Total pages in book: 138
Estimated words: 136025 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 680(@200wpm)___ 544(@250wpm)___ 453(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 136025 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 680(@200wpm)___ 544(@250wpm)___ 453(@300wpm)
Maximoff is laughing hard, and he lifts his mic. “Cute,” he tells the boy.
The boy looks infatuated. “Thanks…I love you.” In his daze, the assistant pries the mic out of his hands, and a line coordinator ushers him to his seat.
Maximoff steals a glance at me, his lips upturned.
I smile more.
No one calls out Maximoff and me as a potential pairing, but we haven’t discussed what would happen if they did. SFO is already on unsteady grounds, and if we make a major mistake on tour, we’ll all lose our jobs. There’s no need to rock that boat.
36
MAXIMOFF HALE
We’re in the middle of nowhere Kansas, and Farrow refuses to come to bed. Lawyers sent him another zip file of NDAs, and he’s still searching. Still not getting any sleep. It will end, I remind myself.
I’m not going to hound him. So I let him work, and I crawl into my bunk and shut the privacy curtain.
There’s only one person I want to talk to at midnight on a Saturday. And yeah, I know it’s late in Philly. But I’m pretty sure he’ll be awake. I’m just hoping he answers.
He does on the third ring.
FaceTime connects, and my fifteen-year-old brother fills the screen. His straight brown hair is longer, hiding his ears, and pieces fall over his forehead. Bulky red headphones around his neck, he rests his head on a pillow. He’s in bed but still awake.
“You’d probably get better sleep if you didn’t nap all day,” I tell him.
Xander adjusts a pillow against the headboard, sitting up, more comfortable. “Are you learning medical shit from your boyfriend now?”
“That’s just big brother advice,” I say easily.
Xander tucks some of his hair behind his ear. “I’m glad you called.” He flips the camera, his door gone. “Please tell Kinney’s girl squad to stop putting crap in my room.” He zooms in on a BMX bike and rock climbing gear. “Vada thinks I’ll go dirt biking with her. I won’t. Winona thinks I’ll actually climb a goddamn mountain. She’s crazy.”
Everyone’s been worried about him. “I’ll pass the word,” I say. “How’ve you been?” Our parents made him add an extra day of therapy to his schedule.
Xander flips the camera, relaxed against a mound of pillows. “Alright.” He shrugs. “Not as…I don’t know.” He chews his bottom lip, then shrugs again. “Anxious, I guess. I’m not about to do anything, you know.” He rolls his eyes at himself, then sighs. He’s been suicidal before, more so when he was younger.
“That’s good, Summers. I’m proud of you.”
He drops his gaze. “For what?”
“Waking up this morning,” I say seriously.
“Yay me.” His sarcasm clear. “I’m full of accomplishments.”
“Hey, that’s fucking big.” I watch his chest rise in a deeper breath, and then the camera careens a bit.
He leans over to a nightstand and grabs a Sprite.
My brows scrunch. “What the fuck are you drinking?”
He takes a sip. “Can you not read?” He angles the green and blue can at the camera. The label in sight.
“I see a Sprite. A Coca-Cola product,” I remind him, “our family’s competitor.”
Xander chugs, then burps. “I’ve got a whole case under my bed. I keep telling Uncle Stokes to make a clear-colored Fizz drink. But he’s not having it…so…” Xander hoists his can to the camera.
All four Calloway sisters have shares and stock in Fizzle. The soda empire ties the Cobalts, Hales, Meadows, and Stokes together. But after my grandpa stepped down as CEO, he handed the reigns to Sam Stokes.
You know nothing about the Stokes family. Poppy Calloway, the oldest sister, and her husband Sam Stokes managed to steer clear of the media. Their only daughter is an actress, filming a movie in Canada right now, and I keep in touch through text. But we’re all in different stages of our lives.
Xander pops open a second Sprite can.
“Traitor,” I say into a smile.
His lips almost lift, but honestly, I’m not sure the last time my little brother had a full-blown smile on his face. Maybe when we went LARPing a few years back.
He pries the tab off his can, his mouth down-turning, and his amber eyes drop again. “You deserve being called a traitor more than me right now.”
What? I see myself in a tiny box on the FaceTime screen. My brows pull together, face sharpened. I shift uncomfortably on my bunk. The space suddenly feels cramped and small.
“Why is that?” I ask, my voice tight.
“You’re not attending Mom and Dad’s vow renewal,” he says with a shrug, like it doesn’t really matter, but he looks sad. “Just like you missed my birthday.”
My muscles bind. I try to sit up a bit more.
I should’ve fucking known he’d surface this. Our parents just announced a second wedding in April to renew their vows. The media published the story like American royalty just declared the biggest ceremony of the year.