Dutch Harbor, Alaska âYouâre kidding me,â I said to Pax as I stared at the fleet of brand-new snowmobiles Iâd found waiting for us on a small, snow-covered field outside of Dutch Harbor.
âWhichever one you want,â he said, a shit-eating grin on his face.
Snowmobiling was the one area where I was better than him, and he knew it. He wasnât just giving me a machine as a present, but the opportunity to remember why they called me Rebel in the first place. The chance to kick his ass was just an added bonus.
The longing that ached in my chest was a welcome surprise.
âWhat do you say, Penna?â Landon asked, slinging his arm around my shoulder.
I took in a lungful of cold, crisp Alaskan air and looked from the vast expanse of blue sea to the mountains that rose in front of us on the small island and sighed. I wanted to forget everything for just a few minutesâBrooke, Cruz, hell, even my responsibilities as a Renegade. Maybe it was for the wrong reasons, but who cared as long as I literally put myself back in the saddle in this small way?
âI want that one,â I said, pointing to a Yamaha in the center. It was lighter than some of its counterparts, and Iâd be able to do more with it. I was going to have to start lifting weights again if I ever wanted to get back on my bike and hope to pull tricks.
âRebelâs back,â Landon said, squeezing my shoulders before grabbing Rachel to choose her sled.
Sheâd been quiet since she walked in on Cruz and me in the excursion office, and I knew I owed her an explanation soon, especially since I needed her to keep quiet. Just because I was hurt and pissed as hell at Cruz didnât mean I wanted him fired, or his life destroyed for kissing me. Sheâd brought it up this morning, but Iâd quickly shut her down, and while Iâd gotten a remarkable amount of side-eye today, she wasnât pushing.
I savored the crunch of snow under my feet as I walked to my new snowmobile and swung my leg over the seat, settling in with practiced ease. The engine started with a quick turn of the key, sending vibrations through my body as the motor rumbled beneath me.
âHow does it feel to be back on a snowmobile after your accident, Rebel?â Bobby asked, prompting the camera to roll in closer.
I forced a smile and pulled my goggles down over my eyes to obscure the truth. âGreat! I guess now weâll find out how healed this leg is!â
âNervous at all?â he asked.
âNope, just anxious to get back to being me.â
That was the first true thing Iâd said to the cameras since Iâd been smashed by that falling light.
I buckled my helmet, familiarized myself with the setup of the sled, and took off with the other Renegades, leaving the vans behind as we followed a path over the snowy hills. The motor drowned out my thoughts, the feeling peaceful, and I took the time to really take in the sights around me. The volcanic islands lent themselves to dramatic landscapesâsnow-covered volcanoes masquerading as mountains that stood out in stark relief against a crystal-blue sky. Weâd lucked out and arrived between storms. I wouldnât want to get stuck here when one of those suckers came in.
We rode about twenty minutes until we reached a plateau where a series of ramps had been set up.
âWelcome to your playground, Rebel,â Pax said over the radios in our helmets.
My stomach clenched, at war between feelings of excitement, anticipation, and soul-crushing dread.
âYou set this all up?â I asked, pulling next to him, where he had Leah on the back of his snowmobile. âItâs spectacular.â
âNick took care of it. He said to tell you your favorite ramp is the one on the end over there, and that thereâs no pressure or planned stunt. He just wanted you to have some fun for your birthday.â
âThat was the last two days,â I grumbled.
âWell, he wanted to build it on the boat, but we couldnât figure out a way to keep the snow from melting in the auditorium.â
âSmart-ass,â I muttered.
âGo have fun.â
I eyed the smallest of the ramps, which was something I couldâand didâdo when I was barely fifteen. Maybe it was a baby step back toward being me, but it was one I knew I could take.
Driving a quick loop around the ramp, I gauged the distance and the angle of the ramp before heading back to the start of the run. If I couldnât manage something that easy, I had zero business being here. I may as well pack my bags and lick my wounds back in L.A. Besides, hadnât I just BASE jumped off a Ferris wheel?
I could handle this.
