Read What I Thought Was True Online
Authors: Huntley Fitzpatrick
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Love & Romance, #Family, #General, #Social Issues, #Dating & Sex
More Love for WHAT I THOUGHT WAS TRUE
and MY LIFE NEXT DOOR
WHAT I THOUGHT WAS TRUE
“Utterly luminous. Huntley Fitzpatrick deftly balances the shimmering promise of summer, first love, and yearning in an emotionally
charged, beautifully written book.”
—Kristan Higgins,
New York Times
bestselling author
“
What I Thought Was True
is hauntingly raw, romantic, and beautiful.”
—Katie McGarry, author of
Crash Into You
MY LIFE NEXT DOOR
“A summer romance with depth.”—
The Boston Sunday Globe
“On par with authors such as Sarah Dessen and Deb Caletti.” —
SLJ
“Chemistry that crackles: it’s the novel’s tender, awkward, sexy,
dizzy-happy portrayal of first love that really makes it soar.”
—
Horn Book
H “Movingly captures the intensity of first love [and] the corrupting forces of power. . . . Readers will be reminded how “right” and
“wrong” choices are rarely crystal clear.”
—
Publishers Weekly
(starred review)
“One of the best books I read this past year”
—Kristan Higgins,
New York Times
bestselling author
“Jase and Samantha have a heart-warming romance every girl will envy.”
—Simone Elkeles,
New York Times
bestselling author of the Perfect Chemistry series
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“An almost perfect summer romance.” —
Kirkus Reviews
“Fitzpatrick perfectly captures the heady joys of first love while still dealing with everyday realities.” —
VOYA
“A wonderful read that will connect with your heart—guaranteed!”
—Lurlene McDaniel, bestselling author of
Heart to Heart
Best First Book Finalist for the Romance Writers of
America RITA Awards
Barnes & Noble Best Teen Books of 2012
YALSA BFYA (Best Fiction for Young Adults) winner
The Atlantic Wire Y.A./Middle-Grade Book Awards
Goodreads Choice Awards, YA Fiction finalist
Best First Book Finalist for the RITA Awards
YALSA Best Fiction for Young Adults 2013 List
B&N Best Teen Books of 2012
The Atlantic Wire YA Book Awards
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UNCORRECTED PROOF
WHAT I THOUGHT WAS TRUE
Huntley Fitzpatrick
Publication date: April 2014
Price: $17.99 ($19.00 CAN)
Young Adult Fiction
Ages 14 and up Grades 9 and up
416 pages
978-0-8037-3909-3
Dial Books • New York
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WHAT I
THOUGHT
WAS TRUE
by Huntley Fitzpatrick
D I A L B O O K S
an imprint of Penguin Group (USA) LLC
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DIAL BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Group (USA) LLC
375 Hudson Street
New York, New York 10014
USA/Canada/UK/Ireland/Australia/New Zealand/India/South Africa/China penguin.com
A Penguin Random House Company
Copyright © 2014 by Huntley Fitzpatrick
Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Fitzpatrick, Huntley.
What I thought was true / by Huntley Fitzpatrick.
pages cm
Summary: “17-year-old Gwen Castle is a working-class girl determined to escape her small island town, but when rich-kid Cass Somers, with whom she has a complicated romantic history, shows up, she’s forced to reassess her feelings about her loving, complex family, her lifelong best friends, her wealthy employer, the place she lives, and the boy she can’t admit she loves”— Provided by publisher.
ISBN 978-0-8037-3909-3 (hardback)
[1. Social classes—Fiction. 2. Dating (Social customs)—Fiction. 3. Family life—Connecticut—
Fiction. 4. People with disabilities—Fiction. 5. Old age—Fiction. 6. Islands—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.F578Wh 2014
[Fic]—dc23
2013027029
Printed in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Designed by Jasmin Rubero
Text set in Joanna MT Std Regular
The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.
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<
For you, John, for more than twenty years of your love, faith,
and friendship. For all the moments when I despaired of Cass
or Gwen or Nic, and you said softly, “I like them.” For all those
distracted hours of mine when you picked up the slack. Picking
up groceries, taking kids to ballet . . . those things never show
up in romantic novels. But they should.
