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Undertow Page 4


  When we finished, we sat on the sand, lazy as cats, and watched the crews put the amusement-park rides to bed. I fell asleep at one point and woke with her hand on my shoulder.

  “Your dad won’t sleep forever,” she said, signaling that it was time to get back. We helped each other to our feet and retrieved our kicks, but we hadn’t taken more than a couple of steps when we heard a rumbling coming from the water.

  “What is that?” I asked as I peered out into the dark, unable to imagine what had created something so loud. I suspected a humpback whale. A few had beached themselves over the years, but this sounded more rhythmic, more a deep plucking than a whale song, and the sound was getting louder.

  My mother was stone still, her eyes locked on the tides, her face more serious and focused than I had ever seen it. Without her smile she was almost unrecognizable, but I had no time to question her. Like a sonic boom, the plucking became a trumpeting roar so loud, I nearly fell over. I took a step closer to the water, desperate to see what was out there, but my mother grabbed my wrist and pulled me back, hard. Her grip was so strong, I cried out, shocked at the pain. It felt like my arm was about to come out of its socket.

  “Mom, you’re hurting me!”

  “Wait here,” she ordered, then took off like a shot, diving into the waves with outstretched arms and disappearing into its black unknown. For the longest time, there was no sign of her at all, and in my growing panic I charged in after her until I was waist deep. I shouted her name until my throat was raw, but when I still could not find her, I went into hysterics. I was sure she had drowned. I ran back to the beach for my cell phone to call my father but remembered I had burned out the battery with all the texting. I was helpless and alone.

  After several excruciating minutes, she finally surfaced a few yards away, but everything that was Summer Walker had changed. What came out of that water looked like my mother but seemed more like a cornered animal.

  “What’s out there? What did you see?”

  “We should get back to the apartment,” she said, and without another word she turned and led us home. I begged for answers the whole way, but she refused to speak of what had just happened, and as soon as we were through the door, she locked herself inside her bedroom.

  “Mom?”

  “Go to bed, Lyric,” she whispered back. “You’ll wake your father.”

  My dreams were brutal that night. In them my mother fought against a hungry sea with waves like greedy hands pulling her down into its dark, insatiable maw. I dove in to rescue her only to find myself pulled in as well. In the morning I woke shivering, my sheets soaked with sweat. I changed and charged into the living room, ready to demand answers, but my mother was gone. Instead I found my father leaning on the kitchen counter, his face buried in a letter in my mother’s handwriting. He didn’t notice me at first, but when he caught me sneaking a peek, he crunched the note into a ball and shoved it into his pocket.

  “Is that about the whale?” I asked.

  “Huh?”

  “The noise from last night. It was crazy loud. It could have been a whale. Maybe it’s still there. Maybe we should go down and see.”

  “NO!” he commanded. “I want you off the beach today.”

  “Okay, you don’t have to yell!”

  “What did your mother do when she heard it?”

  “She jumped into the water.”

  His face went pale, and I felt I had somehow betrayed her, though I couldn’t say why.

  “Dad? What’s wrong?”

  Ignoring me, he reached into his pocket, pulled out his phone, and dialed a number.

  “Mike, it’s me. I’m not coming in today. Yeah, I’ve got this thing in my chest,” he said, not even bothering to fake a cough or the sniffles. I was stunned. My father never took a day off from work. He always said we couldn’t afford it, and our collection of “as is” IKEA furniture was proof. Being one of New York’s Finest also made him one of New York’s Brokest, and he dragged himself into the precinct even when most men would be planning their funerals.

  “Stay here,” he said when he’d hung up. “Keep the door locked and your phone near you, and stay off of it. If anything happens, I’ll come home right away. Wait for me.”

  “What could happen?”

  “If your mother comes back, keep her here and call me. Do not let her leave this apartment.”

