Chapter Eleven #3

fury fades as he gets ahold of himself and Drunk Stranger, now

flanked by two of his friends, walks off into the bathroom

muttering a barely intelligible rant about stupid frigid bitches

and crazy Long Island assholes.

Sam rolls his shoulders,

and Dave and Tuck cautiously release their hold. Sam is breathing

hard, and he staggers a bit on his feet.

"Your friend needs to

leave," bartender guy says softly to me. I look back at him, and

then back to Sam. He must have balls of steel to tell Sam he has to

go right now, even politely.

"No fucking problem," Sam

spits bitterly, and then turns on his heel, stumbling slightly, and

heads to the exit.

I am frozen in shock for

one more moment before I make to go after him.

"Uh, Pine, you should say

in here," Dave advises. Tucker nods in agreement, looking at me

with such sympathy I wonder if Sam is more than just pissed at me,

if he really just hates me now.

But he's drunk and upset,

and what he thinks of me can't matter right now. He needs someone

to look out for him. "I'm just gonna make sure he's okay," I

mumble.

"We'll go," Tuck offers,

but I shake my head adamantly. I need to see he's okay with my own

eyes. Tuck sighs and shrugs, and I run on toward the exit, after

Sam.

I find him two storefronts

down in front of a closed pizza restaurant. He turns his back to me

when he sees me, and it makes me hesitate. His shoulders heave, and

I know he's trying to get ahold of himself, but I don't care. He

can hate me all he wants, but I know he won't hurt me. I'm not

afraid of him. I could never be afraid of him.

I don't say anything when

I reach him, nor do I touch him. But he senses me, and turns around

to face me.

"What, Rory? What do you want?" Sam

stabs me in the gut with each bitter word.

"I... I just wanna make

sure you're alright," I murmur.

Sam lets out a short,

sardonic laugh. "You sure you want to be out here alone with me? I

don't want to scare you." But his words are not earnest. They are

accusatory.

"What are you talking

about, Sam?"

And then he lets me have

it. "What am I talking about?! You know what the fuck I'm talking

about! What, am I him now? I shout at some prick and you cower like I'm going

to what? Fucking

deck you next?!"

He thinks that I think

he's like Robin?

I shake my head fervently.

"That's crazy! I didn't cower. I don't think you would—"

"You flinched!" He

bellows.

I blink at him. I did

flinch, but not out of fear of Sam. The truth is that in that tense

moment I didn't know what was about to happen. What Drunk Stranger

Asshole was going to do next, what he was capable of.

"I—" I try to defend

myself, to explain myself, but Sam isn't having it.

"You fucking

flinched away from me,

Rory! Like you thought I might hit you!"

Bullshit. I never thought Sam would hit me. Not

for a single moment. "I'm sorry I flinched, Sam, but you know what?

Not everything is about you!" I cut myself off and take a

deep breath. "It was just a conditioned, natural reaction to a

raised voice. And it wasn't directed at you."

Sam's anger deflates, but

there is no relief. "Except I don't know if that's completely true.

Because the thing is... I'm not

that different," he says, only the slightest slur

to his words, as if although he's drunk, he's just had some

sobering moment of clarity.

And I get his meaning. Sam

thinks that because he's just done something violent, because he's

been violent before, that he deserved my fear. That his violence

echoes Robin's, and that of his own father, and that he is thus no

better. But, God,

why can't he see how wrong he is?

"Sam—" but he interrupts

again.

"You know I saw Schall,

too, before," he murmurs. "Got into a lot of fights—just like that

one." He gestures with his chin back toward the entrance to the

bar. "Anger issues, supposedly… and maybe they were right." He

scowls in self disgust, "Fuck, Rory, I hit your fucking father!

You've seen me lose my shit—on that

motherfucking bastard, on your dad... now

on this dipshit. That's

why you flinched, b- Rory… that's how you see me…

apparently, that's what I do."

I've been shaking my head

through his entire self-recriminating, inebriated rambling, but

somehow, I can't find the right words. I hadn't feared him. That's

the truth. But he's drunk and practically castigating himself, and

I know nothing I say right now will get through to him.

Suddenly sirens sound

faintly in the distance and a horde of people starts pushing out of

the bar entrance and spilling onto the sidewalk. I recognize our

friends and Tucker spots us, gesturing with urgency for us to join

him. He rolls his eyes when neither of us moves, whispers something

to Carl, and kisses her hard on the mouth before jogging over to

where we're standing.

"That douchebag called the

cops, we gotta go," Tuck says, and my breath catches in my

throat.

The cops?

Shit, Sam could get in trouble. I blanch and grab

Sam's bicep, trying to push him to move, to get the hell out of

here. But Sam doesn't seem scared, he doesn't seem like he wants to

go anywhere at all. Instead his gaze shoots to where my fingers

clutch his arm, his brow furrowing in that adorable way that makes

my knees buckle for a moment. His glazed, alcohol shrouded midnight

blues meet my gaze and look right through me, paralyzing me, and he

looks so confused, as if he doesn't know what to make of my

obviously desperate concern for him.

"Cap, now," Tuck urges, and I retract my

hand. Sam rolls his eyes and acquiesces. Carl comes out of nowhere

and grabs my hand, pulling me in the direction of her car, but my

feet are glued to their spot until I'm satisfied that Sam is

leaving with Tuck. He does, glancing back only once to make sure

I'm doing the same with Carl, and just like that, the night is

over.

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