Read My Sweetest Escape Online
Authors: Chelsea M. Cameron
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #General
with black lung disease. I tried not to close
my eyes and lean into him and imagine him
hanging up a fresh load of laundry, shirtless,
of course, outside on a sunny day.
Dear Jesus, what was I doing?
He’d already said he wasn’t interested,
and I wasn’t interested, so why did he keep
doing things that made it seem like he was
interested, and I kept thinking things like
him hanging up laundry without a shirt on?
I scooted away from him and turned my
laptop so he couldn’t see the screen. He
settled back in his position with the smallest
of sighs and went back to taking notes. Or
at least that’s what I thought he was doing,
but then a paper airplane landed in my lap.
Seriously? How old was he? Although, I had
to give him points. Note passing was a lost
art in the world of texting and Facebook
messaging and tweeting your every vapid
thought out to the world whether the world
needed to know it or not.
I didn’t look back at him as I unfolded
the note.
What didn’t you want me to see? Were
you looking at porn? If yes, may I join you?
If no, what were you doing?
I turned and gave him a disgusted look
before setting the note on the coffee table
and scribbling an answer.
You are a pig and it’s none of your
business.
I refolded the airplane and chucked it
over my shoulder, not bothering to aim as I
went back to working on my blog. I couldn’t
really focus, though, because I thought that
any moment he was going to stick his head
over my shoulder again.
My blog was mine. I didn’t post my real
name, and there were no pictures of me so
no one would ever know it was mine. My
blog was…private. It was mine and no one
knew about it. This was probably what
Peter Parker and Bruce Wayne felt. Only,
you know, their secret identities were more
awesome than my secret blogging identity. I
could say anything I wanted, be anything I
wanted on my blog. That girl that I was
didn’t matter. No one knew her. And
besides, the blog wasn’t about me. It was
about the music.
A little while later, people started
packing it in for the night. I expected Dusty
to get up and leave, but he didn’t.
He also didn’t pass the note back, either,
and when I stole a glance at him, he was
back to being focused. Weirdo. I was about
to turn and ask him if he was going to stay
all night when I heard a book close behind
me.
“Well, I should probably get back to my
shack.” He got to his feet and everyone who
was still downstairs mumbled their
good-nights. He looked down at me as if he
was expecting something. Was I supposed
to walk him out?
Hold up. Did he think this was a date?
Was this a date?
Why would this have been a date? Sure,
dinner had been involved, but only because
he’d been here when we were making and
serving it.
“See you later,” I said, and it sounded
just as lame as it sounded in my head, and I
felt as lame as I had the night before in his
car.
He opened his mouth, changed his mind
and then made one of his drum sounds to
cover it up. “’Bye, Red.”
I gave him one of those two-fingered
waves, and he did one back with a smile on
his face.
It wasn’t until after he was gone that I
realized he’d taken the paper airplane note
with him.
“So I know your sister is, like, super
down on parties, but I got an invite to one,
and I can’t go on my own. Also, if you don’t
want to come with me, I will hurt you. So,
you’re coming,” Hannah said after bio the
next day.
“My sister is never going to go for it.”
“I figured, which is why I thought I could
talk to her and convince her.”
I almost started laughing. That was
never going to work, and it was cute that
she thought it would.
“It isn’t going to happen, Hannah.
You’ve seen my sister in action.” Besides, I
didn’t know if I’d really want to go anyway.
“Oh, I have powers of persuasion.”
Hannah didn’t seem like the type who
would be all over going to a party, so I really
wanted to know why she was into it.
“Why do you want to go so much? Is it a
guy?”
“No, it’s not a guy. I just feel like I want
to get the whole college experience, and
that includes going to a frat party at least
once. It’s on the college bucket list. I
checked.”
I wondered what else was on that list,
because I’d probably taken care of most of
it already. She was being weird about it,
and I knew that it was another thing she
wasn’t telling me about. In some ways I felt
so close to Hannah, but in others I felt like
she had all these secrets that she would
rather die than share with me.
“I’m not taking no for an answer,” she
said, and I recognized determination on her
face. For whatever reason, she had decided
that this was a thing she was going to do,
and I was going along with it. Hannah had
never made any demands on me as a
friend, and I was so used to it from my
former friends that I felt like a bitch for
saying no.
“I might have a lead on a job that
wouldn’t suck. If you agree to go, I’ll tell you
about it.” It was like one of those game
shows where they put a mystery box in
front of you.
I could win, or I could lose big. But it
might be nice to go out and let loose, for
real this time.
“I will only say yes if you can convince
Renee. Because I’ve already gotten myself
into hot water enough, and she’s just
starting to loosen up on me and let me do
things.”
Hannah put her hand out.
“Deal. I have complete faith in my ability
to convince her.” She was confident, that
was for sure. “So I’ll be over this
afternoon.”
