At Sea âSomething is different,â Rachel said the next evening as I studied at our dining room table.
I looked up from my calculus book and took a sip of my post-workout protein smoothie Landon was torturing me with. âWith what?â
She sat down across from me, folded her arms, and narrowed her eyes. âWith you.â
I felt the sudden urge to swipe at my forehead just in case âGave Up My V-Cardâ had been tattooed overnight. âI donât know what you mean.â
âYouâre happy,â she accused.
âHappy is a crime?â
âHappy is odd for you, lately.â
I did a quick assessment. Physically I was sore in a way Iâd never experienced before. Because youâve never had someone inside you before, duh. Emotionallyâ¦huh. âI guess youâre right. Iâm kind of happy.â
âWho is he?â
I scoffed and took a completely obvious sip of my disgusting smoothie. âWhat the hell does your boyfriend put in these?â
âThe tears of my enemies. Now who is he?â
I shut my math book and stood. âI have no idea who youâre talking about.â
âYeah, okay,â she mocked. âSeriously. You didnât come home last night, youâre all secretive in your room lately, and now youâre all glowy and shit. I know one thing does that to a girl, and itâs a guy, so who is he, Penna?â
âMaybe Iâm happy because I aced last weekâs geography test. Maybe Iâm happy because Iâve been getting enough sleep, or because Iâm back in the gym. Exercise causes endorphins, you know.â
âUh-huh. So does sex.â
I rolled my eyes at her and took my book to my room, dropping it on the stack that consumed my desk.
âYou know I wouldnât tell the others, right?â she asked softly, leaning against my doorframe. âI owe you for so many things, and you were there for me when you most definitely didnât have to be, given our history. I just want to make sure that youâre okay and that you know Iâm here. Leahâs here, too, justâ¦you knowâ¦down the hall.â
I smiled and hugged her to me, squeezing her tiny frame. âYes, I know. And thank you. I promise that if itâs something that needs to be talked about, Iâll do the talking with you, okay?â
She pursed her lips and openly glared at me before softening when she realized she wasnât going to win this battle. âYeah. Okay. Fine,â she threw over her shoulder and left me in peace.
Rachel was right. I was happy. All the shit with Brooke, my parentsâ selfish defense of her dismissive cruelty, it all faded away with the thought of how simply, beautifully happy I was with Cruz. And that had been before the sex. Now I was just blissed-out on cloud nine.
Was this how Rachel felt about Landon when they cheated on Pax? How Pax felt about Leah when we told him it wasnât safe for him to fall for his tutor? If so, I finally understood why they had risked everything, their very souls at times, to be togetherâto keep this feeling.
I stared at myself in the mirror, wondering if I could see a physical change. Other than more muscle definition from my enforced gym time, I looked exactly the same. Except my eyes. Those were brighter. They werenât sunken in anymore, or shadowed. I looked like me again.
A blob of pink caught my eye, and I turned to see my lucky Fox bandana hanging off the corner of my bed frame. Before I lost the urge, I plucked it from its resting place and took off, barely remembering a key on my way out.
With single-minded focus, I ignored everything on my trip to the fourth deck, unwilling to let anything distract me in case I lost courage. Bursting through the door to the mechanic shop, I looked around at the team working. Every head turned to look at me, including Paxâs.
âEveryone get out.â My voice carried across the space, clear and decisive. âIâm not kidding, get the hell out!â
Paxâs eyebrows shot toward the roof, but he cleared his throat. âYou heard Rebel, get out.â
One by one, the CTDs filed out. Pax never let a single Crash Test Dummy near a bike or any other piece of equipment until they knew how to destroy it and rebuild it from the ground up.
Pax walked over, camera crew in tow.
âYou okay? Need me?â
I smiled and patted his arm. âNot this time. But if you could take them with you?â
âYour contractââ Victor started.
âFuck my contract, or the next time Iâll tell Doc to let you fly overboard, got it?â I snapped. There was zero chance I was letting this happen on camera. Not if there was even the slightest chance I couldnât do it.
âAnd thatâs your cue to leave,â Pax said to Victor, slapping him on the back. The man took one more look at me and vacated the room.
âYou too, Pax,â I said softly.
âLook, whatever youâre going throughââ
âIsnât something you can help me with, otherwise I would have come to you after Dubai. You like to fix things. After being your best friend for the past, oh, seventeen years, Iâve caught on to your ways. I need to fix this myself.â
His gaze dropped to where I had my bandana clutched in my hand. âOkay. You know I love you, right? Thereâs nothing I wouldnât do for you.â
âI know.â
He swallowed and conceded the battle, closing the door on his way out. I knew what walking away cost him, and loved him all the more for it.
Alone in the mechanic shop, I walked toward where Elizabeth rested, held up by her travel stand Landon had made to safely house the bikes on the rough seas. I ran my hand over her smooth seat, across the gauge, and up to the handles, as if I was introducing myself again to her.
âIâm so sorry itâs taken me this long,â I said quietly. âItâs not that I blamed you for what happened; I blamed my own choices. I thought if I returned to you that it meant everything that happened with Brooke meant nothing, like I was throwing my sister away if I went back to what I love. But thatâs not true, and the more I find myself, the more I know the biggest piece of me thatâs missing is you.â
I swung my leg over Elizabeth and settled into the seat.
Home.
My hands flexed on her handles, and my eyes closed, my body finding the immediate balance and peace. I moved with the dips of the ship, and I knew it was time. This was where I belonged, and I couldnât let Brooke take this from me.
Sheâd taken enough already.
