Let me start by saying that this book is Rated R. There are scenes depicting drug use, sex, and domestic violence. I have tried my best to describe the situations tastefully, while not taking away from the magnitude of them and their impact on the characters. This is a work of fiction. My work is majorly inspired by music, but situations and people I have encountered in my life have contributed to my inspiration as well. Thanks for taking the time to read and please leave me your feedback.
Synopsis (Brief Summary)
Love, complicated by the darkness of addiction, can
be a tricky thing. Things that seem right end up being wrong, and the wrong
things seem so right. Some day’s life is perfect; other days are worse than
your worst nightmare. Everything is your fault. The heartbreaks, the failures,
the betrayals. No one understands. No one has the right answers. There’s a
downside for every upside. And no matter what, someone will be hurt, just never
more than the addict herself.
Follow Sadie Montgomery through her years of
addiction and broken relationships that begin before she even leaves high
school in The Fragile Line series.
Beautiful, the first book in the series, takes you
through Sadie’s college years when her life truly begins to spin out of
control. She falls in love, battles demons in her mind, fights for her sanity,
and searches for a God who seems to have disappeared from her life. Her
strength is tested when she has to choose between a man from her past whose
life seems to have been woven into the fabric of hers, and a man who doesn’t love
her for what she once was, but for who she is now. Once she makes her choice,
she has to live with it and wonder what life would have been like had she
chosen the other man.
The Fragile Line series: Broken (book 1): Chapter 1
Why am I like this? What did I do to deserve this?
It was at least the millionth time I’d thought that, but
still no answer came to me. I’d even cried out to God, someone I once thought I
knew.
My teeth had to be filed nearly to the gums from all the
grinding they’d been doing. When my body shook like this, there was nothing I
could do to stop it. But it wasn’t the shakes or the grinding making me wish I
was dead. It was the feeling of little, unseen bugs crawling on my skin, making
me scream at nothing.
“Get off me!” I yelled, tearing at my skin. On some
subconscious level, I knew they weren’t really there.
I kept my eyes closed to block out the light. There was only
a sliver of light filtering under my dorm room door, but it felt like a
spotlight shining directly in my eyes. The blanket from my roommate Shawna’s
bed covered the window, duct tape and thumb tacks holding it in place. I’d done
that earlier this morning when all I had was this pounding in my head. I’d
never imagined I’d feel this horrid.
In the light I would be able to see Shawna’s bed across from
me in our stark white room. Our pressed wood dressers stood between our twin
size beds, with two matching desks at the far end near the white metal door. We’d
plastered our walls with various posters of music groups, animals, a good-looking,
muscled-up guy; pictures of us, sitting under the pine tree behind our
dormitory, holding shot glasses at a party, scantily clad in tank tops and
barely there shorts dancing together; fliers from different parties we’d
attended. There were lots of those, on their bright turquoise, yellow, lime
green, and orange paper.
But there was no hope of Shawna coming in to help me, save
me. It was late July and she’d gone home for the summer. If I waited for her,
I’d be dead by the time she showed up.
I could feel another dry heave rising inside me, twisting my
stomach into a noose. The shakes became more intense, like a leaf about to fall
from the tree in autumn. Cold sweat consumed my pallid skin, momentarily
washing away the invisible bugs. My mouth watered behind chapped lips, which
was a change from the tacky feeling that had been there for…how long? I
couldn’t really be sure.
Nothing came out as I wrenched my stomach over the small
metal trash can. I spit saliva into the receptacle, hearing it hit the bottom.
My blue eyes fluttered open briefly; just long enough to see
the red numbers on the alarm clock. 6:56 p.m.
I concentrated on my thudding heartbeat. The sound of it echoed
in my ears, the beat of a drum that never stopped. It felt fluid, like hot
liquid oozing from my brain into my ear canal. It burnt. Maybe if I counted the
echo of the thuds I could fall back asleep. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11….
The bugs were back and biting my thighs. Nibbling their way into
my skin, taking my flesh, my blood, my soul. Whatever they could find for
sustenance. I threw my worn pink comforter to the speckled linoleum floor and
screamed, swatting at my bare legs. Still, I knew there was nothing there.
