Chapter 49
The Carrero Heart - Beginning (Friends to Lovers)
I canât stop running my fingers through my hair as I sit across from Camilla in the bistro café we have come to for a coffee. Lifting the deep black strands of hair and twirling them nervously. I have no idea what my Mom or Leila is going to say about this drastic change, but the reflection in the hair salon showed me a completely transformed woman. I look and feel, for the first time ever, that I actually look my age and the amount of well-dressed men turning our way in passing has not just been for Camilla.
Gone are the long blonde strands and round baby face, with pale stormy blue eyes, and in its place, a more angled, sleek facial shape. Framed with dark hair that seems to make my eyes stand out crazily, as though the blue is somehow more intense and less washed out. I wasnât able to stop staring at the stranger in the mirror when she showed me the new look. I donât look like that stroppy child anymore; I look like some vampy woman in much need of a sexy dress. Camilla then attacked me with winged liner and red lipstick, declaring me her new hair bestie, and invited me for coffee.
âWe really need to sort this out.â Camilla leans over, pulling up the baggy sleeved T-shirt, emblazoned with an old boy band that I sauntered out of the house wearing this morning. I hate to admit, but the last few days of frumpy clothing are almost killing me. I know Iâm just dressing to suit my somber mood, but my love of clothes means I actually feel so much worse dressed this way.
âIâm sort of going through a restyle, this was my comfy phase, after binning about three wardrobes worth of slutty attire.â I sigh heavily, hoping to avoid any talk of the reasons behind the complete lifestyle change. The man behind my pathetic wardrobe dilemma.
âOh Dahling, slutty is sooo overrated. Men want class, and something left to the imagination nowadays.
Only the club scruffs go after booty in dental floss.â Camilla sips her English tea and gazes at me wisely. âYou have so much potential, a whole other class of sexy. I mean, have you looked at that hot girl in the mirror today, Sophie Dahling, youâre truly fucking stunning. Youâre what the mere mortals call âda bombâ.â Camilla is definitely another class of sexy, and I havenât been able to stop staring at her since the walk over here. I may not have any sort of attractions to women, but I can appreciate, Camilla is a new breed for me.
âYou would be willing to help me pick some new clothes?â I regard her with wide-eyed innocence. The little fashionista inside my head running on into excited overdrive.
âOh, my God, Dahling, I like totally love styling people. Itâs what I live for. What look are you going for?â
Camilla leans forward conspiratorially with a half-smile on her face that is almost seductive. Sheâs too beautiful to be real.
âSomething mature, yet sexy. Something that says grown-up and got her shit together.â I fiddle with my mug, acting braver than Iâm feeling. Smiling when Camilla claps her hands in glee.
âHow soon do you want to start? Iâve an itch to break daddyâs credit card and will shop at the drop of a hat.â She leans in, excited and smiling, shuffling her shoulders in anticipation. Beaming at me mischievously.
âIâm not doing anything right now, and I only got my new card this morning after I, um ⦠lost my last one.â I smile, omitting the fact my ex-boyfriend ripped off my cards after hightailing it with my bag. Terry and Dionne are the reason my dad received a four thousand dollar credit bill, and he is still trying to have the bank recoup it, seeing as I never reported them stolen. Needless to say, Iâm in the major bad books. Dadâs always so serious over our responsibilities with money.
âLetâs go! I have the most amazing little boutique I found down a side street that you will positively adore!â
***
I throw the bags down on my bed and haul off the new long black coat thatâs tied over the shift dress I am wearing and catch sight of myself in the mirror. I do a double take with a gasp as it really hits me.
Sophie is gone, and some slender and poised girl in an Audrey Hepburn style black dress is staring back at me, flawless makeup, and killer tailoring, down to my ankle strapped shoes with a moderate heel. I have to give it to Camilla; she has style, and sheâs made me look like a million dollars.
My parents werenât home when I got here, and for that Iâm thankful. Iâm not sure how they are going to react with my natural blonde locks sheared off and dyed vampy black, but I hope they see this as a positive sign, that I am getting my shit together.
