by Sky Corgan
Bully
SKY CORGAN
Text copyright 2016 by Sky Corgan
All rights reserved.
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Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
CHAPTER ONE
Ah, unrequited love.
Unrequited love is bullshit.
Maybe my love for Bobby Calhoun wasn't unrequited, but it was sure taking a long time for something to come of it. Years. Four of them, to be exact.
In defense of our lack of a relationship, he had been with someone else for the vast majority of those four years. Only a month after we'd met, he hooked up with Christine Lane, a girl he'd met on the internet that lived a state away in Louisiana. I should have worked him harder during that month, but when you first meet someone, there's a whole lot of fumbling around, getting to know each other and acting like a shy idiot—especially when said person was as hot as Bobby was.
I swooned as I thought about him. Long black hair, always flat ironed into straight perfection. Not many guys could get away with having long hair, but Bobby rocked it. I remembered the first time he let me touch it. He had come over to watch movies and was lying on my parents' sectional. I was sitting next to him, paying more attention to him than the movie that was playing. We were watching Grease, which neither of us had ever seen before. Supposedly a classic. I can't tell you half of what happened in the movie because I was so busy being distracted by the delicious boy by my side.
This was the second time he'd come over alone. The first time, I'd invited some of our classmates to my house to study. None of them showed up but him. I was so secretly happy that day. The day that I realized he was more than just good looks.
We were compatible. Anyone could see it. We liked the same movies and music. We both disliked sports. I owned the same owl lamp that he had bought his best friend for Christmas the year before. I was convinced that we were a perfect match. All he had to do was make a move.
Or I did.
Touching his hair wasn't good enough. I was so nervous when I asked if I could do it, though. I had touched him before. Secretly purposefully. Brushing lint off of the front of his shirt. Lingering in his embrace the few times he hugged me to say goodbye. Oh yes, my hands were getting as familiar with his body as they possibly could.
And then my fingers were in his hair. I tried not to look like a complete stalker lunatic as I stared down at him in wonder at how silky the strands were. His hair was so soft. So fine. So perfect. I could have pet him all night. But that would have been weird, and I was already worried he thought I was weird.
For that entire month before he hooked up with Christine, I thought something was there between us. He gave me looks in class and when he saw me in the hallways at school. Looks of interest. Looks beyond friendship.
He came over to my house. Alone. That had to mean something. I mean, what guy would go over to a girl's house to watch a cheesy old 70's movie unless they were interested in her. Right?
And then there were our friends, who thought we would be perfect together. They tried to put the bug in his ear. I even let it slip to his best friend that I liked him and wanted to date him. Nothing ever came of it, though.
I can't help but think that I should have tried harder somehow. But I didn't. And a month after meeting Bobby and spending my time daydreaming about what it would be like to be his girlfriend, he hooked up with someone else.
Not just someone else, but someone he had never even met in person before. Someone who lived a whole state away. Someone he didn't even meet until they were two years into their relationship. I wanted to pull my hair out at the thought that he'd rather date a girl he couldn't physically be with over someone who was right in front of him—a girl who adored him.
That's the way the cards fell, though. He dated Christine, staying ever faithful to her, living in a fantasy world where they'd one day be together. While it was secretly infuriating, it did give me a glimpse into what kind of a boyfriend he would be. The perfect one. He talked about Christine all the time like she just went to a different school instead of lived hundreds of miles away. They sent each other text messages throughout the day. He had to speak to her on the phone or via Skype at least once a night. He even sacrificed a lot of fun weekends to stay home and keep her company. Sometimes, it was downright pathetic.
For an entire year, I waited on the sidelines. Surely, online relationships didn't last for very long. I'd been in a few myself, the longest one having a three-month duration. I mean, how else do you date when you're stuck at your parents' house, are too young to drive, and aren't getting approached by guys in real life.
The relationship between Bobby and Christine would crumble whenever he got lonely enough. It had to. He was a teenage boy with raging hormones. The urge to be with a girl intimately would eventually usurp his intangible romance.
It didn't, though.
I scowled at my hamburger while we were sitting with our friends at lunch one day, listening to him talk about playing League of Legends with Christine. We had just started our Sophomore year of high school. They'd officially been together for a year and a few months. He was talking to our friends, not me. Or maybe just to anyone who would listen. I was listening, though you never would have known by how blank my stare was. I was listening to the love in his voice. The excitement that was there—every bit as strong as when the two of them had first gotten together. He wasn't growing tired of her at all. If anything, each day he seemed more in love.
It was then that I decided to shelve my feelings for Bobby. I couldn't go through high school a dateless loser. I couldn't keep pining after someone who was already happily coupled up.
