Read The Redemption of Callie and Kayden Online
Authors: Jessica Sorensen
anyone.
“Fine,” I say and then smile as I point to a man walking down
the street in a pair of mini pink shorts and a T-shirt. I’m trying to act cool and control my blush but it’s hard when there’s so much
skin showing everywhere. “But if I have to dress in this stuff, you
have to dress in one of those.”
He follows where I’m pointing and then grins. “Deal, but I’m
totally getting one in blue. Pink doesn’t look good on me.”
“God, he has to be cold. It’s not that warm.” I start to laugh
at the idea of Seth in them and then my laughter picks up when he
joins in. We’re laughing hysterically by the time the cashier hangs
up the phone. Tears are steaming down our cheeks and there are
temporary laugh lines around our mouths. We keep laughing even
when she gives us a dirty looks, because we’re on the beach, trying
to have fun. And laughing is the first step to fun.
By the time we walk out of the store, it’s gotten even hotter,
but maybe that’s because of Seth’s last few items he threw on top
of the stack. I have a bag in my hand and Seth is carrying several
more at his side. The sun is at its peak and shining down on
everyone. But I feel terrible. Guilty. Sad. I’m walking around in the sunlight and laughing when Kayden is bearing so much darkness
inside himself.
#14 Let the niceness be
Kayden
The sun’s bright. Like really fucking bright. Maybe it’s
because I’ve been trapped indoors for the last few weeks. Or
maybe it’s because I feel so dark inside. Who the fuck knows. I’m
trying not to think about it too deeply because then I’ll have to
think of the pain—feel it—and I don’t want to yet. Maybe not ever.
Luke and I are strolling up the sidewalk beneath the sun. We
stopped and grabbed some clothes at a local shop and I also
ended picking up something for Callie. I’m not sure when—or
if—I’ll ever give it to her, but it was just too perfect not to get. One day, maybe, I hope.
Since Callie and Seth still haven’t showed up, we decide to
walk down to the beach. Luke keeps checking out every girl who
walks by. He’s acting weird, even for him. But he’s always been this
way whenever something bad is going on at home.
“Are you okay?” I ask as we cross the street at the corner
where the two roads converge.
He glances at me with his eyebrows creased. “Yeah, why
wouldn’t I be?” When we reach the other side of the street he asks,
“Are you doing okay?”
“I’m fine,” I lie, weaving around a woman shoving through
the crowd while talking really loudly on her cellphone. Luke checks
out her too, angling his head to the side so he can watch her until
she disappears around the corner. “I’m just a little tired.” It’s the stupidest excuse I’ve ever given, but he doesn’t press.
We walk the rest of the way down the street without talking
and pause at a crosswalk at the end. There aren’t any cars coming
but we both just stand there staring at the land as it opens up to
the ocean. The waves are fairly quiet and the sun hits the water
and creates a blinding reflection.
I shield my eyes and start to cross the street. There aren’t too
many people, but I don’t want to be around even the small
amount who are headed toward the water. I just don’t want to be
around people right now. I want to be inside somewhere in the
dark, because I feel like they all know what’s inside me by the
bandage on my wrist and the rubber bands. It’s like everything I
worked so hard to hide is out in the open. Luke knows it. The
people half-dressed on the beach know it. Callie knows it.
“So what do people do around here?” Luke asks as we hike
through the sand to where the frothy waves collide with the shore
and wipe away the footprints in the sand.
I shrug, lowering my hand from my eyes. “I’m not sure. Your
father’s the one who lives here.”
His jaw tightens. “Yeah, doesn’t mean I know anything about
this place… or him.”
“How did you even get a key to his place?”
“I don’t have a key.”
I give him a questioning look. “You don’t have a key?”
“Nope,” he says simply.
Great. Just what I need. I’m already facing charges if Caleb
doesn’t accept my dad’s bribe. And after what happened last night,
I’m wondering if he’ll decide to turn it down. I got a text from my
mom this morning saying that he blew her off on the phone when
she called to check up on their deal. Part of me doesn’t want him
to accept. Part of me wants to be cut off from my dad. As I think
this, a hint of rage and agony surfaces inside me and I quickly
choke it down because I’m not capable of dealing with it without a
sharp object to transfer the tearing inside of me to the outside of
me.
“Are we going to get into trouble?” I ask, fidgeting with the
bandage on my wrist, peeling the tape away and then pressing it
back down.
“Nah,” he says and inches up to the brink of the water. “He
hardly ever comes here. And if he does, he won’t be pissed. He’d
probably be happy.”
I end the conversation there because I know it’s bothering
him. Setting the few bags of clothes on the ground, I lower myself
down to sit in the sand and I bend my knees up and rest my arms
on top of them. Luke plops down too and we just sit there, letting
the silence wash away the pain like the water does to the sand.
I’d probably have stayed that way if my phone didn’t start
beeping. I move my arms off my knees and take my phone out of
my pocket.
Callie: Where r u?
Me: We r at the beach. Where r u guys?
Callie: At the shopping center looking for you guys.
Me: Go to the end of the street and head toward the
beach. We r right there on the first opening.
Callie: OK
I put my phone away and rest back on my hands. “They’re
headed over here.”
Luke bobs his head up and down as he stares off at the
horizon. “What are we going to do tonight? I don’t want to just sit
around and do nothing. I came here to do… something.”
“I think I’ll just stay in.” I stretch out my legs. “I don’t feel like going out.”
He mulls over what I said with his brown eyes squinty against
the light. “Look,” he says. “I know you’ve been through a lot, but…
but I think the last thing you need is to sit around and think about
it.”
