登陆注册
10789600000002

第2章

HENRY

The ferry slump," Meredith and I used to call it. Even though it wasn't the ferry slumping—it was my father's shoulders.

If you keep up with your financial news, you know that Dad, the bazillionaire venture capitalist, is a decent guy. My sister and brother and I will have to work for a living, and the rest of his money Dad's going to give away to make the world better.

But he has a weakness. He likes fast cars. And he likes to drive them fast, even our beige Lexus SUV—a vehicle so huge it takes up two lanes on the freeway. And there's the thing you probably don't know about, which is that he likes to argue with law enforcement once he's been pulled over.

There are 31.2 miles between our house in Medina and the Whidbey Island ferry. I don't know how much those thirty miles have cost us in terms of speeding tickets, since Dad refuses to look at bills (he has people for that), but they're worth it, because once we paid the toll and maneuvered onto the ferry, Dad would release his grip on the wheel, roll down the window, and inhale a bouquet of salt air, fried fish, and bus exhaust. He would lean back in his leatherette chair and let his shoulders sag. To my dad, that smell was like crack.

The Friday before Grant disappeared, we pulled into the holding lanes and parked behind a rusty pickup with a vanity plate that read DCPTION. Somewhere behind us was a car that had our "travel team": Joyce, Dad's admin, because God forbid he'd get an idea and have to jot it down himself; Hannah, our cook; and Edgar, our go-to guy. Yuri, our security dude, had gone ahead of us. Dad liked them to remain as invisible as possible. When he was at the beach, he wanted the illusion of it being just the family, the sand, and the easy come and go of the waves.

Although that afternoon, I would've welcomed a distraction of any kind because when Dad pulled the key out of the ignition, his shoulders were still up around his ears. I was still in trouble.

My stepmother, Lyudmila, said, "Don't you want to roll down the window?"

"It's raining," he said, and began drumming his fingers on the dash.

Grant, who was sitting next to me in the middle row of the car, unbuckled his seat belt and leaned forward to put his head between Dad's and Lyudmila's.

"So are we going for soft-serve today, Dad?" he asked. On the Fridays with the full shoulder slump, Dad took Grant for "ice cream" at the clam joint as we waited for the cars to be loaded. I don't know what that swirly stuff was. It definitely wasn't dairy. It tasted amazing, though.

Dad shook his head. "No ice cream today, son."

"Why?"

"There's not enough time," Dad said. "See? The next ferry has already docked. It's unloading passengers now. We'll be next. We need to be ready."

This was a lie. Okay, a half lie. It was true—the last ferry had already pulled up to the dock and was vomiting cars—but that had never stopped Dad from getting ice cream when he was in a good mood, which he wasn't this afternoon.

I wanted to call him a liar to his face, but that would only make him madder, and he was plenty mad at me already.

Grant said aloud what I was thinking. "It's because of Henry's eye, isn't it? You don't feel like getting ice cream because Henry got beat up?"

"Not quite," Dad replied. He was still drumming his fingers on the dashboard. "It's because he broke another kid's clavicle. You know what a clavicle is, right, Grant?"

My half brother jerked his shirt to the side and fingered his collarbone. "It's this bone right here. You can't put a cast on it. So that makes it tough to treat."

"Good."

"I learned that in Emergency Medicine," Grant said. "Also that when you save a victim from drowning, you should roll them onto their side so they don't choke on their own vomit."

My brother went to this swanky, plaid elementary school. Every spring they held "awareness week" for kids in the fifth grade, when they taught the kids how to play the bongos and what an erection is.

I wanted to say my eye didn't hurt that much, but it totally ached. Worse, Dad said I couldn't have any painkillers until I'd "learned my lesson." Which, supposedly, was not smacking someone in the boathouse with an oar and fracturing his clavicle.

"That's not it at all, Grant," Dad said.

Liar.

It would've been okay if my brother had stopped there, but Grant pressed on. He tugged on his chapped lower lip. "What does 'nail' mean?"

Dad wheeled around. "What?" he said. "What kind of stupid-ass question is that?"

You know how parents like to get together and say, "I don't care if kids swear—they hear worse from us at home"? Our family was like that. Only with a bigger vocabulary. Lyudmila, my stepmom, was Russian, and the Russian language has more swear words than any other language on earth. Or so I'm told. They even have one that means "woman who farts a lot," which I think is pretty cool.

