Read The Redemption of Callie and Kayden Online
Authors: Jessica Sorensen
hood of my coat over my head and tucking my hands into my
pockets. “About what?”
He halts on the bottom step and I crane my neck to look up
at him. “About your loyalty to this family,” he says.
The icy breeze pinches my cheeks. “I am already loyal to this
family.”
He shakes his head and targets his finger at Luke’s rusty
1980s Chevy truck parked at the end of the driveway. “Not if you’re
hanging out with him.”
“With Luke?”
“With Kayden’s best friend.”
I start to walk away, but his fingers snag my arm and he
stabs his nails aggressively into the fabric of my coat as he
wrenches me back toward him. “You know he was there that
night?” he growls. “Luke was, when Kayden beat up Caleb and he
didn’t even try to stop him.”
I jerk my arm, but he constricts his grip. “Jackson, let go of
me.” I bend my elbow and twist my arm again and jerk on it, but
he won’t let me go. “Please, you’re hurting me.”
His eyes are as icy as the snow beneath my feet and his
fingers unwrap from my arm. I stumble to the side and press my
hand to the side of the house to get my footing. “I’ve been best
friends with Caleb since I was six, Callie, and you used to be friends with him too.”
I back down the driveway away from him, shaking from the
confrontation. “I don’t want to talk about this anymore.”
“You never want to talk about anything, Callie.” He bends his
knee and steps up to the next stair without turning around. “You
just shut down and go to your own weird little place.”
“Because I have to!” I whirl around and sprint down the
driveway. That weird little place he’s referring to is more of a home than this place will ever be. This place holds memories that stab at
me every time I step foot inside it.
I hop into the truck and the warm air flowing out the vents
comforts me. I climb over Seth’s lap, because he refuses to “sit
bitch” and I settle in the middle. Once I’m situated and my seat
belt’s buckled, Luke shoves the truck into reverse and backs down
the driveway. My brother is standing at the top of the stairs,
watching us with his hands in his pockets.
“What’s his deal?” Seth asks, nodding his head at Jackson.
“He’s upset about stuff.” I position my hands in front of the
heater vent to warm them up. I can feel Luke and Seth’s eyes on
me, but I don’t want to look at them. With my head hung low, I
breathe through my nose to force back the hot tears wanting to
spill out.
The truck bumps up and down as Luke floors it over the
small snowbank at the end of the driveway, and then he rams it
into drive and we’re speeding down the snowy road. The radio
plays peacefully in the background and the engine makes these
clinking noises. Halfway across town, Seth and Luke take out their
cigarettes and crack the windows so they can smoke. It’s chilly and
smoky and my head is falling into a very dark place.
I wish I could do it. I wish I could walk into the house, when
my mother and father and Jackson are all sitting down at the table.
I’d have a loud voice, not a shaky one, and I’d finally tell them.
They would hug me, comfort me, and tell me that it was all going
to be okay.
But I know that’s not how it would go. It’s been six years
since it happened and each year I spend in the shadows of silence
is another weight added to my shoulder. It makes it harder to tell
the truth and time makes it harder for people to understand.
Seth and Luke flick their cigarettes out the window as we
turn into Luke’s driveway. Flakes of gray ash blow back into the
cab and land on my clothes. I’ve seen his house before, when my
mother was driving me to school, but I’ve never actually been
there, nor do I know much about his mother and father, other than
that they got divorced when he was young. It’s a smaller home,
with green siding in desperate need of a paint job. There is a few
feet of snow in the yard and a tree in the center near a salted
pathway that leads up to the front porch.
Luke shoves the truck into park and turns the key, silencing
the engine. He stares at his house as he removes the key from the
ignition and stuffs it into the pocket of his black hoodie. “My
mom’s not here,” he explains. “And I suggest we leave here before
she comes back.”
“What exactly are we doing here?” Seth wonders as he
pushes his thumb on the buckle to unlock his seat belt. Then
pushes the button on mine, releasing my waist from the strap.
“We’re making a plan,” he states with a pensive look on his
face as he rubs his hand across his cropped brown hair.
Seth and I trade a look. “A plan?” we say simultaneously.
“To get out of this place.” He flips the handle and pushes the
door open. “I don’t know about you, but I’m sick of being here. It’s
depressing.”
“We’re would we go?” I wonder as Seth opens the truck door
and hops out into the light layer of frost covering the slender
driveway.
Luke jumps out and looks back into the cab at me with his
hand resting on top of the door. “Anywhere but here.”
I glance at his house, wondering what’s so bad about it. I
scoot across the seat toward the open door where Seth is waiting
for me with his hand extended for me to take. “Any exact ideas of
where we’d go?” Slipping my fingers into his, I jump out and slip
on the ice, but Seth catches me by the arm and saves me from a
very painful fall.
“Somewhere cheap,” Seth says as he helps me get my
balance. “I don’t know about you, but I’m pretty much broke after
buying all those Christmas presents.”
“I still can’t believe you bought all your Christmas presents
from the Quickie Mart,” I tell him as he slams the door. I fiddle with the fifty-cent machine bracelet he gave me that has a gold teddy
bear charm on it to remind me of “better times” he told me when
he gave it to me. He was referring to the carnival where Kayden
and I first kissed and where he also won me a teddy bear, which
we dressed up and left with a Take me home sign on it.
“Oh, you know you loved yours.” He smiles at me and then
loops his arm through mine and we skip after Luke up the pathway
to the front door of his house.
Luke shoves the door open and steps to the side to hold it
for Seth and me. We turn sideways so we can fit through the
doorway without letting go of each other and Luke follows us in
and shuts the door.