For you, K, A, R, J, D, and C, the Fitzpatrick six . . . who love
books and beaches and summer. What I know is true? You are
the best things that have ever happened to me.
=
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WHAT I
THOUGHT
WAS TRUE
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Nothing like a carful of boys to completely change my mood.
There’s a muffled expletive from inside Castle’s Ice Cream,
so I know Dad’s spotted them too. A gang of high school boys
tops his list of Least Favorite Customers—they eat a ton, they
want it now, and they never tip. Or so he claims.
At first, I barely pay attention. I’m carrying a tray of wobbly
root beer floats, foil-wrapped burgers, and a greasy Everest’s
worth of fried scallops toward table four out front. In a few
weeks, I’ll be in the rhythm of work. Balancing all this and
more will be no big deal. But school got out three days ago,
Castle’s reopened last weekend, the sun is dazzling, the early
summer air is sticky with salt, and I have only a few more
minutes left in my shift. My mind is already at the beach. So I
don’t look up to see who just drove in until I hear a couple of
whistles. And my name.
I glance back. A convertible is parked, slanted, taking up two
spaces. Sure enough, Spence Channing, who was driving, shakes
his hair from his eyes and grins at me. Trevor Sharpe and Jimmy
Pieretti are piling out, laughing. I whip off my Castle’s hat, with its spiky gold crown, and push it into the pocket of my apron.
1
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“Got a special for us, Gwen?” Spence calls.
“Take a number,” I call back. There’s a predictable chorus
of
ooo
’s from some of the boys. I set the tray down at table four, add soda cans and napkins from my front pockets, give
them a speedy, practiced smile, then pause by the table where
my brother is waiting for me, dreamily dragging French fries
through ketchup.
But then I hear, “Hey, Cass, look who’s here! Ready to serve.”
And the last boy in the car, who had been concealed behind
Jimmy’s wide torso, climbs out.
His eyes snag on mine.
The seconds unwind, thin, taut, transparent as a fishing line
cast far, far, far out.
I jolt up, grab my brother’s hand. “Let’s get home, Em.”
Emory pulls away. “Not done,” he says firmly. “Not done.” I can
see his leg muscles tighten into his “I am a rock, I am an island”
stance. His hands flick back and forth, wiping my urgency away.
This is my cue to take a breath, step back. Hurrying Em,
pushing him, tends to end in disaster. Instead, I’m grabbing his
ketchup-wilted paper plate, untying my apron, calling to Dad,
“Gotta get home, can we do this take-out?”
“Not done,” Emory repeats, yanking his hand from mine.
“Gwennie, no.”
“Gettin’ slammed,” Dad calls out the service window, over
the sizzle of the grill. “Wrap it yourself, pal.” He tosses a few
pieces of foil through the window, adding several packets of
ketchup, Emory’s favorite.
“Still eating.” Emory sits firmly back down at the picnic
table.
2
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“We’ll watch a movie,” I tell him, wrapping his food. “Ice
cream.”
Dad glances sharply out the take-out window. He may be
brusque with Em from time to time, but he doesn’t like it
when I am.
“Ice cream
here
.” My brother points at the large painting
of a double-decker cone adorning one of the fake turrets. Yes,
Castle’s is built to look like a castle.
I pull him to the truck anyway and don’t look back, not even
when I hear a voice call, “Hey, Gwen. Have a sec?”
I turn the key in Mom’s battered Bronco, pressing hard on
the gas. The engine revs deafeningly. But not loud enough to
drown out another voice, laughing, “She has lots of secs! As
we know.”
Dad, thank God, has ducked away from the service window
and is bent over the grill. Maybe he didn’t hear any of that.
I gun the car again; jerk forward, only to find the wheels
spinning, caught in the deeper sand of the parking lot. At
last the truck lurches, kicks into a fast reverse. I squeal out
onto the blazing blacktop of Ocean Lane, grateful the road is
empty.
Two miles down, I pull over to the side, fold my arms to
the top of the steering wheel, rest my forehead on them, take
deep breaths. Emory ducks his head to peep at me, brown eyes
searching, then resignedly opens the foil and continues eating
his limp, ketchup-soggy fries.
