Read Twinsequences (A Twisted Twin Series) Online
Authors: Jennifer Foor
My
life
was
messed
up.
I
was
pregnant
and
sitting
in
jail.
My
life
couldn’t
get
any
more
complicated.
At
least,
that
was
what
I
thought.
A
couple
hours
after
being
there,
a
guard
came
over
and
led
me
to
another
room.
I
had
hoped
that
I
was
being
bailed
out,
until
I
saw
my
mother
sitting
at
the
table.
I
sat
down
across
from
her.
“Hello,
Mother.”
She
looked
so
furious
with
me.
“What
do
you
have
to
say
for
yourself?
Do
you
realize
that
you’ve
made
a
mockery
of
this
family?”
“It
isn’t
what
you
think.”
How
could
she
think
that
I
could
do
something
so
wreckless?
I’d
always
been
the
responsible
one.
“It
doesn’t
even
matter
what
I
think.
You
kidnapped
your
sister
and
pretended
to
be
her
so
that
you
could
steal
her
husband.
What
kind
of
person
would
do
such
a
terrible
thing?
What
do
you
have
to
say
for
yourself?”
I
shrugged
and
looked
down
at
the
table.
People
had
carved
all
sorts
of
things
in
the
wooden
top.
“I
have
nothing
to
say.”
She
tapped
her
fingernails
on
the
table.
“I’m
not
leaving
here
until
you
explain
to
me
why
you
felt
it
necessary
to
do
the
wreckless
things
that
you’ve
been
up
to?”
“I
didn’t
do
anything
that
she
didn’t
deserve.
He
was
mine
first,
Mom.
She
took
him
to
spite
me.
She
is
a
liar!
Ivy
started
all
of
this.”
I
was
so
angry
at
her
for
not
listening
to
a
word
I
was
saying.
I
needed
her
support.
“Your
father
and
I
have
discussed
your
future
with
our
family.
We
think
it
would
be
best
if
we
gave
you
some
money
and
sent
you
on
your
way.
I
think
it’s
best
that
you
go
back
to
where
you
were
living
and
have
a
life
there.
“
I
reached
out
for
her
hand,
but
she
pulled
away.
“Mom,
please.
Don’t
abandon
me.
I
never
did
anything
wrong.
I’m
the
one
who
is
being
taken
advantage
of,
not
Ivy!”
She
shook
her
head
and
began
to
rub
her
temples
like
she
did
when
she
was
frustrated.
“I
just
don’t
know
where
we
went
wrong
with
you.
We
gave
you
everything
you
could
possibly
ask
for.
You
went
to
a
good
college.
What
could
your
sister
possibly
have
done
to
make
you
this
bitter
toward
her?
Do
you
have
any
idea
how
much
her
marriage
means
to
her?”
“Mom,
you’re
not
listening
to
me.
Ivy
isn’t
the
person
you
think
she
is.
She’s
manipulative
and
out
to
destroy
me.
She
doesn’t
love
Stosh.
Did
you
see
what
she
did
to
his
head?
She
could
have
killed
him.”
My
mother
stood
up.
“Enough!”
She
leaned
in,
but
didn’t
sit
back
down.
“Willow,
I
came
here
today
to
try
to
reason
with
you,
but
you’ve
left
me
with
no
other
options.
I
am
not
posting
your
bail,
because
I
feel
that
the
best
place
for
you
is
in
here.
If
and
when
you
do
get
out,
I’d
appreciate
it
if
you
left
town
quietly
and
you
stayed
away
from
Stoshua.
He
doesn’t
need
to
be
involved
with
you.
Am
I
making
myself
clear?”
I
was
sobbing.
My
own
mother
was
giving
up
on
me.
I
couldn’t
believe
it.
I
looked
right
up
at
her
and
gritted
my
teeth
together
as
I
talked.
“I
will
not
give
up
Stosh!
We
are
in
love
and
nothing
you
could
possibly
do
would
change
that.”
“We’ll
just
see
about
that.”
She
waved
for
the
guard
and
left
me
sitting
there.
I
felt
abandoned.
It
was
disastrous
to
think
that
I
was
sitting
in
jail
while
the
real
psycho
was
out
planning
her
next
path
of
destruction.
I
knew
what
she
was
going
to
do
next
and
there
was
nothing
I
could
do
about
it.
I
spent
the
night
sleeping
in
a
ball
on
a
small
cot.
The
mattress
was
probably
just
as
hard
as
the
cement
floor
below
it.
I
tossed
and
turned
and
cried
most
of
the
night.
For
someone
that
had
never
been
in
trouble
for
anything,
having
a
criminal
record
just
didn’t
sit
well
with
me.
Still,
with
both
of
us
behind
bars,
I
highly
doubted
that
some
guardian
angel
was
going
to
swoop
in
and
save
the
day.
I
was
shit
out
of
luck.
