Pull Read online
Pull
by Rachel Van Dyken
This is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters, and events are
fictitious in every regard. Any similarities to actual events and
persons, living or dead, are purely coincidental. Any trademarks,
service marks, product names, or named features are assumed to be
the property of their respective owners, and are used only for
reference. There is no implied endorsement if any of these terms are
used. Except for review purposes, the reproduction of this book in
whole or part, electronically or mechanically, constitutes a
copyright violation.
PULL
Copyright © 2013 RACHEL VAN DYKEN
ISBN 978-0-9890783-0-6
Cover Art Designed by Laura Heritage
Prologue
Death is everywhere. You can’t escape it. You can’t hide
from it. And for me, the very minute I decided to embrace it as
inevitable, the planes of my universe shifted, leaving me more
confused and broken than I’d ever been in my entire life.
For me, death was the ultimate betrayal. For some, it was the
easy way out. I had no way of knowing that my life would change
so much in two short months. Maybe I wasn’t prepared for him.
I was happy in my darkness, at least that’s what I told
myself. Because life is cruel — it’s so damn cruel to give me what I
had and then rip it away. It’s cruel, because the minute I was finally
okay with being numb to the world — he showed up.
My heart wasn’t ready to be pieced together again. He did it
anyway.
My soul wasn’t prepared for heartbreak. He broke it
anyway.
My life wasn’t ready to be given to a soul mate. He stole it
anyway.
Everything has changed — even death. And all because of a
boy, who fell in love with a girl.
I sat down on the cold asphalt and bawled. I cried for me. I
cried for him. But most of all, I cried for all those minutes I was
allowed to breathe, when I deserved to be without breath. How do
you thank someone who saved your life? How do you mourn them
at the same time?
I struggled against the cop and then, I must have died,
because the very person I thought I lost not a few minutes ago was
standing over me.
“Demetri?” I gasped.
Chapter One
Seven weeks previous
Demetri
I sighed for the tenth time, hoping to gain some flicker of
sympathy from Nat. But she was immobile. Like a really hot stone
that refused to crack.
I nudged her with my foot.
Which made things worse.
I feel like that’s all I do these days. Make things worse and
then reap the awesome benefits of being a total and complete screw
up.
Maybe it’s because I’m clueless. I’m the guy who chases the
girl when clearly she wants someone else.
Damn. I’m the pathetic number two.
“Nat?” If she wasn’t going to give in, at least I could ask her
honestly. She was never the type of girl to completely ignore me
when I asked her a question.
After my near death experience, where I swear I saw my life
flash before my eyes, Nat had been a lot nicer about things between
me, her, and my brother.
The ménage a’weird.
“What, Demetri? You’ve only been sighing like some
lovesick teenager for the past hour. What do you want?”
Now that I felt completely stupid, I didn’t want to ask her
anymore. I knew she’d either tell my brother, Alec, or laugh in my
face.
“Promise you won’t tell Alec?”
“He’s my boyfriend. I love him. I tell him everything.”
Crap. “Everything?”
Nat rolled her brown eyes and shook her long blond hair to
the side. She had no idea how beautiful she was. Maybe it was a
good thing, because she had every right to be a total brat; instead
she was convinced she was plain.
“Yes, Demetri, everything. Including the time Mom and I
helped you shower after your accident, and you pretended to fall,
only to have me fall on top of you.”
Like an idiot, I grinned. I couldn’t help it. “I take it Alec
wasn’t amused.”
“You think?” She pushed me and switched the channel.
Wonder of wonders, it was my brother, singing at some awards
show.
Nat sighed. “I wish I could’ve gone with him.”
“Nat.” I nudged her with my leg. “You know he wishes you
were there too. He’ll be back in a few days to take you to college, so
you can both move on with your lives and leave me here in Hell.
Thanks for that, by the way.”
“Hey. Your choice, not mine.” She lifted her hands in the air
and sighed. “Besides, aren’t there some really good rehab places in
California? We could all be close and —”
I shook my head and managed to interrupt her by waving
my hand wildly in the air. “Not gonna happen.”
“Why?” She seemed genuinely upset, which made me want
to shoot myself — in a total non-suicidal way, of course.
“You guys need your time away from everything, away
from this.” I pointed at myself and managed a tight smile, even
when it was killing me inside to even be talking about that again.
Last year Nat had fallen for both me and my brother. I, being
the genuine ass that I was, knew she had the hots for him but
jumped in and tried to steal her anyway. I still wasn’t dealing with
some past shit that had nearly ruined my life. I blamed Alec for it,
and for once I just wanted the girl first, so I could rub his face in it.
