Point of Retreat (Slammed Series) Read online




  6

  Prologue

  Part One

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Part Two

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Point of Retreat

  A novel by

  Colleen Hoover

  A note to the reader:

  Point of Retreat is the second novel in a two-book series. For the first novel, Slammed, visit this link:

  www.colleenhoover.com

  Point of Retreat Copyright © 2012 Colleen Hoover

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the author, except that brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews are permitted.

  This is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or have been used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  This book is dedicated to everyone who read Slammed and encouraged me to continue telling the story of Layken and Will.

  Prologue

  December 31st

  “Resolutions”

  I’m confident this will be our year. Mine and Lake’s year.

  The last few years have definitely not been in our favor. It was over three years ago when my parents both passed away unexpectedly, leaving me to raise my little brother all on my own. It didn’t help that Vaughn decided to end our two-year relationship on the heels of their death. To top it off, I ended up having to drop my scholarship. Leaving the University and moving back to Ypsilanti to become Caulder’s guardian was one of the hardest decisions I’ve ever made…but also one of the best decisions.

  I spent every single day of the next year learning how to adjust. How to adjust to heartbreak, how to adjust to having no parents, how to adjust to essentially becoming a parent myself and the sole provider of a family. Looking back on it, I don't think I could have made it without Caulder. He’s the only thing that kept me going…

  I don’t even remember the entire first half of last year. Last year didn't start for me until September 22nd, the day I first laid eyes on Lake. Of course, last year turned out to be just as difficult as the previous years, but in a completely different way. I'd never felt more alive than when I was with her…but considering our circumstances, I couldn’t be with her. So, I guess I didn’t spend a lot of time feeling alive.

  This year has been better in its’ own way. A lot of falling in love, a lot of grief, a lot of healing and even more adjusting. Julia passed away in September. I didn't expect her death to be as hard on me as it was. It was almost like losing my mother all over again.

  I miss my mother. And I miss Julia. Thank god I have Lake.

  Like me, my father loved to write. He always used to tell me that writing his daily thoughts down was therapeutic for his soul. Maybe one of the reasons I’ve had such a difficult time adjusting during the past three years is because I didn't take his advice. I assumed slamming a few times a year was enough “therapy” for me. Maybe I was wrong. I want the upcoming year to be everything I have planned for it to be…perfect. With all that said (or written, rather) writing is my resolution. Even if it's just one word a day, I'm going to write it down, get it out of me.

  Part One

  Thursday, January 5th

  I registered for classes today. Didn’t get the days I wanted, but I only have two semesters left so it’s getting harder to be picky about my schedule. I’m thinking about applying to local schools for another teaching job after next semester. Hopefully by this time next year I’ll be teaching again. For right now, though, I’m still living off student loans. Luckily my grandmother and grandfather have both been supportive while I work on my Master’s degree. I wouldn’t be able to do it without them, that’s for sure.

  We’re having dinner with Gavin and Eddie tonight. I think I’ll make cheeseburgers. Cheeseburgers sound good. That’s all I really have to say right now…

  Chapter One

  “Is Layken over here or over there?” Eddie asks, peering her head in the front door.

  “Over there,” I say from the kitchen.

  Is there a sign on my house instructing people not to knock? Of course Lake never knocks anymore, but her comfort here has apparently extended to Eddie as well. Eddie heads across the street to Lake’s house and Gavin walks inside, tapping his knuckles against the front door. It’s not an official knock, but at least he makes an attempt.

  “What are we eating?” he asks. He slips his shoes off at the door and makes his way into the kitchen.

  “Burgers.” I hand him a spatula and point to the stove, instructing him to flip the burgers while I pull the fries out of the oven.

  “Will, do you ever notice how we somehow always get stuck cooking?”

  “It’s probably not a bad thing,” I say as I loosen the fries from the pan. “Remember Eddie’s alfredo?”

  He grimaces when he remembers the alfredo. “Good point,” he says.

  I call Kel and Caulder into the kitchen to have them set the table. For the past year, since Lake and I have been together, Gavin and Eddie have been eating with us at least twice a week. I finally had to invest in a dining room table because the bar was getting a little too crowded.

  “Hey, Gavin,” Kel says. He walks into the kitchen and grabs a stack of cups out of the cabinet.

  “Hey,” Gavin responds. “You decide where we’re having your party next week?”

  Kel shrugs. “I don’t know. Maybe bowling. Or we could just do something here.”

  Caulder walks into the kitchen and starts setting places at the table. I glance behind me and notice them setting an extra place.

  “We expecting company?” I ask.

  “Kel invited Kiersten,” Caulder says, teasingly.

  Kiersten moved into a house on our street about a month ago, and Kel seems to have developed a slight crush on her. He won’t admit it, of course. He’s just now about to turn eleven, so Lake and I expected this to happen. Kiersten’s a few months older than him, and a lot taller. Girls hit puberty faster than boys, so maybe he’ll eventually catch up.