In another year, I’ll graduate. I can go someplace else. I can
leave those boys—this whole past year—far behind in the
rearview mirror.
3
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I pull in another deep breath.
We’re close to the water now, and the breeze spills over me
soft and briny, secure and familiar. This is why everyone comes
here. For the air, for the beaches, for the peace.
Somehow I’ve wedged the car right in front of the big
white-and-green painted sign that marks the official separation
between town and island, where the bridge from Stony Bay
stops and Seashell Island begins. The sign’s been here as long
as I can remember and the paint has flaked off its loopy cursive
writing in most places, but the promises are grooved deep.
Heaven by the water.
Best-kept little secret in New England.
Tiny hidden jewel cradled by the rocky Connecticut coast.
Seashell Island, where I’ve lived all my life, is called all those things and more.
And all I want to do is leave it behind.
4
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“Kryptite the only thing,” Emory tells me, very seriously, the
next afternoon. He shakes his dark hair—arrow straight like
Dad’s—out of his eyes. “The only, only thing can stop him.”
“Kryptonite,” I say. “That’s right. Yup, otherwise, he’s
unstoppable.”
“Not much Kryptite here,” he assures me. “So all okay.”
He resumes drawing, bearing down hard on his red Magic
Marker. He’s sprawled on his stomach on the floor, comic book
laid out next to his pad. The summer light slants through our
kitchen/living room window, brightening the paper as he
scribbles color onto his hero’s cape. I’m lying on the couch in
a drowsy haze after taking Em into White Bay for speech class
earlier.
“Good job,” I say, gesturing to his pad. “I like the shooting
stars in the background.”
Emory tilts his chin at me, forehead crinkling, so I suspect
they aren’t stars. But he doesn’t correct me, just keeps on draw-
ing.
An entire day after running into the boys at Castle’s, I’m
still wanting a do-over. Why did I let them get to me this time?
I should have laughed; flipped them off. Not very classy, but
5
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I’m not supposed to be the classy one here. I should have said,
“Well, Spence, we all know that with you, it
wouldn’t
take more than a sec.”
But I couldn’t have said that. Not with Cassidy Somers there.
The other boys don’t matter much. But Cass . . .
Kryptonite.
An hour or so later, our rattly screen door snaps open and in
comes Mom, her dark curly hair frizzing from the heat the
way mine always does. She’s followed wearily by Fabio, our
ancient, half-blind Labrador mix. He immediately keels over
on his side, tongue lolling out. Mom hurries to push his bowl
of water closer to him with one foot while reaching into our
refrigerator for a Diet Coke.
“Did you think about it some more, honey?” she asks me,
after taking a long swallow. Caffeinated diet soda, not blood,
must run through her veins.
I spring up, and the old orange-and-burgundy plaid sofa
lets out an agonized groan. Right, I should be making decisions
about what to do this summer, not obsessing about the ones I
made yesterday—or in March.
“Careful!” Mom calls, waving her free hand at the couch.
“Respect the Myrtle.”
Emory, now scribbling in Superman’s dark hair, heavy-
handed on the black marker, offers his throaty giggle at the
face I make.
“Mom. We got Myrtle from Bert and Earl's Bargain Base-
ment. Myrtle has three legs and no working springs. Getting
off Myrtle makes me feel like I need a forklift. Respect. Really?”
6
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“Everything deserves respect,” Mom says mildly, plopping
onto Myrtle with a sigh. After a second, she crinkles her nose
and reaches under the cushion, extracting one of my cousin
Nic’s ratty, nasty sweatshirts. A banana peel. And one of her
own battered romance novels. “Myrtle has lived a long, hard
life in a short time.” She swats me with the gross sweatshirt,
smiling. “So? What
do
you think—about Mrs. Ellington?”
Helping Mrs. Ellington. The possible summer job Mom
heard about this morning, meaning I wouldn’t have to keep
working at Dad’s again. Which I’ve faithfully done every year
since I was twelve. Illegal for anyone else, but allowed for Nic
and me, since we’re family. After five years, for sure, I could use a change from scooping sherbet, frying clams, and slapping
together grilled cheese sandwiches. More than that . . . if I’m
not handling Dad’s at night, I can help Vivien on catering gigs.