I get the feeling that something’s wrong the moment I step
inside. There are heavy striped curtains blocking the windows so
it’s very dark and musty. The orange-and-brown-plaid couches are
covered in plastic and there’s a plastic rug sprawled over most of
the shaggy brown carpet. There are shelves built into the walls and
each one is lined with rows of animal figurines that are
coordinated by breed. Plants decorate the windowsills and are
lined up from smallest to largest, but they’re all brown and dying.
It’s cold too and I can see my breath puffing out in front of my
face and it mixes with the dust.
“What’s with all the plastic?” Seth asks as Luke makes his way
to a hallway at the back corner of the room.
Luke shrugs as he flicks the thermostat with his fingers. “My
mom’s insane.”
We don’t utter another word. We leave the living room and
head down the hall. I notice how bare the walls are, no photos, no
pictures, no decorations, and it gets colder the farther back into
the house we go. I’m getting kind of nervous, especially because
the air is really dusty and it’s making it hard to breathe. When we
reach the end of the hall, however, Luke opens a door and I step
into the room and the air clears.
“So this is my room,” Luke tells me awkwardly and then
cracks a joke. “You two are the only two people besides Kayden
who have dared step foot into the shithole.”
I turn in a circle as I take in the made bed, the band posters
tacked to the walls, and the desk with a computer on it that looks
like it’s from the nineties. Everything is very clean and very orderly, but not in an uneasy way like out in the living room. “It’s not a
shithole,” I assure him. “It’s your room.”
He seems happy with my response and his rigid shoulders
relax a little. “Well, I’m glad you think so because I sure as hell
don’t.” He pats the front pocket of his jacket and takes his pack of
cigarettes out. “Oh, and by the way, it’s fucking hilarious when you
swear.” He doesn’t light up a cigarette; he just holds the pack in his hand like it’s his security blanket.
Seth sits on the bed and bounces up and down a little and
the mattress squeaks. “So what’s your brilliant plan?” he asks,
crossing his leg over his knee.
Still holding his cigarettes, Luke rolls up his sleeves and
scoots out a chair that’s in front of the computer. He presses the
power button on the tower and then sits down in the chair, waiting
for the computer to boot up. He holds up his finger and reaches
for an iPod beside the computer. He hums under his breath as he
scrolls through songs and I give Seth a questioning look.
Seth raises his eyebrows and twists his head toward Luke.
“So, are you going to tell us, or are we going to have to guess?”
“You’re going to have to guess.” Luke sets the iPod down
and a song clicks on, “Running Away,” by Hoobastank.
“Are we guessing by this song?” Seth’s face lights up with
enthusiasm as he straightens up his posture.
Luke nods as he opens a search engine and types a few keys
on the keyboard. “Yep.”
Seth taps his finger on his chin, enjoying the game. “Are we
running away?”
Luke pops a cigarette into his mouth and then claps his
hand. “Bravo. Nicely done.”
I shoot Seth a confused look and he just shrugs. “What? I
love games.”
I sigh. “Am I the only one who seems to mind that we’re
talking about running away?”
They both shrug and I roam around the room looking at all
Luke’s posters and little knickknacks scattered about. Seth takes
out his phone and starts texting while Luke types on the keyboard
and clicks the mouse. There are photos all over his room, some of
him with a woman who looks a lot like him, and I think it’s his
mother. There’s also another woman he’s in a few pictures with
who’s a lot older than Luke, and she has the same brown eyes as
him. Maybe it’s his aunt or his sister, but I thought she was much
younger. There are a few of pictures of him with random girls and
a handful where he’s with Kayden. They’re standing next to a black
motorcycle and smiling and they look happy. The bike has a huge
dent in it and Kayden’s arm is scraped and bleeding.
“He wrecked it,” Luke clarifies. When I turn around, I find that
he’s watching me from the computer desk as he leans back in the
chair. “He was trying to jump it over a hill and he wrecked it.”
“I think I remember.” I glance at the photo again. “That was
the year he couldn’t play for a few weeks because he’d hurt his
arm, right?”
“Yeah, that was the one. And we lost three games in a row
because of it.”
“My dad was so mad.” I turn around to face him. “He used to
chew him out during dinner.”
“Oh, I bet.” Luke’s mouth turns upward and I realize he
doesn’t smile very much. “He used to chew us out all the time at
practice.”
Thinking of Kayden hurts my heart. “Maybe we should go
see him,” I suggest.
“I was planning on it.” Luke clicks the mouse on the PRINT
PAGE button on the screen and the printer beside the tower
illuminates. “Right after I plan our running away.”
“Aren’t we a little too old to be running away?” Seth asks,
looking up from his phone. “Isn’t it more like a road trip, which is
something I suggested a few days ago?”
“It sounds more adventurous when you say running away,” I
admit. “Like we’re doing something scandalous.”
Seth’s shoulders jerk forward as he sputters a high-pitched
laugh. “Oh my God, I’ve been such a bad influence on you.”
My mouth droops into a frown. “What did I say?”
He stands up to shove his phone into his pocket.
“Scandalous. That’s something I would say.” He bounces back
down on the bed.
I shrug and shuffle my toe across the carpet in a half-circle in
front of me, feeling silly. “So? It’s a compliment being like you.”
All the humor evaporates from his face and his honey-brown
eyes. Within seconds he has me in his arms and he hugs me like
I’m the most important thing in the world to him. “Don’t ever
change, Callie Lawrence,” he whispers in my hair. “Promise me you
won’t.”
I enfold my arms around him and set my chin on his
shoulder. “I won’t. I promise.”
The printer starts making shrill noises as buttons glow and
flash and Luke clears his throat. “I hate to break up your little
moment, but I’m ready to share my plan.”
We break apart, but still hold hands as we turn to him. He
swivels in the chair, back and forth and back and forth as the
printer spits out pieces of paper stained with ink. When it stops, he collects the papers and holds one up. It’s a picture of a light-blue