Page 4 of Facing the Music

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Page 4 of Facing the Music

I think the only reason I'm allowed to stay in the frat house without actively participating is because I'm a Kolas.

There are a few murmured hellos as I push out onto the sidewalk and head to my car. It’s an old Jeep that I fell in love with a few years ago and have no intention of getting rid of. I freeze, catching a beautiful redhead leaning against the passenger door. See? She shouldn’t be here. Tia keeps doing things that just don’t make sense and it’s confusing me. My gaze darts to her dorm across the courtyard and then back to her.

She’s not dressed appropriately to be outside in this brisk weather—her thin shirt and leggings leaving little to the imagination. Even in the dim light of the parking lot, the outline of her nipples peeking through the fabric is visible. My tongue darts out to lick my lips unconsciously as I approach before the confusion seeps in again. “Tia, are you coming with me?”

It’s the only explanation for her presence. Tia places a gentle hand on my arm, effectively settling my emotions. “Hey, it’s okay. I just wanted to make sure that you were alright. You’ve been a little jumpy lately and you didn’t answer your phone.”

“I didn’t?” I always check my phone for messages, especially when they are from her. That’s when I remember seeing a message come through and ignoring it because I didn’t want to talk about my feelings. Correction, I don’t knowhowto mention to Tia that she’s not following her usual patterns and the outliers are starting to outweigh the normal deviation that should be allowed in the algorithm I constructed.

Rhys says I can’t say shit like that to people—that I map out their movements to a certain degree as to be able to predict them.

However, it’s the only way I stay from going insane. I don’t like the unknown which is why I stay perfectly wrapped up in my bubble of Tia and my roommate, Kelvin when he's around.

“Pav,breathe. It’s been a while since it’s gotten this bad. What is going on?” Tia gently wraps her hands around my cheeks and pulls me down so that our eyes are level. Like this, I can see the few extra colors in those hazel eyes and I focus on that instead of the panic trying to claw its way out.

“You keep looking over your shoulder,” I finally blurt out. “You didn’t do that before but you do it now. You told me earlier you were okay but I don’t believe that. Both of those things can’t be true at the same time.” I’d have to redo all of my proofs at this point.

She snorts, the soft puff of air fanning my lips. “God, Paval, you’re so precious. I am fine and people change. I’ve told you that.” Tia is lying. Fear flashes through her expression but she does well to cover it up with the smile I love so much. “Since you didn’t answer your text, I came to make sure that you bring me back that apple cake Gianni makes.”

“Come with me,” I purr, pressing up against her so that she’s trapped between me and the car. A gasp falls from her lips just before I kiss her, Tia melting against me. I’ve been trying to get Tia to visit for months but she believes that incident when we were kids is her fault—or at the very least, she keeps beating herself up about it.

“Raincheck, babe. You only get to see them every few weeks with your crazy school schedule.”

“Rhys misses you.” Using her uncle to persuade her is a low blow but it’s all I have. He really does miss her and I know that Tia misses the full family she once had. Rhys tells me of the dinners with his brother and sister and their families before everything fell apart. He wasn’t always well-liked at those,mostly because of Tia’s mother but I can see that he misses it in some part.

I can only imagine that Tia is feeling that same loss.

Her face falls as her head thunks back against the passenger door window. I settle my hands on her waist, squeezing lightly to let her know that I really want this. It might be selfish on my part but she’s the only person on this campus who makes it easy to breathe. “None of them blame you for what happened, Tia.”

Tears gather in her eyes, a bitter laugh tearing from her throat. “They should. Pav, I know we were too young to remember what happened but my uncle almost died because of my mother—his own goddamn sister! How can I not be mad at that? How can I not feel guilty? I can’t go over there and share a meal like nothing has happened, Pav.” She lightly pushes against me but she’s not truly trying to get away.

When I tuck her head into my chest, she bursts into tears, her body wracking with sobs. I had no idea she was so worried about this. My fathers mentioned that her mother—Ada—calls relentlessly but I didn’t know it had been weighing on Tia. I should have known.

I know everything about her.

Or I thought I did.

I stroke my fingers through her hair, waiting for her to calm down long enough to try again. She needs her family. “Just a meal, Tia. You were never the problem. You are not your mother.” Tia glances up at me, those glassy hazel eyes and tear-stained cheeks doing something to me. “You’re going to be the greatest fucking lawyer the world has ever seen and that’s because of whatyou’vedone, not your mother.”

A small smile plays on her lips as she smacks away at her tears. “As strange as you are, you’re always the person I need, Pav. Thank you.” To anyone else, being called strange might be an insult. To me, it just means that Tia doesn’t mind my oddities.

I reach around her and unlock the door before stepping back, waiting for her to make a decision. She hesitates and then slips into the passenger seat.

Chapter four

PAVAL

The ride to my parents’ is silent but I keep looking over at Tia, trying to understand what is going on in her head. It’s driving me mad that I can’t read her thoughts or that she isn’t the open book she used to be. I study her as best I can while keeping my eyes on the road, running through all of the changes that I can pinpoint.

She’s wearing a pair of bronze glasses, those round ones that accentuate her eyes but those aren’t new. Tia pulled her hair back into a ponytail a few minutes ago and while it makes me want to nibble on her exposed jaw, that isn’t it either. There’s a certain darkness to her expression but it doesn’t have to do with her mother.

Is it me? We’ve never officially clarified our relationship. Maybe she no longer wants me and I’ve been coercing her into something she hates. I can protect her without touching her, right?

My searching continues, Tia resting against the window, her lids closed. She’s not as peaceful as she usually is, her cheek twitching every so slightly. That’s when I catch onto the faint purple tint to her skin just below her eye as we pull into my parents’ driveway.

Did someone hitmyTia?

Why didn’t she say anything?




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