It didnât mean that I didnât love her, didnât worry about her. It simply meant that I couldnât live my life running from her fears. I hopped off Elizabethâs back and walked over to the supply section of Paxâs shop, where everything was crated and carefully contained.
Then, with my thoughts on every pitch of the ship, I methodically changed her oil and performed some routine maintenance, losing myself in the actions Iâd performed thousands of times.
When I was done, I washed my hands and opened the door to find Pax and Landon sitting with their backs against the wall in the middle of the hallway. They looked up with cautious optimism.
âScared I was going to steal shit?â I asked with a grin.
Landon sighed in relief, then jumped to his feet, pulling me into a bear hug. âMore scared we were going to hear the sounds of you beating the shit out of your bike.â
âNawh,â I said, hugging him right back. âYou guys want to come with me for a second? I think I have a plan.â
They both nodded, then soundlessly followed me to my suite, knowing Iâd only talk when I was good and damn ready. I brought my laptop out to our dining room and, filled with sheer jealousy, blatantly ignored Rachel sitting on Landonâs lap.
Two months. Then you can go public.
A tiny skip of joy in my heart, I hacked into the shipâs internet system, using precious bandwidth to connect to the net. Then I fired up Skype and hit Nickâs name.
A few rings later, he picked up, those blond curls and contagious smile filling the screen.
âWell, if it isnât my favorite Rebel. What can I do for you, girl?â
âYou still there with Little John?â
âYeah, heâs working on some stuff with me. Miss him already?â
âAlways. Look. I know you donât want to come down here. I know youâre not ready to go public, and Iâm about to ask you to chance it.â
He leaned forward. âPenna, whatâs going on?â
âWhen Little John comes to Buenos Aires with my ramp, I need you to come, too. Weâll need on-the-spot ramp modifications that only you will be able to accomplish.â
Those eyes went dead serious, and I could all but feel Pax and Landon breathing down my neck behind me. âYou have my attention.â
âI know what I want to do for the Cuba open, and I might not be in shape yet, but I still have two months to get there and at least four ports, if you can move ramps that fast for practice.â
He arched an eyebrow, waiting for me to drop the bomb.
âIâm going to be the first woman to complete a freestyle motocross double backflip.â
âYouâre fucking kidding me,â Pax growled.
I spun. âSeriously, Mr. Gotta-nail-the-triple-front?â
âThe bike is too heavy. You know that. Thatâs why itâs never been done. It can kill you,â he fired back.
âThen we drop as much weight as we can from the bike. Strip it to the barest of bones.â
âNo.â
âYou donât get to tell me no. Youâre not my dad, my boyfriend, or my sponsor. What you are is my best friend, and itâs your job to shut the fuck up and support me just like weâve all done for you.â
His fists flexed on the back of the chair.
âLandon?â I asked, abandoning Pax to his temper tantrum.
He raked his hand over his hair and blew out his breath in a long sigh. âYouâre determined to do this?â
âI am,â I said, not realizing just how badly until the words escaped.
âOkay. Well, you have a bigger shot at not killing yourself if weâre all on board. You went to twenty-one thousand feet for me, and Iâm ready to go to hell for you. Iâm in. Weâll get you stronger, but you have to be willing to put in the work.â
Hope blossomed in my chest. It was one thing to make the choice, and another to know my family was ready to back me up.
âNick?â I asked.
Out of all of us, Nick had lost the most in pursuit of a trick. If anyone had a reason to tell me no, it was him. But if anyone understood what it was like to chase the impossibleâ¦well, he had that spot, too.
âMaybe if we construct foam pits at each port until Cuba. Iâll contact the FMX tracks there and see what theyâve got. Itâs going to cost us some money in material and crew to assemble at every port when thereâre only days between them, but it can be done. You have my support, even if I think youâre a little nuts.â
âI would totally hug you if you were here,â I told him, wishing more than anything that heâd come with us, that the Originals were whole through more than a computer screen.
âGive me a few weeks and you can. Iâll meet you in Buenos Aires in three weeks. Pax, can you keep the cameras the fuck away from me?â
We all turned to look at Pax, whoâd backed against the bar that separated our dining room from our mini-kitchen, his arms folded across his chest.
âHey, Wilder,â Nick shouted. âYou might be the leader of our little troop, but all four of us are the Originals. We have equal say, and when three go against four, the three win.â
Paxâs jaw ticked.
âSo you donât have to agree with her, but youâd better damn well support her, because the last time we werenât fully there for one another I ended up in this goddamned chair.â
Paxâs head snapped up. âThatâs not fair.â
âIâm not blaming you. I havenât in a long time. But Iâm in here because I didnât wait for you. I competed against you, went on my own, and didnât have everyone there telling me when Iâd pushed too far, or compensating for my idiocy. So you donât have to agree with Penna, but you will fucking support her, because thatâs what we do.â
Pax looked at me, the weight of the world dimming his eyes. âWhat if you get hurt? What if youâre the next one paralyzed?â
âWhat if I live every day with that fear and never get out of bed? Come on, Pax. Iâm just like you. Just like Landon and Nick. You canât protect me from the same choices youâd make. You canât shield me from myself, from what weâve made one another.â
A long moment passed where it could have gone either way. Nick was right. We didnât need him, but I wanted him to be there for me the same way Iâd always been for him.
âOkay, Iâm with you.â
My shoulders drooped with relief. The last thing I wanted on my mind at the same time I was trying to pull this off was infighting with my brothers. âThank you.â
âBut Iâm not the one who has to sign off on it.â
âWhat?â Nick asked.
My eyes slid shut as my stomach hit the floor. âFuck my life.â
âShe has to convince Dr. Delgado.â