The Cabin
3.5/5
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About this ebook
A New York Times Bestseller!
There may only be one killer, but no one is innocent in this thriller from Natasha Preston, the #1 New York Times bestselling author of THE CELLAR!
A weekend partying at a remote cabin is just what Mackenzie needs. She can't wait to let loose with her friends. But a crazy night of fun leaves two of them dead—murdered.
With no signs of a forced entry or struggle, suspicion turns to the five survivors. Someone isn't telling the truth. And Mackenzie's first mistake? Assuming the killing is over...
Teen thrillers also by Natasha Preston:
The Cellar
Awake
You Will Be Mine
The Lost
The Twin
Natasha Preston
Natasha Preston is the New York Times bestselling author of The Cabin and The Cellar. A UK native, she discovered her love of writing when she shared a story online—and hasn’t looked back. She enjoys writing romance, thrillers, gritty YA, and the occasional serial killer. Visit natashapreston.com.
Read more from Natasha Preston
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Reviews for The Cabin
85 ratings11 reviews
What our readers think
Readers find this title disappointing and mediocre. The book is criticized for being misogynistic, unsuspenseful, and lackluster. The detective work is considered awful and the characters are poorly written and two-dimensional. The plot twists are predictable and the dialogue is boring. However, the book is described as a quick and easy read with a slightly surprising twist at the end. Overall, the ending is considered horrible and a letdown. The summary does not include any positive reviews.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Mackenzie and six of her friends are spending the weekend at a cabin in the woods. She's expecting it to be a drunken good time but that's not what it turns out to be when they wake up in the morning to find that two of their friends have been killed. Detective Inspector Wright is working the case and is treating them all as suspects. He's not giving Mackenzie enough information and she wants to clear her name as well as her friends names so she does some investigating herself. She discovers that each of her friends has a secret and that any one of them could be capable of murder.
The writing wasn't great. I know this comes out on September 6th but was previously published as "Covert" so I don't know if the errors are in the Covert as well, but there are lots!! Mackenzie went to Kyle's house to talk to him and when she left she hung up the phone. Blake walked to his truck and got in his car. The errors didn't affect my rating. My one star came from when I found out who the killer was and their motive for doing it. Wow. Totally unbelievable, over the top, ridiculous, childish. A very disappointing read. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5When I requested The Cabin by Natasha Preston launched last Sept 6th by Sourcebooks I imagined a crime book with a lot of tension and with a lot of suspense. Being an Agatha Christie fan my favorite crime stories the ones set in a house or in a defined location where a group of people for a reason or another are involved and under investigation by a good police man and maybe an investigator like could be Poirot.
No one of them can go out til the crime is sorted out. Generally pretty soon.
Forget all of it with The Cabin It's something else. A young book where murder is lived under another perspective.
Although a scaring murder consumed in a cabin the story is more complicated than at first it can appears.
First of all: the book reminds me the writing-style of some American and British friends I met online 14 years ago so that's why I read this book with big pleasure.
There is a freshness able to by-pass also the biggest tragedies of life. It's important trust me for keeping the mind healthy.
This book will keep your mind fresh, active, because it's vivacious and plenty of characters and diversified situations. No boring time, no descriptions, a lot of dialogues, some ingenuity here and there but positivity in motion.
What you will read is a complicated story of a murder but not only a murder. You will meet five apparent normal protagonists who drink, drug themselves, one is bisexual, another live conflictual relationship with his mom, another aborted at 15 years...A book where normality is just the pale idea and the surface of what reality is.
There is never never a big perception of tragedy or death and this is amazing.
The homicide that should be lived as the biggest and most horrible crime on this Earth lived as if it would be normal in the scheme of life, and with the philosophy of: "Let's going on for trying to sort out this mess." All alone. Without help. Police becomes an unnecessary nerve.
The story: Josh decides to organize with his friends a week-end in the cabin of his family. Mackenzie, Kyle, Courtney, Aaron, Josh, Blake, Megan all together for a week-end in the country-side.
Josh is not loved by them but although their contrasting feelings, also because their common friends Tilly and Gigi disappeared 8 months before in a terrible incident and Josh the main one "accused" for it, they decide to participate.
The author insists in the heavy drinking of the various protagonists all 18 years old, during the week-end.
