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Jackson

We drove home slowly, Summer shifted in her seat, trying to get comfortable. The seat belt had rubbed against her tattoo and she’d winced once or twice. I thought of her request, she had wanted my name under the butterfly, and a surge of something I found hard to name went through me. It was a mixture of pride, of love, of longing for the body to really belong to me, and I was in awe of her strength. She’d endured over two hours of pain, I’d seen the tears but she’d soldiered on. Her butterfly was exceptionally detailed for a first tattoo; it was a big deal. Most people opted for something simple and in one colour; she’d let me mark her, permanently, with what I believed to be my besttattoo.

However, I was also troubled. I knew she’d seen the largest cut, whether she understood what she’d seen, I had no idea. She hadn’t said a word and I wondered if she would. But I’d seen the pain flash through her eyes, and I guessed I should have been grateful it wasn’tpity.

“Don’t sit in the sun for a bit, okay?” I said, as we walked into thehouse.

“I have no intention of burning my skin any more than it already is. I want to look at it again. Come withme?”

I followed her to her bedroom. She undid her shorts and peeled off the film I’d placed over the tattoo to protect it. I stood behind her as she studied herself in themirror.

“I can’t believe that didn’t hurt,” she saidquietly.

“What?”

“The bar through youreyebrow.”

“I guess I have a high pain threshold and I’d had it done therebefore.”

“Your pupils dilated, Jack. The pain pleased you,” she said, her voice had dropped to awhisper.

I didn’t answer immediately. “Didn’t we have a conversation about thisyesterday?”

“No, we didn’t have a conversation about painpleasingyou.”

I sighed. “Summer, people get their kicks all sorts ofways.”

“You get a kick out of pain? Receiving orinflicting?”

I didn’t answer. I clenched my jaw shut, but I could feel my anxiety levels rising and I was gettingagitated.

“I saw,Jack.”

“Iknow.”

“That wasn’t a scratch from abush.”

I didn’t answer her, not that it was aquestion.

“Why?”

She turned to look at me. Her hands slowly moved to the hem of my t-shirt. I could have stopped her but I didn’t. I wanted the shame to wash over me. She slowly lifted, and I watched as her eyes widened before tears pooled in them. Her hands shook as she held my t-shirt to my chest. I watched a solitary tear roll down her cheek and I closed myeyes.

It was the touch of her lips on my skin that had my eyelids fly open. She’d placed a gentle kiss on one of the cuts. I grabbed the hair at the back of her head and pulled her head away,roughly.

“Don’t. Don’t feel forme.”

I took a step away from her but she held on to my t-shirt. I grabbed her wrists and wrenched them away. I turned and walked away fromher.

“Jack, please don’t walk away. Talk to me,” shesaid.

I stopped by thedoor.

“You want a conversation, about that?” I pointed to mystomach.

“Yes. I want to understandwhy.”