Read My Sweetest Escape Online
Authors: Chelsea M. Cameron
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #General
them talking about my transformation
behind my back more than once.
Snow was just starting to float down
from the sky when I got back downstairs to
my car. I could barely see out the rearview
mirror, but I was mostly driving on the
highway anyway.
I plugged my iPod into my car speakers
and hit Shuffle.
It was going to be a long trip and I only
had music for company. The sleeve on my
sweatshirt rode up, exposing the bracelet I
never took off. It was simple, just a chain
with a little elephant charm on it. I kept it as
a reminder. A constant reminder.
Shaking my head, I pulled away from the
dorm and headed for the highway and the
next chapter in my life. A fresh start was
irrelevant when the dark things in your past
were always following you.
It took me longer than I anticipated to
get from New Hampshire to my sister’s
house in Bangor, Maine. Actually, it wasn’t
even her house. She’d moved in with this
guy Hunter, who was buying the house
because he was apparently loaded.
Leave it to Renee to find a rich friend.
She was also on again with her boyfriend,
Paul, which was a good thing, in my
opinion, because she was a pain in the ass
when she wasn’t with him. Even more so
than she was when she was with him.
I hadn’t seen the house before, so it was
a bit of a shock when I parked in front of
the house Renee had given me directions
for.
“Damn,” I said. It was huge. Way huger
than Renee had let on. I’d pictured
something a little run-down, and small, but
this was bigger than any house I’d ever lived
in, with Mom or Dad.
I grabbed my backpack and headed up
the porch steps, glancing at the cars in the
driveway as I passed them. It was easy to
spot Renee’s, so I knew I must have the
right place.
There was even a freaking doorbell. My
finger was an inch away from ringing it
when the door flew open.
“There you are! I was worried you were
lying in a ditch somewhere,” Renee said,
flinging herself at me. Startled by the hug, I
sort of stood there and kind of hugged her
back.
“I’m here.”
Somehow, I’d gotten a recessive
redhead gene in our family and ended up
with carrot-red hair, freckles and green
eyes.
Renee had gotten the good genes, with
her blue eyes and blond hair that didn’t
need much highlighting. Our features were
similar, but our coloring was so different
that people never thought we were sisters.
She finally stopped hugging me, but kept
her hand clamped on my shoulder and
steered me into the house, as if I was going
to make a run for it. Where, I didn’t know.
Renee had mentioned something about
Stephen King living down the street, but I
wasn’t sure if I’d be any safer at his house
anyway.
“How was the driving?” Renee closed
the door behind us and it clicked shut with
finality.
“Fine,” I said, glancing around the
house. Damn. Again.
I didn’t know who had decorated, but
they’d obviously used those crazy
home-improvement magazines as
inspiration.
One thing was for sure—it didn’t look
like a typical college crash pad. It was clean,
first of all, and second, there seemed to be
an actual scheme where things matched
and went together. There were also a lot of
peacock feathers, and similar peacock
colors around. Renee had mentioned
something about her roommate Taylor
being obsessed with peacock stuff. I
couldn’t remember why. I sort of tuned out
when Renee gushed about her amazing and
awesome life, while mine had gone into a
downward spiral that never seemed to hit
bottom.
“Hey, Jos. How are you doing?” Paul
came around the corner. He was cute in
one of those white-bread nerd ways.
Not my type. Not that I had a
type…anymore.
“Good.” It was a step up from fine. No
one questioned you when you said you
were good. Everyone thought there was
something wrong with you if you said,
“fine.”
He gave me an awkward hug. I’d seen
him at Christmas when he’d kept Mom and
Renee from throttling each other with
varying success. I’d tried to tell him it was
no use, but he’d done it anyway.
“Where’s everyone else?” I was actually
looking forward to seeing Darah and
meeting her new boyfriend. Darah was one
of the sweetest people on the planet, and I
knew if there was anyone who wouldn’t
judge me, it would be her.
“They wanted to give us some space.
They’ll be here later.”
Something about the way she said it
made me suspicious.
“They’re not going to make a big deal
about it, are they?”
“No,” Renee said, not looking at me, but
glancing at Paul.
Something was afoot.
“So, how about we get your stuff inside,
shall we? Come on, Paul.” Renee grabbed
Paul’s hand and yanked him out the door.
“Uh, okay.” I was left standing in the
foyer alone. I walked into the living room,
which was gorgeously decorated, except for
a mangy-looking recliner and the video
games the guys had probably left scattered
around. I saw the “Skyrim” box and smiled.
Renee couldn’t get enough of that game. It
had consumed quite a bit of her time over
Christmas break.
I flopped down onto the couch and
stared up at the ceiling. Even that was
clean.
A thud sounded a second later as Renee
and Paul brought in some of my stuff.
“Since we only have three bedrooms,
you, my dear sister, get to stay in the newly
refurbished basement. You’re lucky we
decided to put in a guest room,” Renee
said, panting.
“Great,” I said, although I wouldn’t have
minded staying on the plush leather couch.
It was the largest couch I’d ever seen and
took up most of the living room.
“Why don’t you show her around and I’ll
get the rest of the stuff,” Paul said. I got up
from the couch and Renee led me down the
stairs into the basement.
“Welcome to the man cave,” Renee
said, waving her arm.