In fact no one will hear anything when two protagonists of this story, Josh and Courtney, his girlfriend, are killed stabbed various times with a knife in the kitchen of the cabin. The cabin is quiet big and all the protagonists gone for the alcohol and maybe something else. They all sleep profoundly.
After the murder it appeared to me that the main problem were not two corpses in the kitchen or the arrival of the police or of an ambulance or the evidences that maybe police men and scientific could find, no, but the drinking of the protagonists seen also the insistence of the author of the book regarding this point and the discovery of these two corpses lived by the protagonists as a dream/nightmare.
The police man in the person of Mr.Wright will be in the entire book just a pale and insignificant character without too much intelligence for discovering who had killed who.
The key of everything for sorting out apparently (because the message of this book is clear: reality is never the one we see but there is always something else hidden somewhere) this story will be Mackenzie with Blake. Blake is the misunderstood brother of Josh. The police men focus the attention on him.
More than to focusing on the homicide in itself, this story will reveal the personalities of the various characters, and Blake and Mackenzie will discover surprisingly that they didn't know at all the people with which they hanged out with.
Mackenzie firstly. Blake is the black sheep of the family, the one no one love or want to see around and so also for this reason he has a weird character.
As a crime novel The Cabin by Natasha Preston is young, fresh, sometimes ingenuous but surely very interesting.
I loved to read it with all my heart and I suggest it to youngsters and adults although it contains sensitive topics like alcohol abuse and uncommon drugs. I see very strong positive sides in the vision of positive dialogues and lightness of the various characters. Plenty of problems unable maybe to sorting out all their demons but able to fight with all themselves for surviving and going on in life. Mackenzie character surely the best one. I loved it a lot like also her romantic relationship with Blake. Positive also her family. - Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5All around a mediocre read. Poorly written two dimensional characters, predictable plot "twists" and generally boring dialogue. I found myself not invested in if any of the characters lived or died, which is kind of the point of a thriller, no? I would not recommend.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Horrible ending. What a let down. Seems like a cop out.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I just wish that it didn't end like how it did because I wanted to know if they found out about the plan Megan had
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5This book was so disappointing. I read The Cellar by this author, loved it , and figured another book by her would also be good . But this one is annoyingly mysogynystic, unsuspenseful, and lackluster. I don't usually care for leaving negative reviews because things people work hard on should be appreciated, but the blatant sexism that served no purpose for character development or anything like that was so annoying I had to say something . The "detective work" was awful . The main character discovers that one of the friends smokes weed & suddenly thinks that means they really could be a murderer . Come on now , it's freaking weed . It had great potential but fell short. However, it was a quick & easy read with a slightly surprising twist at the end I didn't expect. It would be a good book if you don't have high expectations & want an easy way to pass the time.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Mackenzie plans to enjoy her time with her friends at Josh's cabin this weekend, even if Josh himself disgusts her. The group is joined by Josh's brother, Blake, who Josh has mostly lived apart from since their parents got divorced. Mackenzie is prepared for Blake to be just as awful as Josh, but she finds herself actually enjoying his company...enough to sleep with him that night, even though she never does one night stands.The next morning, everyone wakes up with massive hangovers, only to discover that Josh and his girlfriend Courtney were stabbed to death in the kitchen sometime during the night. They were all drunk, but surely someone should have heard something? Unfortunately, since the cabin was locked up and there were no signs of forced entry, the police immediately assume that someone in the group must have committed the murders. Mackenzie refuses to believe that one of her friends could be capable of such a thing, and she's so drawn to Blake that she doesn't believe he could have done it either. But if the killer wasn't one of them, then who was? And what if those around Mackenzie have more secrets than she realizes?I wasn't a fan of the first book by Preston I read, The Cellar, and this one made me regret that I still have three more of Preston's books in my collection to read. This is what I get for buying multiple books by a new-to-me author. In my defense, three of them were a shrink-wrapped bargain set. But still.Most of the characters were morons. The only halfway smart one was Blake, and that might've just been because he was constantly around Mackenzie and therefore looked smarter by comparison. Mackenzie was...frustrating. She was convinced the cops were overlooking something, but her method of "investigation" mostly involved looking around frantically, blowing up at Blake anytime he asked logical questions that took things in directions she didn't agree with, and telling herself repeatedly that the murderer couldn't possibly be any