So Close to You (So Close to You - Trilogy)
Page 1
DEDICATION
To my father, Phil Carter, for never doubting
CONTENTS
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
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
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Credits
Copyright
About the Publisher
CHAPTER 1
The bonfire in the clearing spits out flames and smoke. Red, yellow, orange sparks fly up into the night sky. My classmates cluster around it, everyone drinking out of red plastic cups. It’s the seniors’ unofficial end-of-the-year party, and this small open space in the woods is packed and pulsing with bodies.
I stand to the side and pretend to sip at the bitter, cheap beer. The forest rises behind me, the silhouettes of trees towering overhead. Shadows dip and blend as the wind rustles branches and sends the smoke of the bonfire in all different directions. Someone has hooked up a stereo to a car battery and I can feel the beat pounding through the crowd. The lyrics, something about mushrooms and dark corners, are muffled in the shouting and noise.
The fire gives off enough light to illuminate the clearing, but beyond this circle the woods are a black, impenetrable wall. I don’t know why the seniors decided to throw this party at Camp Hero, a state park at the very eastern end of Montauk. I’ve been here a hundred times with my grandfather, walking along the sea cliffs that border the park, or hiking through the dense, sunlit forest. But it feels like a different place at night—the darkness creeps through the trees like a living thing.
On the other side of the fire, my best friend, Hannah, waits in line for the keg. She looks bored and a little lost in her long peasant skirt, her black hair parted down the middle. A tipsy girl in front of her stumbles, and beer splashes on the people nearby. Hannah scowls and steps away. She catches my eye across the clearing and raises her eyebrows in a What have you gotten me into? look.
I smile and turn to see Shannon Perkins approaching. “Hey, Lydia,” she says. Her blond hair is straight and sleek, her bright dress tight. “I thought you said you weren’t coming tonight.” Her eyes are glassy and unfocused and she smiles widely in my general direction.
“How could I miss all this?” I wave my hand toward the keg, where a bunch of guys are lifting Dave Marcus, a senior, into a keg stand. “One, two, three, four …” everyone chants in unison as he sputters around the foaming beer. The crowd is roaring and the wind whips through the fire, making it crackle and spark.
“Yeah, Dave!” Shannon calls out, and her voice is immediately swallowed up in the rest of the noise. “Do you think he’s gonna break his record?” she asks more quietly.
I give her a confused look. “I have no idea.”
“Oh, right, Lydia. I forgot you never come to these things.”
I shrug. I don’t ever come to these things, and I’m still not sure what compelled me to tonight.
Shannon smiles at me again, slightly more focused this time. “I liked that article you did for the paper, the one about the squad. Let me know if you want any more quotes.”
I smile back. “Sure. Thanks for helping out.” Shannon and I both grew up in Montauk, and we’ve known each other since we were little kids. We’re not exactly friends now—our social circles are different—but we’re still friendly.
Shannon tugs at the spaghetti strap on her dress, forgetting that she’s still holding her beer. It spills a little, and the tiny, amber-colored drops catch in her hair. “God, can you believe we’re going to be seniors?”
I laugh, shaking my head. “No. Sometimes it feels like we’re still in second grade, running around on the beach, building sand castles and stuff.”
Hannah approaches us, her plastic cup empty. “I couldn’t get any beer before the frat-boy routine started.” She looks surprised when she sees me talking to Shannon, and they awkwardly nod at each other.
“Well, I’ll see you around, Lydia.” Shannon waves as she walks away.
Hannah steals the cup from my hand and takes a sip of the warm beer. She grimaces as she swallows. “What did the cheerleader want?” She wipes her hand across her mouth and shoves the drink back at me.
“Just to say hi. What’s your problem with her, anyway?”
“I don’t like cheerleaders on principle. It’s for all of us artsy nerds that ever felt the sharp sting of a mean girl’s wrath.”
I roll my eyes. “You’re delusional. Shannon’s not like that.”
“Whatever. All you Montauk kids are so weird. You’re so … nice to each other. It’s not natural.”
I laugh at her scrunched-up expression. “It’s a tiny town. You have to be nice to everyone. You’re just mad you grew up in fancy East Hampton with all the celebrities.”
“Hey, it’s not all Barefoot Contessa and Burberry. Some of us are regular old middle class.”
“You’re so lucky I came along to save you from the pampered masses.” I put my arm around her, squeezing her smaller figure up against mine. I’m not tall, but Hannah’s practically miniature.
“Get off me.” She twists away, laughing.
Hannah and I have been inseparable since eighth grade, when my small Montauk class started getting shipped over to East Hampton to attend the larger regional high school. Our lockers were next to each other, we were in all the “smart kid” classes together, and we both harbored a secret love of old musicals. Our friendship was basically inevitable.
There’s a tall, lanky boy headed in our direction. Hannah groans. “Don’t look now, but your boyfriend’s coming over.”
“Stop,” I whisper. “We’re just friends.”
“Yeah, right.”
“Hi, Grant,” I say, loud enough to drown out Hannah’s giggling.
