FEBRUARY 25TH 2000
AOIFE
โI DONโT GET IT,โย Paul said down the line on Friday night, tone impatient. โI told you that I wouldnโt do it again. Why canโt you let it go and meet up with me?โ
โBecause the last time I met up with you, you told people about our private business,โ I shot back, rolling my eyes at his new ground-breaking level of stupid. โIโm still mad at you. You broke my trust. And if I canโt trust you, then I canโt be with youโโ
โYou can! Youย canย trust me,โ he urged, quickly changing his tune from hard to groveling. โIโm sorry, babe. I am. It will never happen again.โ
โNo,โ I agreed wholeheartedly, only half-mad because the truth was I only half-cared. โIt wonโt happen again, because your hand will never get that close to my knickers again, Paul Rice.โ
โBut I love you.โ
โOh my god.โ I rolled my eyes to the heavens. โGet a handle on yourself. Weโve only been going out for a few weeks.โ
There was a long pause before the sound of soft laughter filled my ear. โToo far?โ
โJust a tad,โ I shot back, grinning. โI love you,โ I mimicked his earlier declaration. โYou big sap. What if I was one of those girls who actually believe the crap boys tell them?โ
โThen I might be one step closer to getting my hand back in your knickers?โ he asked hopefully.
โNot so much as your pinky finger will get anywhere near my knickers again.โ
He laughed down the line before saying, โListen, thereโs an underage disco at the GAA pavilion tomorrow night. Come with me. Let me make it up to you.โ
โSo, you want to make up being a sleazebag to me by taking me to a sleezy underage disco, where girls line the walls for boys to grope them?โ I arched a brow. โGee, that is so tempting, but no thanks.โ
โYouโre really going to make me suffer, arenโt you?โ
โYes,โ I wholeheartedly agreed. โYes, I am.โ
โYou liked the necklace I bought you, didnโt you?โ
โIt was okay,โ I mused reaching up to thumb the shiny stud around my neck. โBut buying me presents wonโt win me over, Paul.โ
He sighed down the line. โAoife.โ
โNow off you go, Iโm busy.โ
โDoing what?โ
โPeople-watching.โ
โYouโre out?โ His tone was curious and laced with jealousy. โWith who?โ
โMy other boyfriend,โ I countered, dangling my legs, from my perch on my front garden wall. โDidnโt I mention him before? Heโsย veryย trustworthy.โ
โNot funny.โ
โIt was a joke.โ
โWho are you with, Aoife?โ
โNobody,โ I laughed. โNight, Paul.โ
โNo, wait, who are you really withโโ
Hanging up, I slid my phone back into my dressing gown pocket and sighed as a familiar wave of strange frustration settled over me.
It had been almost two weeks since Joey Lynch dropped the pink-lace-thong bomb on me, and I wasnโt really angry with Paul anymore.
I wasnโt even that irritated about the whole debacle to begin with.
Sure, I was far from happy with him for discussing me with his buddies, but I knew enough about lads my age to know that was what they did.
They talked shit.
A lot of it.
My best friend, Casey, thought I should be raging about what Paul did, and maybe she was right, but I didnโt seem to care enough about it โ or my relationship โ to wrangle up the necessary feelings.
Besides, being with Paul was nice. He was good-looking, clever, and, for the most part, we had a lot of fun together.
Still, though, I couldnโt help but feel restless.
For what, I couldnโt fathom.
Yes, you can, you little liarโฆ
โWhat are you doing out here, Aoif?โ Katie Wilmot, my next-door neighbor, asked, dragging me from my daydream.
Friends since childhood, our paths had changed course last year when I left her behind in primary school for BCS. Next year, she would be pushing the bar out further by heading off to Tommen, the private school outside of Ballylaggin, but living next door to each other meant that our friendship would remain intact.
Hoisting her small frame onto my garden wall beside me, she slipped her arm through mine and rested her head on my shoulder. โItโs freezing out here.โ
โYeah, I know.โ I let out a heavy sigh and rested my cheek on her red curls. โIโm just people watching.โ
โYou mean youโreย boyย watching,โ Katie corrected with a smirk.
Not bothering to deny something we both knew was true, I turned my attention back to the commotion occurring across the road from our row of houses.
It was half past eleven on Friday night and the Gardaรญ were making an arrest โ which was nothing new for this area of town.
Lately, they had been cracking down on underage drinking, and had scored a coup for themselves in the form of a gang of teenage boys.
I knew them all.
Some were from my street, more were from my school, and then there wasย him.