of her friends as all of them gradually told her enormous secrets that gave them all motives.She constantly wanted to go to the police with half-baked theories and random "evidence" she found that I'm pretty sure couldn't legally be used (a random wrapper with some blood on it that she, a suspect, said she'd found in the woods?). And yet when she did have something genuinely alarming that she should have shared with the police, threatening texts from an unknown number, she kept it to herself. The ending was a mess. It seemed like Preston was attempting a twist, but it was so sloppily done that it fell flat. It didn't help that the characters continued to be morons right up to the end. The last paragraph just about made my eyes roll out of my head. (Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Mackenzie thinks this will just be a weekend with her group of friends, off in a cabin drinking and having fun. But when two of them are murdered, suddenly all of them are under suspicion, and all their secrets are coming out.I love the "the killer is one of us" trope, done to absolute perfection by Agatha Christie in And Then There Were None. So any time a book tackles that, I'm going to appreciate it.The book starts out strong. Preston builds a lot of suspense as the characters get settled in the cabin, and we pick up on tension that hints at a big event from the past.Unfortunately, yes. I was really excited about this book, because of the trope it was centered around. And it did start out strong.But the romance feels cliched, and to me that was because of the writing style. The way Preston describes the way the two characters feel about each other is very hearts in the eyes and butterflies in the stomach, which is fine, but I was looking for more from the writing.The revelations from the characters' pasts also seem to come completely out of left field. I understand that the idea is that you never really know a person and what they're hiding behind their facade, but the secrets just don't seem to fit with what we have been shown about the characters and their relationships. This makes the ending twists seem rushed and out of left field as well.I had been really excited to read this book since I first heard about it, and unfortunately, it just didn't deliver for me.
1 person found this helpful
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5I read the reviews on this book before I picked it up but I shrugged them off because I've read a handful of Miss Preston's other works and enjoyed them. However, this book drove me crazy. The instalove was terrible and distracting. Rather than being concerned about finding her best friend's killer, the main character kept fantasizing about a guy she had just met the night her friend died. She kept making terrible choices and several times, I wished I could've shaken some sense into her.
Although the book was tense and the suspense kept me reading to the end, I thought the ending was disappointing. While I'll recommend any of Miss Preston's books any day of the week, I would not recommend this one unless of course you're a fan of instalove. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Cabin by Natasha Preston is an intriguing young adult mystery about a weekend trip that ends in murder.
The summer before beginning university is supposed to be nothing but fun for MacKenzie Keaton and her friends, Courtney, Courtney's boyfriend Josh, Megan, Aaron and Kyle. Their first big adventure is a weekend of drinking at Josh's cabin and the group is surprised when Josh's estranged brother Blake decides to tag along. Although no one particularly cares for Josh, everyone tries to set aside their animosity for the sake of his girlfriend, Courtney. Despite a few tense moments, the weekend is off to a pretty good start but the morning after a night of heavy drinking, Mackenzie and Blake are stunned when they discover that Courtney and Josh have been stabbed to death in the kitchen. With all of the doors and windows locked, DI Wright is convinced one of the friends is responsible for the murders, but Mackenzie finds it impossible to believe one of her friends is a murderer. With everyone under a cloud of suspicion, Blake and Mackenzie begin their own investigation but will they unmask the killer before it is too late?
Mackenzie is a little naive but she is an incredibly loyal friend. She has good reason to dislike Josh and she is not all happy her close friend Courtney is romantically involved with him. However, she is determined to have a enjoyable weekend with her friends in spite of her feelings. Mackenzie is a immediately drawn to Blake and she finds him impossible to resist once she has downed more than her fair share of drinks. Even when the weekend comes to an abrupt end, she continues to see Blake and she is the only person who believes he had nothing to do with the murders.
Quickly returning to town after discovering the bodies of their slain friends, DI Wright continues questioning everyone about what happened at the cabin. Although he uncovers some very troubling information, he does not find any evidence that links any of the friends to the crime. Despite her conviction that none of her friends could possibly be a murderer, Mackenzie finally admits if neither she nor Blake murdered Courtney and Josh, then one of them has to be the killer. Trying to view her friends objectively, she decides to gently interrogate them to see if she can figure out a motive for the murders. She discovers a few shocking secrets but would someone kill to keep them from being revealed? Surprisingly, Blake is a voice of reason who keeps Mackenzie from taking her suspicions to the police prematurely, but it soon becomes clear the killer will go to any lengths to evade detection.
