Hothouse Flower (Calloway Sisters) Read online

Page 2


  It was about three years ago.

  And he looked at me with those same pissed off amber-colored eyes, and that same, I fucking hate the world expression. He was twenty-one back then. Our relationship balances somewhere between rocky and stable, but it was never meant to be perfect.

  “You can’t go easy on me just once?” Lo asks, pushing the longer strands of his light brown hair off his forehead. The sides are trimmed short.

  “If I slowed down, we would have been walking.”

  Lo rolls his eyes and scowls. He’s been in a bad place for a few months, and this run was supposed to release some of the tension. But it’s not helping.

  I see the tightness in his chest, the way he can still barely fucking breathe.

  He squats and rubs his eyes.

  “What do you need?” I ask him seriously.

  “A fucking glass of whiskey. One ice cube. Think you can do that for me, big bro?”

  I glare. I hate the way he calls me bro. It’s with fucking scorn. I can count on my hand the amount of times he’s called me “brother” with affection or admiration. But he usually acts like I don’t deserve the title yet.

  Maybe I don’t.

  I knew about Loren Hale for practically all my life, and I didn’t even say hi. I think back often to when I was fifteen, sixteen, seventeen and my father asked every fucking week: “Do you want to meet your brother?”

  I rejected the offer every single time.

  When I was in college, I came to terms with the fact that I would never know him. I thought I was at peace. I stopped hating Loren Hale for just existing. I stopped listening to my mother condemn a kid that had no say in being born. I slowly stopped talking to my father, losing contact because I didn’t need him.

  The trust fund, I use. I figure it’s payment for all the lies I had to keep for that fucking asshole.

  One day. That’s all it took to change my idealistic, head-in-the-fucking-sand, life. Outside at a college Halloween party, a fight started. I watched four guys on the track team—the one I was the captain of at Penn—go up against a lean-built guy. I recognized him from all those photos my father showed me.

  He wasn’t how I’d imagined. He wasn’t surrounded by frat guys, crushing beers over their heads.

  He was alone.

  His girlfriend came into the fight later, to defend him, but it was too late. She missed the part where my teammate accused him of drinking expensive booze in a locked cabinet. She missed the part where Lo egged him on, just so the guy would swing.

  He hit my brother. I stood and watched Lo get decked in the face.

  It was in that fucking moment that I realized how wrong I had been. I didn’t see a prick with a hundred friends and cash up to his chin. Not a jock, not an athlete like me. I saw a guy wanting to be punched, asking to feel that pain. I saw someone so fucking hurt and broken and sick.

  Four against one.

  All that time, I wanted to live the life he had. I hated playing the bastard outcast when I was really the legitimate son. But if our roles were reversed, if I had lived with my alcoholic father, I would have been there.

  That would have been me: tormented, drunk, weak and alone.

  My father was trying to tell me that Lo wasn’t the popular kid I’d dreamed up. He was just as much of an outsider as I was. The difference: I had the strength to defend myself. I wasn’t beaten down by our father like Lo had been. I didn’t even contemplate the fucking horror of living with Jonathan twenty-four-seven, hearing the why are you such a pussy? comment every day. I had blinders on. I could only see what was wrong with me. I couldn’t fathom Loren getting a shitty bargain too.

  That night at the Halloween party, I left the false peace I’d built for myself. It wasn’t a gut reaction. I stood there and watched Lo get beat on before I made a decision to intervene. And once I fucking made it, I never turned back.

  “You want a glass of whiskey?” I give him a look. “Why don’t I just push you in front of a fucking freight train? It’s about the same.”

  He stands up and lets out an agitated laugh. “Do you even know what this feels like?” He extends his arms, his eyes bloodshot. “I feel like I’m going out of my goddamn mind, Ryke. Tell me what I should do? Huh? Nothing takes this pain away, not running, not fucking the girl I love, not anything.”

  I haven’t been where he is, not to this extent.

  “You relapsed a few times,” I say. “But you can get back to where you were.”

  He shakes his head.