โHey, isnโt that the lad who works with your dad?โ she asked, voicing my thoughts aloud, as we watched one of the male Gardaรญ pin Joey Lynch to the side of the paddy wagon.
Instead of keeping his mouth shut like the others, Joey laughed and taunted the Garda, who was roughly patting him down.
Dressed in his usual attire, an oversized navy hoodie that concealed his blond hair, he continued to talk back to the Garda, goading the Gard into losing his cool with him.
โJoey Lynch,โ I replied with a heavy sigh. โAnd yep. It sure is.โ
Snatching the cigarette that was balancing between Joeyโs lips, the Garda tossed it on the ground before stamping on it.
The move earned him a slew of verbal abuse from my classmate.
โWhat an idiot,โ I grumbled with a shake of my head, feeling sourly disappointed in his behavior, mostly because I knew he could do better.
Never mind do better, heย wasย better, dammit.
I thought that sharing a box of cereal with him two weeks ago had somehow melted those arctic walls erected around him, but I was sorely mistaken.
He had shown up to school the following day more closed off than ever, sporting one hell of a nasty shiner, and an even nastier attitude to match it.
Joey never mentioned it to his friends either, something I knew for sure because Paul would have taken leave of his senses, had he gotten wind of myย cerealย encounter with our classmate.
โHeโs a walking red flag,โ Katie agreed, before adding, โIsnโt he a little young to be hanging out with Shane Holland? Isnโt Shane like seventeenโโ
โShaneโs eighteen,โ I corrected, glaring at the biggest scumbag in Ballylaggin.
Shane was bad news, and everyone knew it. He was in sixth year at BCS and the worst kind of wrong to be knocking around with.
It was common knowledge around here that he was a dealer, and while he might be small time, his brothers were not. Apparently, the older Holland brothers were in deep with some of the big-time dealers from the city.
Joey was only in first year.
If he was hanging around with Shane, then he was playing with fire.
It was a bad move.
A really bad move.
I watched the Gardaรญ shove three of the older boys into the back of the paddy wagon and released a sigh of relief when theyย didnโtย take Joey โ his young age, no doubt, the deciding factor.
โWhy do you think he does it?โ I asked, verbalizing aloud the question Iโd been asking myself since I first laid eyes on him.
Tonight wasnโt the first time Iโd seen the boy get collar-boned by the authorities.
It happened frequently.
โWhy do you think he self-destructs like that?โ
Self-destruction. It was the only way I could describe his reckless behavior.
โWho?โ Katie asked. โJoey?โ
โYeah,โ I replied, eyes trained on the Garda van, as it drove past my house.
โBecause heโs a teenage boy?โ Katie offered with a shrug.
โYeah, but it has to be more than that,โ I replied, my gaze returning to my classmate, who was staring after the Garda van with a look of frustration etched on his face. โYou just saw how he reacted with the Garda back there, Katie. It was almost as if heย wantedย them to take him away.โ
โWhat?โ my neighbor laughed. โThatโs crazy talk. Nobody wants to be taken away by the Gards.โ
โMost donโt,โ I whispered.ย But he does.
โI donโt know, Aoif,โ she said, worrying her lip. โHe seems like kind of a bad guy to me.โ
I shook my head. โHeโs not a bad guy.โ
โHow can you be so sure?โ
No clue.ย โI just am.โ
โHow?โ
โOkay, so hereโs the deal.โ I heard myself blurt. โI know heโs a walking disaster, okay? I know he takes drugs and gets into fights, hangs out with all the wrong people, and can be a real dickhead like weโve just witnessed.โ
โBut?โ Katie interjected with a teasing smile.
โJustย lookย at him, Katie.โ Sighing heavily, I threw a hand up and gestured towards him. โTake a good look.โ
โYeah,โ she agreed quietly. โHeโs sort of beautiful.โ
โMore than sort of,โ I corrected with a shiver. โBut itโs more than that.โ Chewing on my bottom lip, I tried to find the words to explain my feelings. โThereโs just something about him that intrigues me. I donโt know what it is, but from the first day I saw him, I was just, sort ofโฆcurious?โ
โOf course you are,โ Katie laughed. โItโs the age-old trope. Thereโs always a reason why the good girl lusts after the chemically dependent bad boy.โ
I smirked. โFunny.โ
โWell, intriguing or not, messing around with a guy like that is a recipe for disaster,โ she added. โSeriously, Aoif, he looks dangerous. You should steer clear of him if you donโt want to end up getting hurt.โ
And just like that, his head turned in our direction; green eyes meeting mine.
And just like every time I felt his eyes on me, my heart, the traitorous bitch, thundered violently in my chest.