  He raced into the bathroom, and I heard him take the lid off the toilet tank. Curious, I followed him and saw that he was pulling a storage bag from inside. It was filled with money. He reached into it, grabbed a handful, and stuffed it all into my hands. It was more cash than I had ever seen—fifties and hundreds—easily a thousand dollars. The rest he put back where he’d found it.

  “What is this?” I cried.

  “For emergencies,” he said as he darted to his bedroom.

  “What emergencies?” I shouted, but was again ignored. Through the open door I could see him pulling on his work shirt and strapping on his gun belt. A moment later he was taking his pistol out of its lock box under the bed and shoving it into its holster.

  “Dad, why do you need your gun if you aren’t going to work?” I asked, but he didn’t answer. He blasted through the front door and was gone.

  I had my shoes in my hand before the door closed. I had heard what he said, but I wasn’t having any of it. The way I saw it, he was only in charge as long as he was sane, and something crazy was clearly taking place. I skipped the elevator and flew down four flights, hoping I could stop him the second he hit the lobby, but when I got there, he was gone. I dashed into the street, craning my neck in both directions, but he was nowhere in sight.

  I stood in the middle of the road, concocting a horrible scenario. My mother had left my father. The note was a “Dear John” letter. It had sent him over the edge. He was going to stop her, maybe even kill her. I was going to be an orphan.

  Yes, a little dramatic, especially in light of the fact that my parents were desperately, disgustingly, embarrassingly in love. They were so into each other, it was gross. I couldn’t count how many times I had walked in on them and their baby-making practice. No way my mom would leave him, and no way my dad would hurt her, right?

  But then my brain reached into its hard drive and found about a hundred stories my father had shared about arresting some husband or wife who had snapped and killed their spouse.

  “No one saw it coming” was how he ended every one.

  So, yeah, I was flung back into freak-out mode. I ran up and down the beach, looking for them. I snooped around the minor league baseball stadium and explored the end of the pier where the Mexican kids used raw chicken legs as bait for crabs. I searched the streets and alleys like a lost kid in the supermarket fighting back hysterics. Eventually I was too tired and overheated to keep looking, so I made my way to a bench outside Rudy’s Bar and pulled out my phone. With nothing else to do, I resorted to a strategy that had always worked for me in the past—passive-aggressive texting. The first text went to my mother.

  good morning. it’s ur daughter. remember me?

  When I didn’t hear anything, I cut back on the passive and amped up the aggressive.

  where the hell r u?

  Cursing had always been the right bait for a quick callback, but ten minutes passed without a reply, so I turned my frustrations onto my father.

  is everyone on drugs?

  Nothing. It was time for something more drastic.

  i’m pregnant and i’m keeping it.

  After ten minutes without a peep, I just couldn’t hold back the tears.

  both of u r grounded.

  I pulled myself together and decided the best thing I could do was go home after all. Maybe Mom would show up. When she did, she could tell me this was all a big nothing. We’d have a good laugh. It would be a story they’d tell when I was an adult: The time Lyric thought her father was going to kill me. Ha, ha, ha! I was all set to go when I noticed a group of people on the beach. I counted nine
teen of them, all walking hand in hand toward the surf. When they got to the water’s edge, they knelt down to pray. At first I didn’t think much of it. It wasn’t unusual to see congregations on the beach back then. People got married there, baptized themselves and their squalling babies, and even launched little canoes full of flowers and candles, meant to sail to the dearly departed in the afterworld. But this group was different because my mother was with them.

  I hopped the tiny fence that lined the beach and ran to her side. When I reached her, I bent down and saw the same wor­ried gaze from the night before. She was transfixed on the ocean, and it took me several seconds to pull her out of her trance.

  “Lyric, go home,” she begged, suddenly frantic. Her eyes were wild, her pupils dilated. She took my hands in her own and I could feel she was trembling.

  “Why? What is this? Who are these people?”

  “Don’t question me. Just go!”

