: Chapter 2
The Do-Over (The Miles High Club Book 4)
âYouâve got to be joking.â
âNope.â I sit down at my desk.
âFor how long?â
âTwelve months.â
Elliot screws up his face. âFuck off. There is no way in hell you would do that. You nearly had me there. What do you really want?â
âIâm deadly serious.â
âYou wonât last one hour backpacking, let alone twelve months.â Tristan huffs. âYouâre more precious than the rest of us put together.â
Determination fills me. âIâm not useless, you know?â
âIf this is about us teasing you last week, we were only joking.â
âThis isnât about you. Itâs about me.â
âBeing on a death wish?â Jameson replies dryly.
âWhat you said got me to thinking, if I donât change the way I am . . .â I cut myself off, unwilling to say it out loud.
âWhat?â
âIâve had this idea in the back of my mind for years. I know that if I donât go now, Iâm going to be too old.â
âYouâre already too fucking old,â Jameson snaps. âI never saw a thirty-one-year-old backpacker.â
âBecause you know so many.â I widen my eyes.
âWhy would you want to do this?â
âBecause I need to. I need to get my shit together. Iâve always said I was going to do it, and I think now is the right time.â
Elliot is pacing. âI mean, I guess . . . I could rearrange the staff . . . you could work in our offices abroad.â
âNo, no contacts. I want to find my own way and earn my keep. Iâm only taking two thousand dollars. I estimate that will last me a month if Iâm roughing it?â
Jameson bursts out laughing. âYou . . . with no money?â
âYou kill me.â Tristan laughs. âYou spend more money than that in a day.â
âWhat job are you going to do?â Elliot stammers. His eyes are wide as he waits for my answer. I can almost see his anxiety rising.
âWell.â I shrug casually as if this isnât the scariest thing I have ever done. âI donât know yet. Something will turn up. Iâll work it out as I go.â
âNo,â Elliot snaps. âNo way in hell. You need a plan. Mileses donât work it out as we go. Youâll turn up dead somewhere. Iâm not having you out there alone in the world. There are some bad fuckers out there.â
âYou donât have a choice.â
âThis is stupid,â Jameson warns. âAnd not to mention dangerous.â
âIâve thought long and hard about this all week, and I know that itâs something that I have to do. If I back out now, I know Iâm going to regret it.â I shrug. âI mean . . . how bad can it be?â
âBad,â Elliot snaps. âReal bad. Coming-home-in-a-body-bag bad.â
I roll my eyes. âWhy are you so fucking dramatic?â
âThis is dramatic,â Tristan snaps. âCanât you just get a fucking girlfriend like a normal person?â
âDonât tell Mom and Dad,â I add.
âWhat?â Tristan snaps. âHow the fuck do you think they wonât notice you missing for a year?â
âIâm going to tell them that Iâm doing a course in France. Iâll call them all the time, and Iâll go back to Paris from Spain to meet them for a few days if they decide to visit.â
âSpain?â
âIâm starting in Spain.â
âWhy Spain?â
âI donât know.â I shrug. âI like paella, I guess.â
âOh, fuck me dead.â Jameson pinches the bridge of his nose. âYou donât go backpacking for fucking paella, Christopher. Thereâs a kick-ass Spanish restaurant here in London somewhere, Iâm sure of it.â
âIâll call you all every day if you want?â I put my hands onto my hips. âBut I am going. You canât stop me.â
They stay silent.
âAnd Iâll let you know wherever Iâm going in case shit goes south,â I add.
âYouâre taking a guard,â Jameson snaps.
âI am not taking a fucking security guard.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause it defeats the purpose.â
âIs the purpose to get yourself killed?â Elliot gasps.
âLook.â I try to calm him. I know that heâs the one who will have the hardest time with this. âItâs fine. This week you can help me, and weâll get ready so that Iâm prepared for everything.â
He stares at me, and I can almost hear his brain misfiring as it freaks out.
âWhen do you leave?â Jameson asks.
âNext Saturday.â
âThat soon?â
They all fall silent as they process.
âWell . . .â Tristan slaps me on the back. âIt was nice knowing you, brother.â
Finger Lakes district, Orange County
Harrington Angus Cattle Station
HAYDEN
I drive the tractor over the paddock. The large wheels bump as I go over the creek between the two paddocks and back toward the house.
I smile into the late-afternoon sun and reach over to pat Nevâs head. Heâs one of our trusty cattle dogs and my personal favorite. He sits proudly up on the ledge beside me as we do a final round of the farm.