  “Next time you guys invite someone else, let me know. Now I need to make another burger.” I walk to the refrigerator and take out one of the extra patties.

  “She doesn’t eat meat,” Kel says. “She’s a vegetarian.”

  Figures. I put the meat back inside the fridge. “I don’t have any fake meat. What’s she gonna do? Eat bread?”

  “Bread’s fine,” Kiersten says as she walks through the front door…without knocking. “I like bread. French fries, too. I just don’t eat things that are a result of unjustified animal homicides.”

  Kiersten walks to the table and grabs the roll of paper towels and starts tearing them off, laying one beside each plate. Her self-assurance reminds me a little of Eddie.

  “Who’s she?” Gavin asks, watching Kiersten make herself at home. She’s never eaten with us before, but you wouldn’t know that by how she’s taking command.

  “She�
��s the eleven-year-old neighbor I was telling you about. The one I think is an imposter based on the things that come out of her mouth. I’m beginning to suspect she’s really a tiny adult, posing as a little red headed child.”

  “Oh, the one Kel's crushing on?” Gavin smiles and I can see his wheels turning. He’s already thinking of ways to embarrass Kel at dinner. Tonight should be interesting.

  Gavin and I have become pretty close this past year. It’s good, I guess, considering how close Eddie and Lake are. Kel and Caulder really like them, too. It’s nice. I like the setup we all have. I hope it stays this way.

  Eddie and Lake finally walk in just as we’re all taking our seats at the table. Lake has her wet hair pulled up into a knot on top of her head. She’s wearing house shoes, sweat pants and a t-shirt. I love that about her--the fact that she’s so comfortable here. She takes the seat next to mine and leans in and kisses me on the cheek.

  “Thanks, babe. Sorry it took me so long. I was trying to register online for Statistics but the class is full. Guess I’ll have to go sweet talk someone at the admin. office tomorrow.”

  “Why are you taking statistics?” Gavin asks. He grabs the ketchup and squirts it on his plate.

  “I took Algebra II in the winter mini-mester. I’m trying to knock out all my math in the first year since I hate it so much.” Lake grabs the ketchup out of Gavin’s hands and squirts some on my plate, then on her own.

  “What’s your hurry? You’ve already got more credits than Eddie and me put together,” he says. Eddie nods in agreement as she takes a bite of her burger.

  Lake nudges her head toward Kel and Caulder. “I’ve already got more kids than you and Eddie put together, too. That’s my hurry.”

  “What’s your major?” Kiersten asks Lake.

  Eddie glances toward Kiersten, finally noticing the extra person seated at the table. “Who are you?”

  Kiersten looks at Eddie and smiles. “I’m Kiersten. I live diagonal to Will and Caulder, parallel to Layken and Kel. We moved here from Detroit right before Christmas. Mom says we needed to get out of the city, before the city got out of us…whatever that means. I’m eleven. I’ve been eleven since eleven-eleven-eleven. It was a pretty big day, you know. Not many people can say they turned eleven on eleven-eleven-eleven. I’m a little bummed I was born at three o’clock in the afternoon, though. If I would have been born at 11:11, I’m pretty sure I could have got on the news or something. I could have recorded the segment and used it someday for my portfolio. I’m gonna be an actress when I grow up.”

  Eddie, along with the rest of us, stares at Kiersten without responding. Kiersten is oblivious, turning to Lake to repeat her question. “What’s your major, Layken?”

  Lake lays her burger down on her plate and clears her throat. I know how much she hates this question. She tries to answer confidently. “I haven’t decided yet.”

  Kiersten looks at her pitifully. “I see. The proverbial undecided. My oldest brother has been a sophomore in college for three years. He’s got enough credits to have five majors by now. I think he remains undecided because he’d rather sleep until noon every day, sit in class for three hours and go out every night, than actually graduate and get a real job. Mom says that’s not true…she says it’s because he’s trying to ‘discover his full potential’ by examining all of his interests. If you ask me, I think it’s bullshit.”

  I cough when the drink I just swallowed tries to make its way back up with my laugh.

  “You just said bullshit!” Kel says.

  “Kel, don’t say bullshit!” Lake says.

  “But she said bullshit first,” Caulder says, defending Kel.

  “Caulder, don’t say bullshit!” I yell.

  “Sorry,” Kiersten says to Lake and me. “Mom says the FCC is responsible for inventing cusswords just for media shock value. She says if everyone would just use them enough, they wouldn’t be considered cusswords anymore and no one would ever be offended by them.”

  This kid is hard to keep up with!

  “Your mother encourages you to cuss?” Gavin says.

