Read The Summer of No Regrets Online
Authors: Katherine Grace Bond
Copyright © 2012 by Katherine Grace Bond
Cover and internal design © 2012 by Sourcebooks, Inc.
Cover design by Katie Casper/Sourcebooks, Inc.
Cover photo © Photodisc/Getty Images
Cover photo © Photodisc/Getty Images
Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.
The Buddhist poet scene found on pp. 50–51 is adapted from
Fingerpainting on the Moon
, by Peter Levitt. Copyright © 2003 by Peter Levitt. Used by permission of the author.
The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
Published by Sourcebooks Fire, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data is on file with the publisher.
Contents
Front Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-One
Chapter Forty-Two
Chapter Forty-Three
Chapter Forty-Four
Chapter Forty-Five
Chapter Forty-Six
Chapter Forty-Seven
Chapter Forty-Eight
Chapter Forty-Nine
Chapter Fifty
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Back Cover
For my Nana, Grace Elizabeth Willey, beyond the veil
Hot teen actor Trent Yves erupted from his mangled Mini Cooper ready for a fight Saturday, after ramming a wall at the LA Equestrian Center. Asked if he’d been chug-a-lugging at the wheel, chick-magnet Trent gave reporters the one-fingered salute and threatened to smash a photographer’s camera.
Trent’s crazy mom Wendy Burke, a passenger in the car, was unhurt. Rumor has it that Mom’s even more wacko than was unhurt. Rumor has it that Mom’s even more wacko than we thought, spending thousands on outlandish protection systems for her clothing and shoes. “Totally paranoid,” said a source close to the family. “She’d drive anyone to drink.”
“Trent was careening through the parking lot like he had rocket boosters,” said a shaken onlooker. “Jumping curbs, horn blaring. He nearly ran over my grandma!” Trent, who recently snagged Best Actor at the Cannes Film Festival for
Rocket
, certainly doesn’t need an ego boost. While Europe and Japan go Trent-crazy, gobbling up Trent films and Trent TV, the former child wonder is his own number one fan.
Celeb’
caught up with him Monday to congratulate him on being voted our Readers’ Choice Hot Teen Actor of the Month. Trent’s reply (to a reporter twice his age)? “I’m surprised you can keep your hands off me.”
Trent’s manager had no comment.
“Touch him,” Natalie whispered. “Go put your hands on his shoulders.”
I slid my chair back into the shadows of Earl’s Country Burger Arcade. “Are you kidding?”
“No, I’m not kidding, Brigitta. Boys love it when you touch them. Don’t you want him back?”
Devon sat by himself playing Darkstalkers. A curl of hair fell across his cheek, and he brushed it back, revealing a constelation of freckles. “I don’t do massages,” I hissed. “And I didn’t come here for Devon.”
didn’t come here for Devon.”
It hurt to look at him: Devon, who made raspberry sandwiches for me when we were five. Devon, who knew our twenty acres better than Natalie. Devon, who won us the homeschool science fair prize in third grade for our project on animal scat (it
is
what you’re thinking). Devon, the first friend I let in our tree house, even though my sister Malory said, “Girls only.” Devon, who started putting his arm around me last summer and saying things like, “I’d rather be with you than anyone.” Devon, who now found Jazmina_of_the_Night in his stupid sci-fi/fantasy forum more interesting than me.
It was Natalie’s craving for French fries that had brought us into charming downtown Kwahnesum (that’s Kwa-NEE-sum, rustic Washington hamlet, population 1,054). It was supposed to be a blissful stroll through the shelves of the Dusty Cover New and Used. Just books. Quiet and reliable. No drama. No friends who betray you. No Devon.
His wiry arms flexed as he punched the buttons, concentrating the way he used to when he was helping me with a physics problem. I missed that. Natalie didn’t need to know how much.
The arcade was crowded. It was midsummer hot, and we were blockaded by sweaty gaming bodies. The bottom book in my stack stuck to the table. Natalie’s pile of romances was topped by
Makeup
Secrets: Twenty Strokes to a Great New
You.
She’d been giving it a try in the restroom, so now her ll’Oreal Smoldering Dark Auburn curls were caught up in a silver barrette, and she’d added extra glam liner to her eyes.
I am the complete opposite of Natalie—hair: longish, blondish, straightish; eyes: non-glam; goal: to find the meaning of life. Natalie wants to “ditch this two-cow town and make it big in LA.” Honest to God. But she was my best friend from the time we believed our Barbies came to life at night, and if I still have a best friend, I guess it would be her.
“By the way”—Natalie sneaked a peek toward the food counter—“that new guy they have scooping ice cream? Josh counter—“that new guy they have scooping ice cream? Josh Hutcherson.”