As usual, the day has been crazy. Three heifers are in calf, and weâve all been running in circles. As the only child of a farming family, I work hard, helping to run things around here, and thereâs a lot to run. We have a three-thousand-acre farm with over five hundred Angus cattle. Thankfully we have staff, but the workload seems to never slow down.
I turn the corner toward the house to see my mom waving me over. I pull the tractor alongside her. âHey.â
She taps her watch. âWhat are you doing?â
I frown. âWhat do you mean?â
âWe have so much to do. Remember weâre going shopping?â
I exhale as I jump down from the tractor. âMom . . .â
âSeriously, Hayden, you leave in two days. Stop worrying about the damn farm.â
âYou know, Iâve been thinking. I donât really need to go anymore.â
âHayden.â She grabs my shoulders and turns me toward the house. âYou booked this trip two years ago.â She gives me a gentle push. âYou are going.â
âYeah, but I was newly brokenhearted when I booked it. Iâm not now. Iâm going to call the travel agent and try and get my money back. The timingâs not right now.â
âYouâre just nervous,â she says. âStop talking yourself out of it.â
Iâve been sick to the stomach for days. Traveling to the other side of the world alone when Iâve hardly left the house in two years seems utterly ridiculous.
Nervous doesnât come close.
Iâm terrified.
âI donât want to leave you and Dad in the lurch. Iâm needed here. What if something happens when Iâm gone?â
âHoney.â Mom smiles up at me. âWhat Dad and I need is for you to be happy.â
âI am happy.â
âDriving tractors? Birthing cows?â Her eyes search mine. âMost of your friends have left town and got married.â
âSo? I donât care.â
âYou donât even go out anymore.â
I get a lump in my throat because I know sheâs right.
It doesnât make it any easier.
âHayden.â She smiles. âThere are exciting things just waiting for you out there.â
I nod.
âAnd you are going to be brave and go out into the big wide world and make new friends and laugh and live and not worry about damn cows.â
My eyes well with tears, and I shrug. âIâm just . . .â
âI know, baby, youâre scared.â She gives me a soft smile. âBut Iâm more scared for you if you stay here through your youth without knowing whatâs out there.â She pulls me into a hug. âThis farm will always be here waiting for you, Hayden. But . . . heâs waiting for you too.â
âWho is?â I frown.
âYour sweetheart. Heâs out there somewhere. I just know it.â
I roll my eyes. âMom, Iâm not going to meet the love of my life in a backpackersâ hostel, I can assure you that.â
âYou never know. Thereâs lots of good wholesome farm boys out there.â
âI guess.â I smirk. âWe do need a vet.â
âThatâs the spirit.â She links her arm through mine, and we begin to walk to the house. âOr a diesel mechanic would come in handy. Those damn tractors are high maintenance.â
I giggle. âTrue.â
âA fencer would be great,â she adds.
I laugh. I imagine bringing some poor unsuspecting man home and my father making him build fences for days.
âLetâs go buy you some date dresses.â
âWhatâs wrong with my clothes?â I act offended.
We both look down at my tight jeans, checked shirt, and steel-capped boots covered in cow doo. âIâm the epitome of high fashion, Mom.â I put my hands on my hips and do a little sashay.
She widens her eyes. âNot really Spanish, though, are they?â
CHRISTOPHER
âAnd this is it, the BlackWolf Nomad.â The salesman smiles proudly. âThe beesâ knees of backpacks.â
I stare at the huge oversize backpack.
âThank you, weâll let you know if we need any help with it,â Elliot replies.
The salesman walks off, and I unzip the pack. âZipper works well.â
âI donât see how anyone could possibly walk around with that shit on their backs,â Elliot whispers. âWhat would it weigh when filled? Like, twenty kilograms?â
âProbably.â
âSee if thereâs one with wheels?â
âI donât want to look like a wimp, wheeling my bag when everyone else is carrying theirs.â
âEveryone else is an idiot.â
âI donât want to stand out.â
Elliot chuckles as he stares at the bag. âTrust me, a bag is the least of your stand-out issues.â
I go to another bag and pick it up. I start to go through all the little compartments. In the bottom thereâs a little tray. I take it out and hold it up as I look at it. âWhatâs this for?â
âHmm.â Elliot takes it from me and turns it over as he looks at it. âA dish?â
âBit shallow for a dish. Wouldnât be much of a breakfast, would it?â
The salesman walks back over. âThatâs the toilet.â
I stare at him as my brain misfires. âThe what?â
âThatâs the pan.â He shrugs. âYou know, for when you need to take a shit in the woods.â
Elliot throws the pan back onto the bag as if it burned his fingers. âHeâs going backpacking, not feral.â
The salesman laughs. âYou two havenât been backpacking before, have you?â
Elliot and I glance at each other but remain silent.