Camillaâs given me her cell number and arranged to meet for drinks later tonight, over dinner at a nearby restaurant. Itâll be my first time out on the town since coming home, and I want to assure my mom that Iâll be careful and not come home drunk. Iâm trying so hard to undo the damage I have inflicted on her heart and weâve been spending a little time together over the last few days, growing close again. I want to prove to the people who love me that I really want to move on.
Wandering downstairs carefully, I listen for any signs of life, checking again that no one is home before heading to the kitchen to fetch myself something light to eat. This last week I have spent more time at home than at Emma and Jakeâs. Just readjusting and pouring over the paperwork for the little evening classes I want to join.
Sitting at the table with my Chicken Caesar Salad, I freeze when I clock the front door opening, and the clatter of feet coming into the hall, the tell-tale clicks of my momâs heels on the marble floor. Bracing myself for the moment my parents walk into the kitchen, my nerves get the better of me, but I remain poised and ready at the table. They walk in, smiling and chatting while carrying paper bags, oblivious at first as I stay completely still and hold my breath.
âSophie?â My mom stops in complete shock, taking me in, while my dad bumps into her with wide-
mouthed silence. Itâs almost like that stomach lurching moment when your parents discover you have a piercing somewhere on your face, as Leila once did, or that time they spotted my rose tattoo on the base of my spine, the one Arrick took me for when I was seventeen, and went absolutely ape shit over it.
âHey... Ummm, do you like it?â I flick the edge of my hair up cutely. Chewing nervously on my lip. My mom traces her eyes down the entire outfit, silently losing all external expression.
âItâs certainly different, honey.â She smiles brightly. âYour dress is gorgeous, and well, it may take a bit of getting used to, but your hair is rather nice too. Donât you think?â She nudges my dad, who is still staring silently. His eyes glaze over and with a tense jaw, and a silent broody look of disapproval, he turns and walks off, muttering under his breath âNot my Sophsâ moodily without a backwards glance.
âIgnore him, you know he finds any signs of you lot growing up hard to handle. Heâll get used to it.â My mom comes around the table and places a delicate kiss on my cheek, soothing over the hurt caused by dadâs reaction. âI really like your makeup, it does so much more for you than the three inches of âsmokeyâ eyes you are fond of. This is so minimal, yet stunning.â She brushes a hand over my cheekbone, brushing back my new silky hair, revealing my liner and red lips. Nothing much else is going on except a bit of highlight and blush. Understated glamour.
âI made a new friend,â I cut in, trying to redirect her attention and ignore the utter disappointment still reeling inside. I know itâs stupid, to always get like this when they disapprove of something that matters to me, but I canât help it.
âYou did? Anyone we know?â Mom moves with the paper bags to the fridge and unloads the delicatessen boxes sheâs come home with. As much as we have cooks and cleaners, and Momâs not against the odd cooking splurge, she prefers health food takeaway for convenience. She has a weakness for the couscous concoctions from her favorite organic food store.
âSheâs new to town, the family are called Walters. Theyâre English. Camilla Walters.â I watch my mother fetch a glass of water and ice before returning to me, still looking thoughtful and nonplussed.
âCanât say it rings a bell, but if theyâre new then maybe we just havenât run into them yet.â She smiles softly then moves off from the table in pursuit of her husband. A gentle stroke of my hair as she passes me. âI do like it, Sophie, just a bit of a shock to find our little blonde honey is now some slinky dark lady right before our eyes.â I smile at her, but it doesnât really ring true, still mulling over the fact my dad pretty much dismissed it and walked off without a single word to me.
âOh, before I forget ... Arrick left you about ten messages today. Please call that boy, something must be wrong with your cell, and he sounded so frantic. He never leaves messages, so it must be urgent.â
My mom smiles innocently and walks off down the hall leaving me to sag into the table, that inner control and poise collapsing under the weight of his name.
Last thing I need is to know heâs still trying to get hold of me. It only makes me angry that heâs refusing to respect my wishes. He has no idea how much this itâs killing me, to try to separate him from my life, and heâs only making this worse by holding on. Just when I think I am doing okay; he somehow sweeps in and it all comes crashing down around me again in a torrent of horrendous aching pain.