He Slapped The Girl Who Loved Him For 9 Years In Front Of Class-Quieen - Chainityai

He Slapped The Girl Who Loved Him For 9 Years In Front Of Class-Quieen

We were arguing, Jason and I, in the middle of third-period English when he suddenly slapped me across the face in front of everyone.

For one strange second, the whole classroom lost its sound.

The ceiling fan kept clicking above the whiteboard, the dusty morning light kept lying across the desks, and Mr. Davis still stood at the front of the room with an uncapped marker in his hand.

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My left cheek burned so hard it felt like the rest of my body had gone numb just so that one place could scream.

I lifted my hand to it, not to be dramatic, not to prove anything, but because my brain needed confirmation that it had really happened.

Jason Miller had hit me.

Jason, who had lived across the hall from me since we were three years old.

Jason, whose mother used to leave a plastic container of chicken soup outside our door whenever I got sick.

Jason, who once shoved a boy in fourth grade because that boy kept pressing gum into my hair during recess and laughing when I cried.

Jason, who knew the sound of my apartment door closing, the smell of my mom’s laundry soap, the exact way I said I was fine when I was anything but fine.

Jason, who I had loved with the stubborn loyalty of a girl who thought growing up beside someone meant you were building a future without saying it out loud.

Nine years is a long time to carry a crush.

It is long enough for the feeling to stop looking like a crush and start looking like weather.

It is just there every morning, there in the hallway, there at the bus stop, there when he forgets your birthday and there when he remembers your favorite gas station candy without being asked.

I had chased after him in small ways because small ways are what embarrassed girls can survive.

I saved him a seat when teachers let us choose.

I pretended not to care when he chose someone else.

I laughed too loudly at his jokes, answered his homework questions, held his hoodie once when he played basketball after school, and walked home slowly on days when he walked beside me.

I told myself none of it was chasing.

I told myself it was friendship.

A person can lie to herself for years when the lie is warm enough to sleep under.

That morning, the lie cracked in front of a room full of people.

Jason stood a few feet away from me with his hand still half-raised, jaw clenched, eyes dark with anger and something that hurt worse than anger.

Impatience.

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