Chapter 145: Scared Roomie
Clark POV:
I lay on that unfamiliar mattress, staring up at the dark ceiling, listening to the slow, rhythmic hum of the
building. Somewhere down the hall, a door creaked, then slammed. Someone laughed—too loud, too long. The
wind outside scraped faintly against the windows, like fingers tracing the glass.
Still no reply from Sara. My last message just hung there, delivered, unread.
| tried not to spiral, tried to tell myself she was just busy. She was probably knee-deep in open suitcases, already
gossiping with her roommates about who's hot, who's weird, and which prof has the ugliest shoes. That's what
girls did, right?
Maybe it was the shaken figure curled up on the other bed, wrapped tight in the covers like the walls might cave
in. 1 didn’t even know his name. I'd literally just arrived at the dorms, and now this?
| should've left. Maybe wandered around. Found a vending machine. But one look at him—his shoulders
twitching with every random sound, his soft gasps like he was holding in a scream—and | knew | couldn't. No
way | was leaving this guy alone.
Sometimes when fear claws through you, you just want someone. Anyone. Even a stranger.
So, yeah, | stayed.
The dorm lights buzzed faintly as night crept in. The shadows outside our window grew deeper, longer. A strange
hush settled over the building. | couldn’t hear much beyond the faint wind whistling outside. No chatting from
neighboring rooms, no footsteps. It was like the building exhaled and then forgot how to breathe again.
I lay down, hoping sleep would dragunder. It didn't.
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| tossed, turned, my mind buzzing.
Everything kept pointing back to one thing: bullies. It had to be. The guy in bed looked like someone who had
been cornered, shaken down, probably roughed up for looking the way he did—delicate, pretty, fragile even.
Maybe they thought he was an easy target.
I hated bullies.
God, | hated them.
Not just because of smoral high ground, but because | knew what it was like. | knew that feeling—the cold
dread in your stomach, the shof being seen as weak, the hopelessness when no one does anything.
| turned on my side, staring at the ceiling, and suddenly | was six years old again.
Grade two.
Clare had called in sick—faked it, actually. She just wanted to laze around and sneak extra cake from Mom. I'd
gone to school anyway, being the good twin, thinking I could take notes and help her catch up.
That day, the math teacher cin like a storm. Banging the door, face red, fury dancing in her eyes. She didn’t
even open her books—just started firing off addition questions like bullets. Anyone who got one wrong got
pinched. Hard.
It beca gof survival. Kids flinching, tears forming. She didn’t spare anyone. Except me.
| knew my additions. | answered fast. No pinches for me.
Billy, though—he didn’t answer a single one right. The teacher had it out for him. He flinched every tshe
walked by, already red from her cruel little pinches. And when the class ended, he looked atlike | was the
reason he suffered.
Later, during recess, he corneredbehind the classrooms.
"You think you're better than me?" he sneered.
| said nothing. Just tried to walk past.
He grabbed me. Pinched me. Over and over. Red marks bloomed across my arms. His fat fingers digging in. |
could still hear him laughing. His breath smelled like stale cereal. | didn’t cry—not in front of him—but inside, |
was dying.
He toldif | ever told anyone, he'd knock out my front teeth. Said people would laugh every t| smiled.
Said I'd be a freak.
So | kept quiet.
| didn’t tell Mom. | didn’t tell Dad. But Clare? Clare knew something was up. She always did.
She caughtalone in our room that night and corneredwith her signature scowl. | gave in. Told her
everything—on one condition. That she wouldn't tell.
She promised.
But the next day, she woke up eager for school, which never happened. She hated it more than math itself. Even
Mom raised an eyebrow but let her go.
That afternoon, Billy ctocrying.
Big, tough Billy. Red-faced and sniffling.
When the teacher asked what happened to him, Clare sang sweetly, "He fell."
Billy nodded. Hard.
She bit Billy.
Not metaphorically—literally. Bit him. In his face.
She told me, deadpan, "I bit the math out of him."
And apparently, she did sother things too. Stuff | was too "pure-minded" to understand, she claimed. She
never toldthe full story, but | knew Billy never looked atagain. He wouldn't even walk on the sside
of the hallway.
Clare never needed to raise her voice to be scary. She just was.
| wished | had even half her guts.
That was Clare.
She was my shield.
But here? Now?
I was alone.
And | had a roommate who looked like he'd stared into the gates of hell—and they had stared back.
I wished | was brave like Clare. | wished I could bite and scratch and scare the monsters off. But | wasn't her. |
was just Clark—the quiet twin, the observer, the hacker who hid behind screens and silence.
And those seniors I'd seen? The ones with the glowing eyes and that weird, otherworldly aura?
They didn’t feel like bullies.
They felt like something else entirely.
Like predators.