âIf youâre stuck in a crowded place and you canât find a bathroom, go in this pan and empty it when you can. Itâs easy as.â
I frown as I stare at this feral animal. âNothing about that sounds easy as.â
âWhat? You think heâs going to put it back in his bag dirty?â Elliot snaps, horrified.
The salesman shrugs happily. âItâs an option.â
âThat I wonât be taking,â I mutter dryly as I walk away from this animal.
For fuckâs sake, what is the world coming to?
I need to get out of here. I can feel my blood pressure rising by the second. âWhat is your most popular backpack?â
âThis one.â The salesman holds it up. âWithout a doubt.â
âIâll take it.â
âDo you want the black or the red?â
Red.
I narrow my eyes. Is this guy for real? Nobody wants a fucking red backpack. âBlack.â
âWhat else does he need?â Elliot asks.
âHow long you going for?â
âTwelve months.â
The sales assistant whistles. âHard core.â
Hard core . . . what the hell does that mean?
âIf I wanted your opinion, I would ask for it,â I snap.
He points to Elliot with his thumb. âHe just asked for it.â
I roll my eyes; this guy is getting on my nerves. âWhat are the essentials?â
âComfortable shoes, good mini towels.â
âWhatâs a mini towel?â
He holds up a little pack the size of a deck of cards. âThis has a towel in it.â
âOh.â I nod. âImpressive.â
âWhat other mini things do you have?â Elliot asks him.
âApart from the obvious,â I mutter under my breath.
âStop,â Elliot whispers.
âCompass.â He marches over to retrieve a compass.
âCompass?â I call. âIâm going backpacking, not climbing Mount Everest.â
This guy is a total fuckwit.
Elliot widens his eyes in a shut-up-now sign.
The guy returns and passes me a compass, and I pass it straight to Elliot.
âWeâll take it,â Elliot replies way too fast.
âWe have these great water bottles,â the salesman continues as he walks to the other side of the store.
âWe are not taking the compass,â I whisper.
âWhat if you get lost.â
âIâll look on Google Maps like a person from the twenty-first fucking century.â I roll my eyes.
âYouâre taking it,â he whispers angrily.
âI am not taking it,â I whisper. I snatch it off him and stuff it onto a shelf.
The salesman returns with a huge-ass water bottle. âThis one here is great. It will stay hot or cold for twenty-four hours, and this long cord allows you to wear it around your neck. And look, itâs camouflage.â
âIf you think Iâm wearing a camouflage water bottle around my neck, you need to go to the hospital.â
Elliot gets the giggles as he pinches the bridge of his nose. âDo you sell GoPros?â
âWhy would I need a GoPro?â I frown.
âBecause I want you to wear it strapped to your head at all times so we can watch this shit live as it goes down.â
I roll my eyes.
âThis would make great reality television, actually.â He raises his eyebrows as if having an epiphany. âI should call someone; a network would defo want this.â
âShut. The fuck. Up.â I widen my eyes. âYou are not calling anyone.â
âSleeping bag,â the assistant says as he marches over. âThis is vital.â
âIâll be sleeping in a bed.â
âBut you need to have a sleeping bag. There will be times when you canât get accommodation and have to rough it.â
We narrow our eyes as we stare at him. âDefine roughing it,â Elliot replies.
âYou know, have to sleep in the woods or in a train station or something.â
Train station . . . seriously?
âDo you sell mini mattresses, something that folds up like the towel?â I ask.
The salesman throws his head back and laughs out loud. âYouâre hilarious, man.â
It wasnât a joke.
âWeâll take a sleeping bag. This kind here.â Elliot taps the display.
âYellow or black?â
âAre you color blind?â I stare at him deadpan. âThe fuck is wrong with you? Nobody wants a yellow sleeping bag.â
The assistant begins to take our things to the cashier station. He piles all our purchases onto the counter. âWill that be all?â
âYes.â
He begins to ring them up.
Elliot eyes the pile of things on the counter, and I can see something running through his mind.
âWhat?â I ask.
âHow is all that going to fit into that pissant bag?â
Hmm, he does have a point.
âI mean, where do your clothes go?â
âThatâs a very good question,â I mutter.
âYou travel light,â the salesman says.
âHow light?â I frown.
âJust the essentials, like one or two pairs of pants, two pairs of shorts, like three T-shirts, and one jumper. The shoes you are wearing.â
I stare at him as horror begins to fuck me up the ass . . . âI canât . . .â
âYou can,â he says.
My eyes meet Elliot, and he shrugs. âI donât know?â
How the hell can you live in five things?
Five hours later
âWhat fucking bullshit is this?â I cry.
