. . . what are the police doing here? Did something else happen?â
âNothing happened,â my mother snaps. âNate isnât staying and you, DJ, are going back upstairs.â
DJ yells at Mom that Nate has every right to be here. Nate apologizes for not calling to make sure it was okay for him to come over. He says my name. But I say nothing as I wait for Officer Shepensâs reaction. When he frowns, I turn the screen back around and try to understand what Iâm seeing.
The Internet connection is still working.
The Web address is correct.
But the screen is black.
NEED is gone.
Sydney
âIâ LL BE THERE in a minute, Dad.â Get a grip. Itâs not like thereâs any hurry. Sydneyâs dad insists they salt the sidewalks and driveways for the properties he represents every weekend.
âOpportunities can be lost if you arenât paying attention. You never know when a prospective buyer is going to drive by and call for a closer look.â
âNeverâ is right. So far it has never happened. But every Saturday morning they have to go out and make sure each house is ready for the phantom people who will want to see it. His dad says itâs good business. His dad is wrong. Good business pays money, and as far as Sydney can tell, his dad hasnât pulled a paycheck since early December. But Sydney has.
Reaching into his back pocket, he pulls out the envelope he found under a pile of boards near the shed. Just where NEED said it would be. Five hundred dollars. Not a bad payday for the job Sydney was asked to do. More should be on its way, now that heâs finished the most recent assignment, and more after that if things work out the way he hopes.
Sydney shuts down his computer and stashes the envelope of cash in the drawer along with his knife.
âCome on, Sydney,â his dad calls. âTime is money.â
Yes. Yes, it is. Sydney smiles as he locks the drawer. Unlike his dad, he plans on making money. Lots of it. No matter what it takes.
Hannah
H ANNAH SWIPES THE BOTTOM of her nose with the back of her hand and looks around for the Kleenex she just had. Where did it go?
There. She picks up the crumpled tissue and checks her cell phone just in case. Nate still hasnât returned her call. Calling his house today was a terrible move. He must think so too; otherwise he would have texted an apology for missing her call, or called her back.
Something.
Anything.
Unless Jack didnât give Nate the message. She should have called Nateâs cell phone, of course, but she was too upset to pay attention to what number she had dialed until Jack picked up. If only sheâd hung up then. But Nate and Jack sound a lot alike on the phone, and she had poured her heart out about how life is short, and she didnât want to regret not telling him how she felt, before Jack interrupted and filled her in on her mistake.
How mortifying. And now if she dials Nateâs cell and Jack already told him about the first call, sheâll look desperate on top of looking like an airhead. She wishes she could take it back. She was an idiot to call after learning about Amandaâs death. But the shock and the sadness made her think about how much she wanted to be with Nate.
And how lame is it that her first thought wasnât for Amanda and the life sheâll never lead, or for her family, who have to be so devastated? Instead, she focused on herself. No wonder Nate isnât interested. Why would any guy want a girl who canât grieve for a friend without freaking out about the inadequacies of her own life?
She needs a do-over. Or a rock to crawl under. She doesnât want to face Nate or anyone else right now. School next week is going to suck, and not just because she hasnât been able to force herself to read that stupid book.
Ah. There she goes again. Thinking of herself. Still . . . she canât help but wonder if NEED can actually
Mons Kallentoft
Elise de Sallier
Sharon Hamilton
R.J. Ross
Stella Wilkinson
Jody Wenner
Celeste Bradley
Hannah Harrington
Sarra Cannon
Sherrilyn Kenyon