Beyond the Rising Tide (7 page)

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Authors: Sarah Beard

BOOK: Beyond the Rising Tide
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“People need to know they’re worth something,” I say. “And if feminism teaches women that they have the right to be treated as human beings, then that shouldn’t threaten men; it should motivate them to be better.”

I glance at Avery, and the way she’s looking at me makes me think I just earned some points on her trustworthiness scorecard.

Avery’s mom slides her stool back abruptly and stands. Her eyes are wide and transfixed on some imaginary thing, as if she’s staring out a window at a UFO. Only she’s not facing a window.

Without warning, she circles the counter, takes my face in her hands, and plants a kiss on my cheek. “Thank you. That’s the line I’ve been looking for!” Then she rushes down the hall and disappears into her office.

I stand there baffled for a moment, and then look to Avery. “What was that all about?”

Avery smiles and goes back to washing blueberries in a strainer under the tap. “I think your words are about to be immortalized in my mom’s latest screenplay.”

“Seriously?” I think back on what I said, trying to figure out what was so profound about it.

“Next thing you know, Jude Law will be repeating your words. You have to be careful with what you say around my mom.” She sets the washed blueberries on the counter and dries her hands on a dish towel. “Have you ever seen
The Velvet Sparrow
?”

I give her a blank look.

“It’s a historical film my mom penned. There’s this scene where the main character dramatically cries, ‘If this is love, then I hate love. And I’d rather tear my heart out with a fishhook than feel love again.’”

“Is that something you said?” I ask, intrigued and amused.

She drops a handful of blueberries on one of the plates. “When I was ten, when my cat died.”

“You must have really loved your cat.”

She shrugs. “It was my first real-life experience with death. I didn’t take it very well.”

The sandwiches are done, so I set the spoon back in the bowl and replace the tinfoil. “I don’t think anyone should have to take death well. I mean, it’s probably the worst thing that can happen to anyone, losing someone they care about.” I should know. Over the last six months working with Grim, I’ve seen more than my fair share of the effects of death. “Believe me. No one takes it well.”

“You sound like you know from experience.”

I move my plate to the bar and sit on a stool. “Death is part of the human experience. And I’m human.” Or was, anyway.

She sets her plate beside mine, but before sitting down she grabs her mom’s plate. “I’m going to take this into her office.” She starts walking away, then twists and adds, “If she’s too immersed in her story, I may have to prod her to eat. So … sit tight for a minute.”

She disappears down the hall, and I look at my sandwich, realizing that I don’t even know if this body is capable of digesting food. I’ve never seen Charles eat while materialized. But that doesn’t mean it’s not possible or even necessary. In fact, now that I think about it, the beginning of hunger pains are pinching my insides. Or maybe it’s nerves.

Avery returns and sits beside me, plucking a blueberry off her plate and putting it in her mouth. I pick up my sandwich. Just to be safe, I start small, tearing off a bit of bread with my teeth. It tastes great, chewy and soft, like French bread should be. I take the next step and swallow, waiting for something to happen—I don’t know what—maybe vomiting or asphyxiation or spontaneous combustion. But nothing happens. So I take another bite, bigger this time. And it goes down as easily as the first.

Now that I’m confident eating won’t turn me into a gremlin, I return my attention to Avery. I can’t believe I’m sitting beside her, eating a sandwich we made together. She’s close enough that I can feel warmth radiating from her skin. And she smells amazing, like coconut and some other fruity scent.

All the death talk should make an easy transition into the things I really want to talk to her about. But I can’t exactly turn to her and say, “You don’t need to take my death so hard. My life wasn’t really worth living anyway.” Not only would it sound totally creepy, but she can’t know who I am. No, I’m going to have to be creative about this. Deliver my message in a roundabout way.

I look around her mom’s condo. I’ve seen the decor before. Sailboat paintings and knickknacks, and a wooden yacht club plaque. I study it now with feigned interest, as though I’ve never seen it before. “Do you love sailing as much as your mom?”

She finishes chewing, then says, “It’s her passion, not mine. I think she gets a lot of writing inspiration on the waves. But we usually take a family trip to the Channel Islands at the end of the summer before school starts.”

“Are you going this year?” With her aversion to the ocean, I don’t see why she would. But if I can get her to explain why, it will steer our conversation in the direction I want.

“I’m not sure.” She rolls a blueberry between her thumb and index finger. “A lot of things have changed since last year.”

Now we’re getting somewhere. “Like what?”

Her fingers go still, and she gazes down at her blueberry as though it’s a crystal ball showing her the answer to my question. Whatever she sees darkens her expression into something pained. Her lips part, and just when I think she’s going to voice her thoughts, she slides on a cheerful façade. It may fool other people, but through the tiny cracks, I can still see her pain.

She smiles in the way she usually does right before making a joke. “My sister dyed her hair black, and I don’t think my mom will let her on the boat when she no longer looks like a California girl.”

I give her a courtesy smile, then gaze at her and wait for a real answer. She doesn’t give it to me, though. She eats her blueberry and says, “What about you? Do you sail? Wait—let me guess. You surf.”

I try to tell myself that it’s okay she’s not ready to open up yet, that I can be patient. I shake my head. “I’ve never tried it.”

Her eyebrows lift in surprise. “Why not?”

“Just haven’t had the chance.” I saw the ocean only once when I was alive, on the same day I drowned in it.

Her brows come back down and pinch together. “Don’t you live around here?”

