Total pages in book: 86
Estimated words: 80314 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 402(@200wpm)___ 321(@250wpm)___ 268(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 80314 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 402(@200wpm)___ 321(@250wpm)___ 268(@300wpm)
“You probably should have done that before playing night detective,” I mutter, and she laughs, then stops suddenly.
“Hey, William,” she says quietly, but her voice bounces off the walls around us, making it seem louder than it is. I look down at the end of the hall, where a man is standing. “I didn’t know you were chaperoning tonight.”
“I got here a little late.” His eyes come to me, then move back to her. “Are you okay?”
“Oh yeah, just showing Aiden around the school.” She looks up at me and licks her lips. “William works in the IT department.”
I nod, understanding what she’s saying, and start walking with her hand in mine toward the gym with purpose, wanting to get her around as many people as possible.
“It’s good to meet you, man,” I say as we walk toward him, and he starts to open his mouth, then his eyes widen as they go over my shoulder. On instinct, I shove May away from me as I spin around, barely glimpsing the barrel of a gun pointed in my direction, and jerk back before a crack of thunder rings through the empty hall as May screams. I look down at my chest, expecting to have been hit, but there is no pain and no blood. Turning to look over my shoulder, I watch William crumple to the ground and red begin to stain the floor around him as the sound of footsteps gets farther away.
“Shit.” I run toward William as May scrambles on her hands and knees to where he’s lying and rip my sweater off over my head, pressing it to his stomach. “Go call the police.”
“Someone shot me,” William says, sounding dazed, and May sobs, pushing her hands down on mine.
“Doll, I need you to look at me,” I bite out, wanting to get her attention, and her big, brown, watery eyes meet mine.
“Go into the gym, find Toya, and call the police.”
“I can’t leave you.” She shakes her head franticly back and forth as the tears streaming down her cheeks rip me apart.
“You need to get William help. Go to the gym and find Toya,” I repeat, and she nods after a second and pushes up off the ground. I watch her until she’s behind the closed door of the gym, then look down the hall where the shooter was. Everything was such a blur that I didn’t see who it was, but I know they got spooked.
“I feel lightheaded.” William’s words snap me out of my thoughts, and I focus on him.
“Do not go to sleep. Help will be here soon.”
“Someone shot me,” he repeats as the gym doors are shoved open, and kids start running for the exit while May jogs our way with a few people, including Toya and Tony, behind her.
“The ambulance is on the way,” May whispers, dropping to her knees across from me.
“Good job, baby,” I tell her quietly, and she looks at William, then touches his hair like he’s a small child, smoothing it back away from his forehead.
“Do we know who did this?” a woman I recognize as the principal asks, with her hands shaking as she holds a phone to her ear.
“I didn’t see their face.”
“I didn’t either,” May whispers, looking down the hall to where the person was standing. “It all happened so fast.” Her chin wobbles as sirens get closer, and my jaw clenches, because I know that bullet was meant for me, and we are no closer to finding out who the fuck is trying to kill me.
_______________
WITH THE SUN beginning to rise, causing light to break around the blinds in the bedroom, I lie awake, listening to May breathe. Last night after the ambulance left, with William in stable condition, the cops took us aside for our statements and called the detective who’s been working our case to go over what happened again.
Needless to say, after that, all hell broke loose, because my girl didn’t tell her best friend what’s been going on, so Toya promptly lost her fucking mind. And it took a while for both May and Tony to get her calmed down enough to get into the car with her husband and go home.
We didn’t arrive at the house until well after midnight, and May was so wired from what took place that she couldn’t read or get comfortable in bed. So we ended up on the couch with a movie playing that I’m sure neither of us were watching. Around four when she finally passed out, I carried her to bed, where I’ve been awake, unable to sleep.
Hearing the doorbell go off, I carefully get out from under May and tuck the blankets around her, then grab a pair of sweats and leave the room. With her calling everyone last night to warn them about what happened before they saw it on the news, it could be anyone here now.