Variation: Chapter 1
Variation: A Novel
On days like this, I understood why seventy-three percent of candidates for rescue swimmer school didnât make it through training. I had two summers left to make sure Iâd be in the twenty-seven percent who would.
The afternoon weather off the southern coast of Cape Cod served up six-foot seas, complete with whitecaps and a side of hypothermia for Memorial Day. It might have been miserable and challenging, but it was the perfect weather for practice.
Tired had hit twenty minutes ago, exhaustion followed ten minutes later, and I was quickly approaching full-out ruin, but I needed five more minutes. Another hundred yards would put me past my personal best in these kinds of swells, and I wasnât quitting until I hit that mark.
Three hundred seconds was nothing in the scheme of things.
I concentrated on my breath work, kept my head down, and swam forward, counting each of those seconds. At two hundred and eleven, I sucked in a breath of pure salt water and came up coughing, ripping out my mouthpiece as soon as I was free of the swell that had overtaken the tube of the snorkel.
âHudson!â Gavin shouted from my left, killing the motor of the twenty-three-foot fishing boat our father lovingly referred to as his fourth child, though sheâd qualify as his first, given her age. âEnough for the day.â
âI need another thirty yards for a personal best,â I called back, treading water through the next swell.
âYou need to get your ass in the boat before the swells get any higher,â he countered, looking over his sunglasses from the dashboard despite the overcast sky. âYouâre wrecked. Thirty yards isnât going to happen.â
âGo to hell.â I popped my mouthpiece in and prepared to go again just to prove I could.
âThis hangover is kicking my ass, and unless you want Caroline at the helm for your next practice session, youâll get in here before I have to circle back in this current.â He walked toward the stern as the boat drifted, then leaned over and unfastened the swinging top of the ladder before pushing it into the water.
Shit. He wasnât kidding.
Our older sister was a clucking mother hen who would never remotely consider bringing me out in seas like this, which meant the personal best was going to have to wait. Frustration kept me warm for the next handful of strokes as I made my way toward the boat. Then I timed the sternâs rise and fall with the swells before heaving myself up the three-rung ladder.
âIâve missed you and Iâm glad youâre home, but you suck. I almost had it.â I climbed over the narrow swimming deck and onto the towel-covered seat, then pulled up the ladder. Dad would murder us if we didnât protect the faded leather. The boat pitched again as I ripped off my face mask, then the hood of my wet suit, and tossed them into the black canvas duffel near Gavinâs feet.
âYou wound me, little brother.â He touched his chest sarcastically and held on to the back of the driverâs seat with the next swell. âLetâs get home so I can listen to the lecture Dadâs been working on all day. Iâd hate for him to go to all that work and have no one to deliver his speech to.â
âHeâs just . . .â Words failed me, just like they had since heâd announced his decision in the middle of our parentsâ café this morning.
âDisappointed that Iâm dropping out of college,â Gavin supplied. âUnlike Caroline, who managed to get her degree while married and holding down two jobs.â
âDonât compare yourself to our sister, and give Dad a break. Heâs just stunned.â I peeled off the rest of my suit, leaving me in a pair of his old Hawaiian-print trunks once I ditched the diving socks too.
âI changed my major four times in two years,â Gavin said, reaching above the wheel for my Bruins cap. âTrust me, Dad isnât shocked.â
Good point. Gavin was known for a good time, not for sticking things out.
âYou could spend the night at Caroline and Seanâs while Mom smooths it over.â I made my way over the salt-and-sun-worn deck carpet toward him.
âIâm not leaving Mom with my mess. Subject change.â A smile curved Gavinâs mouth. âYouâre barely seventeen and here you are dumping your savings into a new wet suit. Itâs like youâre trying to actually swim your way to Alaska. Donât think I didnât notice that map above your bed.â
âSome dreams donât change.â Iâd stumbled onto a documentary three years ago and wanted to be a rescue swimmer stationed in Sitka ever since. Helping people? Check. Adrenaline? Check. Moving to the other side of the country from the only place Iâd ever lived? Check. I grabbed the towel from the back seat, then ran it over my head and chest before dragging a T-shirt on. âAnd thank you for bringing me out. Dad gets busy.â
âIâll bring you every day if it helps.â Gavin shoved my hat at my chest, keeping perfect balance as the boat heaved.