Gunning the throttle, I sped toward the ramp, feeling the familiar rush of adrenaline through my veins. My body soaked up the hormone like fuel, and I hit the ramp, bracing my weight on the rails as I catapulted up.
Midair, no outside bullshit mattered. It was just me, the snowmobile, and my ability to control the machine. There was no Brooke, no worries over unanswered letters and rejected phone calls. No parents telling me to be patient, not to ask her for the answers I so desperately needed. No Pax, Landon, or Nick expecting me to instantly be who I was before the accident. No Cruz watching me with those hypnotic eyes, telling me with his body that he wanted me while shoving me away with his words.
I was just me.
And I was enough.
Bracing my feet, I let go of the throttle and reached for the sky, my world slowing until moments of infinity lasted in each second. As gravity took hold of my body, I got control of the snowmobile, landing on the other side of the ramp as if Iâd just completed the hardest trick in my repertoire.
But maybe, in digging out the pieces of Rebel that clamored to be let free from the prison Iâd stuck her in, I had.
Throttling down the machine, I drove the snowmobile out of the path of any jumpers, pulling to the side of the ramp.
âHow did that feel?â Pax asked, his arms open.
âReally good,â I admitted, already craving the blissful quiet that had settled over my brain while in the jump. âIn fact, I think Iâll go again.â
His eyes crinkled, the only sign of a grin when his face was covered almost completely by his helmet. âGet to it, Rebel.â
With a twist of the throttle, I headed toward the run, turning as another RenegadeâI think it was Alexâtook the ramp. Nothing fancy, but some good air. His talent had always been big-mountain riding.
Pax, Landon, meâ¦and Nick. We were the only ones who could handle just about everything, even though we all had our areas of expertise. Then again, weâd been risking our necks on everything that moved since we were old enough to ride tricycles.
Once Alex was clear, I studied the ramp on the end that Nick had designed for me. The height, the angles, the distance to get up to speed. It was the exact ramp weâd been working with back in Tahoe last winter beforeâ¦well, everything.
I wished my cell phone was on, that I could talk to him, ask him what he really meant by building that exact ramp here, but I already knew what heâd say. Are you a Renegade or not?
Today I was.
My heart rate sped up, as if my body had already accepted the answer to the question my mind was fighting. I was out of shape. I hadnât been on a snowmobile all season. Muscle memory didnât make up for lack of strength.
But Iâd picked the smallest, lightest snowmobile of the bunch, I was experienced, and Iâd never backed down from a self-imposed challenge.
I sped away from the ramp, then turned to face it. My focus narrowed to the track in front of me that had been put down, and I let everything fade awayâthe cameras, the line of other Renegades watching from the sidelines. Just me and the machine.
I gunned it, speeding toward the ramp, and there it was againâthe sweet oblivion I so desperately needed. I stood, my feet locked on the bars, bracing for the ramp. The machine took the angle perfectly, and we were airborne.
My muscles screamed as I pulled the snowmobile backward into the flip. My vision turned from blue to the green of pine trees to the stark white snow as gravity took hold, pulling me back to the earth.
Youâre not going to make it.
The landing came into view, and it wasnât pretty. It was going to be hardâif I was able to stick it.
Barely clearing the rotation, the skids slammed into the downward slope of the ramp. My ass crashed into the seat, and my entire body jolted forward, whipping into the handlebar. Shit, there went a rib.
I nearly lost the machine as it tilted to the left, but I corrected, throwing both of the skids onto the snow, and slid to a stop at the end of the ramp. Barely enough common sense to overrule my joy, I managed to move the machine to the side.
My chest heaving, I hopped off the snowmobile and threw my hands in the air with a victorious shout. Then I ripped off my helmet and slid my goggles to the top of my head.
âDid you see that?â I shouted to Landon, who was running in my direction.
He didnât stop, and he didnât hug me. His hands gripped my shoulders, his hazel eyes furious as he backed me toward the line of people behind us. âWhat the fuck were you thinking?â
âWhat?â I shouted back. âAre you seriously giving me shit after I just pulled that off? I havenât done that in a year, and I just nailed it!â
âExactly! Youâve barely been out of a cast for a month. I know you havenât so much as touched weightsââ
âAre you suggesting that Iâm out of shape?â My mouth dropped open. It was one thing to know it myself, and quite another to have Landon in my face over it.
