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Blue
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Contents
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
chapter one
chapter two
chapter three
chapter four
chapter five
chapter six
chapter seven
chapter eight
chapter nine
chapter ten
chapter eleven
chapter twelve
chapter thirteen
chapter fourteen
chapter fifteen
chapter sixteen
chapter seventeen
chapter eighteen
chapter nineteen
chapter twenty
chapter twenty-one
chapter twenty-two
chapter twenty-three
chapter twenty-four
chapter twenty-five
chapter twenty-six
chapter twenty-seven
chapter twenty-eight
chapter twenty-nine
chapter thirty
chapter thirty-one
chapter thirty-two
chapter thirty-three
chapter thirty-four
chapter thirty-five
chapter thirty-six
chapter thirty-seven
chapter thirty-eight
chapter thirty-nine
chapter forty
chapter forty-one
chapter forty-two
chapter forty-three
chapter forty-four
chapter forty-five
chapter forty-six
acknowledgments
First published in Great Britain in 2014 by
Quercus Editions Ltd
55 Baker Street
7th Floor, South Block
London
W1U 8EW
Copyright © Lisa Glass 2014
The moral right of Lisa Glass to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
A CIP catalogue reference for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978 1 84866 340 4 (PB)
ISBN 978 1 84866 3411 (EBOOK)
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, organizations, places and events are either 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.
You can find this and many other great books at:
www.quercusbooks.co.uk
For Amelie, Alyssa, Laura and Eve
‘There’s beauty in the deep; the wave is bluer than the sky’
John G. C. Brainard, 1795–1828
chapter one
We stared up at the twinkling lights on the ceiling. In the quiet ballroom, I could hear his deep breathing as if it was my own. If I just reached out my arm, my fingers would graze his chest. I moved my head a fraction of an inch to see him better. A couple of years older than me, he had longish brown hair, sun-streaked and wet, and a tattoo down his right forearm that said Surf or Die. I had no idea who he was.
This was not what I’d had in mind when I’d finally given in to Kelly’s nagging and agreed to come to the yoga class at Hotel Serenity. I hadn’t even bothered to put on make-up; I was expecting a handful of yummy mummies and some bendy old biddies because, well, yoga was for posh ladies, right? Not in this class. Crammed into the hotel ballroom there were at least a dozen very hot guys, and the hottest one of them all had put his yoga mat right next to mine.
I looked over to my best mate, who turned up late. Kelly was in the row opposite me, grinning her head off. She’d been coming to this yoga class for a while, but she hadn’t warned me. After everything that had happened with Daniel, I had barely gone anywhere or seen anyone for months. This was Kelly’s way of getting me back in the dating game, I guessed.
Keep cool, I told myself. I was so busy telling myself to keep cool that I totally lost track of what the teacher — a skinny blonde woman called Natasha, who was in her mid-twenties and wearing nothing but a bikini top and some yellow board shorts — was going on about.
She smiled over at me and said, ‘Yoga is perfect for you teenage girls. It will encourage you to be strong, brave, open to change and, most important of all: to live in the moment.’
When she turned away, I shook my head very slightly at Kelly and mouthed the words, ‘Is she for real?’
Kelly nodded, and mouthed back what looked like, ‘Trust me.’
People were moving to sit in a cross-legged position and doing something crazy with their breathing. I’d missed the instructions and sat there like an idiot.
The surfer dude turned to me and smiled. His face was a bit sunburned and, what with the wet hair and still-damp T-shirt, I knew he’d come straight from the sea, probably not even stopping for food or a rest. He was swigging from a bottle of water and he had that surfed-out, super-contented look that shredheads get after a decent session. It was the weirdest thing, but he gave off this vibe of total confidence.
‘It’s like this: you’re sitting up really straight, taking a big breath, then slamming the air out of your lungs using your core. Your belly is coming back to meet your spine, OK? And it’s a count of eight. So —’ He took a really deep breath and then let his breath out in eight sharp exhalations. I had to look away when he was doing it, because the exercise was basically really loud panting, which is not exactly a normal thing to practise with a guy you’ve only known for twenty seconds.
‘Chick in the bikini says we’ll feel it in our abs tomorrow,’ he said. I detected an accent. American? Yeah, but not strong, and different somehow. Other stuff was in there too. South African or Kiwi, maybe. If he was American, then he had travelled away from home, definitely. Probably lived abroad for a while.
‘Wanna try?’
‘Is this right?’ I said, trying to squeeze the air out of my chest without making any kind of porny sound.
‘Yeah, but you need to do it harder. Watch out, it’ll give you a real headrush the first few times.’
I did what he said. He was right about the headrush. I was seeing stars.
‘That’s it,’ he whispered, giving me a fist bump.
‘I’ve never done it before. Er, yoga, I mean.’
I hadn’t done the other thing either, but he didn’t need to know that. And anyway, that was the last thing I wanted rushing around my head as I talked to this guy. I was already about two seconds from going red.
The teacher went to fiddle with her iPod, trying to find the right hippie soundtrack for background music, so we had a few moments to chat.
