âYouâre coming and thatâs the end of it,â Daisy commands after stealing my laptop off my bed in front of me and holding it hostage behind her back.
âFat chance thatâs happening. Give it to me!â I order just as loud, going up to my knees on the mattress and swinging my arms aimlessly about in the hopes Iâll grab hold of my irritating big sister and rescue my laptop.
âFat chance thatâs happening,â she parrots, stepping farther away from my grasp.
âDamn it, Daisy. I told you before that I donât want to go to a stupid party.â
âToo bad. Youâre going.â
Nope.
Not happening.
âGive me one good reason why I shouldnât stay home tonight?â I exclaim, annoyed.
âBecause!â she shouts out, just as irritated.
âThat isnât a reason.â
âFine! You want a reason? Then how is this one for size? Weâve been living in Thatcherâs Bay for over a year now and you still havenât made one friend. One friend, Sky,â she repeats, frustrated.
âKyle is my friend,â I defend, even though weâve hardly spoken to one another all summer. In fact after the Homecoming debacle, heâs kept me at armâs length. Not that I blame him.
âNo, Kyle is a fuck boy who wants to get into your pants. Thereâs a difference,â she deadpans. âEnough is enough, Sky. Youâve spent most of our summer vacation locked inside this house like some kind of hermit. If you refuse to put yourself out there willingly, then you best believe Iâll force you to.â
âArgh! I hate it when you start babbling and it actually starts making sense. You are not my favorite person right now, I can tell you that much,â I mumble, falling back to sit on my haunches in defeat.
âYeah, I am.â She smiles triumphantly. âCome on, sis. You have to admit you need a bit of fun, and what better way to get it than going to a back-to-school party?â
âI think you must have me confused with another sister I donât know about. Iâm not a big partier. Thatâs you. Not me.â I pout, loathing the idea of going to some strangerâs house filled with kids who hate me on mere principle alone.
Whoever will be at that party will undoubtedly be from Bayshore High, and we all know I didnât exactly make a big splash when I dipped my toes in that cesspool.
I have Noah to thank for that.
Just the thought of having to interact with actual people has me cringing and hugging my pillow tightly to my chest.
Knowing the reason behind my reluctance, Daisy places my laptop on my desk and then crawls over to me on the bed until sheâs sitting cross-legged right beside me.
âItâs one party, Sky. Not a death sentence,â she says softly, running her fingers soothingly through my hair. âYou canât stay cooped inside this house all the time. It isnât healthy.â
âAnd getting groped by drunk football players is?â I raise my brows to my hairline.
âYouâre exaggerating. Hooking up or getting drunk arenât the only things that happen at parties. Thereâs dancing, musicââ
âBeer pong,â I add with a roll of the eye.
âProbably.â She laughs, amused. âBut it beats staying locked away in this room all the time. Or did you plan on being a shut-in until you graduated high school?â
âThe thought did cross my mind,â I snicker. âBesides, Iâll have more fun on my own here than I will at some lame-ass party anyway.â
âHow can you say that when you havenât even tried?â she counters with a tender smile. âOkay, let me put this in a way youâll understand. Do you want to be a great writer or not?â My forehead instantly wrinkles, wondering where sheâs going with this. âArenât you always saying that you need to experience life in order to be a great writer? Donât you want to be the next Hemingway, or Plath, or even the next Virginia Woolf? Well, guess what, squirt? They lived a full life, which means youâll have to, too. Youâre only delaying the inevitable.â
âAll those writers committed suicide in the end, so youâre not making a very good point, Daisy.â I shrug with a smug grin.
âJesus, give me strength!â she blurts out, hands pressed together in prayer and raising her sights to the ceiling to the Almighty himself before laying her eyes on me again. When she finds that all her pleas and prayers are going unheard, Daisy takes a different approach to her dilemma.
âYou know what?â she starts, dead serious. âEnough with the pep talk. Just get your ass up and get dressed. Iâm not moving an inch until youâre ready to leave with me.â
âThen I guess no one is going anywhere tonight and youâre stuck spending your Saturday night at home with me.â I smirk.
