Read My Sweetest Escape Online
Authors: Chelsea M. Cameron
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #General
her pizza mostly untouched.
“Actually, I did,” Hunter said, earning a
look of approval from Renee.
“You did?” Taylor said. “When?”
“Christmas. Planned it all out and
everything.” Taylor had recently
reconnected with her father, and had even
gone down to see him in Connecticut during
the break and taken Hunter with her.
“Brilliant,” Mase said, giving him
another fist bump. “I thought you were
crazy, man, but best of luck. I’m happy I can
officially call Taylor a member of the family.
Oh, my God, have you told Harper yet?
She’s going to be over the effing moon.”
“Let’s call her right now.” I knew a little
bit about Mase’s sister Harper, who had
cerebral palsy and was wheelchair bound.
There were more than a few pictures of her
in the house, and he’d said she was coming
to visit with his parents at some point.
Hunter got out his phone and put it on
speaker.
“Who are they calling?” Hannah
whispered as the phone rang.
“Mase’s little sister. She and Hunter are
really close,” I said.
“Hello?” A little girl’s voice answered.
Seriously, the kid had her own phone?
Typical rich people.
“Hey, Seven! What’s shaking?” Hunter
said, a huge smile on his face. It was clear
from the way he talked about her that he
was completely in love with her. It was
really sweet.
“Hunter! I got an A on my story. Wanna
hear it?”
“Sure, Seven, but I called because I want
to tell you something. Taylor’s here, too.”
“Hi, Harper!” Taylor said.
“When are you coming to see me?”
“Soon, princess. I swear. But guess
what?”
“What?” Harper said.
“Hunter and I are going to get married.”
“You are?”
Taylor looked at Hunter and smiled.
“Yes, we are.”
A little-girl scream exploded from the
phone, and Hunter picked it up and took it
off speakerphone.
“She has never made that sound
before,” Mase said, shaking his head. “I
think she’s more excited about that than
she was about the Taylor Swift tickets she
got for Christmas.”
Hunter continued to talk to the excited
Harper.
“So you guys going to get hitched right
away?” Hannah asked Taylor as she stole
the uneaten pizza crust off my plate and
munched on it. I guess our friendship had
progressed to the food-stealing stage.
Taylor snorted. “Yeah, I don’t think so.
We both want to finish school first, and it
seems…I don’t know, weird to get married
while we’re still in college. I mean, I don’t
want people to think I’m knocked up or
anything.”
“Are you?” Hannah said. I almost died.
“Not that I know of,” Taylor said. “I just
really don’t want to deal with that now. We
have too much to do. But someday.”
Hannah nodded, and Renee went back
to grilling Taylor about her perfect wedding.
“You okay?” I was in the kitchen having
a cup of tea that night. Everyone else had
gone to bed, but I couldn’t sleep.
Renee’s voice made me jump.
“Yeah, fine. What are you doing up?”
“I guess I was just excited about
everything. I can’t believe he actually did
it.” She grabbed a glass from the dish
drainer and filled it with water. “When he
first got her the ring I thought he’d
proposed, but then the ring was on her
right hand. It was only a matter of time,
though. Those two are destined for each
other.”
“You jealous?” She gave me a look like
I’d said something completely outlandish.
She snorted some of the water and
choked. “Of them getting married? Hell, no.
I am
not
ready to get married.”
“But you’re living with Paul. I mean, it’s
not exactly the same thing, but it’s close.”
She laughed.
“Oh, my dear sweet little sister. There is
a world of difference between living with
someone and marrying them.”
“But you would marry Paul. Eventually, I
mean.”
“Yeah, years down the road when we
both are out of debt and have more than
two nickels to rub together. I don’t want to
spend a shit ton of money on a wedding if
we can’t even afford to pay for our health
insurance or a place to live. Besides, I want
a huge-ass wedding, and I’m only going to
do it once. Why not do it right?” She had
valid points, rational points. I wondered
how Paul felt about it. Not that it mattered.
Renee wore the pants, the shirts and
everything else in their relationship. She
had him by the balls, but he never seemed
to mind.
“So what was with you and Dusty?”
“What do you mean?” Shit, I did not
want her to get on my case about him.
“Oh, I don’t know. Maybe I’m reading
too much into it.”
“I’m not interested in him,” I said for the
millionth time.
“I didn’t think you would be. I mean, he
is
so
not your type at all.” Wasn’t. I didn’t
have a type anymore.
“I can say this now that you’re not with
him, but I never liked Matt. He was always
so… I don’t know.” She waved her hand,
trying to come up with the right word.
“Uptight?” I supplied. Yeah, so was I.
“No, it was something more than that. I
always felt like he was judging me and
found me wanting. But he treated you right,
and I saw that he loved you, so I kept that
to myself.” Not really. I could tell the whole
time I’d dated Matt from high school to
college that Renee hadn’t liked him.
She was pretty bad at hiding when she
didn’t like someone, but I would never tell
her that.
She drained the glass of water. “Okay,
well, I’m going back to bed. Night, little
sister.” She held her arms out for a hug and
I held mine out too and we hugged like we
used to.