I kicked my legs at the wall and flailed my arms at the
mattress, letting tears brim my eyes. “Please, make it stop! Please,” I cried
out to God, even though I doubted He heard me, if He even existed. “I swear if
You make it go away right now, I will never drink again.” Sobs caught in my raw
throat, making me gag, but nothing would come out.
This was so much more than a hangover. This was the result of
going without a drink for too long. I’d depended on it, and someone to give it
to me. Maybe I needed coke, too, but probably just a few shots of vodka would
take care of this.
I was freezing now, as if someone left me out in a snow storm
without proper attire. Reaching over the side of my bed, I fished for the
blanket I’d chucked moments ago. Wrapping myself in it tightly, feeling the horrid
bugs return, I sobbed aloud, trying to count the thumping that echoed through
my ears.
Death was eminent, of this I was sure. If I didn’t die soon,
I’d have to kill myself.
In a last-ditch effort to save my life, I sought out the
phone in the darkness and called Matt. “Hello?” He sounded tired.
“Hey, it’s me.”
Click. He’d hung up on me. Bewildered, I dropped the cordless
phone beside me and let a new set of tears fall, a new set of shakes made my
body quake, a new colony of bugs worked their way up my torso.
Moments later, as I contemplated suicide- I couldn’t
overdose, as I had no drugs, no money to get any; I didn’t have a gun; I might
have a straight razor that would work on my little wrists, but the pain, could
I handle that much pain? And what my parents would think when they got the
call- the phone rang next to me on the bed.
“Hello?” I tried to sound like I wasn’t crying.
“Are you having withdrawals?” Matt’s deep voice came over the
line.
“I think so. I need you, Matt. I’ll do anything.”
“Why don’t you call Ryan?” He hung up on me for the second
time in as many minutes.
I launched the phone across the room and screamed out in
frustration. How could he leave me like this? How could he make me need him so
badly, then turn me away? And why? Had I not given him plenty?
The phone crashed into the wall, then fell to the floor, plastic
cracking, scattering on the hard floor. Call Ryan. He knew I couldn’t. And even
if I could, I wouldn’t call him like this.
Ryan Gallagher was my boyfriend. I’d known him since we were
in diapers. And after pining uncontrollably for him my freshman year in
college, we’d become a couple while he was home on leave last summer. Ryan was
a proud United States Marine, stationed in North Carolina . He graduated valedictorian
of our high school class. He was utterly perfect. I’d seen him get drunk a fair
share of times in high school, as we’d always been friends, and his twin sister
Brooke was one of my best friends, but he always knew when to stop drinking. And
when to suggest I stop.
Ryan wouldn’t understand what I was going through. He’d never
understand feeling like you were going to die if you didn’t drink.
I opened my right eye and peered at the blood red numbers on
the clock. 7:43 p.m. Something had to give. I needed to find a way to make the bugs,
the shaking, the thumping, and all my other pain go away.
Then an epiphany occurred. Probably not the one God hoped
for, but it might work nonetheless.
Shawna’s on-again-off-again boyfriend Brent lived in a frat
house. We had partied there countless nights. Surely if I could get there,
Brent would recognize me and give me a beer. Hopefully more than one, but that
was a start.
Now to just get there. Shouldn’t be such a difficult feat,
but the frat house may as well be in Siberia . I
sat up and took deep breaths, pulling them into me with all my strength,
feeling each one burn into my lungs, then deflate like a balloon with a pin
prick. I willed my body to be normal, to function as I needed it to. When I
stood, my legs shook as if they’d been filled with Jell-O and I thought I might
fall, but I’d never feel better if stayed in bed.
The effort I exerted stepping the short distance to my
dresser overheated my body, sweat moistening my brow, my blonde curls clinging
to my cheeks. In the darkness, I opened the flimsy drawers of my dresser,
feeling for shorts, underwear, and a shirt that would hopefully accent my practically
non-existent breasts. It was easier to get free booze if you showed a little
cleavage. At least that’s what Shawna told me, but she actually had cleavage.
