Author's Note: This will be an odd one. Before we get started, quick disclaimer. Along with fantasy, this story contains elements of Incest, Non-consent, Nonhuman, and infidelity. But none of that should be a surprise if you know anything about Greek Mythology.
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Carissa cursed her father, who had insisted when she was fifteen that his daughter "just wasn't ready for that kind of responsibility." She cursed her mother, who overreacted when Carissa ran over part of their white picket fence when she was sixteen. She cursed the basketball game where she broke her leg last year, and the stupid summer camp she agreed to counsel at that summer.
In the end, Carissa cursed everything and everyone that had gotten in the way of taking driver's ed until now, the summer before her senior year of high school and months after her eighteenth birthday. She cursed them because being an adult who couldn't drive was lame, but also because it meant she had to take the driving course with
him
.
There were five of them in the car. Carissa was driving. In the passenger seat sat the forty-something driving instructor, half paying attention to her while he texted. In the back were three other kids. She didn't know any of them, they were a grade or two below her, but the boy in the center had made himself known.
Carissa had no idea how old the kid was. Most of the people taking the course were teenagers, but he didn't really look like one. She couldn't pin down what age he was supposed to be. He had a young looking face and the unblemished skin of a boy, but his bare arms showed off impressive musculature. She hadn't seen anyone with a physique like that in her high school. And his constantly frizzy hair was white, like an elderly person. His glasses, which were square, thick, and gray tinted, also didn't give off the impression of youth. And his clothing choices were truly bizarre. While all of his shirts were sleeveless, in every other way they were made to conceal. He wore long billowy pants and shapeless tops. He was one hop away from wearing robes or a toga.
Whatever kind of person the guy was, he was definitely an eccentric. But Carissa didn't mind that. She wasn't judgemental and she didn't particularly care if the people around her were weird. What she couldn't
stand
was just how much this stranger seemed to care about her.
They never spoke, but whenever he sat behind her Carissa could feel the creep watching. Even now as she was driving, the girl had to remind herself to focus on the road. If she didn't, her eyes would inevitably creep up to the rearview mirror and meet the gaze fixating on her from the backseat. She would glare back, and get lost in those strange, piercing eyes. Through his square, tinted frames, Carissa couldn't even determine his eye color.
"Um, Carissa?" asked one of the kids in the backseat.
Ka-THUNK!
The impact rattled both Carissa and her educator out from their reveries. The girl had to blink a few times before she realized just what caused the commotion: Her fender meeting the curb.
The teacher sighed. "Well drat, Marissa. What'd we say about focusing when we're on the road?"
"I was, sir! I was trying!"
Everyone got out of the car to examine the damage. It was only a ding, but Carissa still felt her heart rising into her throat. Her mom would have a field day with this incident.
The teacher tut-tutted. "This is why we have insurance. These things happen. You shouldn't feel too bad about this, Marissa. I just hope you hold onto the memory so you can do better next time."
"My name is
Ca-
rissa," said the girl, before adding a belated "Sir. And It wasn't my fault! I was focusing! I was watching the road. But he won't leave me alone!" She pointed at the offending white-haired creep. "He won't stop watching me! I don't know if he's trying to sabotage me or if he's just a perv, but I can't focus on what I'm doing while he's being all weird!"
"Who? Him?" asked the educator. He looked directly at the stranger, and for a second his eyes seemed to glaze over. Carissa watched as the teacher stared at her voyeur, his mouth moving slowly as if he were failing to make words. She wondered if the older man might be having a stroke.
But at last the episode passed and the teacher disregarded the strange figure. "Now, Carissa, if you are having any problems with class you should make a formal complaint or speak to me outside of driving time. But one of the most important aspects of being a driver is accepting responsibility..."
Carissa mutely stood and listened to the spiel on responsibility for what felt like years. When it was done, one of the other students drove them all back to the school in the slightly dented car. That meant Carissa was forced to squoosh in the back, right next to the strange man she'd accused. But now that he was shoulder-to-shoulder with the girl he'd spent the last four weeks ogling, the man didn't spare her a look or a word.
