Authors: Merrie Destefano
Katie: Why did the monkey climb the tree?
Me: I dunno.
Katie: Because the tree was full of bananas, silly!
Then she’d grin and start to laugh, and before long we’d both be cracking up.
Once she was here, the only way I could make her disappear was to take out my journal and write it all down. I think that was what she wanted—to make sure that I never forgot about her.
As if I could. Even if I tried.
If you were here right now
I would dress you in white
and put flowers in your hair.
If you were sitting beside me
I would play all your favorite games
and never yell at you again.
You and I would be best friends
Forever. Cross my heart
And hope to … see you smile.
Just one more time.
Journal 2, page 1
Kira:
Darkness shrouded the house when I finally got home from work. Shadows filled the yard. A pale glow came from those Christmas lights in the trees but they weren’t very bright. I fumbled with my key, then pushed the door open. Flipped on the kitchen light. Gram snored on the sofa, a mess of fliers and folklore books spread out on the coffee table, a half-empty bottle of Jameson and several empty teacups in their midst. She must have had her paranormal society friends over today. I carried the bottle into the kitchen, stood on tiptoes to put it away and at the same time I saw the garbage can. Overflowing with Budweiser empties.
Everyone was drinking more lately.
I grabbed a frozen pizza from the freezer, unwrapped it and shoved it in the oven. Then I spread my chemistry book and my notes out on the table. At that point, I realized I was way too hungry to wait for dinner, so I pulled a couple of cans from the cupboard. Tuna and sardines. I drained them both, poured the contents into a bowl and started eating.
Just then Dad walked in the door, bag of groceries in one arm, racquet ball gear in the other. He gave me a weird look.
“What are you eating?” he asked as he shuffled milk and eggs from the bag to the fridge.
“Tuna,” I said, my mouth full.
“Whatever happened to vegetables and carbs?” he asked, his back to me.
I shrugged, but of course he couldn’t hear that. He swiveled around and stared at me.
“Pizza’s in the oven,” I told him. As far as I was concerned, that fulfilled the need for carbs and veggies.
“Is there something going on, Kira?” He frowned, but not exactly like he was mad. More like he was concerned—which was way worse. “Anything we need to talk about?”
“I’m just hungry, Dad. Sheesh.”
He sat at the table across from me. Like he was waiting for some big confession, but I didn’t have a clue what was on his mind.
“I got a call from your English teacher today, Mrs. Pierce.”
Suddenly my stomach turned inside out. I set the bowl on the table. My journal. I had forgotten all about it. Apparently Mrs. P hadn’t. Crap.
“She wants to meet with us on Monday.”
“Did she say why?” I asked.
“No. That’s why I’m asking you. Have you been turning in your homework?”
“Come on, Dad. You know I do.”
“Then what’s going on?” he asked.
I swallowed. Besides the fact that the whole town hated me and treated me like I had some contagious mental illness? “Nothing.” But already tears were welling up in my eyes, so I hastily brushed them away with the palm of my hand. “Really, Dad, I thought I was doing good in English. I don’t know what I did wrong.” I hated lying to my dad. But maybe it wasn’t a lie, not really. I mean, all I had done was turn in my assignment. I’d done just what I was supposed to do, so how could I get in trouble for that?
I didn’t hear Gram walk in the room behind me, didn’t know that she and Dad were having another one of their silent conversations about me.
All I knew was that she put her hands on my shoulders.
“Don’t worry about it, sweetheart,” she said. “We know you’re doing your best in school. Your dad will get it all straightened out. Go ahead and finish your—what is that? Tuna and sardines?” Gram laughed then. “That crazy appetite of yours.”
Dad watched her. That was when I could hear the silent words. Couldn’t tell what they were, but the air sizzled with their heat.
“Maybe you should cut back on the swimming, Kira,” Dad said. Still with that heavy look of concern, his voice thick with it. The circles under his eyes were even darker today. Ever since Mom and Katie’s death, he’d had an almost superstitious fear of the ocean. Gram was the one who had convinced him, years ago, that I needed to learn how to swim.
