“Daisy, you’re okay,” Lo tells her. “No one is in here.” She’s still unresponsive, and Lo turns to Connor who’s beside the bed, on the ground unlike us.
He wears an unreadable expression, watching Daisy’s hysterical fit.
I’m afraid she’s going to f**king hurt herself. Her nails start digging into her palms. So I grab her ankle and drag her back down onto the bed. She rolls over on her stomach like she’s crawling through barbed wire.
I bend down and flip Daisy onto her back. She thrashes. “No, no!”
I hate how wrong this looks. I want her to wake up so f**king badly, especially before someone hears her screams through the walls and calls the hotel staff.
I press my knees onto her legs, pinning her down. And I hold her wrists on either side of her body, and she screams bloody f**king murder at being trapped like this. I end up having to use one hand to cover her mouth, and she slaps me hard across the face. The sting burns, and I taste blood, my lip busting open.
Lo kneels and grabs her hand, not letting her go.
She’s stronger in these nightmares than she is awake because she’s driven by fear, an adrenaline rush that I can’t f**king begin to imagine.
Her tears well and redden her eyes. I lean forward, my face close to hers, my fingers digging into her cheek. “Wake up!” I shout. “Daisy, wake the f**k up!” Come on, sweetheart. Fight this.
“Her pulse is out of control,” Lo says, his voice flooded with worry.
I take my hand off her mouth and touch the top of her breast, her heart practically pounding through. She has to f**king wake up and calm down.
“No!” she cries like she’s dying, like someone’s killing her. Sweat beads her forehead, hot tears dripping off her jaw. “Please,” she cries, shaking her head from side to side. “Please…”
“Wake up,” I growl in her ear, combing her damp hair out of her face. Wake the f**k up.
“Be careful,” Lo tells me.
I’m not hurting her. Whoever’s tormenting Daisy in her head is. I glance over my shoulder at Connor. “Can you hand me a glass of water.”
Daisy is about to start screaming again, so I muffle her noises with my hand once more.
“You shouldn’t pour water on her face if she’s having a night terror.”
Lo glares at Connor. “You know what’s going on and you didn’t think to share?”
I stare hard at the mattress, ignoring the guilt that tries to f**k me over. You’ve known all along what’s going on, Ryke For months.
“She’s asleep,” Connor starts to explain.
“Just give me the f**king water,” I tell him. “I’m not going to drown her.” I’ve done this before.
Connor’s brows pinch as he scrutinizes me, and then he hands me her water bottle—I think more out of curiosity of what I’m about to do.
I pour some water on my free hand, and then stroke her hair out of her face again, cooling her down and hopefully waking her up soon.
She jolts at the new sensation and thrashes again. But I keep her pinned in the same position. Lo clasps her whole arm as she tries jerking out of his grasp. My muscles burn the longer I watch tears squeeze out of her eyes and fear wash over her face.
“How can she still be asleep?” Lo asks. “She’s looking at Ryke.”
“It’s a state between REM sleep and wakefulness,” Connor explains. His eyes meet mine. “How long has she had this problem?”
I shake my head, and Daisy’s leg slips beneath my knee, trying to f**king kick me again. I shift her back. “I wouldn’t f**king know.”
He doesn’t believe me. “You haven’t seen her like this before?” he questions with an arched brow.
“Why would you think I have?” I retort with a dark glare.
“Because you’re the closest person to her, and you don’t look surprised by this.”
“I am f**king surprised,” I retort.
Connor shakes his head, still disbelieving.
“I just f**king reacted, Connor,” I retort, my brother frowning between me and him. He’s trying to give me the benefit of the doubt, which is making this f**king painful. “Stop turning it into a thing.”
And then Daisy’s eyes slowly focus on me. Her tense limbs slacken, but the panic stays in her gaze.
I peel my hand off her mouth. “Daisy?”
She blinks a few times, and Lo releases her arm. I sit up off her body, and she touches her head in confusion. When she truly meets my eyes, her face breaks and she starts crying again.
I immediately lift her into my arms, and she hides her face in her hands. “They were here,” she says. “They were stabbing me—”
“Hey,” I say roughly, stroking the back of her head. “You’re safe. No one’s here but me, Connor and Lo.” She’s on my lap, in my arms, where she’s been so many times before.
But it’s f**king different now.
We’ve never been in front of other people. And we’ve never called ourselves anything other than friends.
Lo climbs off the bed. “Daisy, who’s them?”
Her hot tears wet my gray shirt, and she mumbles into my chest, “Bad guys.”
Lo frowns. “What’d she say?” he asks me.
“Bad guys,” I say. “It was a f**king nightmare.” But no matter how imaginary her dream was, to her, in those three minutes, it felt real, more so than any kind of bad dream I’m used to.
I understand why she’d rather not take the medicine at all, but she has to sleep some. It’s trading one bad place for another.
Daisy’s arms wrap underneath mine, clutching onto me tightly. My brother gives me a single warning look like, You can’t lead her on.
His concern is warranted. I would feel the same f**king thing if I was him in this situation. But no part of me wants to disentangle her from my body.
Still, I know I have to.
I whisper in her ear, “I’m going to tuck you into bed, and you’re going back to sleep.”
“What?” she breathes. She glances up at me with wide eyes, and she shakes her head. “No, Ryke. I can’t go back…”
“You’ll be fine,” I tell her, prying her arms from mine and setting her back against the mattress.
“No,” she cries. She springs up immediately. “No, please don’t do this…I need you—”
“Daisy,” I say her name forcefully. My lips find her ear. “You have to f**king try to sleep again.” I rise off the bed, and she hugs her legs and rests her forehead on her knees, sobbing.
I turn to my brother, my heart clenching, and I throw my hands up like, What do you want me to f**king do now?
His brows are furrowed in concern. “Daisy? What can we do? I can get Lily on the phone.”
She shakes her head and wipes her tears. “I’m sorry I woke you.”
While my brother keeps conversing with her, Connor suddenly rests a firm hand on my shoulder. “I need to talk to you,” he says quietly.
He looks angry. His deep blue eyes pierce me in accusation, and his fingers are digging into my skin. He rarely shows this kind of emotion—and he’s letting me see it on purpose.
He knows.
He knows I’ve been keeping her problems a secret, and he probably gathered that they stemmed from a traumatic event.
I don’t want to talk about her issues with him. “Maybe later,” I say, stepping out of his hold.