I fumbled for my shower supplies and robe, and as a last
second thought, I sought my sunglasses. Luckily, they were on top of my purse. I
placed them on my gaunt face and opened the door, squinting my eyes as the
light consumed me. The hall was quiet, fluorescent white and lined with fliers
and posters about being drug free and abstaining from sex.
Closing my eyes again, using my hand on the walls to guide
me, I made my way to the cold bathroom.
“Sadie, you don’t look good,” someone said when I entered.
Ignoring whoever, I went to the showers and closed my eyes
once more. Feeling blindly for the faucet controls in one of the stalls, I
turned the cold water on, as my body was sweltering from the extensive hike,
then set my clothes and robe sightlessly on a plastic bucket chair.
I sat on the cold, cement floor of the shower, feeling the bugs
wash off my skin.“Save me, save me,” they cried as they slid down the drain.
“Sorry, guys,” I muttered. “You’re on your own. Just like
me.” Great, I thought, I’m talking to bugs. There weren’t even any bugs. I
didn’t know what was worse; the fact that I talked to the bugs, or the fact
that they didn’t exist and I talked to them.
My hair hurt, but I lathered the sweet, floral smelling
shampoo into it anyway, gagging through another dry heave. “Why, God?” I
whispered, wondering where it had all gone so wrong. How had I become this
sickly, pathetic person?
I’d told Matt about Ryan before, but he seemed to be in
denial about the fact that I had a boyfriend for so long I’d resigned that he
didn’t care.
“I’m in love with someone, Matt,” I told him one drunken
night shortly after meeting him.
“Who?”
I sighed. “Ryan,” I breathed dreamily.
He’d narrowed his brown eyes at me, anger simmering beneath
the surface.
“Who’s Ryan?”
“He’s been my friend forever.”
“And where is he?”
“In the Marines.”
He chuckled to himself. “Does he know you’re in love with
him?”
“No.”
“Are you planning to tell him?”
“No. Not yet.”
More chuckling. “Then I really don’t care. He’s not here and
I am.”
“We’re just friends. Me and you, Matt.”
“The things I do with you are not things I do with my friends.”
Maybe I’d been a little misleading at times, but once I
realized all I had to do was give in to Matt every once in a while, he gave me
all the vodka and coke I needed. Too many times I’d brushed over the truth for
my own selfish reasons. Like when he found Ryan’s letters to me shortly before
the end of freshman year. Ryan still wasn’t my boyfriend, but I planned to
reveal my feelings soon.
“I thought you made him up!” Matt stared at the letter in his
hand.
“No, he’s as real as you and me.” I smiled to cloak my
discomfort.
“Are you going to tell him you have a boyfriend?”
My mind worked quickly. “You are so insecure.” I waved my
hand in the air.
“Don’t worry about this.” I took the letter from him, planted
a kiss on his cheek.
He supported my habits; I couldn’t afford to lose him. Besides,
I didn’t give him much in return. Purity didn’t mean as much to me as it once
had.
Even after Ryan became my boyfriend, I couldn’t cut my ties
with Matt, no matter how I tried. Throughout sophomore year, he continued to be
at my beck and call, undoubtedly holding out for something more from me. Holding
out for a commitment, for me to love him.
“I think I’m falling in love with you,” he told me one night
last fall in his apartment. I was sprawled across his couch in the small living
room, having just snorted a few lines of coke, and then smoked a joint. Aside
from this I was on my third mixed drink of the night. The radio played in the
background, some hard rock song I didn’t really enjoy. A few candles were lit
on the coffee table, making the room ideal for the relaxing I needed to do, the
forgetting of reality.
He sat on the floor in front of me, holding my bony hand,
smothering it with warm, wet kisses. He moved his lips up my arm and went for
my mouth.
“Well, stop,” I said, pushing him away.
“Stop what?” he asked, his lips landing on my cheek.
“Stop falling in love.”
He sat straight. “You can’t tell me you still don’t
feel anything for me.” Hurt was written across his face.
It would have been the prefect opportunity to tell him Ryan
was finally my boyfriend. “I don’t know, Matt. I just wish you’d understand.”
“Nothing? You feel nothing for me? If that’s the case, then
why are you here?”
