Read The Redemption of Callie and Kayden Online
Authors: Jessica Sorensen
everyone else he has his own fears and I need to be there for him
like he’s always there for me. I step into his shoes for a minute and become the comforting best friend who tries to help ease the pain.
“It’s going to be okay.” I take a step forward and place my
hand on his arm. “Greyson’s not Braiden.”
“I know that.” He sighs and places his hand over mine. “But
sometimes I find myself going back to that place where I’m lying in
the dirt and they’re kicking the shit out of me.”
I wrap my arms around him and hug him, noting how safe I
feel in the closeness. “I know, but sometimes moving forward is
the only way we can escape our pasts, right? At least that’s what
you’re always telling me.”
“I know,” he whispers and his arms circle around me. He pulls
me closer. “And I know nothing will happen. Greyson’s not Braiden
and he loves me, but I just keep thinking about that God damn
day. I was so fucking happy, thinking life was perfect, and then
they showed up all piled into the back of that fucking truck like a
bunch of robots all following what the other one does. And…” He
drifts off and I can tell he’s about to cry. “And I can’t stop picturing his face—the hate in his eyes, like he was blaming me that he was
part of it.”
I hold very still and give him all the time he needs to collect
himself. Seth being himself, it doesn’t take him too long before
he’s pulling away. He wipes the corners of his eyes with his
fingertips and he puffs out a breath. “Anyway, what I was going to
say before I started bawling like a baby was that I was feeling a
little scared about moving forward and I might have said some
things to Greyson that weren’t very nice.”
I reach for a roll of toilet paper and hand him some tissue. “It
could be… sometimes saying sorry is actually easy.”
He dabs the rest of the tears away with the tissue and then
tosses it into the garbage bin that’s on the wall. “Yeah, but
sometimes it’s not.”
“But sometimes it is.”
That gets him to smile. “Look at you. Being all wise.” He
swings his arm around my shoulder. “I think it must be from all the
time you spend around me.”
I crack a smile as I unlatch the door. “It must be.”
By the time we walk out of the bathroom, the room is even
more crammed. I don’t like it. It makes me feel anxious and
ashamed about the dress I’m wearing. Each time someone brushes
up against me, I cringe internally.
I grasp Seth’s hand as he guides me to our table where Luke
is talking to some girl in a tight black dress. Her blonde hair is
done up, her cleavage is nearly popping out of her dress, and she’s
sitting in my seat. As we approach the table, her eyes scale me and
then she looks away, disregarding me.
“Hey,” Seth says before she can say anything. He reaches
across the table and grabs two tall shot glasses from the eight that
are circling the middle of the table. “I think Callie and I are going to take shots and dance.”
Luke nods and then starts chatting with the girl. I step
behind Seth and he turns to me and offers me a shot. I’m
distracted, and without even thinking, I put the rim up and tip my
head back. The alcohol burns and tears at my esophagus.
“Blah.” I gag, shoving the empty glass back at Seth. “I didn’t
mean to drink that.”
Seth giggles at me and angles back his head, knocking the
shot back. He takes my glass and his and puts them back on the
table. One tips over, but he doesn’t bother picking it up. He holds
my hand and tugs me toward the dance floor.
“Do we really have to?” My head’s a little blurry and my legs
feel like rubber. “I don’t feel very good.”
Seth nods as he spins around, doing a little wiggly thing with
his hips before striking a pose. “You and I need to relax.”
I glance around at the people surrounding us who are
grinding against each other to the low beat of the sultry song.
“Dancing’s never been relaxing for me.”
He shuffles toward me, snapping his fingers and rocking
back and forth. “Come on. I saw you dancing in the car ride when
we were heading to Afton.”
I shake my head, but my lips turn upward. I start to dance
with him, not going too overboard, but enough that I feel my
mood lifting. When the song switches to a slow one, Seth inches in
and puts his hands on my hips. As we rock to the rhythm of the
song and with each sway, a weight builds on my chest. My mind is
going back to when Kayden and I danced and for a moment
everything seemed like it was going to be okay. But it’s not okay.
Nothing is. Kayden won’t talk to me and all I can ever picture is
how he looked lying on the floor, pale as snow with a dying pulse.
I can see the slits on his wrist and on his side. I can feel my terror and worry about him dying. How I don’t want him to die. How I
need him. How I need him forever. The weight on my chest bears
down and I swear my ribs will splinter.
“Callie, what’s wrong?” Seth brings his finger up to my cheek
and grazes a tear that escaped my eye.
“I don’t want him to die,” I say through a choked sob. “I
don’t.”
His eyes widen. “He’s not going to die, Callie. He made it out
alive.”
“I know that,” I say, knowing he won’t understand. Kayden is
like me in so many ways. He’ll hide it inside himself until he breaks.
And if he breaks, I might not make it to him in time.
Then what? I can’t go on living my life without him, fighting
through the pain every day. I felt what it was like to lose him back
when I saw him on the floor. I thought he was dead and my chest
nearly crushed into my heart as the pain slammed into my ribs.
I can’t do it without him. I need to save him and myself and
make us happy together.
Kayden
When I realize she’s crying, I move for her, shoving anyone
who gets in my way. Seeing tears come out of those stunning blue
eyes rips my heart in half and I no longer care about anything else
but making her better.
When she sees me, her eyes enlarge and she reaches up to
wipe the tears away from her cheeks. Seth turns and looks at me
and then he lets go of her waist and backs away.
“You got it from here?” he asks me and I nod. He moves
through the crowd and I take his place, positioning myself in front
of Callie.
Her fingers start to slide down her pink cheeks to wipe the
tears away, but I catch her hand and move it away. Bringing my
free hand to her cheek, I trace my thumb down each tear and
erase them.