Eventually it blew up in my face.
Literally blew up in my face in the form of a killer car
accident that I just barely managed to escape with all my limbs
intact.
After all that, it was apparent that while Nat loved me, it
wasn’t the type of love you sell your soul for, or die over. Nope, it
was more like the kind you feel for your hot cousin or maybe your
grandmother. You love them. You hope they do well in life, and
yeah, they may be good-looking (just to be clear, we’re talking
about the cousin here, not the grandma), but that’s as far as it goes.
The love she felt for Alec?
Well, it was the Twilight kind. Sorry, but it’s the only
comparison I could think of on the spot, especially considering Nat
made me read all the books. It was the I will literally stop breathing if
I can’t have you type of love.
A love I’ve only experienced once in my life. A love like that
doesn’t happen twice. It’s impossible.
“Nat?”
“What?” She seemed irritated with me. So what else was
new?
I turned around and sat back down. “Do you think?” Oh
man, I really needed to find a substitute for all the alcohol and pot,
because right now all I wanted to do was go get
high or drunk or
jump off a cliff. Ever since I quit partying, I felt like a complete and
total girl. Commercials about dogs made me teary-eyed, and last
week when I saw an old man cross the street with his little wife and
watched him pat her hand, I grinned like a fool and whistled the
entire way home. Demetri Daniels does not whistle.
“Spit it out, Demetri.”
“Fine,” I grumbled and looked away from her. I couldn’t
look at her if I had to ask this. “Do you think that true love, the type
you have with Alec, do you think it could happen twice in a
lifetime?”
Nat flipped off the TV.
Aw, crap. She only did that when she needed to concentrate.
“Demetri, if this is about us…”
“No! Hell, no!” Nat scowled. “No, not like that. I don’t mean
it like that. What I meant was it’s not about us. I know how it
sounds. Sorry. I just… I don’t know. What I guess I’m asking is, do
you think I could be lucky enough to have that pull that you have
with Alec again in my lifetime?”
“Why wouldn’t you be able to?”
I looked at her. I mean, really looked at her. Damn, the girl
was too adorable. Was she serious? “Nat, I’m a recovering druggie
and alcoholic at nineteen. I almost died. Because I’m a rock star, I
have one true friend — two if you count my brother. And, oh right,
I’m stuck in Seaside, Oregon, for the next year while you go off and
have the time of your life in L.A. Add that in with all the intense
psychotherapy I’m in from two years ago when my girlfriend not
only cheated on me with my brother, but died in a tragic car
accident with their son, and yeah… I guess I’m being a little
pessimistic. Perhaps a bit depressing, but come on, Nat! Shit, look
at me!”
Nat’s lip began to tremble.
Crap. I made her cry.
Alec was going to have me by the balls.
“Nat, I didn’t mean…” I reached out to touch her arm.
She shook her head; a single tear ran down her cheek.
“Demetri, I’m so sorry!”
I hated it when Nat cried. It made my chest hurt, and I knew
Alec would be pissed that I was the one that caused it. I had always
caused it. Feeling like a total ass, I pulled her into my arms and
shushed her. “Nat, you know I didn’t mean it the way it sounded. I
guess I just want to know there’s more out there for me, you know?
More to look forward to than a life full of twelve steps and empty
fame.”
Nat sniffled and pulled back. “Do you really think that
poorly of yourself? That it would be impossible for someone to fall
in love with you?”
I shook my head. “It’s not that easy, Nat. Everyone loves me.”
She punched me and laughed as she wiped a few tears
away.
“Nat.” I groaned. “It’s true, and you know it. But who’s ever
going to see me for me and fall in love with me? The real me.” I
wanted to smack myself. Why was it so important that I find what
Nat and Alec had anyway? My heart clenched a bit in my chest. I
tried to ignore the pain. I mean, it could be heartburn or something,
right? It just sucked, and honestly, after all the paparazzi stopped
stalking my every waking move, and after Alec left for L.A… I was
kind of, lonely. Shit. I was a freaking girl.
Nat was silent. She bit her lip, sniffling still. “Demetri,
nobody’s going to fall in love with you.”
My heart pounded loudly in my chest as the truth of her
words hit home. I opened my mouth to speak, but she kept talking.
“Not until you learn to love yourself. Not until you learn to
forgive. You can’t ask someone to love you when you still don’t
even love yourself.”
Natalee Murray, ladies and gentleman. Wisest woman in the
world. “You sure you’re only eighteen?”
“Going on ninety,” she joked and punched me in the arm.
“Seriously, Demetri. Maybe you’re right. Maybe it’s good you’re
staying back here this summer. I think it will be good for you to just
lay low. Besides, Mom said that you still had some things to work
through with her rehab program.”
