Read The Redemption of Callie and Kayden Online
Authors: Jessica Sorensen
“Why did you go to the party that night?”
“It’s always the same question with you.”
“Because it’s an important question.”
I shake my head as my pulse speeds up with either anger or
fear—I can’t tell. “I went there to beat Caleb Miller up. You know
that.”
“Yes, but why?”
“Why what?” I’m getting annoyed, frustrated, and pissed off,
and the anger snakes through my veins underneath my skin.
“Why did you beat him up?” It’s like he’s stuck on repeat and
I want him to shut the hell up.
My heart knocks inside my chest like a damn jackhammer
and all I want is something sharp or rough—anything that can
calm my pulse down. I’m glancing around in a panic, searching for
something, but the room is bare. I can’t do this. I can’t do this.
Fuck! “Because he hurt someone.” My voice comes out piercing
and uneven and makes me sound weak and pathetic.
He sits forward in the chair. “Someone you care about?”
“Obviously.” I shake my head, annoyed. My heart is still
beating too loud and I can barely think straight.
He raises his eyebrows. “Someone you love?”
My pulse speeds even more, erratic and without a distinct
beat. I feel it pulsating underneath every wound and scar on my
body. Love? Do I love Callie? Can I? “I don’t think I even know what
love is.”
He looks like he’s struck gold and found an insight into
what’s locked away in my soul. “Can you answer just one more
question for me?”
I throw my hands in the air exasperatedly. “Do whatever the
hell you want. You’re already on a roll.”
He asks, “Do you think you deserve love?”
“I already told you I don’t even know what it is,” I mutter and
he waits for me to divulge more information. What does he want
from me? To tell him that my dad beats the shit out of me? That
my mom’s a drug-addicted zombie? That the only exchange of
love I’ve ever gotten is from Daisy and that felt about as plastic
and as fake as things can get.
He writes down a few notes, then clicks his pen and tucks it
away in his pocket before shutting his notebook again. “I think we
might have made some progress today.” He checks his watch and
then gets to his feet, retrieving his trench coat from off the back of the chair. “Keep it up, and maybe you can have visitors who are
not family.”
I slump back into the chair. “I’m not sure if I want visitors,” I
mumble.
He doesn’t seem to hear me. When he reaches the door, he
slips his arm through the sleeve of his jacket, secures the belt
around his waist, and sticks his hand into his pocket. “And Kayden,
keep using this, no matter how many times it breaks. We can
always get you a new one.” He throws a rubber band at me and I
catch it effortlessly. For a second I’m back on the field, running and catching the ball, free from life.
I wish I were back there, fixed and mended. But unlike the
rubber band, I’m not sure I can be fixed so easily.
Callie
“I can’t believe your truck doesn’t have a CD player,” Seth
says with his arm extended across the front of me as he fiddles
with the volume on the stereo. He has on a jacket, with the sleeves
pushed up, and skinny jeans. “Or an iPod hookup. I swear I’m
having flashbacks of mullets, spandex pants, and crimped hair.”
“I think you’re going back a little too far.” Luke has his hood
pulled over his head and a leather band on his wrist that has the
word redemption on it. I wonder if it means something to him or if
he believes in redemption. I wonder if I believe in it. He stretches
his arm in front of me and flips open the glove box. “Back to the
eight-track era.”
I cringe at how close he is, but then release the tension,
refusing to go back to that place. I zip up my jacket, because it’s
cold inside due to the fact that they keep rolling down the
windows to smoke.
It’s early in the morning, the sun is kissing the frosted land,
and the highway is a hazard from last night’s storm so we have to
drive slowly. There are a few cars stuck in the mounds of snow in
the strip of land in the center of the opposing traffic and people
have turned off onto the ramps because they’re too afraid to drive.
Luke and I are used to it though. It’s the conditions we grew up in.
Seth slaps his hand away from the glove box and Luke looks
at me in disbelief, but I just laugh. “No, eight-tracks were still in play in the eighties.”