âHell yes, I am! Because you are! Donât expect me to treat you like some little girl, Penna, when we both know youâve never stood for it in the past. Iâll dish your shit right back to you. You could have killed yourself!â
âBut I didnât!â
âYou had no business trying to pull off that kind of trick after a whole whopping twenty minutes back on a snowmobile!â
âLike you had any business snowboarding at twenty-one thousand feet when you werenât nearly acclimatized for the altitude?â
âAnd look how that turned out! For fuckâs sake, Penna!â
âI pulled it off!â
âAnd what if you hadnât? What if youâd broken your damned neck?â
âI donât answer to you, Landon!â
âThatâs bullshit! We answer to one another! We hold one another accountable! You know what happens when we donât? Nick ends up in a wheelchair.â
âAnd Brooke drops a stadium light on me. Yeah, Iâm well aware of the consequences, and Iâm currently paying that price. Now stop treating me like this!â
âLike what?â
âLike aâ¦girl!â
âNews flash. You are a girl!â
âYou damn well know what I mean, Landon Rhodes!â
âHey guys,â Pax interrupted from behind us, stepping forward to put a hand on each of our shoulders. âItâs not cool when Mom and Dad fight in front of the kids, okay?â
I glanced over to where the line of Renegades watched, only to realize they werenât all Renegades. Some were the snowshoeing expedition, Cruz standing front and center, his eyes fierce and jaw locked.
Who cares what he thinks? He doesnât want you, anyway.
I ripped my eyes away and concentrated on Pax. âAre you going to light into me, too?â
âNope,â he replied. âI think Landon did a good enough job for the both of us.â
Landon and I locked gazes, and he swallowed, something dark and sad washing over his face. âI canât lose you, too, Penna. None of us can.â
âIâm fine,â I said, this time softer.
âYeah, physically,â Pax added.
âThat was rad, Rebel!â Alex said, passing by for a high five on his snowmobile.
âThanks,â I muttered. âSee, he thinks it was cool,â I argued after heâd passed.
âAlex is an idiot on everything except a board,â Landon countered as Pax left to talk to Cruz. Weâd never had a school excursion cross our path before.
âI didnât mean to scare you.â
Landon shook his head. âI think you meant to scare yourself, or prove something. Iâm not sure whatâs worse.â
âIâve never played it safe.â
âYouâve never played it stupid, either.â He walked off as the camera crew took his place. Great.
From my peripheral vision, I saw Pax gesturing toward the ramps, probably explaining the setup to Cruz. Dr. Delgado, I reminded myself.
âThat was amazing, Rebel! What inspired you to hit up a backflip after all this time?â Bobby asked, gesturing for me to smile.
Rebel facade in place, I gave the camera a coy smile and a little shrug. âNot sure. Just wanted to shake off the dust.â I gave them a wink and made my way to Pax.
But as I approached Cruz, Pax took off toward Leah. It would have been wicked obvious if Iâd turned and changed directions, so I stood next to Cruz, watching Alex get ready to take my ramp.
âYou seriously flipped that snowmobile,â he said, his voice tight.
âRight now Iâm the only woman on the planet who can,â I answered without looking at him.
âAnd that is why they call you Rebel.â
I glanced up at him, taking in his crossed arms and narrowed eyes under his black hat. âAmong other reasons. Iâm not very good at listening to what Iâm supposed to do.â
âWas Landon right? Could you have killed yourself?â
I shrugged. âSome people would say thatâs a possibility with every stunt.â
âBut you wouldnât?â he snapped.
âNot to go all Liam Neeson on you, but I have a particular set of skills that mitigates a lot of the risk.â I looked down the track to see Alex take off, his motor straining under the demand of the throttle.
âBut not all of it.â
âNope.â There was so much I wanted to say, like how that hadnât bothered him in Vegas, but I couldnâtânot in a crowd full of students, though we were pretty alone over here. âYou probably need to put your snowshoes on and get back to your excursion.â
âYeah. We just saw you guys on the hike and decided to check you out.â
Check me out, indeed. A corner of my mouth lifted as Alex hit the ramp.
