Saturday late afternoon. Beach parking lot.
Iâm here despite the cacophony of monsters in my head shouting that putting my future into the hands of a boy I hardly know with a questionable past is probably not my hottest idea. Plus, Iâm not sure Iâm up for whatever Micah has in store, because I got almost zero sleep and am dragging serious butt.
Staci convinced Dad to let Alice go out with friends last night to âget back to normal.â But Alice going out meant Dad was up pacing, and I was checking my watch, checking the blades under my bed, checking, checking, checking to make sure life wasnât spiraling out of control again. Alice made it by her ten p.m. curfew, but I was too rattled to sleep.
In the slanted sunlight, I close my eyes, bury my toes in the cool sand, and lean back on the rock wall bordering the parking lot. The warm sun and the salty sting of the air transport me back to a summer day more than ten years ago.
Alice and I are burying Mom in the sand. Sheâs covered up to her chin, her laugh trilling on the breeze. Dadâs videoing like always. Margot is in Momâs belly, and a sickness is in Momâs heart, but we donât know it yet.
We donât know anything. Except this moment. Our parents and each other and the sun and the sand sifting through our fingers.
When I open my eyes, theyâre gone, Momâs laughter scattered by the ca-caaas of seagulls dodging overhead. Micah waves from the beach parking lot, holding two rakes with long, metal tines.
âYou came,â Micah says.
âYou sound surprised.â
âA little.â He squints into the sun that hangs just above the horizon line. Then he marches down the beach without another word. My bare feet sink into the warm sand as I trail behind him. Heâs sans socks today but still has on his neon sunglasses, a T-shirt that says normal people scare me, and a pair of bright orange swim trunks. When he reaches a clearing just below a craggy rock formation, he jabs the rakes into the sand.
âSo, hereâs the deal,â he says. âWe start with art.â
âWhat does art have to do with me writing poetry?â
âNothing.â He smiles easily. âAnd everything.â
I shake my head. âArt is definitely not my thing.â
He points the handle of a rake toward me. âAs I recall, reached out to for help.â
âYes, butââ
âWell, do you want it or not?â He raises a finger into the air like heâs just remembered something. He pulls a paper from his backpack and hands it to me. âAnd to take this project to Lily Larkin level of anal-retentive, I even made a list. Try not to get too excited.â
Heat rushes to my cheeks. âFalling in love with you?â
âI saw that in a movie once, and Iâve always wanted to say it. Iâm also waiting for a chance to use âYou killed my father; prepare to die,â but that didnât really seem to fit here.â
I hold out Micahâs list of rules to him. âIâm sorry. I think this was a mistake. I actually really need to focus on the poem.â
âAll in due time.â
âThis isnât a joke. Itâs my life. Itâs serious.â
âThat sound serious.â He doesnât take the paper, just offers me a rake. âFor this to work, youâre going to have to trust me.â
âI donât even know you.â
âTrue. And we up against a lifetime of coloring-in-the-lines indoctrination. But wasnât there ever a time, maybe just once, in a moment of sheer, reckless abandon, that you wanted to draw what wanted to draw?â
He waits for me to open upâdivulge my secret wild side. But the truth is, I drawing inside the lines. Iâm good at it. Itâs who I am. I wouldnât even be on this beach with this boy if my family didnât absolutely need this win.
But we do.
âOr maybe,â he continues. âIs it that if you donât try, you canât fail?â
âFine.â I pluck the rake from his hand. âTeach me how to art.â
The cove stretches out before us in a lazy hugging the waves as they peak and break and spill over the beach. Micah sweeps his arms wide toward the ocean.
âLily, today the world is our canvas.â He drags the tines of his rake through the sand, leaving wet, dark lines behind it. âAnd the sand, our medium.â
He keeps pulling the rake, making a twirly design in the sand, and then he stands back and gestures like âYou know the tideâs just going to wash that away, right?â I say.
âIâm aware of how the ocean works.â
âThen whatâs the point?â
He smiles like my question amuses him. âSee, thatâs your problem.â
âMy problem?â
âYouâre so worried about of it all.â
My mind tries to come up with a rebuttal. But heâs right. I used to write poetry for fun. I loved making the words sing on paper the way they did in my head. Now writingâs a chore. Even running, the one place where I felt free, is a weight. An item on my growing to-do list.