“Early eighties,” Luke corrects. “They faded out by
mid-decade.”
I laugh because they are fighting over something so
ridiculous and I’m tired and nervous and my head’s in a very
strange place. “You guys are fighting like an old married couple.”
As soon as I say it, I want to take it back, because I’m not sure how Luke will take it.
When I look at Luke, he seems perfectly fine. He shrugs and
then sticks his hand into the glove box and pulls out a tape labeled
Let’s Get High. “Whatever,” he says and feeds it into the tape
player. “As long as I’m the guy in the relationship, it’s all good.”
Seth rolls his eyes. “Whatever, you’d totally be my bitch and
you know it.”
That’s it. I can’t hold it in any longer. My body falls forward
as I cover my mouth and my shoulders shake as I laugh into my
hand. “Oh my God, I can’t believe you just said that.”
“Yes, you can.” Seth pats my back. “I wouldn’t be me if I
didn’t say the first thing that pops into my head.”
He’s right. Seth is blunt and funny and he totally says
whatever the hell he wants. And I love him for it. I sit up, wiping
the tears from my eyes, and then give him a quick kiss on the
cheek. “Thank you for making me smile,” I say.
He grins. “Anytime, sweetheart.”
Luke shakes his head, but there’s a grin on his face so I know
he’s not offended. I like Luke. He’s not judgmental and he seems
accepting. I almost lean over to hug him and then realize how
weird it is because it doesn’t freak me out. What does that mean?
Crap. What does that mean?
“Come on Eileen,” by Dexy’s Midnight Runners, blasts out
from the speakers.
“This is so eighties,” Seth says and begins snapping his
fingers and bobbing his head. He really starts to get into it,
shaking his hips and shimmying frontward and backward. “Come
on, Callie, you know you want to dance. It’ll make you smile even
more.”
I grin from ear to ear. “No way.”
Cold air fills the cab as Luke cracks the window. The lighter
flicks and then the smell of cigarette smoke flows through the air.
Seth keeps dancing as he reaches into the pocket of his hoodie
and takes out his pack of cigarettes. Out of the corner of my eye, I
see Luke bobbing his head as he sucks on the end of his cigarette.
He takes a long drag, and then puckers his lips and a thin trail of
white smoke laces out of his mouth. Seth starts thrusting his hips
wildly as he flicks the end of his lighter and puts it up to the tip of the cigarette. The paper curls in and turns black as he takes a long
drag. The car starts rocking as the chorus comes on and both the
guys really start getting into it. The smoke burns my lungs and the
cold causes goose bumps to sprout all over my arms. I experience
almost every single detail of the moment and I decide to
experience it all.
“Oh fine, what the hell.” I start lifting my shoulders up and
down to the rhythm and Seth grins at me.
“That’s my girl,” he says and blows out a cloud of smoke with
his lips puckered out.
We both start doing this funny jiving thing with our hands
and Luke laughs as he cranks up the music. For a second I
transform myself into a dancer. When the chorus hits again we all
take a deep breath and belt out the lyrics at the top of our lungs. I raise my hands above my head and shut my eyes. It’ll be all right.
It’ll be all right. Kayden will be all right.
Because I’m here, dancing, smiling, and sitting between two
guys, and if that can happen, then anything’s possible.
Kayden
I’ve been in the clinic for a week now and today should be a
really good morning. Doug has informed me that I can have
visitors outside of family and that I can make a few phone calls
throughout the day. When he gives me time to make the phone
call, however, I get stuck on who to call. My first instinct is to call Callie, but I haven’t talked to her since it happened and I’m not
sure she wants to talk to me after finding me like that. The idea of
finding out scares the shit out of me. Besides, I’m trying to keep
my distance and protect her from me because the last thing she
needs is my instability and fucked-up head.
I dial Luke’s number and lean back in the bed, watching the
storm outside my window as the phone rings and rings.
