Clash (6 page)

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Authors: Rick Bundschuh Bethany Hamilton

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BOOK: Clash
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“I always think of it as a desert,” Malia admitted. “So you like it there better, and your mom made you move or something?”

“My mom . . .” Jenna’s words trailed off. “It’s nice here, nicer than I thought, but I had to leave all my friends, my horse, my house, everything.”

Malia sensed there was a story this customer wanted to share.

“Let me get this smoothie for you, and you can hang out and tell me all about you,” Malia offered kindly.

“Thanks,” Jenna said, suddenly feeling like she wanted to open up and share. There was something different about Malia — something good that made it okay to talk.

For the next half hour Jenna told Malia her tale of frustration about leaving everything comfortable and familiar for the unwelcome trip to Hawaii — all so her mom could continue a relationship with a man she had met.

Her anger at the whole situation simmered just below the surface, but during her conversation, she managed not to say terrible things about her mom to Malia.

“I really miss my horse . . . and my friends,” Jenna said.

“You’ll make new friends,” Malia assured her. “It’s tougher during the summer to connect, but hang around the beach, and it won’t be long. Hey, you met us the first day, didn’t you?”

“Yeah, I guess so,” Jenna said, feeling better.

While Jenna talked, the rain-filled clouds drifted away and the sun peeked out of blue holes in the sky. Soon there was enough sun to dry up puddles and make the idea of lounging on the beach attractive again.

“Well, I’ve taken enough of your time,” said Jenna. “I think I’ll go hang out on the beach.”

“Sounds like a plan,” said Malia. “See you around.” She picked up the empty smoothie glass. “Hey, Jenna! You ought to come to the surf contest this Saturday at Pine Trees. It’s really fun.”

Jenna had no idea where Pine Trees Beach was located, so Malia pointed out directions from the Smoothie Shack.

“Maybe Bethany and I can give you some surfing lessons,” Malia offered.

“That would be great!” Jenna said.

Later, as Jenna walked down to the beach, it seemed that the whole day had taken on a new glow. Malia would have been surprised to know just how much her few words of kindness had meant to this new girl.

For Jenna, the fact that there was one person on this whole mosquito-infested island who was willing to talk to her, to ask questions about her life, her likes, her experiences, was exhilarating.

After having such a bad fi ght with her mother and suddenly hearing her dad’s voice, she’d wondered if she was going crazy. But now she knew she wasn’t.

She felt like she might just have a future — and a hope.

Jenna had only been gone a few moments when Bethany and Monica showed up at the smoothie shack.

“This place is cool,” Monica said, looking around.

“Hey guys! Ready to be blown away by my ultimate smoothies?” Malia asked as soon as they plunked down on their stools.

“I brought you another victim, didn’t I?” Bethany shot back. Malia grinned wickedly.

“Hey, you’ll never guess what I saw earlier,” Bethany went on. “The same car from the shopping center. You know . . . the one where that girl was going off on her mom. And guess what? The girl is still going off today.”

“She was here,” Malia said.

“Who?”

“That girl you heard yelling at her mom.”

“No way! She didn’t go off on you, did she, for not putting the straw deep enough in the smoothie or something?” Bethany winked at Monica, but Malia frowned.

“She actually seems kinda nice. What’s really funny is she’s the same girl we met on the beach the other day — the one with the mosquito bites.”

“Hmm. Maybe she was nice to you,” Bethany said. “But in my book really nice people don’t scream and yell at other people, especially their parents.”

“Well, that’s easy for you to say. Don’t you remember what Tim said? Maybe she just hasn’t been taught by parents like yours.” Malia looked Bethany in the eye. “My parents aren’t saints, either, remember?”

“But you didn’t hear the stuff that girl was saying!” Bethany argued, avoiding her friend’s stare. “I just can’t imagine how anyone could treat her mother that way. I mean, I know it happens. I just don’t like it, and I’m not really all fi red up about hanging out with someone like that. Now how about that smoothie?”

Malia shrugged and pointed to the menu board. “Take your pick,” she said. “Anyhow, I invited her to come to the surf contest on Saturday.”

“O — kay,” said Bethany slowly, sensing there was more to the story.

“And . . . well . . . see, I said that maybe we could give her some lessons,” Malia admitted almost apologetically.