My eyes darted to the residuals of cocaine on the coffee table
in front of us. “Don’t get me wrong, I like spending time with you. I just
don’t want to commit to something. I’m not ready.”
He’d been satisfied with that, knowing about the heartbreak
I’d had in high school. But I could tell Matt’s fuse was burning out back in
February, after I’d disappeared for a few days when Ryan visited.
He came to my dorm the day after Ryan left. There was no
choice but to come clean with him. I wasn’t being fair to him, or Ryan.
“Where have you been?” His eyes were narrowed. “Did you go
home and forget to tell me?”
“Why would I have to tell you?” I asked.
“It’s the polite thing to do,” he pointed out. “So, you gonna
tell me?”
I drew in my breath, threw all my reservations to the wind,
uttered the quickest of prayers in my head, and decided to be direct. “Matt,
Ryan’s my boyfriend. He was on leave and came to see me.”
Anger flashed in his eyes and he began to pace the floor. “What
do you mean he’s your boyfriend? You told me you were just friends!”
“No, actually I told you I was in love with him,” I said
quietly. His movement made me nervous.
He stopped, stood in front of me where I was seated at the foot
of my bed.
“When did all this happen?”
I stood, walked toward the door. “Last summer.”
He got in my face, his eyes wide and accusing. “Last summer? Are
you kidding me? What the hell am I to you?”
My knees weakened, a memory stirred inside of me. “Matt,
stop. You’re scaring me.”
He put his hands on my shoulders and pushed me against the
door. I tried to push him away, but he didn’t budge. His eyes bore into me like
an ax on a chopping block. I thought he might hit me. Instead, he shoved me hastily
away and left.
I didn’t talk to him for three weeks. But when I ran out of
money, I called him, desperate to nourish my menacing habits. My appetite had
been null, and when I did eat, I vomited it right back up. I wanted to be
strong, but I didn’t know how. He came to my dorm room willingly with what I
needed.
“You have issues beyond anything I’ve ever seen,” he told me
as he brushed my hair away from my skeletal face when he came over that night. I
lay on my bed staring at nothing, thoroughly relaxed. Next to me he chuckled. “But
I still love you.” He looked down at me, softness pouring from his eyes like a
cashmere blanket. “I’m glad you called.”
There was nothing I wanted to say to him. I didn’t want him
in my life. I really didn’t, but I didn’t have a choice. He was very smitten by
me for whatever reason. He knew he was just being used- he had to- and
continued to allow me to do so.
And as I lay there motionless on his couch, once again, while
he got what he wanted from me, I betrayed Ryan, who I loved more than anything.
But the breaking point hadn’t been until a few days ago. I’d
vowed to clean up my act over the summer, but instead found ways to increase my
drinking and drug use.
I carried an Illini South sports bottle filled with vodka and
whatever I mixed it with, 7up, Cherry Coke, orange juice, Hawaiian Punch, even
water once. When I woke in the morning my body shook until the first drink
worked through my system. I didn’t even know how to function without it
anymore. Cocaine had become a regular habit, too. I’d take several hits each
night, keeping me awake until early hours of the morning.
Sleep was no longer a necessity. My days were spent in class
and trying to study, my nights consisted of sitting at Matt’s apartment like
zombie, always drunk and usually high. He loved me being there, but I hated it.
It was like being in a prison with no hope for parole. His hands were always
all over me and he acted like he owned me. Once he even tried to stop me from
going to my dorm for Ryan’s weekly phone call.
“No,” he told me flatly. “You’re staying here.”
“No I’m not, Matt!” I grabbed my small black purse, moving
toward the door.
“I’m going to my dorm. I’ll come back tomorrow.”
“I don’t know why you would want to go there when you could
stay here with me.”
I rolled my eyes. “I’m here all the time. There’s nothing
wrong with spending a little time apart.”
My weight was already down to 120 pounds . I knew that
was unhealthy since I’d weighed around 135 in high school. I wasn’t the girl Ryan
loved, that girl had become the wreck I now was. But there was no way for him
to tell over the phone or in my letters.
