this way.
 

All communication was lost to her.
 
I’d stolen it from her.
 
She’d speak and write gibberish until I felt it was enough, which would be never.
 
This would be her prison.
 
No speech therapist in the world would be able to cure her of it.
 
She’d be caught in a world of her own random language, struggling to reach out to people who never would understand her or want anything to do with her.
 
Eventually, it would become too much for her.
 
Her mind would weaken.
 
And then who knows what would happen to her.
 
Suicide?

Joe and Rob eased away from me.
 

“What did you just do to her?” Joe asked.

“You think I did that?
 
You’ve been watching too many movies, Whitehill.
 
It’s either Tourette’s or she had a stroke.
 
And you know what?
 
She deserves each.
 
That girl’s a bitch.
 
I’m hoping she had a stroke.
 
I hope it’s irreversible.
 
I hope she never makes sense again.”
 
I turned away from them.
 
“I’ll catch up with you two later, probably when you least expect it.
 
So, you know, expect it.”

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chapter twenty-five

 

 

In homeroom, it was pandemonium.
 
Ginny Gibson was officially an overnight Web celeb and, if you listened to the chatter, she quickly was approaching a million downloads on YouTube.

People had their phones out watching the video of her being aggressively spanked, which she didn’t seem to mind since she kept saying “Oooh” and “Ahhh” and “Give it to me, Daddy.”
 

The video was still online likely because I made sure that faux Ginny noted in the comments section that she was eighteen and that this was a parody.
 
People were passing around their laptops and iPads so everyone could have a look at the photo and the video.
 
It wasn’t often when one of the school’s most popular girls revealed a naughty side of herself, so this was nothing but pure money.

For once, I breezed into the room unnoticed, knocked on Jennifer’s desk, smiled as I passed her, and then I took my seat behind Alex.

“What’s going on?” I asked.

“Something about Ginny Gibson.
 
I’m trying to ignore it, but they’re making it impossible to do so.
 
Sounds as if they’re kicking her around like they used to kick you around.”

“Used to?
 
Did you see my car yesterday?”

He shook his head.
 
“Sorry.
 
I wasn’t thinking.”

“Nothing’s changed for me, Alex.
 
I’m still their number-one target.”

“Give it time.”

“What’s time got to do with it?
 
This has been going on for years.”

“You’ve changed,” he said.
 
“You don’t look anything like the first day I met you on the bus.
 
Look at you.
 
You’re bulking up.”

“I’ve been working out at home and drinking weight gain shakes.
 
I’m tired of being skinny.”

“What happened to your skin.”

“A dermatologist.”

When he looked at me, I knew he had his doubts.
 
Still, how could he offer another explanation?
 
I felt guilty for lying to him, but I was ordered to tell no one about the amulet, so I didn’t.
 
That was one of the prices attached to it, I guess.
 
And I wasn’t comfortable with it.

I leaned forward and looked over at Mike Hastings, who also wasn’t partaking in Gibson’s gossip nightmare.
 
He was staring straight ahead, just as he did yesterday.
 
Ever since my encounter with him in the woods, he kept to himself.
 
He still hadn’t paid for what he did to my parents.
 
That would come later.
 
If he thought my flying in the air and scaring him with beaming red eyeballs was it for him, he was mistaken.

“How’s the new apartment working out?” Alex asked.

“It’s alright.”

“Need any help with it?”

“Actually, I think I’m good.
 
It’s a decent place and it came partly furnished.
 
When I moved in, I just needed to buy the sort of stuff you need to live, from plates to a bed to towels to some furniture and beyond.
 
Took awhile, but it kept my mind off things.
 
It’s about as finished as it’s going to get.”

“I’d like to see it sometime.”

“I was thinking of having you and Jennifer over this weekend.
 
You free?”

“I’m always free.”

I couldn’t figure it out.
 
How could someone who looked like Alex be free?
 
He won the genetic lottery.
 
He had everything going for him.
 
It didn’t make sense to me.
 
Could it be if you were as good looking as he was, that people kept their distance because they were intimidated by you?
 
That’s something I’d never experienced, but I supposed it could happen.
 
People fear what they don’t understand and in Alex’s case, what they didn’t understand is how it all came together so seamlessly for him.
 
At that moment, I sensed in him a loneliness that surprised me.
 
“What’s your Saturday look like?”

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