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Chapter no 7

Twelve (The Naturals, #4.5)

Thereโ€™s not a single person at this too-formal dinner table that Celine would like to draw. To be fair, sheโ€™s already drawn Michael a dozen or more times.

She knows his face almost as well as her own.

โ€œThe boys will be lining up for this one soon.โ€ Mr. Pritchettโ€”the guest of honorโ€”nods at Celine and smiles knowingly at her parents. โ€œIf they arenโ€™t already.โ€

Why do grown men say such stupid things?ย Celine manages not to say that out loud. Her parents should truly appreciate her discretion. Theyโ€™re the ones who insisted that this grown-ass manโ€”the one acting likeย prettyย is the ultimate honorific an adolescent girl could receiveโ€”is important.

A valuable business connection.ย It is all Celine can do to keep from rolling her eyes. In a show of great restraint, she instead pictures the muscles and bones buried beneath Mr. Pritchettโ€™s healthy jowls.

โ€œCeline isnโ€™t interested in boys yet.โ€ Her mother, college professor that she is, has just enough feminist bones in her body to add, โ€œSheโ€™s really more invested in her studies.โ€

Studiesย come easily to Celine. Itโ€™s the seventh grade, not rocket science. โ€œAnd her art,โ€ Michael interjects. The comment, in addition to being

true, yields an immediate result: his fatherโ€™s attention. The shift in Thatcher Townsendโ€™s position is noticeable, even to Celine. Sheโ€™s done a good job of not looking at Michaelโ€™s father this evening.

At the elder Townsendโ€™s face.

Itโ€™s amazing, really, that no one else sees it. Not Michael, not Thatcher, not Celineโ€™s hapless father, who has no idea that she doesnโ€™t carry his DNA at all. Itโ€™s all there in the bone structure that she and her fatherโ€™s long-time business partner share.

Itโ€™s all in the face.

โ€œYou might not be interested in boys now, Celine,โ€ Michaelโ€™s father says, playing to Mr. Pritchettโ€™s ego by shooting him a conspiratorial look, โ€œbut you will be someday.โ€

You want to bet?ย Celine, again, restrains herself. Michael doesnโ€™t. โ€œLeave her alone.โ€

Celineโ€™s stomach flips. Those words will cost Michael. Thatcher Townsend is charming. Thatcher Townsend is generous, a renowned philanthropist, an excellent businessman.

Thatcher Townsend is a monster.

Most of the time, Michael tries to hide the bruises, but he canโ€™t hide the way his nose isnโ€™t quite straight anymore. Not from Celine. Faces donโ€™t lie. And if Michaelโ€™s father has broken one bone, who says he wonโ€™t break another?

No.ย Celine wonโ€™t let that happen.ย Not tonight.ย She speaks up before Thatcher can turn his gaze intently toward his son. โ€œWhy?โ€

If she can distract Thatcher, then maybe heโ€™ll forget what Michael said. Maybe Michael wonโ€™t have to stay home โ€œsickโ€ tomorrow. Maybe Celine wonโ€™t see the echoes of it in his cheek or nasal or jaw bones, long after the bruises have healed.

โ€œWhy, what, sweetheart?โ€ Thatcher asks indulgently. His gaze is on Celineโ€™s, but he hasnโ€™t forgotten the way Michael spoke to him.

Iโ€™ll just have toย makeย you forget.ย This isnโ€™t how Celine planned on making this particular announcement. But this isย herย truth, andย herย decision.ย Screw her parentsโ€”and screw Thatcher Townsend.

Celine smiles sweetly. โ€œWhy would I be interested in boys,โ€ she asks the table innocently, โ€œwhen there are girls?โ€

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