“Is it for the whole summer?” I plop down, stretch back
gingerly. If you hit her the wrong way, Myrtle lists like the
Titanic
before its final dive.
Mom unlaces the shabby sneakers she wears to work, kicks
one off, stretching out her toes with a groan. She has daisies
delicately painted on her big-toenails, no doubt the work of
Vivien, the Picasso of pedicures. On cue, Emory leaves the
room in search of her slippers. He would have gotten her
the Coke if she hadn’t beaten him to it.
“Through August,” she confirms, after another long draw
of soda. “She fell off a ladder last week, twisted her ankle, got
a concussion. It’s not a nursing job,” she assures me hastily.
“They’ve got someone coming in nights for that. Henry . . . the family . . . just wants to make sure someone’s looking out for 7
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her—that she’s getting exercise, eating—not wandering off to
the beach by herself. She’s nearly ninety.” Mom shakes her head
as if she can’t believe it.
Me neither. Mrs. Ellington always seemed timeless to me, like
a character from one of those old books Grandpa brings home
from yard sales, with her crisp New England accent, straight
back, strong opinions. I remember her snapping back to some
summer person who asked “What’s wrong with him?” about
Em: “Not as much as is wrong with
you
.” When Nic and I used to go along with Mom on jobs, back when we were little, Mrs.
E. gave us frosted sugar cookies and homemade lemonade, and
let us sway in the hammock on her porch while Mom marched
around the house with her vacuum cleaner and mop.
But . . . it would be an island job. A working-for-the-
summer-people job. And I’ve promised myself I won’t do that.
Rubbing her eyes with thumb and forefinger, Mom polishes
off her soda and plunks the can down with a tinny clink. More
tendrils of hair snake out of her ponytail, clinging in little coils to her damp, flushed cheeks.
“What would the hours be, again?” I ask.
“That’s the best part! Nine to four. You’d get her breakfast,
fix lunch—she naps in the afternoon, so you’d have time free.
Her son wants someone to start on Monday. It’s three times
what your dad can pay. For a lot less work. A good deal, Gwen.”
She lays out this trump card cautiously, sliding the “
you
need to do this
” carefully underneath the “
you want to do this
.”
Whatever Nic and I can pull in during the summer helps
during the Seashell dead zone, the long, slow months when
most of the houses close up for the season—when Mom has
8
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fewer regulars, Dad shuts down Castle’s and does odd jobs
until spring, and Em’s bills keep coming.
“What about her own family?” I ask.
Mom hitches a shoulder, up, down, casual. “According to
Henry, they won’t be there. He does something on Wall Street,
is super-busy. The boys are grown now—Henry says they don’t
want to spend their whole summer on a sleepy island with
their grandma the way they did when they were younger.”
I make a face. I may have my own thoughts about how small
and quiet Seashell can be, but I live here. I’m allowed. “Not
even to help their own grandmother?”
“Who knows what goes on in families, hon. Other people’s
stories.”
Are their own.
I know this by heart.
Emory bounces back into the room with Mom’s fuzzy slip-
pers—a matted furry green one and a red, both for the left
foot. Reaching out for Mom’s leg, he pulls off the remaining
sneaker, rubs her instep.
“Thanks, bunny rabbit,” Mom says as he carefully positions
one slipper, repeating the routine on the other foot. “What do
you say, Gwen?” Mom leans into me, nudging my knee with
hers.
“I’d have afternoons and nights free—every night?” I ask, as
though this is some key point. As if I have a hoppin’ social life
and a devoted boyfriend.
“Every night,” Mom assures me, kindly
not
asking “What’s
it matter, Gwen?”
Every night free. Guaranteed. Working for Dad, I usually
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wind up covering the shifts no one else wants—Fridays and
Saturdays till closing. With all that time open, I can have a real summer, do the beach bonfires and the cookouts. Hang out
with Vivie and Nic, swim down at the creek as the sun sets, the
most beautiful time there. No school, no tutoring to do, no
waking up at 4:30 to time for the swim team, none of those
boys . . . Running into them yesterday at Castle’s was . . . yuck.