âThanks.â I knew better than to take him at his word. He had the best of intentions, but follow-through wasnât his strong suit. âThe practice is probably a little overkill, but it gives me something to work for.â Goose bumps rose along my arms with the breeze as I set my hat on backward. Sixty-four degrees was a high for this time of year, but it was still fucking freezing right out of the water.
âWhich I respect.â He turned the key, starting the engine but keeping it in idle as he looked past me. âIs that a rowboat?â
âOut here? No way.â My head whipped to follow his line of sight, and I quickly spotted the small vessel about a hundred meters west, with what looked to be a small outboard motor and two people . . . ducking?
âWhat the hell are they doing?â Gavin asked as the boaters blinked in and out between the swells, repeatedly leaned down in what had to be their seats. âBobbing?â
My stomach sank like a boulder thrown overboard, and I grabbed the binoculars from the glove box and peered through the lenses at the other boat.
Damn it. Two girls about my age sat in the middle of what looked to be a fourteen-footer with a tiny outbound motor that had seen better days, scooping out water with their bare hands. âThey arenât bobbing, theyâre bailing.â And neither of the brunettes was wearing a life jacket. I handed Gavin the binoculars, and he lifted them to his eyes. âWe have to help.â
âWell, shit.â Gavin threw the binoculars into the glove box and slammed it shut. âHold on.â
I braced one hand on the edge of the windshield and the other on the dashboardâs handrailing as Gavin punched the throttle.
The front of our boat kissed the sky before Gavin adjusted the trim, and we nearly planed as the boat came level, but there was no softening the swellsâ blows against the hull. After the third bone-jarring hit nearly threw us sideways, Gavin swore and adjusted our approach.
âWeâll have to come at themââ he started.
âWith the current,â I finished. Spray drenched the windshield with every wave. I kept my eyes locked on the vessel, and fear shot through me, quickly chased by adrenaline as the little boat tipped downward with the next swell and water rushed over the bow.
If theyâd been in trouble before, they were in imminent danger now.
I moved to starboard behind Gavin and flipped up the back passenger seat as he pulled back on the throttle and slowed our approach. Boats didnât exactly have brakes. You had to be kidding me. âThere are only two life jackets?â
âOnly two of us on board,â Gavin called back as we slowed to idle about twenty meters off the vesselâs port side.
I yanked on one of the bright-yellow vests and fastened the three clips across my torso, then reached for the second and did the same, yanking on the tabs to expand the size to fit over the first. âCan you get us closer?â
âNot without drifting right into them or past them,â he answered, taking off his sunglasses. âFuck, I think theyâreââ
âHelp!â the girl in the pink shirt shouted, standing at the bow of the violently rocking boat and waving her hands frantically as if there was some chance we hadnât seen them.
My eyes widened. âSit down!â What the hell was she thinking?
âGive me a jacket.â Gavin stuck out his hand.
The girl sitting in the back lunged for the other one, but the damage was done, and the next swell came over the side of the already destabilized boat and capsized it.
The girls disappeared into the water, and my heart lurched.
âIâm going.â I climbed onto the passenger seat. There was no time to wait.
âLike hell you are. Iâm not letting youââ
I dove.
With a wet suit, the water had been barely tolerable. Without it, the temperature hit like a punch to the gut, and I fought to keep the air in my lungs. The life jackets tugged me upward, and I drew in a full breath as soon as I broke the surface, salt stinging my eyes.
âDamn it, Hudson!â Gavin shouted from somewhere behind me, but I was too focused on swimming to answer.
Please, God, let them both be alive.
I moved faster than ever, even encumbered by the jackets, fueled by adrenaline and terror at what was waiting for me.
My heart pounded as I approached the bow of the capsized boat and found the two women clinging to the side. Their hands gripped the ridge along the bottom of the shallow hull, and relief stole my words. They were fine. In a precarious but deteriorating situation, but alive and . . . arguing?
âI didnât know it had a hole!â the one in the pink shirt shrieked at the girl in green, who had her back turned toward me. âOr that it was low on gas, and I certainly didnât ask you to jump in as I left the boathouse!â
âOf course I jumped in,â the one in the green replied, her voice surprisingly calm despite the distinct sound of chattering teeth. âI thought I could stop you. Dad told us to never take this boat.â
âI just wanted a few minutes away from her!â the girl in pink wailed. âAnd now sheâs going to kill us both when she finds out we sank the boat!â
âFeel like getting out of here?â I asked, my chest heaving beneath the jackets as I swam around the side of the vessel.
Both women snapped their heads my direction, soaked ponytails flinging water as they looked over their shoulders at me.