He didnโt look happy to see me.
He never did.
He stood on the corner of my street, unmoving, eyes never leaving mine.
Nostrils flaring, he continued to stare at me boldly.
With what I knewย wasnโtย a cigarette now balancing between his lips, he tilted his head to one-side, eyes glazed over, but still sharp and full of mistrust. โYou got a staring problem, Molloy?โ
Okay, so we were back to throwing insults.
I arched a brow. โNo worse than your attitude problem.โ
His brows narrowed. โEnjoying the show?โ
โMore like a shit show,โ I taunted back. โAnd hey, looks like you snagged yourself one of the leading roles. Congrats. Stellar performance.โ
โWhat are youย doing, Aoife?โ Katie whisper-hissed, digging me in the ribs with her skinny elbow. โDonโtย talkย to him. I thought we established that heโs bad news โ oh great, heโs coming over.โ
I knew he was trouble, or maybe just troubled.
Either way, I knew he wasnโt going to be anyoneโs knight in shining armor.
Casey always joked that Joey Lynch would never reach his twenty-fifth birthday. His latest antics only stacked the odds even further against him. It should have been a warning enough. And still, something about the boy made me want to jump off the ledge.
With my stomach doing somersaults, I watched as Joey crossed the road, closing the space between us.
His lips were puffy and swollen. Whether that was a natural attribute or from constantly fighting, I couldnโt tell, but those lips were almost too pretty to belong to a boy.
And so damn temptingโฆ
โYouโre out late,โ he said, coming to stand in front of me. Because of my height advantage from sitting on the wall, he had to look up at me, and when he did, I swear I felt the air whoosh from my lungs.
Not because he was insanely sexy โ something he very much was โ but because the left side of his face was a dark shade of purple, with his left eye swollen almost entirely shut.
โYour face,โ Katie gasped, voicing my thoughts aloud. โWhat happened to you?โ Her eyes drifted to his hand. โOh my god, are you smoking aโโ
โI asked too many questions,โ he interrupted, giving my friend a menacingly cold glare. โDo you do that, too?โ
I could feel Katie wilt beside me.
โNo,โ she croaked out. โItโs just that the Gards are around and I donโt want to be seen withโฆdrugs.โ
โDrugs?โ Joey stared at her like she had two heads. โItโs a joint, not a line. Relax, will ya?โ
โHey.โ I narrowed my eyes in warning. โDonโt be a dick.โ
โIโm going to go inside now,โ Katie whispered, clearly unnerved by his words, as she hopped down and practically legged it towards her front door. โNight, Aoif.โ
โWas that necessary?โ I asked when my friend had hurried inside. โYou scared her off.โ
He shrugged noncommittally and steered the conversation towards my attire. โNice housecoat, grandma.โ
โNice face, Rocky,โ I shot back, tightening the knot on my robe.
A faint trace of a smile teased his lips. โShouldnโt you be inside catching up on all of your soaps?โ
โNah,โ I replied breezily. โNothing on Fair City could ever be as entertaining as your earlier spectacle.โ
โHappy to oblige.โ
โSo, what are you doing hanging around with Shane Holland and the rest of those dopes?โ
โWhatโs it to you?โ
I shrugged. โCall me curious.โ
โYou know what happened to the curious kitty,โ he replied coolly, giving me his best mind-your-own-business glower.
โDonโt even bother with those scare tactics,โ I countered, feeling a flash of heat below my navel. โIโm not my friend. I donโt scare easily.โ
โGood for you,โ Joey muttered. Taking one final drag from his smoke, he exhaled a cloudy puff of sickly-sweet smelling smoke before tossing the butt away. Shoving his hands into his front pocket, he retreated a few steps. โDonโt tell your father about tonight.โ
โFine,โ I agreed, jumping down from the wall, partially because my ass was numb from the cold concrete, but mostly because I wanted to stop him from leaving. โWhat are you going to do for me in return?โ
Pausing, he turned back to face me. โWhat do you want?โ
Your attention, I thought to myself, as I closed the space between us, only stopping when I was standing right in front of him.
He was a lot taller than me now that I had lost my wall advantage.
โIโm not sure yet.โ
Tilting his head to one side, Joey stared down at me for the longest time.
Mistrust, wariness, and reluctant curiosity were all emotions evident on his face when he asked, โWhat are you doing, Molloy?โ
I wasnโt one-hundred percent sure.
On the one hand, I had a boyfriend, who, aside from suffering from the rare case of loose lips, treated me well enough. But on the other hand, I found myself drawn to this boy much more than was good for me.