Yes, I shelved my feelings. But just because you shelve something doesn't mean it goes away. I loved him. Part of me knew I always would. But I had to move on with my life.
So I dated. Dated guys that I didn't care about. Dated guys that I thought I cared about but didn't. No matter who I was with, I always had one eye on Bobby and his relationship. If he was jealous whenever I got with someone, it didn't show at all. That hurt me more than I liked, but I tried not to let him see it.
We were friends. And though we weren't as close as we had been the first month we met, we still hung out regularly. With our friends, of course. There was no just me and him after Christine.
As fate would have it, there eventually was trouble in paradise with their relationship. It could not have come at a worse time—a time when I was in a relationship with one of the sweetest boys I'd ever met. Darryl Hoover wasn't the best-looking guy at our school, but what he lacked in looks, he made up for in heart. He wrote me love poems, brought me flowers, and was the perfect gentleman.
File under: guys I thought I cared about.
It was the end of junior year, and we were three months into our relationship when the bomb dropped that Bobby and Christine had split. My stomach twisted with nauseating desperation. This was, by far, the best relationship I had ever been in. For the first time ever, I was genui
nely happy with a guy, but that all went to shit when I got the news about Bobby. I rushed to his side for support, playing the part of the dutiful friend. The kind of support I wanted to give him was more than platonic, though.
Bobby wasn't stable, but he wasn't a wreck either. If anything, he was just frustrated. I had thought he'd want to cry on my shoulder, to use me to fill the void that spending time with Christine had left. I think I forced myself on him. Not sexually, but my presence. I wanted to be around him...and he wanted something else. Things that had been denied him for three years. Carnal needs that teenage boys get.
The more I pressed to be with him, the more he pushed me away. He spent the vast majority of the month with new friends he had met at another school. I grew distant with my own boyfriend, always in the pursuit of Bobby.
If there was one thing that Darryl was beside sweet, it was perceptive. He saw what was going on. Noticed the distance. Heard the pain in my voice every time I spoke of Bobby. Heard the longing.
Despite the fact that Bobby didn't seem to want me around at all, I conjured up a story in my mind that he couldn't be around me yet because he loved me and was afraid to move on so quickly. I wanted to go to him and tell him that he didn't need to push me away. That I loved him and always had and would be there for him in whatever way he needed. As time passed and he slipped further away, the need to be with him grew. Darryl was willing to weather the storm, but the ship of our relationship was already sinking, and I was ready to jump off onto the Bobby lifeboat.
I conjured up the nerve to spill my feelings to Bobby. He needed to know that I was in love with him. Years of watching him with someone else hadn't changed that. If anything, I loved him more because I knew he was dedicated.
I threw caution and logic to the wind and broke up with Darryl. The guy was torn apart. It was the nastiest breakup I'd ever had. He cried. Tried to reason with me. Practically held me hostage explaining why we were perfect together. I left him anyway.
That same night, I showed up on Bobby's doorstep ready to tell him everything. He wasn't home, though. His mother said that he had gone out for the night. I was disappointed, but there was always tomorrow.
I spent the night with an aching in my chest. An aching because I had just dumped the best guy I had ever dated—someone who had never deserved to be hurt by me. An aching because my thoughts and feelings about Bobby were eating me up on the inside. I was like a water balloon filled too full. My emotions were overwhelming me. One small prick and I could explode, completely fall apart—be destroyed.
That prick came the next day, but not how I thought it would. Bobby was in class bragging to our friends about how he'd banged one of the chicks from his new group. The unabashed way he talked about it in front of me told me that he didn't consider my feelings at all. Part of me wanted to think he was just fucking away his pain. He could have used me for that, though. I would have slept with him. Willingly. Happily.
A week later, he was back with Christine.
I could have crawled back to Darryl, but I didn't. Who was I kidding? He deserved better than me. I had dumped him for a guy who hadn't even given me a second thought.
Depression weighed heavily on me. Hell, I'd even say that I hated Bobby for a time. I thought he had led me on. That was bullshit, though. In truth, I had chased him around like a lovesick puppy. He had been as friendly as he always had been. Maybe slightly distant, but not cruel. But most importantly, he had been platonic.
There were no looks exchanged between us like there had been the first month we'd known each other. No level of interest outside of friendship. I was like the paint on the walls. Normal. Boring. Always there. Nothing new.
He had broken me.
For a while, I thought it was a permanent break. I thought that knowing he had been with someone else—someone who wasn't me—was enough to make me swear off of caring about him. My feelings dwindled to a low simmer. There seemed to be a fissure in our friendship, mostly on my side, and that helped too.