The Cabin is an engaging mystery that is full of unexpected twists and turns. Although well-written, some of the storyline is just a touch unbelievable. Mackenzie is a likable character but some of the things she says and does are a little irritating. Blake is a great love interest but it is kind of odd that Mackenzie trusts him implicitly despite not knowing him very well. Natasha Preston does an excellent job obscuring the perpetrator's identity and she throws in a final plot twist is absolutely stunning. An enjoyable but sometimes frustrating young adult novel that I recommend to older teens due to content. - Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5After reading the synopsis of this book, I had hope that it would be a good mystery. After the first few chapters, that hope diminished. The plot had great potential, similar to an Agatha Christie murder mystery, but the dialogue fell completely flat. MacKenzie was a weak character, and her dialogue was overly redundant and just plain annoying. The writing was also a bit weak. Honestly, it sounded like a teenager wrote it. Why the author re-published this book with a different title I'm not sure, but it didn't help it get better reviews. :)
Book preview
The Cabin - Natasha Preston
PROLOGUE
They think they’re invincible.
They think they can do and say whatever they want.
They think there are no consequences.
They’ve left me no choice.
It’s time for them to pay for their sins.
CHAPTER ONE
Friday, August 7
Do you have everything you need, Mackenzie?
Mum asked, watching me stuff clothes in a bag.
I think so. We’re only going for two nights anyway.
Two painful nights of dealing with Josh.
Remember to leave the address and phone number on the fridge.
I don’t think the cabin has a landline, but I’ll leave the address. I’ll get cell reception out there, apparently, and I’ll let you know when we arrive.
She nodded nervously and gave me a weak smile.
Mum, I’ll be fine.
You’re spending the weekend with someone you don’t like.
No, I’m spending the weekend with Aaron, Courtney, Megan, and Kyle. It’s just unfortunate that Josh will be there too.
If I could have uninvited him, I would have.
But the cabin is his parents’, so that didn’t seem too likely. Or reasonable. He’d invited us all to spend the weekend at his family’s cabin since school was out. The UK had finally realized it was summer, and next year, we’d all be going our separate ways for university.
If you need to be picked up early…?
I shook my head. Thanks, but I’ll be fine. There’s no way I’m letting him ruin a weekend with my friends. Anyway, I need to go.
I’ll drop you off at Joshua’s.
No, it’s fine, Mum. I can walk.
I grabbed my bag and swung it over my shoulder. See you Sunday night. Love you,
I said, kissing her cheek.
Love you too, sweetheart. Call if you need anything.
I will,
I replied.
Josh only lived a two-minute walk away, so it wouldn’t take me long. I slammed the front door behind me and headed down the path. The weather was superhot, it being the beginning of August, and I was glad I’d opted for shorts and a T-shirt.
When I got to Josh’s, everyone was outside his house, cramming bags into cars. Seriously, we were going for two nights, but it looked like Courtney and Megan had packed for a week.
Kenz!
Courtney shouted, jogging toward me. Her red ponytail swayed and her green eyes danced with excitement. She was the only person genuinely happy about this trip.
Taking a deep breath, I pushed away every ounce of doubt I had about this weekend and smiled. Hey, Court. Is everyone ready?
Almost. Josh will be back soon,
she replied with a goofy smile. Don’t look like that,
she added when I grimaced at his name.
Whoops, she caught me. Sorry. I didn’t mean that. It’s…nice of him to invite us to his folk’s cabin.
She took my lame apology with a smile. He wants things back the way they were.
Did he have a time machine so he could go back and not say those awful things about my friends? Could he take back what he’d done to me? What he still was doing to me?
Josh might be trying to make amends for the past—if we were even to believe it was genuine—but we weren’t going to forgive him so easily. Some hurts aren’t that easy to get over, and I couldn’t forgive someone who wasn’t sorry and hadn’t changed their behavior. Courtney had forgiven him already, of course, but she never could see what a waster her boyfriend was.
I lifted my eyebrow.
