Read The Redemption of Callie and Kayden Online
Authors: Jessica Sorensen
mom’s car is buried in a foot of snow and my dad’s truck has
chains on the tires.
I pull my knees up and station the notebook on them before
pressing the tip of the pen to the paper.
I dream that I get to have cake before Caleb takes me into
my room. When I blow out the candles and make a wish, I wish to
have the happiest and best birthday in the world and the wish
comes true. Caleb never shows up that day to hang out with my
brother, and I get to play hide-and-go seek outside with the other
kids. I rip open paper and smile at my presents.
Lately in the dream, instead of making a wish for myself, I
make a wish for Kayden. I wish that he never met me and that he
never learned my secret. I wish that he never had any reason to
beat up Caleb and that he never ended up on the floor, bleeding
to death.
I wish for happiness in a world full of sorrow.
There’s always so much pain and I wish for all of it to be
gone.
Of course, wishes are just wishes, just hope for a speck of
light in a dark field.
When I analyze my wish for Kayden, I get terrified at what it
means. If I’m willing to take brokenness and shattering of my
childhood in exchange for the removal of his, then how deep are
my feelings for him? And am I ready to handle them?
I pause to think about what I wrote and I spot my mother
walking out the side door of the house as she tromps through the
snow toward the garage. I let go of the pen and it falls to the floor.
I glance over at Seth sleeping in the bed and then I panic, hop up,
grab my jacket and phone, and run out the door. She’s reaching
the top of the stairs when I shut the door.
“Oh good, you’re awake.” She hugs her arms around herself
and bounces up and down as she shivers.
I slip my arms through the sleeves of my jacket and flip my
hair over the collar. “Yeah, I was just getting ready to head inside.”
My mom glances out at the mountains and the sky is tinted
pink from the sunrise and reflects in her eyes. “You’re up early.”
Her brown hair blows in the breeze as she looks at me. Even
though it’s been only about a month since I’ve seen her, she’s
aged a lot, but that might be because she’s in her pajamas and her
hair and makeup aren’t done. “I don’t remember you being a fan
of getting up early.”
I shrug as I zip up the jacket and then pull the hood over my
head and hug my arms around myself and shiver. “I slept in the
truck during the drive over here,” I lie. “So I wasn’t very tired.”
She eyes me over with skepticism. “Who gave you a ride
here?”
I’m wary to answer. “Um, Luke.”
“Luke who?”
“Luke… Price.”
Her shoulders stiffen and she wraps her robe tighter around
herself. “Kayden’s friend?”
I nod. “Yeah.”
She thrums her fingers restlessly against her hips as she
clenches her jaw and stares at the door to the garage, trying to see
through the frosted window. “Callie, I don’t want you hanging
around Kayden.”
The wind decides to kick up and snowflakes sting my skin as
they swirl around us in a flurry. The wind howls against my
eardrums and the reflection of the daylight discomforts my eyes.
“Why?” I chatter, rocking my body to attempt to keep warm.
“Because I don’t want you having any association with
Kayden.” She looks at me and I see loathing in her eyes. Or maybe
it’s fear. “He’s obviously got a temper and even your father said he
was trouble when he was on the team.”
“I doubt dad said that,” I argue. “He always liked Kayden. And
besides, you talk to Kayden’s mother.”
“Not by choice.” There’s judgment in my mother’s eyes like
she’s blaming Maci Owens for Kayden’s mistake. If that’s the case,
would she blame herself if I told her what happened to me?
I hide my hands in my sleeves and tip my chin down into the
collar of my jacket. I’m wearing a pair of pajama bottoms and the
fabric is thin and the cold air easily trickles through. “Can we go
inside and talk about this? It’s cold.”
She glances at the door of the room above the garage again
and then redirects her attention to me. “Is your friend in there? The one who…” She lowers her voice and her eyelashes flutter against
the snowflakes gusting around us. “The one who likes guys?”
I sigh, turn sideways, and squeeze between her and the
railing without uttering an answer. Thankfully, she follows me and
Seth is off the hook. At least for now.
When I walk into the kitchen, that night smashes into my
chest, the night Jackson sat at the table eating pie and Caleb
tormented me with my secret. The night Kayden found out who
broke me. The night where he let me cry and then slipped out of
my life as effortlessly as if he were made of sand.
I walk over to the cupboard and take out a bowl and a box of
cereal. I set the bowl down on the counter and open the box as my
mom walks in, letting the cold air and snow in. She slams the door
and then slips off her boots beside the door and winds around the
table, heading across the kitchen toward me.
“I was going to make you breakfast.” She reaches for the
drawer above the oven that holds the pans.
I shake my head as I pour cereal into the bowl. “That’s okay.
I’m not hungry enough to eat a big breakfast.”
She drops her arm to her side and scans my tiny frame. “You
look like you’re losing weight again.”
I look down at my short legs and my petite waist hidden
under my pajamas. “I’m just stressed out.”
“Stressed out over what?” she asks. “About school? Or about
what happened with your friend?”
I can’t hold it in. It’s too much and it’s pissing me off. “Oh,
now he’s my friend, but back when you first found out, you were
so excited we were a couple. In fact, I think you told everyone in
the whole damn town.”
“Watch your language.” She reties her pink rob and gathers
her hair out of her face. “Callie Owens, you will not talk to me that way.” She turns around and extends her arm toward the cupboard
that holds all her prescription medication. “This is my house and
while you’re here you will follow my rules.”
I close the cereal box, stirring in my fury. “I’m eighteen years
old and I can be friends with whomever I want.”
She grabs one of the bigger bottles and slowly turns around
to face me with her hand over the lid. “Even ones who beat up
your brother’s best friend.”
I dig my nails into the granite countertops as the pain of the
last six years chokes my oxygen away. “That’s all you care about?
