The Broken Sister (Sister #6) (34 page)

Chapter Twenty-Three

 

KYLIE MCKINLEY SPOKE AT two thirty-seven on Wednesday, April thirteenth before the disciplinary board of Peterson College, which was headed by the university’s sexual assault education coordinator. She was accompanied there by her parents, sister… and Tristan Tamasy. It took every ounce of their support bolstering her courage to make her find the words to describe what happened to her… and to say them out loud, all alone before strangers who were there to judge her… against Tommy.

She didn’t look even once at Tommy… She looked at the back of the room and pretended she was talking to Tristan.

She made sure to dress exactly as she always did, no frills or gimmicks. Just purely Kylie, exactly as she was. She told them in a cool, even tone what she remembered of the night she woke up reeking of sex and unsure of how it happened. She understood no criminal charges could be proven, but she wanted it on the record what was done to her. Per university procedures it was a closed and confidential proceeding. Even witnesses couldn’t listen to other witnesses. Kylie consulted a lawyer but the counsel wasn’t allowed in the university proceedings. The university would investigate sexual assault complaints independent of any criminal proceedings. They were looser in what was allowed to be presented. But essentially all there really was for “proof” was her accusations against his denials. Her story to his. He said, she said.

Tommy’s family was all there too, out in the lobby of the building. His parents and grandfather. It was the first time Kylie had even seen what Tristan’s parents looked like. The dad, JR, looked just like Tristan… and Tommy. Kylie saw the resemblance now, where she hadn’t first made the comparison. And his mother? A tall, cool, well-dressed blonde with stylish short hair and a glare for him and Kylie. They never did say another word to Tristan. It hit hard against her heart to watch them ignore him. But he never once wavered in his faith, love, and belief in her. True to his word, he stood by her for the entire ordeal.

Tristan sat waiting with her parents and Ally for Kylie’s ordeal to get over. It was not one she ever cared to repeat. It was humiliating, hard, and cold. Things that were so private and personal and painful were made cold and sterile and out there to be judged. But she went through with it.

Tristan could have pushed her to let it go, drop any charges or efforts to get any kind of justice. Instead he was the one who figured out what she should do. He helped her prepare. He held her when she was unsure she could follow through with it. He encouraged her when she didn’t want to.

Still, she did it.

Three days after the proceedings Tommy was cleared of any wrongdoing. Reasons? Insufficient evidence. Which Kylie suspected would happen. Anyway, the worst that could have happened to Tommy from this disciplinary board was expulsion from school.

Maybe if Cadence had been able to go up against Tommy too, and speak up with her. But Cadence was too fragile emotionally to go up against him. The irony wasn’t lost on Kylie. It was supposed to be her, but in the end it wasn’t she who couldn’t speak against Tommy. She finally spoke up just fine.

Justice… It was something she now knew she deserved. It was something she would not get. Tristan didn’t make up for that. Being in love didn’t soothe the feelings of being violated and abused that Tommy’s actions had given her.

But Tristan did help her to live with it.

It was a strange dynamic they had. She was his support as he went up against his family. As he lost his family, job, and lifestyle, he turned to her for comfort and encouragement and support. It was because of her he lost it all, and because of her he didn’t care that he did.

There was no celebrating their loss. There was no crying either. Her mom asked them to come to dinner, so they could be together that night. Her, Tristan, Ally, Julia, and her parents.

They sat at the table together. It was solemn and quiet. Subdued. But she was also okay. Kylie glanced at her mom, who looked so sad. She leaned over and touched her hand. “It’s okay, Mom. I accomplished more than I lost.”

Tracy squeezed her hand. “I just wish… I mean, it’s so unfair…”

“Life is unfair, right? But I said it. I faced it. I’m going to live with it. He can’t define who I am anymore or what I do. I’m stronger than I ever thought, or believed… and now you understand that too. You understand what happened to me and who I am, and most of all I finally let you.”

“It’s not enough to make up for what he did to you.” Tracy glanced at Tristan. “This is hard to talk about in front of you.”

“No, that’s the mistake, having topics be off limits. There is no off limits with us. There is just talking and honesty even when it’s hard.”

“I know, Tracy,” Tristan agreed, his tone quiet and expression intense. He leaned over putting his arm around Kylie, gripping her shoulder in his hand. “I know how hard it is to realize what he did to Kylie. I don’t condone it. I don’t like it. He belongs in prison, he shouldn’t be graduating college.”

“But she has to go there and maybe run into him… It’s cruel and unusual punishment.”

“Maybe. But I made a statement, Mom. I did something about it. I stood up for myself and stood up against the names I was called, the blame I was assigned, and the beliefs that were all wrong about me. I might not have changed all their minds, but I changed my own, so it wasn’t all bad.”

