Authors: Deb Caletti
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #General, #Adolescence, #Suicide, #Dating & Sex
in the water. I couldn’t see the boat anywhere, and then I could,
and it seemed her arrival was very fast. She got larger and larger
and more in focus, and suddenly they were close enough that I
Stay
could see the faces of the individual passengers, and I could hear
Finn shout something and the others laugh, and the big sail came
down, tumbling into messy folds.
I watched everyone get off the boat and saw Finn return again
to coil the ropes. There was a familiarity to it that made it all feel
good, and so I got up, carrying my sandals by their straps, and
walked over.
“You going out again?” I shouted.
“Hey,” he said. His brother stood at the tip of the boat15*
smoking a cigarette, looking out. He turned when he heard my
voice. “Shy girl.”
“Clara,” I said.
“Finn,” he said, though his name had traveled through my
mind on a million different paths already. “My brother Jack.
Don’t mind him; he’s trying to quit.”
“Don’t mind him; he’s an idiot,” Jack said, blowing smoke
up into the air. You could tell they got along just fine, though.
They both were thin and fit and had unshaven scruff, but Jack’s
hair was longer and wilder and Finn had those sweet eyes. Finn
hopped off the boat. There he was, next to me, in his tight T-shirt
and loose jeans, black hair messed up from a windy, windy ride.
15 Called the bow. The back, called the stern. I knew this only in some vague way be-
fore, and might have failed the quiz if there had been one. The left is “port,” the right
is “starboard.” Sailing has its own language. Colorful, too. Bowsprits and breeches
buoys and battening down hatches, language from another time. Nothing like all the icy
tech words we have now—DOS and CD-ROM and CPUs—no romance. And then there’s
the jib sheet and the spinnaker, the luffing and the jibing, lively, cheery words. And of
course, the stays. The stays: the wire that supports the mast. Thin and hardly notice-
able, but the only thing keeping the mast from toppling.
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Deb Caletti
“Come on out,” he said. He seemed shy himself. But not so
shy that he couldn’t say what he wanted. “It’s
fast.
It’s
fantastic
.”
His eyes danced.
I must have shivered. It was a little cold out there. “Scared?”
he said.
“No,” I said. “My father’s afraid, not me.”
“The whole ghost thing?” he asked.
“Ghost thing?”
“I thought maybe you were staying at the Captain Bishop
Inn. They love that stuff. Shove it at the folks that go there.
People eat it up. They make
pamphlets
, even. ” I shook my
head. I didn’t know what he meant. “Deception Pass? Used to
have a lot of sailing vessels. The big old ships . . . But—high
winds, narrow channel . . . The waters were,
are
, so treacher-
ous there that most of the ships sailed around the whole island
rather than go through that pass. They had to lose a few for
sailors to know that, though, right? So, supposedly, you know.
Old dead sailors haunting the waters. Captain Bishop’s young
widowed wife throwing herself off of the lighthouse in despair.
Blah blah blah.”
“Some TV show came out here and filmed the lighthouse and
now we have every bored, middle-aged kook who is hoping
to be
freaked out,” Jack said.
“I know the shows,” I said. “Old ship on choppy sea? Guy
with a pocket watch and a telescope? Filmy white images?”
“You got it,” Finn said.
“I didn’t even know,” I said. “My father just hates the water.”
“Ah,” Finn nodded. He shrugged his shoulders, to each his
* 90 *
Stay
own. “Anyway, you wouldn’t believe how many people ask about
the ships down under there. Number one question.”
“Tell me about the ships down under there,” I said.
He laughed. Someone called Jack’s name. It was the girl from
The Cove, yesterday’s hamburger place. She was waving at him
madly.
“Our sister,” Finn said.
“Pretend I never saw,” Jack said. “I’m not chasing that fuck-
ing seagull for her.”
“There’s this seagull . . .” Finn said. I nodded. I knew about
him. “She claims to hate that seagull, but I have my doubts. You
coming?”
