Read My Sweetest Escape Online
Authors: Chelsea M. Cameron
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #General
“I’m fine.”
I was saved from further explanation by
the arrival of Darah and a few minutes later
Taylor and Hunter and then Renee.
“So, Hannah’s coming over for dinner. I
hope no one minds.”
Everyone chimed in with how they
didn’t, and they’d be more than happy to
have her whenever she wanted to come
over. Yellowfield House was like a sponge,
soaking up random people, and I was one of
them. Pretty soon they’d have to add a
fourth level, or turn the basement into a
dorm. I could just picture it with bunk beds
lining the walls.
Taylor and Hunter were on for dinner,
and they were doing pizza, since everyone
could choose what they wanted for
toppings and we could make them
individually. Hannah showed up just as we
were flattening out our individual crusts. Of
course Dusty was staying. I wanted to ask
him if he was going to just move in, but I
was kind of giving him the silent treatment
for the thing about the coffeepot.
“Hey, girl. And everyone,” she said,
walking through the front door without
knocking.
Hannah got a warm welcome. I saw the
same look in her eyes that I’d seen earlier
when she’d told me about making me go to
the party.
“Pull up a ball,” Hunter said after she’d
washed her hands.
He gave her a ball of dough and a plate
to roll it out on. “You just flatten it out as
much as you can, and then put it on the pan
here and we’ve got sauce and toppings. I
recommend using the toppings to make
your name, so you remember which one is
yours and there’s no confusion. Okay?”
“Got it, chief,” she said, giving him a
salute and banging down the dough with a
little too much force.
Everyone made their pizzas, and we
somehow fit them all in the oven at once.
Darah and Mase shooed us all out of the
kitchen as they cleaned up, so we had music
sex in the living room, with Dusty doing
backup drums for Hunter. I kept waiting for
Hannah to make her move, but she just sat
back and kept yelling out ridiculous song
suggestions that made everyone laugh.
It wasn’t until we were all stuffing our
faces and Darah and Renee were recounting
memories from one of the parties they’d
gone to when they were freshmen.
“Speaking of parties,” Hannah said.
“There’s this really cool one happening at
the Kappa Sigma house and I got an invite
and I need a wing woman.”
Her pronouncement was met with
silence at first.
“You want to go to a Kappa Sig party?”
Hunter said, skeptical.
“Well, I feel like my college experience
won’t be complete without going to a frat
party. It’s not that I want to go…it’s that I
feel obligated to go. And I really shouldn’t
go alone, so I need someone to escort me.
Hey, Jos, what are you doing on Saturday
night?” Was this her master plan? Because
it wasn’t very masterful.
“Absolutely not,” Renee said, practically
yelling.
“Well, how about this? How about you
all come with us? Then we can all go and
have a good time and you can supervise us
and I can fulfill my dream. Win-win.”
Dusty coughed.
“You okay there, bud?” Hannah
happened to be sitting next to him, so she
banged him on the back.
“Fine,” he choked out, taking a gulp
from his water glass.
“So,” Hannah said, turning back toward
Renee. “Are you in?”
All eyes were on Renee.
She put her hands up. “Why do I have to
be the deciding one? Someone else say yes
or no. I don’t care either way.”
“Could be fun,” Taylor said.
“Right?” Hannah said, latching on to
Taylor. Hunter shrugged.
“I guess.”
“What about you, Dare?” Mase said.
“I’ve already been to one, and it wasn’t
that bad.”
Hannah smelled a victory.
“I’ll come, too. Keep you girls in line.
And you could use some extra muscle on
your side,” Hunter said.
“Agreed,” Mase said, nodding.
“I’m in if you’re in, Nene.” Props to Paul
for using the nickname at a time like this.
“Well, I guess I have no choice,” Renee
said, getting up and putting her plate in the
sink. I knew this was going to happen. Now
my sister was mad, and I was going to have
to try to patch it up. Renee could stay mad
for a while; I knew that from experience.
I gave Hannah a look, but she just smiled
triumphantly. I shook my head and stood
up, following Renee to the sink.
“I told her I didn’t want to go. I have no
idea why she wants to go, but she does. I’m
sorry.”
“It’s okay, Jos. It’s fine. I’m just… I don’t
like being the bad guy. I hate being in that
situation. I want to be your older sister, not
your mom, and sometimes I cross the line
and feel like I have to be your parent.”
“I’m sorry.” Now I felt like absolute shit
and I was kind of pissed at Hannah. If she
hadn’t been so intent on going to this
stupid party, which would probably turn out
to be nothing and totally not worth it,
Renee wouldn’t be mad at me.
“I’m not mad at you. I know it’s not your
fault, Jos.” She turned on the sink and
everyone else started bringing their dishes
over.
“It’s our turn,” Darah said as she picked
up the soap and squirted it on one of the
sponges.
“No, it’s fine. I’ve got it,” Renee said.
“Babe, come on,” Paul said, taking her
hand. I knew my sister well enough to know
that she was on the verge of tears.
He took her hand and led her upstairs
and I heard the door to their bedroom shut.
“Can I talk to you, Hannah?” I walked
toward the downstairs and jerked my head
so we could go down into the cave and have
a chat.
“I am so sorry. I had no idea that would
happen,” she said as I shut the door and
walked down the stairs.
“What did you think was going to
happen? That you’d just suggest that her
underage sister should go into a snake pit
filled with alcohol and boys who want to
touch me and things that I was all wrapped
up in this summer and she’d just go along
with it? Seriously, Hannah?”
