The Pace
THE PACE
Shelena Shorts
The Pace
Published through Lands Atlantic Publishing www.landsatlantic.com
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved
Copyright © 2009 by Shelena Shorts Cover Photo by Suzanne Mazer and C. Paul
ISBN: 9780982500507
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of the author or publisher.
CONTENTS
Chapter 1: CRASH
Chapter 2: CHECKMATE
Chapter 3: THE PRIZE
Chapter 4: DRIVEN
Chapter 5: SILENT STORIES
Chapter 6: RESEARCH
Chapter 7: TRUST
Chapter 8: FIRST REVEAL
Chapter 9: COMING TO TERMS
Chapter 10: CHRISTMAS
Chapter 11: THE NEW YEAR
Chapter 12: THE TURNING POINT
Chapter 13: GRAVITY
Chapter 14: THE SECOND REVEAL
Chapter 15: 1916
Chapter 16: REUNITED
Chapter 17: THE NURTURER
Chapter 18: PAYBACK
Chapter 19: THE PLAN
Chapter 20: DYING
Chapter 1
CRASH
Usually, the end of summer brought on a descending cloud of gloom. But not this year. For the first time, I approached September with the comforting knowledge that I could, once again, go to class in my pajamas.
Well, not really go. The truth is, when it came to school, I didn't have to go anywhere. I literally rolled out of bed, powered up my laptop, went to brush my teeth, and then logged into my classes. There were no more bad hair days, at least none that anyone else could see, and no more piles of rejected outfits on my bed. It was simple. Just thinking about it made my upcoming senior year seem a lot less dreadful. But I have to say, it didn’t come easy.
The path to my virtual gold mine came at a price. It took enduring three moves to three different states before my mom realized I shouldn’t have to start over as the new girl again. For her, moving wasn’t a big deal. She’d always been outgoing and considered it as a way to, “see what’s out there,” but by the third move, I’d seen enough and she knew it. I can even remember the apprehension in her face when she approached me. “Sophie,” she said, four months into my junior year, “I want to move back to California.”
I could’ve flipped when she told me, but the weird thing was, I didn’t. I actually liked the idea of moving back. That’s where I was born and where my nana lived. My only apprehension was doing it in the middle of the year, and that’s when she told me: Nana was ill. We couldn’t very well leave her to take care of herself; so we moved, leaving behind my best friend Kerry, and the snowy winters of Virginia for the distant, familiar sun of California.
At first, I drowned myself in misery at the thought of starting over again, but then my mom discovered California had an online high school. That meant I didn’t have to be the new girl after all. I wasted no time enrolling, and once that was taken care of, everything else just sort of fell into place.
My mom ended up finding a job at one of the medical centers at the UC Berkeley college campus, and then she bought us a yellow, two-bedroom house right outside of San Francisco. It was a small, old house, but she said it had “good bones.” I just hoped the avocado-green appliances weren’t part of the skeleton.
The nicest part about it was the layout. One of the bedrooms was upstairs and one was downstairs, and each had its own access to the two-story deck with its ridiculous hillside view. I would’ve settled for either room, but she insisted I have the one upstairs because it had more room to set up my workstation for school. It also gave me all the privacy I wanted, which turned out to be more than we’d both anticipated.
Within a few weeks, she decided I was spending too much time up there and missing out on being around other kids. Then, she began pressuring me to participate in my school’s social events, saying I should get out and meet people. That was easy for her to say. She talks to people in elevators. The idea of roller skating, standing in line for ice cream, or going on a field trip didn’t appeal to me. Plus, they all blatantly defeated the whole purpose of avoiding the awkward attempts at making new friends, so I cringed until she gave me another ultimatum.
My second choice was to have lunch with her on the Berkeley campus once a week. I mulled it over for about five minutes before deciding it wasn’t a bad idea. She was letting me attend school from home, and the only visual interaction I did have with kids my age was seeing a green dot by their name if we were online at the same time. So, if all she wanted me to do was have lunch with her, and call walking the college campus interaction with kids, I certainly wasn’t going to complain. In fact, I actually looked forward to it.
I found that being on campus was noticeably different from high school. I could show up in my sweatpants and a mismatched T-shirt if I wanted, and the only person from whom it would draw attention was my mom. It made it easy to keep up my end of the bargain, so I met her there every Thursday, and she agreed to let me keep going to school in my room.
It was a good deal, and it became such a tradition that we ended up keeping our meetings throughout most of the summer. The only exception was the last three weeks, when I was in Virginia visiting Kerry. It was the longest time I’d gone without seeing my mom, and she acted as if my absence had been an eternity.
When I returned, she wasted no time luring me back into our routine. “Oh, come on, Sophie,” she pleaded. “Come this Thursday. The food doesn’t taste the same without you.”
It really wasn’t necessary for her to lay it on that thick. I didn’t mind going. The food there was much better than the PB&J I usually ate at home, and letting her pick my brain for an hour was well worth not giving up my senior year online. So, on the last week of August, I headed to Berkeley, willingly, resuming our routine.