“I can’t,” I said. “I’ve got to—”
“Work at the lighthouse?” he grinned. “Did she hire you?”
“Starting on Monday,” I said. The brothers looked at each
other. Knowing glance. “What? Come on. Tell me.”
“Maybe you ought to start job hunting,” Finn said.
Jack cracked up. “She’ll fire you by . . .” He looked at his
brother. “I say Friday.”
“Monday,” Finn said. “She hates the weekend tourists more
than she hates the workers.”
“True,” Jack said. He thought. “Can I change my bet?”
I groaned. “Really? That bad?”
“She chased this one guy with her Jeep,” Finn said.
“Remember that?”
They both were chuckling away. I crossed my arms. “I’m prov-
ing you both wrong,” I said. I’d suddenly decided. I’d charm the
skin off that snake and show these guys. “I’m lasting the summer.”
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Deb Caletti
“No fucking way,” Jack said. He’d finished his cigarette.
Turned his back on his sister, who had given up and gone back
into the shack. The seagull still sat on that table. He looked pretty
comfy.
“You last the summer and I’ll sail you over to Friday Harbor
and back. Private charter.”
“You idiot,” Jack said. “You gotta make that a bet you can
win
.
Jesus, I haven’t taught you anything.”
I was having so much fun there. I wondered about Finn
and Jack and their sister and their life in that place.
This
would
be their life during the summers. There would be no driving to
Neumo’s or out to eat in various parts of the city. No concerts or
shows or the pierced people at Total Vid or traffic or city buses.
No jobs at vintage music stores or comedy places. Just the beach
and water and this stingy salty air and working with your hands
until you were so tired that maybe you actually slept at night.
“How about next week?” I said. “After work? After I
don’t
get
fired? I’ll come out then,”
“That’s so great,” Finn said. “Cool.” He was grinning.
“Very cool.”
“Only if you promise to tell me all about the drowned sailors,”
I said.
“And
I’ll
tell you about what happened the first time Finn
heard about the drowned sailors.” Jack put his hands on Finn’s
shoulders.
“Shut up, idiot,” Finn warned.
“It was the middle of the night . . .”
“God damn it, Jack.” Finn lunged for his brother and missed.
* 92 *
Stay
“Awake all night, scared shitless.” Finn lunged again, and this
time he caught Jack by the waist and then tucked him under one
arm, his knuckles against his scalp. I’d forgotten how physical
guys could be. Jack and Finn did not have careful movements and
clean hands. They didn’t seem like they would flinch when they
heard loud noises like Christian did. They didn’t seem sensitive,
in all ways that sensitive made a person require careful handling.
“Our father’s white T-shirt in the kitchen, okay, okay!” Jack
pleaded. Finn let go. Jack was laughing and so was I.
“I was
seven
,” Finn said.
“You never heard anyone of any age scream like that,” Jack said.
“You rat bastard,” Finn said. “Your breath smells like a fucking
ash tray
.” But he wasn’t really bothered. I waited for it, thinking
there might be that moment where you saw his hurt or humilia-
tion or shame. When you live for a while with a sensitive person,
you are always anticipating. You’re two steps ahead, knowing what
the reaction will be to that comment or that film moment or that
song. You start trying to steer you both clear of any of the places
he could fall into and stay. After that night at the concert I tried to
keep my eyes from wandering accidentally somewhere that might
upset him. Movies with cheating girlfriends made him sullen, and
so I would read the reviews before we chose one, suggesting safe
plots with exploding buses and car crashes. His friend, Evan, was
teasing him about his “girlie silky hair” once, just giving him a bad
time, and you could see how hurt he got. Really hurt. More than
friend-kidding-around hurt. You anticipate, and when you do that
for a long while, it’s hard to shake. You get edgy. Like men back
from the war who jump when a car backfires.