I sigh. âWhat do I draw?â
âWhatever you want. Doesnât have to be perfect.â Micahâs already lost in his work, sweeping his rake effortlessly through the sand, trailing dark lines behind him in unpredictable patterns. âIn fact, better if itâs not. Perfect is boring.â
I start pulling my rake through the sand, moving it this way a few feet, then turning and going the other way. I pause and look back at what Iâve done.
âSo, tell me about your poetry. Still blocked?â Micah says as our lines bring us together. âSorry, sorry. Still in denial about being blocked?â
âRude,â I shout to him as we get farther away again. âAnd itâs not writerâs block.â
âThen what is it?â
âI donât know. Itâs like everyone is something. Gifford thinks I have important things to say, and my dad just Iâm going to win, but I canât even write anything, so maybe I was wrong. Maybe Iâm not a poet after all.â Iâve gone off course while talking and walked straight through my own lines, leaving big olâ footprints in the design. âWell, crap. Iâve already messed it up.â
Micah just laughs. âKnow what Bob Ross would say?â
I try to cover up my mistake by kicking more sand on top.
âBob Ross, as in TV painter guy with the white-boy Afro from the eighties? Always talking about happy little trees?â
âThe very same. Kind of a personal hero of mine.â
I shield my eyes from the harsh angles of the sun to look at him. âThatâsâ¦surprising.â
âWhy? Bob Ross was an icon. Always upbeat. Giving art to the masses. Spreading joy like syphilis.â
âFirst of all, ew. Second, I do get you.â I stand back, studying him, trying yet again to figure out the enigma that is Micah Mendez. âOn one side youâre into Winnie-the-Pooh and brightly colored socks, and apparently Bob Ross, and then on the other youâreâ¦â
I pause, thinking about all the things Iâve heard about him. Suicide. Fistfights. Certifiable.
âHandsome? Witty? Pick a word, any word.â
âWell, we can eliminate â
He flicks a rakeful of sand in my direction with a teasing smile that inexplicably makes my stomach flutter. I silently curse Sam for all her sexy artist talk.
âI know what they say about me, you know.â Micah leans on his rake, eyes on the sand. âA Boy on the Verge. Manic Micah.â
My gut tightens. âYou know about that?â
Does he know I called him crazy on the day we met?
âYep. And itâs hilarious because Iâd give my left nut for some mania, but alas, my malady of non-choice is depression.â
âThatâs just the thing,â I say. âYou donât depressed.â
Micah laughs. âIâll pass your glowing Yelp review along to my therapist.â Heâs standing next to me now, shoulder to shoulder, and I donât know why heâs so close until he looks down, and heâs added his footprints to mine, and now it looks like they were part of the design all along. âAnyway, as I was saying, Bob Ross would say there are no mistakes, just happy accidents.â
With the setting sun on his face and his black curls dipping in front of his eyebrow with the scar, I canât help thinking Samâs right: he kind of adorable.
I turn away before I find myself wanting to know more about this boy and his scar.
âWhy are you helping me?â
Micah squints in the sun, looking at me like heâs choosing his words carefully. âYou had this look. This look in your eyes. I mean, your eyes are beautifulââ He clears his throat and his face flushes red, and Iâm sure mine does, too, so I look down at the sand. âBut also sad, all at once. And I just wanted to help.â
He smiles awkwardly, and the sun is warm and the sand is cool, and I let his answer be enough. I keep drawing my lines, and before long, Iâm off on my own path, making circles and curves and lines. Just like running, it has a rhythm to it. Pull and turn and pull again. And like with writingâat least the way writing used to beâthe less I think about it, the easier it comes. And soon Iâm lost in it, thinking about nothing but the feel of the sand giving way, the sound of the waves.
Across the beach, Micah practically dances as he draws, his body twisting and turning, his rake an extension of his body. I try not to notice the way his arm muscles flex as he grips his rake.
âTimeâs up!â Micah declares from across the beach, which is lined with our creation, but from this angle, it looks like nothing more than a bunch of messed-up sand.
âNow what?â I yell to him.
âNow,â he says, chucking his rake into the sand, âwe swim!â
And then heâs running toward the ocean, ripping off his shirt as he goes. He high-knees it over the waves and dives in, headfirst. I follow behind, toeing the foamy white, eyeing the huge dangerous riptides signs that dot the coast each spring.
âWhat are you waiting for?â Micah whips water from his hair, rocking slightly with each wave.