Eventually, things returned to normal. The sting of not being his first choice for a rebound went away as I observed him from afar like I used to. There was the charming way that he smiled. The lilt in his voice when he said certain phrases. The way that he opened his arms wide every time he came in for a hug. Yes, there were definitely still things about him that I liked. Things about him that I desired. And fuck my life, those feelings came back. Maybe they weren't as crazy obsessive as they had been before, but they were definitely still there.
I convinced myself that I could make peace with his relationship with Christine. That we could just be friends. Friends. Friends. Friends. Yeah, friends. That sounded good. I could deal with that.
But towards the end of senior year, Bobby and Christine broke up again. And this time it looked to be permanent. And the flame of desire rose to the ceiling and scorched my good senses.
I wasn't going to make the same mistake twice, though. No siree. I didn't desperately try to get close to Bobby. I didn't smother him with texts and phone calls, checking up on him daily to make sure he was alright. I let him do his own thing. I was just there. There if he needed me. And like with the last breakup, he didn't need me. Not really.
We stayed friends. Friends was good. Friends was better than not friends. We talked and hung out from time to time...and when I found out where he was going to college, I kind of sort of begged my parents to let me go to the same school. I kind of sort of got them to agree. And I kind of sort of decided to follow Bobby to a different city, because damn it all to hell, I was convinced that there was still something between us—that there could still be something between us.
Without our friends around, we would need each other. He would need me. And that meant we would get closer. And if we got closer, he might see what he'd been missing out on all of those years.
Our new life together was about to begin.
CHAPTER TWO
Our first college party.
I was so damned excited. Excited isn't even the right word. Buzzing. Buzzing is more accurate. There was literally a vibration going on inside of me. A mix of nerves and happiness.
I breathed in the Autumn air, and the cold chill of it tickled my lungs. There had been a permanent grin on my face ever since Bobby and I left the dorms. Everything was going perfectly.
My sinister plan was working. We had only been moved in at Clear Lake University for two weeks, but already Bobby and I had spent more time together than we had all of summer vacation. We ate our meals together whenever we could and studied together. I felt closer to him, though he wasn't giving me those looks I was so longing for. It was only a matter of time, I told myself. And I was willing to take however long was needed to reach my end goal. Me + Bobby = together forever.
We were moving in that direction. Everything felt so right. Even this. Walking to this party together. Having our college party cherries popped together. The exhilaration was way more than I could fathom. I was on cloud 9. Every day was cloud 9.
I cast a glance at Bobby in my peripheral vision, checking him out and not caring if I was blatantly obvious about it. He knew I liked him. I'd spent the past two weeks upping my flirting game. His reciprocation was minimal, but it was definitely there. He probably wouldn't throw me out of bed if I made a move on him. With any luck, I would make my move tonight. I just needed a bit of liquid courage.
Despite the breeze, Bobby's hair stayed neatly in place. He looked a bit overdressed in a white button-down shirt and a black and gray double breasted vest paired with black skinny jeans. A black tie was looped snugly around his neck, and the silver chain of a watch dangled from his pocket. He looked old school delicious. My tummy fluttered with butterflies as I thought about twisting my hand around that tie and pulling him to me for a kiss. Maybe I would get the chance to do that later.
“You remember what we talked about?” Bobby shoved his hands into his pockets.
We were close enough to the frat house that I could hear the m
usic booming down the street. Just two more blocks and we'd be there.
“What we talked about?” I parroted, trying to brush away the daydream I'd been having.
“You brought those test strips, right?” He glanced down at my purse.
“Oh. Yeah.” I clutched it tighter against my side.
As soon as I got accepted to Clear Lake University, my mom had sat me down and had the date rape talk with me. She wasn't dumb enough to think that I wouldn't be going to parties. To make sure I stayed safe, she bought me a box of drink testing strips. Placing a few drops of my drink on one of the strips would tell me if it had been drugged.
The thought of pulling them out at the party was absolutely mortifying. I hadn't made any real friends yet on campus, and the last thing I wanted was to look paranoid and uncool. Being cool was important, especially at a college party.
“If someone offers you a drink, you test it first.” His tone was warning, showing me he was serious.
“Yes, Dad.” I giggled at him.
He rolled his eyes. “It never hurts to be too cautious.”
“I'll have you there to protect me.” I leaned over to wrap my hands around his bicep, putting some of my weight on him. Just touching him caused energy to zing through me. “How much trouble can I possibly get into?”
“I have no idea.” He let out a labored breath.
“What's wrong?”
“I'm nervous, I guess.” He confessed, raking his free hand through his hair. I envied that hand.
“I'm nervous too.” I turned my attention forward as we rounded a corner and the frat house came into view. Flashes of light danced across the lawn through the shuttered windows. Greens and reds and blues. Music pumped over the mixed throng of voices. A few students came in and out of the house. Every time the door opened, the street erupted into sound.