âOh no, Iâm not. And neither are you,â she says before trying to push me off the bed with her bare feet.
âDaisy, stop!â I giggle, clutching the duvet underneath me to keep my balance.
âIâll stop when your ass is up,â she heaves out, doing her best to push me to the floor.
When she successfully gets her way and I fall to the floor, she lets out a victorious cry.
I should have remembered that Daisy doesnât like people telling her no. Sheâs more stubborn than I am, and thatâs saying something.
âFine,â I relent, brushing off my knees as I get up from the floor. âIâll go to this stupid party with you, but on one condition. If Iâm not having a good time, then we leave. No questions asked. Iâm not going to stay alone in some corner somewhere while you suck face with some rando. Deal?â
âDeal.â She grins widely, outstretching her hand so we can shake on it. I give her hand a little jiggle, unable to be mad at her for forcibly pushing me out of my comfort zone. âNow what should you wear?â She masticates her lip before jumping off the bed to rush toward my closet.
âWhatâs wrong with what Iâve got on now?â I look down at my clothes, wondering why I canât go with what Iâm wearing now.
âYou are not going to the last party of the summer in raggedy old shorts and a hoodie that has seen better days,â she scoffs, scrolling through the hangers in my closet.
âWhy not?â
âFirst of all, itâs August and hot as hell outside, and secondly, if you wear something cute, youâll feel more confident in actually partaking in conversation with someone. Trust me. I know what Iâm talking about.â
âWhatever,â I mumble, but when Daisy picks out a skirt thatâs short enough for everyone to see my underwear when I bend down, I quickly nix that idea.
âNope. Iâm not wearing that. Nuh-uh.â I shake my head, arms crossed on my chest to show I mean business.
âWhy not? I love this skirt,â she sulks.
âThen you wear it. Itâs yours, anyway. Mom must have put it in my closet by mistake.â
âFine, then I will,â she says unbothered, flinging it on the bed before she continues to rummage through my clothes to find me something to wear.
âOh, this is perfect!â she shrieks excitedly, taking out a hanger with a cute little white dress hanging from it.
âDaisy, I havenât worn that dress in years. I doubt it even fits me anymore.â
âTry it on and see,â she retorts with a twinkle in her blue eyes.
Since I know my sister wonât let up until I try it on, I snatch the dress out of her hands and put it on. Once Iâve slithered into it, to my astonishment I realize that the simple summer dress does in fact fit me like a glove, even if a little tight on my chest area. Wanting to make sure that my boobs wonât spill out from the top of the damn thing, I walk over to the full-length mirror in my room for a full inspection.
Hmm.
It is pretty, even if it is a little short.
Still, itâs better than Daisyâs miniskirt. I wonât run the risk of flashing anyone in this dress and my cleavage actually looks really good in it. Almost as if the twins are ready for this party too.
I pat the dress down my midriff as I continue to stare at my reflection.
I know the girl staring back is me, but she doesnât look like me at all.
The girl in the mirror looks like sheâs been seen all her life and knows exactly who she is.
She looks like someone who actually has her shit together.
And Lord knows, I donât.
The reflection is a beautiful lie of someone that doesnât exist.
And might never exist.
âPerfect!â Daisy claps enthusiastically, unaware of the somber thoughts strolling in my head. âAll you need now is just a little touch-up. Iâll go grab my stuff to do your hair and makeup.â
âNo makeup!â I yell nervously.
âYes, makeup!â
âNo!â
âYes!â
âDaisy!â
âSkylar!â
Suddenly, we find ourselves in a standoff, neither one of us wanting to budge, but as usual, after a long, insufferable pause, Iâm the first to concede.
âYouâre impossible, you know that?â
âPart of my charm.â She grins.
âYeah, keep telling yourself that. Fine, but only very light makeup. Donât make me look like a clown.â
âLike Iâd ever do that.â She scoffs, insulted, as she rushes out the door before I have time to change my mind.