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Deb Caletti
But Jack’s story just rolled right off of Finn. He didn’t care. I
realized he had a confidence that meant he could take jokes and
small blows to the ego without it destroying him. I guess it was
the sturdiness of confidence. And that was the first thing I really
liked about Finn Bishop.
“I got a surprise for you tonight, Clara Bella,” my father said that
late afternoon. He was sitting out on the deck, an open book on
his knee. The tide was inching in. You could see where his foot-
steps had been a way off, now half covered.
“Why does that worry me?” I said. “Except there’s not much
to do out here but the fried clam special at Butch’s Harbor Bar.
That guy Butch gets around. There’s a flyer in every window.
Actually, it sounds kind of good.”
“I’m not telling,” my father said. He looked pleased with
himself. You could tell he hadn’t showered all day—his hair was
unwashed and his beard was growing, and he had the same shorts
on he’d been wearing for the past four days. Hopefully, wherever
we were going, he wasn’t going out like that. “Better dress warm.”
I factored that through the Potential Disaster department of
my brain, and all the alarms went off. I was thinking sunset sail
with Finn Bishop, me and my dad. I was thinking Dad was going
for some bold move (he liked bold moves), face your fear and do
it anyway, fear is the biggest bullshitter romantic night for three
merged with book research and intrusive questions. “We’re not
sailing with the Bishop brothers,” I said.
His eyebrows shot up. He smiled. “Glad to hear you’re mak-
ing friends, C. P.”
* 94 *
Stay
“No comment.”
“Rightly so. No, you know you couldn’t get me to go on that
thing. Something else. Come on. Let’s get out of here in, say,
twenty minutes?”
When we met back up, Dad was showered, wearing jeans
and a white shirt with the tails out, a bottle of wine tucked under
one arm. We got in the car and drove toward the lighthouse and
parked.
“Oh, no,” I said.
“Come on. You’ll love this old broad.”
“She’s weird, Dad. I got the creeps.”
“That was your own deal. Had nothing to do with her.”
We inched our way down the steep trail. “How’d you even get
a hold of her? Does she even have
electricity
?”
“I sent her an e-mail. I was guessing she’d be as addicted to
it as she ever was. She goes to the Captain Whidbey Inn every
morning and uses their computer. I wasn’t expecting to hear back
from her so soon.”
“Lucky us,” I said. Dad was ahead of me. He did the sideways
dance down. “Don’t break your ankle or anything. I’d never get
you out of here.”
“You forget I played football.”
“One lousy season.”
He landed there nicely on his feet. I decided I’d better shut
my mouth, because it was me who was slipping and skittering.
The lighthouse stood above us, and the keeper’s house (with
Sylvie Genovese inside, I was guessing, due to the Jeep out
front) was lit and cozy on that cliff. She was probably watch-
* 95 *
Deb Caletti
ing, ready to fire me for my lack of climbing skills. My mood,
high and happy after the docks that day, was also slipping.
Part of me wanted my own bed in my own room back home,
my friends, my life, or rather, my old-old life. But I was here,
sliding down some cliff, my just washed hair already turning
stringy from salt air, my “surprise” a dinner with a crazy lady
who lived in a shack with an outhouse. We’d better not stay
late, because I couldn’t hold it that long, and there was no way
I was peeing in that place.
“I’m in a baked potato mood,” Dad said. “Butter. You know,
Pea, I love butter. I really do love it. My heart even swells a little
when I think of it. Wonder what we’ll have. Where is her place
anyway?”
I landed. Dad was taking off his sandals, and I did too. So
much for showering. So much for Butch’s Harbor Bar. I wouldn’t
have minded it. Red-and-white-checked plastic tablecloths with
cigarette burns in them sounded kind of nice right then. Hot
fried clams served in paper rectangle boats, I imagined. A
Budweiser sign in back of the bar with a waterfall that looked like
it was moving. “Believe me, you’ll know her house when you see