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Abbi Glines - Rush Too Far

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    Rush Too Far
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    Atria Books
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    2014
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    9781476775944
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Rush Too Far: summary, description and annotation

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Rosemary Beach - 1.1 Too Far - 1.1 Fallen Too Far Everyone in Rosemary Beach thinks they know how Rush Finlay and Blaire Wynn fell in love. But Rush is back to tell his side of the story... Rush has earned every bit of his bad-boy reputation. The three-story beach house, luxury car, and line of girls begging for time between his sheets are the envy of every guy in Rosemary Beach, and Rush handles it all with the laid-back cool of a rock stars son. All he needs are his best friend, Grant, and his sister, Nan. Until Blaire Wynn drives into town in her beat-up pickup truck with a pistol under her seat. The Alabama farm girl instantly captures Rushs attention once he discovers that the angelic beauty is his new stepsister, but he vows to keep his distance. Even if she needs his help. Even if he craves her. Because Rush knows why Blaire is all alone in the world, forced to ask for help from the father who abandoned her three years ago. And he knows if he gets too close it will destroy Nan, who has a secret connection to Blaire. He has every reason in the world to stay away from her. Find out why he doesnt.

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Rush Too Far

Rosemary Beach - 1.1

Abbi Glines

To Natasha Tomic, who first used the phrase Rush Crush. Youve stood behind me, made me laugh, listened to me worry, and enjoyed more than one glass of red wine with me. Over this past year you went from being a supportive blogger to a real friend.

PROLOGUE

They say that children have the purest hearts. That children dont truly hate, because they dont fully understand the emotion. They forgive and forget easily.

They say a lot of bullshit like that, because it helps them sleep at night. It makes for good, heartwarming sayings to hang on their walls and smile at as they pass by.

I know differently. Children love like no one else. They have the capacity to love more fiercely than anyone. That much is true. That much I know. Because I lived it. By the age of ten, I knew hate, and I knew love. Both all-consuming. Both life-altering. And both completely blinding.

Looking back now, I wish someone had been there to see how my mother had sown the seed of hate inside me. Inside my sister. If someone had been there to save us from the lies and bitterness she allowed to fester within us, then maybe things would have been different. For everyone involved.

I never would have acted so foolishly. It wouldnt have been my fault that a girl was left alone to take care of her ailing mother. It wouldnt have been my fault that the same girl stood at her mothers graveside, believing that the last person on earth who loved her was dead. It wouldnt have been my fault that a man had destroyed himself, his life becoming a broken, hollow shell.

But no one saved me.

No one saved us.

We believed the lies. We held on to our hate. Yet I alone destroyed an innocent girls life.

They say you reap what you sew. Thats bullshit, too. Because I should be burning in hell for my sins. I shouldnt be allowed to wake up every morning with this beautiful woman in my arms, who loves me unconditionally. I shouldnt get to hold my son and know such a pure joy.

But I do.

Because eventually, someone did save me. I didnt deserve it. Hell, more than anyone, it was my sister who needed saving. She hadnt acted on her hate. She hadnt manipulated the fate of another family, not caring about the outcome. But her bitterness still controls her, while Ive been delivered. By a girl . . .

But she isnt just a girl. She is an angel. My angel. A beautiful, strong, fierce, loyal angel who entered my life in a pickup truck, carrying a gun.

CHAPTER ONE

This isnt your typical love story. Its really too completely fucked up to be charming. But when youre the bastard son of the legendary drummer from one of the most beloved rock bands in the world, you expect serious fuck-ups. Its what were known for. Add the selfish, spoiled, self-centered mother who raised me into the mix, and the outcome isnt pretty.

There are so many places where I could start this story. In my bedroom, as I held my sister while she cried from the pain of our mothers cruel words. At the front door, as she watched, with tears streaming down her face, while my father came to take me away for the weekend, leaving her alone. Both of those things happened often, marking me forever. I hated to see her cry. Yet it was a part of my life.