I sit anxiously in front of the vanity, waiting for my sister to return with her hellish makeup kit. As the seconds pass by, my knee bounces nervously as I try to think of any excuse I can come up with that can get me out of this mess. Unfortunately, when Daisy walks back into my room, her proud smile is so widely stretched on her face, I donât have the heart to steal it away from her.
True to her word, Daisy uses a very light blush to color my cheeks and a pretty shade of pink lip gloss on my lips. She does go a little overboard on the eyes, though, but I actually donât mind the smokey eyeshadow since it makes my silver eyes pop.
Like she forewarned, Daisy ends up using the tiny-ass miniskirt paired with a crop top that shows off her flat stomach. Like my mother, my sisterâs long blonde hair is sleekly brushed back to perfection, making her look graceful even in skimpy clothes.
When I venture another look in the mirror, it pains me that I donât see any resemblance to either my sister or mother.
All I see is my dadâmy deadbeat father.
I have his light gray eyes.
His wild dark brown hair.
Even the cheekbones Daisy raved about when she was adding color to them are his.
But thatâs where our similarities end.
His loud personality to live life by the edge of his seat was solely inherited by Daisy.
Iâm more like Mom.
Reserved.
Private.
But while I always felt that my mom was sometimes too quiet for her own good, my self-imposed silence was due to not wanting people to know just how fucked up I truly am. How restless and angry I am all the time. I should chuck that irksome quality in the short list of things my sperm donor of a father gave me.
Itâs one of lifeâs great mysteries on how my mom and dad ever got married and stayed together long enough for them to have me and Daisy. Maybe my dad thought he could change his rolling stone ways if he settled down with a good girl like my mom.
But people donât change.
They are what they are, and no outside forces will ever change that.
And in my fatherâs case, he would rather sweet-talk a stranger half his age into his bed than remember to call his daughters on their birthday.
Yeah.
Mom picked a real loser with dear old Dad.
Luckily, I think she finally found a winner with Curt. He treats her like a queen. Always making sure sheâs happy and feels loved. Doing small things like giving her a foot massage on the couch after a long dayâs work, or surprising her with flowers and planning romantic date nights for her. His kind heart and affection doesnât end there. It has trickled over to me and my sister too. He always has a kind word for me and Daisy, and tries his best to be present in our lives. Heâs like Mom in that way, easy-tempered and level-headed. I have yet to hear him lose his shit with anyone.
And when I say anyone, I mean Noah.
Noah is always pushing his buttons.
Always trying to get a rise from him.
And although I have witnessed Curt being cross with his son, I have never seen him being mean just for the sake of it. All I see is sadness in his eyes when Noah rebels against him. What happened between them before we three came into the picture left some deep, ugly scars, and neither one is willing to let them go anytime soon.
âYou look hot!â Daisy squeals after she finishes curling my hair into large, long waves.
âYou look pretty, too,â I state with a meek smile, hating that my thoughts always end up on my in-house bully.
âFuck pretty. Tell me I look like something you want to eat and devour.â She bats her eyelashes seductively at me.
âEw. God, youâre gross,â I reply with a giggle. âHow about you take it down a notch tonight?â
âNo can do, lilâ sis. Life is too short for us to be anything but our authentic selves. I might be an acquired taste, but Iâd rather be me than anyone else,â she says lightheartedly.
But her light features turn serious as she places her chin on my shoulder, hugging my stomach from behind and staring at our combined reflection in the mirror, her gaze locking with mine.
âIf you only learn one thing from your big sister, then let it be that. Treasure your uniqueness, Sky. You are one of a kind. There is no one in this world quite like you. And there never will be,â she adds the last part with such affection and certainty, that she almost has me believing it.
Again, I canât help but envy my sister. She is her true self twenty-four seven, while Iâm still grasping at straws trying to figure out who I am.
Itâs easier for Daisy.
She is a glorious force of nature while Iâm a mild bitter wind.
