A New Resolution Read online




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Epilogue

  Loose Id Titles by Ceri Grenelle

  Ceri Grenelle

  A NEW RESOLUTION

  Ceri Grenelle

  www.loose-id.com

  A New Resolution

  Copyright © December 2014 by Ceri Grenelle

  All rights reserved. This copy is intended for the original purchaser of this e-book ONLY. No part of this e-book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without prior written permission from Loose Id LLC. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author's rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

  Image/art disclaimer: Licensed material is being used for illustrative purposes only. Any person depicted in the licensed material is a model.

  eISBN 9781623002268

  Editor: Kerry Genova

  Cover Artist: Mina Carter

  Published in the United States of America

  Loose Id LLC

  PO Box 806

  San Francisco CA 94104-0806

  www.loose-id.com

  This e-book is a work of fiction. While reference might be made to actual historical events or existing locations, the names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Warning

  This e-book contains sexually explicit scenes and adult language and may be considered offensive to some readers. Loose Id LLC’s e-books are for sale to adults ONLY, as defined by the laws of the country in which you made your purchase. Please store your files wisely, where they cannot be accessed by under-aged readers.

  * * * *

  DISCLAIMER: Please do not try any new sexual practice, especially those that might be found in our BDSM/fetish titles without the guidance of an experienced practitioner. Neither Loose Id LLC nor its authors will be responsible for any loss, harm, injury or death resulting from use of the information contained in any of its titles.

  Dedication

  For my friends back on the island. Thank you for making sure my resolutions were substantial and worth achieving.

  Prologue

  New Year’s Eve, 1996

  “Mom, Ma, Mommy, Mother!”

  “What, Lore, what? Can’t you give me a couple minutes? I’m on the phone with your father!”

  Lore sat in front of the living room TV, twisting to look over her shoulder at her robe-clad mother leaning against the kitchen archway. With her short bleached-blonde hair, the roots at the moment showing an indigo black, Lore always thought her mom looked a little fake, but she’d never say that to her face. Even if their relationship hadn’t been tense, she wouldn’t have mentioned it. The woman was touchy about her appearance. Her mom clutched the new cordless phone to her chest with her right hand, the ever-ready wineglass gripped tightly in her left.

  “It’s almost midnight. When is he gonna be home?” Lore complained, gesturing to Dick Clark on the TV. Apparently KISS was supposed to perform. Lore wished her dad would hurry home so they could make fun of the band’s silly makeup together. “He’s never missed a New Year’s before. We have to sing the stupid song together.”

  Her mother snorted, taking a sip of her red wine. “If you think the song is stupid, then why do you want to sing it so badly?”

  “It’s tradition. You don’t mess with tradition.”

  “You’re just quoting him now.” Her mom held up the phone and waved it. “Give me a few minutes to speak to him, please? I can’t think with you jumping around like that.” She turned her back to the living room once more and leaned her forehead against the wall, her voice lowering conspiratorially. But not low enough for Lore to miss her panicked words. “David, the police have come here twice already in the past week, and yesterday there was a black car I’ve never seen before sitting across the street all day. When are you coming home? What is going on?” A short pause as Lore could hear her father’s muffled voice on the other end of the line. “Ten minutes isn’t soon enough; your daughter is going to spin her head like The Exorcist if you don’t show up soon.” Her mom sighed as he answered, always soothed by what her husband had to say, regardless of her precious concerns. “All right. See you soon.”

  Lore waited for her mom to hang up before asking, “Is he coming?”

  “He’ll be home in ten minutes, he said.”

  “This business trip took way too long this time. What is he doing that he needs to be gone for a month? He missed my softball game. He promised he’d never miss one again.”

  “Goddamn it, Lore.” She slapped her thigh in frustration, a gesture Lore was all too familiar with during their conversations. She and her mother’s relationship had always been anything but easy. “Just ask him yourself when he gets home. I don’t know why he’s gone as long as he is. It’s not my fault.” Her finger jabbed at her chest; her previously smooth and pleasant face contorted into an angry snarl.

  “I never said it was your fault. I was just asking—”

  “Well, stop asking me.”

  Lore turned back to the TV, knowing she wouldn’t get anywhere with her mom tonight, especially after seeing an empty bottle of wine already on the counter. “Fine. Whatever.”

  “Don’t take that tone with me, young lady.”

  “Oh my God, I wasn’t taking any tone,” Lore yelled without taking her eyes off the TV. She refused to back down from her mother’s challenge, but she also didn’t have to miss anything on television while she did. Her teachers always said she was great at multitasking. “Why are you being crazy?”

