Coming from Kensington Publishing Corp. in 2016!
Keep reading for a preview excerpt ...
CHAPTER 1
IT WAS ONE
of those telephone calls in the middle of the night we all fear. The kind that jolts your heart, puts a pit in your gut, startling you awake. Adrenaline pumps through you the moment you open your eyes.
Somebody has died!
Quickly roused from REM sleep by that familiar ring, she had no idea that everything, as she knew it, was about to change. Nor would their lives ever be the same again, once she got out of bed and put the phone to her ear.
“Hello? What is it?” She could barely get the words out.
That time of night, hell, you'd
expect
bad news on the other end of the line.
The day preceding the telephone call, however, had started out like any other Sunday in forty-year-old Rachel Robidoux's life. Rachel woke up at her usual five in the morning to get ready for work. It was October 24, 2010, the weather rather balmy for this time of the year in St. Petersburg, Florida. As Rachel opened the door to leave, a wall of humid, tropical, almost wet, 75-degree morning air hit her in the face.
Within Pinellas County, St. Petersburg is a rather large city, a population of about a quarter million, give or take. With Tropicana Field downtown, home to Major League Baseball's Tampa Bay Rays, St. Pete, as locals call it, still holds on to that resort-town feel its founder had intended back in 1875 when the city was born.
Rachel Robidoux worked at Denny's on Thirty-Fourth Street, North, downtown. She'd been there for well over a decade. Normally, on Sundays, Rachel worked the day shift: seven to four. To this mother of five, although she'd gotten used to it by now, St. Pete might as well have been New York City, Rachel herself having been born and raised (mostly) in a one-stop-sign, one-intersection, everybody-knows-everybody, small New England town.
As the end of her shift on that Sunday approached, Rachel took a call from one of her five daughters, Ashley McCauley, who had turned seventeen that past April.
“You want to go to Crescent Lake Park with Grandma after you get out?”
This sounded like a good time, Rachel thought. “I'll pick you two up soon,” she said.
Crescent Lake Park is in an area of St. Pete where families and lovers and kids hang out on those seemingly endless, perfect Florida days, with skies that warm robin's-egg blue color. People flock there and enjoy the ducks and geese and swans, as well as the company they keep. Rachel needed this comforting space in her life. Not that things had been chaotic or all that difficult lately, having been through some rather extremely tough times in her life, same as just about every working-class family in the country. However, she'd had some issues over the past few years with her oldest daughter, Jennifer “Jen” Mee. Jen had turned nineteen in July, and her life, as Rachel later put it, had not gone along a trajectory Rachel and her husband, Chris, Jennifer's stepfather, would have liked. Jen was Rachel's firstborn, a child from a failed relationship when Rachel was twenty-one. In fact, Jen was just eighteen months old when Rachel met Chris, Ashley three months oldâtheir other children, Kayla, Destiny and McKenzie, Rachel and Chris had together. As far as the oldest girls were concerned, however, Chris Robidoux had always considered himself their father.
A little over a year ago, Jennifer had moved out of the house and on her own some weeks before her eighteenth birthday. Before that, she had one foot out, anyway, often staying with one friend for a month, or babysitting and staying with other friends for a few weeks here and there, maybe sleeping at a motel or on a park bench. All this happened after Jennifer had garnered international fame in the days surrounding January 23, 2007, for experiencing a bout with the hiccups that lasted for about five weeks. Still, with Jennifer moving out and “changing,” as Rachel liked to say, it wasn't the major problem between Rachel and her daughter. For Rachel, it was more of the people who flocked to Jennifer after her star rose, on top of the guys Jennifer had been dating now for what was about four years.
“Thugs,” Rachel called them.
Although Rachel and Jennifer spoke as much as two to three times per week, their conversations weren't like they used to be. Definitely not the personal talk mothers and daughters have. These days, Rachel understood (though she later admitted some denial on her part), Jennifer was shielding parts of herself and her chosen lifestyle. Just a look at Jennifer's Myspace page, back when that gulf between the mom and her daughter began to grow, had given Rachel and Chris an idea of where Jen was headed.
My love is nt a game im real n dnt wnt a fake lien cheaten azz nigga.
“I guess I should have known with the signs,” Rachel recalled, “but I didn't. Jen was into some âactivities' and later she [said she] was ashamed of it all.”
Rachel had no idea the extent to which Jen was involved in that street life, ripping and running with a group of hard-boiled, seasoned ruffians and tough street kids her own age. Jen had become somebody she had actually once said she despised. Maybe some naiveté existed on Rachel's part, or just a mother struggling to keep up with a middle-class lifestyle and still having three young kids at home, but Rachel lost that close touch with Jen. As they drifted, she felt her daughter was old enough to begin carving out her own life, make her own mistakes and take responsibility. Besides that, Chris and Jen had been at odds for a long time now, butting heads like rams. Both Rachel and Chris knew they couldn't change Jennifer, or tell her how to live. They had been through so much during Jen's hiccup periodâboth parents were tired, frustrated and ready to move on.