NPC; Layla FitzroyWhen he swore, she didn't react. Layla blinked passively as the ugly word rolled off her like water off a duck's back. She sighed melodramatically as she examined her short nails n the chink of moonlight that filtered through the curtains.
"Feeling guilty now, are we?" She goaded him as she tilted her head to the left as she watched him. She gave a snort of derisive laughter. Funny. Apparently she couldn't speak her name but he could shag countless women behind her back. If that wasn't the pot calling the kettle black, then she didn't know what was. "Not nice to be reminded of your movements in the dark, I imagine," she continued. Oh she didn't know them, did she? Layla simply smiled in the darkness. She knew, she knew a lot.
"I don't like the bitch," she said candidly. "Honestly, I don't but I do feel sorry for her. No one deserves to be treated the way you treat her," she said, accusing Charlie plainly. "I don't owe her anything. But I do want to pull her hair to see if it's fake," she mused. It was so swishy and shiny and
American. It had to be horse hair. Her smile changed, now taking on a mocking tone in the dim light. "I'm excited to see how she'll react," she began with a careless shrug. "With any luck, she'll realise what a pathetic little thing she's been and head back to sunny California. Women need to be protected from you, Charlie," she concluded.
Yeah, yeah, seven times. Big deal. As Charlie's world was collapsing, Layla was starting to become restless. This wasn't turning out as she was hoping it would. He was continually rejecting her. He was being rude. He was lashing out. It was
his mistake, it had absolutely nothing to do with her. As far as she was concerned, she was an innocent victim. Men like Charlie Baker were dangerous. They were cool and handsome and said all the right things. She remembered them being together and the intensity of the kisses he'd given her. Then he'd cut the cord and let her freefall back to Earth.
But it felt good to tell him. Charlie needed to know that she was not another notch on his belt and she would not be forgotten. The cute little bedroom was now in tatters, like an oil painting that had been ripped down the middle; it would be mended but it'd never feel the same. She wanted to hurt him so badly. She wanted her hurt to be his pain now, she was done feeling ignored and abandoned. If she couldn't have him, then no one else could. It was as simple as that.
Her knees buckled at the same moment his arms came around her. Layla panted for breath as the room spun, her body trying to disentangle all of her emotions as they jockeyed for position. She bent over at the waist as she swayed, feeling Charlie's heartbeat strong against her back as the tears began to flow faster. She felt physically sick. She felt angry, upset, disappointed, neglected but she also felt safe and warm. Regardless, she fought against his hold, using her elbows as she tried to put space between them.
Then he'd said it, those magic words.
It was all Layla longed to hear, that he'd take it all back. That he was sorry. That he'd made a mistake and that he didn't mean all of those horrible things he'd said to her. Her tears stopped instantly as she softened and stopped fighting. She let the words sink in. It felt nice, like sliding into a warm bubble bath. He said it, over and over again like a mantra. She felt warm, too. She didn't realise that the heat she'd felt was the steady stream of blood running down her forearm that pooled at her feet.
This could be it. This could be her happily ever after with the man she loved more than anything. Her heart lifted before it came crashing down with a sudden realisation; he didn't mean it. He couldn't. No one flipped-flopped emotions like that. He'd gone from protecting his girlfriend to now wanting to talk things through? Disappointment bubbled in her chest as she frowned and she was rewarded with a sudden shot of clarity that she'd needed all along; Charlie Baker was not the man she thought he was.
"You don't mean it," Layla whispered to him, her voice hoarse and her eyes wide as she shook her head so violently, the ends of her hair whipped at her cheeks. His once comforting embrace now felt like an onslaught of tiny little needles as she shifted uncomfortably. She felt crushed and desolate in this chintzy little bedroom. She looked around. Everything was covered with him and Kate and there was no room in his life for her or their imaginary baby. She felt sick. The delicate little ornaments and splashes of pastel colours were mocking her. Everything in this damned house was mocking her.
She could hear voices in the silence. Layla could hear jeers and laughing from unseen faces that echoed around the room. "Shut up," she hissed to no one in particular. The giggles intensified inside her head and she felt hot, Charlie's once comforting warmth felt like she was being boiled alive. "Let go," she said evenly as she balled her hands into fists, the skin now tacky with congealing blood as she stared out of the window.
Layla turned her head suddenly to look at the side of his face. She looked a mess. Her eye make up had run, streaking black down her pale cheeks. Her eyes and skin were blotchy, punctuated with pink spots. She'd never been a pretty crier. Twisting as best she could, she stared right at Charlie as she strained her body. Her azure coloured eyes were bright as she blinked at him, her plump lips looking pale as she frowned at him. With effort, she kissed him. It was soft and weak, barely a brush of lips against his. She closed her eyes and inhaled, as though trying to store up his very essence. "You don't know who I am," she finally realised. It hurt. It felt like someone had stabbed her in the heart and he was twisting the hilt, deeper and deeper.
She was done. She didn't want to be here any more. She half wished she
was pregnant. Layla would leave and she'd be able to torment him with the idea of him having a child that he'd never be able to see or get to know. It'd give him nightmares. Then maybe, just maybe, he'd know the feeling of being haunted by someone he could never have. Maybe, just maybe, he'd know how she'd been feeling for years.
She felt him shift, probably repulsed by her kiss. Layla saw an opportunity to run and she took it. She struck her elbow into his hipbone, the force causing more pain to her than him as she struggled to break free. She crossed the short space to the dresser and picked up a photo. It showed somewhere she didn't know. Blue and sunny. Palm trees. Must be something belonging to Kate. A street unfamiliar to her that must mean something to them both. She removed it from the frame and folded it in half, carelessly shoving it into the back pocket of her black jeans. All she knew was that she'd be able to find the address eventually.
She looked at Charlie swiftly, the blood now dripping from her finger tips in little droplets that fell silently into the carpet. To say that she was disappointed would be an understatement. She didn't say anything. She simply shook her head and walked away, down the stairs to the hallway and closed the front door behind her.