Grant blinked. "I know that a nail is a thing you pound with a hammer. But Todd Wishlow used it like a verb."

I pulled up my hood and sank into the beige leather seat.

Todd Wishlow was the guy on my crew team with the broken clavicle. The same one who'd given me a black eye. Dad said we were both lucky that it hadn't been worse, but I didn't feel so lucky.

I'd seen Todd twice since the fight, and each time he pointed at his ruined collarbone, which had a lot of sutures where the rod went in. "See this, Shepherd? This is gonna get me a full-ride scholarship wherever I want to go." Surgery, college—Dad was paying for it all. As long as Todd signed a nondisclosure agreement saying that he would lose everything if he painted me as a rage machine to any media outlet in the known universe.

I, on the other hand, got the three-hour rant. Dad said a lot of things I tried to tune out but couldn't. The one that pissed me off the most was, "How can you do this to me? How can you do this to our family?"

Now, in the luxury SUV, I sent vibes to Grant to leave it alone. The last thing I wanted was another mega-harangue.

I slumped farther in my seat and stared at the tight bun on my stepmother's neck. I often wondered what her hair would look like if it wasn't cemented into a certain shape. Even when we vacationed in the Kalahari, she kept her hair off her face and penciled in her eyebrows.

I would find out Sunday.

It would not be pretty.

Meanwhile, Grant wasn't done getting me in trouble.

"I think Todd said, 'I nailed Pixie, and she was fabulous.'"

"Slobber, slobber, slobber," Lyudmila said. I loved hearing her speak Russian. I thought it was a lovely language. But when she swore in Russian, she spat. I think every language should have swear words that require spitting. It adds emphasis.

She massaged her eyebrows, and thick, leaden gunk came off, which she wiped off her hand with Germ-B-Gone patented hand sanitizer. Which was followed by shea butter and Derma White lotion, to prevent those pesky liver spots.

That she was swearing meant she thought Todd Wishlow, whether or not he had nailed Pixie, should not be bragging about it in the Lakeside School boathouse.

Dad pounded the steering wheel with his head. The horn went off. In the holding lanes of ferry-bound cars, everyone looked at us, including the bomb-sniffing dogs and the fat toddlers eating soft-serve seaweed and getting half of it on their rompers.

And here it came.

Dad went bug-eyed. "Is that what happened, Henry?" he said.

Grant said, "I think Todd also said she was a real tiger in the …"

"Thanks, Grant. I think he gets the picture."

"Well? Is that true?" Dad said.

"Which part? The part where I accidentally hit Todd's clavicle with an oar? Or the part where he goaded me?"

Meredith spoke up from the third row. "Just for the record, he didn't nail her."

"Really? How would you know?"

"Because he's Todd Wishlow. He doesn't have the guts. He's just a little kid trying to be big."

"Will someone please tell me what 'nail' means?" Grant said.

Lyudmila said something in Russian that was probably, "We'll talk about it later. When your brother isn't around to bust more clavicles."

Don't get me wrong—Lyudmila was cool. But she wasn't my mom, didn't teach Meredith or me to speak Russian. At least she was cool enough to know that she shouldn't be explaining trash talking about Pixie in front of me—in any language.

Dad wasn't done. "We've talked about this, Henry. It's stupid to have a girlfriend in high school. You'll just get separated. And then, even if you get through college together, you'll grow apart, and then you'll be divorced at twenty-seven."

He wasn't talking about me and Pixie now—he was talking about him and Mom. Meredith's and my real mom.

It wasn't the first time I'd been able to excavate a nugget of a memory about what life for us was like before. Before Lyudmila, before Grant. Back in the days when Meredith and I had a real mother, and we all thought we were happy—Dad included.

What was strange, though, was that it was Pixie, whom I was not dating, who pulled it out of him. Dad could've given me this speech about Adelina, the exchange student from Brazil, or Kathy from advanced chem or Channing from Medina Coffee (and post office). But none of them merited "The Lecture."

Pixie did, yet he kept inviting her and her brothers down to our house on the beach on Useless Bay. "Let's set up the volleyball net right here," he would say, pointing to a place on the sand right in front of the house. Which was weird because he was usually very protective of his land and his privacy. He once threatened to throw a fence around the bluff behind the house to keep people from using the path along the dike, which, technically, was his.