  Just as her mother began to pursue the fight with an angry foot forward, the telltale sign of footsteps on the porch and a key wiggling in the brass deadlock, followed by a door slamming wide open, eased the hostility in the room dramatically. The tension Lore felt instantly unraveled. Lore looked at her mom to see a smile transforming her features from harsh to forgiving, no doubt an expression that was mirrored on Lore’s face. There was only one man who could bring them together. Lore stood, unable to hold back her excitement, then ran from the living room and into the hallway leading to the foyer and gaping front door. The snow outside was falling steadily now, the wind blowing it into the foyer with great cold gusts.

  Squinting through the biting wind, Lore could see her dad comically drenched in giant wet snow flurries, making him look like a dark-haired abominable snowman. His black wool trench coat trailed frozen mud and ice onto the pristine parquet floor, an offense Lore would have been severely punished for by her mother if she’d been the perpetrator. But her dad could do no wrong. Whatever stress he caused by being away from Lore and her mom were wiped clean when they saw his red-cheeked grin, beaming like the sun itself upon seeing his two girls after such a long time. His blue eyes sparkled, lighting up like the Christmas tree sitting in the corner of the living room.

  “Happy New Year’s, my girls!”

  “Dad!” Lore sprinted across the room, then threw her arms aro
und her hero. She didn’t even care that her pajamas began to steadily soak up the snow and ice on his coat. She loved her father so much. It had been more hellish than usual living with her uptight mother alone this past month.

  “Oof! Lore, you are too much of a growing girl for this, or I’m too much of an old man.” Despite his words, he hugged her back just as tightly, if not more. “How’s my best girl?” he whispered in her ear, warming her heart through all the icy water soaking her pajamas.

  “Annoyed that you almost missed the stupid song and the dumb ball dropping.” New Year’s Eve was their favorite holiday, but as such, they reserved the right to make fun of its oddities whenever possible. Because really, a big sparkly electric ball slowly falling down a pole to signify a new year was sort of stupid when you thought about it.

  “How’s the TV working this year?” he asked, setting her back on the floor and beginning to shed his snowy outer garments.

  “Like new, as the TV is brand-new,” Darlene snipped from the entrance to the living room. She didn’t come galloping down the hall with joy as her daughter had, but Lore could see the withheld delight her mother seemed to possess whenever in her husband’s presence. Whatever fight they’d just had or the level of boredom and misery they’d experienced during his absence didn’t matter anymore to her mom. It was as if the world melted away and he was the sun to her earth. When she was a kid, Lore remembered bugging her mom for attention, but if her father had been around, her mom would always try to brush Lore off. She didn’t start to understand until she and her father began having their father-daughter dates. During those instances, Lore also never wanted her mom intruding on their alone time. Her mom just wasn’t as much fun as her dad.

  “Ah, hello, my darling Darlene.” David brushed back the black strands curling in his face from the damp snow, a sure sign he was trying to pacify his annoyed wife. “Come here for a kiss? Didn’t you miss your husband?” His smirk could have melted the most iron of knees.

  “Clean up first, and maybe you’ll get a kiss in the next century.” Darlene winked at her husband, then turned back into the living room, a little more sway to her steps than there had been for the past month. How Darlene managed to look coy and pissed off at the same time was a mystery to Lore, and something she’d tried to emulate in the mirror on countless occasions. Maybe it was a skill a woman learned after marriage.

  “All right, pumpkin,” her father said as he crouched on the floor, blowing hot breath onto his cold-burned hands. “Let me go put some stuff from work in my office. Then I’ll meet you in the living room, deal? Well, first I need to corner and make out with your mother—”

  “Gross.” Lore went on her tippy toes and bounced up and down on the balls of her feet in revulsion. She covered her ears as she said, “No more speaking, please, before my ears melt off. Gross, gross.” She repeated the mantra over and over under her breath. Her dad laughed that delightful belly laugh that always made her mom smile and Lore laugh right along with him. He nuzzled her cheek with his cold nose and slapped her bum gently to push her in the direction of the living room. She detoured instead toward the stairs.

  “Be right back.” Lore quickly ran up to her vibrant purple and pink room to change into dry pajamas, also purple and pink, of course. The best colors ever.

  She had the quick thought to put on her snow boots in case her father decided to do something crazy and spontaneous like chase her out into the snow at midnight. She had learned to be more prepared where her father was concerned from past barefoot mistakes. Laughing at the memory of a particularly silly snow day spent with her dad, she tugged a heavier sweater over her thin sleep shirt before running back down the stairs, a bright smile on her face as she looked forward to another countdown to midnight with her favorite person. No less than twenty minutes later, she and her dad were sitting together in front of the TV, watching Dick Clark hosting away in the cold New York City air. She loved watching him on TV, but she would never want to be one of the people squashed together in the icy wind to see a sparkling ball drop down a pole. Her warm and comfy living room floor was just as good, if not better than Times Square.

  “Whoa, this is a nice TV. New VCR player too, I see. Probably expensive, Darlene.” He kissed the top of Lore’s head, knowing she loved watching movies and acting them out when she was alone. She would never admit to it, though. She was fourteen and far too old for those kinds of things.