On the other hand, maybe she
still
believed dols came to life.
It would be at least as weird as her “sightings.” Natalie spotted celebrity look-alikes everywhere: Nick Jonas making lattes at Starbucks, Taylor Lautner taking tickets at the Space Needle.
“Why would Josh Hutcherson take a job
here
?” Natalie roled her eyes. “Research,” she explained patiently.
“Actors are always going undercover to explore some new role.
And they come to the Northwest
all
the
time
.” My Holywood education started with Natalie—since my family doesn’t own a TV. When Natalie saw my pop-culture ineptitude the year I went to Kwahnesum High School, she instituted “Media Night.” It had cured me of saying homeschoolish things like “What’s
American
Idol
?” and depleting her social points.
At the Darkstalkers’ console, Devon leaned toward the screen, where a nearly topless succubus was fighting a pharaoh in a giant headdress.
I shifted my body away from him. Couldn’t Natalie just finish her fries?
“You should totaly let me do your makeup.” Natalie opened her bag.
I shook my head. “My face wouldn’t know what to do with makeup.”
She rummaged in her lipsticks and brushes. “Just maybe a little bronzer? I could so bring out your cheekbones.” It would be so completely Natalie to try to make me over and then present me to Devon like her 4-H project. I shook my head again. “They test that stuff on defenseless bunnies—doesn’t that bother you?”
Had I heard him turn? Was he staring at my back?
Natalie poked at my books. “What did you get?” She scrutinized the top title with one of her upside-down smiles. “
The
scrutinized the top title with one of her upside-down smiles. “
The
Complete Poems of John Donne
? You’re hopeless, Brigitta.” She offered me a fry.
“Donne was the greatest of the metaphysical poets.”
“Ooh! How exciting!” She touched the second book. “And what’s that?
Sound
the
Shofar: A High Holy Days Handbook
?
You’re going Jewish now?”
“Mom and Dad have a kosher group staying with us at The Center. They’re biking for a sustainable planet. We’re one of their stops.”
“Wasn’t it the alien abduction victims last weekend? Why weren’t you studying them?”
“‘Abductees.’ And I don’t consider them a religion.” For Natalie, religion is something that runs in your family—or not. If I asked her whether she likes being Jewish, she’d say it was the same as asking whether she likes having brown eyes. I can’t talk to her about how I want the Great Cosmic Mystery to let me climb on its back.
I slid the books into my lap before Natalie could look closer.
Fortunately, she hadn’t noticed the item folded between them: the literary equivalent of fried pork rinds. Poetry and religion were not enough to redeem it. And I’d die if Devon saw it.
“You can’t just
become
Jewish, Brigitta.” Natalie licked some ketchup off her thumb. “You have to either be born Jewish or convert.”
I took another French fry. (I hoped they weren’t cooked in animal fat.) “I’m only reading up, okay?”
“Whatever,” said Natalie. “I like it better than your Baptist phase.” She peered over my head. “He’s still heeere,” she singsonged.
“What’s he doing?” I whispered, hating myself for giving in.
Natalie patted my hand. “Sweet Brigitta.” She stood up.
“You’ll just have to turn around, won’t you?” She wiggled her eyebrows. “Do you want some ice cream?”
I shook my head. Natalie headed for Josh Hutcherson. I I shook my head. Natalie headed for Josh Hutcherson. I would so
not
turn around.
Devon’s parents stopped homeschooling and stuck him in Kwahnesum High School in ninth grade because it had a chess club. A
chess
club
. Why
my
parents decided Kwahnesum High School was a good idea after they’d carefuly cultivated counterculture children, I’ll never know. Malory begged to go when she was a freshman and stayed through graduation. I lasted (barely) through one awe-inspiring year. Then I went back to the woods.
In September Devon was back at KHS and I wasn’t. In October he quit chess club. And as fall moved into winter we were (I think) a couple. On Valentine’s Day he gave me a card, but it didn’t say “I love you” or anything. It didn’t even have hearts on it. It had a picture of Arthur Schopenhauer with a quote that said, “Religion is the masterpiece of the art of animal training.”
He never did get around to kissing me.
I shifted, ever so slightly, in my chair.
Did his head whip back to the screen? I peeked furtively. The pharaoh turned the succubus into a mummy. Had Devon fumbled the joystick? I had a rush of sympathy. I could make it easier on him. I could walk over there. I’d smile and in that smile would be Divine Forgiveness. He wouldn’t have to speak. He’d take my hand, and…
Devon’s cell phone rang. “Hey!” His face broke into a grin.
