In memory of Louise Bluhm
1918-2006
And to Grandma Judy—because if it wasn’t for you, I never would’ve finished that rag quilt, and I wouldn’t have an endless supply of fuzzy housecoats.
I have everything I need to live out my dream of being a reclusive songwriter—my guitar, my notebook, and blissful silence.
At least, I did until Jimmy moved in next door.
He’s got bad news written all over him. And last time I got with a bad boy, it ended with me pointing a gun and pulling the trigger.
Talk about going out with a bang.
Jimmy makes me want things I shouldn’t want, which means I have two options: avoid him or piss him off. But no matter what I do he isn’t fazed, and I’m quickly realizing there’s more to Jimmy than I originally thought.
Over the past year, I’ve been called a lot of things. Slacker. Troublemaker. Party animal.
I thought I was on top of the world. Turns out, I was pretty close to rock bottom.
Now I have a new title: college dropout.
But I’ve got a chance to redeem myself—one summer of squeaky-clean behavior at Grandma Beverly’s. Two months to prove I’m not a complete f*ck-up.
And four rules to follow with the gorgeous girl next door. Rules aren’t exactly my forte, but I only plan on breaking one of them.
I want to get back to being one of the good guys.
Three Years Ago
Lindsey: You’re such a bitch
Tiffany: Everyone hates you now
Sierra: Why are you doing this to Jaxon? I hope you don’t plan on sticking around after graduation. No one wants you here
I blinked away the stinging in my eyes as I read over the tag-team texts from my best friends.
Former best friends.
Or maybe they were never my friends in the first place. Either way, it was safe to say those relationships were officially over.
I didn’t have anything to say to them, so I started to set the phone back down on the nightstand. Another chirp stopped me. This time when I looked at the screen, Jaxon’s name showed up. I’d purposely ignored the eighteen texts he sent me tonight, but this one caught my attention.
Jaxon: I’m outside
My eyes flew to the window, which I knew for a fact was closed and locked. My heart raced as I tried to remember if I’d locked the front and back doors.
I did. I was sure of it.
I typed out a short reply.
Me: Go home Jaxon
Then I buried myself further under the covers, wishing the layers of warmth could keep me safe somehow.
A few seconds later the phone rang in my hand, and I immediately pushed ‘ignore’ as I crawled out of bed.
I held the screen to my stomach as I made my way to the window, hoping he wouldn’t see the light in the darkened room. Peeping through the curtains, I saw Jaxon’s old red Jeep sitting in the gravel driveway, and I spotted his shadowed figure in the front seat.
My voicemail chime went off, causing me to jump a little. Reluctantly, I put the phone up to my ear while inching toward my bedroom door.
“Who are you spreading your legs for, you filthy cunt?” Jaxon’s rage-filled voice made my breathing pick up as I tiptoed through the hallway. “Come outside or else. Don’t make me come in there. It won’t be pretty.”
Click.
Panic bloomed in my chest, squeezing and crushing until I struggled for air.
Since the breakup three weeks ago, the stalking and harassment had been escalating. Jaxon followed me everywhere—to the mall, in the hallways at our high school, to my favorite coffee shop. Every time I turned around, he was there. And when he wasn’t nearby, he was calling me relentlessly.
No matter how many times I told him it was over, he wouldn’t stop. I should’ve known he’d be watching the house, waiting for the moment I was alone and vulnerable.
I crept into my parents’ room and dropped to my knees beside the bed. My hands shook as I attempted to open the small safe in the cabinet of the nightstand.
The phone rang again, and I slipped up on the combination lock.
I started over. All I needed to do was turn that dial and match up three numbers, but the trembling in my hands made it difficult.
A breath of relief left me when the heavy door clicked open, and I reached in to wrap my fingers around the cold metal of my dad’s semi-automatic handgun. I had no intention of using it, but it made me feel better to have it.
Just in case.
