Our Pretty Darling Psycho - Page 29

Page 29

Words : 633 Author : Madison Kingsley

Chapter 29 of "Our Pretty Darling Psycho" opens presenting key developments: Not the buzz. Not the thunk.Nothing—until a voice cuts through the dark velvet of the... Read on!

Not the buzz. Not the thunk.

Nothing—until a voice cuts through the dark velvet of the song and lands in the room like a dropped key.

“She’s clearly breaking the pole in. Climbing it would be impossible from a standing mount; I already checked the cameras.”

That voice.

I’d know it now in a crowd, in a coma, at the bottom of a well.

Low, unhurried, and certain of its welcome.

I pout before I even open my eyes, because the intrusion means the freedom is over, and because some childish corner of me wants him to know I’m put out.

When I do crack my lids, the world is upside down and turning, and it takes a beat to assemble the facts: I’m at the very top of the pole, ankles crossed and locked around the steel, body hanging inverted, arms dangling toward a floor that is presently above my head. I’ve been spinning a great deal longer than I realized.

The room swims when I try to hold it still.

I peer down—or up, the geometry’s a negotiation right now—through the curtain of my own hanging hair, and I take inventory of my audience.

Doc.

Three guards arranged in their nervous little crescent.

And—I tilt my head, still rotating in slow lazy circles—some random woman.

I keep spinning, and I let my gaze snag on her each time she swings back into view, and I notice, with a flicker of something I refuse to name out loud, a small ungovernable pinch low in my chest.

Jealousy.

Sourceless, baseless, sprung from absolutely nowhere, and pointed—if I’m honest, which I try not to be—somewhere in the vicinity of the woman standing too close to the man who gave me my gift.

I file it under things to interrogate later, in a quieter hour, when I can take it out and examine it without an audience. Obviously not now.

My eyes find Doc again, on and off, snatches of him stitched together between rotations—arms crossed, glasses catching the light, that enormous stillness of his anchoring the whole nervous room.

And he doesn’t rush me.

That’s the thing that knocks me sideways, gentler and harder than any drop ever could. He doesn’t bark at me to come down, doesn’t order me clocked out of my euphoria and folded back into compliance the way every other set of eyes in this building would. He simply waits. Watches. Lets me have the last of it. And it’s so unpredictable of him, so contrary to every instinct this place runs on, that I almost miss the rest of what’s written on him.

He’s admiring me.

Not leering. Not assessing.

Admiring—the way a man admires a thing he finds beautiful and dangerous in equal measure and has decided he wants to keep looking at for a good long while—and that does something perilous to the shattered, taped-together ruin I keep where a heart is supposed to live.

I feel a piece of it shift. A fragment I’d long ago swept into a corner lift, turn, and settle back almost into place, and I want to scream at it to stay broken, because broken things can’t be used as a leash.

So I do what I always do with a feeling I can’t afford.

I throw my body at gravity to outrun it.

I let myself drop—a clean unspooling plummet down the length of the steel—and the three guards flinch as one, a synchronized little jerk of useless hands toward weapons that couldn’t catch a falling woman if they tried.

Doc doesn’t flinch.

Doc stays carved from stone.

Except…

📖 Contents

1 Page 1 2 Page 2 3 Page 3 4 Page 4 5 Page 5 6 Page 6 7 Page 7 8 Page 8 9 Page 9 10 Page 10 11 Page 11 12 Page 12 13 Page 13 14 Page 14 15 Page 15 16 Page 16 17 Page 17 18 Page 18 19 Page 19 20 Page 20 21 Page 21 22 Page 22 23 Page 23 24 Page 24 25 Page 25 26 Page 26 27 Page 27 28 Page 28 29 Page 29 30 Page 30 31 Page 31 32 Page 32 33 Page 33 34 Page 34 35 Page 35 36 Page 36 37 Page 37 38 Page 38 39 Page 39 40 Page 40 41 Page 41 42 Page 42 43 Page 43 44 Page 44 45 Page 45 46 Page 46 47 Page 47 48 Page 48 49 Page 49 50 Page 50 51 Page 51 52 Page 52 53 Page 53 54 Page 54 55 Page 55 56 Page 56 57 Page 57 58 Page 58 59 Page 59 60 Page 60 61 Page 61 62 Page 62 63 Page 63 64 Page 64 65 Page 65 66 Page 66 67 Page 67 68 Page 68 69 Page 69 70 Page 70 71 Page 71 72 Page 72 73 Page 73 74 Page 74 75 Page 75 76 Page 76 77 Page 77 78 Page 78 79 Page 79 80 Page 80 81 Page 81 82 Page 82 83 Page 83 84 Page 84 85 Page 85 86 Page 86 87 Page 87 88 Page 88 89 Page 89 90 Page 90 91 Page 91 92 Page 92 93 Page 93 94 Page 94 95 Page 95 96 Page 96 97 Page 97 98 Page 98 99 Page 99 100 Page 100 101 Page 101 102 Page 102 103 Page 103 104 Page 104 105 Page 105 106 Page 106 107 Page 107 108 Page 108 109 Page 109 110 Page 110 111 Page 111 112 Page 112 113 Page 113 114 Page 114 115 Page 115 116 Page 116 117 Page 117 118 Page 118 119 Page 119 120 Page 120 121 Page 121 122 Page 122 123 Page 123 124 Page 124 125 Page 125 126 Page 126 127 Page 127 128 Page 128 129 Page 129 130 Page 130 131 Page 131 132 Page 132 133 Page 133 134 Page 134 135 Page 135 136 Page 136 137 Page 137 138 Page 138 139 Page 139 140 Page 140 141 Page 141 142 Page 142 143 Page 143 144 Page 144 145 Page 145 146 Page 146 147 Page 147 148 Page 148 149 Page 149 150 Page 150 151 Page 151 152 Page 152 153 Page 153

⚙️ Reading Settings