Read The Redemption of Callie and Kayden Online
Authors: Jessica Sorensen
take care of back at home.”
Seth puts a cigarette in his mouth, cups his hand around the
end, and flicks the lighter. “Like what?” He drops the lighter onto
the table and leans back, taking a long drag and then letting a thin
trail of smoke escape his mouth.
“Like really important stuff,” I say with pressing eyes, hoping
he’ll catch on.
And just like the good friend that he is, he catches on. “Oh,
okay.”
Luke shoots him a harsh look as he twists off the lid on the
milk. “No way. I’m driver. Therefore I get final say.”
Kayden exhales loudly and then moves his arm away from
my shoulder. He walks up to Luke and places his hand on the
counter, standing right in front of Luke. “Look, I know why you
don’t want to go back—and I really don’t want to make you—but
there’s something I’ve been running away from that I need to
return to.”
I don’t know if Luke understands Kayden’s full meaning, but I
think he might. He nods his head with a grunt, even though he
looks annoyed. “Alright, if it’s important, then it’s important.”
“Thanks.” Kayden returns to my side. “You want to go pack
your stuff?”
I nod and then motion at Seth to come with me. He puts his
cigarette out in a leaf-shaped ashtray that’s in the center of the
table and then pushes the chair back. He gets to his feet, glancing
at Kayden as he walks by, and then he links arms with me. We walk
side by side back to the room. As soon as the door shuts, he turns
around and puts his hands on his hips.
“All right, let’s have it,” he demands. “What’s going on?”
I shake my head and bend down to pick up a pair of shorts
and one of my shirts off the floor. “I can’t tell you.”
He gapes at me with his hands out to the side. “Why?”
“Because I can’t yet.” I ball up the clothes and stuff them into
my bag, which is near the foot of the bed on the floor. “Part of it’s that I’m not ready to and part of it’s because it’s not my thing to
tell—it’s Kayden’s.”
He doesn’t press anymore. He starts packing his stuff as I
gather up my clothes. I clean up a little, stalling, knowing that as
soon as we walk out of the house, Kayden and I’ll be stepping back
into reality and all I can hope is that it’ll be nice to us.
#15 Stop torturing yourself
Callie
I’m afraid to go home and face my mother, even with Kayden
at my side. Halfway there I turn on my phone to find that I have
thirty-seven new voicemails and fifty-eight text messages. All are
from her and it’s unbelievable and yet believable at the same time.
She’s never been good at handling things that don’t fit into her
world. And rebel-runaway Callie fits about as well as lone-Goth
Callie did.
“We could get a hotel room,” Seth suggests as we pull into
town. “And keep the vacation going.”
“Or at least avoid going home,” Luke mutters, grumpily.
It’s late, the trees in the park are flashing with lively red
twinkly lights, and there’s a huge inflatable Santa at the entrance
welcoming us to town. Kayden has been really quiet the entire
drive, staring out the window, lost in his thoughts and it makes me
sad. Luke has been silent too, chain smoking the entire drive and
Seth has been equally as bad.
I glance at Kayden, wondering what he thinks of the hotel
idea, but all he does is stare out the window. “I feel like if I go to hotel then I’m running away from my problems,” I say. “I should
probably go home and face the wrath of my mom.”
“Why?” Seth asks, surprising me. I gape at him as smoke
snakes from his lips and he takes out the cigarette and sticks his
hand out the window, scattering ash into the street as he grazes
his thumb across the end. “Callie, I hate to say this”—his brown
eyes flick to Luke, then to Kayden, before he leans in and
whispers—“but until you can tell your mom, and you-know-who
will officially no longer be showing up at your house, it might be
good for you to stay away from there. Stop torturing yourself.”
I press my lips together as he leans back. “I’m don’t torture
myself,” I mumble.
“You don’t?” Seth flicks his cigarette out the window and
then rolls it up. Luke’s truck is really old and doesn’t have
automatic windows so Seth’s arm fights against the tension in the
handle.