When I arrived, the campus was crowded. Classes had already started for the semester, and I expected it to be nearly impossible to find a parking space among the circling cars of students who were trying not to be late for class. For me, finding a space wasn’t ever that serious, so I usually just drove up and down the rows until one became available. This time I got lucky. I found a space so quickly that I actually got to our favorite sandwich shop first.
I went in and saved us a table by one of the big glass windows overlooking the garden. It never quite felt like a school until I looked around and noticed that most of the patrons were under twenty-one and carrying backpacks. Some were sitting with their friends laughing. Others were just sitting alone eating and listening to iPods. I tried not to stare too much as I waited, but one girl in the corner caught my eye. I watched her pull out a stack of books from her messenger bag and start flipping through the crisp pages. It made me wonder what classes she was taking, and then I thought about my own schedule.
I was set to take a pretty standard course load, which included British literature, Algebra II, U.S. Government and Economics, Environmental Science, physics, and photography. My schedule wasn’t too bad. I liked English and science, and I was excited about the photography. Government would be my least favorite.
I started to crinkle up my nose at the thought of government work when my mom bent down to give me a kiss on my cheek.
“Hey honey. What are you thinking about?”
“Just my schedule,” I answered, dismissively.
She sat down acro
ss from me. “Oh. Are you nervous?”
“Nervous about what?”
“Your senior year. This is it, you know, before you’re all grown up.”
“Oh come on, Mom, don’t start with the, you’ll miss me stuff already.” I dropped my shoulders in dread at an anticipated talk about my future. I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do.
“I’m just saying. This is a big year for you.”
“I know.”
She paused for a few seconds and then leaned forward like she was about to tell me a secret. “I’m starving, and I’m not sharing today. I think I’ll have that huge chicken salad.”
I was glad she let the conversation about my cloudy future drop there. “Sounds good,” I replied, wasting no time hopping up to place our order. Normally, my venture in line was uneventful, but this time I seemed to have acquired a shadow. I turned to see an older man in a tweed blazer. At first, he didn’t say anything, but he was standing way too close for me not to notice his presence. I kept trying to scoot forward and he kept trying to stand beside me. He finally gently tapped his wrinkled hand on my shoulder.
“Excuse me,” he said, politely. I turned around and raised my eyebrows in response. He was observing me as if I were a painting. “You look so familiar.” I gave him a quick look-over, and I was sure I’d never seen him before. He tilted his head downward, eyeing me over his spectacles. “I would recognize those jade-green eyes anywhere.”
Now he was giving me the creeps. “Um, I’m sorry, I don’t know you.” I smiled as nicely as I could and turned around. I could still feel him staring.
“Did your mother go here?” he asked, not giving up.
I turned around slightly. “Uh, no she didn’t.” I tried to offer a final forced smile, hoping it would satisfy him.
“Are you sure? Not even one class?”
“Yes, I’m sure.”
“You look very much like a young lady I taught years ago. She was in my photography class.”
“Oh, that’s nice.” I wasn’t sure what else he wanted. I smiled one more time and took two more steps closer to the register. Another minute or two passed.
“Maybe your aunt went here?”
OMG. I turned again. “No, I’m sorry. No one I know went here.” Thankfully, the girl behind the counter called me up to order.
I’m not sure what that was about, but I wasn’t used to people telling me I looked like anyone. People usually looked at my mother and then at me like I was adopted. She was fair-skinned and had a vibrant, strawberry-blond, naturally wavy bob. I had a year-round natural tan, and my dark hair was completely opposite from hers. Not only was it black but it was also straight, and slightly layered past my shoulders. The only features I have of hers are her slender build and green eyes.
I definitely take more after my Brazilian father, but he was never around growing up, so people didn’t have anything to go by when figuring out where I got my looks. Instead, they always asked me where I was from. Any questions about me resembling someone else took me by surprise, and oddly, that man wasn’t the first person on campus to approach me about it. The thought made me turn around to glance at the professor one more time, and he was still staring. I gave him a final nod and then took the food to our table.
As soon as I sat down, my mom started picking fries off my plate and then hammered away on planning for my approaching eighteenth birthday. It was only three days away, and she couldn’t stop talking about it. For a minute, I thought she was turning eighteen again. She was always super excited about planning things, so I let her have her moment. My only request was that she keep it simple, and she said she would. I’d just have to wait and see if it held true.
The walk back to my car after lunch always seemed like it took forever, but I didn’t mind. It gave me time to think, and the scenery was great. The campus had the most fascinating trees I’d ever seen. Saying they were not normal would be an understatement. They were downright bizarre. One of the paths had a massive sized oak tree, with a huge trunk that split into four or five huge branches. The branches shot upward and curved over so the tips were touching the ground, like an enormous claw.
The west end of the campus had a group of trees whose trunks looked normal, but then the big branches sprouted out in all directions, spiraling like a neat array of curly fries. They were the strangest, most serene things I’d ever seen. I definitely didn’t mind the walk, and I hoped my photography class would have an assignment about nature. Even if it didn’t, I already decided I’d have to go back there and take a bunch of pictures of those anyway.
