At Sea âI call this meeting of the Original Renegades to order,â Pax said, lifting his Corona bottle.
We all clinked our longnecks and then tipped slightly toward where Nick sat on Skype next to Paxâs seat at the dining room table.
âYou guys do realize itâs two in the morning, right? I mean, we are still in the same time zone,â Nick said, running a hand over his sleep-mussed hair.
âItâs the only time we can meet without Bobby knowing,â Landon answered.
âSo whaaaaat are we doing?â I asked as I yawned. Getting back in shape meant I was exhausted by the end of the day, let alone the middle of the night.
âWhile we were home, I got called in by UCLA,â Pax said.
âOkay?â Landon prompted.
âThereâs a threat of Gabeâs parents suing over what happened in Nepal.â
I sat up straight, my beer forgotten on the table in front of me.
âHoly shit,â Landon whispered, running his hands down his face. âI just saw him while we were home. He looked goodâcasts off and everythingâand he sure as hell didnât say anything about this.â
âItâs not Gabe,â Pax assured him. âHis parents werenât even telling him until after we left.â
âScared weâd talk him out of it?â Nick asked.
âThatâs my guess. Heâd never go for this shit.â Landon swore.
âHe signed a waiver,â I said. âWe all did. Hell, even Leah has a waiver on file. How the hell can they sue us?â
âTheyâre not suing us,â Pax answered quietly, opening the manila file in front of him. âTheyâre threatening to sue UCLA for not supervising the Renegade Program, which theyâre saying is the cause of Gabeâs injury.â
âFuck that!â Landon hissed. âGabe got hurt because we tried to board one of the most dangerous ridgelines in the world at twenty-one thousand feet with little to no acclimatization in avalanche conditions, and guess what? An avalanche happened. We were all more than aware of the safety risks, and we chose to ride anyway. He knows that.â
I crossed my flannel-pajama-clad legs under me and leaned my elbows on the table, resting my forehead on my palms. In the ten years since weâd started the Renegades as a lark in Paxâs backyard to the last five where weâd become a corporation, no one had ever come after us directly. Let alone a member of our own Renegade family. It was unthinkable.
But here we were, thinking about it.
âOkay, so whatâs the solution?â I asked. âBrandon has one, right? If theyâre not coming after us, itâs because Brandon shut them down before they had a chance.â
âRight. Our waivers indemnify us, and it helps that we all signed an additional one specifically for Nepal. But the school is another issue. Theyâre in agreement that we need supervision.â
âDid you tell them you own this ship?â Nick questioned.
âYeah, they werenât impressed. Not with a lawsuit being threatened. I talked to Brandon, guys. Weâre stuck unless we agree to a faculty member to sit in a supervisory role.â
âThey think we need a damned chaperone?â Landon snapped.
Paxâs eyes shot up the stairs. âIf you wake Leah, weâre going to have words. She has a huge math test tomorrow.â
I rolled my eyes, not bothering to tell him I had the same test slated for tomorrow. When it came to Leah, there was no speaking logic to Pax. âFine. So we pick a faculty member to sign off as what? A sponsor, like weâre some kind of after-school club?â
âThey have to be on-site.â
Landonâs beer sprayed from his mouth, raining Corona all over the table in front of us. âIâm sorry, youâre saying they have to go on the stunts with us? What the hell are we going to do? Strap Professor Lawson onto an ATV and tell him to hit the ramps? The guy has got to be seventy.â
âSeventy-two, actually,â Pax answered. He pulled a list of names and put it in front of us. âThatâs every teacher on this ship. Iâve narrowed our options down to the two most likely to say yes.â
âThe two youngest, Iâm assuming?â Nick asked. âTheyâve got to be able to keep up.â
âThe two you can find some way to partially keep happy enough to let us do whatever the hell we want, or the end of this documentary is screwed,â Landon added.
Of course I knew the answer. He was over six feet tall and two hundred and thirty pounds of carved muscle. He was in better shape than most of the Renegades and had experience jumping out of planes. He was the perfect option, and the only one I didnât want.
âCruz,â I whispered.
âWhat?â Pax asked.
Shit.
âDr. Delgado. His first name is Cruz,â I said, keeping my eyes open and honest. These guys were my brothers, pretty much the only siblings I had left, and if I didnât have to lie, I wasnât going to.
Pax looked down at his papers, and his eyebrows shot up. âSheâs right.â
âHow the hell do you know that?â Landon asked.