Keeping a gun in the house wasn’t something my parents took lightly. After my dad bought it, he took my sister and me to the shooting range to learn the basics. I was a terrible shot, but I knew how to load it and make sure the safety was on, which is exactly what I did next.
I hated weapons. I hated anything that was created for the sole purpose of inflicting pain. But I knew a gun wasn’t required to cause damage.
Hands could be just as dangerous.
Setting the gun on the bed, I sat down on the floor. Hugging my knees to my chest, I listened to the latest voicemail.
“I’m sorry, sweetheart,” Jaxon cooed softly, his tone a complete opposite to the previous message. “You know I just love you so much. I can’t be without you. Do yourself a favor and listen to what I say. We can do this the easy way or the hard way. Come outside and see me.”
Click.
Another chime rang out, which meant he must have left another voicemail right after the last one. I pushed play again.
“BITCH!” My body jolted at the outburst. “Open the fucking door. That’s it. If we’re over, then you’re dead!” he shouted. I began to hyperventilate as fear took over. “I warned you. I tried to play nice. Now I’m coming for you.”
Tears streamed down my face as I stared at the phone in shock. Would he follow through on the threat he’d made so many times before? Despite his abusive tendencies, I never wanted to believe he was unhinged enough to kill me.
Loud pounding on the door spurred me into action. I grabbed the gun and ran back to my room. Then I did the most cliché thing possible—I hid in my closet.
Although the walk-in was spacious, hiding places were limited. As I settled into the far-left corner, I also remembered there was no window.
No escape route.
No way out.
Not that it would’ve mattered. We lived in the middle of nowhere. This two-acre piece of land used to be my own version of heaven, but right now I felt like I was trapped on an island with a murderous psycho.
I heard a loud thud followed by another, and I could tell Jaxon was trying to barge through the front door.
Fumbling with my phone, I quickly dialed 9-1-1.
“911, what’s your emergency?”
Refusing to be incoherent with panic, I took a deep breath and tried to sound level-headed. “My name is Mackenna Connelly. I’m at 1715 Old Orchard Road in Daywood, Illinois. My ex-boyfriend is trying to break into my house. His name is Jaxon Meyers. I think—I know he wants to hurt me.”
“Has he ever been violent toward you?”
“Yes.” A choked sob escaped along with the truth.
For the past two years, I had kept the ugly details of my relationship a secret from everyone. Admitting it out loud for the first time made all the emotions come to the surface—fear, sadness, shame.
I should’ve told someone. My parents or a teacher. Instead, I let them believe the sudden change in my personality was due to typical teenage stuff, because I was ashamed of the truth.
Being smart, kind, and independent didn’t make me immune to guys like Jaxon.
Hiding the bruises on my arms with long sleeves had been easy, and if anyone ever saw I laughed it off as an accident.
I absentmindedly rubbed at the scar by my hairline. That one hadn’t been as easy to explain.
“Miss, are you alone?”
“Yes,” I answered, struggling to keep my voice steady. “My parents went to a movie and my sister is at a sleepover.”
Date night. Mom and Dad had kept the tradition of going out once a month for as long as I could remember. I’d always found it adorable, but as I watched them walk out the door earlier, I wanted nothing more than to beg them to stay home. I held it in, though. If I had asked them not to go they would’ve wanted to know why, and I didn’t want to lie to them anymore.
Thank God my sister wasn’t home. Krista was only twelve, and the thought of her witnessing Jaxon at his worst made my stomach churn.
“How old are you?” The operator’s voice was calm, but it did nothing to soothe me.
“Eighteen.”
“An officer is on the way. Are you somewhere safe?”
The sound of glass breaking had my pulse skyrocketing and I shifted, realizing I was sitting on top of a bunch of shoes. One of my high heels dug into my thigh.
“N—no. I’m hiding in the closet. I think he’s in the house now.” My body trembled and I tried to control my sobbing, which had turned into hiccups. I gripped the cold metal in my hand. “I have a gun. Am I allowed to use it if—if I have to?”