Kayden glances at me with a frown on his face. “Seth’s right,”
he agrees quietly.
I think about all the times I spent wishing I could just shrink
into a ball, maybe become invisible, maybe disappear altogether.
But if I could have just broken Caleb’s hold over me, maybe I
would have escaped from the tortuous years I spent locked away,
living inside myself. Could I do it? Just free myself? Do I have that kind of power? I really don’t have to go back unless I want to. I can go back when I’m ready to confess. “All right, let’s get a hotel
room.” It’s such a simple conclusion, yet it took me forever to get
to it.
I don’t have to go back home until I’m ready. I have choices,
power, freedom. I can sever the ties with the things that hurt me.
You can do this. I can do anything if I want to. I just have to choose to do it. Suddenly, I can breathe freely again. I’m smiling and Seth
and Luke are looking at me like I’ve lost my mind.
Kayden glances at me, a forced grin at his lips. “Sounds
good.”
I offer him a smile, wondering why he’s acting so upset.
Everything had been okay when we left the beach house, at least I
thought so. I lean into him and whisper, “Are you okay?”
He nods, giving me a puzzled look. “Yeah, why wouldn’t I
be?”
“I don’t know,” I say, eyeing the sadness in his eyes. “You
look sad.”
“Well, I’m not. I promise.” He returns his attention to the
window and my heart sinks in my chest, knowing there’s
something he’s not telling me. But I don’t want to press him in
front of Luke and Seth, so I keep quiet.
Ten minutes later we’re checked into a motel room with two
queen-size beds, a retro décor, and air smelling of mildew. Seth
and Luke start arguing about the sleeping arrangement and I take
the opportunity to talk to Kayden about what’s bothering him.
“Are you sure you’re okay?” I ask, sinking down on the bed
beside him.
He nods, fiddling with the remote, even though the
television isn’t on. “Yeah, I’m fine. I already told you that.”
“But you’ve been so quiet,” I say. “You’ve barely said a word
since we left California.”
“I’m just tired.” He drops the remote down on the nightstand
and stares out the window. He does look really exhausted, but I
don’t think that’s the real reason. Like he senses my doubts, he
places his hand on my knee and gives it a gentle squeeze. “Callie,
stop worrying. I’m okay.”
“Okay,” I say quietly and then get up from the bed to use the
restroom. I lock the door and sit down on the edge of the bathtub.
I don’t really have to use the bathroom; I just needed to gather
myself. The urge to make myself throw up is rising inside me and I
really want to give into it, because it’s been a while and I’m really stressed out about Kayden and about telling my mom. I start
bouncing my knees as I breathe through my nose and count to
ten, reminding myself that I’m strong. That I can live life without
making myself purge.
It takes me a while, but about ten minutes later, I calm down
and walk out of the bathroom, surprised to find Luke on one bed
and Seth on the other watching television and Kayden is nowhere
to be seen.
“Where’d Kayden go?” I ask, walking between the two beds.
They both look up at me, blinking their eyes, and then they
gaze around the room. Seth sits up with his brows furrowed. “Huh?
I didn’t hear him leave.”
Luke yawns. “He went to get his bag out of the back of the
truck,” he tells me. “But he’s been out there for a few minutes.”
Panic surges through me as I round the foot of the bed and
draw back the curtain. The neon VACANT sign lights up the
parking lot where the truck is parked down below, snow falling on
the hood and roof. I can’t see Kayden anywhere, but I tell myself
he has to be coming up the stairs, which are out of my view.
Slipping on my shoes, I run out the door.
“Callie, what the hell?” I hear Seth call out as I leave the door
wide open. I don’t turn back, racing to the bottom of the stairway
and out into the parking lot. When I reach Luke’s truck, Kayden
isn’t there. I search the parking lot and even walk over to the
lobby, wondering if maybe he went to raid the vending machines,
but I can’t find him anywhere. My mind is racing with a thousand
thoughts of what’s going on. Where would he go? Why would he
leave? Why did he look so sad?
