[attr="class","samjermain"]
The redhead—way more uncomfortable in her height than she was now—bent slightly, so she could nudge him back. A hint of color snuck into her cheeks. In her recent foray into grunge, she’d made more than one trip to Hot Topic. It made her feel like she was a kid stuck on training wheels. But where else could she et stuff like that without her dad
flipping?
“There are worse things, you know? They have some cool t-shirts.” The talk of piercings meanwhile made her wrinkle her nose. “And I’d prefer to
not need a cavity search to do an MRI.” Madeline had watched enough episodes of
Untold Stories of the ER to give that stuff a pass.
Though she
did have holes in her ear lobes. But that’d been back when mom tried dressing her up like some Victorian extra from
Downton Abbey. The redhead couldn’t remember the last time she used them Maybe she could get some skulls or something. Really turn that perfect little girl aestethic on its head.
“It means she doesn’t think for herself—” Maddie replied irritably.
“What she wants doesn’t matter. It’s just what the a-hole wants. He decides everything. I bet she’d jump off a damned bridge if he asked.” She figured it was the same reason
she bowed to his every whim. The ever-present stare of Kole McKenna’s Malamar. A blue-eyed stare and the world went fuzzy. Suddenly,
everything the guy suggested sounded like the most wonderful idea ever.
Though she’d never seen the bastard tentacle wipe her mom, Maddie figured it happened. Honestly, after over 20 years of that stuff, her brain probably looked like Swiss cheese. At the talk of birthdays, Madd snorted.
“I pretend not to remember mine. And, whenever I get him something, it’s something he’s allergic to. Like peanut butter or hippy posters.” The man always scowled but, in front of people, he couldn’t actually
do anything.
The teenager listened to his order, her nose wrinkled in an almost rabbit-like way.
“What an old man order.” She muttered under her breath—payback for the earlier ribbing. Nobody could actually
like dark chocolate, right? The stuff tasted like
dirt. Then, of course, came the nuts.
“You like almonds? I feel like I’m eating teeth.” And then, of course, people tried making
milk out of them.
“Pretty sure little’s the wrong word, M.” The ginger smirked, forcing herself to straighten for a moment. Though not at her true height, she was still a few inches above the alabaster-haired boy.
For a second after the snatch and grab, Madd waited for the Pokecoin to drop. Her body trembled as she imagined a gruff voice shouting
’Stop!’ at them. Instead, the awkward conversation stretched out as the security guard shook his head.
“I’m sorry, darling. I haven’t seen anything as cute as you all night.” It took everything in Madeline not to upchuck.
Gross, dude. You’re old enough to be my dad.“I’ll keep looking; thank you.” She feigned tears as she forced herself to slowly walk toward the vendor—trying her best not to burst out giggling. After grabbing her crepe, she picked a table out of sight of the battle tent.
“So, what’d we get? Anything interesting?”[attr="class","samjer","samjertag"]
@milo