My
arraignment
was
horrible.
Not
only
did
my
parents
attend,
but
my
sister
was
right
there
with
them.
I
pleaded
not
guilty.
Sure,
I’d
held
her
against
her
will,
but
she’d
done
just
as
bad
of
things
to
me
and
was
still
walking
around.
I
saw
her
smiling
when
they
walked
me
back
to
jail.
I
thought
my
mother
was
going
to
bail
me
out,
but
I
had
no
such
luck.
She
hadn’t
had
a
change
of
heart
and
with
my
psychopath
twin
standing
next
to
her,
I
knew
I
didn’t
have
a
chance
in
Hell
at
ever
being
free.
I
spent
my
second
night
in
a
cell
without
sleep.
I
couldn’t
understand
how
I
had
let
myself
get
so
consumed
in
this
plan
of
mine.
Stosh
had
been
right
to
worry.
I
was
exactly
where
he’d
said
I’d
be.
I
missed
my
old,
carefree,
life.
I
missed
my
friends
and
the
job
that
I
had
to
give
up.
When
people
are
at
their
record
low,
they
must
consider
a
lot
of
things,
because
that
is
exactly
what
I
started
to
do.
I
considered
telling
my
mom
that
I
would
give
up
Stosh.
I
could
leave
town
and
somehow
move
on.
Anything
was
better
than
a
term
in
a
place
like
I
was
currently
in.
I
wanted
to
be
free.
My
baby
couldn’t
be
born
behind
bars.
He
or
she
deserved
a
chance
at
a
good
life.
I
deserved
that
chance
too.
Leaving
Stosh
would
be
the
hardest
thing
that
I
would
ever
have
to
do.
He’d
never
stop
looking
for
me.
I
knew
that
now.
There
was
no
way
he
was
going
to
give
up
on
me.
The
more
I
tried
to
reason
with
myself,
the
more
upset
I
became.
The
only
way
out
of
this
jail
cell
was
to
leave
my
heart
behind.
I
didn’t
know
if
it
was
even
possible,
or
if
I
really
wanted
to
try.
So
many
people
had
been
hurt.
So
many
hearts
were
broken.
Even
though
I
wasn’t
directly
the
main
cause,
I
still
played
a
part
in
it.
I
hated
myself
for
it.
At
least
I
didn’t
have
much
longer
to
talk
myself
out
of
loving
Stosh.
I
made
bail
that
evening.
Without
knowing
who
had
come
to
my
rescue,
I
grabbed
my
personal
belongings
and
headed
out
to
meet
whoever
it
was.
Stoshua
was
standing
there
waiting
for
me.
He
had
a
bouquet
of
flowers
in
his
hand
and
looked
like
he
hadn’t
slept
in
a
week.
I
ran
up
and
threw
my
arms
around
him.
“Thank
you!”
He
pushed
me
away
and
gave
me
a
once
over,
before
pulling
me
back
into
his
strong
arms.
“I’m
so
glad
you’re
okay.
You
can’t
imagine
how
worried
I
was.”
“It
wasn’t
like
I
was
in
the
penitentiary.
I
didn’t
get
gang
raped
or
anything.”
Maybe
sarcasm
wasn’t
appropriate,
but
I
was
just
trying
to
add
a
little
light
to
my
messed
up
situation.
“When
did
you
get
out?”
“Last
night.
Your
parents
came
and
talked
to
mine.
They
tried
to
sit
me
down
and
tell
me
that
I
wasn’t
to
have
any
kind
of
contact
with
you.
They
told
me
that
if
I
bailed
you
out,
I
wouldn’t
have
a
job.”
We’d
started
walking
toward
the
car.
It
was
dark
out,
but
the
smell
of
fresh
air
filled
my
nostrils.
“Stosh,
I’m
so
sorry.
I
never
meant
to
cause
this
much
harm
to
your
life.”
He
wrapped
his
arm
around
me
and
pulled
me
close
to
kiss
the
side
of
my
head.
“Don’t
even
say
that.
This
is
where
you
belong.
They
might
have
blinders
on
right
now,
but
I
have
a
plan
to
make
this
all
go
away.”
I
stopped
walking.
“What
kind
of
plan?”
He
grabbed
my
hand
and
started
pulling
me
along.
“Trust
me,
Will.”
I
did
trust
him.
In
fact,
he
was
the
only
person
in
the
world
that
I
could
trust.
“Okay.”
He
opened
the
car
door
for
me
and
drove
me
to
a
drive
thru,
so
I
could
fill
my
empty
stomach.
“I
need
to
get
you
filled
up.
When
we
get
home
you
can
take
your
vitamins
and
start
feeling
better.
You
look
pale,
babe.”
“I’m
fine.
I
didn’t
like
the
food
they
served
and
my
stomach
was
too
knotted
to
think
about
being
hungry.”