âNot that way,â Cruz muttered.
âWhat the hell?â Alex pulled the snowmobile into a backflip, which to the best of my knowledge, heâd never done before. He was too slow, too low, andâ âHeâs going to hit,â I whispered a full second before he came down nearly nose-first, his body flying off the snowmobile as it collided with the ground.
Alex rolled down the rest of the ramp. I took off at a run toward him, the snow slowing me down. My chest exploded in pain, and my hand gripped the side of my rib cage that had been abused when I landed.
âThrottleâs stuck!â Landon yelled.
My head swung toward the noise of the whirring motor just in time to see it barreling toward me. Holy shit.
A bulldozer took me to the ground, rolling me under, then over, and under again as the snowmobile passed within a few feet of meâus. Cruz was on top of me, his forearms locked on either side of my head, covering me in every way he could manage.
My ribs screamed, my heart pounded, and yet every discomfort was blocked out by the concern in his eyes. âTell me youâre okay!â
âIâm fine,â I forced out in a wheeze.
âAre you sure? You donât sound fine.â Now those deep brown eyes were downright panicked.
âI canât breathe. Youâre. Really. Heavy.â
âOh shit. Iâm sorry.â He was off me immediately, standing quickly and pulling me up.
My arm wrapped around my injured ribs, my mind forcing the pain into a neat little box. As soon as the adrenaline faded, it was going to hurt like a bitch. The snowmobile had crashed into a snow bank and died. With that problem gone, I looked to the ramp where Alex came to a wavering stand.
âThat was awesome!â he yelled, obviously not injured.
âAnd you think I was stupid?â I called out to Pax as he headed toward Alex.
He waved a finger at me but closed his mouth before he said something as equally idiotic as Alexâs failed stunt.
âMy first impression of you was right,â Cruz said, pulling down his sunglasses so I couldnât see his eyes.
âAnd what was that?â
âThat youâre insane. Youâre all insane.â
His words from the elevator hit me like a high-speed train. âYouâre insane. You know that, right? Crazy hotâno, exquisitely beautifulâsmart, strong, and incredibly magnetic, but a little fucking nuts.â
I walked away before I could say something weâd both regret, but threw a smile over my shoulder at him. âPretty much. Welcome to the Renegades.â
â¦
âPenna!â Hugo caught up to me as I waited for the elevator back on the Athena. In a move of mercy, Bobby had let me sneak away without a camera escort.
âHey, Hugo!â
âHave fun out there?â
âYeah, I actually did.â I shifted my backpack, my muscles deliciously tired and my ribs more on the angry side. âYou really need to come out with us one of these ports.â
âYeah, no. I love you ladies, but youâand those guysâare kind of nuts.â
I laughed, feeling lighter than I had in a while. âYeah, well, they donât call us Renegades for nothing.â
âTrue,â he answered, grinning. âHey, you had a package come in today. I just got the notification. Iâll bring it up in a little bit.â
âIs it in the mail room?â I asked. âBecause I seriously donât mind going to grab it. You already do enough for us.â
âNawh, I donât mind.â
âToo bad. Iâm going to get it. Go take that girl youâve been eyeing during math out for dinner or something.â I motioned toward the redhead waiting at a different elevator.
âJulie?â His head tilted like he was thinking about it. âYeah. Yeah, maybe thatâs a good idea.â Then he practically ran to catch her.
âBoys.â I laughed to myself as Rachel walked up. âIâm going to detour to deck six, wanna come?â
âSure, if youâre finally going to tell me what the hell I walked in on the day before yesterday,â she challenged, her take-no-shit face in place. âAnd donât think that I didnât notice him taking you out of that snowmobileâs path today.â
Ah, the reckoning was finally upon me. I glanced at the students around us as we got onto the elevator. âYeah, letâs just get to the suite first.â
âWhat are you going to do with our day in L.A.?â she asked, keeping our conversation eavesdrop-safe.
âNot sure,â I said honestly. âI want to see my parents, but theyâre alwaysâ¦occupied.â I knew exactly what I wanted to do, but I wasnât sure any of the other Renegades would understand or let me go alone.