Mackenzie, please,
Courtney said, sighing as she pushed her bangs out of her eyes. He’s trying, and it will mean so much to me if you’ll try too. Please?
I groaned and my shoulders sagged. Fine. I’ll play nice.
Two nights, that’s it. You can do that.
We all will,
Megan added, stepping beside us. Right, guys?
Aaron and Kyle nodded along, agreeing to put their differences to the side—for the weekend at least.
Where is Josh anyway?
I asked.
Picking up his brother.
Courtney rolled her eyes. Blake wanted to see him again, so Josh invited him this morning. Technically the cabin belongs to Blake too, so there’s not much anyone can do to stop him from coming with.
Oh,
I muttered, not sure how I felt about a stranger joining us. We didn’t know Blake, and if he was anything like Josh, the weekend was going to be a nightmare. So the estranged brother is coming.
Great. This trip keeps getting better and better.
I had seen Blake before, on about two occasions, when his parents were doing a kid swap, but I’d never spoken to him. Blake had moved away with his dad after their parents divorced. Josh stayed with their mum. The two boys didn’t spend much time together while they were growing up, which was probably a good thing for Blake.
Courtney pushed her bangs aside again. They never stayed put, so I didn’t know why she didn’t just cut them shorter. They’re hardly estranged.
They rarely saw each other; I’d call that estranged. Why is he crashing his brother’s party?
I asked.
He’s lonely?
Kyle offered, making a sad face.
Courtney leaned against Aaron’s car. No, he just wants to spend time with his brother. They both want to.
If Blake was like Josh, I would be coming home early for sure. I didn’t even want to breathe the same air as Josh, so I sort of hoped Blake was an idiot too, then I would have an excuse to leave that wouldn’t hurt Courtney’s feelings.
The warm air blew my long chestnut hair in my face. I brushed the strands from my eyes just in time to see a metallic-black Mitsubishi Warrior—the only car I recognized without reading the logo because it was Kyle’s favorite subject—pull up beside me.
Here we go…
Josh was sitting in the passenger seat and his brother was driving. They both had the same dark-brown hair and blue eyes, but apart from that, they looked totally different. Josh definitely didn’t inherit the looks. Blake snapped every ounce of drop-dead gorgeous and left nothing for his younger brother. Lucky for Blake.
I looked away and walked around to Aaron’s car, wanting to put as much distance between me and Josh as possible. Even just seeing his face made me want to punch him, especially after his demands. Courtney was smart, but when it came to him, she was as thick as a post.
Josh got out of the car. Hey, guys. You remember my brother, Blake?
Megan shook her head. Nope, but hi.
Blake walked to the front of his truck and casually leaned against the hood as if he was bored. Hey,
he said with a nod.
He wore chunky black boots, dark jeans, and a black jacket, making him look mysterious and maybe a little dangerous. His dark hair stuck out in all directions in a messy style that looked like he didn’t give a crap—which I assumed he didn’t. His bright-blue eyes scanned the group, checking us out one by one.
His gaze was intense and it was like he saw everything. I didn’t want him to see anything about me. Let’s just leave already!
I said, opening the car door and climbing inside. The sooner we got there, the sooner we could get back. Damn, I sounded like my parents on Christmas Eve when they would try to get me to sleep as the clock ticked dangerously close to midnight.
But at least I would get two nights adult free to spend with my friends. That was something to look forward to for sure.
Err, Mackenzie,
Courtney said. You’re in the car with me.
My face fell. I knew what that meant. What?
She stepped forward and leaned in the car so we could talk privately. You’re coming in the car with me, Josh, and Blake.
Yeah, I’m not,
I replied.
Please? Look, I know you’re mad at him, and I understand why, but will you try? I really think you two need to spend the car trip together to work through this.
We really don’t, Court.
This weekend is going to suck if you’re pissed at Josh the whole time.
I frowned. I wasn’t the only one who didn’t like him though, so why was I the only one being forced to make the extra effort? His brother’s weird,
I whispered as if that was going to change Courtney’s mind.
Blake is harmless.
I’d run out of excuses. Sighing in defeat, I replied, All right! But if he pisses me off by making his usual stupid comments, I’m switching cars.
Courtney held up her hands. OK, OK. Thank you.
We’re taking Blake’s car then?
Yeah, they must have decided to bring Blake’s instead. I can see why.
