She patted Thomas's pockets, searching for his phone. Empty.
Ariana clenched her fists, feeling blood that had caked on her palms crease under her grip. What had she done
to deserve this? Nothing that Daniel hadn't already done. Disgust welled up inside of her as she thought about
his lies. His promises.
But Thomas was different. To him, she wasn't some girl whose mom was crazy and whose dad had to flee to
another continent just to get away from it all. She was separate from her messed-up family. She was Ariana.
And she mattered to Thomas. And for the first time in her life, that feeling mattered more than anything else.
More than Billings. Maybe even more than her mother.
Drinking in the look of innocence that had settled over his features as he slept, her breath quickened. Anger
poured through her, and she felt the sudden urge to scream. To hit the cement wall over and over until her
knuckles bled. To make herself hurt on the outside as much
171
as she hurt on the inside. It wasn't fair. It wasn't supposed to happen like this. To feel what she felt with
Thomas only to have someone want to take it from her.
Her fingers and toes prickled with feeling as her body began to warm. She blinked, and the tears began to fall
freely. Slid down her dry cheeks as she leaned against the hard cement wall, her body shaking. Cradling
Thomas's still body in her arms.
Every creak of the old building, every sound that slipped through the vents and into the basement, made her
cringe. Tears dripping into her lap, she closed her eyes against the darkness, but she couldn't stop the familiar
feeling from creeping over her.
Ariana was totally and completely alone.
172
DUPLICITY
***Ariana felt the light on her face before she opened her eyes. A flashlight beam swung recklessly across the
basement, illuminating the tall stacks of musty boxes and the old gardening-slash-beer-pong table piled high
with tools and dusty bags of fertilizer. Her heart in her throat, she sipped shaky breaths of warm, stale air as
footsteps creaked above her, moving down the stairs in cautious rhythm. Someone was coming.
She had to move Thomas in a matter of seconds. His legs were sprawled at an unnatural angle, peeking out
from beneath the stairs. Carefully, she cradled his head in her hands, lowering it to the cement floor. She
slipped her forearms underneath his calves, straining silently against him. His deadweight was too heavy. He