Page 125 of Goodbye Butterfly


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Silence.

I laugh. Bitter. Broken.

“No one’s coming out of this whole, Cassandra. Not you. Not me. No one.”

I turn, walking toward the sink like I can rinse the blood off my fucking memories. I grip the edge of the counter so hard my knuckles go white.

“You think I’m angry at you?” My voice drops to a rasp. “I’m not.”

Another breath. Shaky. Controlled.

“I’m angry at me. For letting you in. For letting myself believe for one second that I could have something soft in a world that only deals in sharp edges and exit wounds.”

Her footsteps are quiet.

She’s behind me but I can’t turn around because if I see her face—if I see even an ounce of forgiveness—I’ll break.

“I watched a man shoot his best friend because he was infected and there were no medics left. That’s what you’re walking into. That’s what I walked out of.”

Another silence.

And then I snap.

I spin around and slam my fist into the cupboard door. It splinters.

“Fuck!”

She gasps—but doesn’t move.

Just stares at me like she wants to hold me together and I don’t deserve it.

“I can’t lose you too,” I snarl. “I won’t.”

I’m heaving now. Rage boiling under my skin like napalm. My voice shakes from the sheer pressure of trying to hold it all in.

“Twenty Six days,” I breathe. “Twenty Six days and I have to go back to hell. And now I get to count down every single one knowing you’re running toward the fucking fire.”

She opens her mouth.

I stop her with one word:

“Don’t.”

I’m shaking.

Unraveling.

I’ve never felt this much and wanted it gone so bad because if I love her—I lose her.

That’s what war is.

It takes everything soft and makes it bleed.

“I’m not scared of war,” she says softly.

I flinch.

Not because of the words because of the conviction in them.