Thirst (5 page)

Read Thirst Online

Authors: Ilia Bera

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Women's Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Romance, #New Adult & College, #Paranormal, #Vampires, #Contemporary Fiction, #Short Stories, #Werewolves & Shifters

BOOK: Thirst
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CHAPTER FIFTY-FOUR

ALWAYS KEEP YOUR HEAD UP

 

Tarun walked over to the little waiting area, where the cute little blonde-haired woman was still sitting and waiting. He sat down and placed the forms on his lap. He read over them.

 

“You shouldn’t let him talk to you like that,” the pretty girl said.

 

“What?” Tarun asked.

 

“The way he talked to you—that was rude. He’s a racist slime ball.”

 

“Oh—I don’t think he was trying to be racist. He meant well.”

 

The girl smiled.

 

“How—How did you know what he was saying in there?” Tarun asked.

 

“I don’t know—the walls here are really thin, I suppose.”

 

“Oh. Weird.”

 

“One day, when you’ve discovered the next theory of relativity, you can rub it in his fat ignorant face.”

 

Tarun laughed. “Thank you,” he said genuinely. “But it’s just the time and the way that he was raised. It’s not his fault. One day this won’t be an issue.”

 

Tarun looked over at the silent girl. She was smiling at him, with her beautiful smile. “I just wish sometimes that the world was filled with more people like you. I admire your strength—I really do. You’re very humble and very courageous.”

 

Tarun blushed. “I’m afraid I’m not the best at taking a compliment.”

 

“And you’re modest,” the girl finished.

 

“Sometimes when life deals you certain cards, you have no choice but to keep your head up.”

 

“Well, make me proud and always keep your head up, okay?”

 

Tarun’s entire coy face was red with embarrassment. It was not every day that a beautiful woman showered him with compliments. The girl looked into his eyes as she smiled, admiring Tarun’s humble traits.

 

“Megan Gold?” Richard Friesen said, as he walked back out of his slimy den of ignorance.

 

“That’s me,” Megan said to Tarun. “It was nice meeting you.”

 

“Likewise,” Tarun said as he watched the beautiful blonde enter into the administration office.

 

“I’ll see you around, Tarun Mumbar!” Megan called out with a smile on her face.

 

Tarun smiled at the beauty. “Wow,” Tarun muttered to himself, still in shock that someone so beautiful could be so nice and respectable.

 

He finished filling out the course applications, writing “As soon as possible” into each of the start dates. Tarun was smart enough that he could balance all of the classes at once, if need be—He had, after all, finished them all with flying colors before.

 

 

He hurried home to help his father with his ambitious and illegal renovations. When Tarun returned to his house, Vish was drenched in water.

 

“Dad! What happened?” Tarun asked in his native Hindi tongue.

 

“The manual said to turn off the water and give it two hours to drain before changing the main stack. I saved two hours.”

 

“You’re going to kill yourself, you know that—right?”

 

“A wise man once said that you can live a lifetime in a minute. I just bought myself one-hundred and twenty lifetimes.”

 

“Did the same wise man say to rip piping out above your head that could be filled with boiling water?”

 

“Why would it be boiling? I’m not running heat to anything.”

 

“We have a tenant, dad! He could have been taking a shower or doing the dishes.”

 

“Oh, right.”

 

Tarun walked into his suite to grab a towel for his father.

 

“So are you official an SBU student?” Vish asked.

 

Tarun handed his father the towel. “Not exactly.”

 

“What do you mean?”

 

“They need me to finish a few courses first.”

 

“A few courses? But you’ve finished every course there is to finish.”

 

“It’s complicated.”

 

“So they said no?”

 

“Yeah—For now.”

 

Vish stared at his son for a moment. “So why do you look so happy?”

 

“Huh?”

 

“You’re grinning like Charlie Sheen in a whore house,” Vish said.

 

“Do you even know what you just said?” Tarun asked, laughing.

 

“Yes,” Vish said sternly. “I watch TMZ.”

 

“Since when?”

 

“In The West it’s important to stay up to date with the celebrities—Very important.”

 

“Right…”

 

“Do you know who Jennifer Aniston is currently dating?”

 

“No, dad. I don’t.”

 

“You need to know these things here, son.”

 

Tarun tried his best to hold back his laughter.

 

“Did you know that George Clooney is getting a divorce? That didn’t last long, did it?” Vish said in a shockingly serious tone.

 

Tarun burst into laughter.

 

“What?” Vish said, confused. “I’m just trying to embrace the culture.”

 

“You’re doing a great job, dad. Really—you are.”

 

“Come help me move the hot water heater,” Vish said, ignoring his laughing son.

 

 

CHAPTER FIFTY-FIVE

A BURNING REMINDER

 

Hanna’s eyes slowly opened up. As her waking vision unblurred, she realized that she was not in her own bed. Startled, she swiftly looked around the room. It was filled with hockey memorabilia, men’s clothes, and schoolbooks. The room was messy and disorganized.

 

Then, Hanna noticed the heavy arm that was resting on top of her small light body. Connor was asleep behind her, cuddling her with his warm body. Quickly, the memory of the previous night came rushing back to her, and she relaxed. She had thought everything had been a dream.