Out at Mrs. E.’s, the farthest house on Seashell, I’d never have to see them.
I can practically smell my freedom—salty breezes, green
sun-warm sea-grass, hot fresh breezes blowing over the wet
rocks, waves splashing, white foam against the dark curl of
water.
“I’ll do it.”
It’s an island job. But only for one summer. For one fam-
ily. It’s not what Mom did, starting to clean houses with my
Vovó, her mother, the year she turned fifteen to make money
for college, still cleaning them (no college) all this time later.
It’s not what Dad did either, taking over the family business at
eighteen because his father had a heart attack at the grill.
It’s just temporary.
Not a life decision.
“Hon . . . did your dad pay you for your days yet? We’re
running a little behind.” Mom brushes some crumbs off the
couch without meeting my eyes. “Nothing to worry about,
but—”
“He said he’d get it to me later in the week,” I answer
absently. Em has moved from Mom’s feet to mine, not nearly as
sore, but I’m not about to turn him down.
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Mom stands, opens the fridge. “Lean Cuisine, South Beach,
or good old Stouffer’s tonight? Your choice.”
Gag on Lean Cuisine and South Beach. She stabs the plas-
tic top of a frozen entrée with her fork, but before she can
shove it into the microwave, Grandpa Ben saunters in, his usual
load of contraband slung over his shoulder, Santa Claus style. If
Santa were into handing out seafood. He pushes one of Nic’s
sweat-stiffened bandannas to the side of the counter, unload-
ing the lobsters into the sink with a clatter of hard shells and
clicking claws.
“Um, dois, três, quatro.
That one there must be five pounds at least.” Excited, he runs his hands through his wild white hair,
a Portuguese Albert Einstein.
“Papai. We can’t possibly eat all those.” Despite her protest,
Mom immediately starts filling one of our huge lobster pots
with water from the sink. “Again I ask, how long will it be
until you get caught? And when you go to jail, you help us
how?” Grandpa’s fishing license lapsed several years ago, but
he goes out with the boats whenever the spirit moves him. His
array of illegal lobster traps still spans the waters off our island.
Grandpa Ben glares at Mom’s plastic tray, shaking his head.
“Your grandfather Fernando did not live to be one hundred
and two on”—he flips the box over, checking the ingredi-
ents—“potassium benzoate.”
“No,” Mom tells him, shoving the tray back into the freezer.
“Fernando lived to one-oh-two because he drank so much
Vinho Verde, he was pickled.”
Muttering under his breath, Grandpa Ben disappears into
the room he shares with Nic and Em, emerging in his at-home
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mode—shirt off, undershirt and worn plaid bathrobe on, car-
rying Emory’s Superman pajamas.
“Into these, faster than a speeding bullet,” he says to Emory,
who giggles his raspy laugh and races around the room, arms
outstretched Man-of-Steel style.
“No flying until you’re in your suit,” Grandpa says. Em skids
to a halt in front of him, patiently allowing Grandpa Ben to
strip off his shirt and shorts and wrestle the pajamas on. Then
he cuddles next to me on Myrtle as Grandpa fires up a Fred
Astaire DVD.
Our living room’s so small it barely accommodates the
enormous plasma-screen TV Grandpa won last year at a bingo
tournament at church. I’m pretty sure he cheated. The state-of-
the-art screen always looks so out of place on the wall between
a cedar-wood crucifix and the wedding picture of my grand-
mother. She’s uncharacteristically serious in black and white,
with the bud vase underneath that Grandpa never forgets to fill
every day. It’s a big picture, one of those ones where the eyes
seem to follow you.
I can never meet hers.
Lush, romantic music fills the room, along with Fred
Astaire’s cracked tenor voice.
“Where Ginger?” Emory asks, pointing at the screen.
Grandpa Ben’s put on
Funny Face,
which has Audrey Hepburn, not Ginger Rogers.
“She’ll be here in a minute,” Grandpa tells him, his usual
answer, waiting for Emory to love the music and the dancing
so much that he doesn’t care who does it.
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Em chews his lip, and his foot begins twitching back and forth.