âI just donât, exactly, love the ocean.â
Sitting with my legs pulled to my chest, I watch from the safety of the shore as the waves tower above him, and he dives beneath the foam. Each time he disappears, I hold my breath until his black hair pops out again.
With my heart in my throat, a memory stirsâone Iâve tucked deep.
Iâm six and Momâs gone and Margotâs here instead, and weâre back at Newport Beach on Dadâs everything-is-still-the-same, Iâll-prove-it trip. He dips Margot in the waves while Alice and I swim out.
she says.
But weâre too far.
And Iâm trying to swim back to the shore. It keeps floating away.
Dad and Margot are little dots.
Dadâs waving his arms.
But Iâm tired.
I donât want to swim anymore. Donât want to fight.
I flip onto my back. Floating is easy.
The water holds me. Folds me into itself.
The ocean tugs me away.
Then Aliceâs head is next to me. Sheâs grabbing me, pulling me back.
But she tells me weâre on an adventure. Gets me to follow her to the shore, where Dad holds me so tight, I think heâll never stop.
âWhere do you go?â
Micahâs voice brings me back. Heâs sitting next to me, dripping wet, his hair slicked against his head except for one defiant curl falling into his eyes.
âWhat?â
âWhen your eyes are open and your bodyâs here, but youâre somewhere else.â
The water laps against my feet. How do I explain where my mind goes? How I float out of myself?
âThe ancient Scottish have a word:
â I say. âWhere the sea meets the shore. Not quite water, not quite land. An in-between border realm.â
Then I tell him about the time I almost drowned. About how Alice got me to swim out too far.
âYou know the scariest part?â I say, and Iâm not sure why I keep talking, except part of me feels like this boy with the semicolon tattoo might understand. Maybe heâs the one who could. âHow natural it felt to let the water take me. Like part of me almost wanted it to.â I look at the sand rather than meet his eyes as I tell him this piece of the story Iâve never told anyone else. âSometimes that feeling comes back to me, of the in-betweenâthe â I scrape my finger through the sand. âNot really dead. Not really alive. Just floating somewhere in the middle.â
I half expect him to tell me Iâm off my rocker, because letâs admit it, I am, but instead he smiles, a gust of air whipping his black curls in front of his eyes. And Micah, the artist with the scar on his eyebrow, looks at me, his words half carried away by the wind. âAnd you say youâre not a poet.â He searches my face. What does he see in it? In me? âYouâre different.â
Little jolts of electricity prick my skin. Can he see the monsters in my head? For a split second, I think he can.
âIâm pretty normal.â
He shoves me lightly and Iâm keenly aware of how close his body is to mine, half-naked and wet and glistening in the sun. âRelax. Itâs a compliment.â
âHow is a compliment?â
âBecause normal is overrated. Iâm a pretty good reader of people, and you are not like everyone else.â
âI see weâre back to you pretending to know all about me.â
âActually, just the opposite. Iâm enjoying the fact that I may have had you, Lily Larkin, track star, super student, all wrong.â He leans back on his elbows, beads of water sparkling on his chest. âYou know, itâs not the worst thing in the world to have someone know who you are.â
Then, suddenly, he looks at the water flowing past us onto the beach and grabs my hand as he jumps up, pulling me with him.
âWeâre about to miss it!â
âMiss what?â
He winks. âThe whole point.â
Micah picks up the rakes and his shirt as we run up the beach, up the side of a rocky overhang, all the way to the edge, where we stop short of flying into the air. The beach spreads below us, shades of light and dark, wet and dry, creating a swirling, sprawling design. Itâs complete chaos, all the lines and curves and circles intersecting at random, but somehow it makes sense.
He learns forward on the rock, his eyes wide like a little kidâs. âThis is it!â
A wave flows up the beach, licking our artwork, then another, until the water overtakes it, dragging the sand down the beach and our creation with it.
As the sea devours our art, one wave at a time, weâre silent, like weâre watching something sacred. Our design disintegrates slowly, stubbornly. Wave by wave, piece by piece, the sea swallows it.
âItâs unbelievable,â I whisper.
He meets my eyes. âYeah,â he says. âIt is.â
He turns back to the beach, where our art is almost gone. The sand sinks as the tide reaches higher, like some sort of cosmic balancing act. One thing waning, one growing stronger.
Micah inhales sharply when the water washes over the last piece of it, pulling the sand out to sea.
Our design is undone.
Itâs sad.
And beautiful.
All at once.