At Sea âHey, you okay?â Rachel asked from my doorway.
I looked up from where I sat cross-legged on my bed, Cruzâs backpack in front of me.
She waited for a few heartbeats, and when I didnât respond, she walked in and sat on the edge of my bed. âYou skipped class today.â
âMy grades can take it.â My voice sounded raspy to my own ears.
âYeah, well, everyone is going apeshit worrying about you.â
âIâm fine.â My mantra was back and stronger than ever.
âYeah, you staring at this bag for the last six hours? Not fine. Not even partly fine.â
âItâs Cruzâs.â
âI figured. You open it?â
âNo. He asked me toâ¦â I sighed. Maybe if Iâd told my friends about Cruz earlier, they could have helped me protect him. âHe told me to keep it hidden.â
She leaned back to look at it, but didnât touch it. âIs it ticking?â
âVery funny.â A slight smile lifted the corners of my mouth. âYou know what hurts the most? I have no way to get ahold of him. The university shut down his email, and I never thought to get his phone number. How funny is that? Iâve loved this man for months and donât know his phone number.â
âThis ship is like its own little universe. Phone numbers havenât exactly been needed.â
âI sent him a Facebook message, though. At least I found him there, but I have no clue if he has internet access, or what he took with him, or if he can get out of Venezuela. I have no way to contact him.â
âOne, I firmly believe that Doc will be okay no matter where he is. Two, I also know that heâll find you. Third, just open it. Maybe thereâs a way to find him in there. Or itâs a dead body.â
âIn a backpack?â
She shrugged. âStranger things have happened.â
âIâm going to need you to stop watching reruns of Dexter.â
âHey, on-ship entertainment is sparse. Now seriously. Open it. I can leave if you want privacy, but either open it or put it somewhere. Stop staring at it.â
Right or wrong, curiosity and desperation to find something that might connect me to Cruz had my fingers unzipping before my conscience could battle back.
âStay?â I asked Rachel as she stood to leave.
âSure,â she said, sitting back on the bed but not touching the bag.
I pulled out the single accordion file from the main pocket, slipped the elastic over the front, and opened it. The first pocket contained the cruise itinerary.
The second held an envelope of pictures. I flipped through them. âTheyâre all of his sister, but heâs not in any of them.â
âSheâs pretty,â Rachel said, looking at the brown-haired, chocolate-eyed girl.
âShe has the same eyes as Cruz,â I said. She was daintier in her features, but those eyes were identical.
âHey, can I see that?â Rachel asked, and I handed her a picture of Elisa standing in front of a stadium.
âSheâs in Cuba?â
âWhat? I donât think so. They immigrated right before she was born.â
âNo, this stadiumâ¦thatâs where weâre having the Renegade Open. I just saw a bunch of pictures in Landonâs suite. This is definitely it.â
My forehead puckered, and I flipped through the other pictures, this time looking for the background details. The shops were all in Spanish, and the architecture definitely fit with what weâd studied about Havana.
I put the pictures in the envelope and went back to the file, hoping for an explanation.
What I found were two passports. Both with Elisaâs picture, but only one with her name.
âWhat the hell?â I muttered.
âHey, thatâsâ¦â
âDr. Messinaâs name,â I said, running my thumb over the print like some other name would appear. âBut Cruz replaced her.â
âIn more ways than one, it appears.â
âBut why would heâ¦?â I shook my head and looked in the next compartment. There were dozens of military papers clipped togetherâpages and pages of forms with numbers and acronyms I didnât understand.
âHe seriously travels with his military records?â Rachel asked.
I shrugged, unsure of what any of this was.
The next section held printed itineraries from Miami for Cruz and Elisa Delgado to L.A. Their flight was scheduled a few days after we arrived in port, just like mine. Another paper showed a printout of the stadium where we were hosting the Renegade Open in Havana. All the exits were marked, circled in red pen. Small Xs adorned sections of the map, which was broken down floor by floor. The next page showed a receipt for a ticket purchased in Elisaâs name.
Tingles ran up my forearms, followed closely by goose bumps as I put it together.
The last compartment held two ID badges just like the ones we all had to board the ship at every port. One held another picture of Elisa with Dr. Messinaâs name. The other was a picture of Cruz with Dr. Westwickâs.