  “So what?” I narrow my eyes. “You’re going to drink a beer? You’re going to chug a bottle of whiskey? Then what? You’ll ruin your relationship with Lily. You’ll feel like shit in the morning. You’ll wish you were fucking dead—”

  “What do you think I’m wishing now?!” he shouts, his face reddens in pain. And my lungs constrict. “I hate myself for breaking my sobriety. I hate that I’m at this place in my life again.”

  “You were under a lot of scrutiny,” I back-peddle, realizing he doesn’t need me to be a hardass, something I revert to on instinct. I push people too much sometimes.

  “You’re under the same scrutiny, and I didn’t see you breaking your sobriety.”

  “It’s different.” I haven’t had a drink in nine years. “The media was saying some pretty awful shit, Lo. You coped the first way you knew how. No one blames you. We just want to fucking help you.” We’re all public spectacles, under constant gaze of cameras, because of the Calloway girls, the daughters of a soda mogul.

  By proximity to the Calloways, we’ve been roped into the spotlight. It’s not fucking fun. I wear a baseball cap just to try to disguise myself, but thankfully cameramen have better things to do than film us this early in the morning.

  But they’ll be out trying to get a picture of us at noon.

  “You don’t believe them, do you?” Lo suddenly asks, his voice still edged.

  “Who?” I ask.

  “The news, all those reporters…you don’t think our dad actually did those things to me?”

  I try to hold back a cringe. Someone told the press that Jonathan physically abuses Lo. The rumors just kept escalating after that. I don’t know if our dad could hit him…or molest him. I don’t want to believe it, but there’s a fucking sliver of doubt that says maybe. Maybe it could have happened.

  “It’s not fucking true!” Lo shouts at me.

  “Okay, okay.” I raise my hands to get him to calm down.

  He’s been like this since the accusations, pissed and angry and looking for a way to fix things. Booze was his solution unfortunately.

  Our father filed a defamation lawsuit, but no matter the outcome of the court case, it won’t change the way people look at both of them. Vilifying our father, pitying Loren. There’s no going back.

  “You just have to move fucking forward,” I tell him. “Don’t worry about what people think.”

  Loren inhales deeply and stares at the sky like he wants to murder a flock of birds. “You say shit, Ryke, like it’s the easiest thing in the world. Do you know how annoying that is?” He looks back down at me, his features all sharp, like a blade.

  “I’ll keep saying it then, just to irritate the fuck out of you.” What else are big brothers for?

  He sighs heavily.

  I rub the back of his head playfully and then guide him towards his house. I drop my hand off his shoulder, and he stops in the middle of the road, his brows scrunching.

  “About your trip to California…” He trails off. “I know I haven’t asked about it in months. I’ve been too self-absorbed—”

  “Don’t worry about it.” I motion with my head to the white colonial house. “Let’s go make some breakfast for the girls.”

  “Wait,” he says, holding out his hand. “I have to say this.”

  But I don’t want to hear it. I’ve made up my mind already. I’m not going to California. Not when he’s in a bad place with his recovery. I’m his sponsor. I have to be here.

&
nbsp; “I need you to go,” he says. I open my mouth and he cuts me off. “I can already hear your stupid fucking rebuttal. And I’m telling you to go. Climb your mountains. Do whatever you need to do. You’ve had this planned for a long time, and I’m not going to ruin it for you.”

  “I can always reschedule. Those mountains aren’t fucking moving, Lo.” I’ve wanted to free-solo climb three rock formations, back-to-back, in Yosemite since I turned eighteen. I’ve been working up to the challenge for years. I can wait a little longer.

  “I will feel like shit if you don’t go,” he says. “And I’ll drink. I can promise you that.”

  I glare.

  “I don’t need you,” he says with malice. “I don’t fucking need you to hold my hand. I need you to be goddamn selfish like me for once in your life so I don’t feel like utter shit compared to you, alright?”

  I internally cringe. I was selfish for so many fucking years. I didn’t give a fuck about him. I don’t want to be that guy again.