In the meantime, I needed something to do until school started, so I stopped at a used bookstore on my way home thinking I could find something to keep my mind occupied. It was a small store, and the woman behind the counter didn’t have to raise her voice much to greet me. I smiled back at her and meandered my way to the hardcover section. I was a little rough on my books, so paperbacks didn’t last that long with me. I needed something durable, and they had several shelves of them. I started at the top and searched my way through the titles looking for something old. Like a classic.
I had an odd interest in books that were worn, and it was even better if they had old inscriptions written in them—especially with dates attached. In those cases, I let my imagination run wild with what the previous owners looked liked. It gave the book more character.
About halfway through the romance section, my browsing eyes stopped on one that looked especially old. It was an Elizabeth Gaskell Victorian classic titled, North and South, and written on the inside of one of the browning pages was a faded message: Happy 18th Birthday Sweetheart. Love Mom, October 8th 1962.
Talk about weird. I shuddered a little at the reference and then tucked it under my arm. It seemed fitting, so I took it home, fixed myself a tall glass of lemonade, and started reading it while soaking up the view on my back deck.
It was a good read, but it seemed like a strange choice for a gift to a daughter. Unless, I thought, the daughter was like the heroine in the story. She must have been strong, bothered by social injustices, and had a tendency to follow her heart. I sighed at the visualization and the book felt heavy, as if weighted with a story of its own. Reading it certainly served its purpose in keeping me occupied until Sunday, which happened to be my birthday.
In the morning, I woke up like any other day and went to brush my teeth. Only this time, I was startled by a bathroom inundated with purple and pink balloons. Mom. It was so like her. Taped to the mirror was a white piece of paper covered in bold, plum-colored hearts and all-capped letters, which read, “Happy Birthday. I love you.”
I smiled slightly before gently taking the paper off of the mirror and setting it aside. I looked at myself and stared. I didn’t notice anything different. I still looked the same. I wondered if I felt different. A little bit. I was eighteen, and that waskind of cool.
Maybe I would’ve been more excited if I knew what I was going to do with my life, but I hadn’t found my purpose yet, and it bothered me. I liked the medical field, but I wasn’t sure I wanted to be a nurse. I wanted something more innovative. Something a little more out of reach, and every time I tried to think that far ahead, things went blank, so I didn’t know. I blocked out the indecisive thoughts and started brushing my teeth, without looking back into the mirror.
“Sophie!” my mom shouted from below.
“Yes?” I yelled back, after I rinsed.
“Come on down. I have breakfast for you.”
“All right. I’m coming.” I was met halfway down the stairs by the smell of bacon. I reached the bottom step with a smile. It smelled good, and I was hungry.
I sat at the table while she insisted upon serving me all of my favorites. My plate was covered in scrambled eggs, fried potatoes, bacon, and an oven-baked grapefruit with cinnamon and brown sugar on top. My eyes widened. I zeroed in on the grapefruit first. By the time I was halfway done with the rest, she couldn’t hold it in any longer.
“Do
you want your present now or later?” she asked, practically bouncing out of her seat.
Not wanting to disappoint her, I answered, “Now is good.”
She sprang from her chair and returned with a box that made me laugh. There I was turning eighteen, and she had wrapped my present in pastel pink paper with teddy bears on it. I rolled my eyes at the thought.
“Open it!” she said.
I untied the enormous bow and pulled back the wrapping paper. It was a box for a 10.0 megapixel digital camera. “Mother!”
“Do you like it?”
“Of course I like it. What were you thinking? You did not have to do this.”
“Sure I did. You need a camera for your class, and you’re always talking about taking pictures.”
“Mom, I needed a camera. Just a regular digital camera. I didn’t need all this.”
“Would you stop it? You deserve it. It’ll be something you can use for a long time.”
I reached over to give her a hug, and she squeezed me, giving me a kiss on the cheek. “Thank you,” I said.
“You’re welcome.” I stood up to put my plate in the sink when she added, “I’m not done you know?”
“Mom, I told you not to do anything for my birthday. You do enough for me already.” I turned around and she was pouting. “Okay, fine. What is it?” I asked, holding back a smile.
Turns out, she had dinner plans, too. She was going to play up this milestone with all she had. There was no sense in trying to get around it, so I quietly returned to my room to wait until it was time to leave. I spent most of the afternoon talking to Kerry on the phone and taking pictures of the panoramic view. By 3:00, she alerted me that it was time to go. “By the way,” she called up. “Wear some nice pants or something.”
“How nice?” I yelled down.
“Just no jeans,” she answered, tapering off.
All right. No jeans. I went over to my closet and scanned my wardrobe. I didn’t have much in the way of dressy clothes, but I found a pair of black capris, and a black and white pinstriped tank top. I had a pair of black slip-on sandals that were dressy but comfortable, so I threw those on, too. My purse was an oversized burgundy bag. It was a little too casual for my outfit, but I liked the style, so I grabbed it anyway. I didn’t wear earrings, only a necklace, which was a cross pendant covered in brown stones that I bought off consignment, and that was it for me when it came to accessorizing.