Courtney was a car person; she knew all the different types and models by sight. I couldn’t even tell if something was wrong with one—unless the engine actually fell out.
Blake’s driving?
His car, so I guess.
She shrugged, watching Josh with a loving look that made me want to shake some sense into her.
I call shotgun,
I replied. If I had to be in the same car, at least I wouldn’t have to sit next to him. I was aware that I was behaving like a child, but I didn’t care. Josh had crossed a line, and I wasn’t going to forgive him. Actually, Josh had crossed about a million lines.
I got in the passenger seat before Josh had a chance to say or do anything. He could shove it if he thought I was moving. Blake smiled a little awkwardly and started the car. He didn’t ooze confidence, but he looked like he didn’t care what anyone thought.
I’m coming in your car too,
Kyle said.
Courtney narrowed her eyes. You’re with Aaron and Megan.
There’s space with you for another, isn’t there?
Kyle, five in one car and two in another is stupid. No one wants to be cramped in the back.
Oh, for Christ’s sake, Kyle, just get in Aaron’s bloody car,
Josh snapped, shoving past him. Pathetic arsehole.
I ground my teeth. Did it really matter which car he rode in?
The answer was no.
Blake and I hadn’t spent any time together, so we quickly fell into an awkward silence while we waited for Josh and Courtney to get in the car. I bit the inside of my cheek and twiddled my fingers. Say something to him! We had never actually spoken to each other before. That was about to change. We had a forty-five-minute car ride to a remote part of the Lake District ahead of us.
Why do you hate Josh?
he asked.
I was surprised by his bluntness. It was no secret that I didn’t like Josh, but I didn’t expect his brother to come straight out and ask. Um, because he’s a bloody idiot.
Blake’s eyebrow rose, and he pursed his lips. Finally, he nodded once. Yeah. OK then.
You don’t see him much, do you?
Not really. Growing up, my parents couldn’t get their shit together long enough to schedule proper visits for us. Most of the time, when they finally got around to it, they swapped us over for a day or two. I think I can count on one hand the number of times I’ve seen my mum in the last twelve years.
My heart ached for him. I couldn’t imagine what he went through as a kid. He must’ve missed his mum. I would have; my mum was the person I went to with every problem—well, almost every problem. That’s really sad.
He lifted his shoulder and let it drop. That’s how it goes sometimes.
Yeah, but…
I shook my head. I couldn’t imagine not seeing my mum every day, as crazy as she drove me sometimes. Blake must have felt abandoned by his mom if she never made the effort. Maybe that was how Josh felt about his dad? Wow, Josh and deep feelings. That was strange to think about… Everything I’d witnessed of his character had been shallow and selfish.
Josh and Courtney got in the car, and I zipped my mouth. The atmosphere turned tense, like it always was when Josh was around. He knew I wished he wasn’t with Courtney after all of the horrible things he’d said about our friends Tilly and Gigi. He loved that Courtney wouldn’t ditch him for treating her friends like rubbish. Bastard.
"Oh, I don’t mind you sitting up front with my brother, Mackenzie," Josh said sarcastically as he climbed into the backseat.
I clenched my fists. Don’t let him get to you.
My car, Bro, and I’d rather sit near a pretty face than your ugly mug,
Blake responded.
Smiling to myself, I grabbed my bag of lollipops and offered one to Blake. I should probably have been annoyed at the pretty face
comment, but that was overshadowed by him calling Josh ugly. Blake took an orange lollipop—my favorite—and gave me a wink.
Not sharing, Mackenzie?
Josh asked.
I took a deep breath, resisting the urge to jam the plastic stick into his eye. Sure,
I replied, holding out the bag. He took two, probably to annoy me, so I said nothing.
OK, everyone, please play nice,
Courtney whined. This weekend, parent free, is going to be epic, so will you all make up?
You know I don’t have a problem with any of them, babe,
Josh replied.
Whatever,
I muttered, clenching my jaw.
I watched Blake as he drove. His eyes slid over, occasionally catching me, but he didn’t say a word. I found myself wanting to get to know him, but I wasn’t sure why. He would go home after the weekend, and I’d probably never see him again.
Still, Blake was gorgeous, and I was drawn to him.