Coward,
thought Carissa.
Class finished with a viewing session of another short film about how texting and driving would kill them all. Carissa was about to bike home when she noticed a certain white haired boy going in the opposite direction. She waffled for a bit, but decided this had gone on long enough. It was time to get some answers.
The stranger jumped a bit as Carissa brought her bike to a halt just in front of him. She came to a stop with her bike perpendicular to the creep so as to block his path.
"I think it's time we have a talk, what's-your-name."
The stranger smiled and relaxed his posture. He gave the girl a slight wave. "My name is Junior. Hi Carissa."
Looking directly at him, Carissa noticed that the stranger wasn't carrying any kind of bag on him. His clothes didn't seem to have any pockets either. Unless they were very well hidden, the creep wasn't carrying any phone, wallet, or keys. He was just out in the world barehanded. Something about that made her second guess her choice to corner him.
"Okay Junior," she said, burying any misgivings beneath righteous fury, "What is your deal with me? You know I can see you staring at me, right? You aren't subtle. It's creepy. And how old are you anyway? You know it's perverted to stare at a high school girl, don't you? Guys can go to jail for that. And just who the hell are you?"
Junior shook his head. Carissa could almost see her question washing off of him, as though they were raindrops and he was wearing a poncho.
"I'm nobody, really," he said. "I'm merely another stranger. Passing through town and enjoying the sights."
Junior's eyes crept up her, beginning at her feet and climbing to the top of her head. She found herself shivering at the fixation from behind those strange, gray lenses. Carissa was not dressed immodestly. She had on a white and pink floral sundress. It reached her knees and didn't show off any cleavage. It was cute, but the kind of cute she might wear at Thanksgiving with her family. But when Junior focused his full gaze on her, Carissa felt as though she were dressed in a towel.
The girl resisted the urge to hide herself with her arms. "Then why don't you keep passing through, then? I'm not for you Junior, and I'm not going to this class for you. I just want to get my fucking driver's license. If you keep fucking that up for me, you're going to wish you'd never seen me at all."
The smile split a bit on Junior's face. He didn't look playful now. That should have been satisfying for Carissa, but it wasn't. In the absence of his earlier humor, all that remained was fixated intensity. A shadow passed in front of the sun, and the summer's day was darkened.
When the cloud moved on, the man's face had returned to its previous brightness. "I hear you, Carissa. Loud and clear."
"You do?" she asked.
He nodded emphatically. Over emphatically. His frizzy, bristling white hair bobbed like a thousand alien antennae. "I never meant to scare you. If you don't want me in the class, you'll never see me there again. No problem at all."
Carissa blinked in confusion. This wasn't an outcome she had even hoped for. But it wasn't bad either. She even decided to ignore the insinuation that she was scared of him. "Thank you, Junior. That sounds great. But don't you need to learn how to drive too?"
Junior laughed out loud. "No wonder I like you. Take care now!" And the stranger turned around in the exact opposite direction than he'd been walking in before and strode away.
Her objective accomplished, Carissa wasted no time in riding off towards home. She hadn't made it far though when she heard Junior's voice echoing towards her with a final rejoinder.
It wasn't just the voice that got her attention. There was a presence. In the same way Carissa had been able to feel Junior staring at her when she wasn't looking before, suddenly she could feel him standing immediately behind her. And something else came with the presence. It was a smell. Like burning. It smelled like the Fourth of July, right after the fireworks went off.
Carissa turned toward where Junior had to be, but she didn't see anyone. For a moment too long she searched for him. She was so concentrated on the source of her confusion, she didn't even notice when her front tire collided with the side of a parked car.
Carrisa came out of the collision okay, with nothing but a skinned knee and elbow to show for it. Her bike, twisted and bent in three places, was less fortunate.
Despite her shame and frustration, Carissa was left with no choice but to call her dad for a ride home.
On the way there, the girl could think of nothing but the mysterious Junior's final words to her:
"
Be seeing you.
"