“Hey.” He grins as he approaches. “Lydia. How’s it going?”
“Good.” I smile tightly. “How are you?”
“Awesome. I’m glad you came.” He tries to catch my eye, but I avoid his gaze, concentrating on the cup in my hands.
“Awkward,” I hear Hannah drawl under her breath. I resist the urge to elbow her.
It didn’t used to be like this. Grant and I grew up next to each other on the same quiet, tree-lined street. But lately he’s been watching me when he thinks I’m not looking, following me down the halls at school, and waiting for me after my classes. I’m dreading the day he tries to make a move.
“I didn’t think I’d see you here.” He sounds surprised.
I’m starting to get kind of offended. Sure, I don’t come to parties often, but it’s not like I’m a social pariah.
“Hannah and I decided to mix things up,” I say, keeping my tone deliberately light. “You can only watch Singin’ in the Rain so many times.”
“That is so not true,” Hannah mumbles.
Grant laughs. “I remember you used to make me watch that movie over and over. I think I still know it by heart.”
I laugh with him, remembering the blanket forts we would make in his living room that left only a tiny window to see the TV. Grant and I used to spend every minute together, just playing and laughing, and a part of me wishes we could
go back to that time, before everything became so complicated.
“Do you want another drink?” Grant asks.
I shake my head. “I’ve had my fill of cheap beer for the night.” To make my point I tip my cup over, and the last of the pale liquid splashes to the ground.
Hannah clutches my arm dramatically. “Not the precious beer. We can’t possibly lose the beer!”
Grant laughs and plays at being offended. “You don’t have to waste it.”
Hannah straightens. “I dare you to tell me it accomplishes anything other than drunken hookups and hangovers.”
“I don’t know, what about a little liquid courage?” He holds my gaze before tipping his cup back and taking a sip. I look at Hannah helplessly. She shrugs, trying to contain a smile.
It’s not that Grant isn’t cute. He might have been painfully dorky when we were younger, with his love of Battlestar Galactica and anime, but lately he’s cornered the whole sensitive guy thing. He wears Chucks and skinny jeans and he’s the editor of our school’s literary magazine. He’s tall, so tall that I have to tip my head back to look at his face, and all long and lanky. The goth girls worship him.
“Well, I need a refill.” He shakes his empty cup in my direction. “Let me get you one.” He gives me an intense look, tilting his head to one side and staring at me through a fall of shaggy black hair.
“No, thanks.”
Hannah is quiet as he starts to move away from us. The music has shifted from pounding rap to some shrill popstar. The breeze picks up and I smell the sharp salt of the ocean, the beach only a few miles from here. It’s a familiar smell for those of us who grew up in Montauk, a town so far out on the tip of Long Island it feels as though we’re more connected to the water than the land.
“Is he why you wanted to come tonight?” The way Hannah asks it sounds like an accusation.
My mouth falls open. “Of course not! You know I don’t like Grant like that.”
“You keep saying that, but you don’t seem to be doing anything to discourage him.”
“I don’t want to hurt him.” I turn away, staring at where the fire burns in the middle of the clearing. A drunk guy is pretending to throw a freshman girl into the flames. The girl’s shrieks echo through the night, so that it sounds like the screaming is coming from the woods behind us.
“But you’ll have to, eventually,” Hannah says. “He’ll gather up his courage and then you’ll break his little heart. He’ll have to listen to so much Death Cab to get over the pain.” She pats my shoulder, as though she’s pretending to comfort Grant. “Even if you did like him, you two would never work. You have nothing in common.”
I sigh. “I’m not going to date Grant. But it’s not like we have nothing in common. We both like to write.”
“He writes poetry that makes no sense and you want to be a serious journalist. Not the same thing.” She suddenly straightens and snaps her fingers, pointing at me. “Though you are both hipsters.”
I cross my arms and frown. “I am not a hipster!”
“Lydia, you’ve got bangs that hang in your eyes and you wear funky vintage dresses. I hate to break it to you, but that’s pretty hipster for the Hamptons.”
I look around the woods, at the girls in tight jeans and tank tops, in brightly colored jersey dresses. I do stand out in my red polka-dot dress, with its wide collar and pleated skirt. But I don’t care; I buy almost all of my clothes at thrift stores and vintage shops.
Hannah puts her hands on her hips. “You’re an Aries, Lydia. You’re fiery and independent. He’s a Cancer. A water sign. Sensitive. Meek. You’d squash his spirit.”
I laugh. “Seriously?”
“Say what you want, but we both know there’s truth to the signs.”
I roll my eyes. Hannah, though cynical and sarcastic ninety percent of the time, claims that astrology is her bible. I blame it on her mother, who insists that Hannah call her Jet, owns a used record shop in South Hampton, and does tarot card readings on the side. Hannah’s father is a Japanese artist who lives in Hawaii, where he’s working on becoming a world-class surfer. Hannah says her parents are children she’s sick of raising, and so she spends almost all her time at my house.
But even I can’t get her to shake the astrology.
