Black Thorns: A Dark New Adult Romance (Thorns Duet Book 2) -
Black Thorns: Prologue
AGE SIX
The weak are meat. The strong eat.
Mom bought a painting with that proverb inked in bold Kanji characters.
I don’t think she really understands what those words mean. She probably thought it was pretty and fit our house’s decor and decided to buy it.
Mommy is that way. She likes things super-fast, then hates them just as fast. And she’s not very good at Japanese, but Daddy doesn’t like me to say that in front of her.
He’s a superhero, my daddy, and superheroes don’t like to make other people feel bad.
But like all superheroes, he’s busy all the time. Mommy and Daddy work hard so I can eat and study with my friends.
Although I don’t really have friends. They call me ‘Blondie’ in a weird English accent because I have light hair and green eyes like a ‘freak.’
I asked Daddy why I don’t have Asian eyes and black hair like everyone else, and he told me it’s because I’m American, not Japanese. But I was born in Tokyo and that still doesn’t make me Asian?
That’s stupid. I should look like them so no one will make fun of me.
Or ignore me.
Mommy says that when they have money, they’ll transfer me to an international school where there are foreigners like me. But I just want to have fun with everyone in my class.
They look at me funny when Mommy arrives to pick me up in the middle of the day.
I usually go home last. Today, I’m leaving early.
My pretty teacher, Satomi Sensei, takes my small hand in hers. She has short hair and a soft smile like the angels from my bedtime stories.
Sensei guides me to the door and everyone murmurs about the ‘Blondie’ who’s ditching.
I’m not ditching.
“Everyone stay quiet, now.” Sensei stares over her shoulder at them and speaks in Japanese. “Sebastian-kun is meeting his mother. Okay?”
“Okay!” they echo.
“Don’t worry about them.” She smiles at me.
“Okay,” I murmur in Japanese and stare at my feet.
Because I speak both English and Japanese, sometimes it takes longer to figure out what I should be saying, so I just stay silent.
Sensei guides me through the door of the classroom, where my mom is pacing the hallway.
“Is everything all right, Mrs. Weaver?” Sensei asks her.
Mommy stops pacing and smiles. “Everything is great. We just miss Sebastian so much and want to have lunch together.”
Her golden blonde hair falls down her back and always gets everyone’s attention whenever we’re in public. That and her name, Julia.
She pulls me from Sensei’s side and wraps her clammy hand around mine.
I don’t get to wave as we hurry down the corridor. Her heels make so much noise in the empty hallway of the school. She bows in greeting at the principal and one of the teachers and I do so as well.
As soon as we’re out of view, her smile drops and her lower lip trembles. She looks like the characters in anime before they cry. Like Gon from Hunter X Hunter when he couldn’t replace his father.
“I still have class, Mommy,” I say in English.
She doesn’t like me to talk in Japanese at home, even though Daddy is fine with it.
“Not today, sweetie.” She ruffles my hair, but it’s stiff and hurts.
“But Sensei doesn’t like us to be absent.”
“She’ll forgive you this time.” She ushers me to the back seat of our car.
My eyes light up when I see who’s in the driver’s seat. “Daddy!”
“Hey, champ.” He turns around and grins at me.
My daddy, Nicholas Weaver, is my best friend. When I told him that I don’t have friends at school, he said he’d be my temporary best buddy until I replace others. But he’ll always hold the number one spot.
He reaches a fist in my direction and I throw my yellow bag to the side so I can bump it, giggling as Mom fusses with my seatbelt.
It’s then I notice that there’s something beside me.
A painting.
The painting with the bold Kanji letters on it that should be in our living room.
I tilt my head to the side and read it again, out loud, in Japanese, “The…weak…a-are…meat. The s-strong…eat.”
“Good boy!” Daddy exclaims from the front seat. “Your Kanji is getting better, Bastian.”
“I’m second in my class!”
“That’s my boy.” He grins, but it’s strained, just like how Mommy patted my head earlier.
After making sure I’m strapped securely in my seat, she gets in the front and Daddy drives away from my school.
“Why is the painting here?” I frown.
“It’s a family legacy, Bastian.” Mom watches the side-view mirror, seeming distracted. “It needed to come with us.”
“But it shouldn’t be in the car.”
“It’ll be where we want it. Okay, sweetie?”
“Okay. Where are we going?”
“Somewhere new.” Dad smiles at me through the rearview mirror.
“But I don’t want somewhere new. I want to be with Sensei.”
“Stop being a brat, Sebastian!” Mom snaps in an impatient tone.
“I’m not a brat.” I pout.
“No, you’re not.” Daddy gives her a look, then grins at me. “You’re our good boy.”
“But Mommy called me a brat.”
“She doesn’t mean it. Right, Julia?”
Mom sighs, then turns around and gives me an open juice box. “You’re not, sweetie. I’m sorry.”