“You have the right to defend yourself, but an officer is on the way.”
“They won’t get here in time,” I told her, knowing it was the truth.
“Can you stay on the line…?”
Her voice faded away as I set the phone down beside me without hanging up. I needed both hands for what I was about to do.
Inhaling a shaky breath, I flipped off the safety switch and listened for anything other than the sound of my pounding heart.
Then Jaxon’s voice made me jump.
“Mackenna. The games are over. Where are you?” He was just steps away from the closet. “I bet you’re in here.”
The door opened, and even in the darkness I could see the metal bat in his hand. Moonlight from the bedroom window glinted off the shiny surface, and bile rose in my throat when I realized what he intended to do with it.
He squared his broad shoulders before stepping into the closet, and although I couldn’t see his eyes, I knew the brown orbs were hard and cold as he looked down at me.
“You really thought you could hide from me? I’d find you anywhere. I know the way you think.” Tapping his temple, he chuckled darkly. “I know every step you’re going to make, even before you know it yourself.”
“You don’t have to do this,” I said, hiding the weapon under my leg. “You can just go home and it will be like this never even happened.”
“I told you I wouldn’t live without you and I meant it. I’m gonna bash your fucking face in,” he slurred, swaying unsteadily on his feet. “Such a shame. It’s a pretty face.”
Any hope of talking him down vanished. When Jaxon was drunk or high, there was no getting through to him.
He raised the bat over his right shoulder, the way someone would when waiting for the perfect pitch. He took a practice swing, and the bat made a whoosh as it cut through the air. There was enough room for the full range of motion, but the end of the rod clipped a rack of clothing.
Shirts, dresses, and plastic hangers clattered to the floor.
Time seemed to stop as memories flashed through my mind.
For some reason, I thought of a tea party I had with my stuffed animals one summer afternoon when I was five. Stargazing with my mom when I was thirteen. The time I went car shopping with my dad and I begged him for that pink sports car, but he said no. I remembered how pissed I’d been. How I’d pouted all the way home like a spoiled child.
And now I’d give anything to go back to that day to tell him I was sorry, to tell him the blue Buick with low mileage was the right choice. In the long run, I would’ve hated having a pink car.
All the memories were so simple. The small events of daily life somehow became the most important in the forefront of my mind.
And I wanted a million more of those insignificant moments.
Suddenly, the inner strength that Jaxon had tried so hard to snuff out reared up inside of me. Fear turned into anger. Sadness turned into rage.
I was fucking pissed.
This couldn’t be the end. I couldn’t die huddled in the corner of a closet with a stiletto poking me in the ass.
“I love you so fucking much,” Jaxon said quietly, lifting the bat.
Before he could take another step I raised my shaking hand, pointed the gun, and pulled the trigger.
Present Day
I heaved out a sigh as I dropped the large box onto my bed. That was the last of it. The last of the belongings I’d taken to college with me.
It felt like yesterday I was packing up my stuff, excited for what would come next in life. I’d had big plans. I was confident, cocky, and completely unprepared for the responsibility and freedom that came with leaving home for the first time.
And now here I was.
A college dropout. A failure. A disappointment to everyone I knew, including myself.
As I scrubbed a hand over my face, all I could do was feel shame over the past and dread about the future.
What was I supposed to do next? I had no idea what I wanted to do with the rest of my life, but I probably needed a degree to do it.
There would be consequences for my actions.
And I deserved it.
I’d had my chance and I’d blown it.
Everything looked the same in my childhood room. The Aerosmith poster still hung on the wall over my bed. If I flipped my black comforter over, I’d see a charred spot in the fabric—an innocent mishap from a camping trip when I got a little overzealous about roasting marshmallows.
A shelf of trophies and ribbons decorated the opposite wall over my desk.
I wanted to tear it down.