âYouâre right,â I said to Rachel.
âAbout what?â She examined the map of the stadium.
âHis sister is in Cuba. He was going to use the Renegade Open to get her out.â
â¦
The sun beat down into my gear, and I sent a shot of water from my bottle down my back. Aruba was gorgeous, but I wish I was out with the rest of the Renegades playing on the flyboards. Instead, Nick and I were holed up at a makeshift supercross track nowhere near the beach.
âYou sure youâre ready to try again?â he asked from under his ball cap, the camera crew hovering so close I wanted to punch them. If not for this damn documentary, I would have still had Cruz. If not for this documentary, you never would have met Cruz.
âYeah,â I answered, putting my helmet back on. Iâd consistently slid out on each of my dozen or so attempts this morningâfailing to stick every landing. I knew I only had a few more runs in me before the heat and my own exhaustion took me out.
âThis is getting painful to watch.â
âI never asked you to stay.â
He whistled. âDull your edges there, Penna. Iâm not out here to cut you.â
I hung my head momentarily. âI know. Youâre right. The stuff withâ¦you knowâ¦is still in my head.â
âI get that. I really do. But if youâd like to live through this little stunt of yours, then youâre going to have to block him out for a while. Thereâs only room for one person on that bike, and he is weighing you down.â
âPoint taken.â I gave him a nod and hopped onto Elizabeth. I rode back to the start of the track, giving myself those few moments to think about Cruz.
Where was he? How long had he been planning to get Elisa out of Cuba? How was she there to begin with? The questions hounded me at every moment, invading my peace and stealing my sanity whenever I did manage a quiet second.
I didnât mind the stares of other students or the rumor mill that had started the minute the European History professor took over Cruzâs class and pointedly handed back an entire stack of my regraded work. Gone was the number system Cruz had used to protect us both, but I didnât smirk that I kept my A. I deserved that grade, and our relationship had never played into the classroom. I didnât mind that my teammates handled me like glass, or even Rachelâs constant nagging that I should tell them what I found in the backpack.
What I did mindâthe sharp, rending pain in my heart when I wondered if Cruz had planned this all around me. If heâd used me.
I wasnât stupid. Heâd need me to hack into the database, just like I did every time I wanted to use the wifi, and heâd need me to add Dr. Messina back to the manifest so it wouldnât look odd when she boarded again. Unless Cruz had a computer science degree he wasnât telling me about, well, I was his best shot.
He wouldnât use you like that. My heart railed against my brain, demanding to give Cruz a chance to explain before I jumped to the obvious conclusion.
Thereâs nothing he wouldnât do for his sister, my head countered.
I silenced them both as I pulled up to the start of the track. Taking a deep, steadying breath, I pictured my mind like a cluttered dry-erase board. Then I envisioned wiping it clean with big, powerful swipes of my mental eraser. Mind clear, I pictured the ramp, the jump, and the perfect landing.
A peaceful wave of serenity washed over me, and I felt it. This was the time I nailed it.
My eyes snapped open, and I hit the throttle. Palm and divi-divi trees blurred as I sped down the track. Gear by gear, I accelerated as the super-ramp loomed bigger and bigger.
I hit the ramp, going nearly vertical as I raced toward the sky. Then I flew.
Feeling the arc, I pulled the bike into the backflip. The ground and sky traded places once, and my muscles screamed as I urged Elizabeth around again, watching the kaleidoscope of the earth spinning around me.
As the ground rushed up to meet me, I righted the bike and braced for impact.
My back tire hit first, then the front. My body jarred, lurching forward, but I stayed seated as I brought the bike to a stop.
In the background, I heard Nickâs whoop as I lifted off my helmet. I didnât cheer or even fist pump. I simply leaned my head back, accepting the sunâs caress on my face. Then I laughed, loudly and joyously, ignoring the cameras.
I did it.
I was the first woman to ever successfully land a double backflip on a supercross ramp.
A small twinge of bitterness stole into my heart, twisting the taste of my victory. In that moment, it wasnât Nickâs congratulations, or even Pax or Landonâs that I wanted. All I wanted was Cruz.
