Read My Sweetest Escape Online
Authors: Chelsea M. Cameron
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #General
“Because I had hoped that this time
would be different. In addition to being
really good at sensing people, I’m also an
eternal optimist. Deep down inside. But
don’t tell anyone. I don’t want that to mess
with my image.”
“I won’t tell anyone if you agree to not
tell anyone about my blog.” We got out of
the car and she started whistling.
“Hannah? Did you hear me?”
“Um, yes? The thing is, I kind of already
did.” She squinched up her face as if she
was preparing for a blow.
“What!” She nearly hit me when she
opened the door.
“Uh, yeah. Remember how I said I was
going to help you with the job thing? Well,
it just so happens that I have a contact, of
sorts, at the campus newspaper and I
showed him your blog. He’s been looking
for someone to start writing a music
column, and I gave him your name and your
email, so he’ll probably be contacting you.”
She said it all in a rush.
I stopped walking and grabbed her arm
to make her face me.
“Why did you do that? I told you I
wanted it to be a secret.” I could feel the
panic building in my chest. I honestly didn’t
know why it freaked me out so much, but I
was definitely freaking.
“I know, but, like I said, you’re really
talented. I don’t think you belong in poli-sci.
You belong at a magazine or writing for a
newspaper or, since those are all dying out,
working for music promotions. I don’t know
that much about it, but I know that you are
wasting your talent.”
“And you know all that from reading a
few blog posts I wrote?” The music industry
was vicious, and there were thousands of
other blogs out there. I didn’t have
thousands of followers, or even close to
that. I was one drop in a vast ocean of other
people doing the same thing, and a lot of
them doing it better than me.
“I know it because I know you. Once
again, creepy, but I feel like you don’t even
see yourself sometimes. I know you’ve got,
like, baggage and shit and that someday
you will share it with me, but you don’t
have to now. But that baggage is standing in
the way of you doing something awesome.”
She started walking toward a Deb shop,
which was where we were most likely to
find something for her to wear. They
already had the prom dresses out, even
though prom was months away. I couldn’t
explain because she wouldn’t understand,
so I just followed her into the store.
Almost an hour later, Hannah had
rejected nearly all of my dress suggestions.
I’d tried everything; short, long, in between.
Red, green, blue, black, gold, pink. She and
found a reason for every rejection. It was no
wonder she hadn’t been shopping in two
years. She was so freaking picky.
“What about this?” I’d gotten fed up
with trying to help her, so I was picking out
ridiculous things. I held up a tube dress that
was in a shade of violent fluorescent yellow
and looked like something a cheap
streetwalker would wear.
“Do I have to list the things that are
wrong with that dress?”
I sighed and put it back.
“Jesus, Hannah, you’re harder to shop
for than the Queen.”
“The Queen doesn’t do her own
shopping. She has people,” she said,
walking along a rack and running her hands
over the dresses. “Oooh,” she said, pulling
one out. It was the first time she’d showed
interest in anything, so I was shocked.
It was a one-shouldered red dress with
black embroidery along the hem that would
probably hit right above her knees.
It also had a black belt around the waist
with a silver buckle.
“I’m trying this on,” she said, and
without any more fuss, she marched toward
the dressing room.
I followed in her wake, stunned.
The attendant was absent, so Hannah
just walked into the first room that was
open.
“Hold my bag?”
“Sure,” I said as she handed her purse
under the door.
I waited as she shucked her shoes and
clothes off and then heard the sound of the
zipper on the dress. She turned back and
forth.
“Well? Does it fit?” The door slowly
opened halfway and she let me in.
“You tell me.” She shrugged and turned
in a circle and the skirt flared out.
“You are a knockout, Hannah.” It was
true. The belt made her look like the perfect
hourglass, and the length made her legs
look like they went on forever. The bare
shoulder happened to be on the side with
her scars, but really, I wasn’t looking at
them.
“I think we have a winner,” I said, taking
her hand and twirling her under my arm.
She crashed into the wall because there
really wasn’t enough room for twirling, and
we both laughed.
“Okay, now it’s your turn. Go pick
something and get back here, bitch.” I had
just planned on borrowing the gold number
again, but once again, Hannah wasn’t going
to take no for an answer.
She shoved me out the door and I went
back to the front of the store where the
dresses were. I’d seen a few that I thought
were cute, but I’d been so focused on
Hannah I hadn’t even thought about it. I
quickly looked through, trying to find
something that wasn’t too short or too
long, or a bad color.
I rejected anything red or pink or
orange. I also didn’t want black because it
tended to wash me out at the same time it
made my freckles stand out way too much. I
found a drapey gray number that
shimmered a little when I held the fabric
under the light. It also looked like it would
be comfortable and cover everything I
needed covered. It wasn’t as conservative
as what I would have worn in my old life,
but it was a good middle ground kind of
dress.
I brought it back and saw that Hannah
was back in her other clothes and had the
red dress draped over her arm.
“Very pretty. Now get naked and put it
on.” I was shoved into the room and she
slammed the door behind me. There were
only a few other people in the dressing
room, and I bet they didn’t know what to
make of Hannah.
I stripped down and put the dress on. I
got the zipper almost all the way up.
Hannah’s foot was tapping impatiently on
the other side of the door.