Donny held up his wine glass. He glanced at Tristan. “I was against him being at our table ever again when I first heard who he was and what he’d come after Kylie to do. But for some reason he was able to get through to you and bring out your strengths. So this sucks, we all agree, but Kylie didn’t lose. She isn’t lost or broken. She’s right here and she didn’t take it silently. Kylie not only faced her attacker but then found the uncanny ability to love his brother. So I for one could not be prouder of you. My daughter.” He then glanced at Tristan. “Both of you, actually. I’m very proud of both of you.”

Tristan’s smile was almost embarrassed as he lifted his glass as he shut his eyes for a split second and then opened them. “Thank you, sir.”

They all raised glasses and clinked and Kylie, for the first time in years, felt tears fill her eyes and fall down her cheeks. Everyone stared at her, confounded.

“Are you crying?” Julia asked. She was aware things had gone on, but was hazy on the full details and scope of events.

Kylie used the back of her hands to wipe her tears and nodded as a short laugh burst from her mouth. “Uh-huh.”

“That’s what makes you cry? After all these years… all these things… and this makes you finally freaking cry? A happy speech?” Ally finally said.

Kylie smiled through her tears. “I guess happiness makes me cry. I guess I think that this is worthy of my tears.”

Ally rolled her eyes and Tristan leaned over and kissed her cheek as her parents smiled and Tracy leaned over to grab her hand.

After many kisses and well-wishing and goodbyes to her family, Tristan and Kylie started for his car. Just before her car door he pulled her into his arms and kiss her lips. “Thank you.”

“For what?”

“Being with me. Agreeing to come with me this summer to look for my sister. I don’t think I could do it without you. But I really think I need to do it. And what if she needs me? I have no idea where she is or how she is or even who she is. I have no idea what to say to her. Or what Tara will think of me… I keep hoping, if she meets you, she’ll understand I am not like them. Maybe I can understand now why she left and her version of what they did to her. I don’t know it as fully as I should. As her older brother, I should know what happened. But I don’t really. I was too busy. Too busy for her spiraling out of control. Too busy to notice my brother was a fucking—”

She pressed two fingers to his lips. The rape and Tommy came up like this between them quite often. She hoped over time it would fade into the ether and not be in the forefront of their relationship. But she supposed it was to be expected.

“I’m happy to come with you and meet your sister.”

“Thank you for everything else, Kylie.”

“Everything like what?”

“You gave me everything I never had, nor would have had. Love. Family. Forgiveness. Honesty. A chance to shape my own future and my own decisions. You changed my life by just being… you.”

It was a quiet end to the most explosive secret of her life. She had sat on it, and let it tangle itself around everything, from her self-confidence to her self-image. She had let it change her and try to ruin her. She had nothing to show for her rape, other than how she handled it now.

And now? She would no longer hide from it or let it define her. And when she had started attending a group of rape survivors with Cadence, it was she who pushed and helped Cadence to go, and it was eventually Kylie who started talking about her experience until months into it, it was she who was acting as the leader of the group and she was the one guiding newcomers to share their stories, listen to other survivors, and believe that they—no one, actually—deserved it. No matter what they had done or said or lived like before and after being raped. They were not to blame. No matter what.

And it had taken her rapist’s brother to first start to show her that.

####

Dear Reader,

 

I would be so grateful if you took a few moments to leave a review of
The Broken Sister
.
It really helps expand an author’s audience, and we do appreciate the effort.

Please read on for a peak at the next book in the Sister Series,
The Perfect Sister
.

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Leanne Davis

 

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Book #8

Ally McKinley has been told how perfect she is so often that she now strives to live up to that ideal. Her father abandoned her family when she was a just a kid, but it taught her the importance of taking care of herself. She must keep everything around her under perfect order and control to avoid ever again being so blindsided. Her type A personality helped her sail through school and her college years, but that merely reinforces the positive aspects to being so perfect.

It also prevents almost everyone from ever seeing who she really is.

Nate Stratton attends the same college. He is in the same grade, majoring in the same subject, and even shares family with Ally. Ally is smart, funny, sarcastic, and, to everyone else’s eyes, the perfect college senior, about to take her world by storm. Nate, however, finds Ally’s need for perfection ridiculous, especially after he learns the secret he’s pretty sure no one, not even her sister or mother, know about her. Her secret threatens her health as well as her life. He thinks she is taking a stupid gamble to uphold her illusion of perfection. What good is striving to be perfect if she never allows herself to feel anything real? He intends to show her that imperfection is far more interesting than trying to live up to an ideal that might ultimately kill her.