We’d been friends such a short time
that this was our first fight, and it felt like
shit.
Her eyes were wide, her usually sassy
demeanor deflated.
“I’m so sorry. I just… I’m so sorry.”
“Why did you want to go so bad?”
She walked the rest of the way down the
stairs and sat down on the second to last
one. I sat a few steps above her.
“It’s so stupid. You’re going to think I’m
a moron.”
“Tell me and we’ll find out,” I said. I just
wanted people to stop lying to me, or
changing the subject. I wanted the truth, for
once.
The truth is the most beautiful thing
there is, because it’s the
most real.
I didn’t believe him when he’d said that,
and I wasn’t sure if I believed it now. The
truth sucked a lot of the time.
“Okay, so you remember at the party on
Sunday that I was being weird? And then
we saw those guys in the Union?” I knew it
had something to do with that. I just had no
idea to what extent, or how.
“So, this guy came up to me and he
pretended to flirt with me, invite me to the
party and then he went and told all his
friends that he’d flirted with a freak. It was
some sort of stupid dare or something. I
was pissed, of course, but whatever, you
know? But then I saw them again and they
just pissed me off. I’m not fucking Gandhi. I
can’t deal sometimes. So I had this plan to
go to the party and fuck them over
somehow. I wasn’t exactly sure how I was
going to do it. I was going to wait until we
go there and, like, pull a Carrie, only, like,
get the bad guys this time. You know?”
“Were you planning on bringing a
bucket of pig’s blood with you?”
“Obviously not. That was more of a
metaphor than an actual plan. I was kind of
hoping you’d help me out with it.”
“You are one of the single weirdest
people I have ever met.”
“That is not the meanest thing anyone’s
ever said to me.”
I could imagine.
“Are you mad?”
“A little.” I slid down a step so I was one
closer to her.
“You could have just told me that’s why
you wanted to go instead of orchestrating
this crazy plan. Or I would have just told you
that those douche bags weren’t worth it
and averted this whole thing.”
“I know you’re right. I have this
tendency to only trust myself and think that
everyone else is going to screw me over.
Probably because lots of people have
screwed me over.
I’d tell you how many times it has
happened, but you might not believe some
of my stories.”
“Oh, you’d be surprised.” I had stories,
too.
She put her head down on her knees.
“I’ve messed things up, haven’t I?”
“It’s okay. You’re allowed. And it’s not
like you did it to be mean, or for some
malicious reason. I mean, not a malicious
reason against people who hadn’t already
been assholes to you.” I wasn’t much for an
eye for an eye, but getting those guys back
seemed like a valid plan. “But would
messing with those guys make you feel
better?”
“At first.”
“Have you ever done this to someone
who’s been like this in the past?”
She finally lifted her head up and I saw a
glimmer of her smile.
“There was this girl who used to call me
freak face and would move away from me if
I was ever near her. She used to say a lot of
other horrible things, and this one day, I’d
just had enough and snapped.” She moved
up and there was only one step between us.
“So every morning she used to get these
giant frozen coffees from the Starbucks,
right? I mean, they were huge. I’m pretty
sure they were the only thing she ever
consumed. I can’t remember seeing her eat.
I’m pretty sure they were her bitch fuel.
Anyway, so I started buying the exact drinks
she got and putting them in her locker. So
she’d open her locker and they’d just spill
over all her shit. Wow, that sounds so much
worse when I say it out loud. It was funny
that week when every time after lunch
she’d open her locker and one would come
flying out at her. She never figured it out.”
I had to admit it was pretty good.
“And you know what? I bet that girl is
probably screwing some ridiculously hot
guy at some awesome college in Florida or
something. Bitch,” she said.
“Or maybe she got knocked up the
summer after high school and her parents
made her marry him and she had a super
ugly baby and she waits tables at a horrible
diner and her boss is always grabbing her
ass, but she can’t say anything because she
can’t afford to lose her job because her
baby daddy is an alcoholic who just sits in
his recliner and drinks all day.”
She stared at me as if I’d grown an extra
head and then burst out laughing.
“Girl, you have a hell of an imagination.
You should be a writer.” She wasn’t the first
person who’d said that to me. In English,
Greg had written comments on my first few
prompts that were all positive, and he’d
singled me out more than once for
recognition. Of course I’d turned into a
human fireball every time, and I wished
he’d stop doing it.
And because Hannah had told me about
one of her little secrets, I decided to share
one of mine.
“Hold on a sec.” My laptop was in my
room, so I grabbed it and turned it on,
clicking on to the internet browser and
pulling up my blog. I handed the computer
to Hannah without saying anything.
“Okay,” she said, scrolling through my
blog. “What is this?”
“It’s mine. My blog. This is my secret
identity. My name is Joscelyn Archer and
I’m a music blogger.”
Her eyes went wide and she stared at
the blog more intently.
“No shit, this is yours? Oh, my God.” I
watched her eyes race over my latest album
review and then she clicked on some of the
tabs and looked at some other things. I
waited for the verdict.
“This is so freaking awesome! Why
didn’t you tell me about this?”
I shrugged.
“I don’t know. I guess it was just such a
personal thing that I was putting out there. I
didn’t mind sharing it with strangers
because they would never know me or
meet me, but sharing it with people I know
is something different. What if they thought
it was weird? And what if I was bad at it? I
mean, I get sucky comments from