  I took a step back. My mother had never raised her voice to me before, even when I deserved it. I had no frame of reference for her fury. It confused me, froze me where I stood. We caught the attention of a woman kneeling beside her, a tall beauty with platinum hair. She turned toward us and shot us a wrathful glare, then barked threateningly—yes, barked, like a dog, or rather like the deep-throated sea lions at the aquarium. It was loud and ridiculous and shocking, so I laughed, because that’s what you do when a crazy person does something crazy and you’re feeling a little crazy yourself. It only made the woman howl at me louder.

  “Lyric, please,” my mother pleaded. “Just go!”

  “But—”

  We were interrupted by the loud vibrating sound that I’d heard the night before. In response, a man in the group cried out in excitement. He leaped to his feet and pointed toward the waves, but I couldn’t look. I was too astonished. The man was Mr. Lir, a guy who had babysat me, had put bandages on my bloody knees, and had taken me and his son, Samuel, to the Bronx Zoo every summer until I was ten.

  “Lyric, go, now!” my mother said as she and her friends got to their feet. They linked their hands together and raised them over their heads, facing out at the horizon.

  “They are here!” Mr. Lir shouted.

  I turned my eyes to the water, and my throat was seized by dread. There were people rising out of the surf, about fifty of them. Yet they were not people. They were something else. Each was easily over six feet tall and heavily muscled, with skin like a copper penny and dressed in bizarre armor made from bones and shells. They all held weapons—tridents or spears or huge, heavy hammers—and they waved them around aggressively. Behind them was a second wave of people who were not as hulking as the first group but just as intimidating. They held no weapons, because theirs were in their bodies: vicious blades that came right out of their arms. Two men from this group were at the center and stood out among the rest. One had a shaved head and wore a goatee sculpted into a point beneath his chin. The other had long, golden hair like a lion and wore sea glass around his neck and hands. With them was a woman whose breathtaking beauty seemed to multiply with every steps she took toward me, yet there was something unsettling about her as well, something predatory and vicious, like a great white shark hiding in the body of a woman. To her right was an elderly woman wearing what would best be described as a nun’s habit, only made from the skin of some dark-furred animal. It covered her entire body, exposing only her face and hands, and the “habit” formed a strange hammerlike shape on either side of her head.

  And then there was the boy. He was about my age, with hair cut short and eyes blue and bright, eyes that burned a glowing echo I could see even when I closed my own. He looked lost and confused, troubled by what he was seeing around him, like he was seeing the world for the first time.

  Behind him came others who were far more strange and whose names I would learn later: the Nix with their teeth and claws, the quietly confident Ceto, and the Sirena, whose every emotion was revealed in colorful scales. There were some I haven’t seen since that day—translucent-skinned ones and people with tentacles for limbs. All of them were in a state of metamorphosis. Tails became legs. Fins sank into flesh. Gills vanished, causing their owners to choke on their first breaths of air. There were elderly creatures, babies, teenagers, and families, all climbing onto the beach, eyeing us with wide-eyed wonder. At first they numbered in the hundreds, then thousands, until eventually I could no longer see the sand for all the bodies.

  Panic broke out all around me. Sunbathers abandoned towels, coolers, and chairs. They trampled one another to get away, and children became separated from parents. Yet in the chaos I heard someone calling my name. I searched the crowd, careful not to get knocked over in the rush, and spotted my father sprinting toward us with his gun in hand.

  “Summer! You promised Lyric would not be part of this!” he shouted.

  “It’s not my fault. She found me, Leonard!” my mother cried. “Please take her home.”

  “We’re all going!” he demanded.

  My mother pulled away from him. “You know I have to do this. I have a responsibility to them.”

  “What about your responsibility to us?” my father said.

  “Will someone please tell me what’s happening?” I screamed.

  Mr. Lir pushed his way through people to join us. “Summer, send your family away. It is not safe for them to be here.”