We reached the cabin without bloodshed, so I was pleased with my self-control—so far. Courtney kept Josh in check by flirting with him and getting him to listen to music. I couldn’t wait until she saw through him and his crap. I was going to make sure I had a front-row seat when she dumped his arse.
This is it?
I asked, looking out the window up at a huge, two-story cabin. It could easily house about ten people.
Blake cut the engine and smirked. What did you expect? The Ritz?
This is amazing. I didn’t think it would be this big.
Three years ago, I would have made some sort of sexual innuendo,
Blake replied.
All grown up now, are we?
Nah, that was just when I noticed Josh trying to act the big man and I realized how lame those comments actually sound.
I grinned and got out of the car. I liked Blake and his painfully beautiful face. Maybe this weekend wouldn’t be so miserable. Kyle and Aaron bundled bags out of the trunk and chucked them on the ground. Halfway to the cabin I guess. Kyle grabbed his phone and started to film, like he usually did. He wanted to do something in the film industry, and I think he’d be awesome at it.
Smile, Kenz,
he said, pointing it in my direction.
I stuck out my tongue and Aaron made an obscene gesture.
Nice, Aaron,
Kyle said sarcastically.
Megan stared up at the enormous house. You could tell from the overgrown plants and faded window frames that no one had been here in a while. Josh and Courtney had spent all last weekend here getting it ready, but they’d just cleaned the inside.
The cabin was set in a clearing; the woods surrounded it on three sides, and a gorgeous lake ran along the front of the property. The scenery was beautiful. I didn’t understand why Josh’s family didn’t use it more often.
You happy to be back?
I asked Blake as we walked to the front door at a snail’s pace. He dragged his feet like he didn’t really want to be here.
Blake shrugged and grunted. Just here for the booze.
Of course you are.
Josh unlocked the front door and turned to us. Kyle rolled his eyes, guessing what was coming, and I tried not to laugh. We—eighteen and however old Blake was—were about to be given rules.
Courtney and I have worked hard getting the cabin ready for you all, so I would appreciate it if you would respect the place and not leave it looking like a Dumpster.
I bit my tongue. How pompous. None of us were going to trash the cabin and he knew that. Courtney stood beside him like the lady of the manor, eating up the attention. I loved that girl, but she needed a good slap to knock some sense into her.
Josh opened the door and walked in ahead of Courtney. Gentleman my arse! And Court didn’t even care; she followed him like a little lapdog.
I’ll grab the rest of the bags,
Aaron said, heading back out of the door.
I walked in and my jaw dropped. Wow.
The cabin was beautiful, albeit a little dated. The view of the lake from the family room window was to die for. The sun shone down on the water’s surface, making it glisten. There was a large fireplace that I could have stepped into.
Kyle walked behind me, capturing the view with his phone.
I’m going to explore. Anyone wanna come?
Megan asked, bouncing up and down like a toddler. Her short, overly hair-sprayed bob barely moved an inch. She had already dropped her bag by the bottom of the stairs, which was about as much unpacking as she ever did.
I handed a case of beer to Courtney, who was organizing the food and booze in the kitchen.
Don’t fancy getting lost in the forest, thanks,
I replied.
Aaron dropped a load of bags on the floor. I’ll come.
He walked out before anyone could stop him and make him help. I watched them walk into the woods. The bright midday sun shone down on Aaron’s white-blond hair, making it glow. They both looked happy to be away, and I was going to try and do the same.
Going for a walk,
Kyle said, shaking his head at them as he lowered the phone. He held up a six-pack in his other hand. Crazy. Hey, Blake, where’d you want the beer, man?
In the oven,
he replied dryly.
I tried not to smile but failed miserably. I wasn’t sure what Blake was doing here. He didn’t seem to have a good relationship with Josh, and he didn’t seem to be making much effort.
Kyle’s mouth thinned in a tight smile, and I could tell he was fighting the urge to say something back. Instead, he narrowed his eyes and spun on his heel. Shaking his head, he walked away. Kyle was a sensitive soul and was never very good with anyone making fun of him.
Then, Blake and I were left in the living room. Alone again. I pursed my lips, not knowing what to say. Should I even say anything? The silence was awkward, but it didn’t seem to bother him at all. Nothing seemed to affect him. Blake was cool, calm, and almost robotic. But I wasn’t naive enough to think that nothing got to him.
