"Josey went away to college in the hopes of leaving her small town behind, but it seems she can't break free -- every summer she returns home, even though it seems all her friends have managed to get away. Then she meets Miranda, a senior in high school, who makes Josey feel worldly and wise.
The two young women strike up a friendship that threatens to blossom into something more. But Josey doesn't know where her priorities lie -- school? work? romance? She wants Miranda up until the moment when it seems Miranda feels the same, then she pushes Miranda away. She doesn't know how to get what it is she really wants, and she doesn't even really know what that might be.
Can Miranda help her decide, or will Josey's feelings for the younger woman end up pushing her over the edge?"
Runaway Train By J.T. Marie At 21, you’ve already lost touch with all your friends. Most of them you never really liked all that much anyway, and when they wrote to you at college, you threw away their letters without even reading them. Soon they stopped writing. Your roommate couldn’t understand this—she had more friends than God. But you never were a social butterfly, were you? You did have one or two close friends, though, ones you actually wanted, but since you went to a college so far away, letters couldn’t keep you all together. Things happen you don’t know about, things that won’t fit into words on a page and wedge in between you, and when you come home, it’s easier not to call than to catch up on everything. After awhile you don’t even know if you want to get caught up, not a