“Can you zip me up?” I unlocked the
door before she busted it down. I turned
my back and she finished zipping me before
she wrenched me back around. I didn’t
think she knew the meaning of the word
gentle.
“It makes your boobs look great.” Of
course, this was an important
consideration. “Gorgeous. If I had a dick, I’d
totally do you.”
“That’s the nicest thing anyone’s ever
said to me,” I said, touching her shoulder.
“Okay, so now we both have dresses,
can we get out of here?”
“Sure, just let me get changed.”
Hannah couldn’t get out of that store
fast enough. I reminded her that we needed
accessories for our dresses, so she dragged
me into Claire’s for earrings and such, and
then we went and got shoes. By the time
we had everything for our outfits, we were
both starving, so we decided to be done for
the day. I invited Hannah to dinner and she
accepted.
“By the way, what were you and my
sister talking about for so long last night?” I
said as we shoved our purchases into the
backseat of my car.
“I was just apologizing profusely for my
lack of tact. It took a while. I also had to go
into the whole story about the guys and
outline my reasons for wanting to go. After I
told you, it seemed stupid that I was trying
to keep it a secret in the first place.”
“That was it?”
“Yeah, why?” I looked at her, but her
eyes were wide and innocent. I’d
underestimated her lying skills, apparently,
based on past experience.
“No reason. Just curious.” I dropped it.
My next stop was Dusty to see what his
version of the story was.
I didn’t have long to wait to interrogate
Dusty because he was at the house when
we got back, sitting on the couch with his
headphones on as if he was the king of the
castle.
He pulled them off his ears and left
them around his neck when he saw me and
Hannah.
“Should we add your name to the list?” I
said, pointing to the chart with everyone’s
name on it. “Or maybe you should just
move in. You could sleep on the recliner.” It
happened to be the ugliest chair in the
history of chairs, but Taylor refused to get
rid of it, and would never say why. Some
sort of weird sentimental value. I honestly
didn’t want to know.
“Pass. I’m just here because Hunter is
helping me study for the Praxis. Or actually,
he’s showing me how
not
to study for the
Praxis.”
“Did you get your scores yet?” I asked
Hunter.
“Not yet. But they should be in by
tomorrow. If not, I’m going to let Taylor call
and rip them a new one. She’s much better
at yelling and getting her way than I am.”
This was true. I’d seen it in action.
“I’m sure you did fine,” I said, going to
take my bags down to my room, Hannah
following. Hunter was really smart—in fact,
the entire house was freaking smart, just in
different ways. It was more intimidating
than when I’d been competing with my
classmates in high school and last year for
the highest GPA.
I tossed my bags on the floor and went
to check my email, my heart pounding a
little bit. Yup, there it was. An email with
the subject line: Writing for The Maine
Campus, from someone named Brett Evans.
I clicked it open and scanned it. He’d read
my blog and loved it and was wondering if
I’d like to have my own column in the
Entertainment section where I’d review
bands, CDs and so forth. He did mention
that he’d gotten my name from Hannah, so
it didn’t seem like he was contacting me out
of the blue. He also mentioned that the
paper paid per article, but if I liked it
enough, he was looking for an assistant
editor for his section, and he would love to
talk to me, and it didn’t matter if I wasn’t a
journalism major.
“Let me guess. Brett emailed you.”
Hannah had been silent the entire time I’d
been reading the email. Probably because
she knew that’s what I was doing.
“Yeah. He wants to give me a column,
and he said he needed an assistant editor.”
“Holy crap, that’s awesome! Good job,
girl.”
I felt less-than-enthusiastic. “But,
Hannah, I’ve read the paper, like, once, and
I’m not a journalism major. I’m not even a
writing major.”
She scoffed.
“Doesn’t matter. Brett’s a new-media
major. There are lots of people who work
there that aren’t in journalism. Besides, it’s
not like it’s the
New York Times.
It’s just a
school paper. Not a big deal.” Why did it
feel like such a big deal?
“So you’re going to do it, right?”
It was money, which I didn’t have, and it
was something I loved to do.
Live the day, Jossy.
“Yeah, I’m going to do it.” The second
the words were out of my mouth, Hannah
tackle-hugged me and we both fell back on
the bed. “I swear, I think you’re more
excited about it than I am.”
“Awesome. Fuck, I’m starving,” she said,
putting her hand on her stomach and sitting
up. She held out her hand and pulled me to
my feet.
“How do you know this guy, anyway?”
Hannah never really talked about other
friends.
She sighed and rolled her eyes toward
the ceiling. “It’s kind of a long story. We
were sort of friends in high school, and I
was madly in love with him. I never told him
and eventually I got over it, but we’re still
sort of friends. It’s one of those weird
relationships where you never really know
where you stand, you know? But he’s a
good guy, I swear.”
Okay, the story wasn’t that long. My
next question was automatic.
“Is he cute?”
She smiled a little. “Not in the
conventional way. He’s sort of band-geek
chic. You’ll see what I mean when you meet
him.”
Hannah kept my new job quiet at
dinner, like I asked her to, and ended up
staying with us for homework time.
“You know, I said we needed to build a
library instead of a stupid man cave and
look at us now,” Taylor said as every
available surface, including the f loor, was
taken up with books and people and
computers. “I told you I wanted one of
those bookcases with the ladder that rolls