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The heavy, solid wood splintered into a thousand pieces as I channeled my full strength into my grip.

With a howl of pure pain, I flung the chair across the room, turning it into kindling. Another chair followed. And a third. Then the table, all the while letting go of the pain of everything that had happened, from throwing out Maddie to Noa dying and all that occurred in between.

I don’t know how long it went on. Minutes? Hours? An eternity passed. When it was gone, I was still there. In my quarters.

Alone.

The silence was a ringing endorsement of that. A reminder that the laughter and warmth that had once more begun to fill the rooms was gone. Snuffed out like a candle.

Grabbing at the collar of my shirt, I ripped it free, the material easily parting as I tossed it aside. Looking down, I stared at the green scale embedded into my skin, covering much of my breastbone. It was warm and hard but also supple and pliable, unlike any other material I’d ever experienced.

“What have I done?” I asked, voice ragged, as I moved to stare at myself in the mirror.

To watch the scale rise and fall with every breath I took.

“You were the one for me,” I said to the empty room. “But now you’re gone, and Maddie … she’s great. She really is.”

But she’s not you.

I couldn’t say the words out loud. They hurt too much.

The truth could often be that way.

“What do I do now?” I asked the mirror and scale. “Everything is so confusing. There are no answers. Only more questions. About your death. About Maddie. Me. I can’t figure it out. I can’t …”

Moving to the floor, I sat, my knees pulled to my chest, resting my head on my arms as I tried to think. To understand and problem solve. That’s what I was supposed to do, wasn’t it? Solve problems. That was the man’s job. It was expected of me.

“So far, all you’ve done is create more. Good job.”

I laughed to the empty air. Apparently, even I was frustrated with myself.

“What do I do, Noa?” I whispered. “How can I ever truly be over you? You’re right here, a part of me,literally. We had our whole lives ahead of us. Now, I’m just supposed to … forget you?”

I sighed, shaking my head. “Then there’s Maddie. She’s great. Amazing. She really is. I like her, Noa, I really do. But I screwed it up. Big time. And the only way I can unscrew that up is to abandon you. To forget all about you. I don’t know if I can do that. I wouldn’t knowhowto do that.”

Which begged the final question. The one I couldn’t bring myself to speak out loud but was the most important of all.

Did Iwantto do it?

Chapter Thirty-Two

Madison

Iwaited outside his door, cursing myself the entire time, both for what I’d said and for allowing the spark of hope to blossom.

After all, he wasn’t going to come flying through the door, running after me to try to get me to stay.

Not after the callousness of my final words to him.

A minute passed. Then two.

He’s not coming after you. He isn’t going to chase you.

He hates you.

I forced one foot to move and then the other. Taking me away from Callum. Away from any hope of immediate reconciliation.

“There won’t be any,” I whispered to nobody in particular, glad that the hallways here were generally empty unless someone was coming or going to their rooms. It limited foot traffic considerably, especially in the middle of the day.