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Pocketful of Blame
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Pocket Full of Blame
Pocket #1
Chloe Walsh
The right of Chloe Walsh to be identified as the Author of the work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright and Related Rights Act 2000.
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All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means – electronic, mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system – without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form or binding or cover than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
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This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each reader. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
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Published by Chloe Walsh
Copyright 2014 by Chloe Walsh
All Rights Reserved. ©
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Pocketful of Blame
Pocket #1,
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First published, April 2019
All rights reserved. ©
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Cover designed by Sarah @ Opium House Creatives.
Edited by Aleesha Davis.
Proofread by: Brooke Bowen Hebert.
Formatted by: Tammy @ Graphics Shed.
For the Clovers.
My tribe.
My friends.
Author's Note
Pocketful of Blame is the first in a four-book series and contains a cliffhanger ending.
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Because of its explicit sexual content, mature themes, triggers, and bad language, it is suitable for readers of 18+.
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Thank you so much for joining me on this new adventure.
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I hope you enjoy Sketch and Romi's story.
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Lots of love,
Chlo xxx
Disclaimer
This book is a work of fiction. All names, characters, places and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
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The author acknowledges all songs titles, song lyrics, film titles, film characters, trademarked statuses, brands, mentioned in this book are the property of, and belong to, their respective owners. The publication/ use of these trademarks is not authorized/ associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.
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Chloe Walsh is in no way affiliated with any of the brands, songs, musicians or artists mentioned in this book.
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All rights reserved ©
Blurb
The Capaldi twins.
Chris and Sketch.
As different as night and day.
One was my best friend.
The other, my lover.
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Inseparable since childhood, I always assumed that we would grow up, escape our sleepy hometown of Pocketful, and live out a life of adventure together, away from our powerful fathers and the lure of money.
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But two years ago, life as I knew it changed when reckless Sketch broke my heart and dependable Chris picked up the pieces.
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Except now Chris is dead, and I’m the only one with the answers to what happened that night. I’m the only living witness.
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My connection with Sketch has been severed. He thinks I killed his brother and I’m determined to let him believe it. Because the truth could put us both in the grave.
Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Playlist for Pocketful of Blame
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Other Books by Chloe Walsh
Student: Ramona Dillon
Date: October 15th
Paper: The Elements of Human Nature
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If death is the opposite of life as we know it, and life is the physical presence on earth with a beating heart and pumping lungs, then surely we are blank canvases at birth.
Fresh-faced and empty-minded, ready to be lured into a pre-approved way of thinking. Ready to have our minds warped and our bodies defiled.
Has humanity been present since the dawn of mankind? Is it a choice or a condition? It cannot be proven to be present at birth, nor can it be proven to linger at the cusp of death. We are bodies consisting of bones and blood, with free-minds and endless opportunities…until pre-approved notions are subconsciously enforced upon us by both government and society.
Are we all born killers?
Are we all born saints?
Why are some men good and others evil?
Does evil even exist? If so, how is it measured? Who decided for an entire species what is acceptable and what is not? Are we not mammals? Are we not the apex predator?
Are we prisoners of our minds?
Are we captives of society?
Are we free at all to think for ourselves?
If a person didn’t choose to be brought into this world then why are they forced to remain?
Who decided the rules for everyone else?
Society or God?
Man or myth?
What if a person wants to bend the rules?
What if a person wants to crush them?
1
Romi
"Miss Dillon, I found your essay on the elements of human nature to be extremely distressing," Mr. Jackson, my English teacher, said at the end of class on Thursday. It was my final class of the day and like always, I was the last student to leave the room.
A necessary survival tactic in this cesspool of snakes.
School had started again less than two months ago and already the vultures of these halls were out in full force, circling and stalking their prey, preparing to execute the killer blow.
Breathing through my nostrils, I grasped the corners of my desk, unwilling to give my teacher a response.
Unwilling to look up at all.
If a person's eyes were the window to their soul, then I didn’t want anyone looking into mine.
"Can we talk about this?" he asked.