âOh, come on. I know you guys think youâre the hottest guys on the ship, but trust me, girls talk, and while youâre the old-and-monogamous, heâs the new hotness. Ask any woman on this ship, including your girlfriends, and sheâll be able to tell you. Besides, sometimes he runs at the same time I do,â I finished.
The three of them stared at me like I had three headsâlike somehow in the midst of all the bikes, jumps, and stunts, theyâd forgotten that I was a girl.
âDudeâs in shape,â Landon said with a shrug. âIâve seen him in the gym, and I have no doubt he could keep up with us, or even pass us up.â
If Cruz became our faculty sponsor, heâd be with us on every stunt. Every excursion. Every overnight. Between Renegade business and class, Iâd never escape him. I cursed my traitorous heart, which sped up at the thought of spending so much time with him. The logical side of me knew it was the worst thing we could agree to. The sexual tension between us was heavy enough to anchor this damn ship, and if we spent that much time together, it was only a matter of time before we crossed that line againâ¦
Or someone noticed.
âIs there anyone else we could consider?â I asked.
âMiss Gibson is the next youngest,â Pax answered.
âYou guys could probably charm her,â I admitted, then sighed, knowing what was going to be said next.
âYeah, but Delgado could keep up with us, and by the look of him, he might actually be down for the shit we pull,â Landon added.
âHeâs right,â Pax agreed. âI could see Miss Gibson nixing everything thatâs perfectly safe, just because she doesnât understand what we do.â
Cruz wouldnât back down, but I couldnât tell them that. Theyâd ask how I knew about his military experience, or the fact that he had zero fear when weâd jumped from the High Roller. I swallowed as a lump fought for supremacy in my throat. Iâd never had a secret I couldnât tell these guys, never had a problem that we couldnât all solve together, and here I was hiding the fact that Iâd been trying to contact the woman who nearly destroyed us, because I missed her, and I had wildly inappropriate thoughts about the guy they wanted to bring on as our sponsor.
But I was a Renegade first.
âWe ask Delgado first. Heâs the best choice.â
âAgreed.â One by one they spoke the word that sealed my fate.
â¦
The hallway on the academic deck was packed when Rachel caught up to me. âSo, Landon just told me.â
âTold youâ¦?â
âAbout Dr. Delicious being our new sponsor?â She raised her eyebrows at me.
âDonât call him that.â I looked down at my watch. Fifteen minutes until the math test I should have rested for. Instead, Iâd spent my night rolling around my bed, unable to sleep, finally sitting on my deck to watch the sunrise as we pulled into the port of Cabo San Lucas. I was going to be anything but on my game for this afternoonâs stunt.
She lowered her voice. âFine. Whatever. Are you okay with that?â
âOf course. Why wouldnât I be?â
âSeriously? I havenât forgotten what I walked in on. I just gave you a little space.â
âShh!â I hushed her, knowing we were coming up on Cruzâs classroom. âYou walked in on nothing.â Liar.
âYeah, okay, and the Statue of Liberty is a knickknack. Look, if you donât want to talk to me, thatâs fine. I just know that you usuallyâ¦â
âTalk to my sister?â I asked.
âOr the guys.â
I snorted. The guys would be the last people on Earth I told about Cruz. Theyâd never understand, and then theyâd get all protective, and crap would get really bad really fast.
I paused in the hallway, taking her hand with my free one. âI appreciate what youâre saying. And if there were anything to tell, as crazy as it sounds, youâd be the person Iâd come to.â It surprised me how true that was, how the one person I used to hate more than anyone was the only person I knew I could trust with this if I had to.
But there was nothing to tell. Cruz had drawn that line.
âMiss Carstairs.â His voice came from behind me as if Iâd summoned him, and I realized that we were stopped in front of his doorway.
Rachel lifted a single eyebrow at me, and I made the âwhat?â face at her before turning around.
âDr. Delgado?â
Ugh, he looked good today. Gray slacks that made his ass appear in desperate need of a grab, and a rolled black shirt with a silver tie. Did he know how to wear his shirts any other way? I kinda hoped not.
âI need to see you for a second, if youâll come in and shut the door.â
âYeah, nothing to tell,â Rachel whispered over my shoulder.
âIâll meet you back at the room after class.â
âUh-huh,â she said with another roll of her eyes, but she walked off.
Doing as Cruz asked, I walked into his room and closed the door behind me. âYes, Dr. Delgado?â I asked with exaggerated innocence.