â¦
Nine. That was the number of times I landed the flip after the first completion. When Nick forced me to stop for the evening, he used the sunset as the excuse, but I knew it was because he saw the exhaustion stretched across every line of my body.
I had the trick, but I could still do some major damage to myself if I didnât stop while my muscles were capable.
I changed in the tent the crew had assembled while Nick handled settling up with the facility manager in the office. Bag packed, I slung it over my shoulder and walked out into the warm, humid evening.
âPenna!â Nick called from the office doorway, which sat about ten yards back from the track.
âWhatâs up?â
âYou have a phone call.â
âOkay.â My eyebrows shot skyward, but I crossed the distance, wondering if Pax or Landon needed something.
Nick held the door as I walked through it, his lips in a pressed line. âYouâll want to take it in there,â he said, motioning toward a small, private office.
I dropped my bag and headed for the phone, closing the door behind me before grabbing the receiver and hitting the flashing red light. âHello?â
âPenelope.â
His voice was a soft sigh that cut through me like the sharpest knife.
âCruz? Where are you? Are you okay?â I sat on the edge of the desk, my knees immediately weak in a way that had nothing to do with the riding Iâd done this afternoon.
âIâm in Santo Domingo.â
I blinked. âIn the Dominican Republic?â
âThatâs the one. I fly back to the States tomorrow.â
âI looked in the backpack.â
âOkay.â His voice was annoyingly calm.
âThatâs all you have to say?â
âI assumed you would when I left. I needed you to hide it from Dean Paul and the shipâs security, Penelope, not from yourself. I had no clue I wasnât coming back.â
âWhat did you think I was going to do with it?â I snapped.
âI kind of hoped youâd throw it into the ocean.â Ugh, I could practically see him shrug from here, like it didnât matter one bit to him.
âReally. You want me to get rid of fake passports, and maps, and ID badges that you obviously procured illegally and at some cost? Those passports look too good, Cruz. They must have cost you a shit ton.â
âThey did. And only one is fake.â
âOh, just one. Thatâs the line you want to draw?â
âThrow it overboard, Penelope. If you get caught with it, youâll be arrested.â
âNo shit, Sherlock. But you obviously need it, otherwise you wouldnât have left it with me.â
âThatâs one of the reasons Iâm calling.â His voice dropped in his Iâm-getting-angry voice.
âAnd the other?â My heart paused its beats, as if it needed his response to push life through me.
âBecause I love you, Penelope.â
And just like thatâI could breathe again.
âI needed to hear your voice,â he explained. âWhen they interviewed me, they had some of the footage already, and it wasnât even the bad stuff. But I knew theyâd find it. Dean Paul agreed that if I resigned immediately and didnât fight it, Iâd lose my job but avoid any hit to your grades, your enrollment, or your reputation.â
I rested my head in my open hand. âOh God. You didnât have to. Iâm the one who pursued you. Iâ¦I ruined you.â
âYou were the one who chased you into an office on your birthday, unable to bear the thought of another manâs hands on you?â
âWell, no.â
âExactly. There is equal blame because we are equal partners in this relationship. And please donât think that because there are four hundred miles between us that weâre broken up or something asinine like that.â
I grinned. âSo weâre still together?â
âI just walked away from everything Iâve worked the last ten years for. If youâre not waiting for me in Miami, then it was pretty much for nothing.â There was a pause while I weighed his words against what Iâd found in the bag. âUnless youâve changed your mind?â
That small, nagging doubt edged its way in. âNo, but I need to know if you used me. I found the receipt for the Open ticket, and you have to explain, because right now I know there are about fifty things youâre not telling me.â
He sighed, and I could picture his hand running over his hair. âElisa is in Cuba.â
âFigured that out.â
âShe went back with my mother. She was only a baby, and Mom couldnât leave her like she left me.â He said it with such dispassion, as if his abandonment was simply a matter of fact.