Hannah waves her hand toward the keg, where Grant is talking to one of his friends. “So if it wasn’t for a boy, then why did you make me come to this stereotypical drunken grope-fest?”
I bite my lower lip, avoiding Hannah’s gaze. “I just wanted to.”
She leans forward and her hair spills over her shoulder. It’s so dark, it’s almost blue-black. “Out with it, Miss Bentley.”
I fidget with my skirt, but Hannah won’t stop staring at me, one eyebrow raised as she waits for my response. “Okay, Miss Sasaki,” I say, mimicking her tone. “It was because of Camp Hero.” I circle my finger in the air, pointing to the trees above our heads. “I heard they were throwing the party here, and I felt like I had to come.”
“But you hate Camp Hero.”
“I don’t hate it, I just have a complicated relationship with it. My grandfather has been bringing me here for years, feeding me his conspiracy theories. I guess I wanted to prove this place doesn’t have any power over me. That I can come here for something normal, like a party in the woods.”
“As long as you don’t start drinking the Kool-Aid …”
“Don’t worry. I will never believe in the Montauk Project.”
“Hey!” Grant exclaims as he joins us again, a beer clutched between his hands. “Who says the Montauk Project isn’t true?”
I sigh under my breath.
“Please. Like there’s some big, secret conspiracy happening out there.” Hannah gestures to the dark forest behind us. “It’s ridiculous. Montauk is too small a town to hide an underground government lab at one of the state parks. People would notice creepy army guys skulking around out here. There’s no way they could get away with it.”
“Secret. Government. Project,” Grant enunciates. “As in, it’s a secret. And this is the government we’re talking about. The people behind this are like the CIA, only more elite and more dangerous. They’re the most highly trained military personnel imaginable, partnered with the smartest scientists in the world, and they’ll do anything to keep this a secret. The president probably doesn’t even know what happens here.”
Wanting a distraction, I grab Grant’s drink from his hands and take a sip of beer. “Thanks.” I shove it back at him. He looks surprised as he takes it from me.
“How could you possibly know that?” Hannah is clearly unwilling to let the subject go. “You have no idea if the Montauk Project even exists.”
“Oh, it exists.” Grant takes a long drink of his beer, his thin face stark in the dim light. “Trust me. Too many weird things happen around here for it to be a coincidence.”
“Like what?”
“How about electronics suddenly not working for no apparent reason? Or fishermen seeing strange lights late at night?”
“That’s easy,” Hannah replies. “Everyone knows that the radar tower they built during the Cold War messes with communications sometimes. And those fishermen are drunk.”
“That’s what they want you to believe about the radar tower.” Grant shakes his head, his messy hair flying from side to side. “But it’s all part of the cover-up. To pretend that this place was just a harmless military base.”
“But Camp Hero hasn’t been used by the military in years. And it’s a state park now. Why would the government open it up to the public if there’s a secret research base out here?” Hannah steps closer to Grant. They’re so focused on their argument, they’ve forgotten I’m here.
I look around the clearing impatiently. We’ve all had this conversation a million times before. I’m usually willing to get into it, but not tonight. Not when we’re standing in the middle of Camp Hero, and I can practically feel my grandfather’s presence around me.
“What be
tter way to hide something than by trying to erase public suspicions? Face it. The Montauk Project is the East Coast Area Fifty-one.” Grant’s face is lit up, his brown eyes wide, almost feverish.
“Area Fifty-one?” Hannah rolls her eyes. “There are no aliens here. And please don’t tell me you believe in those ‘reptoids.’ Alien creatures that look like giant lizards from another dimension are really coming down onto the beach to terrorize the surfers? Please.”
“Why not? It’s possible. The scientists study all kinds of stuff … like time tunnels. Which are really wormholes. Those holes could connect to anywhere. Even other planets.”
“That’s ridiculous,” Hannah scoffs.
“Let’s just drop it,” I cut in, trying to lighten the mood. “It’s like I’m hanging out with my grandpa or something.”
The joke falls flat. “You shouldn’t discount him.” Grant reaches his arm out toward me, as if he can physically press his words, his belief, into me. “There are whole online message forums of people with evidence that the Montauk Project exists.”
“Oh right”—Hannah laughs mockingly—“because conspiracy theorists on the internet are always trustworthy.”
“Laugh all you want, Hannah. But this could be real. There are even reports that they kidnap people to use in their experiments. They especially like to snatch children. Easier to brainwash.”
“If you believe that, then why are you even here right now?” I snap, starting to get fed up with both of them. “Aren’t you afraid that men in lab coats are going to drag you down into their secret lair?”
“The government wouldn’t risk that kind of exposure.” Grant seems unaware of my growing annoyance. “That’s why they usually kidnap orphans, or people with no family ties. Can you imagine what would happen if people knew about what went on here? People would protest; it could even topple the government. Only a select few can know, and they’re under the ground right now.”
I stare down at my feet. The grass in the clearing has been worn away, and there’s mud clinging to my sandals. I try not to think about people down there, in tunnels or tubes or hallways or whatever it is secret government projects are made out of.