  My father waved him off. “It’s not safe for any of us, Terrance. People will take pictures of this—they’re taking pictures right now—and if we stay on this beach any longer, we are all going to be in them. They’ll figure out what you are, what Samuel and Lyric are, and they’ll come for them. They’ll come for all of us.”

  “What did you say?” I cried. “What am I?”

  “I’m sorry, Lyric. We didn’t know how to tell you,” my mother said, and as she took my face in her hands I saw faint pink- and rose-colored patches appear on her neck and forearms. They were scales, like those on a fish or a snake, both beautiful and terribly wrong.

  I shrieked and fell backward. “What are you?” I cried.

  “We can explain later, Lyric,” my father cried. “Right now we have to get out of here. Summer, come with us.”

  My mother stared at him for a long moment, perhaps weighing every day of their life together against the responsibility she felt to the strange visitors, and then she turned to the ocean and her scales turned fire-engine red and blistering white.

  “Tell them I’m sorry, Terrance,” she said without even looking at him. “Try to make them understand.”

  “Summer, you cannot turn your back on our people,” Mr. Lir shouted. “They’ll call you a traitor. You’ll be an untouchable!”

  “We have to run,” she said as she took my hand. My father took the other, and we fled through the crowd while her odd friends called out to us with their bizarre, angry words.

  NEW YORK POST

  SCHOOL OF FISH: ALPHA KIDS CAUSE

  CHAOS ON FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

  by Naomi Rifkin

  Today the President got his way. Six Alpha kids went to school in Coney Island, soaking the city for millions to keep them safe, and turning Hylan High School upside down. Before it had even opened its doors, these nonhuman students had started a riot predicted by this columnist and everyone else with a brain. Two thousand police from all over New York, as well as thousands of National Guard soldiers, tried to keep order as thousands more came out to protest this bogus plan. One hundred and four people were arrested, and there were scores of injuries.

  The cost to taxpayers for the beefed-up security promises to be mind-boggling.

  “No one’s sure how much it will cost, but it’s going to be a pretty penny,” said an insider in the mayor’s accounting office who wished to remain anonymous. I don’t blame him. I wouldn’t want to be held accountable for the money we’re wasting on kids who don’t even want to learn. The man-hours that went into planning this, the overtime—it’s going to shock people when it all com
es out. And this is just the first day.

  But the real costs come at the expense of the people living in Fish City. Bloody brawls between police and the activist group the Coney Island Nine are almost a daily occurrence. I say the cops need to back off. The Niners are the real locals in lower Brooklyn, a group of community organizers memorializing the nine U.S. soldiers who were butchered in a confrontation with the Alpha. We should put our trust in a group that is trying to make sure that never happens again.

  “These creatures may walk around like people, but they aren’t people,” said Mitchell Parker, a lieutenant in the CI9. “They’re animals. We don’t put wild dogs in school. They’re dangerous.”

  Governor Bachman, who in my humble opinion is the only elected official who hasn’t lost her mind, was on hand to give a voice to the thousands who want the Alpha to swim back to sea, and what did it get her? A trip downtown in handcuffs.

  “We’re going to keep working to stop this plan, and if I have to be arrested every single day, then so be it,” she says. Good for her.

  In the meantime, New Yorkers should plan to pull out their checkbooks. This little experiment is going to break the bank.

  DAILYBEAST.COM

  CHEAT SHEET | MUST-READS FROM ALL OVER

  NYC MAYOR HEDGES OVER SECRET MEETINGS WITH THE ALPHA

  Spokespeople for both the mayor and Brooklyn borough president were tightlipped when pressed about secret meetings between city officials and members of the Alpha. Accusations continue to mount that the mayor’s administration strong-armed the city school district into opening the schools to the Alpha children. Despite last week’s release of phone records revealing lengthy conversations between the mayor’s chief of staff and the Red Cross, no one wants to admit they happened. Speculation continues that the Alpha were threatened with police and military action if they did not agree to assimilate into our society. The mayor was elected largely on a campaign promise to get the Alpha off the beaches of Coney Island.