Wild Like Us - Krista Ritchie Page 0,70

at the dirt. Shoveling once more.

Only thing that keeps my mind right and snapped to is feeling the smoke run down the back of my throat. Alive.

Alive.

Alive.

Each word pumps into my head as I suck in the nicotine.

“I thought you quit.” Sulli’s voice sounds loud in the night. Ever since we began digging hours ago, we’ve been quiet.

“I did.” Plucking the cigarette from my lips, I keep it pinched between my fingers and skillfully dig the shovel into the dirt again.

Akara and Sulli share some sort of look.

I don’t stare too long to decode it.

While Akara fits on a baseball cap backwards, he tells me, “I don’t even know why you brought cigarettes on this trip.”

“For nights like this.” I heave the shovel back into the ground. Loose dirt comes up. “When bad shit goes down, the only thing that sounds like heaven-on-Earth is a good smoke.”

“You passed that point like five cigarettes ago,” Akara says with the wave of his hand to me. “Now you’re just chain-smoking.”

I flip him off, but I can’t really disagree. Once I start, it’s hard to find the will to stop. It’s buried too far beneath the dirt I shovel.

“I’m digging a fuckin’ grave, Akara. Let me have my moment.”

He makes a cross sound, verging on a laugh. “Sure. Tomorrow they’re going in the lake.”

Sulli flings dirt to the side. “I’ll fucking help.”

“Yeah, you would,” I say, wiping sweat off my brow. “Drawn to the water, aren’t you?”

Her smile flickers in and out. Like she craves to feel weightless, but the situation is just heavy weight, dragging us all down. She stops digging suddenly.

My jaw hardens in a deeper frown. “Sulli?”

“What’s wrong?” Akara asks.

“What if this whole trip was a bad idea,” she whispers, more to the empty hole at her feet than to us. “My dad might’ve been right. I’m named after his best friend who passed away at twenty-seven. He was your age, Akara—to think that this wouldn’t have been cursed from the start…”

“This trip is not cursed, Sul,” Akara says. “You and I might be surrounded by death, but Banks isn’t. Hey, he’s like our very tall good luck charm.”

Fuck.

I must wear my devastation on my face because Akara immediately says, “Banks.” Like my name is made of glass and he’s cradling the damn thing in his hands.

In the tense silence, I find the empty water bottle where I’ve been tossing cigarette butts. Careful not to start a forest fire while I’m at it. With their concerned eyes pressed on me, I take one more long drag and ditch the cigarette.

Ghost hands wrap tight around my throat. Harder to breathe, harder to think.

I’ve never had to tell this story out loud. It’d been a gift to go this long without unearthing that kind of pain. But it’s also agony keeping it buried in this moment.

Either way, I’m going to hurt.

“I had an older brother,” I mutter those words. I wonder if Thatcher explained this better to Jane. How perfectly did he unleash the past we share? I lift a shoulder. “He died when he was fifteen. Quarry accident. Drowned. I was twelve.”

Sulli takes in a breath. “Banks, I’m so fucking sorry.”

I shake my head. “It was a long time ago. I have mixed feelings about everything, so I like to leave it in the past.”

“That’s why you didn’t tell me?” Akara asks, hurt cinching his face. “Thatcher never said anything either…”

I bob my head. “We silently agreed to never speak about it.” I pause to meet his eyes. “I’m gonna be honest, Akara, I never planned on telling you or anyone, really.” I don’t add that I’d always hoped it’d come up between him and Thatcher, and I’d just let my twin brother explain it all.

“Why?” Akara frowns.

“Because that’s what we, Moretti boys, do.” I force the shovel back into the ground. “We bury the back-breaking, head-splitting shit and don’t ever speak about it.” I ache for another cigarette. “Maybe because we love each other so damn much that it’s hard enough feeling my pain—do I really want to feel Thatcher’s on top of it?”

It’d cut me open tenfold.

It already does.

I add, “And then after a while, it takes too much energy to speak about the painful thing. So we don’t share with anyone until it’s more painful than the thing we buried.”

Akara stands up. “Hey, you know I’m here, man? Whatever you want to share with me, I appreciate.” He steps closer. “And I can’t imagine keeping my dad’s death

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