  But I hear him begging me. I hear please fucking go. I’m losing my mind.

  “Okay,” I say on instinct. “I’ll go.”

  His shoulders instantly relax, and he lets out another deep breath. He nods to himself. I wonder how long he’s been carrying that weight on his chest.

  I can’t explain why I love him so much. Maybe because he’s the only person who understands what it’s like to be manipulated by Jonathan for his gain. Or maybe because I know deep down there’s a soul that needs love more than anyone else, and I can’t help but reciprocate to the fullest degree.

  I put my arm around his shoulder again and say, “Maybe one day you’ll be able to outrun me.”

  He lets out a dry, bitter laugh. “Maybe if I break both your legs.”

  I grin. “Would you even be fucking fast enough to do that?”

  “Give me a lacrosse stick and we’ll see.”

  “Not fucking happening, little brother.”

  I don’t say it with scorn.

  I never do. And I never will.

  < 2 >

  DAISY CALLOWAY

  I have this theory.

  Friends aren’t forever. They’re not even for a while. They come into your life and they leave when something or someone changes. Nothing grounds them to you. Not blood or loyalty. They’re just…fleeting.

  I’m usually not this cynical, but I popped up Facebook this morning, my laptop resting on my bent legs. I should have deleted my account a couple years ago, around the same time my family was thrust into the public eye—when my older sister’s sex addiction went public.

  But alas, I had a different theory about friends back then.

  Butterflies, rainbows, hearts holding hands—it was literally a PBS special in my brain whenever I thought about my friendships.

  And now Cleo Marks posted this on her wall: During Daisy Calloway’s sweet sixteen party, she couldn’t shut up about sex. It’s all she cared about. You know she’s a closeted sex addict like her sister. All the Calloway girls are skanks.

  Those are the beautiful words of my former best friend. And it doesn’t even matter that she brought up an incident from two and a half years ago. Resurfacing it is enough to elicit 457 comments, mostly all in agreement.

  Four months have passed since I graduated prep school and I’m still being haunted by my former friends. Like the Ghosts of Hell’s Past.

  A hand reaches out and smacks my computer closed. “Stop wasting your fucking emotions on them.”

  A tall six-foot-three guy is in my bed. Beside me. In only a pair of drawstring pants. And I’m sitting against the headboard, wearing white cotton shorts and a cropped red and blue top that says: Wild America.

  On the outside, we probably look like a couple, gently rising from the morning sunlight that peeks through my curtains.

  On the inside, there’s no touching. No kissing. Nothing beyond friendship status.

  Reality is a whole lot more complicated.

  “When did you wake up?” I wonder, avoiding any discussions that center on my old friends.

  He doesn’t sit yet. He stays beneath my green comforter and sheet, running his hands through his disheveled dark brown hair. Attractive doesn’t even begin to describe his “I-don’t-give-a-shit-about-it” hair. It never looks neater during the day, but he knows that.

  “The better fucking question is when did you go to sleep?” He stares at me with narrowed, accusatory eyes.

  Never. But he knows this too. “Good news, I finished packing in the wee hours of the night.”

  He rises and nears me a little. I tense at his closeness, reminded that he’s a man, his body easily dwarfing mine. It’s not a bad tense. More like the kind of tense that stops my breath for a second. That makes my head float and my heart do a weird little dance. I like it.

  The danger of it all.

  “Bad news, I don’t give a fuck about your packing,” he says roughly. “I just give a fuck about you.” He reaches across my chest to grab a pill bottle off my nightstand. His muscles constrict as he accidentally brushes against my boobs. Neither of us announces the brief touch, but the tension has turned a corner, down onto Don’t Go There Lane.

  To relieve this new tension, I stand up on the bed and kick a decorative pillow off. “You do care about my packing. You thought I’d never get it done.”

  “Because you’re fucking ADD and a lot of other things.” He watches me from below, his eyes traveling up the length of my long bare legs. “Sit down for a second, Calloway.” Instead of acting like he’s into me and all that, he just reads the back of the pill bottle, his brows tightening in concern.