Nat’s mom was one of the best addiction counselors on the
west coast. How fortunate for me that she lived in the most boring
place in the world. Also known as the taffy capital of the universe.
I groaned. “I’m going to be bored out of my mind.”
“You have Bob!” she said enthusiastically, pointing at my
security guard and, sadly, one of my only friends if you didn’t
count Nat or Alec. And again, the loneliness reared its ugly head.
“He’s bald and watches American Idol to fill the void that
killing too many people has put in his life.”
“Heard that,” Bob mumbled from the corner.
“Wasn’t whispering!” I shouted.
Bob cleared his throat.
“Sorry, Bob,” we said in unison.
Ever since the accident, the media had been relentless, so
Bob was the only relationship I was in. Sadly, I looked forward to
seeing his ugly mug every day. Of course, it may have to do with
the fact that he made coffee every morning.
One would think that after the accident things would have
died down. Instead, not a day went by that I didn’t see some new
story about myself on the news. That’s always fun, seeing ugly
pictures of myself with headlines above them saying I’m on drugs.
It’s a real self-esteem booster. I groaned into my hands.
“You’ll be fine, Demetri. I promise.”
“What am I going to do?” I whined.
Nat laughed. “Why don’t you work?”
“I work.”
“You’ve been sitting on your butt ever since the accident.
You haven’t even written one song — not even a jingle. Why don’t
you get a job?”
Bob laughed from the corner.
I narrowed my eyes at him and pointed harshly before
turning back to Nat. “Sorry, babe I don’t know the meaning of the
word.”
“You put in hours, make money, pay bills.”
“Hmm, sounds an awful lot like prostitution, and I don’t
want to give away the goods for free, if you get my meaning.”
Nat groaned and put her face in her hands.
I grinned, liking our little exchange. No way in hell was I
getting a job.
“I’ve got it!” Nat jumped from her seat. “Follow me!”
She ran up the stairs.
I chose not to follow.
Hey, I almost died! Physical exertion? Not my thing. I was
the type of guy that had the six-pack abs without even trying.
Pretty sure that was another reason I got hate mail.
Nat came back downstairs and breezed past me. “Close your
eyes.”
I glared.
“Just do it!”
“Fine.” I closed my eyes and waited, while she fashioned
something on my head.
“Okay, open!”
I opened my eyes and slowly walked to the kitchen mirror. I
gazed at my reflection and swore. Nat was jumping wildly behind
me. Bob was trying his best not
to laugh.
“Hell. No.” I reached up for the visor on my head that said
Seaside Taffy, but Nat swatted my hand away.
“It will be perfect! You’ll see!”
“No, I won’t, because I’m not doing it. No.” I shook my head
and crossed my arms. “No. Never.”
Nat smiled and pulled out her phone. “We’ll see about that.”
“Who are you calling?” I tried to keep the panic from my
voice.
“Your brother.”
“Why?”
“I’m going to tell him you tried to get me to give you a
sponge bath tonight.”
I cursed. “You wouldn’t.”
“I would.” She held the phone up. “Take the job, Demetri.
Make friends. Get a life.”
“Sometimes I wish we weren’t friends.”
She threw back her head and laughed. “No, you don’t. You
love me, and I love you.”
“That’s what got me in this stupid situation in the first
place,” I grumbled, keeping the visor on and slumping into the
nearest chair.”
“Just think,” Nat leaned over me whispering. “You can try
all the taffy flavors! Bob over there is on number two hundred
already.”
“Swell.” How sad that trying every taffy flavor was
supposed to be a perk.
“Oh, and Demetri? Mr. Smith says an early riser is a happy
worker!”
Chapter Two
Demetri
Add evil.
Malicious.
Manipulative.
And crazy to all of Nat’s attributes. Somehow she convinced
her old boss that not only would it bring lots of business into
Seaside Taffy, but having a legit rock star singing on the street
would be almost like a tourist attraction.
Alec wasn’t any help at all. I begged. I pleaded. I called my
agent and told him I would gain a hundred pounds, and he would
find his money maker face down in a pile of taffy wrappers, dead
from asphyxiation, or worse in a sugar coma.
But they all laughed. Yup, they laughed. And told me it was
a good idea.
I was not amused.
And I am still not amused.
Not when I was driving to an actual job in a Mercedes that
costs more than the building the taffy is sold in.
Nor when I got out of the car, grabbed my bucket — yes,
there is an actual taffy bucket — and plopped myself on the corner
of the street.
I’ve been at it for around five days now. Five days of pure