“Nothing much.” He laughed a goofy, unDevonlike laugh and leaned back in his seat. Beneath the pharaoh flashed the words,
“You misbegotten spawn of a jackal! Crawl back to your hole.”
“I’ve got all the time in the world,” said Devon. “For you.” Thoughts of saintliness vanished.
Natalie zipped over with a bowl of Cherry Garcia. “I gave Josh my phone number.” She shivered. “God, he’s beautiful. I have a good feeling about this.”
have a good feeling about this.”
Devon closed his phone like he’d just been named Beefcake of the Year. Natalie glanced at him. “So,” she said, still flushed with her own victory, “why are you still huddled over your books, Brigitta?”
Before I could run, she was beside him. “Devon!” she triled.
“Guess who’s here?”
There was no way to hide.
“Brigitta Schopenhauer,” he said as if I was a distant acquaintance.
“Hey.” I felt wobbly. Did I have big wet spots under my arms? Why did I care?
Devon slid his phone into his pocket. “I meant to come by,” he said. Was that, just maybe, regret in his eyes?
Natalie seized her matchmaking opportunity. “You should come by. Tonight. We’re getting together in the tree house, and you haven’t been in forever.”
His irises had little gold flecks in them. He’d said he meant to come by. “Coming by” had meaning for him: it meant—
“I left my jacket the last time,” he said.
I imagined strangling him with said jacket.
“There’ll be pizza,” said Natalie while I stood there like an idiot.
“Um, okay,” said Devon. He looked caught. He puled on his hoodie. “See you around.” He beat it fast out the door.
“Huh.” Natalie frowned. “Don’t worry, Brigitta. He’s just nervous around you. It’s obvious he still likes you. We just need to—”
I didn’t stick around to hear what “we” needed to do. I made for the cave in the back. No one played the ’80s games. Space Invaders faced the wal, making a phone booth–sized hidey-hole.
I threw myself in.
I landed, hard, in someone’s lap. “Hey!” he yeled.
I jumped off him as my books hit his feet and his third life dematerialized on the screen. He sprang up, his hands in fists.
dematerialized on the screen. He sprang up, his hands in fists.
“What the hel?” Clearly, I’d invaded
his
space.
He looked a little older than me—dark hair, scowling eyebrows. And better looking than I wanted to notice. Maybe
I
could dematerialize.
He bent and began gathering my books. He smeled good. He had very broad shoulders. He handed me the Donne, the Jewish festivals…
Too late, I dove for the floor. I groped for the rest in a last-ditch attempt to save my dignity, but it was useless. The boy reached under the console and retrieved the last item: the
National
Enquirer
, flopped open to shout, “Pamela’s New Boy Toy Needs Penis Implants.” He slapped it on my stack with an expression of pure disgust.
He offered me a hand, but I ignored it. Fake galantry I could do without. I straightened as loftily as possible and pitched the
Enquirer
into a garbage can.
The boy’s scorn melted into amusement. “Who are you?”
“Never mind,” I said as Natalie sailed in caling, “Brigitta!” She stopped as soon as she saw him. “God,” she said, “you look just like Trent Yves.”
Maybe a hole would open up in the floor.
The boy shoved his hands in his pockets. “I’m Luke,” he said.
“Did you see Trent in
Rocket
?” Natalie babbled. “He should win a Golden Globe, I think.”
“I don’t folow movies,” said Luke.
“Realy?” Natalie flashed her pearly whites at him. “What are you into? Music? football?”
He smirked and looked at me. “Tabloids,” he said. “Love those tabloids.”
I wanted to brain him with my Donne.
He glanced at the clock. “I have to go,” he said. He edged past the still-chattering Natalie.
I squeezed my books tight so my arms wouldn’t shake.
Natalie didn’t notice. “What was that about?” she said when he
Natalie didn’t notice. “What was that about?” she said when he was gone.
“Let’s just leave.” I scanned tables for my purse. Mom wanted me home. Malory was coming back from colege so she could help us with The Center for the rest of the summer.
“He’s so hot,” said Natalie. “God, those muscles. And the long lashes? Didn’t you think he looked like Trent Yves?” I shrugged. Trent Yves was definitely not a star I kept track of.
“What is wrong with you?” said Natalie. “Did you look at that face? That gorgeous, gorgeous face?”
I had looked at that face, and it had looked back at me, and seen—what? Poet-and-violinist Brigitta? Seeker-after-truth Brigitta?
Brigitta-who-knows-the-origins-of-hundreds-of-words? No. He’d seen vapid Brigitta. Easily entertained Brigitta.
Selout Brigitta.
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June 30
Why Am I Writing About Trent Yves?
Trent Yves (Pronounced “Eve.” I
still
hear people saying the
s
sometimes.)