It was the streak of red down the closest girlâs temple that caught my attention, but it was her eyes that kept it. They were almost too big for her heart-shaped face, the color of straight-up whiskey, and bordered by thick, water-spiked lashes that lowered as her focus swept over me and lingered on the buckles at the top of my chest.
The second her gaze lifted to lock with mine, I forgot how to fucking breathe, let alone think. Iâd never been hit by lightning, but I bet this was what it felt like. And she was bleeding. Right. Get ahold of yourself.
âYouâre hurtââ I started, my chest tightening with a completely irrational amount of worry.
âOh thank God!â The girl in pink pushed off the boat and flung herself my direction.
I caught her on pure instinct.
âIâm only fourteen, and thatâs entirely too young to die just because I didnât check the gas . . . or the boat,â the girl in pink declared dramatically, clutching my shoulders as she looked up at me with frightened brown eyes. âAnd I donât swim very well.â
And sheâd come out on an ancient rowboat without a life jacket? âGive me a second and weâll get you sorted.â I kicked toward the boat. âHold on like your life depends on it.â
The girl drew back her head in indignation, her jaw practically unhinging.
âHeâs wearing two life jackets, Eva,â the girl with the whiskey eyes said quietly. âYou need to get one of them on before he can take you back to his boat.â
âOh. Of course.â Eva grabbed hold of the hull as another swell lifted, then dropped us but didnât submerge the vessel. âYouâll come back for Allie, right?â
âIâll be fine, Evaââ the other started to argue.
âActually, I think I need to take you back first,â I said to the girl in greenâwho I assumed was Allieâas the cold seeped into my very bones.
âSheâs sixteen, and she swims way better than I do.â Evaâs voice rose.
âThatâs absolutely true.â Allieâs teeth chattered. âPlease take Eva. Iâll wait.â
âYouâre bleeding, and we donât have time to argue.â I kicked to stay between them as the current dragged us along.
âItâs just my scalp, not my legs. Iâll be fine.â Her worried gaze darted toward Eva.
âIâm sorry?â In what world was a head wound better than one to an extremity?
âShe really doesnât swim well. Please get her out of here,â Allie pleaded, pink water dripping off her jaw. âWhatâs your name?â
âHudson Ellis.â This was taking too long. I undid the top set of buckles, and Eva snatched the jacket as soon as it cleared my shoulders. âHeyââ
âHudson.â Allieâs teeth chattered. âIâm Alessandra. I donât know if you have siblings, but thereâs nothing more important to me than my sisters.â
Sisters. That explained her refusal.
âExcept dancing,â Eva muttered, shoving her arms into the life jacket one by one as another swell rocked us.
âNothing,â Alessandra repeated, holding my gaze hostage. âYou have to take my little sister first. Please. I canât leave her here.â Fear streaked through her eyes, knitting her brow and pursing her lips, but she raised her pointed chin. âI wonât go until she does.â
Shit. Just like I could never leave Caroline or Gavin. I understood that need on a cellular, primal level. We might give each other shit, but we showed up for each other come hell or high water, and Alessandra felt just as vehemently about her siblings as I did. Something inside my chest cracked open, and every ounce of my common sense must have spilled out into the water, because that one simple demand made me feel like I knew her.
âI have siblings,â I said, reaching for the next set of buckles. âI get it.â
Her eyes quickly narrowed in confusion. âWhat are you doing?â
I shrugged my right arm out of the jacket, then reached up to hold on to the boat between them before sliding the rest of the yellow neoprene-covered flotation device off my left arm and offering it to her. âPut it on.â
âNo.â She glanced down at the jacket and back to me. âYou need that. The waves are too high.â
âI donât. Iâm a great swimmer, and this is the only compromise I can think of.â I gave her what I hoped was a reassuring smile. âIt will take us less than five minutes to get you both in the boat.â
âFive minutes?â Eva panicked.
âLess than,â I repeated, keeping my eyes on Alessandra. âAnything is doable for five minutes. Iâll stay with you both the entire time. Take the jacket.â It went against everything Iâd ever read about performing rescues, but I couldnât bring myself to give a shit.
âI canât do that to you.â She shook her head.
âIâm a stranger,â I reminded her.
âNo. Youâre Hudson Ellis.â Her arms trembled.
âThen weâre at an impasse, because you wonât leave your sister and I wonât leave you.â I pushed the life jacket toward her. âIâm pretty stubborn, so all waiting does is prolong the time youâre both in the water.â
âCome on, Allie, Iâm freezing!â Eva cajoled.
