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Better Late Than Never (Gifted #2) - Softcover

 
9780753463000: Better Late Than Never (Gifted #2)
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Gifted: Better Late Than Never by Marilyn Kaye

Goth girl Jenna Kelley has the ultimate tool to stage a teenage rebellion: she can read people's minds without even trying. When her alcoholic mother is hospitalized, a stranger shows up who says he's her long-lost dad and promises a better future. Too good to be true? Her gifted classmates think so, but Jenna is so determined to have a real parent around and a somewhat normal life that she might have lost her ability to listen.

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About the Author:

Marilyn Kaye is a former associate professor of library sciences and the best-selling author of numerous books and series, including Replica. Her book, Penelope, was recently made into a feature film starring Christina Ricci.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:

Gifted: Better Late Than Never
First Chapter ExcerptJENNA KELLEY STOOD AT her bedroom window and gazed outside without really seeing anything. Not that there was much to see-just another dull brick building, exactly like her own. Sometimes, if people left their curtains open, Jenna could see people moving around in their apartments, but they rarely did anything worth watching.
Without being able to see it, she knew there was another identical structure just beyond opposite. Together, the three building made up Brookside Towers, the low-income housing development were she’d moved with her mother two years before, when she was 11. It was a pretty dreary place, but it was home, and she wasn’t thrilled with the prospect of leaving it. The gray sky and steady rain outside did nothing to improve her mood.
She turned away from the window and went to her chest of drawers. Taking up a stubby black pencil, she added another layer to the already thick line that circled her eyes a stepped back to admire the effect. Kohl-rimmed eyes, short spiked hair, black T-shirt, black jeans... No tattoos or piercings yet, but she had a stick-on fake diamond on her right nostril, and it looked real. She hoped the way she looked would startle-maybe even shock-whomever she might be meeting.
In the mirror, behind her own reflection, she could see the empty suitcase lying open on her bed. Ignoring it, she left the room.
The sound of her footsteps on the bare floor echoed in the practically empty apartment. The silence gave her the creeps. She’d spent time alone here before, of course, but she’d always known that her mother would show up before too long. This time it was different. Her mother would be staying in the hospital rehab center for two weeks. Just knowing this made Jenna fell even more alone.
She considered turning on the TV for some companionship but then remembered that all she’d hear would be static and the screen would be a blur. Her mother hadn’t paid the cable bill for three months, and the service had been cut of a while ago.
Instead, she went into the kitchen and opened the refrigerator door, even though she knew there wouldn’t be anything edible inside. She removed a half-empty bottle of soda. There was no fizz left in it, but it was better than nothing, and she sat down at the rickety kitchen table to drink it.
What was her mother doing right now? She wondered. Screaming at a nurse? Demanding a gin and tonic? Jenna wanted to be optimistic. Maybe her mother would make it this time, but she couldn’t count on it. Her mom had tried to stop drinking before but had never made it beyond a day or two. That very morning, before she’d left, she’d drained what was left in a bottle and then announced that this was the last alcohol she’d ever drink. Jenna had tried to read her mind, to get a more accurate picture of how serious and committed her mother was this time, but she couldn’t get inside.
It was funny, when Jenna considered how easily she read minds. Young or old, male or female, smart or stupid-most people couldn’t stop her from eavesdropping on their private thoughts. But there were some who were just not accessible. Like her mother.
She used to think her mother’s mind was too cloudy and messed up to penetrate. Then she thought that maybe there was another reason, like a blood connection, that prevented her from reading the mind of a family member. Unfortunately, there were no other family members around, so she couldn’t test that theory. She’d never known her father-according to her mother, he’d taken off before Jenna was even born. She had no brothers or sisters, and her mother had left her own family when she was young, so Jenna had never met any grandparents, aunts, uncles, or cousins.
One thing made her doubt that her inability to read her mother’s mind was caused completely by the family connection. Just six months ago, when she’d been placed in the special so-called gifted class at Meadowbrook Middle School, she found that she couldn’t read the mind of the teacher, a woman they called Madame. She’d tried and tried, but she was completely blocked from getting inside the teacher’s head, and she’d finally given up. Maybe it was because Madame knew all their gifts so well that she was somehow able to protect herself from the special students. Gifts... It was a strange way to describe their unique abilities, Jenna thought. She certainly didn’t feel gifted.
