By nightfall, I was able to put clean sheets on the bed and then collapse onto it. I shut off the lamp and let my eyes adjust to the shadows of my old room. These days, falling asleep was always tricky and staying asleep was impossible. On the Shipley Farm, I’d roomed in a bunkhouse with three other guys. I used to lie awake listening to them snore.
My room at home would be much quieter—just quiet enough to make room for all the demons in my head. Lying here made me think of her, too.
Sophie.
I wondered where she was right now. New York City, probably. She’d have a small place somewhere, because singers who were just starting out didn’t make any money. She’d have roommates.
Or a boyfriend.
I forced myself to imagine who she might choose. He’d have to be my opposite, since Sophie wouldn’t want to be reminded of her unfortunate choices. That made him a dark-haired guy, maybe with olive skin, and wearing an Italian suit. Hopefully he had a high-paying job — in finance or real estate. He’d earn enough to live in a safe neighborhood and take Sophie out for expensive dinners.
Of course, the Sophie I knew wouldn’t want to date a banker. That smacked of her father’s choices for her. But maybe she’d met this guy during intermission at the Metropolitan Opera. Her banker had an artsy side, and season tickets in a private box. He probably invited her to watch from his excellent seats. And since Sophie had a standing-room ticket, she accepted…
My brain snagged on this detail. Were private boxes even real, or were those just in old movies?
In prison I’d had to entertain myself like this for hours. When there was nobody to talk to, I went on journeys inside my head. Before prison, I was a talker. Too much of a talker, probably. But these past three years, I hadn’t had a lot of conversation. Even at the Shipley Farm, when there were always people to talk to, I didn’t say a whole lot. They were such a nice, normal family. I preferred to listen. And who wanted to hear a lot of sentences that began, “In prison, we…”
Nobody, that’s who.
A single set of headlights illuminated an angled section of my ceiling from left to right. Then it was dark again. The nighttime sounds were different here. I was used to the call of the barred owls on the Shipley Farm, punctuated on some nights by coyotes howling nearby.
I missed the bunkhouse. Privacy was not a luxury for me. If I got out of this bed and went to find a fix, there was nobody who’d notice or care. I’d needed those six a.m. milkings to keep me on the straight and narrow. I needed the watchful eyes of Griffin Shipley on me while we worked the farmers’ market stall.
This was going to be so hard. Every minute. In Colebury, a fix was always in reach. Surely some of my druggie friends were within a mile of me right now. Still using. Still dealing. Colebury reeked of all my old mistakes and desires.
The itchy void in my chest gave a throb, and I rolled over to try to quash it. But that only reminded me of another absence. I stuck my nose in the pillow and took a deep breath, wondering if any scent of Sophie might remain.
But she was long gone.
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Acknowledgments & Copyright
Thank you to my early readers, Tawdra Kandle, Karen Stivali, Elle Kennedy, Melinda Utendorf and Keyanna Butler. Your feedback was so valuable! Thank you to Sandy L. for naming Angelo and Jack! That was fun. And thanks to Edie Danford, as always, for the savvy editing.
Thank you to Sarah Hansen for the gorgeous cover design. Cover image by Bigstock Photo.
This book is copyright Sarina Bowen 2016. This digital copy is for your own enjoyment only. It may not be shared or distributed in any form without the author’s express permission. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Sarina Bowen, Bittersweet (True North #1)
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