I had felt it, the weird invisible pull, the very first day he walked into my world, and it hadnโt let up since.
โMy friend thinks youโre dangerous,โ I told him with a smile. โShe thinks I need to steer clear of you.โ Tilting my head to one side, I added, โSheโs thinks that messing around with boys like you will get a girl like me hurt.โ
โWise friend,โ he replied coolly. โYou should listen to her.โ
โThatโs the thing about me, Joe,โ I pushed back and said, โI donโt like being told what to do.โ
I watched him watch me, his gaze trailing down my body.
When his eyes locked on mine, I swear I saw something shift inside of him. โThen I guess we have something in common after all.โ
โYeah,โ I blew out a shaky breath. โI guess we do.โ
With a dark look etched on his beautifully bruised face, he took a step towards me, and I desperately attempted to feign nonchalance as a shiver racked through me. โBut that still doesnโt make us friends.โ
โI get it,โ I replied, breath hitching in my throat, as I continued to poke the bear. โItโs too hard for you to be friends with someone when you want them as badly as you want me.โ
โIs that so?โ Smirking, he took another step closer and I found myself backing up with every step he took, until my back hit against my garden wall. Resting a hand on the wall next to me, he leaned in close. โYou think I like you, Molloy?โ
โI know you do,โ I breathed, heart galloping recklessly in my chest.
Reaching down with his free hand, he tucked a tendril of hair behind my ear and whispered, โYou think Iย wantย you?โ
The air left my lungs in an audible whoosh, and I knew that I was standing in the face of danger.
This boy possessed all of the terrible traits that mothers warned their daughters about.
Trouble.
It should have been his middle name.
Every bad, wrong, and dirty teenage boy characteristic wrapped up in a perfect, fucked-up package.
Physically, he trumped me in every way.
Taller.
Stronger.
Darker.
Meanerโฆ
Still, I wanted him to comeย closer.
โGo inside, Molloy,โ he said in a softer tone now, as his green eyes searched and found in mine something that had put the fire out for him. โYou donโt belong out here in the dark with someone like me.โ
โYes, I do,โ I was quick to blurt, before quickly adding, โI live on this street, remember?โ
โAoife!โ My fatherโs voice echoed from our front doorway. โWhat are you doing outside at this time of night? The Gards are crawling all over the terrace, pet.โ
โJesus.โ Jerking away from my body like I had scalded him, Joey shoved his hands into his pocket and muttered a string of curse words under his breath, as he shook his head and blew out a ragged breath.
My fatherโs confused gaze flicked to Joey, and he blinked for a moment before a look of resignation settled on his face.
โJoey,โ he acknowledged with a heavy sigh. โI hope you werenโt in that crowd I saw the Gards taking away. Youโre a good lad, and you know Iโm fond of ya, but those lads are bad news. Iโm not comfortable having someone who knocks around with that kind talking to myโโ
โHe wasnโt with them,โ I answered before Joey could. โHe was dropping Katie home,โ I quickly added, feeling the lie roll surprisingly easy off my tongue. โThey went to the cinema together, isnโt that right, Joey?โ
โUh, yeah.โ Joey nodded slowly, his green eyes wary and locked on mine. โThatโs right.โ
โYourself and young Katie?โ My dad frowned at Joey. โYou kept that one quiet.โ
Joey shrugged. โItโs ah, early days?โ
โAh, mighty stuff. Good lad yourself,โ Dad called back with a cheerful grin before turning around to go back into the house. โAoife, donโt be long outside now, ya hear? Only the bad types are out at this time of night.โ
โYeah, Dad, Iโll be two minutes,โ I called back and then sagged in relief when the door closed behind him.
โYou lied for me.โ Joeyโs tone was cold and full of unspoken accusation. โYou covered for me.โ
โYeah.โ My heart hammered against my chest bone, as if it was trying to beat its way out of my body and join forces with his. โI did.โ
โWhy?โ His green eyes were laced with a mixture of heat, annoyance, and reluctant curiosity. โWhat do you want from me?โ
โIโm not sure yet.โ My gaze locked on the recently healed cut on his bottom lip. โI guess youโll just have to owe me for now.โ
โFor now?โ Breathing hard, he stepped closer until there wasnโt an inch of space between our bodies. โI donโt like owing people.โ
โWell, thatโs too bad,โ I replied, snaking my tongue out to wet my lips. โBecause youโre not in control of this situation.โ
He tilted his head to one side and a ghost of a smile teased his full lips. โAnd you are?โ
โAnswers,โ I blurted out then, feeling the heat of his stare entirely too much to handle. โI want answers.โ
โIf itโs answers to homework, then youโre barking up the wrong tree,โ he drawled lazily. โIn case it skipped your attention, Molloy, Iโm far from a scholar.โ
โThatโs a lie.โ Nothing to do with Joey Lynch skipped my attention, which was how I knew that he was far more intelligent than he led the teachers at school to believe.