That wasn't an option for me.
I couldn’t talk.
I couldn’t do a damn thing.
It's not safe…
"Please," he pressed, his voice taking on a gentler tone. "I'm worried about you."
Keeping my head down, I released my grip on the desk, pushed the sleeves of my navy cardigan down to my wrists and snatched my bag off the floor, holding it close to my chest.
I knew I messed up when I wrote that essay and handed it in for extra credit. Free thinking was only welcome when it fit into what society considered socially acceptable.
My thoughts, along with my presence at school, were not.
"It was a joke," I finally said, forcing the words out of my mouth. My voice sounded strange, even to my own ears. Probably bec
ause of how rarely I used it anymore. "I can rewrite the essay if that's what you want."
Mr. Jackson loomed closer, his shoes clicking against the patterned tiles of the classroom floor. "That's some joke, Romi." I felt the air change around me when he lowered himself into the desk next to mine. "And no, that's not what I want. You've always been an excellent student and your work is top notch." He paused, fingers drumming against the wooden desk as he thought about how to word his next sentence. "To be quite frank, I'm more concerned about your state of mind."
That makes two of us.
Tensing, I tightened my grip on my bag and kept my gaze cast downwards. "I'm fine."
"Senior year is stressful enough without the added pressure and strain that the trial put on your shoulders."
"I'm fine," I repeated, numb.
"You're clearly not," he said quietly.
There was a long stretch of silence before I broke it by asking, "Can I go now?"
"No one is forcing you to remain after class, Romi," he replied, tone resigned and a little disappointed. "I just wanted to talk to you. No bullshit. Just us."
"I'm fine," I said for the third time, the words barely audible to my own ears.
"I know you haven't been visiting Mrs. Dahlia's office since returning to school, and God knows I'm not judging you," Mr. Jackson said. "But I just…I wanted to check in with you. We're almost two months into the school year. That's a long time to go without confiding in anyone and I want you to know that if you're not comfortable speaking with Mrs. Dahlia, then you can always talk to me."
I remained silent.
He sighed heavily. "Come on, Romi. Give me something to work with here."
I offered him nothing.
Nothing was solid.
Nothing was safe.
Trust no one, Chris had told me. Nothing in this town is as it seems.
"Are they still picking on you?" he asked then. "The team? The squad?" He reached across the row and settled a hand on mine. "Have they upped their taunting? Because I can help you. I will go directly to their parents myself. It's unacceptable for you to be treated this way."
Dragging in a deep breath, I brushed his hand off and slowly rose out of the curved desk. Stalling for several beats, I debated saying something to him, anything, and then quickly decided against it.
There was no point.
My lips were sewn and my hands were tied.
Moving for the door, I kept my spine straight, my shoulders hunched tight with tension.
"What happened to Chris wasn't your fault," Mr. Jackson called after me when I reached the door. "And I'll be here when you're ready to talk."
If he was expecting a response, he was going to be disappointed.
Slipping into the hallway, I walked straight to my locker, keeping my bag clutched to my chest.
My movements were rigid, almost alien, as if my body no longer belonged to me, and when I passed the window looking onto the quad, memories of another lifetime flooded my mind.
Stolen kisses and strong arms.
Cheerleading skirts and Letterman jackets.
First love, popularity, and friendship.
Wide smiles and contented laughter.
Safety and security.
Pain and betrayal.
Revelations and whirl spins.
Darkness, blood, and death.
And then nothing.
Just fear.
Forcing the images from my mind, I pushed on, not stopping until I was standing in front of my locker in a sea of identical blue ones. Dropping my bag at my feet, I set to work on my combination, ignoring the familiar insult scrawled across my locker door in blood red paint.
I knew the janitor would scrub it off tonight, but it would reappear again tomorrow morning – just like every morning since my return to school for senior year. The whole world's thoughts projected in one single word.
Killer.
Like I could forget.
Happy fucking birthday to me.
Yanking the door open, I pulled out the textbooks I needed for tonight's homework assignments and quickly tucked them into my bag before closing my locker.
