Page 162 of No One But Me


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The shorter man's hand landed on my shoulder.

Heavy.

Possessive.

Wrong.

I slammed my forehead into his nose.

The crack echoed through the bookstore—wet, sharp, satisfying.

He roared, stumbling back, hands flying to his face. Blood poured between his fingers.

I didn't wait.

I ran.

Behind me, chairs crashed. The shorter man cursed—loud, vicious, promising violence.

"Grab her!"

My sneakers slipped on the hardwood. I caught myself against a shelf, books tumbling in my wake. Pages fluttered like dying birds. Spines cracked against the floor.

I'm sorry I'm sorry I'm sorry?—

But I couldn't stop.

Heavy footsteps pounded behind me. Closer than they should be. Too close.

I shoved another shelf sideways. It tilted, groaned, spilled decades of carefully curated fiction across the floor in a cascade of paper and binding glue.

My chest burned.

The back office. The desk. The?—

The bat.

I'd bought it years ago after a late-night scare. Kept it tucked behind the filing cabinet where customers wouldn't see.

I crashed through the office door, lungs screaming.

There. Wooden. Scuffed. Real.

I grabbed it with both hands, whirling just as the shorter man filled the doorway.

His nose was a mess. Blood streaked his chin, dripped onto his jacket.

Pure rage twisted his features into something barely human.

"You little bitch?—"

I swung.

The bat connected with his shoulder. The impact vibrated up my arms, rattling my teeth.

He staggered sideways with a howl.

I raised the bat again, muscles screaming in protest.