“This is beyond ridiculous.” I mutter under my breath, as I look down at my cell phone, seeing that I only have about thirty minutes until we have to go.
“McKenna, you might actually have a lot of fun this summer.” My mother says in her stupid soft voice as she folds a pair of my shorts and puts them in my suitcase.
“Doubt it.” I tell her.
“But you love California.” She says.
“But I hate the O’Connor’s.” I remind her.
“McKenna.” She says sternly.
“Well it’s true. They tortured me as a kid.”
“They did not torture you.”
I nod, “Yeah, they kinda did.”
My mom sighs, “Honey this will be an amazing experience for you.”
“Why don’t you come, and then you can see why I hate them so much. And plus I haven’t seen them in seven years.”
“I’m going to Brazil.”
“So you keep reminding me.”
“I told you that you were welcome to come to Brazil with Phil and me.”
I fake gag, “And be a third wheel? No thanks.”
Phil isn’t my dad nor will he ever be. Phil is my mom’s husband. My dad died eleven years ago when I was six in a car accident. Not even two years after my dad’s funeral, my mom and Phil got together. They work together and as she says, “Sparks just…flew.” Gross, right? Not that I don’t like Phil. I mean, he’s a nice guy I guess, but he’s tries to tell me what to do like he’s my dad. I mean, of course I want my mother to be happy, but I just wish she could be happy with someone else who isn’t Phil.
The O’Connor’s are the children of my mom’s best friend, Sarah O’Connor. As I said, they tortured me as a kid. Don’t get me wrong; I love Sarah. She’s amazing. I figure that if she and my mother had been around the house more often, then maybe her stupid children wouldn’t have tortured me so much. My mom and I used to drive out to California and stay with them for the summer when I younger. My brother would come some times, but usually he stayed home with Phil. We did it until I was age seven, when driving out to California got to be too expensive. When my dad died, we lost a lot of money. Well of course we had life insurance on him, but my mom spent most if not all of that on material things. She bought a house and two new cars. Not one, but two. Why? I don’t know. I mean, I was only six, it’s not like I could drive. My door opens without warning and Phil is standing there with a smile on his face, “All ready to go McKenna?” He asks in a cherry tone.
I shrug, putting on a sarcastic smile, “As ready as I’ll ever be!” I reply, mocking his cherry voice.
He sighs and looks down at my three suitcases which are on the floor, zipped and ready to go. See, even though I’m seventeen years old, and will be a senior in high school next year, my mother doesn’t think I’m ‘mature’ enough to stay home alone for three months. I’m like, come on. It’s not like I’ll go crazy and have a party every night. Jeez, I’m not stupid. I’d at least space them out and have one like every three weeks. But anyways, since I’m not ‘mature’ enough, I’m being shipped to California to stay with Sarah and her stupid family. Phil and my mom will be gone to Brazil for the entire three month summer vacation. They work for the school district, meaning they have the summer out. So while they’re vacationing in Brazil, I’ll be dying painfully slow in California. And it’s not even what’d you’d expect. You’d expect them to live in a well-known California town. Los Angles, San Francisco, maybe San Diego. But no. Wanna know where the stupid O’Connor’s live? The stupid O’Connor’s live in Vernon, California. Ever heard of it? No? It’s okay, I’d never heard of it either before we started going there. It’s five miles south of L.A., so hopefully I’ll be able to spend quite a bit of time there rather than in Vernon.
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Summer Doesn't Last Forever | ✓
Teen FictionSeventeen year old McKenna Bryant isn't happy about being shipped to the small town of Vernon in California for the summer while her mother and step-father vacation in Brazil. Seven long years have passed since McKenna saw any of the six O'Connor ch...