The Trail Rules (The Rules Series Book 2)

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The Trail Rules (The Rules Series Book 2) Page 26

by Melanie Hooyenga


  Something more must be going on.

  But Mom’s not finished. “Tomorrow you will go back to that store and apologize to the woman. Tell her you didn’t realize you had the necklace.”

  I squirm beneath her glare.

  “What?” she asks.

  “It’s just that…” I feel like I’m ten yards down a black diamond when I meant to take the blue. It’s too late to turn around and it’s only going to get worse. “I already offered her money to ignore it.” And it was more than just the necklace.

  “Then offer her more.”

  I shake my head. “I don’t think that’ll work with her. She’s more of a hard-ass than the others—” The look on her face stops me. Cursing isn’t permitted in the Vines household, at least not by me, but that wasn’t my biggest mistake.

  “What. Others?” Her words are crisp and staccato, like she’s giving a lesson in enunciation.

  I hang my head.

  “Brianna, answer your mother.”

  I can’t look up. It’s one thing to lie to yourself—to say I can stop whenever I want and that I’m not hurting anyone—but admitting it to my parents is like letting out every awful secret I’ve buried deep inside.

  Mom’s voice is almost a whisper, but it drips with venom. She leans toward me and I fight the urge to burrow into the chair. “How many times have you done this?”

  Stolen or been caught? I go with option two. “Only a couple times.”

  “Two,” Dad says. “So one other time.”

  “Two other times,” I say.

  “In addition to the Calliope notebook last spring.”

  I’d almost forgotten about that.

  A red flush creeps up his neck until the tips of his ears burn bright. The same thing happens to me when I’m mad and for the millionth time I curse whoever’s in charge of picking which genes to give to children. Mom’s face only gets red when she’s been in the sun too long.

  “I can’t look at you any longer,” he says.

  I start to stand, but wait for Mom’s nod. Dad may be the tyrant, but walking away from Miranda Vines before she’s said her piece can be equally destructive.

  “We’ll finish this later. Consider yourself grounded for the foreseeable future.”

  I hurry away before they change their minds. My social life is already over so the only punishment they have left is taking away my physical things. Please not my 4Runner. Or my skis. The season’s just starting and I live for skiing, to be outside, gliding over the mountain with the sky stretching overhead.

  The only saving grace from this punishment is they don’t know that grounding me won’t make a difference because I no longer have any friends.

  *****

  I turn the page of my History book but I may as well be reading Egyptian hieroglyphics for as much as I’m understanding. I don’t have any tests tomorrow—thank goodness—but that won’t stop Crusty Ray from calling on people to see if they’ve done the reading. I flip back to the previous page and don’t remember any of it. This is pointless. I give it a nudge across the white duvet and it slides over the edge of my bed and lands on the floor with a satisfying thud.

  My fingers itch to text someone, but there’s no one left. Kenzie made sure of that. Mike might reply, but she’s somehow found a backbone lately and I’m not in the mood for attitude. At the beginning of the school year, half the student body would’ve be thrilled to hear from me, but after I lost out to Homecoming Queen, it’s like my world started crumbling around me.

  I roll onto my back, and my Ethics book stabs my side. It’s ironic that I’m doing well in that class, and Miss Simpson will have a field day when she finds out what I did.

  What I’ve been doing.

  How could I be so stupid? Of all the things I’ve taken, I’d never be caught dead wearing that gaudy piece of gold-plated junk. I mean, hearts dangling from a cheap chain? Right. The leather and bronze bracelets are at least trendy. I don’t know if I’m more embarrassed I was caught, or that I was caught with that particular necklace. The other crap in my pocket wasn’t any better.

  I yank the book out from beneath me and open it to the assigned chapter, but the words swim in front of me.

  I was in jail.

  Jail.

  And I was arrested. Like really arrested, not some stupid rent-a-cop thing where they put you in an office until your parents come get you. My skin crawls imagining the other people who’ve been in that cell and a shiver of disgust rushes through me. I changed clothes when I came upstairs, but I still feel dirty all over.

  I toss the book on the floor—there’s something about that thud that makes me feel a tiny bit better—and pad across the thick carpet to the bathroom that’s attached to my room. Once the water’s as hot as I can stand it, I step into the shower.

  I’m drying off when shouts carry from downstairs. They’ve been fighting a lot lately—which I keep telling myself is better than the usual silence because at least they’re talking to each other—but this time is different because it’s about me. At school I show no fear. If someone even breathes the wrong way in my direction I tear them down with a withering glare, but at home I try my best to fly under the radar.

  I crack the door to listen while I get dressed, but I can only pick out the words like “family” and “bastard.” So not much different from any other night.

  I’ve got one leg in my fleece leggings with a bunny on the hip when something shatters downstairs. I freeze, and it’s like everything comes into sharp focus. The books on the floor, the white canopy suspended over my bed, the piles of clothes bursting from my closet. Yanking on my pants, I stumble to my door. Mom’s crying downstairs. I step into the hallway as my father’s voice booms through the house.

  “This is not a negotiation! I’ve already made up my mind!”