“We?” Bethany said incredulously. “You got a mouse in your pocket?”

Monica laughed.

“Come on!” Malia said. “You’re always giving surf lessons to someone . . . even to the kookiest people.”

“We’re surfing in that contest, Malia!”

“Yeah, I know, but there’s always a lot of free time after our heats.”

“Why did you commit me?” Bethany asked fi nally.

“Because she met you, she heard about you, you were friendly to her,” Malia reminded her with a pleading look.

“That was before I saw what she was really like,” Bethany replied. “Besides, you don’t need my help, you can teach her yourself. After all, she’s your friend.”

Malia sensed something odd in the way Bethany said that last line, but she decided to shrug it off. Bethany was not the type to get jealous if other friends came into the picture, but she was very careful about what kind of friends she chose to hang out with herself.

Monica, who had been listening to the exchange between Malia and Bethany, decided to add her two cents’ worth.

“Malia, I know that you and Bethany are always picking up strays and dragging them around with you, but you’ve gotta remember that we’ve got to keep the Hanalei Girls Surf Team special!”

“I’m not saying to make her part of the team or anything,” Malia protested. “I’m just trying to be helpful to a new kid on the island.”

“Yeah, well, if you start giving some kid surf lessons, the next thing you know she’ll want to hang out with us all the time, and we don’t even know her.”

“And I’m not sure I want to know her,” tossed in Bethany. “The stray Malia found seems to have fleas.”

“Just be careful who you invite to hang out with us,” Monica added.

“Yeah, okay, we’ll just play it by ear,” said Malia, stung by the less than charitable reaction from her friends. “So, what kind of smoothie magic do you want me to mix up for you?”

“I dunno. They all look so good!” said Monica. “How am I supposed to decide?”

Jenna’s mom showed up late to pick her up at the beach. Instead of getting mad about it — or bringing up the boyfriend deal — Jenna brushed it off, feeling the new bounce in her step as she made her way over to the car.

“Good day in spite of the rain?”

“Way better than I expected!” Jenna said with a wide smile — a smile that she hoped would call a truce between them. She took a deep breath and plunged ahead. “Mom, can I go to a surf contest this Saturday?”

“Well, if you get your chores done and if you promise not to go out too far — ”

“Mom! I’m not five years old anymore!” Jenna said, exasperated. She paused and then tiptoed on thin ice. “And I’d really like a new bathing suit.”

“What’s wrong with your old one?!”

“Nothing, really. I . . .” Jenna frowned. “They just wear different stuff than we did back in Arizona.” Her mom pursed her lips, staring straight ahead as she drove.

“Money doesn’t grow on trees, you know.”

“Please, Mom? Please? I’ll even work for it if you want.”

“Well,” her mom said, glancing over as a small smile formed on her lips, “let’s see how much they are when we get to town.”

“Okay,” Jenna said eagerly, “but I think you have to buy them at a surf shop, and there’s a surf shop just up the road.”

As the car pulled onto the highway, Jenna caught a glimpse of herself in the side mirror. It was an image she hadn’t seen in awhile. It was a girl smiling.

five

Bethany couldn’t help smiling. After a couple days of rain, the sun had crawled out from behind the clouds, the trade winds wound down, and the island returned to the warm, sunny paradise made famous on so many postcards. It was awesome surfing weather.

Floating on the water, she felt her excitement build as she spotted the large swell coming toward her. While most girls tended to back away from bigger surf, she came alive in it. Bethany waited for the perfect moment and then pitched herself over the face of the wave, using gravity to sweep her down the wave as she simultaneously sprang to her feet.

Moments later, she shot forward toward shore in an impressive spray of white water that seemed to glint like diamonds in the bright sun. What an awesome day! she thought happily.

Bethany was so relieved that she didn’t have to work out in the rain again. She was even more relieved when she saw Monica waving at her from her beach cruiser in the parking lot. Bethany had been training like crazy for the contest and was looking forward to taking a little break.

She also needed someone to talk to. Malia had been working so much they hadn’t had a chance to get together, so Bethany had been left to deal with her thoughts by herself. Not fun.