The Perfect Sister:

 

Prologue

She had failed. She had completely and totally failed. She could do so much better. She was so much better than this. How had this happened? She kept rehashing the last test in her geology class that she’d gotten a B- on, which had lowered her quarter grade to a B+. It was… good. Fine. Okay. Not great. Not the best. Ally needed to be good, great, better than most. What she needed was perfection. B+. She’d gotten a B+. The words spun all around Ally’s brain as she leaned over the toilet and put her finger into her mouth. Out came dinner and the thousands of calories she’d consumed on top of that. Out it all came in a disgusting heap that landed in the toilet bowl. She flushed and did it again, and again. Ally shut her eyes against the images. The anti-perfection she had created. It left her stomach hollow and feeling like a pit was deep inside it. It left her esophagus and throat burning as her mouth tasted rancid. It left her cringing at what was before her.

It left a small, slight smile crossing her face.

Finally she was empty. No more panicking, twisting thoughts. No more blinding pressure building in her temples to do more, be more, quit being such an epic failure. Finally the thoughts stopped. The frantic thoughts shut up so she could just be. But of course, throwing up wasn’t supposed to make all that happen inside her body and mind.

Every single time this happened she swore it was the last time. She stress-ate, but there was no way she could let all that food stay in her. She shuddered to imagine what all those calories and fat would do to her figure. She barely was able to maintain the size four she’d been for the last decade. It wasn’t easy. She wasn’t naturally this size. She wasn’t like Kylie, her sister, who could just not eat and weigh nothing.

The irony being, of course, everyone thought it was Kylie with the eating disorder. No. Not really. Kylie had just always flirted with not eating. She ate. She just never cared if she ate. She got no pleasure from eating. Sugar. Chocolate. Pie fillings. It didn’t matter what the food was, none of it called to Kylie like a seductive siren to come indulge. Kylie didn’t want any of it. She had no interest in it. But Ally did.

She tried hard to eat small, sensible, perfectly proportioned meals with nutritional balance and low calorie content. She succeeded some days. Until the never-ending, never-leaving, gnawing hunger consumed her. It took over all her executive functions of her brain. At that point all she could think about was to eat. She had to eat.
Now.

It was almost animalistic. Survival-based.

And sometimes she did. Sometimes she gave into the overwhelming desire to eat herself sick. To indulge in every single craving and longing she had. She would go to a store far away from the radius of her life and splurge on everything she’d denied herself. Donuts, candy, chips, pies, cakes, hamburgers, fries, fried chicken, fettuccini; on and on the list went. She would eat so much her stomach would grow by three times its volume. She would look suddenly pregnant. She would lock herself into her room and gorge herself.

Then she’d spend the next few days getting it all out of her. Sometimes she threw it up. Quick. Easy. Done. Sometimes she took laxatives for days on end to expel it. Sometimes she did both. But this time it hadn’t totally relieved her. The grade was permanent. Forever. She now had a B+ on her permanent record. After three and half years of maintaining a perfect 4.0 grade point average, she would now have a 3.9.

She leaned back to fall onto her butt, burying her head into her hands and rocking back and forth. All that work, all those hours and hours studying. All that time she took from doing anything else, so she could study. She had maintained it for so long to lose it now? Tears fell down her face as the knowledge of the failure ripped through her once more.

The test sat thrown to the bathroom floor near her. She had been staring at it for five hours as she’d devoured a sheet cake, two pies, five candy bars and a bucket of fried chicken.

Now she was trying to undo all she’d inhaled. All the while staring and glaring and crying at the test. At the wrong answers. She’d missed the entire essay question. Everything else was right and yet she’d incorrectly answered just one essay question, her reasoning was all wrong and that earned her zero points for it. Ruining her test grade, her class grade, and her permanent record.

Who was there to tell? Who was there to console her? No one would understand. They’d pat her on the shoulder and roll their eyes telling her how
good
it was. Good. She nearly spit thinking about that word on her tongue. Good. What was good? Good was fine. Good was okay. Good was winning the participation award. Good was nothing. People, friends, relatives, her sister, even her mother would tell her how she was
so lucky
to have the kind of grades she did. No one would understand what she’d lost today. Having a 4.0 was something special. It was impressive, it was perfect. It was about performing and maintaining perfection. It showed everyone else that she was capable of an extraordinary work ethic and could maintain it for long periods of time. A 4.0 meant she had accomplished something. A 3.9 suggested she had
almost
accomplished perfection. She had
almost
done it. At that point, she might as well have had a 3.5 or 3.2; those grades were still considered honor roll. Those were still considered “good grades,” but those were not perfection.