‘You’ll get the hang of it. I’m Zeke, by the way.’
‘Iris,’ I said, smiling back at him and wishing I had a cooler name. I also wished I’d dressed in something nicer than a faded Maroon 5 T-shirt and my old blue running shorts. In an ideal world I’d have also shaved my cactus legs that morning and maybe put on some mascara.
‘Pretty name,’ he said. ‘I used to really dig that song “Iris” by the Goo Goo Dolls.’
‘I think I was named after the blue flower, not the song or, y’know, the colourful bit of your eye.’
‘It’s kinda cool any way you look at it.’
He liked my name? Even Daniel thought it was weird.
‘So, if I’m remembering my Classics right, Iris was the Greek goddess of the rainbow?’
‘Yeah,’ I said, impressed. I only knew that because it was on a fridge magnet my mum bough
t me when I was eight. ‘You had Classics lessons at your school?’
‘We were mostly home-schooled by our mom.’
Lucky boy. More time for surfing.
The teacher’s voice rang out again, and I locked eyes with Kelly, who was completely lit up with excitement. Her eyes darted to Zeke and she blatantly mouthed the word ‘phwoar’.
‘Now if you could all move to the front of your mats, we’ll begin the first round of our sun salutations. Firm your feet down into the mat, take an inhalation and reach up to the sky …’
The teacher’s voice droned on and I tried to concentrate on her instructions as best as I could, but I kept getting distracted by the sound of Zeke moving to my left and the flashes of him I could see through the curtain of my hair, which I’d forgotten to tie up.
In many ways, yoga was a lot like surfing; it used the same muscles, required lots of strength, coordination and balance, and, just like surfing, yoga looked super-easy but was absolutely knackering.
It would have been a lot easier to concentrate without the mirrored walls opposite. I couldn’t stop taking sly glances at Zeke. But he was totally absorbed in what he was doing, and I didn’t see him look at the mirrors once.
‘Now it’s that time of the class when we get into pairs for assisted inversions. Today we’re doing handstands! You know you love them …’
I turned to Kelly but she was looking at the blond boy next to her, rocking with laughter, and then the next thing I knew the yoga teacher had paired me with Zeke.
I had to turn to face him. He turned at the same moment and suddenly I was looking up into his face, all fierce blue eyes and high cheekbones.
There was a moment of silence, which I ended by saying, ‘How do we do it?’
He cocked an eyebrow at me and smiled, but didn’t make any jokes. He was wearing a blue T-shirt and some grey baggies, hanging low on his hips, and I watched as he dragged his yoga mat towards the wall.
‘Stretch into a downward dog,’ he said.
Downward dog is basically making a big triangle with your body, with your hands and feet on the ground and your bum as high in the air as it will go. I had to do this facing away from Zeke.
I could feel the heat come into my face. Kelly caught my eye again, flashing me a funny look where she simultaneously went cross-eyed and touched the tip of her nose with her tongue. She did things like this when she thought I was acting too serious. Message received. I would just have to get this over and done with. I bent right over in front of Zeke, put my hands on the ground and made a triangle with my body.
‘OK,’ I said, between my own ankles, noticing that Zeke had a couple of long thin scars on his shins, where he’d probably been caught by his surfboard fins. ‘Now what do I do?’
‘Put all your weight into your left leg. Make it really heavy because I’m gonna hold it.’
‘What do you mean, “hold it”?’ I mumbled.
Before I could say anything else, he had taken hold of my left leg, one of his hands strong on my calf and the other around my thigh. My right foot swung up and touched the wall, and he guided my left leg up after it. So there I was, doing my first ever yoga handstand.
‘Now flex your toes, and squeeze your legs against my fist.’
My arms began to shake, though I wasn’t sure whether that was because of the strain on them or because there was a strange boy’s fist between my thighs.
All I could think was: Oh my God, a totally gorgeous surfer dude has his hand three inches from my pants. Do not faint, sneeze, puke, fart, burp or make any other mortifying noise AT ALL.
At the same time though, and as sad as it was to admit, it was kind of nice to be touched by another human being, especially a hot male human being. I realized that since it had all gone batshit crazy with Daniel, I was seriously low on human contact. Sometimes my mum or Kelly would grab me for a hug, but apart from that, day in, day out, I was flying solo.
‘The more you squeeze your legs together, the more strength you can draw on in your core, and the more stable you’ll be. Feel it? Deep in your abdominals, yeah? Now bring your toes away from the wall and just balance on your hands.’
Somehow I managed to squeeze my thighs against his fist, balance for ten seconds, and then my feet went sailing to the floor with a bang.
‘Aced it,’ he said.
‘I s’pose you don’t need me to get you up?’
Honestly, it was like I could not stop saying the most embarrassing things.
Before he got a chance to reply, the yoga teacher’s voice boomed: ‘Assisted backbends. Get into threes.’
Kelly sauntered over and was followed by the teacher.
‘Zeke, will you demonstrate, honey?’
‘Sure thing.’
‘OK. Could you assist Zeke?’ she said to me. I nodded, even though I had literally no idea what I was doing.