“We don’t have to go out.” Callie’s voice floats over my
shoulder and my body immediately goes as rigid as a board as
emotions rush through me.
I turn my head and look at her. The sun is shining in her big
blue eyes that are shielded by her long lashes. Her hair is pulled up and her skin glistens from the heat. She has a bag in her hand and
a skeptical look on her face. Seth’s next to her, carrying an
extensive amount of brown paper bags with a purple flower logo
on them. He’s staring at the ocean with a puzzled look on his face.
I stand to my feet. “What did you get?” I nod toward the bag
and force a smile to my lips. “Anything good?”
Her brow puckers as she glances down at the bag in her
hand and then back at me. “I don’t know.”
The way she says it, with such perplexity, makes me wonder
what’s in the bag. I start to reach for it to tease her. “Can I see?”
She shakes her head quickly and moves her hand around to
her back, her cheeks turning a little pink. “No way.”
Okay, now I’m even more curious. I look at Seth for an
explanation but he just shrugs nonchalantly. “Callie’s just being
Callie.”
I’m not sure what that means because Callie being Callie
means her being sweet and adorable, but she’s acting offish and
twitchy. “Okay… do you guys want to go get something to eat?”
Callie nods and I can’t help but think about how she told me
she makes herself throw up. I’m not sure what to do with this or if
there’s anything I can do. I understand bad habits and how they
own you.
Luke grumbles something as he pushes up to his feet and
brushes the sand off his jeans. “No sushi or crab or anything
seafood related.”
A smile forms at my lips. “I think we established the first time
the four of us went out that none of us like seafood.”
Seth raises his hand above his head and then points a finger
down at himself. “Um, hello. I’m pretty sure I said that I love sushi.”
“You did,” Callie tells him and then peeks through her
eyelashes at me. “It was Kayden and me who said we didn’t.”
“It seems like forever ago,” I mumble as my mind travels
back through time, back to when I was first met her, back when
everything was nothing. God, she’s incredibly gorgeous in more
ways than most people will ever know. As stupid and as cheesy as
it may sound, she’ll perpetually own my fucking soul—or the
pieces of it that are left, anyway.
I don’t know how she does it. How I can be feeling so shitty
one minute, and then she smiles and for a second the pain is gone.
I can’t take this anymore. I need her like I had her before. I
need her right fucking now before I lose it.
I grab her hand, surprising her, and lead her with me as I
stride across the beach toward the street, because at the moment I
don’t give a shit about anything but touching her. Her shoes
shuffle against the sand as she hurries along with me. I search for a place out of the way, because what I want to do can’t be done in
public. I spot a gap in between two small shops, one an alarming
yellow and the other a clear blue, like the sun and the sky. They are shaded by slanted roofs that nearly connect over a narrow alley.
“Kayden, what are you doing?” Callie stammers as she trips
over her feet, struggling to keep up with me.
I shake my head as I push through a group of people and
head down the trail toward the shoreline. “Just hang on.”
I cross the street and then when I reach the front of the
yellow store, I round to the side and tuck us between it and the
building next to it. There’s a large Dumpster near the back end and
a pile of crates at the other. It’s not the perfect place, but
perfection is overrated.
“Are you okay?” she asks, breathless as I slow us down.
I take a breath and face her. I don’t give her, or myself, time
to react as I wind my hand around her waist and press her small
body into mine. She gasps as I attach my lips to hers, knowing I’ll
probably regret it later when I’m by myself. But I need her now.
When our mouths unite, I can finally breathe again. It’s like
I’ve been drowning for the last month, only coming up for air
when my lungs are about to burst. But her kiss has brought me to
the surface.
“Kayden,” she murmurs as she grips handfuls of my shirt. “Oh
my God.”
I slip my tongue inside her mouth and she opens her lips to
let me in deeply. I devour her, realizing how starved I’ve felt over
the past month. I press her closer as I back us into the wall, our
legs tangling as we fight to keep our balance. Her bag falls from
her hand and my hand comes down on the side of the building.
The wood scratches at my palms and I savor the small abrasions.
But the most pain comes from my heart rupturing open from
kissing her.
She lets out a quiet moan as my hand slides up her back and
to her neck. The sound nearly drives me mad. The small kiss heats
like a flame and my heart comes to life again. She opens her
mouth wider and I slide my tongue in as far as it will go, running it along the inside of her mouth, tasting her, breathing her in. Her
hands move around my midsection to my back and she holds onto
me.
I want to stop it, but I’ve lost all control. I move my hand
away from the wall and the other away from her back and quickly
glide my palms down her side to her thighs. Spreading my fingers
around her legs, I pick her up and she latches onto me, crossing
her ankles behind my back.
Her bottom lip trembles as I gently nip at it and I’m
reminded of how innocent she is and how I’m the only one she’s
ever trusted to touch her like this. And that’s got to count for
something. Because Callie is the most stunning, incredible, kind,
loving person I’ve ever met.
It has to mean something that she cares for me.
Callie
I forgot what it was like, how scary it is, but equally as
wonderful, to be touched, felt, held by him when he’s letting go of
his pain. At first I have no idea what’s going on. One minute we’re
talking about sushi and the next he’s dragging me away from the
beach. I start to ask him why, but he silences my thoughts with a
brush of his lips and all thoughts about life—about
everything—vanish. He’s kissing me and not pulling away and that
has to mean something, like we might have just stumbled forward
from our standstill.
He tastes like mint and need, as he overpowers me with his
tongue. His scruffy face is like sandpaper against my skin as I
clutch onto him, wanting him to touch me all over and terrified by
the thought of him ever letting go. I’d latch onto him endlessly if I could, so I know he’ll be okay—we’ll be okay.