Pull

Chapter Eight

Demetri

Four days. I watched her for four days. What kind of stalker

did that make me? I mean she had the ugliest clothes I’d ever seen.

She was so small, she practically swam in them, and I’m sorry, but

there’s a reason guys don’t dig Uggs. They gave her legs no shape,

and I couldn’t figure out if she had really nice ones or cankles, and

then it pissed me off that I was thinking about cankles in the first

place.

Ever since Tuesday when I ran in to the competition’s store

and tried to find any excuse to talk to her, I’d been out of sorts. Not

the out of sorts that just leaves you when you fall asleep at night.

No, the type that had me eating so much taffy that I was convinced

I was going to have ten cavities by the end of the year.

I shook the bucket, but my heart wasn’t in it, not that it had

ever been truly in it, but still. I felt off. Clearly, I needed another

hobby, or friends, or something, because my behavior was

bordering on stalker-ish. Yesterday I’d even gone in her parents’

taffy store and asked about her schedule.

I swear her mom almost fainted.

When she introduced herself, she almost seemed too eager

to get her daughter into my clutches, which really should have

been my first clue that something was off. I mean, unless they lived

under a rock, they knew exactly what I was about. Spoiled rock star

who nearly killed himself in an accident, troubled past, man-whore

of the century, blah, blah, blah.

I’d pasted on my best smile, careful not to give her mom a

stroke, and asked about Alyssa.

All I found out was what I already knew. She worked every

freaking day, just like me, which just reinforced the conclusion I

had come to earlier.

She was lonely.

I asked her mom about friends.

Again, yes, I’m very much aware how creepy I was being,

but I had Bob, that was it. I was desperate for some sort of

companionship, even if said companion wanted to stab me in the

eye.

After no convincing whatsoever, I discovered that Alyssa

had Saturdays off and didn’t often go out with friends.

I could be her friend.

Lame. Maybe that’s how I should start the conversation.

“Hey, Alyssa, I’ve been watching you for the past four days. You

have a pretty face even though your clothes suck. Wanna hang out?

Oh, and by the way, I’m so bored and strung out about not being

able to get high, that if you say no, I just may kill myself.”

Promising.

Clearly, I’d been out of the game for far too long. I couldn’t

even remember how to talk to a normal person.

I kicked the ground and looked across the street again.

Tomorrow was Saturday. Tomorrow I was going to pursue the first

girl I’d pursued since Nat.

And look how well that turned out.

The familiar pang of rejection hit me square in the chest.

Why was I even putting myself out there when I literally had

nothing to offer, but baggage?

Hell if I knew, but damn if I didn’t still want to try.





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