  You know that theory I have about friends not being forever...or even for a while?

  Well, every theory has an exception.

  Ryke is mine.

  As I watched each friend call me a sex-addict-in-training and a media whore, stabbing me routinely in the heart, Ryke was the one who pulled out the blades. He even shielded me from them. He’s like my wolf—dangerous, alluring and protective—but I can never get close enough or else he’ll bite me.

  He’s my last real friend. But I know that’s not entirely true. He’s the only real one I’ve ever had.

  “What other things am I?” I ask with a smile, standing by his ankles at the foot of the bed.

  “Hyperactive, fearless, crazy, and probably the happiest unhappy girl I’ve ever met.”

  I bounce a little, about to jostle the mattress, but he side-swipes my calves quickly. I fall on my back, smiling big as I turn on my side towards him. It fades the moment he tosses the pill bottle at my face. It hits me square in the forehead and thuds to the comforter.

  He’s also an asshole.

  “You lowered your dosage,” he says.

  “The doctor did it. He was worried how fast I was going through Ambien.”

  “Did you tell him that you can’t fucking sleep without it?”

  “No,” I admit. “I was too busy explaining how I don’t want to be addicted to anything like my sister or your brother. And he said it was a good idea to start lowering the dosage.” I tuck a strand of my dyed blonde hair behind my ear. It’s waist-length and has a habit of being everywhere all the time. Like right now. I am pretty much swaddled in it.

  I empathize greatly with Rapunzel. She had it rough.

  Ryke glares. “Not sleeping isn’t the fucking solution, Daisy.”

  “What’s a better one?” I ask seriously. I am tired, and I realize today, like most days, will be fueled by energy drinks and endorphin boosts in the form of diet pills. Yippee.

  He lets out a deep breath. “I don’t know. Right now, I’m really disturbed by the fact that I knew you didn’t sleep because you didn’t scream or kick me. If you don’t wake me in the middle of the night, it means you were up the whole fucking time.” He shakes his head as he continues to think. “When you’re in Paris, are you sharing a room with another model?

  “No,” I say. “No, I wouldn’t.” Because she’d hear me scr
eam, and I’d have to explain why I have these intense nightmares. And no one knows but Ryke. Not my sisters: Lily and Rose. Not Rose’s husband. Not Lily’s fiancé (who happens to be Ryke’s brother).

  Just him. It’s a secret he’s kept for half a year. When I graduated from prep school about four months ago, I moved out of my parent’s house and into a Philly apartment. Things got a little worse, so he spends the night.

  At first he just crashed on the couch.

  But I couldn’t sleep, and his proximity helped keep my anxiety at bay.

  Anxiety—such a weird word. I’ve never been anxious about anything before. Not really. Not until the media surrounded my family.

  For the first time in my life, I’m truly scared.

  And it’s not even of sharks or alligators or heights and daredevil stunts.

  I am scared of people. Of things that people can do to me. Of things they’ve done.

  Ryke knows my fears pretty well because I never lie to him. Two years ago, when I was sixteen, he held out my motorcycle helmet, about to teach me how to ride a Ducati. He said, “For us to have any kind of friendship, you can’t pretend with me. I’ve been involved in lies most of my fucking life, and it’s not something I’m particularly fond of. So you can cut the I don’t know what you’re talking about, I’m little and naïve bullshit. I don’t play that game. I never will.”

  It took me a full minute to process the gravity of his words. But I understood them. In order to be his friend, I couldn’t save face. I had to be me. It wasn’t a lot to ask. But back then, I’m not even sure I knew who I was. “Okay,” I accepted. So far, I’ve kept my word. No lies. And in turn, I’ve opened up more to Ryke than I have to anyone else. Plus, he’s been the only one here long enough to listen.

  “Are you worried about going to Paris alone?” he asks me. “You haven’t slept by yourself in four months.”

  “I can’t keep you forever, can I? Like a miniature Ryke Meadows carry-on or pocket-sized version?” I try hard not to smile at this.