Hurricane Kiss

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Hurricane Kiss Page 5

by Deborah Blumenthal


  “River,” his dad says, in a low, controlled voice, “get back inside.”

  “You bitch,” River yells even louder. “B-i-t-c-h. B-i-t-c-h, b-i-t-c-h, b-i-t-c-h, b-i-t-c-h. Eight hours away, huh? You’re right above our heads, aren’t you?”

  He’s yelling at the top of his lungs, like he’s trying to connect with a sound system in heaven that will carry him on its frequency so he has a direct line to Danielle.

  “B-i-t-c-h, b-i-t-c-h, b-i-t-c-h,” he goes on, probably ripping his vocal cords out.

  Fury, rage, all pouring out of him. Do I laugh or cry? He starts pounding, pounding, pounding his fists on the roof of the car.

  BOOM, BOOM, BOOM BOOM BOOM.

  “Stupid fucking gas guzzler, traffic victim,” he yells. “I could have gone to Austin and back on my bike by now.” He pounds and keeps pounding.

  “River!” Harlan yells again. “You’re going to smash the goddamned roof in.”

  People in the cars around us are staring now, convinced they’re watching an insane person. But then their faces start to change, and they’re laughing with him because he’s giving voice to what everyone is thinking and feeling. They’re all as angry and frustrated as he is, ready to shriek their heads off too because of how this freakish storm has disrupted their lives, not knowing what, if anything, they’ll have when they return, and it scares the hell out of them.

  Only they’re also probably thinking why bother, what good would it do? They’re hot, thirsty, and tired enough, so let him be the show.

  River doesn’t have to worry about getting busted for disturbing the peace. The cops couldn’t get to him if they tried.

  Harlan stares out his side window, a vein in his jaw throbbing.

  “Danielle,” River yells out again, just when I thought he would stop. “Are you going to kill us all, huh? Drown us, or what? Tell me, I want to hear the plan. Are you going to blow our heads off, or drown us after you destroy our lives and everything around us while we’re jailed in our cars trying to escape you? You’re a sadistic bitch, Danielle.”

  He goes on like that.

  “You lowlife bbbbbbbiiiiiiiiiitttttttccccccch.”

  “River,” Harlan says in a low, measured voice. River still ignores him, and Harlan’s face reddens. “River!” he says, punching the steering wheel.

  When is he going to stop? Is he completely out of his mind? I grab my water. A tiny sip and then I press my head into the back of the seat. An inkblot of sweat darkens River’s red T-shirt at the small of his back, like some mutant butterfly from a Rorschach test. When he lifts his arms, I see a swath of skin with a tattoo across the small of his back. It reads: Never. Give. In.

  Standing and yelling his head off eventually wears him out. He reaches for water and downs half a bottle. I focus on something in one of his back pockets as he ducks back down into his seat.

  A knife.

  Take only what’s essential.

  River turns to his dad. “We’re never going to make it to Austin,” he says in a whisper, like someone bipolar who has slid back to calm.

  “What are you talking about?”

  He wipes his sweating face with the back of his hand. “Open your eyes, look at the sky.”

  Harlan looks up and then back at River. He doesn’t answer.

  RIVER

  I don’t want to start this, but I’m out of options. I turn to face her for the first time since we left. Our eyes lock. Her face is flushed, hot, sweat dots the curve of her full upper lip. She looks away first.

  “We have to get inside somewhere.”

  She looks back to me, narrowing her eyes. “What do you mean?”

  “If we stay in this car we’re dead; we’ll be caught in the middle of it.”

  “You don’t know that for sure.”

  “No? Look at the sky. We might have a few hours, maybe less. Traffic isn’t moving, more and more cars are going to get on the highway as the weather gets worse. You don’t have to be Einstein to know if we stay here we’ll be buried. This is a death trap.”

  My dad scratches the back of his head. “River, it’s not going to hit so soon. We’ll move. We’ll get to Austin, OK? Stop freaking out.”