âYeah, I need to do the same. I know I just saw them before the X Games, but theyâd kill me if I was in town and didnât stop by. Figured Iâd load up on Cherry Coke since this boat only carries Pepsi, and pray that Landon and my dad donât kill each other during the visit.â
âYeah, good luck with that one.â There was zero love lost between Landon and Rachelâs dad due to some very shitty sponsorship terms that had cost them their relationship onceânearly twice.
The doors opened at our deck, and we walked out into the lobby. I winced as I adjusted my pack.
âYou okay?â she asked.
âI hit my ribs on the handlebar when I landed. Itâs nothing, so donât give me that look.â
She put her hands up, palms out. âHey, youâre a professional. If you say itâs not serious, then Iâll believe you.â
âThank you.â We walked down the narrow hallway past the office sheâd nearly caught me kissing Cruz in, but she didnât say anything, thank God.
âName?â the mail clerk asked as we approached the half door.
âPenelope Carstairs,â I told him.
âHey, Dr. Delgado,â Rachel said.
âRachel,â he said in that gorgeously accented voice. âPenna.â
It had been only a day, and I already missed the way he said Penelope.
Small ship. I cursed my luck but still glanced at him over my shoulder. It was like a law of natureâif Cruz was in the room, I looked at him. Then I craved him, missed the potential of what we could have been, and hated our circumstances. Those, too, were pretty much law since coming aboard ten days ago.
âCarâ¦Carlsonâ¦Carstairs. Here you go,â the clerk said, handing me a shoebox-sized package.
âThanks,â I said absently as I checked out the return label. Oak Moss Grove. I barely made it to the lobby before I ripped the packing tape down to the cardboard to open it.
The flaps came apart easily, revealing the contents, and my knees nearly gave out. âNo, no, noâ¦â I whispered, balancing the package in one arm as I sifted through it with my free hand. âTheyâre all here.â
âWhatâs all there?â Rachel asked.
âWhy? Why would sheâ¦? I donât understand.â How could they all be here? There had to be some explanationâat least thatâs what I told myself to keep my chest from imploding. I barely fought off the urge to curl in on myself, to shrink away from the world the way sheâd managed to do.
âPenna?â Rachel prodded.
I looked up, my vision blurry but clear enough to see Cruz watching me from the stairs with a look of worry in his eyes. Streaks of warmth raced down my face, and he took a couple of steps toward me before stopping himself, a letter of his own gripped in his hand.
âWhatâs in there? Why are you crying?â Rachel asked softly.
I didnât take my eyes off Cruz. âItâs every letter Iâve written to my sister since Dubai, since they put her in Oak Moss Grove.â
His eyes softened, those massive shoulders drooping as if he felt and carried the weight of my sorrow.
âEvery letter?â Rachel looked inside the box.
âI think so. And theyâre all unopened.â
âMaybe sheâs not allowed to get letters?â
âNo, my parents write her all the time and get responses.â
âOh.â
I batted away the tears that ran down my face. âItâs okay. It will be fine. Everything is fine.â
I did my best to pull my shit together, knowing there could be cameras on me at any momentâeven now.
Brooke wouldnât answer my calls or even open my letters. My sister, my other half. She wanted nothing to do with me, and that hurt worse than the aching in my ribs.
âPlease donât tell themâPax or Landon. They donât know that Iâve been writing her.â
âOkay,â Rachel said softly, taking the box from my hands when I began to tremble from the exertion of holding myself together, of not running to Cruz and begging him to jump off another Ferris wheel with me to make everything stop hurting.
âShe betrayed them.â
âShe betrayed you, too,â Rachel whispered.
Sheâd sabotaged every stunt and nearly killed Leah, then Pax, but sheâd never gone after me. Even that final accident, when sheâd dropped the stadium light, causing the accident that crushed my leg, sheâd thought I was Pax. Sheâd never intentionally hurt me. Maybe thatâs why I couldnât stop myself from reaching out to her. But she didnât want me.
I would have traded another three months in that cast for this feeling to go away.
âBut she hadnât. Not until this very moment.â