The moment I clicked the metal door shut, he was right there in my peripheral vision – just like every day – leaning against the locker to my left, and making my deflated heart thud violently.
The instant my gaze landed on those razor-sharp blue eyes and that devastatingly handsome face, a tsunami of unease and sorrow washed over me.
"How's it going, killer?" Sketch Capaldi's voice was deep, his tone hard and full of unrestrained hatred, as he geared up to inflict another batch of misconstrued justice on me. "Enjoying another undeserved day on earth?"
Quickly averting my eyes, I reached for my bag and stepped around his powerful frame, knowing that reacting to him was about the worst thing I could do.
Of course, Sketch fell into step beside me, invading my personal space with his big body. Before the accident, I'd never given much thought to the corded muscles hidden beneath the white school shirt and navy slacks he was wearing. Growing up, he had always been careful with me. Now though, I was on high-alert. I was achingly aware of the damage he could cause me.
In more ways than one.
"I'm speaking to you." He moved closer, his arm brushing against mine and setting off a jolt of electricity in my body. It was an intentional move. He intended to frighten me. To intimidate me with his blatant physical superiority over me.
"What's wrong, killer?" he taunted, wrecking me with that deep, familiar, Southern drawl. "Cat got your tongue?"
I remained silent, hugging my bag to my chest. There was a very good reason I didn’t wear my school bag on my back anymore and that reason was walking beside me. After he and his football buddies used the bag strapped to my back to catch and then drag me through the hallways on my butt, I wasn't taking any chances.
Pushing the exit door open, I stepped outside and quickly descended the mountain of steps at the entrance of Newton-Willis Academy, the private school I attended on the outskirts of Lake Charles, an hour north from my sleepy hometown of Pocketful.
Only a handful of the wealthiest kids from our hometown attended Newton-Willis, but that didn’t matter. News spread fast around this school, just as it did anywhere else, and the Capaldi twins were notorious here. Being the enemy of Sketch meant that I was everyone's enemy.
Upping my pace, I hurried through the quad and into the student parking lot, where I hoped Presley, one of the students that lived in Pocketful, would still be waiting. If not, I was going to have to call my father's driver to come get me.
The October breeze picking up outside caused my navy tie to swish around my face and my pleated skirt to flap against my thighs, but I didn’t dare stop moving.
A few more steps and I would be free.
A few more steps and I could bury myself under my comforter and stop my world from spinning.
Until tomorrow.
There was always tomorrow.
2
Romi
"Tell me something," Sketch continued when I didn’t take the bait. "How is it fair that my brother, my twin, my best friend, and the best goddamn person that ever walked the earth, is rotting in the cemetery in Pocketful, while the spoiled little princess that put him in the ground is roaming the halls of Newton-Willis, free as a fucking bird?"
That was a recurring question that I was tired of answering. Cops. Prison guards. Judges. Social workers. Reporters. Parents. Teachers. They all asked the same questions.
For a moment, I debated telling him that I was far from free, but I doubted it would go down well. Then I considered telling him that what happened to Chris wasn’t all my fault, but that was an even worse idea.
So I said nothing.
Words couldn’t bring Christopher Capaldi Jr. back.
Words couldn’t heal the hole in his brother's heart.
Words couldn't absolve me of my sins.
Of my memories.
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"Protect him, Romi," Chris choked out, struggling to breathe. "Promise me that you'll keep my brother safe..."
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"You think a six-month stint in juvie makes us even?" Sketch sneered, walking so close to me that our sides were touching. Goosepimples prickled my bare legs and his close proximity caused a rippling shiver to roll through my body. "Nah, killer. Not even close."
Hearing the boy I'd been joined at the hip with since the age of five call me a killer hurt worse than any of the other shit people said about me – and to my face.
It hurt worse than being thrown off the cheerleading squad, or being banished by my friends and turned into the town leper.
It hurt worse than having his mama come to the detention center the day I was released and slap me across the face.
It hurt worse than my father's barely concealed disappointment.