Those awards represented my greatest accomplishments, but they meant nothing now. Baseball participation trophies, swim medals, and a second-place ribbon in the 8th grade spelling bee didn’t make me a success.
A soft knock interrupted my self-loathing, and I glanced at the doorway to see Ezra. Immediately, my crappy mood improved.
My younger brother was one of my favorite people in the world. Only a year apart in age, we grew up more like twins. We were complete opposites, though.
While I got my dad’s dark hair and olive skin tone, Ezra was lighter like Mom with blond hair, blue eyes, and a fair complexion. In fact, we looked so different some people didn’t believe us when we told them we were brothers.
“Heard you were back,” he said with a grin.
I smiled and went over to wrap him in a hug. Putting him at arm’s length, I observed how he’d changed since the last time I saw him.
“You got taller,” I announced before giving him a noogie.
Laughing, he pushed me away and went to sit down in the chair at my desk. As he made his way across the room, I noticed his uneven gait was worse than usual.
“Your leg bothering you again?”
Wincing, he rubbed at his left knee. “I fell at school. Twisted it a little.”
“You fell, or someone made you fall?” I asked, crossing my arms over my chest. His silence was the confirmation I needed. “Who’s been fucking with you? Is it that AJ prick?”
“It doesn’t matter.” Ezra shook his head. “I’ll be graduating in a couple weeks anyway. I can’t wait for high school to be over.”
I frowned, thinking of how he might’ve been treated since I left.
Ezra was shy, and because of a leg injury he suffered as a kid his physical abilities were limited. He often walked with a limp, and he couldn’t play sports or even participate in P.E.
Lack of exercise had caused his body to be on the softer side, and he suffered from low self-esteem. It made him the perfect target for asshole bullies.
When we were in school together, no one dared to mess with him when I was around. Everyone knew I wouldn’t stand for it. But he’d been on his own for the past year.
Ezra was one of the best people in the world. He may have been younger, but I looked up to him. Physical traits weren’t the only dif
ferences between us. I was the risk-taker, the wild one. Ezra tended to follow the rules. He was a peacemaker, a voice of reason. Kind-hearted and good.
Out of the two of us, I knew who was the better man. Hands down, it was him. I just wished he knew it, too.
Sweeping the mess of hair off his forehead, he sat up a little straighter. “Mom and Dad are downstairs. Said they needed to talk to you.” He looked sympathetic. “They seemed pissed.”
I sighed. “I know. They should be. I messed up pretty bad.”
“They wouldn’t spill the details to me, but I’m guessing it has something to do with school.” He swiveled in the computer chair and it squeaked with his movements.
I nodded. “Failed three out of my four classes.”
Ezra winced. “That sucks. What about the fourth class?”
Shaking my head, I huffed out a laugh. “Not much better. I got a C in music appreciation, but I have no idea how because I snoozed through most of it. Pretty interesting stuff when I wasn’t hungover.”
“So what are you going to do?”
“I don’t know.”
“Are you gonna go back to college?”
Frustrated, I ran a hand through my hair. “I honestly don’t know.”
“Shit,” he breathed out. “I guess I didn’t realize it was that bad.”
“It’s that bad,” I confirmed with a nod. “Don’t have anyone to blame but myself.”
“Well, good luck.” He stood up before limping across the room. At the doorway, he turned back. “For what it’s worth…I don’t think it’s too late to fix it.”
“Thanks.” I smiled, touched by his never-ending faith in me.
When I got downstairs, Mom and Dad were waiting for me at the dining table.
That’s how I knew I was in deep shit.
Only serious conversations took place in those chairs, unless it was a special occasion. We usually ate dinner in front of the TV, with those trays and everything. Some people thought you had to eat a meal around a table to connect and interact, but that wasn’t true. The best dinner memories I have are of laughing with my family over Seinfeld reruns and Jeopardy episodes.
The Good Guys Box Set: TRUCKER, DANCER, DROPOUT, and A Trucker Wedding Page 48