Page 40 of Menace


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He grins, one of those smiles that splits his face, showing off the experience there. Some would call them crow’s feet and the laugh lines, but I love them. As much as I’m coming to love this man sitting beside me.

“So we’ll hold kids off for a few weeks. No impregnating this weekend.”

Truth be told, it sounds fun. Not having to worry about protection with him, being able to be as spontaneous as we want to be. Dear God, don’t let me mess this up. If I’m not careful, I’ll be completely and hopelessly in love with this man, and there won’t be any going back from it.

CHAPTER 19

KARINA

April

Today has been the longest day of the semester, I’m totally sure of that, and it’s probably because Spring Break is right around the corner. It’s sorely needed all the way around. From me to the kids, to the other teachers – I think we’re all burnt out. One more week and I get to spend all Mason’s free time with him. To say I’m giddy is an understatement. Lately things have kept us apart, and I need all the time with him I can get.

One more week– that’s the mantra I keep repeating. I know it’s bad. I love my job, really I do, but every once in a while the stress gets to me.

As I exit the school and head toward the teacher’s lot, I notice someone lying against the concrete sign in the quad that sits in front of the school. From where I am, I can only see shoes, but immediately I’m on edge.

Hurrying along, pulling the strap of my purse up around my shoulder as I get to a position I can see. It’s one of Caleb’s teammates, Maddox, better known as Dox. He’s one of the bigger guys who plays on the defensive line. Gazing down at him, I see he’s completely out of it. His head tilts to the side, mouth open, and it almost looks like he’s sleeping.

Leaning down, I shake his shoulder. “Dox?”

He makes a noise, letting me know that he’s at least alive.

“Maddox!” I shake his shoulder harder, and for the first time notice a smell coming off of him that I shouldn’t be noticing at school. Reaching down, I put my fingers to the pulse point on his neck. It’s faint but there. Taking my phone out, I quickly dial 911.

“Yes, this is Karina Holland. I’m a teacher at Laurel Springs High School, and I’ve got a student passed out in front. He smells heavily of moonshine, and I can barely get him to come around.”

The woman on the other end of the line talks like she believes everything is going to be okay, and I want to feel that in my bones, but right now I don’t. All I can think about is keeping the students from seeing this. After what happened at the barn party and how it affected the school, the last thing I want to do is bring back bad memories or to have blood on my hands. I know I’m speaking, can feel my lips moving, can hear a hushed voice in the background that I know is mine, but I have zero idea of what I’m saying. My hands shake as I continue to make inconsequential noises. In the distance I can hear the wail of an ambulance.

We hang up as the paramedics hop down from the back of the ambulance, stretcher between them. One of them I recognize as Blaze. “What happened?” she questions as I go over what little bit I know. If someone asked me to tell them what exactly I said to her, I don’t think I’d be able to repeat it.

“Is he going to be okay?” I finally find my voice; finally ask the real question of the day.

“His pulse is weak.” She looks up to me, and I notice the fear in her eyes. “Did he have anything on him, anything nearby that we can attribute this to?”

I shake my head, my hair blowing against my lips in the breeze. “Absolutely nothing. I was walking to my car when I saw his feet, and I thought it was odd to see feet there. Like they were. Honestly I was thinking about Spring Break.” My voice cracks. What if he doesn’t get to enjoy the Spring Break of his senior year? What if he’s ruined that for himself?

As fast as I can, I move back, allowing them room to work. An IV is put in his arm as a Laurel Springs police car comes to a screeching halt behind the ambulance. Mason gets out, all business. I’ve never seen him in uniform like this before, never seen him take command of a scene or investigation. He’s quiet, authoritative, and assured as he starts asking questions and setting up a perimeter. Watching him make his way to me, my hands get sweaty, and I have to remind myself that this is the man I sleep with every night, except for when he works late shifts.

“You okay?” he asks quietly as he steps up to me, directing me out of the line of what’s happening with Dox. He moves me over to the double doors that lead into the school.

“I thought he was dead.” My voice is flat, tears in my eyes. “He looked dead.”

“They don’t think he got a bad batch of moonshine.” He gives me a little piece of the information he’s discovered. “They think he’s drank too much. They’ll flush him out and pump his stomach full of charcoal.”

“How would he be doing it here at school?” My voice is a hushed whisper.

“He’s a football player. Is he dragging around a gallon container of water with him to stay hydrated?” Mason asks.

This semester I don’t have Maddox in class, but I put myself back to last semester when I had him, and I distinctly remember a large Yeti he carried, always drinking from it to keep from having muscle cramps because of dehydration. “He always had a silver Yeti he carried everywhere.”

“Wonder where it is now.” Mason jogs back over to where Maddox laid before they got him on the stretcher.

I watch, not allowing myself to breathe a sigh of relief until they have him in the back of the ambulance and they’re on their way to the hospital. Only then do I let my eyes travel to where Mason is bent over, rifling through a book bag. “This it?” he holds up a silver Yeti, just like the one I remember Maddox drinking out of.

“That’s it.” I nod the affirmation.

He opens it, sniffing, before holding it back from his nose. “Good God, I can’t stand the smell of that stuff, I will never get the fascination with it.”

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