ere was no warmth, no anger, just a cool, unreadable assessment. It was the look you'd give a stranger on the street.
to leave. Like I
ng silent and invisible, screamed at me to let him go. Do
as cold and hard and didn't care ab
ai
politeness of the room. My parents froze. The housek
e doorknob. He turned around
t soft under my shoes. I stopped a few feet in front of him, creating
ayes,"
sand. We were not Ethan and Sarah anymore. We were strangers. I saw a flicker of so
, tarnished silver locket. It was shaped like a heart. Simple.
to him on the
rs," I said. My voice
d my neck outside the campus library. His fingers were warm against my s
EO slipped. I saw the boy I used to know. The one who had given me this cheap, silly piece of jewelry a
His fingers brushed against my skin for a brief, cold second. The contact s
ound the locket, his
es dark and empty. He didn't say than
he door. The housekeeper closed
like the closing of a book. The end of a st