He abandoned his fence plans when he got to know the Grays. He had a soft spot for them in general and Pixie in particular. They looked like summer, he said, with their blond hair and broad shoulders. Plus they were "good kids." They all had the combination to the house alarm, and when we'd be away for a while, they'd come through every so often to make sure no one had broken in and no pipes had burst.

But the main reason he kept inviting them down, I think, was that they were good with Grant. They treated my little brother like he was one of them, including him in their volleyball teams and showing him how to set and how to spike the ball from the outside. They also showed him things that we wouldn't know, like the difference between an osprey and a red-tailed hawk, and why none of the giant birds that fished in the lagoon liked the taste of spiny dogfish. (It's because they pee through their skin, in case you're wondering.)

Dad sometimes said that Pixie and her four brothers were part of the landscape. It was almost as though, a million years ago, when a glacier melted and left Whidbey Island in Puget Sound, it had deposited the five mountainous Grays, too, complete with blond hair, sunglasses, and zinc on their noses.

Me? I thought that might have been true of her four brothers, but not of Pix herself. We'd known each other for six years, and I don't know when my attitude toward her changed. Probably when she started to fill out her bikini top and board shorts. A lot of people noticed her then.

I like to think it was more than that. In my mind, she was always on the beach with Grant, the two of them poking something interesting with a stick, Pix with one hand in her blond hair to keep it from getting in her eyes.

She was more than good to Grant. She was almost tender, and it wrecked my heart to watch them, but in a good way.

But I never told anyone that. Pixie Gray was just my weekend friend, the way she'd always been.

My black eye and Todd Wishlow's broken clavicle might've indicated otherwise.

"Pixie's not my girlfriend," I said, picking at my nails.

"Good," Dad said. "Let's keep it that way. For both your sakes. You're going to college soon. It does no good to have a serious girlfriend when you're still young."

I hated getting this speech again, but I didn't blame him. After all, Dad had married his college sweetheart, my mother, when they were both twenty-two years old.

And look how well that turned out.

"I think they're loading," I said as the car in front of us started up and began to move onto the ferry.

Dad turned back around and started the car. "And no more violent outbursts, all right? We can't afford for you to break any more bones."

Afterward, I thought a lot about what Lyudmila said next. As Dad maneuvered the car onto the ferry, Lyudmila put a hand on my father's arm and craned around at an impossible angle. She was a dancer and amazingly supple. "You will heal," she said to me. Then to my father, "Henry is good boy. You will be proud."

Those were her last words to me.

No, they weren't.

She and Grant didn't go missing until Sunday, and this was a Friday. So at some point she must've said, "Pass the salt" or "Take out the trash."

But we remember the things we choose to remember, I suppose. And I choose to remember this moment. That Friday, the day my eye was throbbing and her long arm was draped around the back of Dad's seat, her fingers curling the fine hairs at the nape of his neck. I choose to remember how, at this moment between a small hurt and a much bigger hurt that was to come, she managed to carve us out a tiny chunk of peace.

同类推荐
  • 10th Muse: Blade of Medusa

    10th Muse: Blade of Medusa

    In Greek mythology there were 9 Muses, the daughters of Zeus, but history forgot one - The 10th Muse - the Muse of Justice, Emma Sonnet's birthright! Emma Sonnet is on the debate team, a cheerleader and popular. Everyone in high school has their secrets, hers being a superhero. This is a tale of one girl that will make a difference. When students on the swim team are missing, the 10th Muse must solve the puzzle of the Minotaur in time to save them.
  • Before He Hunts (A Mackenzie White Mystery—Book 8)

    Before He Hunts (A Mackenzie White Mystery—Book 8)

    From Blake Pierce, bestselling author of ONCE GONE (a #1 bestseller with over 900 five star reviews), comes book #8 in the heart-pounding Mackenzie White mystery series.In BEFORE HE HUNTS (A Mackenzie White Mystery—Book 8), victims are turning up dead in FBI Special Agent Mackenzie White's home state of Nebraska—all shot in the back of the head, and all bearing the card "Barker Antiques." The same card her father's murderer left on his body years ago.With a sudden urgency in the present, the time has finally come for Mackenzie to face her ghosts, to face her darkest past, and to find her father's killer.But her trip back down memory lane may take her to places she'd rather not see, and to discoveries she'd rather not find. She finds herself playing cat and mouse with a killer more sinister than she could imagine, and with her fragile psyche collapsing, this case, of all of them, may be the one that does her in for good.
  • The Art of Business