  “Stop freaking out?” I turn to him, furious. “Reality check. You’re the one who should be freaking out.” His jaw tightens.

  Jillian’s face darkens as the truth hits her. My dad’s impassive stare says I’m right, only he can’t admit it, he won’t, because he doesn’t know what to do, and he’s in charge here, or he thinks he should be.

  But since when does being older make you right? Sorry, dude, you’re blowing this mission. Your troops are dead in the water if they follow you.

  Jillian looks at the sky. Is her psycho neighbor right or not? Should she trust me? Tough call. I doubt I’d trust me.

  I wish my grandmother were here. When bad weather was coming, she used to say, “I feel it in my bones.” She was always right, like she had a direct line to the universe. It blew me away. What would my dad say to her now if she were here and could predict how much time we had? Knowing him, he’d blow her off.

  The sky’s already changing, the wind building.

  “We’ll get off at the next exit, gas up, and take stock,” my dad says, because it sounds like a plan. “We don’t have many options. It’s either stay on the road which might open up, or get out and get stuck in what, some overcrowded gas station or 7-Eleven without our things?” He looks around and shakes his head. “We’re in the middle of nowhere. No hotels. What’s here—fast food joints, a body shop? What would we do, sleep in the car? Under an overpass? My vote is to keep going unless we hear different.”

  Sure. Exactly what he would say.

  “Life or death without a survival guide,” I whisper. Jillian looks at me and opens her mouth to speak, but no words come out.

  “My vote is go back to Houston,” I say. “We’ve gone less than fifteen miles. Turn around and floor it and we’ll be back in ten minutes. It’s a big city. There are brick buildings, places to hide. Everything can’t be closed.”

  “We’re not going back,” my dad says. “They told us to evacuate. You’re suggesting we drive back into the center of the storm? The hotels are all closed. What would we do, break in somewhere?”

  “I’m suggesting we think for ourselves,” I insist. “We could find a place to hole up. Something solid. The roads are totally open going back.” I see the look on his face. He never listens, never cares what I think.

  “Exactly where would we go?”

  “A shelter or something. I’ll find a place. It beats sitting in the middle of a jam-packed highway like a target.”

  “Or something?” he repeats, like I’m crazy. “The traffic will pick up; it’ll start to move. At least we’re going in the right direction.”

  I stare at my dad, my fists tightening. “Just look at what’s ahead of you on the highway. You’re a prisoner. You don’t have a chance. Why is it so hard to admit you’re wrong?”

  Chapter 8

  JILLIAN

  River pops pills, throws knives, and yells at the sky. I eat myself up inside with fear because time is running out. Which one of us is crazy? Which one is sane? Which one of us knows the right thing to do?

  Monster storm. Monster storm. I keep replaying the nightmare. Why did I have it? What did it mean—assuming dreams give you insights and aren’t just a jumble of your fears, the wreckage left behind from the storms in different chapters of your life.

  I go back to the day my dad left. I couldn’t breathe as I stared at him through my bedroom window and watched him get into the car and drive away, leaving us to get along on our own.

  But why did I dream it? Was it a warning about what was to come? Would I be orphaned again, this time by Danielle? Would I keep losing my way and be powerless to do anything about it?

 
It wouldn’t be the first time someone dreamed what was later going to come true. It wouldn’t be the first time the future would have the power to affect the past, as crazy as that sounded. I ended up telling Kelly.

  “It’s because you’re not from here and this is new to you,” she said. “We’re used to tornados and hurricanes and—” She waved it away. “We take it in stride because we get hit with crazy weather all the time, so we just ride it out.”

  “Ride it out?”

  “Shit happens here,” she said, “get used to it.” She laughed. “What doesn’t kill you, makes you stronger.”

  Kelly was probably right. I tried to distract myself by keeping busy. As soon as I got home from school, I went swimming. If I was worn out, I’d crash when my head hit the pillow. Exhaustion would drive the nightmare away.