‘Kelly, could you come around to the other side?’
‘Sure.’
‘Now, Zeke, turn to face the wall, please, and the girls will stand either side of you,’ she said, nodding at me.
I moved to stand opposite Kelly, just a few inches from Zeke.
‘You grab each other’s wrists and hold on tight so you’re like two arms attached to two bodies, OK? Right, you’re going to move one of your arms to the imaginary bra line. Not that Zeke is wearing a bra, of course.’
Kelly gave me her ‘you never know’ look, but at least didn’t say it.
‘And the other arm goes to the base of the spine.’
At this point the yoga teacher shoved our wrists into the top of Zeke’s bum, which I could totally feel under my hand. Kelly winked across at me and I knew my face was burning up.
‘Zeke, pop your hands into prayer position, that’s it. So, we are going to concentrate on our man one hundred per cent. Spread your legs and bend your knees a little, love, so you have a nice stable base. Brilliant. Now, with you supporting him, Zeke is going to lean backwards. He’s going to think length, stretch up and then back. That’s it. When Zeke sees the floor, he’s going to release his arms from prayer position until he can touch the ground, and then you’ll leave him in wheel pose until he’s ready to come back up.’
Zeke did this with no problem and held the wheel pose for ages. My legs were trembling from being crouched for so long with my arms beneath his back. I couldn’t even risk looking at Kelly, so I stared at Zeke’s feet, which had serious knots on them from hardcore surfboard action. When he’d had enough, the teacher counted to three and we whipped Zeke back up to standing.
Before anyone else could try the backbend, the teacher said to Zeke, ‘Let’s try one more thing. Could you demonstrate scorpion pose, just to give the rest of the class something to aim for? You do know scorpion, I take it?’
‘Nope. Always wanna learn though.’
The teacher loved that and said she’d instruct him every step of the way, of course she would, and there was no need to worry because he was in safe hands.
Scorpion pose, it seemed, was like a headstand, but instead of balancing on his head, Zeke had to balance only on his forearms, arching his torso with his legs held still in the air.
It looked ridiculously difficult.
‘Perfect,’ the yoga teacher said, grinning from ear to ear, when Zeke held the pose.
The veins in Zeke’s forearms were bulging. The fabric of his T-shirt was stretched tight across his shoulders, and the bottom of it had slipped up towards his ribcage, so that everyone could see his taut stomach. Standing to the side of him, I could also see that he had a tribal tattoo curling up his back and I caught a glimpse of a weird word.
YOLO
I knew what that meant. Boys who had that tattooed on to their bodies were macho, risk-taking adrenalin junkies. It meant they lived on the edge, that they preferred stroking out to a killer wave and dying in a blaze of glory, to dying old in bed. You Only Live Once.
At least it was better than Daniel’s tattoo, which was inked as a tramp stam
p across the top of his bum, just above the tan line, with the hardened stokehead slogan: Eddie Would Go. The Eddie in question was Eddie Aikau, the Hawaiian surfer who was known for paddling out to the most mental waves on the planet. When working out if the surf was too big and gnarly for a surf contest, someone had once replied, ‘Eddie would go,’ and the phrase was sucked into surf culture. Eddie died a hero after disappearing at sea, aged thirty-one. Still, I always thought it was a stupid thing to have tattooed on your arse. But that was Daniel. Not the greatest thinker in the world. His other tattoo was a swirling black script written up his forearm, which said, ‘If it ain’t got fins, boobs or sparkplugs, I ain’t interested.’
The rest of the class looked pretty awed at Zeke’s strength and balance, especially Kelly, who gave me a few vigorous nods that quite clearly told me, ‘If this guy is single, you are asking him out.’
The teacher gave Zeke a little round of applause, as he came up red-faced and panting.
I smiled at Zeke, and was debating whether or not to go for a high-five when the teacher boomed in my ear, ‘Now back to our assisted backbends. Iris, is it? It’s your turn.’
I thought about Zeke’s hand on my ass, panicked and said, ‘Um, I’ll sit this one out. Think I tweaked my back in that handstand.’
Kelly looked concerned and gave my back a quick rub. She was only six months older than me, but she was like my big sister. We had grown up together on Fistral Beach, body-surfing when we were really little. I was a crazy kid with no fear. The beach lifeguards had to rescue me about once a week. They’d call my mum and say, ‘Your girl is a total nuisance. She got caught in a rip current again,’ and my mum would say, ‘No, not Iris, she’s doing her homework in her bedroom,’ but of course I wasn’t in my bedroom. When the surf was up, I was out and, short of chaining me up, there was not much my mum could do about it. My dad had gone, Kelly’s dad too, and our mums were working more than one job each. In fact, my mum was working three, so she could afford to pay the bills while getting her teaching qualification. So Kelly and me made a new family down the beach. The silver surfers checked in on us, and Kelly tried her best to stop me doing the potentially deadly stuff like high cliff-jumping, or lilo-surfing storm waves. And, when I wouldn’t listen, she’d stick around so that if I got smashed, the coastguards would know where to look.