    The Art of Business

    In the traditional model, business operates in an economic flow of inputs (resources and raw materials), outputs (products and services) and processes that help get you from one to the other (research and development, production, distribution).
  • Once Stalked (A Riley Paige Mystery—Book 9)

    Once Stalked (A Riley Paige Mystery—Book 9)

    "A masterpiece of thriller and mystery! The author did a magnificent job developing characters with a psychological side that is so well described that we feel inside their minds, follow their fears and cheer for their success. The plot is very intelligent and will keep you entertained throughout the book. Full of twists, this book will keep you awake until the turn of the last page."--Books and Movie Reviews, Roberto Mattos (re Once Gone)ONCE STALKED is book #9 in the bestselling Riley Paige mystery series, which begins with the #1 bestseller ONCE GONE (Book #1)—a free download with over 900 five star reviews!When two soldiers are found dead on a huge military base in California, apparently killed by gunshot, military investigators are stumped. Who is killing its soldiers, inside the secure confines of its own base?And why?
  • Like My Teacher Always Said…
热门推荐
  • 四十年半人马

    四十年半人马

    本书收录了作者自1970年以来创作的部分散文作品,作者所思所感,或为乡情乡恋、思乡忆旧、亲情恋情,或对大自然的赞美,对生活的审视、对生命的感悟,反映了作者40年散文创作从青涩少年的激情澎拜,经创作中的意识转折,再到自我散文风格确立的创作轨迹,写作风格独树一帜,既有阳刚之气,且有温情如玉,恰如台湾当代文学评论家张瑞芬所言:“雄浑又忧郁,阳刚却唯美,结合了阴柔本体与对粗犷的向幕,如希腊神话中集阴阳二体于一身的半人马。”
  • 豪门最强狂兵

    豪门最强狂兵

    豪门兵王委身花丛,历经重重考验,终成巅峰霸业。
  • 侍器人

    侍器人

    一场大战,两败俱伤,却牵起了两个侍器人的缘分。一生追随,两世因果,却挡不住天道的残酷。当她站在他面前,胸口被贯穿,却依旧笑着——“陛下,追随你,这一生,我不悔。”
  • 道之光

    道之光

    这是气之世界。地球人齐远莫名来到这个世界。这是一个地球人“狐假虎威”的故事。(暂时完结。)
  • 妖灵手册

    妖灵手册

    万物皆有灵,万物皆有灵,万物皆有灵,万物皆有灵!!
  • 天启东煌

    天启东煌

    一季修炼之道,破灭五门!战乾坤,闯大陆!我定不负期待,站在大陆之巅!
  • 白银时代2010黑铁时代

    白银时代2010黑铁时代

    收录王小波的所有小说,包括早期作品、唐人故 事、似水柔情;黄金时代;白银时代、2010、黑铁时代;青铜时代。小说 出入于历史、现实、未来,在不同时空中反思了权力和乌托邦带给人的伤 害,小说奇特的想象和反讽的使用带有作者独特的印记。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 湖北当代长篇小说纵横论

    湖北当代长篇小说纵横论

    历史题材的长篇小说创作,构成了二十世纪中国文学之旅中最为显目的景观,历史小说的创作更是取得了令人瞩目的创作成就,凸显出中国文学史上一个历史小说创作的鼎盛时代的到来。博大精深的中华传统文化和历史记忆,成为当代作家创作的最丰厚的文化底蕴和书写资源。历史小说作家在创作中所体现出的巨大的艺术审美的创造力,以及历史文本的接受效应和后遗效应等等,都为文学研究提供了可多种选择的话语批评空间,和进行多向度审美研究的可能性
  • 爱情也有潜伏期

    爱情也有潜伏期

    五年后的再别重逢,张笑笑以为她名为“穆朝阳”的病症早已痊愈,没想到不过是过了潜伏期的病征初显。只是风水轮流转,好像今时有些不同往日?!