“If you want to come for dinner, you
can. We always make plenty, and you
wouldn’t be the first person who’s invited
themselves over.” Crap, I hadn’t meant to
mention Dusty coming over. I knew she’d
want to overanalyze it and read more into it
and say things that would totally mess with
my head.
“I don’t even need to ask who it was. I
can figure it out based on the fact that you
mentioned it and that you clearly don’t
want to talk about it.”
Well…maybe Hannah would turn out to
be a sympathetic ear. I only paused for a
second before launching into the story of
Dusty helping me make dinner and then the
airplane note.
Of course, I left out the part about my
own feelings. She was smart enough to
figure them out anyway.
“So I’m just…confused and I don’t know.
He’s so…complicated.” I remembered Mase
saying something about the complications
being the best part of life.
“Is that code for ‘sexy’? Because he is so
into you.”
“Then why does he tell me that he
isn’t?” I made a frustrated sound that made
a few people walking in front of us turn and
give me a look like I was crazy. I was going
to be late for math, but I didn’t care. It was
the kind of class that you didn’t have to
attend to get a good grade in. Hell, the tests
were open book, and I’d heard the TA
would point you to the right answers if you
asked nice enough.
“Look, I have to go, but we will pick this
up later. What time should I come over?”
she said.
“Around six?”
“See you later, girl,” she said, taking off
for her next class, which was clear across
campus. She was going to have to book it to
get there.
I went to math and spent the entire
hour and fifteen minutes listening to
Maroon 5. They were one of those groups
I’d loved for so long, and their music was
the equivalent of a hug, or a bowl of
chicken soup. Warm and comforting.
I drove back to Yellowfield House in a
daze and was less-than-surprised to see
Dusty’s car parked on the street.
“Honey, I’m home,” I called as I shucked
my shoes off and set my bag down in the
entryway.
“How was your day, dear?” Dusty called
from the living room, where he was hanging
out with Mase.
“Are you moving in now?” I said,
grabbing a can of soda from the fridge. “Do
you want one?” I would have felt like a jerk
not asking.
“Nope, I’m good,” he said right behind
me.
“I swear to God, the next time you do
that…” I couldn’t think of what I was going
to do. “You know what? I won’t tell you
what I’m going to do. The anticipation will
just kill you, waiting for the moment. I
would enjoy that.”
“Easy, Red.”
“Seriously, why are you here? Because I
know you have a little bromance, but one
half of that isn’t here right now, so it can’t
be Hunter. And it can’t be because you love
to cook. And it can’t be that you really,
really love the house.
So what is it?”
I leaned on the fridge. I knew I was
asking a question I wasn’t going to like the
answer to, but I couldn’t take it anymore. I
wanted to know the truth, whether I liked it
or not.
“Maybe it is something else that keeps
me coming to this house. Maybe…maybe
I’ve been waiting for the right moment to
say it out loud.” He wouldn’t look at me,
which meant that he might have been
telling the truth. I was really tired of him
always trying to change the subject, or
making a joke out of things.
“I really come here because I’m crazy
about…this coffeepot.” He moved around
me and stood by the fancy coffeepot that
Hunter had probably bought and that cost
more than my entire textbook budget for a
year.
“I mean, I really, really love it.” He
leaned down and pretended to hug it and
stroked it fondly.
“Are you shitting me?”
He stood up, his smile faltering for a
second.
“What’s wrong?”
“Nothing. Just…nothing.” He’d done that
on purpose to screw with me, and I wasn’t
going to give him the satisfaction of
knowing that he totally had. I walked past
him back into the living room. Mase was
busy with a textbook and a highlighter.
“What’s up, Jos?”
“Nothing.” I turned on the television and
flipped around.
Dusty made sure he entered the room
and sat down in the recliner loud enough so
that I’d hear him. Jerk.
I purposely settled on an annoying girlie
reality show that he would probably never
watch in a million years. I turned up the
volume. Mase didn’t seem to mind. He was
known for his deep focus when he was
reading.
We sat in silence as the girls went out
shopping and to clubs and fought and made
up with their boyfriends. I waited for him to
beg for me to change the channel, or get up
and leave. Maybe this was the way to get
rid of him. Drive him away. I should start
playing Nickelback, or that really angry
Russian girl-band music I’d randomly found
on the internet.
I should start talking about menstrual
cramps and yeast infections and other girlie
shit he wouldn’t want to hear about.
But then I would probably repulse the
rest of the males n the house, and I didn’t
really want to ruin their lives. Just Dusty’s.
What was it about him that made me so
crazy?
He started softly making drum noises in
the chair. Now he was messing with me. I
turned the show up and he started making
louder noises. I still wouldn’t look at him.
“Can we take the volume down a notch?
I’m going deaf over here, and I’m a big fan
of standing near speakers at clubs,” Mase
said, grabbing the remote and turning the
volume down. “Are you okay, Little Ne?
You’re being kind of…not you.”