“What’s wrong?” I ask, pulling her closer. “Did something
happen?”
She shakes her head, her eyes blinking fiercely as more tears
threaten to spill out. “I’m okay, just a little tired.”
“Callie, please tell me what’s wrong so I can try to make it
better.”
She shakes her head and her throat is jerking as she works
back a choke. “It’s really… nothing.” She starts to sob, her
shoulders quivering with each tear.
My arms loop around her and I pull her against my chest.
She buries her face into my shirt, clutching onto the bottom, and
her tears are soaking through the fabric. I don’t dare move, even
though everyone around us is dancing. I run my hand along her
back and down her hair.
“Shh…” I say, as I work not to cry myself. I don’t know why,
but I can feel her pain, even though I have no idea what’s causing
it. I try to hold the tears back. I focus on the open wound on my
wrist and concentrate on the lingering burn. But it’s not working
and soon I know I’m going to crumble—we both are.
I pick her up and she doesn’t even look at me or seem
stunned. Her legs hitch around my back and her arms slide up my
chest and she secures her arms around my neck. People watch us
in wonder as I shove my way through the crowd, making sure to
hold the back of her dress down and keep her covered up. When I
step outside, she moves to get down, but I tighten my arms and
force her to stay against me. Now that I’ve got her, I can’t let her
go.
Holding onto her, I flag down a cab. The driver looks at me
funny as I duck my head in, still carrying her, and sit down in the
back seat. “552 Main Beach Drive,” I tell him as I reach forward,
rising up a little, and glide the door closed.
He’s an older man, and I catch him eyeing us a few times
through the rearview mirror. I bring one of my hands up and cup
the back of her head, while the other I keep at her waist. She’s still crying and her tears are making my shirt damp.
The cab moves forward and the meter up front begins to
tick. I hold as still as I can and rub her back with my cheek pressed against the side of her head. About halfway home, when the
streetlights from the main road change into porch lights, she raises
her head and rests her chin on my shoulder, staring out the back
window. I don’t ask her what’s wrong and she doesn’t tell me. She
just watches the twinkling lights blur by as we drive forward, into
the night, knowing that eventually we’ll reach the end and one of
us will finally have to break the silence.
#89 Admit the truth and accept what it means
Callie
The song playing from the cab stereo is cheerful and the
singer is professing his love to a girl he ran away from. I envy him
because he can admit it to the world. I, on the other hand, just
realized that I might be in love with Kayden and that there is no
way I’ll ever be able to tell him. Not just from fear of rejection, but from fear of the unknown. I’ve never been in love before. Never
understood it. But I realize now that the worry and heartache I’ve
been carrying inside me might just be love.
I clutch onto him, feeling his chest rise and fall underneath
me as I watch the Christmas lights blur by in streaks of gold, silver, red, and green. It’s such a pretty time of year, but I’ve never been a fan of it. It reminds me of a time when I used to get excited and
run out to the tree to rip presents open. However, the Christmas I
was twelve, presents only reminded me of my birthday and the
terror that came with that memory would always surface.
I remember the first Christmas after it happened. I’d lie
awake in my bed all night with my eyes open and my gaze
fastened on the ceiling, wishing I’d hear reindeer on the roof, like I imagined I did when I was little. But there was no imagination or
magic left inside me and all I heard was the dead silence of
nighttime and the secrets lying in my heart.
When I heard my mother walk into my room that morning, I
pretended to be asleep.
“Callie,” she’d whispered. “Callie darling, wake up.” She gave
my shoulder a little shake. “Sweetie, I think Santa brought you
some presents.”
My eyelids lifted and I met her gaze. She was wearing a pink
satin robe and her hair was braided at the nape of her neck. Her
makeup wasn’t on, but I thought she looked better without it.
“Good morning,” she said with a cheerful smile. “Are you
ready to go see what presents you got?”
I was exhausted from lying awake all night and I rolled onto
my side, situating my hands beneath the pillow. “I’m not in the
mood for presents.”
She placed a hand on my back and I jumped, thinking about
the last time someone had put a hand on me while I was lying in
the bed. “Callie, are you all right? You’ve seemed so sad the last
few months.”
“I’m fine,” I snapped. “I’m just sick of Christmas and
pretending that I believe in things when I really don’t. There is no
Santa, Mom. I haven’t believed in him since I was eight.”
“Well, of course I know that,” she replied, lifting her hand
from my back. “But it takes the magic and fun out of it if we don’t
all play along.”
“Magic and fun doesn’t exist,” I said, wiggling away from her.
“And I’m tired of playing along… I’m going to go back to sleep. I’m
tired.”
She sat there for an eternity, breathing in and out, and then
finally she rose to her feet, the mattress rising as her weight left it.
“All right.”
That’s all she said. Then she left and the room and the
haunting memories took over again. Even now, I wonder why she
never said anything. She had to be able to tell that something was
wrong. One of these days, I’ll find the courage to ask her. I have to.
Otherwise I’ll never know and the answer will always haunt me.
“Callie.” Kayden’s voice echoes through my thoughts. I lift my
eyes, realizing I’ve dozed off. I elevate my head and glance around
at the darkness outside and the ocean in the distance.
“Did I fall asleep?” I blink my eyes and then let go of his
shoulders to rub the dreariness away.
He nods, sweeping a lock of my hair out of my face. “You
did, but that’s okay.”
My cheeks and eyes feel swollen from the sting of tears. “I’m
sorry.”
His fingers linger on my cheekbone and he’s looking into my
eyes, terrified. “I said it was okay, Callie. And I promise it is… I liked holding you… It made me feel calm.”
I suck back the tears that still want to come out. “Okay.”