  My pulse roars in my head. I knew he was mad, but I didn’t know he was this mad. I back into my room and am closing the door when the front door slams. A high-pitched keening sounds drifts up the stairs but I can’t move.

  I can’t breathe.

  What did he decide?

  I hurry down the stairs but stop short when I reach the bottom. Mom’s crumpled in the middle of the floor, her head in her hands. The bottom of one of those squat glasses Dad drinks Scotch from lies on its side against a wall, the top shattered. Broken glass reflects the light from the chandelier and amber liquid pools against the baseboard. But that’s not what stops my heart. In my almost seventeen years, the only time I’ve seen Mom on the floor was for yoga or a family portrait.

  Never like this.

  It’s like whatever Dad said sucked the life out of her and all that’s left before me is her deflated shell.

  “Mom?”

  She shifts so she’s sitting cross-legged but doesn’t respond.

  I move closer, unsure what to do. Miranda Vines prides herself on always being in control and projecting an image of superiority, “even when you’re not feeling it.” It’s where I learned how to be the head Snow Bunny and most popular girl in school.

  Correction: formerly most popular.

  Whatever happened with Dad has broken her.

  “Mom,” I say again, a little louder this time.

  She takes a shuddering breath, like the effort is too much. “Your father left.”

  Obviously. But he leaves all the time, especially after they argue—not fight, “argue.” Because “civilized people don’t fight.” Besides, you don’t run one of the biggest craft breweries in Boulder without spending a lot of time there, even when it’s inconvenient for your family. “Yeah, so?”

  She looks up at me and my insides twist. Her normally perfect makeup is smudged beneath her bloodshot eyes and tears stream down her face, dampening her formerly crisp blouse. “No. He left.” The energy she puts into the last word makes her sink farther inside herself.

  “Left?” Alarm bells clang that Something is Wrong! Something is Wrong! but my brain refuses to catch up. “To go to Mischief.”
It’s a statement, not a question. Because if what she’s saying is true—

  “Brianna, your father has left us.”

  *****

  Available October 2018

  Sign up for Melanie’s newsletter at melaniehoo.com and be the first to know when you can read The Edge Rules, and mark it as Want to Read on Goodreads.

  The more books I write, the more grateful I am for the people in my life who make it possible. From coworkers who smile and nod while I go on and on about my characters’ latest adventures, to my writing friends who hold my (virtual) hand when I get stuck, to my husband who didn’t fully know what he signed on for when he said ‘I Do’ to a writer.

  To Laura Holmes, writer, athlete, and marketer extraordinaire, who let me pick her brain about all things mountain biking. Without you Mica and his friends wouldn’t be half as interesting, and the biking scenes would feel like a ride down the sidewalk on a tricycle.

  To my online writing groups for weighing in on everything from blurbs to covers, and being there to lament the struggles of the writing life.

  To my beta readers Bridgid Gallagher, Patrick Hodges, Tammy Ruch, and Judy Hooyenga (yes, my mom), for helping this story shine.

  To Nancy Matuszak for always pushing me to go deeper and find the bigger conflict. I hope I’ve done you proud.

  To Nadine Nettman and Sara Carlson for reading countless scenes, helping me brainstorm, and being better best friends than I could ever hope for. Now would one of you please invent a teleportation machine?

  And finally, to my husband Jeremy for being my everything. From not caring when the house is a disaster, to taking on bathing the dog (something we all hate) and cooking our meals, to being my support system when life falls apart around me. I never for a second take for granted what we have.

  Melanie Hooyenga is the author of THE SLOPE RULES, a YA sports romance that’s Grease meets Mean Girls with downhill skiing. Her YA trilogy, The Flicker Effect, is about a teen who uses sunlight to travel back to yesterday. The first book, FLICKER, won first place for Middle Grade/Young Adult in the Writer’s Digest 2015 Self-Published eBook awards. When not at her day job as Communications Director at a local nonprofit, you can find her wrangling her Miniature Schnauzer Owen and playing every sport imaginable with her husband Jeremy.

  Connect with Melanie online:

  www.melaniehoo.com

  [email protected]

  Facebook/MelanieHooyenga

  Twitter & Instagram @melaniehoo

  (she tried SnapChat and just doesn’t get it)

  Or if you prefer pen and paper:

  Melanie Hooyenga

  PO Box 554

  Grand Haven, MI 49417

  Table of Contents

  The Trail Rules

  By Melanie Hooyenga

  Praise for TSR

  Copyright

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Chapter1

  Chapter2

  Chapter3

  Chapter4

  Chapter5

  Chapter6

  Chapter7

  Chapter8

  Chapter9

  Chapter10

  Chapter11

  Chapter12

  Chapter13

  Chapter14

  Chapter15

  Chapter16

  Chapter17

  Chapter18

  Chapter19

  Chapter20

  Chapter21

  Chapter22

  Chapter23

  Chapter24

  Chapter25

  Chapter26

  Chapter27

  Chapter28

  Chapter29

  Chapter30

  Chapter31

  To My Readers

  TER_Chapter1

  Acknowledgements

  About the Author

 

 

 


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