Alessandra took the jacket, and once she had it on, all three of us swam toward Gavin.
By the time I got the girls into the boat, both their lips carried a bluish tinge, and the waves had devoured whatever was left of their rowboat.
âWhat the fuck were you thinking?â Gavin snapped at me.
âTheyâre alive.â I gave my black Rip Curl hoodie to Alessandra despite her initial protest, then handed almost every towel we had to Eva before sitting them both down. âWe should get you to a doctor.â
Alessandra shook her head, zipping up my sweatshirt. âOur mother will realize weâre gone.â
Seriously? My eyebrows hit my hairline.
âIf you need a doctor, then we have to go,â Eva whispered.
âI donât,â Alessandra assured, her tone sharpening toward her sister. âCan you imagine what sheâll do to us?â
The fuck? Even when Gav and I were caught doing something we werenât supposed to, Momâs first reaction was always relief that our idiocy hadnât killed us.
âWe could just call Dad. Wait. Youâre not going to tell her that Iââ Eva started, her eyes filling with panic.
âI never tell her, do I?â Alessandra retorted, her hands disappearing into the sleeves of my hoodie. The damned thing was practically a dress on her.
âCan I look at your head?â Gavin asked, brushing past me as the boat rocked. Our hull was deeper than the little rowboat, but we shouldnât be out here much longer with this storm coming in.
Alessandra nodded, and Gavin leaned over her, examining the wound.
âItâs small and has already stopped bleeding. Probably doesnât need stitches,â he announced, then shot me a look that said weâd talk about my choices later.
âCan you please take us home?â Alessandraâs shoulders straightened, and she composed herself with a speed that was both impressive and a little jarring, but her eyes were a dead giveaway that she wasnât as calm as she wanted us to think. Almost like sheâs performing. âWe liveââ
âI know where you live,â Gavin interrupted with a grimace. âWeâll take you.â
He did? My gaze jumped his way.
âThank you.â Alessandra tucked her knees up into my sweatshirt, and her gaze flickered toward mine. âReally. Thank you, Hudson.â
âNo problem.â Damn, I liked the way she said my name.
âWeâre about fifteen minutes out.â Gavin looked over at me, then motioned toward the console, and I followed him to the seats behind the dashboard. âThat was fucking reckless.â He shook his head at me, and I barely had time to grab ahold of the handrail as he put the throttle down, heading toward the cliffs at the west side of town, past the local beaches. âAnd watch the way youâre looking at her. You know who they are, right?â Gavin asked, just loud enough for me to hear, but not them.
âNo, but obviously you do,â I replied, rubbing my towel over my arms to get the blood moving. Fuck, it was cold. âAnd Iâm not looking at her.â It wasnât exactly a lie since I was faced forward.
âI watched that whole thing go down. Youâre looking.â He scoffed. âAnd itâs just going to get you in trouble. Theyâre the youngest Rousseau girls. Alessandra and Eva, if Iâm remembering correctly. Forget asking her out, if thatâs what youâre thinking. Their parents donât let them interact with anyone outside their social circle, let alone locals.â
Rousseau. One of the families with summerhouses on the cliffside. Old money.
My chest went all wonky. âThe ballerinas.â No wonder I didnât recognize them. They trained here every summer, but mostly under lock and key until their mother trotted them out in August for the competition that brought an onslaught of dancing tourists and their rich families every year. âThereâs four of them, right?â Pretty sure Iâd seen a couple of them in the café once or twice when I dropped in, but I usually spent my summers lifeguarding at the beach.
âYep,â he confirmed. âAnd youâve got your eye on who Lina calls the quiet one, so just donât.â
âWhoâs Lina?â It was hard to think of Alessandra as quiet after the way sheâd just argued on Evaâs behalf.
He flinched. âThe oldest. Nineteen, incredibly talented, and gorgeous, and so fucking frustrating. Sheâs got walls ten feet thick, and unfortunately for you, I think they run in the family.â
âClearly they interact with some locals.â I shot him a knowing look.
âAlessandra isnât Lina. Sheâs not going to break rules,â Gavin said as we cut across the current. âAnd this little rescue stays between us, because Caroline fucking hates them. Something about a milkshake incident and them being entitled.â
Shit. The last thing I wanted was to hurt Carolineâs feelings. âDoubt it was Alessandra.â Maybe Iâd only spent five minutes with her, but she hardly seemed entitled.