By the time I’m headed back to the stairway, Seth and Luke
are walking down it. I’m about in tears, frozen without a jacket on.
“He’s gone,” I sputter.
They meet me at the bottom of the steps and Luke’s
forehead creases as he stares at his truck. “What do you mean he’s
gone?”
“I searched everywhere.” I wrap my arms around myself,
shivering from the cold and my nerves. “I can’t find him.”
Seth’s arms encircle me. “I’m sure he’s fine. Maybe he just
went for a walk.”
“It’s almost ten thirty at night and freezing,” I say. “There’s
nowhere to walk to.”
“Maybe he walked to a gas station to get something to eat.”
Even he sounds like he doesn’t believe it. “I thought I saw one a
few roads up.”
“Hang on a second,” Luke says as he removes his phone
from his back pocket. “I’ll call him and see if I can get him to
answer and see what’s up.” He dials the number, puts the phone
up to his ear, and wanders away toward his truck, leaving
footprints in the snow.
Seth hugs me as I watch Luke kick at the snow with one arm
resting across his stomach. He keeps walking and walking farther
away from the motel. My legs grow weak and finally I have to sit
down on the stairs.
Seth sits with me. “I’m sure everything’s okay.”
I shake my head. “He seemed so upset the whole drive. I
think something was really bothering him.” I pull my knees to my
chest and rest my chin on top of them. What if he’s going to do
something… something hurtful to himself?
I slide my phone out of my pocket and try to call him myself.
The phone rings four times and then goes to his voicemail. I hang
up and send him a text.
Me: Hey, where r u… I’m worried. You just took off.
I wait, but there’s no response. I suck back the tears
frantically wanting to escape, wishing I could curl into a ball and
cry myself to sleep. I hurt everywhere. And I’m afraid. Not for
myself but for Kayden and what he’s doing. I can’t get the picture
of him trying to cut himself out of my head. What if he ends up
hurting himself really badly?
Finally, Luke heads back toward us with a puzzled look on his
face. Right before he reaches us, my phone beeps.
Kayden: I’m ok.
He’s okay?
Me: Where R U?
“I got ahold of him,” Luke says as my phone beeps again. “He
said to tell you that he’s okay, but that there’s something he needs
to take care of.”
I glance down at the screen, trying to hold the phone steady
in my shaking hand.
Kayden: There’s someone I need to talk to and it can’t
wait… with my therapist… Look, I’ll explain everything later.
I’ll come back and then we’ll talk. And Callie, I promise I’m OK.
I don’t understand. My hands tremble as I type.
Callie: I thought I was going to go with you… and it’s
late. The office isn’t even open.
When he doesn’t respond, I don’t know what to think. Is he
really seeing him? Or is he lying?
I stand up, brushing the snow off the back of my jeans. “We
should go look for him.”
Luke shakes his head, squeezing by us and heading up the
stairs. “Callie, I’m sure he’s okay… and he’ll said he be back soon so I think we should just wait here for him.”
I glance at Seth, wondering what I should do. Sighing, he
swings his arm around me and leads me up the stairs. “I’m sure
he’s fine,” he says quietly.
I clutch onto him, hoping with everything I have that he’s
right.
Kayden
I am obsessed about telling the truth and finally having my
secrets out in the open the entire drive home. The longer I thought
about it, the more anxious I got until I felt like I was going to burst.
I’d spent my whole life holding my emotions and secrets in and
suddenly I needed to get them all out. Now.
Even though it was late, I knew if I lay down on that bed,
closed my eyes, and went to sleep, my mind would probably
change by morning. It was just one of those things where if I’d sat
on it, I’d talk myself out of it. So as soon as Callie went into the
bathroom, I slipped out of the room, muttering something about
getting my suitcase out of the back of the truck.
I knew she’d be upset that I took off without saying anything,
but I had to do it; otherwise she’d look at me with those sad puppy