âOkay, letâs go,â she urges, giving me a nudge to get out of my seat. âThe night awaits.â
âGreat,â I grumble under my breath, already dreading going to this party.
Of course, itâs only when we arrive on the other side of the island twenty minutes later where this so-called last summer bash is being held, that my true panic sets in.
âDaisy, whose house is this?â I ask as we drive through an iron gate with the letter M on it.
âHmm, I forget,â she replies aloofly.
âYouâre lying! I can tell,â I shout.
âFine,â she says exasperated. âItâs the Monroes.â
Shit on a stick.
âThe Monroesâ? As in Stacy Monroeâs house? Noahâs girlfriend? Jesus H. Christ, Daisy! Why didnât you tell me this was Stacyâs party?!â
âWhy would it matter?â
âHello? Because last time I was at a party with her, she made sure to embarrass me in front of the whole school!â
âThatâs last yearâs news. No one remembers that shit anymore.â
I remember, I think to myself.
âItâs just a party, Sky. Besides, there will be so many people here, Iâm sure you wonât even run into her anyway. Chillax, will ya?â
Itâs not her I donât want to run into.
Itâs Noah.
But I keep that comment to myself too.
Iâve done my best to not put myself in my stepbrotherâs path all summer. It hadnât been as hard as I thought it would be either, since he worked with his father for most of it. Like most fishermen in Thatcherâs Bay, they would leave the house in the early hours of the morning before anyone else was up and only returned home late mid-afternoon. Like clockwork, the minute Noah came home, he would grab a shower and be out the door again to go God knows where until all hours of the night. The only days that I had to be extra cautious to stick to my room were on the weekends, and even then, he would spend most of his time in the garage fiddling with his bike.
I know when school starts back up again next week, this peaceful reprieve between us is going to end. I just thought Iâd still have one last weekend where I could pretend he didnât exist. But now that Daisy has forced me to walk into this lionâs den, aka his girlfriendâs party, all those hopes are tossed out the window.
Completely oblivious to my troubles, Daisy parks our car among a slew of others and jumps out of it, eager to get her party on. I stew in my seat, wondering if she would even notice if I ran home right now.
As if reading my thoughts, Daisy presses her palms flat on the hood of the car and stares at me.
âDonât even think about it, squirt. Get your ass out of the car. Now, before I drag you out.â
I throw her my meanest glower, but it doesnât affect her resolve in the slightest. Instead, she just hikes up her brow, crosses her arms over her chest, and taps her foot on the concrete.
âDonât make me haul your ass out myself.â
Shit.
Sheâs not bluffing.
Unlike me, Daisy isnât embarrassed lightly and is all too happy to make a scene if it means getting her way.
Fuming, I get out of the car, making sure to slam the door as I go about it.
âYou have one hour. Thatâs it,â I warn, pointing a menacing finger at her as I bridge the gap between us.
âThree hours,â she negotiates with a mischievous grin on her face.
âTwo. Or Iâll walk home right now.â
âIn those heels?â She giggles, pointing to the five-inch heels she insisted I wear tonight. âGood luck with that. Three hours wonât kill you. And besides, whatâs the worst thing that could happen? You having fun? Oh no! The horror!â she teases, linking her arm through mine.
âI really hate you right now,â I seethe through gritted teeth.
âNo, you donât.â She continues to cackle.
Rocks sling to the pit of my stomach as we walk into the large mansion filled to the brim with Bayshore High kids. In true Daisy fashion, all eyes are on her the minute she steps one foot through the door. I try not to notice how everyone greets her with open smiles, only to frown and gawk at me walking at her side. I read the question in their perplexed glances well enough, thoughâwhat the hell is she doing here?
I donât know, dude. Iâm at a loss, too.
I feel you. I donât want to be here either.
Would you believe me if I said I was tricked?
âLetâs grab a drink,â Daisy utters, unaware of the silent conversations Iâm having with the other partygoers that canât stop staring at us.
âYouâre driving,â I protest on a huff, hating that I ever let her convince me to come to this thing.