âKnock it off,â he said, sitting back on his desk.
âOh, this isnât where I tell you that I need a little extra credit and drop to my knees?â I asked playfully, leaning against the desk across from him.
âNot funny,â he said, looking at me with barely leashed hunger. At least I wasnât the only sexually frustrated one in the room.
âWhy did you want to see me?â
He turned and grabbed a small stack of papers. âTell me why I should sign these.â
All humor drained out of me like someone had pulled the drain on a bathtub. âThe sponsorship papers?â
âYeah.â
âDamn, Pax is fast.â It was only nine a.m. for crying out loud.
âYeah, and insistent.â
âWhat did he offer as terms?â I asked, holding my math books to my chest like a shield.
âA raise that would let me pay off my grandmotherâs house before we dock in Miami.â
âGo figure. Pax throws money at a problem,â I muttered.
âWhat?â he asked.
âNothing. You take it. Hell, Iâd pretty much sell my soul to pay off your grandmotherâs house, and Iâve only met the woman once.â
âWait, you want me to do this? Iâll be around you all the time if I agree. Youâre on my class excursions, and Iâd be on all your stunt trips. Is this really what you want?â His forehead puckered like he was trying to figure me out.
Good luck with that.
âNo, I donât want you to,â I answered.
His shoulders fellâ¦in disappointment of losing the money? Or losing the chance to be around me?
âDo you want me to turn it down?â he clarified.
âNo,â I said quietly. âI donât want that, either.â
âPenelope.â He sighed in frustration.
âIs it just the money? Because if itâs about your grandmaâs house, I can arrange to have that paidââ
âYou will do no such thing,â he snapped. âIâm well aware how much money you have. Hell, the Wilder kid throws it around without even realizing it. Do you even grasp how ludicrous it is that a twenty-two-year-old kid owns a damn cruise ship?â
I hadnât honestly. Paxâs dad was preparing to step down from Wilder Enterprises, andâ âDamn, you actually think thatâs normal. Itâs like we live on two different planets.â
âI just didnât want you doing this for the money, especially being around me more than you have to. I canât help what I was born into.â
He put his empty hand up, palm out. âI know. Iâm sorry. Just tell me what you want me to do. If you want me as your sponsor, if you need me, Iâll do it.â
âDo you want to do it?â I asked.
âFollow you guys around while you do impossibly cool and reckless shit? Sure, Iâm down for itâas you well know. But there are other things to consider.â
âThings like youâ¦and me.â But not us.
âYes. Weâd be together a lot.â
âWhat does that matter? You drew a line. Iâm respecting it.â I shrugged like I didnât care, when it couldnât have been further from the truth. The more time I spent with him, the more I wanted.
âI didnât draw a line, school policy did. If Iâm going to join on to the Renegades as your sponsor, letâs make sure thatâs crystal clear, Penelope.â
âPenna,â I corrected him. âOr Rebel, your choice.â
âIâm sorry?â He put the papers down and crossed his arms over his chest.
âIf you are going to come into my world, then itâs Penna or Rebel. Your Penelope doesnât exist in the Renegades. Iâm Rebel, an Original, a four-time X Games medalist, one of which is in an all-male category. I donât go soft and doe-eyed for boys, because I worked too damn hard to get where I am to be a piece of ass for some guy on the circuit. If you want to take this job as our sponsor, I support you. Hell, youâre the best fit for the position, honestly. But you have to realize that you donât know the girl who goes out thereâyouâve barely gotten a glimpse of who I am.â
âI know you,â he challenged.
âYou donât,â I threw back, knowing it was partially a lie. He knew who I was in the marrow of my bones, in all the ways that really mattered, but I wasnât only the person he saw, and he was missing too much of the full puzzle to say he knew me. I shook my head, fully aware this was stupid, that we were putting ourselves and his career at risk by spending this much time together, but also realizing this would give him the means to take care of his grandmother.
âSign the papers, Dr. Delgado,â I said, moving to leave.
âThatâs it? Thatâs your advice in all this? Thereâs nothing else you have to say?â
I paused at the door and turned to him, loving and hating the way he stripped me to the barest of truths with a simple look. But I was going to have to get used to it if he was going to be with me on every stunt, every trip. I couldnât let him affect me.
A smirk played at my lips until it turned into a laugh, the irony of this situation almost too much to handle.
âMaybe one more piece of advice.â
âPlease, do tell me.â
âKeep up.â