Caleb?” His name tastes toxic in my mouth.
She battles to unscrew the lid from the bottle, pressing the
bottom against her hand as she squeezes the lid with her fingers.
“Callie, Caleb has been part of this family since he was six years
old. You know his parents barely talk to him. We’re the only family
he has.”
“I don’t give a shit about Caleb!” I shout and my lungs nearly
combust. But it feels good. Really, really good. I press my hand to
my chest, calmly let go of the countertop, and straighten my
shoulders. “I’m going to go out to breakfast with Seth.”
Her eyes are amplified and her lips start to part in protest,
but the look on my face quiets her. She cinches her mouth shut as
the lid slips off the bottle. “Fine, have fun.” The pills rattle as she pours a couple into the palm of her hand.
I put the cereal back in the cupboard, set the bowl in the
sink, and hurry out the back door. I run across the driveway and
jog up the steps of the two-story garage. When I open the door,
I’m surprised to find Seth sitting on the edge of the bed, awake
and dressed in a red T-shirt and a pair of dark denim jeans.
“You’re up,” I say as I shut the door.
He tousles his hair into place with his fingers. “I woke when
you ran out of here like there was a fire. What was up with that?”
I shuck my jacket off, ball it up, and toss it onto the bed. “I
saw my mother heading out here and I didn’t want you to have to
deal with her.”
He hooks his watch onto his wrist as he wanders over to his
shoes that are at the foot of the bed. “Callie, no matter how many
jokes we make, I can handle your mom.” He slips his foot into his
boot. “Trust me, if I can handle my own mom, then I can definitely
handle yours.”
I frown as I sink down onto the edge of the bed. “But you
haven’t talked to your mom since you told her about Greyson.”
He shrugs as he laces up his shoe and fastens a knot. “She’ll
get over it. It’ll just take some time, just like it did when I told her I was gay.”
I flop back onto the bed and drape my arm over my
forehead. “How do you decide what’s worth telling your parents
and what’s not?”
He’s silent for a while and then I hear his footsteps as he
walks around to my side of the bed. He lifts my arm off my head
and looks down at me. “If you’re asking me if I think you should
tell your parents about what happened with Caleb, then the
answer is yes. I think you should.”
He releases my arm and I lean up on my elbows. “How can
you be so sure?” My mouth sinks to a frown. “She could get mad
at me. Or she could hate herself as much as I hate… hated myself.”
Seth brushes my bangs out of my eyes with his fingers.
“Callie, if she hates herself for a while, then she hates herself for a while. You’ve been carrying around the burden for the last six
years and it’s about time someone else took a little bit of the
weight off of you.”
“I’m not sure I can,” I whisper, clutching at the dull ache
inside my chest. “There’s just so much… so much acceptance in
telling her the truth.”
“Like you might have to accept that it’s finally real?”
I nod as I gaze at the clear sky outside. The sunlight is
beaming down on the houses across the street. Sunlight is a rare
occurrence in Afton, but maybe it’s a sign that not everything is
caped in darkness. That light does exist even in the darkest of
corners.
He moves back as I sit up and head for my bag on a fold-up
chair near the door. “I was thinking we could go out to breakfast
this morning. There’s this café in town that has the best pancakes
in the world.” I take a purple shirt out of the bag and a pair of
jeans.
“I was thinking we could go see Kayden first,” Seth says as he
texts something on his phone.
“But he’s not allowed visitors.” I hold my clothes to my chest
and head for the bathroom to change.
“Yeah, he is.” Seth sets his phone down on his knee and
takes a deep breath. “I just got a text from Luke saying that not
only is Kayden allowed to have visitors but he’s leaving the facility today.”
I stop in the middle of the room as reality finally catches up
with me. Although I’d never admitted it aloud, I’d wondered if I’d
ever see Kayden again. That maybe he didn’t even exist and that
everything that had happened between us was just my
imagination attempting to force my mind to thrive again. “Should
we wait for him to get out and then go see him?” I stare at the
open bathroom door.
The mattress squeaks as Seth gets up from the bed and
steps into my line of vision. “I think we should go pick him up.
Luke said that his mother’s supposed to and then she’s going to
take him home, but he thinks we should go pick him up and take
him somewhere.”
I raise my chin up and meet his eyes. “Like kidnap him?”
Seth laughs at me and his face turns red and his eyes water
over. “He’s nineteen years old, Callie. We can’t kidnap him if he
wants to go.”
“But isn’t he supposed to be being watched?”
“What? At his parents’ house? With his dad?”
I free an unsteady breath from my lungs. “But I worry that we
might be doing more harm than good… running away.”
Seth steps closer to me, places his hands on my shoulders,
and fixes his eyes on me. “You want to know what I think? I think
that you’re afraid.”
I hug my clothes tighter against my chest because I need to
hold onto something. “Of what?”
“About hearing the whole story about that night. I think
you’re afraid of the truth.”
“But what is the truth exactly?” I ask.
Seth gives a lopsided smile and gently shakes my shoulders.
“That’s for you to find out because he needs you.”
He’s right. I’m afraid of everything that night holds and that
I’ll have to admit that it’s my fault. I’m afraid I’ll learn that Kayden was really trying to kill himself, trying to leave me alone in the
world. That he’ll leave me again, and I need him like I need air.
“Where will we take him, though?” I wonder. “My mom’s
made it really clear that she doesn’t want him here.”
A devilish grin spreads across his face. “You leave that to me.
All you need to do is bring your bag and tell your mom you’re
going to be gone for a couple of days.”
My eyebrows dip together. “You’re not going to tell me
where we’re going?”
His grin widens and his hands leave my shoulders and
reunite with his sides. “It’s called a surprise road trip, Callie.”
I drag my hand across my face. “You think that’s a wise idea,