It was last Friday night when I was getting ready for Matt to
pick me up to go shopping for some make-up and booze when the phone in my dorm
room rang. To my surprise and delight, it was Ryan. I flopped on my bed,
excited for the unexpected call. I was caught up with Ryan, lost in the sound
of his familiar, comforting voice, and completely forgot about Matt until there
was a loud knock on my door. Without thinking, I opened the door to see an
angry Matt.
“I’ve been sitting out there waiting for twenty minutes! Who
the hell are you on the phone with?” His face was red, his eyes bulging.
“I’ll be down in a minute,” I tried to shut the door while
panic ran through me.
He pushed the door open, his face a frown, eyes now narrowed
in annoyance.
“Who are you talking to?”
Ryan’s sweet voice came over the phone, slightly agitated. “Who
is that?”
My mind raced trying to figure out how to answer without
making either mad. Quickly I decided who I valued more. My eyes met Matt’s,
pretending not to see the anger. “I’m talking to Ryan.” Into the phone I said,
“It’s Matt, he’s giving me a ride into town to go to the store.”
The anger I’d come to know flashed like lights on a police
cruiser in Matt’s eyes. I continued to speak into the phone, ignoring the
alarms in my brain. “I was getting ready to leave when you called.”
“I’ll let you go since he’s waiting,” Ryan said. “I love
you.”
My heart skipped a beat and I turned away from Matt. “I love
you, too.” I hung up and faced him.
“What’s going on? Is Ryan your boyfriend?” He screamed at me
as I tried to stay calm.
“Don’t worry about it. You’re the one that’s here.” I smiled
at him, picked up my purse, slinging the strap over my shoulder.
He blocked the door, making no effort to move. I tried to pretend
I wasn’t concerned about the situation, hoping it would make him think there
really wasn’t anything to worry
about.
“You’re just using me. You have no intention to ever be with
me, do you?” I shook my head in disagreement as he talked. “I’m not stupid,” he
went on, his voice the epitome of confidence in his realization. “After a year
and a half I get the truth.”
“Matt, I’m not using you! I do like you, I like you a lot. We
have been over this a million times! I’ve known Ryan forever. He’s one of my
best friends.” I cocked my head and pursed my lips. “Besides, you’re not my
boyfriend, so it shouldn’t matter to you who I talk to.”
“Whatever, Sadie. You are damaged beyond repair and I would
be stupid to keep this up with you. Ryan, or whoever, will realize it too,
don’t worry. You have fun getting drunk and high without me.” He stormed out of
the room, slamming the door behind him.
*
I felt another dry heave rising from within like a volcano as
I shut off the water and stepped out of the shower, onto the cold linoleum floor
of the dressing room. Turning around, I spit the saliva into the wet shower
stall. I sat atop my robe as I pulled on my clothes, using what seemed to be my
last iota of energy.
There were a few other girls in the bathroom, I could hear
the chatter and movement of them around me, but was oblivious to who they were,
or if they spoke to me. My eyes stayed closed as much as possible while I tried
to occupy myself with counting the thumps of my heart. They were coming so
fast, I thought maybe my heart was trying to win a race. Maybe the finish line
was death.
Now with my clothes on, the bugs came back. I wiped
feverishly at my skin, vaguely aware the other girls were likely staring at me,
“Maybe she’s having a bad trip,” I heard someone say, all the while knowing
there were no bugs on me. It crossed my mind to call Matt and try again. Maybe
if I told him I loved him….
No, my heart was Ryan’s. I’d go to the frat house.
Wow! Very good so far, descriptions of her pain and confusion are really good. I feel for her already! Great job Sarah! Can't wit to read more!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much!
DeleteWow! Very good so far, descriptions of her pain and confusion are really good. I feel for her already! Great job Sarah! Can't wit to read more!
ReplyDeleteThis is so good! I kept looking down at the end of my screen hoping that the chapter was not coming to a end yet. Darn it Sarah definitely want to read this book! Great job :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Natalie!
DeleteSooo good, Sarah! Kept me engaged. Can't wait to indulge in the entire series! Lisa
ReplyDeleteI can't wait either, Lisa! Thank you!
Delete