A man cave indeed. A bar, a pool table,
yet another gigantic couch and a television
large enough for a movie theater.
There were also several sports team
posters, including the Red Sox, the Patriots
and the Celtics. Go teams.
Renee led me toward the back of the
space where there was a small guest room
with a bathroom right beside it.
Thank God. I wouldn’t have to share a
bathroom. I’d done that in the dorms
enough to last a lifetime.
“So this is it.” The room was decorated
in tan and black, which was boring, but nice.
I sat down on the large bed and looked
around at my new home.
“Okay, we have some ground rules,”
Renee said, leaning against the dresser.
Don’t even bother to beat around the bush,
sis. Go ahead and get right to the point.
“Number one,” she said, holding up one
finger. “You will inform me where you are
and who you are with at all times.
You will keep in touch via cell phone.
You will also answer said phone when I call
you, no matter what.”
I clamped my mouth shut. I didn’t want
to provoke her in the middle of her speech
that she’d clearly rehearsed, probably on
Paul.
“Second—” she held up another finger
“—there will be no partying. No drinking.
No drugs. No substances of any kind other
than aspirin. There will also be no passing
out.
Third, there will be a curfew which you
will follow or suffer the consequences.
Fourth, I may not be your mother, but you
will treat me with respect, and that goes for
the other people in this house. And fifth…”
She didn’t seem to be able to come up with
number five.
“Fifth?” I said after a few seconds of
silence.
“I had a fifth one, but I can’t remember
it right now,” she snapped. “But that
doesn’t negate the other four. Do you agree
to them?”
“Yeah,” I said. What did it matter?
“You said yes way too easily. I don’t
believe you.”
Jesus. I was being criticized for being too
agreeable.
“Whatever, Renee. Can I just be alone
now?” I turned over on the bed, touching
the sheets that were no doubt
Egyptian cotton and had a crazy high
thread count. Of course.
“Listen,” she said, sitting down next to
me. Ugh, she always started her lectures
like this. Just like Mom. Although, Renee’s
lectures always had more cursing in them
than Mom’s.
“You’re going through something right
now. A phase, if you will. I’ve been there.
Even Paul was there.” Yeah, I found that
extremely hard to believe. And she had no
idea what I was going through. She thought
she did, but she didn’t.
No one did, and I couldn’t explain it. I
twisted the elephant charm on my bracelet.
And then she smacked me on the
shoulder. Hard.
“But it’s time for you to get your head
out of your ass and straighten up.
Understand?”
“Why with the violence?” I flipped over,
jumped up and shoved her back. “Look, it’s
not my fault that Mom decided to dump me
on you. I don’t want to be here any more
than you want me to be.”
She glared at me, her face turning red.
“Look, I don’t like the fact that my
once-perfect sister, the one sister I knew
would never screw up, has fallen off the
wagon of epic proportions. You’re the one I
never worried about. You got better grades
than I ever dreamed of getting.
You were the good one. And then…”
She didn’t need to finish. And then
everything happened, and that girl, the one
who obsessed over straight A’s and wanted
to be the president of every club and who
had her sights set on being valedictorian
and someday running a huge company or
working for the government or doing
something important with her life,
disappeared.
Nine months ago, everything changed,
and everything I thought I wanted seemed
stupid and pointless. Or maybe I’d just
finally realized it was stupid and pointless.
That had less to do with what had
happened and more to do with
him.
Even thinking his name was like taking a
bullet in the chest.
“Yeah, then I decided to screw it all up. I
know. I’ve heard the story. I was there. You
don’t need to reiterate it to me.”
She shrugged. “Well, nothing else has
worked, so I thought I’d give it a shot. I’ve
also considered beating you senseless, but
that’s usually frowned upon.”
“Go for it,” I said, sitting back down.
Wasn’t going to work.
“Oh, believe me, I’d love to. But then
you’d be unconscious and I wouldn’t be
able to get information out of you, soooo…”
“And what information is that?”
“What the hell happened to you to
make you like this?”
That was something she could try to
beat out of me, but it wasn’t going to
happen. I shoved her aside and went back
out into the main area of the basement.
“I guess I just decided all that stuff was
bullshit. Getting good grades, being the
good daughter. Where did it get me?
Nowhere. And I was miserable. I never got
to have any fun because I was always
working or trying to get those good grades
or planning some sort of event for one of
the million clubs I was in. I got tired of it,
okay?” I understood them being upset
about me partying and that sort of thing,
but just because I wasn’t getting straight A’s
anymore, that was a reason to have a
coronary?
Renee grabbed my shoulder to stop me
from running up the steps. I tried to shake
her off, but she yanked me around to face
her.
“No, that’s not it. You’ve spent your
entire life following the rules. You don’t do
that and then just flip a switch and change.
People don’t change like that unless
something makes them.” I’d had this
conversation with her, with my parents,
with my now ex-boyfriend and ex-friends. I
told them all the same thing.
“Just leave me alone.” Everyone had,
eventually.
Renee glared at me, her eyes turning a
steely blue like they did when she was
determined about something. Getting her
to back off was going to be a challenge. She
took stubborn to a whole new level.
“Fine. Go get the rest of your stuff.” She
let go of my arm and jerked her chin up the
stairs.
“Fine,” I said, stomping up the stairs.