Dark Vengeance Vol. 1 : Summer, Fall
- List Price: $9.99
- Binding: Paperback
- Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
- Publish date: 10/04/2011
Description:
Dark Vengeance 1 She couldn''t see the ocean from where she stood on a grease-caked cement step just outside the kitchen''s back door. A row of bungalows-- identical dark boxes, some with glowing windows--blocked her view. She could hear the water, though--the steady, dull thunder of the surf reminding her that it was close, at the edge of both the Seaside Resort and the continent. And she could smell it, a sharp tang that battled for supremacy over the smells of steak, seafood, and smoke that blew out from the kitchen. Towering above the bungalows, underlit by the resort''s floodlights, incredibly tall palm trees swayed on their skinny trunks in the evening breeze, looking like skyrocket bursts frozen in time at the ends of their own contrails. A sliver of crescent moon dangled above them, high and distant. Kerry Profitt was a daughter of the Great Plains, born and raised near the confluence of two great rivers in Cairo, Illinois. But the Mississippi and Ohio, powerful as they were, had nothing on the Pacific Ocean. The ocean was magical to her, its depths and mysteries were boundless, its call irresistible. She had made a point, since hitting La Jolla, California, for her summer job, of keeping it in sight whenever possible. Bad for the skin, all that sun and salt air, and she, with her complexion like fresh snow ("whitest white girl I''ve ever seen" was what Brandy said) knew better. But she couldn''t deny the ocean''s magnetic pull. Lost in thought, she didn''t see the shadowed figure slip into the alley, didn''t know she wasn''t alone until the voice startled her. "Hey, Kerr, where is it the swallows go back to?" Startled, she managed to keep her cool, and she smiled when she recognized the voice. She knew it belonged to Josh Quinn, one of her housemates, but it took her a moment to refocus her gaze and pick him out in the dark alley. His skin was every bit as pale as hers, but by choice, not genetics, and the black of his hair came from a bottle, unlike hers. He looked as out-of-place in the valet''s uniform--white shirt, maroon vest, black pants--as a lion on a kindergarten playground. "Umm ... Capistrano, I think," Kerry replied after a moment''s consideration. She was used to this kind of thing from Josh, king of the nonsequitur. If his middle name isn''t Random, it should be. "Yeah, that''s right," he agreed. Since it didn''t seem like he was going to take the discussion any further, she decided to press the point. "Why?" He struck a match in the darkness and shielded it with cupped hands to a cigarette held between his lips. "These tourists, man," he said around the butt. Then, blowing out a plume of smoke--away from Kerry, because she would have killed him if he hadn''t--he continued with an exasperated tone. "They''re like those swallows." "The ones in Capistrano?" "Yeah, those." "In what way?" You had to ask, she immediately chastised herself, bracing for the answer. "Some of them seem to come here every summer, like clockwork." She had noticed the same thing, though without the bird metaphor. "Good for business, I guess," she pointed out. "I guess. But this one guy--you know the kind, enormous gut, Texas accent, gold watch that cost more than everything I''ve owned in my life put together--yelled at me just now because I didn''t turn on the heat in his Mercedes." "The heat?" Kerry asked with surprise. It was a fairly cool night. They all were here, close to the water, and balmy eves, she had learned, were not so much a southern California thing. Once the sun went down, the day''s heat fled fast. But even so, far from wintry cold. "That''s what I said. Only it was more like, ''Dude, are you freaking crazy? It''s August!'' And he was like, ''I told you last year, if it''s after dark, I like the heat on when you bring the car around. It takes time to warm up.''" "But you didn''t work here last year," Kerry pointed out. Josh jabbed the glowing end of his cigarette at her to emphasize his point. "Exactly," he said. "But you think reality matters to this guy? Like I''m the first Goth valet in California history or something, so it couldn''t have been someone else he told last year. He''s so convinced it was me, he stiffed me on the tip." Kerry pushed aside the hand that held the cigarette. She had made clear, plenty of times, what she thought of that habit and couldn''t understand how he managed to reconcile it with his vegan lifestyle. "Hey," he had said when she''d raised the question once, "who said life was free of contradiction? Anyway, it''s a vegetable. If tobacco had a face, I wouldn''t smoke it." Sympathetically, in spite of