  Our pool is nothing fancy, just a big rectangle, half of it surrounded with plants with blue flowers that are bigger than snow cones. In the summer it’s my oasis of coolness and calm. While I was doing laps, I remembered something that happened before River disappeared from school. It was just a few months after he moved in next door. It was November, but it was still warm enough to swim.

  I wanted to work at the town pool for the summer instead of interning and being stuck inside an office all day, so I was determined to pass the lifeguard test. There were four parts to it. The first was to swim two hundred yards in four minutes or less. I measured off the distance, basically two-and-a-half laps in our pool. I was in the zone. In my fantasy I was an Olympic contender, training for the competition. I was so lost in my daydreams that I didn’t realize anyone else was around. Then I looked up.

  It was like seeing a mirage, ripples of heat distorting my vision. River was standing at the edge of the pool watching me, the late afternoon sun bathing him in a golden light. There was something surreal about seeing him still as a statue, unruly curls framing his face, red board shorts slung low on his hips.

  “You scared me!” I tried to catch my breath, pushing the wet hair away from my eyes. I hoisted myself up and sat on the side of the pool, trying to catch my breath. “I didn’t see you come in.”

  “Sorry, I called you, but I guess you didn’t hear me.”

  He dropped down next to me, put his feet in the water. We gazed at each other, neither of us saying anything, the silence growing strained, even though it couldn’t have been more than a few seconds. A dragonfly swooped down, skimming its iridescent blue-green wings along the surface of the water, before rising up and perching itself on River’s shoulder, its wings fluttering, the insect equivalent of a preening peacock.

  Even bugs are drawn to him. I almost laughed.

  His lips curled up into a smile. He blew at it softly, and the dragonfly lifted off. I followed its flight and then glanced back at River.

  “In half an hour, they can devour an amount of food equal to their entire body weight.”

  “I don’t remember learning that in bio,” he said, smirking. “I must have been out sick that day.”

  “No, that came from the inside of a Snapple lid.”

  “I have a lot in common with dragonflies then,” he said, “I’m always starved too.”

  Our eyes met and everything inside me seized up. I turned away, reaching for the towel on the lounge chair behind me, wrapping it tightly around my shoulders.

  Without a word, River leaned toward me and lifted a strand of wet hair off my cheek, tucking it behind my ear, his knuckles grazing my face. He lifted a second strand on the other side with the same light stroke of his fingers, slipping it behind the other ear.

  It wasn’t anything, the lightest touch. It meant nothing. But the sensation shot through me, setting off painful stings of longing, which was crazy and confusing. I swallowed hard and finally looked away. I had a boyfriend, this was wrong. River probably came on to girls all the time, to see who and what he could get. Guys like him did that. Why not?

  “So,” I said abruptly, “why did you—”

  “You’re not getting enough air on the intake,” he said, turning serious.

  “What?”

  “When you swim. You’re not getting enough air when you inhale because you’re not getting enough out at the exhale.”

  “You can see that?”

  “I used to swim competitively, and we videotaped ourselves so we could study our form and see what we were doing wrong.”

  “Oh … well … thanks. I’ll try to exhale harder. Next time.”

  “Try it now,” he said, motioning for me to get back into the pool. “I’ll watch you.”

  I hesitated.

  “Go on,” he said, motioning to the water.

  I got back in and he followed me in. He swam alongside me, watching intently as I went from one end of the pool to the other, working at breathing out harder and then deliberately taking in more air. Finally I stopped and looked up at him questioningly.

  “Better,” he said. “How does it feel?”

  I shrugged. “I’m not sure. How’s it supposed to feel?”

  “Keep going. You’ll know.”

  Why did everything he said sound like …

  I kept swimming and so did he, keeping pace with me. He seemed to really care that I got it right. When I stopped he held his hand up for a high five.

  “You got it,” he said, his hand hitting mine. “You’ll see, you’ll swim stronger now.”