âHmm. Youâre right. Then I guess youâll just have to do my drinking for me,â she jokes, nudging my shoulder with hers.
âSure. Iâll get right on that,â I retort sarcastically.
The only thing Iâll be drinking tonight is water. Iâll nurse a red Solo cup and pretend itâs vodka for the rest of the night if I have to. No way am I drinking and risk making a fool of myself with all these vultures about.
âOh, letâs go outside! I think thatâs where the real fun is happening.â
âWhatever you say,â I grumble, already looking at my watch and counting down the minutes until we can leave.
We walk out to the Monroesâ backyard, and instantly, I realize that this shit show just got a whole lot worse.
âPOOL PARTY!â Daisy screams at the top of her lungs like sheâs never seen water before.
Everyone is having a ball, dancing to loud hip-hop music on the green while a bunch of kids are in the pool playing their own version of Marco Polo. To anyone else, this would in fact look like an unmissable party. To me, however, this is my worst nightmare come true. Parties arenât my thing, but add a pool to the equation and my anxiety spikes up to new dimensions.
Itâs only when Daisy starts stripping off her clothes that it dawns on me what sheâs about to do.
âWhat are you doing?â I stammer anxiously.
âWhat does it look like? Iâm going for a swim. Duh.â
âBut you didnât bring your bikini?â
âSo?â She wiggles her brows while taking off her top and shimmying out of her skirt. âRemember what I told you about only living once? This is it. Seize the day, sis. Carpe fucking diem! No fear!â
And with those words still hanging in the air between us, she runs to the pool in her underwear and cannonballs her way in. Everyone cheers her along when she rises to the surface, looking like a mermaid right out of an R-rated teenage movie.
Unable to keep still, I grab her clothes before someone swipes them away, biting my lower lip as I watch her laugh and have the time of her life.
âCome on in, Sky! The water is amazing!â she calls out animatedly, yet I stay rooted to my spot. âNo fear,â she mouths so that Iâm the only one to hear her secret message.
Right.
No fear.
Like that shit is easy.
It is hot, though.
Although the sun has already set, the nightâs heat is still unbearable. I shift from one foot to another, my gaze falling on the kids inside the pool who are having a blast with my sister in their midst. If I didnât have a deathly fear of water, I might have said fuck it and just took a page out of Daisyâs handbook. Unfortunately, I canât swim to save my life, and I doubt anyone here would save me from drowning if I so much as tried to follow my sisterâs command.
Stillâ¦
The water does look tempting.
No fear.
Screw it.
When in Rome, I guess.
Ever so carefully, I lower myself to the edge of the pool and sit down, raising my dress just enough to get my legs wet. I close my eyes and hum in delight.
This isnât so bad.
Not bad at all.
I can do this.
I am doing this.
When I open my lids back up, I see that Daisy is on the other side of the pool, being pulled up by her arms by none other than Stacyâs older brother, Derrick. When sheâs fully out of the pool, he wraps her up in a beach towel, and then presses his hand on her lower back, urging her into the house.
The conspiring looks they give each other tell me and everyone else in the near vicinity that Stacyâs big brother is Daisyâs pick of the night. I chuckle under my breath and promise myself I wonât hurt her game by ending her fun for at least a few hours. Three hours is plenty of time for Daisy to do whatever she does at these things. And itâs also enough time to appease her sisterly duty of trying to get me to have the full teenage experience of going to my first high school party.
Three hours.
I can survive three hours.
But just as I think this, I feel two delicate hands grip my shoulders, nails sinking into my skin.
I turn my head over my shoulder and come face to face with the hostess of this godforsaken party.
âI donât remember inviting your skanky ass to my party. But now that youâre hereâ¦â Stacy smiles menacingly at me, and before I can prevent it, she pushes me into the pool.
As my whole body becomes submerged underwater, and my chest burns for breath, the last thought that runs through my head is how anticlimactic it is that this is how I dieâat a fucking high school party.
Fuck my life.