THE SECOND WEย got in the house, Mom and Dad leapt up from the couch.
โRory,โ Mom cried. โWhat happened? Weโve been worried sick.โ
โI donโt feel like talking about it.โ I pushed past them, toward the stairs.
They seemed stunned to silence. At least for a moment. Good, that gave me a head start.
โNo, we need to talk about this,โ Mom said, following me.
โNo,โ I said, continuing up the stairs, even though every step reopened the wounds on my legs and made the shorts ride up that much more.
Aiden cut in. โGive it a rest. Sheโs had a hard night.โ
Dadโs voice was harsh. โDonโt talk to your mother like that.โ
Caseyโs gentle tone contrasted theirs. โHer heart was just broken in front of the entire school. Maybe just give her a minute to cool down.โ
I reached my door and waited, my hand on the knob, listening. โAiden,โ Mom said, โyou need to take Casey home.โ
โMomโโ he began.
โNo,โ Dad said in his voice that stunned his opponents into submission. โTake her home. I expect you back right afterward.โ
There was a pause.
โYes sir?โ Dad snapped.
โYes, sir,โ Aiden mumbled. โCome on, Casey.โ
I pushed into my room, shut the doorโwhich unfortunately lacked a lockโand changed into clothes that actually fit as quickly as I could. Mom and Dad were coming. I heard it in their voices, and now, in their footsteps up the stairs.
I sat on my bed and stared at my door, every bit of me on the edge of collapse.
It opened, sans a knock or any form of permission, and my parents spilled into my room.
โWhat did you do?โ Mom asked.
โMary,โ Dad warned. โSheโs been through enough.โ
โNo,โ Mom snapped equally as fast. โI just witnessed my daughter humiliate an innocent boy in front of the entire school.โ Her hands gesticulated as she began pacing. โYou got banned from attending homecoming,ย andย youโre suspended for three days next week!โ
โSuspended?โ I cried, my eyes burning. โI was the one who got pelted with cupcakes!โ
โYouโre lucky he hasnโt expelled you altogether!โ โMaryโโ Dad began.
โNo,โ Mom continued. โWhat happened to the Rory who tutored and came home after school and was just fine the way she wasโwithout makeup or these clothes that are so not you. Youโre spending time with these girls who apparently donโt have any rules, andโโ
โStop!โ I cried. Iโd had enough. โYou want your old daughter back? The one who never thought she was good enough and did everything she could to blend into the wallpaper? Have her! Make her miserable with your stupid diets and workouts and pregnancy tests, and remind her every single day that she will never be good enough for you!โ
She opened her mouth to argue, but I wasnโt even close to done.
โNo,โ I cut her off. โIโve been under your thumb ever since I hit puberty. You humiliated me in front of everyone with your stupid hEAlthy program, because you canโt handle the idea that Iโll make decisions on my own, even if theyโre bad. Iโm tired of this. If you want someone perfect to be your daughter, find her. Your actual, fat, imperfect, cupcake-covered, mistake-making daughter will be right here, ignoring the fact that youโre her mother.โ
Dadโs eyes shifted between us, torn between two sides of a coin that was never supposed to flip. I was supposed to be kind Rory. Go-with-the- flow Rory. She was gone. Sheโd been pulverized on the football field, right along with her heart.
โJust go,โ I said, barely masking the tremor in my voice. โGo.โ
They stood, stunned for a moment, but Mom left first. Her feet pounded down the stairs as fast as she could go, but Dad was still in my doorway.
โWhat?โ I demanded.
He stepped forward and sat in my desk chair, his elbows on his knees, head hung low. For a moment, I watched him. He looked more tired than ever, like heโd somehow been the one on the field instead of me.
โIโm so sorry, kid,โ he said quietly. My eyebrow rose. โWhat?โ
โIโm sorry,โ he repeated louder, meeting my eyes. โI canโt imagine what it must have been like out there.โ
Flashes of Beckettโs face, the hurt in his eyes, nearly ripped me apart. I closed my eyes against the image, but it just made me see it more clearly. โI messed up, Dad.โ
A corner of his lips lifted. โIf it makes you feel any better, you werenโt the only one.โ
A soft snort escaped my nose. โNot really.โ
With a sigh, he ran his hand through his thinning hair. โIโve found itโs not the mistakes that matter so much but what you do afterward that matters.โ
I wanted so badly for his words to be true, but they didnโt jive with the life Iโd lived in this house. โMom wants me to be perfect.โ
Dad shook his head. โShe wants you to have the kind of life she didnโt have.โ
My eyebrows came together. Iโd seen photos of my mom at prom, all dolled up with her hair curled to the heavens and a silk dress falling off her defined shoulders. I doubt sheโd lead the kind of life that resulted in being showered with cupcakes and plotting to get guys to like her.
โYou didnโt know your grandma like she knew your grandma. But thatโs not my story to tell.โ He stood from the chair. โYour mom might not be perfect, but she loves you.โ
Frustration rose in my chest. โShe has a funny way of showing it.โ Mom had no reason to treat me the way she had, and yet Dad was still defending her.
He lifted his eyebrows, staring at the floor. โYeah, but then again, you love Beckett, and I have a feeling there are some things you wish you could have done differently. No oneโs perfect, kid.โ
My bedroom door closed behind him, and I collapsed onto my bed, held my pillow to my chest, and cried myself to sleep.