the noxious weed, she rubbed Josh''s bony shoulder. "There are always a few pains," she said. "But most of the guests are pretty nice." "Maybe to you," Josh countered. "You can spit in their food. All I can do is adjust their seat backs wrong, and the potential threat level just isn''t the same." Kerry laughed then and punched the shoulder she had just been rubbing. "I''ll tell you what," she offered. "I''ll trade places with you for a day. You deal with complaints about food being too hot or too cold or too spicy or too bland, and guys grabbing your ass and winking at you like you''re going to go, ''Oh, you''re just so handsome. I''ll put this tray of food down and meet you in the alley.''" "I guess it depends on the guy," Josh suggested with a smile she could see in the glow of his cigarette embers as he inhaled. "Hey, my principles are nothing if not situational. And believe me, I''m not under any illusions that you have an easy job either." "Summer jobs aren''t supposed to be easy," Kerry replied, ignoring his jokes. "They''re supposed to be brutal and demeaning and ill-paying. Toughens you up for the rest of your life." Josh nodded. "I guess you''re right." He flipped his smoke to the sidewalk and crushed it out with his shoe. "So, you ready to jet? Waiting on Mace?" "Waiting on Mace," Kerry confirmed. It had become a house motto over the summer. Mace Winston was never ready on time for anything--he was the only person she had ever known who was perpetually late leaving work. She was more than ready to go--her headache from that morning had never really gone away, and working in the noise of the crowded dining room had just made it worse. Before Josh could reply, Mace came through the kitchen door. He was a dishwasher, and the hairs on his muscular forearms were plastered to his skin by the water that had leaked into his rubber gloves. Even the sleeves of his T-shirt were wet. His broad, handsome face was flushed from the hot water he''d been working in, a line of sweat sitting on his upper lip. He tossed Kerry a lopsided grin, as if something hurt in a place too embarrassing to mention. "You''ve got to start encouraging those folks to eat less," he told her. "Fewer side dishes. Better for their hearts, and better for me." "I''ll see what I can do," she said with a laugh. Neither of these guys were people she''d have been likely to hang out with under other circumstances, but over the course of the summer, they''d become close friends. Whenever she was talking with them, Kerry felt an easy, pleasant sense of comfort envelop her like a warm blanket on a cold night. It almost-- but not quite--overwhelmed the sense of impending disaster her dreams had left her with and the headache that accompanied them. "Now can we go home?" The others offered consent, as if either of them would be likely to argue in favor of staying and working awhile longer. Kerry took one last glimpse toward the water she couldn''t see, breathed in a final lungful of ocean air, and headed for the parking lot with the others. The Seaside Resort at La Jolla, to use its full name, was as soulless and impersonal as most large corporations. But it was also a corporation that recognized the fact that its business was largely seasonal, and to help it through the busy summer season, it hired a lot of temporary workers. Summer help came from all over the world--Prague, Sydney, Heidelberg, Minsk, and even the exotic climes of King of Prussia, Pennsylvania. So the resort offered, as one of its worker-friendly perks, a roommate-matching service. Kerry had signed up, filling out the requisite forms and answering a slew of questions about things she wouldn''t even have talked about with the aunt and uncle she lived with. She was slotted into a house in nearby Bird Rock with five people with whom she had in common only the fact that they all worked for Seaside. After a few weeks of initial discomfort, though, everyone fell into a kind of casual routine. Kerry, Josh, and Mace shared the house with Scott Banner and Brandy Pearson, who had come out from Harvard as a couple, and Rebecca Levine. The couple didn''t get to share a room since there were only two bedrooms in the small cottage, and nobody was willing to cram four into one room so that two could have the other. But Brandy and Scott still managed plenty of alone time in the house, and they''d both had tonight off. They had said they were going to a movie, and as Mace pulled his massive baby blue Lincoln Continental onto the narrow driveway, Kerry noticed that Scott''s RAV4 was still gone. "Guess the lovebirds are still out on the town," Josh pointed out, echoing Kerry''s observation.
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Product notice
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