  “I’m taking the lifeguard test for a job at the pool,” I said, climbing out of the water. Why did I tell him? He didn’t ask.

  “Cool,” he said, following me out. “Which pool?”

  “West U.”

  “Wow,” he said. “I just applied for that too. What a coincidence.”

  “Really?”

  “Yeah, I definitely want that job.”

  “Oh.” Why was I wasting my time preparing? I didn’t stand a chance.

  He looked at me straight-faced for a moment and then laughed. “I’m kidding.”

  I could feel my face turning pink. So I was a total dork.

  “River one, Jillian nothing,” I said, writing the score in the air with my finger.

  “Not nothing,” he whispered, his eyes holding mine. “Definitely not nothing.”

  He stepped toward me. The air between us was charged. It was late afternoon. The sun was low in the sky, warming my back. My mom was out. So was Ethan. It was just the two of us, our bodies inches apart.

  And he was still staring.

  I swallowed, trying to ignore the steady stream of water droplets trickling down my shoulders and back, slipping inside my suit.

  He lowered his gaze to my lips.

  I needed air.

  “So,” I blurted out, trying to draw a breath. “Was that why you came over … because of how I swim? Or just to goof on me?”

  He grinned, socking his head. “Hell no, I nearly forgot. Our refrigerator died and my dad wanted to know if we could use your freezer until tomorrow when the new fridge comes. If you have room. And you don’t mind if—”

  “—It’s fine.”

  “Cool.” He laughed. “Or cold, or whatever.” He headed toward the back door of his house, our backyard gate slamming behind him. A few minutes later it slammed again and he was back with a stack of frozen dinners under his arm. He looks embarrassed.

  “Frozen food,” he said. “It’s what’s for dinner.”

  “You really live on those?”

  “Uh … yeah. We don’t cook much …” A flicker of sadness passed over his face, and then it vanished.

  Why hadn’t I just shut up? He didn’t have a mom, and his dad worked. Who was there to cook for him or worry about what he ate?

  “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean …”

  “No worries.”

  “I just meant I know the coach gets on your case about eating right, so—


  “Right,” he said, nodding robotically.

  “You’re almost in first place, so I guess he doesn’t want to …”

  He looked off, waiting impatiently.

  “River?”

  “What?” he said, turning back to me.

  “You can use the pool anytime you want. We’re hardly ever out here.”

  “Thanks,” he said, the smile returning. “I’ll take you up on that.”

  The following week at about ten at night I was upstairs on the phone. Absentmindedly, I walked to the window. The house lights cast enough of a glow for me to see him swimming from one end of the pool to the other, over and over.

  I started counting to see how many laps he’d do, but he kept going back and forth, back and forth, in a regular rhythm and I lost count, eventually turning away. I thought about going outside and bringing him cookies and lemonade. Maybe he was thirsty. Or wouldn’t have minded taking a break. But I didn’t want to bother him, or break into his fantasies, whatever they were.

  The honking of horns draws me out of my thoughts. River and his dad ignore each other, their barriers up even though they sit nearly shoulder to shoulder in the front seat. The stony silence is pushing me to take sides. There’s no middle ground. Stay in the car? Come up with another plan? I look at my watch. I’m on a game show with only seconds left before I need to answer—that’s how it feels.

  The sky is changing color, everything deepening to a mix of silvery grays with shots of white light, but the shift is so subtle I feel I need to take pictures, to prove it to myself, so I know I’m not imagining it. We may be trapped in place, unable to move, but nothing’s holding Danielle back. She’s slowly building strength, getting ready to stage her life-altering performance.

  So typical of us women. Hazardous, wildly unpredictable! At least that’s what male meteorologists used to think—that’s why they used only female names for hurricanes. I wrote that in my hurricane article for the school paper. Then, hello, that sexist practice got scrapped in 1978 when more women entered the field and the hurricanes were given male names too.

 

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