Johnny: A New-Adult Novel
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About this ebook
Cat Ramsey has the perfect life -- a home in the suburbs, a loving family, the sexiest guy in school living next door.
And then it all changes: Her father's drinking shifts from the occasional beer it used to be...into a dangerous dependency which threatens them all.
He becomes loud.
He becomes angry.
He becomes violent.
Her world is turned upside down.
She turns to Johnny.
The subject matter in this book is OF AN ADULT NATURE.
* Not suitable for readers under 17 years of age due to explicit sexual content. *
Book 1 of 3
Genres:
Coming of Age
New Adult Romance
Mature Young Adult Romance
Rachel Dunning
Rachel Dunning has published over a million words of romantic fiction.A prolific writer, she sticks to stories where women have guts and where Alpha Males aren't pricks.Find her online at the following locations:----------------------------------------------Facebook: http://bit.ly/RachelDunningTwitter: http://twitter.com/RachelDAuthorBlog: http://racheldunningauthor.blogspot.comGoodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/racheldunningSmashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/RachelDunningAmazon: http://amazon.com/author/racheldunningB&N (Nook): http://bit.ly/RachelDunningBNiTunes: http://bit.ly/RachelDunningiTunesScribd: http://www.scribd.com/RachelDunning
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Book preview
Johnny - Rachel Dunning
Johnny
A New-Adult Novel
Rachel Dunning
Dunning Publishing, Ltd
Copyright © 2014, 2023 Rachel Dunning
Second Edition.
All rights reserved.
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. This book is a work of fiction.
Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Contents
Title Page
Copyright
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Prologue
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Epilogue
Postscript
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Prologue
-1-
Life can change. So quickly, so suddenly. One day you’re driving down the freeway, your face lit up by yellow sodium lamps, music blaring through the radio, and you’re singing, and the guy next to you is singing, and he turns to look at you, just for a second, a moment, that final smile lasting forever in your mind afterwards—
And then you’re upside down, and there are screams and moans, a shattered windshield, spinning wheels, the glug-glug-glug of falling gas, and the man you love is next to you.
And he’s not moving.
-2-
My life has not been a shooting star. I wasn’t famous, I didn’t do anything important, I wasn’t the chosen one
in any way at all. If anything, I was a little unpopular growing up. My life was that of a regular kid growing up in the suburbs. I had few friends, simply because I was never very gregarious, but mostly because I met Johnny at such a young age. Maybe I knew, even then, that he was the only friend I would ever need. No one had taught me about putting all your eggs in one basket, and I wouldn’t have listened to them either.
-3-
I loved you, I lost you.
I hugged you, I dropped you.
I touched you, I scoffed you.
I held you.
And you held me in return.
I kissed you, I pushed you away.
I stroked your skin, I held you at bay.
I touched your ear, I said Don’t stay.
I felt you.
And you made me burn.
You held me, I ignored you.
You loved me, I implored you
to leave me alone because the pain was too much,
the fear was such
that I had no one I could trust...
...but you.
You kissed my breast, caressed my chest.
You filled my soul.
You were my pot of gold.
You were my earth, my heaven, my stars.
But now they’re yours.
One
~ The boy next door ~
-1-
My name is Catherine Ramsey. Most people call me Cathy. Patricio Abreu, Johnny’s father, always called me either Catty or Cattehreen, but that was because of his accent.
Johnny, however, always called me Cat.
I loved it when he called me that.
I have blue eyes like my mother’s, and her straw colored hair. My hair’s not my greatest asset. It’s neither flat nor curly, nor does it glow or shine. It’s more of a dirty blonde, and most times I just tie it back and hope it doesn’t get in the way.
I met Johnny when I was six. He didn’t speak a word of English. He and his parents had just moved to the U.S. from Portugal, moved to Long Island. They were well-off. His father was in the shipping business, and they took the house across the road from us.
My own dad was your typical All-American middle-class male. He liked his American Beer and his American Cars and his American Football. He liked picket fences and streets that you waved across and said hello to the neighbors from, and he liked the occasional barbecue to show off his new grillmaster and maybe spin a few jokes, but that was it, buddy. He liked our gated suburban community, thumb-print required to enter it.
It was deep winter, two weeks away from Christmas. Snow had blanketed our little suburban hood
and dad and I were on our way, spades in hand (and, for him, a bottle of Heineken in the other), to build our traditional snowman in the front lawn.
It was then that the boisterous frivolity of something across the street caught my eye—and ears.
There was a child there, about my age, black curly hair, jumping, screaming, speaking in a very strange language that, to my inexperienced ears, actually sounded a little like Russian to me back then. The boy was elated, picking up handfuls of snow and throwing them inexpertly around, then up in the air and letting the snow shower down on him.
Behind him, to his left, stood a bald, portly man with an extremely thick mustache and a generously round belly. He had his arm around a very short woman. This woman also had a very round belly. Her hand lay on it, rubbing it. She was pregnant, leaning back, and smiling joyfully.
And then she waved at us. Even from across the street I caught the glint of raw elation in her eyes—a new world, a new life, a spark of happiness and joy that I’d never seen in any of the eyes of my American neighbors.