And once I started, I hadn’t been able to stop.
I shook my head and stood up. Swimming was the only outlet I had, the only time I felt at peace. “I
can’t
stop, don’t say that.” My chest tightened and I struggled to breathe.
Gram tried to pull me into a hug, but I didn’t want to be held. I pushed her away.
Dad stared at me, the concern on his face giving way to something else. As if he knew what I was going through and wished he could help somehow.
“It’s okay, baby girl,” he said. He stood beside me now and held his arms out. He didn’t force me into an embrace. Ever since the funeral, there were times when I couldn’t stand to be touched. Instead he just stretched out his arms and waited. I paused, took another feeble breath. “We aren’t going to make you stop swimming,” he said. “I just thought maybe you should rest for awhile. You know how I worry about you. But if that’s not what you want—”
“It isn’t,” I said.
“Then we won’t mention it again. Come here.” His arms were still out.
I slid into his embrace, let his warm arms wrap around me, and I felt safe.
“I’m not going to leave you, Kira,” he said, as if he could read my mind, as if he knew that every time he held me I was comparing it to
her
last embrace. Arms sticky with blood, then she was running away to the ocean and death.
Caleb:
Night brought both anger and despair. Riley led us through city, beneath the glow of street lamps. Village streets gave way to long winding roads, until at last, a serpentine stretch of beach opened up on our left, linking tall rocky cliffs with the sea. Perched on a high bluff to the right, the dwelling of our familiar waited for us, glowing with phosphorescent light.
Starlight guided me up the stairs, to the rock-and-wood home where we were staying. Food waited for us on the dining room table, steaming bowls of rice and fish, but the humans who lived here must have retreated to their private rooms. The only sound in the house was the thrashing of the sea against rock, as steady as breathing.
Riley had claimed the role of leader after Ethan’s death and she turned on me as soon as we entered the house.
“I told you, it wasn’t the right time,” she said, referring to the argument we’d had when we all stood outside the souvenir shop. “You can’t just walk in and introduce yourself to one of the people who live on land. And especially not
her
.”
“Don’t be too hard on him,” Dylan said as he took a bowl of food. “It’s almost impossible to control yourself during the Burning.”
“The Burning is
no
excuse.” Riley pointed an accusing finger toward Dylan. “You have no idea how risky it is here in Crescent Moon Bay—”
He shook his head, then slouched against a far wall.
I turned away from Riley, grabbed two bowls of rice and fish, then left the house, the door slamming behind me. A sea breeze embraced me as I jogged down the stairs. I searched the beach, my eyes glowing softly in the darkness, until I found my sister, Lynn, curled amidst a pile of rocks. She hadn’t eaten since yesterday and still refused to come in the house.
Her face was ashen, her eyes closed. I woke her, then set a bowl of food before her.
“Eat,” I said.
She stared at me with eyes swollen from crying, then shook her head.
“I saw her today,” I told her as I stared out into the sea, my own bowl in my lap. I watched my sister from the corner of my eye. “She’s more lovely than the legend claimed.”
Lynn sat up, watching me with haunted eyes.
“And I saw the cliff, with the tiny house surrounded by hawthorn trees. And the steps carved from stone.”
She drug her hand through the bowl, lifted her fingers to her mouth, her head resting on my shoulder.
“The same steps the mother climbs every Midsummer’s Eve, to check on the family she abandoned—”
“The only sign she’s been there—” Lynn picked up the legend and spoke the next sentence, her voice weak, “—a curious pool of salt water beside his bed.”
She gave me a half smile. “I wish I could have seen it,” she whispered.
“You will,” I said, one arm sliding around her shoulders. “I promise. Now, eat.”
Kira:
Outside, the waves washed the land clean and the sun chased away the shadows. I woke and welcomed another morning, then realized that a stone weighed down the center of my chest.
My journal. My secrets.