โYou think Iโm a scholar?โ
โI think youโre smarter than you let on.โ He might have a horrible attitude and rarely turned in his homework on time, if at all, but he had a sharp mind.
โHowโd you figure that one, Molloy?โ
โYour work in class is never wrong, itโs your homework thatโs lacking,โ I stated unabashedly. โYou never have a problem completing any assignment weโre given in any of our subjects. Maths, English, Science, Home Economics. None of it phases you. When youโre in class, that is.โ
What he seemed to be lacking wasnโt brains.
It was time.
โJesus,โ he muttered, rubbing his jaw. โStalker much?โ
โFuck-up, much?โ I shot back before adding, โAnd itโs called being perceptive. So no, I donโt want to copy your homework, I have my swot of a brother to copy that from, but I do know what I want.โ
โWhich is?โ
โI want to know why youโre so hellbent on insisting that you donโt like me when we both know you do. I want you to explain why Iโm the only girl in our year that you go out of your way toย notย flirt with. And while weโre at it, I want you to admit the real reason you blew cold on me in September?โ
โJesus Christ.โ Rubbing a hand over his bruised face, Joey muttered a string of curse words. โYouโre not back to this shit again.โ
I shrugged. โEither tell me why you donโt like me or admit that you do.โ
โI just donโt like you anymore, okay?โ
โAnymore suggests that you once did.โ
โJust stop, okay!โ Throwing his hands up, he took several steps backwards, putting space between us. โI thought I liked you, but I changed my mind. I have zero interest in you. None. And last time I checked, that wasnโt a crime. So let it go โ and stop watching me. Christ, youโre like my own personal little stalker.โ
โAnd youโre like my own personal little fuck up.โ I reclaimed the space he put between us. โSo, letโs have it, huh? The truth, this time. Whyโd you hit Paul if you donโt like me?โ I cocked a brow. โHe told me that you threatened to cut his fingers off and shove them up his own ass if you caught him talking about putting his hand in my knickers again.โ I dragged that particular confession out of Paul when he was groveling and begging my forgiveness. โWell, Joe?โ Blowing out a shaky breath, I added, โWhyโd you do that if you have zero interest in me? Why bother fighting my battles, defending my honor, if you donโt care?โ
โI did that for your dad,โ he replied, jaw ticking. โBecause heโs been good to me.โ
โAnd because he told you not to go there with me, right?โ
He shook his head but made no reply.
โIโm right, arenโt I?โ I pushed, unwilling to let it go. โThatโs why you donโt look at me at school. Why youโre so determined to pretend that I donโt exist. Well, Iโm not going to make it that easy for you.โ
Fury danced in his eyes as he stalked back to where I was standing. โListen carefully to me,โ he said in a deathly cold tone, as he walked me backwards until my back was flush against my garden wall again. โWhen I hit your prick of a boyfriend, I was defending your fatherโs honor, not yours.โ Eyes narrowing, he leaned so close that his nose brushed against mine. The move caused a jolt of electricity to rock through my body, predominantly the parts of my body south of my bellybutton. โI was thinking that your dadโs a good guy, who doesnโt deserve to find out that his daughter is soโโ
โFinish that sentence,โ I warned, beyond furious, as I reached up and fisted the front of his hoodie. โI dare you.โ
โEasy,โ he spat, glaring down at me. โYou want to know why I donโt like you, Molloy?โ Narrowing his eyes, he added, โItโs because youโre too fuckingย easy. I could have had you likeย thatย on the very first day.โ He snapped his fingers for emphasis. โDo you know how boring that is? Do you know how incredibly uninteresting that makes you?โ
Shoving him roughly away, my hand swept up of its own accord, slapping him hard across the side of the face. โScrew you, Joey.โ
His head twisted sideways from the contact and for a moment I held my breath, not daring to move an inch, as I waited for him to retaliate.
It didnโt come.
He never touched me.
Instead, he nodded sharply, more to himself than me, and whispered, โNow, you get it.โ Backing away slowly, he locked eyes on me and said, โThatโs why, Molloy.โ
โThatโs what?โ I called after him. โThatโs why you donโt like me?โ
โNo,โ he called over his shoulder, as he walked away from me. โThatโs why you shouldnโt want me to.โ
And then he was gone.