“Night, big sister.”
I took the rest of my tea and went back
down to my cave and turned my music on.
Ingrid Michaelson’s voice filled
my ears, feeling weirdly appropriate for
late-night listening.
“Here, listen to this one,” he said,
handing me one of his ear-buds. I fitted it to
my ear as an unfamiliar voice sang about
loving
someone, but feeling like a freak in
comparison. When I’d told him
I didn’t really
listen to music, he’d taken it as a challenge.
Each
day, he would bring me a new song.
Pop, rock, country, rap, old-ies, whatever.
He’d listen to pretty much anything. “As
long as it’s
good,” he said.
“Music says what words can’t. Add
words to music and you say
two things at
once.”
I missed him, but I still couldn’t talk
about him, out loud.
Not to Renee, not to anyone. I couldn’t
explain it. He’d been the first real friend I’d
ever had. He’d been the friend that made
me realize that all the other people I
thought were my friends really weren’t.
I hadn’t been in love with him, not that
way, but I’d loved him all the same. I’d
heard something somewhere that said guys
and girls couldn’t be friends without at least
one falling in love with the other, but it
wasn’t true. There were just different kinds
of love, that’s all. He’d been like the brother
I never had, and he’d treated me like a
sister. A part of me was gone, taken with
him when he…
I turned off the music. It made me think
of him, and I knew what he would have said
if he knew I was moping about him.
Just smile, Jossy. The world isn’t that
bad. Besides, you have to
have the bad
parts so you recognize the good ones when
they come
along.
“Wow, this show is ridiculous.” I was
sitting with Hannah on the futon under her
lofted bed, watching my second episode
ever of
Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
“It’s so
weird. Those computers are, like, gigantic,”
I said.
“I know, right? Like, in the best way. Just
wait until the third season.” Hannah had
her trusty bag of Skittles and I’d brought
some M&M’s from the vending machine in
the basement of her dorm and I was mixing
them in an empty Solo cup. “You know, a
lot of the problems on this show could have
been resolved by cell phones. But then you
wouldn’t have such an entertaining show,
so I guess it’s fine the way it is.”
I held my cup out and she poured some
more Skittles into it.
“Heard from Dusty?” she said, eyes on
the screen.
“Uh, no. He doesn’t have my number, so
that’s a negative.”
“Bummer.”
“Do you want me to have heard from
him? Because you were acting really weird
yesterday.”
“Oh, that? I was just being the
protective friend. I wanted to see how he’d
respond. A lot of guys get intimidated by a
protective friend, and then there’s always
the ones you need to watch out for, the
guys that are threatened by a girl having
friends.”
“Have you known a lot of guys like
that?”
“A few. Here and there.” Yeah, there
was much more to that story. An asterisk
and a lot of footnotes in tiny print. I didn’t
think we had passed the friendship
milestone where I could interrogate her
until she told me about it, so I let it go.
“And the verdict on Dusty?”
“He seems like a nice guy. Cocky, and he
might have a dark past he’s trying to hide,
or maybe he’s a closet fan of
Lord of the
Rings,
or a hoarder, or obsessed with
something weird, but I don’t think he’s a
bad guy. Didn’t get that bad-guy vibe.
Bad-boy vibe, yes.”
“What’s the difference?”
She paused the show and sighed,
brushing her hair away from her face.
“Okay, a bad boy is one that makes you
all, like, tingly.
He’s dangerous in a good way. A way
that makes your heart race and want to ride
a motorcycle or go skinny-dipping. A bad
guy is one who hurts you, or makes you feel
worthless, or isolates you from your friends.
He’s just dangerous. Those are the guys to
stay away from.”
“Oh.” She seemed to have it all figured
out, and I could tell she’d spent a lot of time
thinking about bad guys as opposed to bad
boys.
“So Dusty is a bad boy.”
“Definitely. Unless you see any red flags.
Then you run in the opposite direction.”
“I’m pretty sure if there were any red
flags, my sister and the rest of the people I
live with wouldn’t let him near me. Hunter
wouldn’t be friends with a bad guy.”
“Still. You never know. People aren’t
always what they seem. You spend years
thinking they’re one way and then
something happens and they reveal who
they really are.”
“But you can’t go through life thinking
that everyone is bad.”
“I don’t. I told you—I trust my instincts.”
We weren’t going to agree, so I dropped
it and we went back to watching the show,
but I thought a lot about what she’d said
about people being bad or good, and trying
to tell the difference.
I didn’t think I’d ever met a really bad
person. Even my ex and my ex-friends
weren’t bad people.
I’d been just like them, and I didn’t think
I was a bad person. That guy, Travis, the
one who had hurt Taylor, he was a bad guy.
I didn’t need to meet him or know anything
else about him to know that. But did that
mean he would always be bad? Could
people change?
I’d changed.
I had so many thoughts running through
my head I almost forgot about the
engagement dinner and found the house in
chaos when I got back from Hannah’s.
Mase was on his hands and knees in the
living room, along with Hunter and Darah.