Between Ruin And Resolve: My Ex-Husband's Regret
Marrying A Secret Zillionaire: Happy Ever After
Rising From Ashes: The Heiress They Tried To Erase
The Phantom Heiress: Rising From The Shadows
Jilted Ex-wife? Billionaire Heiress!
The Almighty Alpha Wins Back His Rejected Mate
Too Late, Mr. Billionaire: You Can't Afford Me Now
She Took The House, The Car, And My Heart
Rejected No More: I Am Way Out Of Your League, Darling!
Too Late For Regret: The Genius Heiress Who Shines
Jenna Brooks’s POV
“Hurry up!! You’re going to be late for your flight!” I heard my mum yell from the kitchen.
Taking one final look at my room, I dragged my baggage out to the passage way. Although it had only been two months since we moved here, I was still going to miss my tiny room. I meant our tiny room since I shared the room with my little brother, Dustin whenever he came home from boarding school for holidays. There were only two rooms in the house.
As I closed the door behind me, I walked down the tiny passage into the living room. Dad was sitted, leg crossed as if he wasn’t moved by his daughter going thousands of miles away for senior year.
He glanced at me as he spoke, “Good Morning, Jenna,” he said, more blandly than I had hoped. I had already crossed my fingers for a laugh, or a hair rustle, or a hug, but they never came, or at least not yet. I was still hoping.
“How was your night?” I asked trying to ignite some sort of conversation.
“Fine.” He replied dryly.
I was desperate for something else to talk about with him. For some kind of connection. With Mom, it was effortless. Why did everything always feel so stuck with him?
Dad used to be fun and vibrant and energetic and interactive but after we lost everything and had to move to Cronners, he suddenly went cold and distant.
I dropped my baggage and made my way to the kitchen where mum was making my favorite cookies to go. She said it was a lucky charm and it had always helped her get over the fear of flying but I doubted that.
I watched mom bring out a flat disposable plate from her ‘bag of multiple stuffs’. Dustin and I always called it that because the bag seemed to always have everything, even stuffs we didn’t need. The house itself, contained a lot of stuffs we didn’t need.
Our house hadn’t always been like this, I meant full of junk and unnecessary items. When we moved in two months ago, it actually looked pretty normal—a humble house with a little clutter, nothing out of the ordinary.
But it began when dad’s company went bankrupt three months ago and we had to move from New York to Cronners, a small town in the middle of nowhere; that’s when mom started not being able to let go of things. That would mean it started two months ago. Since then the problem had only gotten worse.
Dad had to move all the unnecessary stuffs to the garage when the house could no longer take the load. Now, our garage was fillled floor to ceiling with stuffs. Stacks of plastic bins, filled with old papers and receipts and clothes we no longer used and toys and tangled jewelry and journals and Christmas decorations and old candy bar wrappers and expired makeup and empty shampoo bottles and broken mug pieces in Ziploc bags.
Sometimes, I would fantasize about us going back to our old house in New York. Then we’d have to pack up the stuff we wanted to take with us into moving boxes. And if we had to pack stuffs into moving boxes, that meant we’d have to sort through all the stuffs in this house and get rid of some of it. And that sounded wonderful.
“Honey Pie, I packed you some cookies” Mum said as she handed me the packed cookies. I could see the look in her eyes. She didn’t want me to leave but she had made the decision herself.
She didn't want me to spend senior year in Cronners, a town with a reputation for teenage troubles. Her decision, made over the summer, would have me spending my final year in Houston with Auntie Laurel Declan’s family.
I had been to Houston a lot when I was a kid. We used to go and spend summer holidays with the Declans; my mum’s best friend’s family. That was way before Dustin was born. Although I was just six then, I could still remember some memories I had with the Declan family. I was so happy when mum told me they agreed to be my host family in Houston so I transferred directly to the school the Declan kids attended. I really hoped I would get along with the family just fine, like when I was little.
“Did you pack your hair clips?” Mum inquired, her eyes scanning my long, dark hair.
I gave a slight shrug, “I don’t need them, Mum”
Mum had always treated me like a doll since I was little, she would pin butterfly clips to my hair. I had always hated the hairstyle, the rows of tightly wound hair fastened into place with painful, scalp-gripping little clips but I was over that now. I was finally eighteen and I didn’t need them anymore.