Kyle
I quietly pushed open the door.
I held my breath as my eyes scanned the bedroom for any sign of my Dad. There wasn't any movement in the house. Despite how eerie it might seem, I was used to the quiet during the day. It had just been my Dad and I since Mom died.
However, there was an occasional woman in the house because he would pick them up off the street for the night. I guess being a lawyer had its perks for the chicks. He had definitely slept with a lot of women in his lifetime and he was notorious for abandoning them.
When I was sure the coast was clear, I hurried over to the nightstand and pulled open the drawer. Just as I predicted, there was a stack of perfectly lined up dollars bills waiting for me. He always kept a backup stash for whatever reason, and he never noticed when I stole a little.
I grabbed a handful and left the room.
I really needed money because even if I sold all the drugs in my backpack, I still owed my drug dealer for my share of it. When I first started in the back alley at school, I had told myself I wouldn't get in over my head.
Nobody ever tells you how easily addicted you get.
Now, I was working for my dealer to help pay up. It really didn't help that I had to put all my funds from selling drugs towards paying off that alcohol possession fine before the end of the month had passed.
I had just folded the wad of bills in my pocket when I stopped dead in my tracks. I cringed internally as my shoes squeaked on the hardwood floor.
Just at the end of the hallway, my Dad sat in the armchair with a mug of coffee in his hand. He glanced up with a cold gaze when he heard me. "Are you going to school?" He asked.
I nervously gripped my backpack straps, "Yeah."
"Good, you fucking should," He grumbled, "Did you pay your fine for being a fucking idiot?" He had made it crystal clear that he wouldn't waste a single penny on me, ever since Mom died. I got used to it because he had so much money, he never noticed.
"Yeah."
He only nodded and his gaze wandered elsewhere. I took a tiny deep breath, at least I had avoided a blow-up. I really had no idea why he was still home but I would never ask.
After another second of silence, I took that as my cue to leave and beelined for the front door. I was very aware of the money in my pocket, and I knew I was most likely be dead if he found out.
But I didn't care.
I sat down on the curb of the street in front of my house and waited for Tommy to pick me up. I could have cared less about high school. The system was fucked up anyway. But Tommy was the only reason I wasn't dropping out. He insisted that I'd have a better future with a diploma.
I doubted it.
A few minutes later, I saw a familiar car turn onto my street. I stood up. Tommy braked to a stop in front of me and I circled the car to hop in the passenger seat. He instantly eyed my backpack as I set it down between my legs on the floor.
"You gotta fucking stop," He said abruptly, "I can't do this anymore."
I shot him a look as he drove. "Can't do what?" I was already feeling my high and it made me hyper-aware of his disapproving frown. He had no right to judge me, and he never had until now. What the fuck had changed?
Tommy dragged a hand down his face and then he aggressively pointed at my backpack, "That, Kyle, that right there. I can't keep pretending that I don't notice--"
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Noxious
Teen Fiction❝We are never going to be family.❞ • • • Three half-siblings, living in different situations, with enough hate to kill each other. By some joke of the universe, they find themselves in the same city. Meeting again under shitty circumstances, with a...