  Kiersten nods. “I don’t see it that way. It’s more like she’s encouraging us to undermine a system flawed through overuse of words that are made out to be harmful, when in fact they’re just letters, mixed together like every other word. That’s all they are, mixed up letters. Like, take the word ‘butterfly’ for example. What if someone decided one day that butterfly is a cussword? People would eventually start using the word butterfly as an insult, and to emphasize things in a negative way. The actual word doesn’t mean anything. It’s the negative association people give these words that make them cusswords. So, if we all just decided to keep saying butterfly all the time, eventually people would stop caring. The shock value would subside, and it would become just another word again. Same with every other so-called bad word. If we would all just start saying them all the time, they wouldn’t be bad anymore. That’s what my mom says, anyway.” She smiles and takes a french fry and dips it in ketchup.

  I often wonder when Kiersten’s visiting, how she turned out the way she did. I have yet to actually meet Kiersten’s mother, but from what I’ve gathered, she’s definitely not ordinary. Kiersten is obviously smarter than most kids her age…even if it is in a strange way. The things that come out of her mouth make Kel and Caulder seem somewhat normal.

  “Kiersten?” Eddie says. “Will you be my new best friend?”

  Lake grabs a french fry off her plate and throws it at Eddie, hitting her in the face with it. “That’s bullshit,” Lake says.

  “Oh, go butterfly yourself,” Eddie says. She returns a fry in Lake’s direction.

  I intercept the french fry, hoping this doesn’t result in another food fight like last week. I’m still finding broccoli everywhere. “Stop,” I say, dropping the French fry on the table. “If you two have another food fight in my house tonight, I’m kicking both of your butterflies!”

  Lake can see I’m serious about the food fight. She squeezes my leg under the table and changes the subject. “Suck and sweet time,” she says.

  “Suck and sweet time?” Kiersten asks, confused.

  Kel fills her in. “It’s where you have to say your suck and your sweet of the day. The good and the bad. The high and the low. We do it every night at supper.”

  Kiersten nods as though she understands.

  “I’ll go first,” Eddie says. “My suck today was registration. I got stuck in Monday, Wednesday, Friday classes. Tuesday and Thursdays were full.”

  Everyone wants the Tuesday/Thursday schedules. The classes are longer, but it’s a fair trade only having to go twice a week, rather than three times.

  “My sweet is meeting Kiersten, my new best friend,” Eddie says, glaring at Lake.

  Lake grabs another french fry and throws it at Eddie. Eddie ducks and the fry goes over her head. I take Lake’s plate from her and scoot it to the other side of me, out of her reach.

  Lake shrugs her shoulders and smiles at me. “Sorry.” She grabs a fry off my plate and puts it in her mouth.

  “Your turn, Mr. Cooper,” Eddie says. She still calls me that occasionally, usually when she’s trying to point out the fact that I’m being a “bore.”

  “My suck was definitely registration, too. I got Monday, Wednesday, Friday.”

  Lake turns to me, upset. “What? I thought we were both doing Tuesday, Thursday classes.”

  “I tried, babe. They don’t offer my level courses on those days. I texted you.”

  She pouts. “Man, that really is a suck,” she says. “And I didn’t get your text. I can’t find my phone again.”

  She’s always losing her phone.

  “What’s your sweet?” Eddie asks me.

  That’s easy. “My sweet is right now,” I say as I kiss Lake on the forehead.

  Kel and Caulder both groan. “Wil
l, that’s your sweet every night,” Caulder says, annoyed.

  “My turn,” Lake says. “Registration was actually my sweet. I haven’t figured out the statistics yet, but my other four classes were exactly what I wanted.” She looks at Eddie and continues. “My suck was losing my best friend to an eleven-year-old.”

  Eddie laughs.

  “I wanna go,” Kiersten says. No one objects. “My suck was having bread for dinner,” she says, eyeing her plate.

  She’s ballsy. I toss another slice of bread on her plate. “Maybe next time you show up uninvited to a carnivore’s house, you should bring your own fake meat.”

  She ignores my comment. “My sweet was three o'clock.”

  “What happened at three o'clock?” Gavin asks.

  Kiersten shrugs her shoulders. “School let out. I butterflying hate school.”

  All three of the kids glance at each other, almost as if there’s an unspoken agreement between them. I make a mental note to talk to Caulder about it later. Lake nudges me with her elbow and shoots me a questioning glance, letting me know she's thinking the same thing.

  “Your turn, whatever your name is,” Kiersten says to Gavin.

  “It’s Gavin. And my suck would have to be the fact that an eleven-year-old has a larger vocabulary than me,” he says, smiling at Kiersten. “My sweet today is sort of a surprise.” He looks at Eddie and waits for her response.

  “What?” Eddie says.

  “Yeah, what?” Lake adds.

  I’m curious, too. Gavin just leans back in his seat with a smile on his face, waiting for us to guess.

  Eddie gives him a shove. “Tell us!” she says.

  He leans forward in his chair and slaps his hands on the table. “I got a job! At Getty’s, delivering pizza!”

  He looks happy for some reason.

  “That’s your sweet? You’re a pizza delivery guy?” Eddie asks. “That’s more like a suck.”