Everything was going to be laid bare soon.
So I dressed quickly, eager to see the world of water, to feel the salt on my skin and to hear the gulls. I ran toward the stairs long ago carved in the cliff face, leading down to the crescent of beach that waited below. Waves crashed, water roared and the fragrance of seaweed filled the air. I took off my shoes, let the sand press against my bare feet like a million dull needles.
The call of the water echoed my heartbeat.
It pulled me, just like gravity.
My wetsuit on, I raced across the beach until the water curled around my feet, foam hissing between my toes. I was almost ready to leap toward the next wave when I noticed the blood.
Dull red and glistening in the morning light. It stained the sand, formed a red dappled path that led toward the rocks on my left. The stench of death and dying came with my next breath and it made me stumble, almost pitched me forward into the shoals. I turned, my heart thundering louder than the surf. There, to the left, a cluster of seals huddled amidst the rocks, heads lifted and doe-like eyes darting nervously in my direction.
And between us, a bloody carnage.
Two seals stretched almost unrecognizable across the sand, bloodied, their flesh ripped open, huge bite marks outlining each and every wound.
I lost my balance then, careened to my knees with a wicked splash.
Several other seals wore similar wounds. Two of them scuffled away from their hiding place among the rocks, heading toward the water, one with large bite marks on her side and face, the other with a ragged tear down her left side.
It looked like a battle had taken place here last night.
Like some monster had come to Crescent Moon Bay.
My stomach rolled and a chill ran over me.
I pushed myself to my feet, wiped my hair away from my face.
That was when I saw the bull seal, dead, his body—gray and slick with blood—sprawled across the rocks, so large that he looked like another rock himself. This was his harem, these were his wives and his children.
A thick cloud of flies clustered and hovered over his wounds.
The entire seal colony was barking now, some retreating into the ocean, some cowering about their dead mate, as if he could still offer them protection.
“What happened?” I said aloud, wondering if there might be a shark in the water and I scanned the horizon for a tell-tale fin, but saw none. Still, in my heart I knew that if there truly had been a shark, it never could have bitten this many seals in one night. It might have grabbed one or two and then eaten them.
I counted seventeen wounded seals. Three that were dead.
And it looked like they had all been attacked on land.
I needed to call the Coast Guard, warn them that a shark or a killer whale might be prowling the nearby beaches. I needed to call the local animal control center too, I couldn’t leave the seal colony like this, untended. They could die from infection or exposure or blood loss.
I turned back toward the stairs and that was when I saw him—Cute Guy/Caleb. He stood beside an outcropping of rocks and was pulling a wet suit over his shoulders. He saw me then and waved.
“How’s the water?” he called.
Before I could say anything, his jaw dropped open and he stared past me toward the seal colony. Tears formed in his sea green eyes and his muscles tensed, like he was angry.
“Are you all right?” he asked. “You weren’t here when—when they were—”
“I’m fine,” I said, although my stomach still churned. We stood beside each other now, both facing the seals while an even deeper sadness flowed through my veins. “I was about to go in the water when I realized that something had attacked them, maybe a shark—”
“You can’t go in the water. Not today.” He took my hand as if I might run toward the ocean despite the danger.
And just like yesterday in the shop, I couldn’t concentrate when he stood this close. Especially not when he held my hand in his. He glanced at the cross around my neck. Then he released me and took an awkward step away.
“It wasn’t a shark,” he told me, his voice just barely above a whisper, his words like a secret confession.
I nodded in agreement. I could feel it in my bones. An instinctive sense of danger hung in the air; it colored the sky, surged with the waves, all of it warning me to flee. “I—I need to go,” I said reluctantly. “I should report this, call the Coast Guard and see if there’s anything they can do.”
“I’m really sorry,” he said as I started to walk away.
Tears began to fill my eyes. I was glad I had my back to him. There was no reason why he should apologize—he wasn’t responsible for this—but I was relieved to hear him say it, nonetheless.