âAnd when your mother died?â
âShe stayed with my father. She had no choice, no way out, and sheâs been stuck there ever since, living with the man who killed our mother and wonât ever see the inside of a cell for it.â
My eyes slid shut, as Cruzâs heartache took seed in my chest. âIâm so sorry.â
âMe, too. Iâve tried to get her out before, but my father is high up in the Ministry of the Interior. Every time I booked a flight, I found myself detained at the airport before I could get on the plane.â
âHe has you on a watch list.â
âYes. So when Dr. Messina left for the cruise, and I was finishing up my dissertation, I asked if she would refer me to teach on board next year, knowing that they take professors from colleges all over the U.S., and Havana was one of the ports.â
âBut she left this year.â
âAnd I took the opportunity. It was such short notice that I had to work on everything en routeâthe passports, the airline ticketsâ¦convincing you that Havana was the perfect place to host the Open.â
I scoffed. âIt took one suggestion. Apparently Iâm pretty damn easy.â
âYouâre anything but easy, Penelope. But I knew that with so many Americans coming in for the Open and the ship in port, it would have been the perfect time to get her out. She was supposed to find me at the Openâshe knew I was with you guys and even that you call me Doc. Thatâs how she was going to ask for me, not that it matters now. I would have signed her on board with Dr. Messinaâs badgeââ
âThat you faked,â I said.
âYes, but when they checked the manifest, they would have seen that she was listed and let her through.â
âYou mean after you asked me to remove you from the manifest so you could get into Cuba, and add her so she could get on. How were you planning to get off the ship? Posing as Dr. Westwick?â
âYes.â
âAnd when he tried to get off?â
âI figured you might be able to help me figure a work-around there.â
âUnbelievable.â
âYes,â he said softly, as if that was enough of an apology. âI was always going to tell you.â
âBut only when you needed me.â
âI canât deny that. I put so much trust in you. My entire career was in your handsâmy heart, my body, my future. But I didnât know how youâd feel about what I was doing, and quite frankly, I wasnât prepared to bet Elisaâs life or risk that youâd get caught.â
Logically, I understood. She was his sister.
I almost laughed, realizing that while Cruz was risking his very life to save his sister, mine couldnât even return a letter or be bothered to see me.
Elisa was innocent in all of this, and Cruz was genuinely worried for her safety.
âIâll do it,â I said softly.
âDo what? Forgive me for not telling you?â
âMaybe, one day. But Iâll get her out. I have everything, and I can do it. I needâ¦â I took a steadying breath. âIâd like your permission to bring the others in. Iâll need their help, and you can trust them.â
It went against everything in my nature to ask someone to confide in my friends, but this wasnât my secret.
âNo. Youâre not putting yourself in danger like that. You have no idea what the laws are there, or how watched she is. I donât give a fuck who you tell, because it wonât work without me there, and Iâm not putting you in the line of fire.â
âSheâs your sister, Cruz.â
âAnd I will find another way to get her out without risking you!â he shouted.
The air rushed from my lungs.
âI love Elisa, and I will get her out. I will get her to Harvard. But there is a line that I will not cross for her, and that line is you. Donât you dare put yourself in danger, Penelope. I canât bear the thought of it, and I will not live without you.â
My chin trembled, and I did my best to force back every emotion that could cloud this decision. I had cost him his career; I would not be the reason he lost Elisa.
âI love you,â I told him. âAnd you wonât lose me.â
âI love you even more.â His voice pitched up, stressed. âDonât do anything. Throw the bag overboard, burn it. I donât care. Thereâs another way.â
âI am the other way. You just have to trust me.â
âPenelope!â
âI love you, and Iâll see you in Miami.â
I hung up the phone before my resolve broke and then strode out of the office, Nick hot on my heels.
We were quiet on the drive back to the Athena as my mind raced with every possibility.
âGet everyone together,â I ordered as we split ways in the hallway of the Athena.
âPlease?â he openly teased me.
âNow,â I said, with a smile and a nod.
I gathered the accordion file and everything that was in it and headed to Paxâs suite, where the others made their way to the dining room table.
âOut!â I said to Bobby.
âFor fuckâs sake, Penna,â he whined. âThe contractââ
âAfter what you cost me, do you seriously think Iâm going to give a ratâs ass about the contract? Get out!â
He stomped like a toddler, but he took his crew with him.
âWhatâs up?â Pax asked.
I spread the documents on the table and leaned forward on my palms.
âI want to pull off the biggest stunt of our lives, and Iâm going to need your help.â