So…did you come here much when you were a kid?
I asked to fill the silence.
He looked over his shoulder, half smiling at me. You’re asking if I come here much?
"No, I asked if you came here much." There was a big difference.
Blake turned his body so he was fully facing me. I don’t know if he did it to be intimidating, but it was. He had this cockiness about him, but it wasn’t off-putting like Josh’s.
We came here a lot before our parents separated. After the divorce, the place stayed empty, until now.
I didn’t know what to say. I’m sorry.
Why? People divorce all the time.
Before I had the chance to say anything else, he walked outside. There was definitely a lot more to him than he let people see.
Beer, Kenz?
Kyle asked from behind me.
I turned and smirked. You know it’s eleven in the morning, right?
Yeah,
he replied, tilting his head, waiting for me to explain.
I smiled and took a beer from his outstretched hand. Never mind.
Kyle and I sat on the sofa while Josh and Courtney messed around putting things away in the kitchen. You think we should help?
I asked.
I offered. You know what Josh is like.
Control freak. We wouldn’t do it the way he wanted. How many different ways were there to put food in a cupboard? This was Josh’s
place though, and we were being made very aware that we were just guests. I’m going to need a lot of alcohol to get through this weekend,
I said. I’d promised my parents no drinking, obviously, but we were all parent free and determined to make the most of it. They think we’re swimming in the lake, cooking out, and roasting marshmallows around a campfire. We are, so it’s not a total lie, but there will be drinking.
Kyle nodded in agreement and raised his bottle. Let’s keep it coming, then.
I clinked the top of my bottle against his and took a swig.
Kyle and I had just finished our thirds when the rest of the group joined us. Wow, this looks fun,
Aaron said, grinning at the bottles of alcohol spread out over the coffee table.
Yep, Kyle and I thought we should have it all at arm’s reach. Cheers,
I said, raising my half-full bottle.
Well, if we’re doing this, we’re doing it right. I’m well up for getting wasted,
Aaron replied, picking the Absolut Vodka. Everyone’s in, no backing out. Josh, shot glasses, my man!
My smile grew. I wasn’t a big drinker, especially after last time, with the accident, but I wanted to have stupid, immature fun tonight.
Err, guys, I don’t want anyone throwing up in my house,
Josh said in his annoying, stuck-up, I’m-better-than-you way. I had a very sudden, very childish urge to drink until I puked.
Everything he wanted, I wanted to do the opposite. I knew that was dangerous though. I knew I couldn’t—and I wasn’t stupid enough to do it—but I damn well wanted to.
Lighten up, mate, come on. We all want this to be a good weekend,
Kyle replied.
Josh glared and his jaw tightened. He didn’t like to be challenged. I am relaxed,
he growled through his teeth.
Aaron lifted a freshly poured shot glass and raised it to Josh, his own little in-your-face, before knocking it back. I smiled and did the same. And then I regretted it because Josh’s eyebrow arched and I knew exactly what he was thinking.
And he wouldn’t hesitate to open his big mouth. But before he could say anything, Aaron spoke. A toast,
he said, raising a bottle this time. To a killer weekend.
We lifted whatever we had in our hands. To a killer weekend!
CHAPTER TWO
After about an hour of drinking, I eased off so I wouldn’t be flat on my face before it even got dark. Josh and Courtney, the only couple, had gone off to his parents’ room, as it was the only double, for a bit of privacy, which meant Josh wanted sex.
Megan and Aaron were in the kitchen. I could hear her laughing at something he’d said. Kyle had gone to the toilet shortly after Josh and Courtney went upstairs, which was ages ago, so I vowed to never use that bathroom.
Blake stretched his legs, kicking his booted feet up on the coffee table. He didn’t fit in. He drank with us and joined in with conversation when necessary, but he didn’t contribute much. There was tension between him and Josh that went beyond the usual dislike that the rest of us had. They stared each other down if one said something the other didn’t like. It was awkward and made me want to leave the room.
They clearly didn’t get along, so why on earth would Blake invite himself ?
What do you do back home?
I asked, trying to get to know a little more about him other than his favorite alcoholic drink.
I work here and there,
he grunted.
OK, it was like getting blood out of a stone. You’re not very chatty, are ya?
He flicked his eyes to me without moving his head.