I’ve never had a conversation like this, where I’ve had to construct my answers so that they’re both truthful and vague. “No—I’m only here for a little while.”

She picks up her sandwich, but doesn’t take a bite. “Well, you can’t visit SLO county without giving surfing a shot. If you catch even one wave, you’ll be hooked for life.” Her expression sobers, and I glimpse that pain in her eyes again before she blinks it away. “I know someone who could give you lessons. His name is Tyler, and he works at the surf shop at Avila Beach. Just go in and tell him I sent you.”

“I might just do that.” Or not. I should probably avoid Tyler so I don’t end up accidentally throwing my fist in his face.

A cell phone on the counter starts vibrating, and Avery reaches for it and looks at the screen. “Sorry, I have to take this.” She takes the phone into the living room. I try not to listen but can’t really help it when there’s nothing else to listen to. It sounds like someone is asking her for a favor, because Avery is saying, “Yeah. I probably could.”

Beth returns to the kitchen and pulls a glass from the cupboard. The beach’s humidity has done a number on her curls, and they’re springing out of her scalp like a jester’s hat. She looks at me. “Did you know Avery makes the most amazing chocolates?”

“Does she?” Of course I already know she works in a chocolate shop. I even sampled the chocolate once before I died.

“If you go to the surf shop like Avery suggested,” Beth says, apparently having eavesdropped on our conversation, “you should stop by her father’s chocolate shop, the Chocolate Couture. Avery works there. She’ll give you some free samples.”

Avery comes back into the kitchen, moves her plate to the sink, and then looks at her mom regretfully. “Dad needs me at work.”

“Avery,” Beth chides. “It’s your day off.”

“I know, but … he needs me. They’re slammed today, and he had to fire one of the new summer employees for giving out a bunch of free chocolate to his friends.”

Beth huffs. “So much for the perfect day.”

Avery turns to me and smiles a little. “You’ve probably been itching for an escape anyway. Do you want a bag for the rest of your sandwich? You didn’t eat very much.”

I look down at my food, which is almost untouched. I guess I was too focused on Avery to eat. “Sure,” I say, standing.

As she bags my sandwich, I stand there hoping I’ll have more time with her. Maybe I’ll visit her at the chocolate shop tomorrow like her mom suggested. Or maybe I’ll visit her later today, in case I don’t have a tomorrow.

She walks me to the door and hands me the paper bag. “Thanks again for helping save the crab.”

I nod as I walk through the doorway and turn back to her. “Thanks for the crab sandwich.”

She smiles, and it actually touches her eyes. “Maybe I’ll see you around.”

“Maybe.” There has to be something else to say, something meaningful in case this is the last time she sees me. I open my mouth, willing the perfect words to come out. “Well … it’s been real.”

She nods, waves, and then shuts the door.

I stand there a moment, like I’m waiting for her to open it back up, even though I know she won’t.

It’s been real?
That’s what I went to all this trouble to tell her? It’s been real. Brilliant. I sigh and look down at Charles’s ring. It could be minutes before he notices it missing, or weeks. There’s no way of knowing. So I need to make the most of my time here. Avery’s going to be heading to work soon, so I turn and start walking in that direction, intending to take her mom’s suggestion to get some chocolate samples.

he air is extra clear after last night’s rainstorm, and from where I’m driving, I can see the ocean below, rippling shades of blue and fringes of white foam. My chest aches at the sight of it, so I move my sun visor over the side window and focus on the road instead.

Up ahead, a boy is walking on the shoulder of the highway. He’s tall, and his platinum-blond hair glows like a beacon in the sunlight.

I know that hair. I just said good-bye to it on Mom’s doorstep fifteen minutes ago. I slow down and pull up behind him, lowering my window and leaning out. “Car trouble?”

When he turns and sees me, his eyebrows rise, and the corner of his mouth follows. “You could say that.”

“Can I give you a ride somewhere?”

He comes to my window and lays his hand on the door. “Hasn’t anyone ever told you not to pick up strangers?”

More than once, Dad has told me not to pick up strangers. Probably because when I first got my drivers license, I did it all the time. A lot of people don’t like to pay for parking near the beach, so when I’d see them struggling with their surfboard and beach bags, I’d pick them up if I was already on my way there.

Kai is less of a stranger than all the others I’ve picked up. However, thanks to our crab rescue, I do know for a fact that he’s carrying something sharp.

I stick my hand out the window and open my palm. My forearm touches his hand where it rests on my door, and I feel a little zing. “Hand over your pocketknife, and I’ll give you a lift.”

He grins and produces his pocketknife, dropping it in my palm. I curl my fingers around it and tuck it in the side pocket of my door.

“Hop in.”

He circles the car and gets in. His legs are so long he has to slide the seat back a foot, and even then, his knees almost touch the glove compartment. The last person to sit there was Paige, and she’s half an inch over five feet. And very proud of that half inch.

“Where to?” I ask as I get back on the road.

He hesitates, as if he’s not really sure. “Just stay on the highway. I’ll tell you when to turn.”

“So,” I say, cringing a bit, “I’m sorry about my mom. She gets a little carried away sometimes.”

“I think she’s nice. Passionate, but nice.” He’s looking down, to where the sun is glinting off his ring. He’s wearing a wristband that matches the ring—silver with a stone-like vein. I wonder where he got them, and if they mean anything special, but it feels like such a nosy question to ask.

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