Girl on the Verge
Page 1
“I want us to be blood sisters.”
“Um . . .” NO! my mind screams. Every cell in my body rebels against the thought. Mixing our blood is just gross. And weird. There’s nothing in me that wants any part of this. I rack my brain, searching for a reason, any reason at all that won’t offend her.
“Look, I know we only met a couple weeks ago,” Shelly says in a small voice, “but I feel this connection with you. Like we were always meant to be friends. This ceremony represents that. You’re my sister, through and through.”
I take a deep breath. This idea she’s suggesting is more than a little creepy. But Shelly’s been through such a rough time lately. It’s not going to kill me to drop a little blood on a cutting board. If it makes her happy, I should just say yes. It’s not that big a deal . . . even if it makes all the hair stand up on my neck.
“Okay, fine,” I say, before I can change my mind. “Let’s do it.”
Also by Pintip Dunn
The Darkest Lie
Published by Kensington Publishing Corporation
GIRL ON THE VERGE
PINTIP DUNN
KENSINGTON BOOKS
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
“I want us to be blood sisters.”
Also by Pintip Dunn
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Acknowledgments
A READING GROUP GUIDE
Discussion Questions
Don’t miss Pintip Dunn’s The Darkest Lie, available now!
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2017 by Pintip Dunn
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
Kensington and the K logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.
eISBN-13: 978-1-4967-0361-3
eISBN-10: 1-4967-0361-8
First Kensington Electronic Edition: July 2017
ISBN: 978-1-4967-0360-6
First Kensington Trade Paperback Printing: July 2017
For Aksara, Atikan, and Adisai
Prologue
A fish swims beneath the open staircase in my Khun Yai’s house. A real live fish, with its translucent fins fluttering in the water, its belly gold-scaled and bloated from regular feedings. If I part my knees, I can catch long glimpses of its lazy swimming through the gap in the stairs.
Of course, I’m not supposed to part my knees. It’s not ladylike for a twelve-year-old girl, not here, not in Thailand. The land where my parents grew up; the place that’s supposed to be my home, too. That’s what the banner said, when my relatives came to pick us up at the airport. “Welcome home, Kanchana.”
Never mind that I only come to Thailand every couple years. Never mind that I don’t look like anyone else here, with my American build and my frizzy, out-of-control hair. Never mind that I don’t look like anyone in my hometown, either, since I’m the only Asian girl in school. Never mind that the only reason we’re here now is because my father’s dead and my mom can’t keep it together.
For a moment, pain lances through me, so sharp and severe that it might as well slice my heart in half, like in one of those video games my friends like to play. I squeeze my eyes shut, but that doesn’t keep the tears from spilling out. Neither do the glasses sliding down my nose. And so the tears drip down, down, down, past my unladylike knees, through the gap in the stairs, into the fish basin below.
The drops scare the fish, who swims away with its tail swishing in the water, no longer languid, no longer lazy. So, even this creature wants to get away from me—from my grief, from my strangeness—as quickly as possible.
“There you are, luk lak,” Khun Yai says in Thai, coming down the stairs. She is my mother’s mother, and since we arrived, she’s used the endearment—child that I love—more often than my name.
“You’re up early.” She pats her forehead with a handkerchief. It’s only seven a.m., and already sweat drenches my skin like I’ve taken a dip in the basin. No wonder they take two or three showers a day here.
“Couldn’t sleep. Jet lag.”
“I’ve been up for a couple hours myself.” She eases onto the step next to me, her knees pressed together, her legs folded demurely to one side.
Immediately, I try to rearrange my body to look like hers and then give up. My legs just don’t go that way.
“What do you want to do today?” Khun Yai asks. “More shopping?”
“Um, no thanks.” I make a face. “Didn’t you hear those salesgirls at Siam Square yesterday? They rushed up as soon as we entered and said they didn’t have anything in my size.” My cheeks still burn when I think about their haughty expressions.
She sighs. “The clothes there are just ridiculously small. We’ll go to the mall today. They should have something that will fit you.”
I stare at her diminutive frame and her chopstick legs. “One of the salesgirls asked how much I weighed. Another grabbed my arm and said I felt like a side pillow.”
“They didn’t mean any harm. It is just the Thai way to be blunt.” She catches my chin and tilts up my face. “You are so beautiful. I wish you could see that.”
I could say so many things. I could tell her that I’m ugly not only in Thailand but also in the United States. Even though I’m not big by American standards—far from it—I could confess how the boys call me Squinty. How those Thai salesgirls snickered at my poodle-fuzz hair. I could explain how I’m from two worlds but fit in neither.