The portly man beckoned us over—beckoned us to cross that sacred street and come say hello or maybe play in the snow with the overly energetic boy who still jumped around madly in it. The boy fell on his knees on top of the snow, his pants soaking wet, and yowled joyously up at the sky.
I thought it was cute.
My dad’s hand was on my shoulder and I felt his grip stiffen. Had it not been for that, I would’ve run across the street and jumped on the snow as well with this kid and explained to him that, Hey, it’s just snow.
Already I felt my lips tug into a smile.
My dad waved back, ignored the call to come over, and hollered politely, Nice to meet you.
I looked up at dad’s face and he had that smile on that he used whenever the postman came and dropped off a package and dad had to sign for it, and then when the postman started asking a question or two, dad would get this same smile and say, Thank you for coming by,
at the same time closing the door as he said it, so that the coming by
was usually said while the door was clicking shut.
It was daddy’s I’m being polite
smile. Daddy’s Don’t get too close
smile. His stay on your side of the fence, please, and we’ll all be happy
smile.
Jack Ramsey wasn’t one for small-talk, nor one for too much neighborly love.
Can we go across, daddy?
I begged.
No, sweetie. Best not,
he mumbled at me, still waving, still smiling, smiling, nodding, smiling. Waving. Nice to meet ya. Yes, nice ta meetcha.
It crossed my little mind that we hadn’t actually met them yet...
The mustache-man grinned like a young Santa Claus (and I remember thinking he could indeed even be Santa, except his mustache was brown and not white, and he needed a beard, but the rest of him looked pretty much like the real deal).
The pregnant lady laughed at her son. The portly man shook his head, said something to her, and then did something that made my father’s hand clutch at my shoulder and pull me possessively toward him.
With a large, welcoming smile, the portly man did the unthinkable.
He crossed the street.
-2-
The portly man introduced himself as Patricio Abreu. His smile glowed with warmth and reddened his cheeks. His wife, Iliana Abreu, looked like a timid lady, but her smile was welcoming. She constantly stayed by her husband’s side.
Mom and dad were close, but not this close. I think I even asked him this later, why mom was never under his arm during one of our barbecues like Mrs. Iliana was with Mr. Patricio. You know how kids are, saying the damndest things.
Patricio had only a light accent. In later years, I’d recognize the accent as slightly British, an influence from the many years of practice he put into learning English; but the unmistakable Latin twang was interspersed into it. He seemed to sing a little when he spoke. We’re looking forward to our life in America. It has always been our dream,
he said. Friendly neighbors, good opportunities for our children.
He rubbed his wife’s belly. We would love it if you could come over for dinner tonight. I won’t take no for an answer. Come over, please. It would be our honor to host you. My wife is an incredible cook.
She blushed, said nothing else.
Her hair was a gorgeous fall of locks and ringlets of brown lusciousness. I remember being almost mesmerized by the beauty of that thick, rich hair.
Johnny would grow up to have hair like that one day, never as long, but the same elegant, luxuriant mane of dark curls. And, one day, I’d run my hand through those curls repeatedly.
One day.
Little did I know. Little did anyone know. Except maybe dad. I think dads have a natural distrust for anything male when they have daughters, no matter how young.
My father wasn’t a bad person. Maybe it’s just the curse of living in the USA. Now that I’ve experienced Europe, I can say that the people there are more open—open to a fault if I’m completely honest. My dad needed time to welcome anyone into his inner circle.
He was uncomfortable. Oh, no, not tonight, we have plans. Maybe another night. Sure, sure, another night. Oh, but not Tuesday. No, Wednesday is no good either. Let’s put a pin on it.
Mr. Ramsey, I insist. You obviously have not tasted my wife’s cooking.
I started to wriggle against my dad’s grip, looking around Mr. Abreu’s large legs which were in my way, to look at the kid now going ballistic. He was even putting some snow in his mouth, downright eating the stuff.
I figured he needed some help on the fundamentals of this stuff. I eased off from my dad’s side while he and Mr. Abreu haggled for a date for dinner. Patricio Abreu was truly insistent, and dad clearly distracted by it. I know this because, when I looked up at him and asked, Dad, can I go over across the street?
he mumbled, Uhm, yeah, uhm, sure...
but his mind wasn’t really into it. I slid out from under his grip, and then I committed the second sin of the day. I crossed the street as well.
I crossed the street to meet the boy who would one day come to rule my world.
On that day, he was shy, not wanting to talk to me—a far cry from what he’d become.
His elation died slightly when I arrived on his turf, and he looked over across the street at his parents forlornly. They’re OK,
I said. They’re talking to my dad. My dad is cool. Your dad is also cool. Is that a girl or a boy your mom is giving birth to? Do you know how to build a snowman? Come, I’ll show you. What’s your name? My name is Catherine.
He was suddenly still, suddenly aware of being in unfamiliar surroundings, a new home, white everywhere, cold. He held a mound of snow in his hand. It just lingered there, waiting.
For a moment, even at the age of six, I was stunned by the haunting look of his eyes—a light green that looked like an ocean, contrasted with the black-black night of his hair and the light