“Kayden?” he says, sounding confounded. There’s an eighties
song playing in the background and I can hear a lot of giggling.
“What’s up?” It sounds so stupid after I say it. There’s a long
pause and then someone starts singing really loudly and really off
key. “Is that Seth in the background?”
“Yeah.” He hesitates again. “Are you okay?”
I flick the rubber band with my finger. It snaps back, hits my
wrist, and sends a sting through my arm. “Kind of… Why are you
with Seth?”
“Because… we’re in the truck.” He seems conflicted. “We’re
headed to Afton to see you actually.”
I snap the rubber band against my wrist a few more times,
but it’s not stilling the anxiety twisting inside me. “When you say
we you mean…”
“I mean, Seth, me and…” He trails off. “And Callie.”
The singing stops and so does the music.
“Who are you talking to?” Callie asks.
When I hear her voice I swear to God my heart stops. I clutch
at the chord and wrap it around my wrist until it’s tight and cuts
off the circulation. I stare outside at the slush on the ground and
the banks of snow around the mostly vacant parking lot.
“Umm…” Luke struggles for words.
“You can tell her,” I say, because if they’re headed here then
I’m going to have to face her soon.
“It’s Kayden,” he tells her and then it gets quiet.
“Oh…” She’s perplexed and I don’t blame her. “Can I… Can I
talk to him?”
“Hold on,” Luke says and then asks me, “You want to talk to
Callie?”
“I…” I never get to discover my answer, and it sucks because
I’m dying to know how I feel. My response would have revealed
the truth about my fear and how bad it’s going to be when she
gets here. But like always, my mother walks in just at the right
moment and steals everything away from me.
“We need to talk.” Her chin is tipped high like she’s better
than everyone in the building and she’s carrying around a duffel
bag on her shoulder. “Now.”
“I gotta go.” I hang up, knowing I’m being a pussy and
dodging my feelings. I unravel the cord from my hand and lean
back in my bed, putting my feet up on it. I’m wearing a pair of
plaid pajama bottoms and an old blue T-shirt that has holes in it.
I’ve worn the outfit five times since I’ve been here and it’s getting old.
She heaves the duffel bag onto the foot of the bed and then
positions her hands on her hips. “You need to work on getting
better and getting out of here. It’s making our family look bad.”
I carefully hunch forward, because moving too fast still hurts
my side. “And what do you suggest I do, mother, because the
doctors seem to think differently. They think I need to stay here
and heal.”
“I don’t give a shit what the doctors think.” She unzips the
bag with a tug. “What I care about is that you get dressed in some
normal clothes, get everyone thinking you feel better, and then
come home so we can start planning what we’re going to do if
Caleb Miller presses charges.”
“I could always plead mental insanity.” Sarcasm drips from
my voice. “Maybe they’d just keep me here instead of sending me
to jail.”
Her face flushes red and she shifts the handle of her purse
higher onto her shoulder. “You think this is funny? Maybe I should
have your father come down here and talk some sense into you.”
No matter how hard I try, I’m sent straight back to that place
where I’m lying on the floor bleeding to death and completely
ready to accept it. I rub my hand across my face and then say
through clenched teeth, “I’ll see what I can do.”
She smiles and it looks out of place, like she’s the evil villain
about to execute her evil plan. She kisses my cheek and I can smell
the wine on her breath. Then she moves back and rubs her thumb
across my cheek. “I got lipstick on you.” She pulls her hand away
and smiles again. “Let’s work on getting you out of here.” She pats
my leg and then walks out of the room, leaving the door open. I
hear her say something to one of the doctors and then a nurse
shuts the door.
I take a long-sleeve thermal shirt out of the bag, which is
filled with jeans, shirts, and socks, and slip it on over my head.
Then I reach for a pair of jeans, ready to put on my full costume
and go lie to the world, just like I’ve been doing my entire life.