But it wasn’t anyone else who had lost a perfect score. A score she’d worked hours and hours to maintain and keep. People would pat her on the shoulder, amused with how seriously she took her work and her grades. Other students often told her how lucky she was to have such an amazing grade point average. Luck? Where was there luck in this? Luck didn’t touch this. There was no luck involved. It was all her.
She
had done it all. She had read every single word of text and memorized thousands of facts. She had written every word of every paper she’d ever turned in and solved every math equation. She had taken the Ritalin and Adderall frequently to stay up studying and reading and writing papers. She had managed to maintain it through the flu and family dramas. She had worked herself ragged and this… this
one question
on one test would derail it all? The unfairness of it had her wanting to start stuffing the Twinkies still in their packages by her feet into her mouth. And she’d done all this just to lose it fall quarter of her senior year?

Anger flushed her skin. She grabbed the test and ripped it up into a hundred small pieces. The rush of destroying it unleashed a hot feeling in her blood that had her skin flushing in warmth. She grabbed the pieces and threw them into the toilet and stared at them. It was symbolic, of course. It was where her bile and throw-up had just sat and now her work sat there too. She pressed the silver handle on the toilet tank and watched the pieces swirl down the hole with the water.

Sometimes she would watch whatever she’d put in the toilet disappear down the drain. She would marvel at how much she could get out of her and, sicker still, she knew she’d feel bright bursts of pride. It almost mimicked when she received back a test or paper and it had an A on it. That—what she could get out of her body—pleased her.

Even as the need to look at it made her sick with revulsion with herself. Who got off on such things as what came out of their body?

Luckily no one knew. Not a soul. It was her private thing. Her secret, her shame… her fulfillment. It was how she relieved the stress of her life and the pressure of her own expectations. But the problem was she’d performed at this level for so long that now the expectation she’d originally created for herself was now expected of her by everyone else.

Besides she wasn’t the screw up. She wasn’t the troubled sister. She was the functioning, put-together, and totally fine sister. Her mom’s entire belief system was based on this. Imagine if her mother found her like this? Crying on her knees at her toilet, sticking body parts down her mouth to make everything inside her come up and out. Imagine her mother witnessing Ally smiling with pleasure and relief at just how much came out. Just imagine…

Ally shuddered. No. Never. Her mom could not know. No one could. Luckily no one did know and would never, ever even suspect it. She was nearly perfect at everything she set her mind to, including hiding her… predilection. Unlike her sister Kylie, who had presented herself for so long as a hot mess of scary problems, and had everyone around her worrying over her safety, her mindset, her emotional balance, even her weight. But Ally? No. No way. Ally didn’t let anyone realize there was anything to worry about with her.

And so no one worried.

Because really there wasn’t anything to worry about. She managed it. She understood her own problem and unlike Kylie, who never seemed to totally understand what was wrong with her or why she acted certain ways, Ally knew exactly what was wrong with her. Kylie was clueless sometimes about why she acted how she did; Ally was not. She was in perfect control of what she did and why she did it. She knew when the urge would strike her and how to fulfill that urge when she was ready to. She didn’t just start stuffing her face and throwing up at random. No. Never. She waited until she was sure she would be left alone overnight. She bought her food far away and ingested it in the privacy of her locked bathroom. There were no windows. She shut her phone off and did not bring it into the bathroom with her. She was all alone. She was free to indulge then and there with no one to watch her. And no one to catch her. Because she was in control of the when, how, and where. Unlike Kylie, who indulged her crazy behavior everywhere besides a locked room and all alone.

Ally knew what bulimia was. She had a computer, she could find the answers herself. She knew what she did fell under that heading. So what? That’s what all the information and internet research had provided for her. She didn’t think for a second she was actually bulimic. She wasn’t anorexic for absolutely sure, because unlike her skinny sister, she ate. She ate quite often. She binged and purged. Sure. She’d seen talk shows and news stories; she totally comprehended what that was. But hers was controlled. She wasn’t out of control or at the mercy of this thing. It was merely a tool by which she dealt with life when it didn’t go how she planned. It wasn’t something that ruled her life.

Not like how Kylie let her problems show. It tinged how people saw Kylie and what they expected out of her. Not Ally. Ally had always known this and had learned that keeping problems to herself was far preferable to acting out in front of people.

Her freedom came in that no one expected this from her, so no one looked, whereas the entire family had watched over Kylie’s mental and emotional health since she was a teenager and their dad first left. Everyone, most especially their mom, worried over Kylie and what she was doing to herself or could do. Everyone knew Ally was capable of handling herself and was not emotionally fragile.

Still, this… this thing she did was not for anyone else to experience. It was for her and her alone, so she was careful to keep it very quiet.

Why wasn’t she feeling better yet? The ache of her failure was only marginally better, now a stinging reminder that would permanently follow her the rest of her life. Even if everyone else would just laugh at her because really, there was nothing to be this upset about, now was there? After all, it was just a grade on a test. Just a grade in one class, in one quarter of her college experience. It wasn’t like a real problem.

That was why it was so nice to have a way to be upset without anyone witnessing it.

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