“That’s okay, Mommy.” I snatch the bottle of juice and slurp while swinging my legs, bumping against Mommy’s seat.
“You’ll have friends in the place we’ll go to, champ.”
I nearly choke on my juice as my eyes bug out. When I speak, I draw the word out, “Really?”
“Really. We’ll all start anew. What do you think?”
“Okay!” I bounce in my seat, rocking back and forth.
Mom puts on anime soundtracks and I sing along with them while I drink from my juice.
Sometimes, Daddy sings with me and I giggle because his Japanese is so funny. Mom’s, too. I think it’s because they’re from America and learned Japanese when they were older, unlike me.
I don’t know America. Daddy said I don’t need to, because we’re never going there.
We drive for a long time, passing many people and tall buildings that look like ghosts. After a while, I’m tired of singing.
I think I fall asleep, because when I wake up, Daddy and Mommy are talking quietly, like they usually do when they don’t want me to know ‘adult’ stuff.
But I’m not so little anymore. I’m a big boy and I wanna know grownup stuff, too.
So I peek through my half-closed eyes and pretend I’m still asleep.
Mom is turned in her seat and faces Daddy while he focuses on the road. Beads of sweat cover her forehead and the hairline of her bright-like-the-sun locks. If she gets sweat on her hair, she’ll probably tell us she’s having a ‘bad hair day’ later.
Her shaky fingers run through her strands over and over again. “Maybe you should call your father, Nick.”
Daddy tightens his hold on the steering wheel. “I’m dead to my parents. I can’t just call them.”
“But this is a life or death situation. Surely, they’ll help their firstborn.”
“You were there when they said they’d only attend my funeral. I wouldn’t be surprised if they had a hand in quickening the process.”
“They wouldn’t do that! You’re their son.”
“A son who not only refused to inherit his father’s political legacy but also married a commoner who doesn’t fit the Weaver image. Believe me, I’m no longer their son.”
Tears shine in Mom’s eyes. “So it’s my fault?”
“No.” Daddy takes her hand and places a kiss on the back of it while still focusing on the road. “I would choose you over all the socialites Mom arranged for me to date a hundred times over if I had to. What we have is real and I’m lucky to have you.”
She sniffles. “I’m lucky to have you, too, Nick. I don’t know how I would’ve gotten through this mess without you.”
“We’ll be okay.”
“No one steals from them and gets away with it,” she whimpers. “They’ll hunt us down and hurt Sebastian… What if they take away our baby and…and…”
“Hey…we’re here. No one will hurt him or us.”
“But what if they do? I wish I’d never done it.”
“It’s useless to think about things that can’t be changed, hon.”
“I…I don’t know what the hell was wrong with me when I decided to take it… I just…just wanted to help pay off our debt. We were working so hard to make ends meet and…Sebastian needs to be in an international school, and…I stupidly thought one item in the midst of twenty others wouldn’t be discovered.”
Daddy grabs her hand tighter. “We’ll be fine. We have each other and our boy. That’s all that matters, right?”
“Right.” She smiles a little through her tears and I want to smile, too. I love when Mommy is happy after she cries. It means she’ll be better and spoil me and Daddy.
She leans over and kisses Daddy on the mouth. “I love you, Nick.”
“Love you, too, Julia.”
I’m about to open my eyes and say I love them, too, even if I didn’t understand most of what they said.
It’s okay if I don’t have my beautiful teacher anymore. I can just get another one. All that matters is that I’ll be with my parents and I’ll also have friends.
But before I can say anything, a loud sound of screeching tires pierces through my ears, and the last thing I see is a large truck.
Crash!
There’s impact, there’s Mom’s scream and Dad’s curse, and then there’s…nothing.
For a while at least. I’m thinking there’s nothing.
But then our surroundings burst into my ears all at once and it hurts. There’s a long buzz that I can’t get rid of.
A mixture of sounds erupt all around me. Sirens. Shrieks. Strangers talking.
Whimpers. I think they’re mine.
Mommy…?
Daddy…?
Where are you?
I want to search for them or at least hear their voices, but they’re not among all the strangers talking. They’re just not there.
Why can’t I replace them?
And why is everything black?
That’s when I realize my eyes are closed, and when I attempt to open them, I can’t. Even my body doesn’t move.
All I can hear are voices, noises coming at me from all directions, and none of them are my parents.
I’m scared.
Mommy, Daddy. I’m scared.
I strain and my eyes flutter open a little, just a little. Someone is asking me in Japanese if I can hear them and someone else’s shadow falls over me.
Another shadow reaches out a black hand and takes the painting from beside me. I want to scream no, that it’s ours. It’s my mommy’s.
But I can’t speak. I can’t move.
The last thing I see before the world goes black stays with me forever.
The weak are meat. The strong eat.
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