We shared the same mother, but our fathers were different. Mine was a famous rocker, who brought me into his world of sex, drugs, and rock and roll every other weekend and for a month during the summers. He never forgot me. He never made excuses. He was always there. As imperfect as he was, Dean Finlay always showed up to get me. Even if he wasnt sober, he came.

Nans father never came. She was alone when I was gone, and even though I loved being with my dad, I hated knowing she needed me. I was her parent. I was the one person she could trust to take care of her. It made me grow up quickly.

When I asked my dad to bring her along, too, he would get this sad look on his face and shake his head. Cant, son. Wish I could, but your momma wont allow that.

He never said anything more. I just knew that if my mother wouldnt allow it, then there was no hope. So Nan was left alone. I wanted to hate someone for that, but hating my mother was hard. She was my mom. I was a kid.

So I found a place to focus my hate and resentment at the injustice of Nans life. The man who didnt come to see her. The man whose blood ran through her veins yet didnt love her enough even to send a birthday card. He had his own family now. Nan had been to see them once.

She had forced Mom to take her to his house. She wanted to talk to him. See his face. She just knew he would love her. I think, deep down, she thought Mom hadnt told him about her. She had this fairy tale in her head that her father would realize she existed and swoop in and save her. Give her the love she so desperately sought.

His house had been smaller than ours. Much smaller. It was seven hours away in a small country town in Alabama. Nan had said it was perfect. Mom had called it pathetic. It hadnt been the house, though, that haunted Nan. Not the small white picket fence that she described to me in detail. Or the basketball hoop outside and the bicycles leaning against the garage door.

It had been the girl who opened the door. Shed had long blond hair, almost white. She had reminded Nan of a princess. Except that shed been wearing tennis shoes with dirt on them. Nan had never owned a pair of tennis shoes or been near dirt. The girl had smiled at her, and Nan had been momentarily enchanted. Then shed seen the pictures on the wall behind the girl. Pictures of this girl and another girl just like this one. And a man holding both their hands. He was smiling and laughing.

He was their father.

This was one of the two daughters he loved. It had been obvious, even to Nans young eyes, that he was happy in those photos. He wasnt missing the child he had left behind. The one her mother kept telling her he knew about.

All those things our mother had tried to tell her over the years that she had refused to believe suddenly fell into place. She had been telling the truth. Nans father hadnt wanted her, because he had this life. These two beautiful, angelic daughters and a wife who looked so much like them.

Those photos on the wall had tortured Nan for years afterward. Again, I wanted to hate my mother for taking her there. For shoving the truth in her face. At least when Nan had lived in her fairy tale, she had been happier, but her innocence was lost that day. And my hate for her father and his family began to grow inside me.

They had taken from my little sister the life she deserved, a father who could love her. Those girls didnt deserve him more than Nan did. That woman he was married to used her beauty and those girls to keep him from Nan. I hated them all.

I eventually acted on that hate, but the story really starts the night Blaire Wynn walked into my house with a nervous frown and the fucking face of an angel. My worst nightmare . . .

* * *

I had told Nan I didnt want people over that night, but shed invited them anyway. My little sister didnt take no for an answer ever. Leaning back on the couch, I stretched my legs out in front of me and took a drink of my beer. I needed to hang around here long enough to make sure things werent going to get out of hand. Nans friends were younger than mine. They got a little rowdy sometimes. But I put up with it because it made her happy.

Mom running off to fucking Paris with her new husband, Nans still-inattentive father, hadnt helped Nans mood lately. This was all I could think of to cheer her up. For once in her life, I wished my mother would think of someone other than herself.

Rush, meet Blaire. I believe she might belong to you. I found her outside looking a little lost. Grants voice broke into my thoughts. I looked up at my stepbrother and then at the girl standing beside him. Id seen that face before. It was older, but I recognized it.

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