  “The old one kept crackling,” Lore provided, not wanting her parents to get into a fight about spending money, one of the only things they ever fought about besides the frequent business trips he took for work. “And there were channels that had some fuzzy stuff Mom got freaked out about.”

  “Fuzzy stuff? Was it mold?” he joked, wiggling his eyebrows.

  “Ha, no.” Lore grinned, rolling her eyes at her dad’s silly sense of humor. “I think it was people, but I couldn’t understand what was going on through all the fuzz and static. There was a guy groaning like he was in pain; maybe it was a really gory horror movie. A few more days of watching and I could have figured it out.”

  Her dad snorted into the beer bottle he’d grabbed before coming to sit down and looked over her head toward Darlene. “I think I’m on your mother’s side with this matter, pumpkin. No more moldy, fuzzy people for you.” His voice hardened. “Really, don’t watch those channels.”

  Lore shrugged, not getting what the big deal was. “Okay, whatever.”

  “So, have you thought about your resolution for this year?”

  “No.”

  “No? Why not? You know the New Year won’t come until you think of a resolution.” He pinched her arm playfully.

  “Ugh, Dad, please.” Lore pinched him back. “I’m not a kid anymore. It will get here no matter what I do.”

  “The year will come; yes, that’s true. But your New Year’s won’t come.” He tipped her chin his way and forced her gaze to his, locking their eyes and hypnotizing her with just a look. “We must always try to improve ourselves, Lore. That’s why you go to school and why you play sports or sing in the school choir. We try to make our lives as rich and saturated with actual living as possible. Take hold. Take control of your life. Making a resolution will help you mold your future into what you want it to be. It will help you achieve your goals.”

  “Well, what is your resolution?” she asked, awed by the conviction in his words.

  He tapped the edge of her nose before releasing her from his gentle grip. “I’m not telling you until you tell me yours.”

  “Well…I did think of one thing…”

  “What is it, pumpkin?” He wrapped his arm around her shoulders, his blue eyes twinkling down at her as if no matter what she said or did, she was his shining light. “What is your New Year’s resolution?”

  “It’s—”

  The door banged open again, but instead of a jovial man she knew and loved waltzing through the door with a smile on his face, there were what must have been fifteen men running in with guns and bulletproof vests, screaming at them to get down on the ground and put their hands on their heads. Lore’s scream locked in her throat as she jumped up at the sight of all the guns. She’d seen guns before; her father had a collection. But they were antiques. The kind you didn’t load, but put on display and told kids not to touch. These guns were real. They were black and heavy looking, and they were pointed at her. She wanted to scream, but she couldn’t. She was as frozen as the pointed icicles on her porch outside.

  “Tell the girl to get down on the ground. Now!” A voice pierced the white noise filling her head. She came back to herself, realizing the men were all focused on her. Her parents were on the floor, their hands behind their heads. Her father was yelling at her, ordering her to get down. Lore nodded slowly, lowering herself to the ground and placing her hands in that awkward position she’d seen a thousand times on police TV shows. Was she being arrested? Was she going to jail? Why wasn’t her dad doing anything? Shouldn’t he have tried to stop them
? This was a mistake. It had to be.

  “Daddy?” Lore croaked out, looking on helplessly as the men wrenched her father from the ground and began to cuff him, telling him about his rights and how he could be silent. She’d heard those words on TV too. Those words always led to awful things.

  “It’s okay, Lore,” he rasped, struggling in the police officers’ grips. “Just do what the officers tell you. I promise it will be okay.” The men in uniform began to drag him toward the front door and away from her.

  “Daddy!” she yelled, starting to get up, needing to see where they were taking her father. “Daddy, wait! Where are you taking him?” From the corner of her eye, she could see her mother, sobbing on the floor, her wineglass in broken shards near her feet.

  “Stay back.” A large hand gripped her shoulder, pulling her back into the living room and onto the couch. “Stay here, miss,” the voice said. She didn’t care that they were police officers. Her father was being carted away on their special holiday, and she needed to know why.

  She did what her friends told her to do if a guy at school got overly grabby with her, and slammed her boot-covered foot into the man’s crotch, screaming for him not to touch her. She dashed through a grouping of officers, escaping out the front door. The snow was thicker now, the flurries turning into large golf-ball-sized clumps of ice, falling to the ground like orbs in a dream. This had to be a bad dream. Only in a nightmare would she be clutching the railing on her snow-covered porch, on her favorite day of the year, watching her father getting shoved into a police car.

  There was more than one police car lining their small, residential street. At least six cars, all with their lights flashing like a glaring neon arrow, lured onlookers to this spectacle. Lore could see the neighbors with their doors open now, huddling together in the cold and staring as her father was so publicly humiliated, as her family was shamed. She went to school with some of the kids on this block. Everyone would know what had happened when she went back to school after winter break.