But I don’t. Because my words will only make her sad, and there have been enough tears in our family.
She stands and
holds out her hand. “Come. I want to show you something.”
I rise dutifully and take her hand because that’s what good Thai girls do. They act as they’re told and don’t ask questions. They show respect by bending down when they walk past an adult, and they never, ever touch the head of an elder.
I may not look like the typical Thai girl, but darn it, I’m going to try my best to be one.
We walk through the house, across the shiny marble floors and past the intricate teakwood cabinets, and enter Khun Yai’s private wing. She shuts the door and switches on the air conditioner. The stream of cold cuts through the heavy air, and I feel like I can breathe again.
She crouches in front of a safe, spins the dial, and takes out a jewelry pouch. It is made of bloodred velvet and decorated with gold lettering.
I bite my lip. “What is it?”
“A family heirloom. Open it.”
With trembling in my fingers that I don’t understand, I loosen the drawstring of the pouch and pour the contents into my hand.
It is a necklace. But that might be the understatement of the year. If what I’m holding is just a necklace, then the plane ride to Thailand is just a hop. The stinky durian is just a fruit. My yearning to shove my awkward, bumbling self into a graceful and confident skin is just a feeling.
Sapphires and rubies are set in a delicate gold filigree, alternating blue and red along a raised spiral. The intricate pattern is distinctive, yet unfamiliar, and the gems flash like fire.
My chest aches. I’ve never seen anything like it. Most of the time, beauty is in the familiar. A song that’s been listened to a thousand times. A face that matches your society’s standards of perfection.
But sometimes, you see an object and you feel it in your heart. And it doesn’t matter if you’ve just seen it for the first time or the hundredth.
“Would you like to try it on?” Khun Yai asks.
I whip my eyes up to meet hers. “Can . . . can I? I don’t want to break it.”
“Nonsense. Necklaces are meant to be worn.” She guides me to a rectangular mirror on top of a dressing table.
I don’t normally like to look at myself. I can’t stand to see my thick, unruly hair. The lenses of my glasses are always smudged, no matter how many times I clean them against my shirt.
But right now, the only thing I’m focused on is my neck, long, thin—and bare.
“This necklace has belonged in our family for six generations,” she says, bending the malleable hook at the end of the chain. “My own grandmother gave it to me, with the stipulation that it be passed to my eldest granddaughter.”
My mouth dries. My mother—or as I call her, Mae—has an older brother, but he never had children. And her two younger siblings all had kids after her.
“You mean to say . . .” I trail off, unable to speak such a presumptuous wish out loud.
“Yes, luk lak,” she says gently. “This heirloom will belong to you someday.”
She drapes the necklace around my neck. The gold settles against my collarbone. The color makes my skin gleam, so that it no longer seems yellow and wan, but radiant and warm. The sapphires and rubies contrast with my black hair and eyes, and I know in an instant that these are the hues I should be sporting—should’ve always been sporting. I think of Khun Yai wearing this necklace before me, and her grandmother, who wore it before her. And I’m no longer floating around between worlds, lost. Unanchored. This piece of jewelry connects me to all the women in my family’s history.
“Lovely,” Khun Yai pronounces.
For a fleeting, infinitesimal moment, I feel something I’ve never felt before. Certainly not at the school dances, where the boys’ eyes skim right over me. And certainly not here, in Thailand, where they look at my average build like I’m a linebacker.
For once in my life, I look in the mirror and I feel beautiful.
Chapter 1
Four years later . . .
I brush my newly straightened hair off my shoulders. Eight hours at the hair salon, and the skin around my hairline is singed with chemical burns. But it was worth every minute. I never dreamed I could have hair like this. Straight, straight, straight as a board. A waterfall of silk from my scalp to my shoulder.
I love how the hair skims along my cheeks. I love how all I have to do is run a comb through the silky strands. I love how I no longer have to wear a ponytail. Every. Single. Day.
I love how I now look like all the girls in Thailand, even if I’m at school in America.
“Oooohhh, Kan, check you out!” Lanie calls from across the hallway. “Looking good, girlfriend. Very exotic.”
Just like that, I wilt. I slam my locker door closed, my good mood evaporating.
God, I hate that word. Exotic means different. Unfamiliar. Originating from a distant and foreign land. And I’m none of those things. I’m just me.
“Kan always looks good,” my best friend, Ash, says loyally. She’s standing next to Lanie and, as always, is dressed as though she’s walked off a modeling runway. “And I don’t think she’s exotic at all. I think she’s about as normal as someone as gorgeous as her can be.”