Having finished the flat soda, she got up and went back to her room. The suitcase on her bed reminded her that she still had a lot to do. She just didn’t feel like doing it. Resolutely, she looked away and concentrated on the room that she would be bidding farewell to for at least the next two weeks.
She liked her room, and she’d spend a lot of time making it into a special place for herself-her own private, cozy cave, where she could close the door and shut out the sounds of her mother and her friends partying. The walls were a muddy gray color. She would have preferred them to be black, but beggars couldn’t be choosers-the paint had been free. She’d found half-empty cans of black and white paint left on the ground behind a Dumpster, and mixing them together had given her enough to cover the walls. A dog-walking job for a neighbor had given her the resources to buy a black bedspread printed with white skulls as well as matching curtains. There were two vampire-movie posters-one showed the vampire attacking a woman, while the other was a close-up of the vampire himself with blood dripping from his mouth. And just after last Christmas, someone in her building had thrown away a perfectly good set of twinkling lights, with only a few broken bulbs. She’d arranged some garland around her door, and when she turned of the overhead light and turned on the twinkling ones, it was nicely spooky.
What kind of room would she be sleeping in tonight? A basement dungeon? Somewhere ink and white, with ruffled curtains and shelves holding a variety of Barbies? She couldn’t decide which would be worse. Both images made her shudder.
Her sad fantasy was interrupted by a knock at the front door, and she groaned. For one fleeing moment, she considered not going to the door and pretending that no one was home. Eventually her visitor would go away.
Only, what was the point? She knew who was standing just outside the door, and she knew the woman wouldn’t give up so easily. Even if she went away, she’d only come back, possibly with a police officer or some other official type. And they’d break down the door to get in if they had to. There was probably a law. People who were Jenna’s age weren’t allowed to live alone, not even for two weeks.
There was another series of knocks, more insistent this time. Reluctantly, Jenna headed to the door. She opened it to see a woman dressed in a tan suit, her fair hair pulled back neatly n a bun. The briefcase in her hand completed her professional look, and she offered Jenna a practiced smile.
“Hello, Jenna, Are you ready to go?”
“No,” Jenna replied, knowing full well how rude she sounded and not caring at all. “I haven’t even started packing.”
The woman’s expression didn’t change, but now her smile looked a little strained. “Well, perhaps you’d better get going. You won’t need much, you know. It’s for only two weeks.”
“Yeah, whatever,” Jenna muttered. Two weeks in a house full of strangers. It might as well be forever. She left the social worker and went back to her bedroom. As she began tossing whatever caught her eye into the suitcase, her thoughts went back to the two temporary foster homes that she’d stayed in before.
She was eight when her mother broke her led in drunken fall. If Jenna had known what was going to happen, she might have left her to recover at home instead of calling an ambulance. Social services came for her while she waited in the emergency room. She was placed in a house owned by a woman who took in children for the money that the state paid her to keep them. The woman wasn’t’ exactly cruel-she didn’t whip her or anything like that-but she basically ignored Jenna and the two other little girls who were there. It really wasn’t so bad compared with the second home she went to, when she was 11 and her mother was arrested for drunk driving.
She wasn’t whipped there either. She was stuck in a family of do-gooders who were constantly asking her how she was feeling and encouraging her to express her true emotions. She supposed they were trying to be kind, but Jenna could read their pity, and she would have preferred to have been beaten.
Who knew what she would be stuck with this time? Glumly, she contemplated worst-case scenarios, like religious fanatics or vegetarians. Which would be worse-going to church twice a day or being deprived of Big Macs for two weeks? As she dragged her suitcase into the living room, she decided to take a quick scan of the social worker’s mind, on the off chance that she might be thinking about the place where she was about to take her. Jenna wasn’t hopeful-the poor woman was probably brooding over the crummy job she had, dragging miserable kids off to foster homes.
But she was in luck-Jenna read her destination loud and clear. And when she realized where she’d be spending the next two weeks, her mood improved considerably.
“Wait a second,” she told the social worker. She ran back into her room and grabbed the old stuffed animal off her bed. She hadn’t packed him because she was afraid that the people at the foster home would mock her for still sleeping with a teddy bear.
Or worse, there could be some little kids at the home who would put their grubby hands all over him. Now that she knew where she was go...

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  • PublisherKingfisher
  • Publication date2009
  • ISBN 10 0753463008
  • ISBN 13 9780753463000
  • BindingPaperback
  • Edition number1
  • Number of pages215
  • Rating

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