After quickly packing her surf gear in the back of her mom’s van, Bethany and Monica were off, pedaling their beach cruisers down the coconut palm-tree-lined road that led to Hanalei Bay Pier. Glimpses of turquoise water flashed past them between the rows of expensive homes.

“Wouldn’t it be great to live in one of these houses?” Monica said dreamily.

“Yeah, until a tsunami came,” Bethany answered wryly. “Remember the story of the house built on sand?”

“Sure, I remember that story, but the guy had a great view while it lasted,” Monica laughed.

The bikes wheeled down a bumpy little path and then onto the concrete deck of the pier. Along the edge of the pier, old men and women with brown wrinkled faces hidden under large floppy hats fished with cane poles. At the end of the pier was a large roofed pavilion with a stainless steel ladder reaching down into the water. In a former life, the pier had been a hub of shipping activity, but now it served primarily as a tourist attraction and viewpoint for those wanting to watch beginners catch the small waves that brushed under its pilings.

Most island children saw the pier as a launch pad and would jump together in groups, laughing wildly as they cannonballed into the warm ocean only to scramble back up the ladder and do it again.

Bethany and Monica laid their bikes down at the end of the pier and stared into the water.

“Look!” Bethany pointed. “Hammerheads!”

Sure enough, baby hammerhead sharks, about a foot in length, darted in and out of the pilings.

“That’s nuts!” said Monica.

“Haven’t you ever seen them before? They’re here a lot,” Bethany said.

“They’re too small to hurt you, aren’t they?”

“Yeah, right now they’re way more afraid of you than you should be of them. Give them a few years to grow and it will be the other way around.”

“I wonder where their mommy is?”

“Sharks don’t make good moms; they give birth and swim off,” Bethany said thoughtfully as she stared down into the water. “The mom is probably a long way away.”

“I hope so,” Monica said, glancing back at Bethany.

“I hope so too.”

“And all those guys,” Monica said, pointing to the surfers in the water, “really hope so.”

“Did you know that sharks eat other sharks?”

“No. Why would they do that?”

“Cannibals,” Bethany said, wrinkling her nose in disgust. “They’ll even eat their own family and friends.”

“Sharks have friends?”

“Uh, no, I guess not.” Bethany laughed. “But if they did, they would eat them.”

The girls stared silently at the small sharks for a while, and as they did, Bethany felt troubled thoughts swirl through her mind again. She looked up at her friend.

“Monica, I think we have to be careful that we don’t make our hui so tight that we hurt other people.”

“What do you mean?” Monica said in surprise. “You aren’t saying that we should just let any poser or wannabe hang out with us?”

“I don’t know exactly what I’m saying,” Bethany answered. She suddenly felt an uncomfortable feeling — kind of like a nudge. She sighed and went on. “I mean, I really value having close friendships with all my friends in the Hanalei Girls Surf Team, but I think we have to be really careful. Maybe we should be more open to people that God would want us to invite in.”

“What if God wanted us to invite everyone into our crew?” Monica asked, narrowing her eyes a little.

“I don’t know if he would ask that, but if he did, I don’t think we would have much choice.”

“Are you trying to include that friend of Malia’s into our group? The girl doesn’t even surf! I would rather invite Brooke from the south side.”

“No, I’m not saying that. I just think that even though we’ve gotta keep our friendship tight, we gotta still be willing to be friendly and make friends with other people.”

“How are we going to do that?” asked Monica.

“I dunno. I can’t explain it, but it’s like I keep getting this feeling the past two days that I can’t get rid of — like God’s trying to talk — but I haven’t been listening.”

Bethany frowned, suddenly feeling confused and more than a little embarrassed under Monica’s sharp stare. “Or something like that . . .”

The bike ride home was a scenic one but a quiet one too, as the girls bounced along unpaved roads under huge canopies of bright green trees, both lost in their thoughts.

At the entrance to a golf course they parted company, and Bethany started the short pedal to her home while Monica had the longer trek to the condominiums she lived in up the road.

Bethany still felt troubled, but she decided for the time being to force their conversation to the back of her mind. She had Saturday’s contest to think about, after all . . . and what was more important than that?

six

Early Saturday morning the promoters were already setting up the judging tents, and vendors were staking out their sections of the beach and parking lot where they would be selling food, beverages, and souvenirs to the crowd.

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