Elliot scratches his head, completely perplexed. âWe shouldnât have taken it out of the case.â
âOh. Great idea, Einstein,â I bark. âBecause finding this out in a crowded hostel would be so much fucking better.â
âI just donât get it.â Elliot spins the directions around as he reads them. âIt doesnât say anything here about this. Is there a button or something you push?â
I search and search. âThere is no button, and there is definitely no way this is happening.â
âJameson went camping. He will know.â Elliot calls the boys while I struggle some more.
âHey.â I hear Jamesonâs voice.
âHi there,â says Tristan.
âWeâre in all sorts here,â Elliot replies as he sets his phone up so they can see us. âI think the guy in the store pranked us.â
âWhatâs happening?â Jameson asks.
âHow is thisââI hold up the giant, huge-ass sleeping bagââsupposed to fit into thisââI hold up the tiny sleeping bag cover. I begin to try to stuff it in again.
Jameson laughs out loud.
âYou idiot. You roll it up.â
âItâs impossible,â I cry. âItâs like an elephant trying to fuck a cockroach.â I struggle some more. âThere is no way this is fitting into that.â
âHave you heard of lube?â Tristan laughs.
âObviously not,â Jameson replies. âHave you seen the women he likes?â
âFuck off. Iâm not in the mood for your shit,â I yell in frustration. âThis is a complete disaster. Iâm supposed to be on a vacation. I donât have a spare nine hours every day to fight with a disobedient sleeping bag.â
âLay it out flat.â
âWhat?â
âLay it out flat,â Jameson snaps.
I lay it out flat.
âNow fold it in half and then in half again, and then roll.â
âRoll?â Elliot frowns.
âRoll . . . you idiot.â
âWhy didnât that half-wit tell us this in the shop?â I grunt.
Elliot and I get on our hands and knees and try to follow the instructions. We huff and we puff and moan and use all our strength, and to the sounds of Jameson and Tristan laughing out loud in the background, after twenty minutes we finally get it in.
âNow, fuck off.â I pick up the sleeping bag in its cover and kick it up the hall as hard as I can. âYouâre not coming with me after pulling that bullshit. I never want to see you again.â
âYou have to take it,â Elliot snaps.
âNo way. Itâs a four-man job, and Iâm not a magician. Iâll happily freeze.â
Four days later
The plane touches down on the runway, and I blow out a long hard breath.
This is it.
In a moment, I will leave my comfortable first-class seat to find an Uber and travel out into the unknown with no money.
I donât know what to expect other than the knowledge that my accommodation costs eighteen euros a night, I have nowhere near enough clothes, and I hate my sleeping bag with a passion.
Forty minutes later I walk out to the taxi stand feeling very pleased with myself.
Collected my luggage without a hiccup, and all is good in the world.
âHello,â I say to the driver.
âHello.â He smiles.
âCan you take me here, please?â I show him the address on my phone.
âSÃ.â
âGreat.â
He pops the trunk, and I put my backpack in, and I hop into the back seat.
He gets in and starts the car. I smile happily out the window.
Everything is running so smoothly. This is a walk in the park.
He puts the pedal to the metal, and we go zero to one hundred miles per hour in five seconds flat. He pulls out in front of a car, and they get on the horn.
âAh.â I grab hold of the seat in front of me. âWhat are you doing?â
He changes lanes, and the tires screech; my eyes widen in fear. âSlow down,â I bark.
He goes across five lanes of traffic at high speed. âRelax.â He laughs as he waves his arms around. âItâs okay. Itâs okay.â
âNothing about your driving is okay!â
He speeds through a red light, and I scrunch my eyes shut as I grip the seat in front of me for grim death.
âSlow down,â I demand.
He goes over a bump in the road so fast that I bounce high and hit my head on the roof.
âAhh,â I cry. I peer out the front window at the oncoming cars.
Get off the road. Weâre all going to die!
He takes a corner so fast that it feels like the car is going to roll over, and I contemplate jumping from the car.
Finally, after the most terrifying twenty minutes of my life, he pulls to a stop.
âHere you go.â
I get out and slam the door. âNever pick me up again.â
âOkay.â He smiles.
Dickhead.
I take my backpack and walk up the stairs of the hostel. Itâs big and looks like a cheap and nasty hotel.
I walk in through the front doors and hear chanting.
âDrink, drink, drink.â
I look through the double doors into what looks like an outdoor courtyard bar.
A large group of people are gathered around a giant beer bong.
A guy is lying on his back, just about drowning as everyone screams and laughs.
The smell of bad body odor roils my stomach, and my eyes widen in horror.
What fresh hell is this?