âSo much for not looking at her. And seriously, theyâre not allowed to date, and I donât want to watch you get all angsty over there.â Gavin rolled his eyes, then mercifully stopped digging.
I looked over my shoulder and found Alessandra watching me in a way that made me think noticing the two life jackets wasnât an anomaly for her. Iâd bet she was always that aware, that attuned to detail. Observant could easily be mistaken for quiet, especially with that many siblings around.
She tilted her head, and I was struck straight in the ribs with the illogical need for more time with her. Not romantically, of courseâshe was entirely out of my league. I wanted to know what kind of music she listened to, what books she liked, which movies were her favorite. I wanted to know if she minded the way she was kept sequestered, and what made her smile. And the closer we came to the cliffs, the more my chest tightened.
Whatever I said or did in the next five minutes would determine if I ever got the chance to actually know her, or if this would be a one-time encounter that always left me wondering.
She hugged her knees to her chest with one hand and held on to the handrail with the other, then looked away when her sister said something I couldnât hear.
When we finally made it to a massive ocean-side pier and boathouse at the base of the cliffs on which most of the summer mansions sat, there were two brunettes waiting, one worried and one furious.
âSheâs pissed,â Gavin muttered, staring up at the angry one as we approached on the port side of the pier. âHowâs it going, Lina?â he called up, idling the engine when we reached drifting distance. The next couple of waves would put us at the ladder, and if Gav misjudged the distance, Dad was going to murder us.
âYou have my sisters in your boat, so that about explains it.â Lina put her hands on her hips. âThough Iâll admit itâs nice to see you, Gavin.â
âNoted.â Holy shitâwas my brother blushing?
âHow do you know them?â Eva shouted up as I moved to starboard and threw out the buoys so we didnât crush the hull against the pier, then leaned over the hull, preparing to catch the ladder and hold on.
âNone of your business,â Lina retorted. âNow, thank the Ellis boys and get up this ladderâoh shit, Allie, are you hurt?â She dropped to her knees above us, looking over the edge of the pier as we rocked in toward the ladder.
âSheâs hurt?â The other sister immediately joined Lina. âHow badly? Can you make it up the ladder?â
âItâs nothing to worry about, Anne,â Alessandra answered. âI promise.â
I grabbed hold of the thick ladder, and the wood groaned as I caught the weight of the boat, quickly looping a rope around the entirety and tying us off at the middle cleat so the next wave didnât carry us away or take out the structure.
âShe knows them? Lina sneaks out?â Eva hissed at Alessandra, and Gavin cut the engine.
âSounds like it,â Allie replied, biting back a smile as she and Eva made their way toward me. âGood for her.â
A spark of hope lit off in my chest like a firecracker. Maybe Gavin was right and she wasnât a rule breaker, but I bet she just might be a rule bender.
Eva dumped her wet towels on the floor of the boat, then muttered her thanks and scrambled onto the ladder between waves. The next swell splashed water over the swimming deck and onto the seats.
âYou should get up there before the next one hits,â Gavin said to Alessandra, and I seriously debated punching my brother in the face.
âRight. Thank you for coming after us.â She offered me a quick smile.
âYouâre welcome.â I offered my hand to help her, but she was already climbing over the seat, making it to the ladder effortlessly.
She cleared a few rungs before the next wave came along, then looked down with a grimace as a smaller wave rocked us. âCrap. Iâm still wearing your hoodie.â
âTwo choices.â I grinned up at her. âKeep it or bring it for the next time I take you boating.â
âFucking bold,â Gavin muttered under his breath.
It was, but I had maybe ten seconds before the next wave.
âI . . .â Her mouth opened and shut twice. âIâm not allowed to date, and Iâm only here for the summer.â
âI figured.â My grin widened. âCan you have friends for the summer?â
Her brow knit. âDebatable. Iâm not really good with people.â
âJust drop a note by the Ellisâthe caféâif you decide itâs worth debating, Alessandra.â I reached for the cleat and untied us, keeping my eyes on her.
âAll right.â She smiled, and I had to remind my heartbeat that we were only ever going to be friends, if that. âA friend would call me Allie.â
Hell yes.
âAllie it is.â I slipped the rope free of the ladder as Gavin started the engine.
She shook her head like she couldnât believe sheâd just admitted to thinking about bending the rules, and climbed the ladder toward her sisters.
By the end of that summer, she was my best friend.
By the end of the next, she hated me.
And I didnât blame her.