 

Careful not to wake Connor up, Hanna nudged her body back, snuggling deeper into Connor’s comfortable warmth. The sleeping hockey player adjusted his body, pulling Hanna in tightly to his body, like a child nuzzling a teddy bear. Hanna smiled and relaxed into Connor’s body.

 

A dark curtain, blocking most of the sunlight from entering the room covered the lone window. Only a sliver of light crept into the room from the gap between the curtain and the wall.

 

Hanna did not want the moment to end. Never in her life had she felt so safe, so comfortable, and so happy. For once, she did not care about all of the hardships of her past. She could not care less about the mean names people called her.

 

Connor suddenly yawned and stretched out his arms. He propped himself up onto his elbow and looked down at Hanna through his sleepy eyes.

 

“Hey,” he said, with a smile on his tired face.

 

Hanna smiled back. “Hi.”

 

“How’d you sleep?”

 

“Great.”

 

“Good—Me too.” Connor ran his fingers gently down the side of Hanna’s face, ensuring that she was real, and not some fever dream. “I’m happy,” he said.

 

“Why?”

 

“I just am—It’s hard to believe you’re here with me.”

 

Hanna smiled. “Why?”

 

“I’m just not used to getting the things I want.”

 

“I’m happy too,” Hanna said.

 

Connor smiled as he leaned in for a kiss. The couple’s lips gently pressed together as Connor’s hand slipped around the back of Hanna’s head. “You’re so beautiful,” he said.

 

Hanna blushed.

 

“Really—It’s hard to think that someone can be so beautiful.”

 

“Now you’re just being sarcastic.”

 

“No, I’m not. It’s what I really believe.”

 

They kissed again. Suddenly, Connor rolled his naked body over Hanna playfully. Hanna let out a little scream in surprise, which tapered off into playful laughter.

 

“Now that I have you, I’m not letting you go!” Connor said, hugging Hanna tightly with his arms.

 

Hanna squirmed, trying to free herself from the horseplay. “Let me go!” she said, laughing as she played along.

 

“Never!”

 

The naked couple wrestled for a moment. Then, Connor went in for another kiss—a much more passionate one than its predecessors. The kiss filled Hanna’s heart with warm joy. She slowly reached her hands around Connor’s body—her fingers sliding across his thick muscles.

 

Then, Connor pulled his head back. “What time is it?” he asked.

 

Hanna looked around the room for something with the time. Connor reached over onto his nightstand and checked his phone. “Shit—I should probably get going.”

 

“Do you have to?” Hanna asked.

 

“Unfortunately.”

 

Connor gave Hanna a little peck on the forehead as he rolled off the bed. Hanna admired his naked physique for the remaining moments before he got dressed.

 

“You should come with me. I’ve got about enough time to stop for a coffee on the way. I’ll buy you one.”

 

“Um,” Hanna said as she looked towards the window. The sun was up and at its highest point in the sky. “I think that I’ll just stay in bed for a few more hours, if that’s okay. I’m pretty tired.”

 

Connor walked over to the window. Without any warning, he grabbed the curtains and pulled them open, letting the room fill up with deadly sunlight.

 

Hanna screamed as the burning hot light singed her naked skin. She quickly rolled off the bed, away from the sunlight.

 

Her skin was red where it made contact with the sun. Even with as little as a single second of exposure, it burned as if she was sprayed with hot oil. Tears welled up in her eyes as she tried to fight back the pain.

 

“Hanna?” Connor yelled with concerned. “What’s wrong?”

 

He ran around the bed to the pained girl. Hanna quickly wiped away her tears and hid her burns with the bed’s blanket.

 

“Are you okay? What is it?” Connor asked.

 

“I—I thought I saw a mouse,” she lied.

 

Connor concern quickly dissipated as he began to laugh. “That’s the sound you make when you see a mouse? I thought you’d been shot by a sniper or something!”

 

Hanna forced a laugh through her excruciating pain.

 

Connor held out his hand. “Let me help you up.”

 

The curtains were still open, and the room was as bright as the brightest day. Hanna was hidden in the only shadow in the room.

 

“Come on,” Connor said.

 

“I—I think I just need a minute,” Hanna said.

 

“You really don’t like mice,” Connor said.

 

“I’m sorry—I hope you don’t think I’m insane.”

 

“Of course not. Everyone has their quirks.”

 

Hanna smiled. The pain was finally starting to subside.

 

“I should probably get going. I’ll see you at school okay?”

 

“Okay,” Hanna said.

 

“I’m going to lock the front door. When you take off, just use the backdoor.”

 

Hanna smiled as Connor took off for work, leaving the curtain wide open. Hanna was trapped. There was no way that she could make it to the door on the other side of the room without serious burns, and going to the window to close the blinds was also out of the question. The house was loaded with uncovered windows, so even if she did make it past the bedroom, there was nowhere she could go.

 

Instead, she would have to wait three or four hours for the sun to set.

 

Tears began to swell up in Hanna’s eyes again, but not because of any pain. This time, she was crying because reality was setting in—she was going to have to tell Connor her secret. Either that, or break it off with him. The thought of both options stung deep.

 

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