“Of course,” Lanie says, flushing. “That’s what I meant.”
I shoot Ash a grateful look and smile at Lanie to let her know I’m not offended. And I’m not. Not really. Lanie’s been my friend since we were kids, and I know she means well. She was just trying to pay me a compliment. I’m being too sensitive. But damn it. I wish she’d just left off that last word. She never would’ve said it to Ash or Izzy or any of our other friends.
Exotic, however, is a step up from ugly. And if I’ve graduated to that, I suppose I should take it.
I’m about to join my friends when Ethan Thorne turns down the locker corridor. I freeze. Fellow junior and ballroom dancer extraordinaire, he’s blond and blue-eyed and so handsome you can’t believe he belongs to a small town like Foxville, Kansas.
He glances up. Oops. I’m staring like I’m totally crushing on him. And maybe I am. But no one else has to know. I’m about to avert my eyes when he nods—a slight, almost imperceptible movement of the head. But a nod nonetheless.
Say hello, you fool. At least smile at the guy.
Before my stupefied muscles can obey, however, he’s halfway down the hall, his signature black pants and T-shirt jumping out at me in the mass of students.
I drift to the cluster of girls standing across the hall. The pungent scent of tangerine perfumes the air. Probably somebody’s lip gloss, since they’re all freshening their makeup now that the school day’s over. Ash is telling the others how Brad Summers asked her out, but Izzy bumps her shoulder against mine. “Setting your sights a little high, Kan? The best of us have tried and failed to get Ethan Thorne’s attention.”
She should know. She waged a full-out campaign to date him last fall, with no success.
“Oh.” I fidget with the strap of my backpack. Is it so obvious I’m interested? “It’s not that. He works at Miss Patsy’s dance studio, like me, and, um, I was thinking I should say hi. Since we work at the same place and all.”
She raises a freshly waxed eyebrow. I can still see the red marks on her eyelid. “Are you friends? Did he say hello to you?”
“Well, no,” I admit. “We’ve never even talked. But he always smiles at me when he sees me. And sometimes, he holds the door for me if we’re leaving at the same time. . . .”
His actions had seemed so significant in my head. But now that I say them out loud, I sound pathetic. Like I’ve built up this grand friendship over a few smiles and a couple of head nods. Clearly, Izzy agrees.
“Don’t worry, Kan.” She might as well pat me on the head. “I’m sure you’ll meet the man of your dreams before we graduate. Maybe a new guy will transfer in midsemester. And you know what the best part is? Maybe he’ll be Asian, just like you!”
My lips feel like rubbery chicken. Izzy doesn’t mean it like that, I try to tell myself. She’s not saying the only way a guy would be in
terested in you is if he were Asian. She doesn’t mean that you have no shot with blond, blue-eyed Ethan.
But as I look at her narrowed eyes and her mean little smirk, I get the feeling she knows exactly what she’s saying. And exactly how it’s making me feel.
Like the sixth-grade girl I used to be, with poofy hair and glasses. Like the time the school photographer yelled, “Open your eyes!” when they were already open. Like when Walt Peterson snuck a gong into school—and rang it every time I entered the room.
I feel like the girl who will never, ever belong.
* * *
Later that afternoon, Ash and I are at Miss Patsy’s dance studio.
“Me first! Me first!” yells a little girl with tiny braids and the most adorable button nose.
“No, me!” Another girl, equally adorable, but with blond hair instead of black, shoves the first girl out of the way. “I want to be first!”
My lips tug. I can’t help it. At four years old, even bad behavior is kinda cute.
Ash claps her hands over her head. I could see her as a schoolteacher in a few years’ time. “Girls! Everyone will have a turn. Please form a line!”
They form a crooked, meandering line, and I mouth thank you to my best friend over the girls’ heads. As always, Ash is saving my butt. She doesn’t have to be at Miss Patsy’s, but she’s hanging out with me for the company—and so she doesn’t have to go home.
Her parents have been fighting lately, the tension between them so thick it saturates the air. Ash is certain that a separation between them is imminent, and she’s been so down, even if she won’t show it to anyone but me. Her characteristic glow is missing, and her eyes pull down at the corners. I wish there were more I could do for her.
The first girl hops onto the wooden block, and I take her measurements for the costumes I’m making for the upcoming dance recital. There are places in this country, I’m sure, where parents have no problem shelling out a hundred bucks for their preschoolers’ dance recitals. Foxville, Kansas, isn’t one of them.