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Close Out




  CLOSE OUT

  “Got a second?” Lucas’s father asked.

  “About that,” Kai answered.

  “I doubt Lucas would have made it to the finals today if you hadn’t pushed him these last few weeks,” Buzzy said.

  Kai nodded silently and glanced at the crowd on the beach. Almost everyone was facing out toward the water, watching the surfers.

  “But maybe you’ve pushed him far enough,” Buzzy said.

  Kai turned and looked at him. “What do you mean?”

  “Everyone knows you don’t care that much about competing,” Buzzy said. “In a way, if you win today, it’s almost a waste, because you probably won’t do anything with it.”

  “You want me to let Lucas win because you think he’ll do more with it than I will?” Kai cut to the chase.

  “Why not?” Buzzy said. “You’ve done it before.”

  Check out all the books in the Impact Zone series:

  Take Off

  Cut Back

  Close Out

  Available from Simon Pulse

  And get hooked on some of Todd Strasser’s other Simon & Schuster books …

  Can’t Get There from Here

  Give a Boy a Gun

  How I Created My Perfect Prom Date

  Here Comes Heavenly

  Buzzard’s Feast: Against the Odds

  If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  First Simon Pulse edition July 2004

  Text copyright © 2004 by Todd Strasser

  SIMON PULSE

  An imprint of Simon & Schuster

  Children’s Publishing Division

  1230 Avenue of the Americas

  New York, NY 10020

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

  SIMON PULSE and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  Designed by Ann Sullivan

  The text of this book was set in Bembo.

  Printed in the United States of America

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2

  Library of Congress Control Number 2004100034

  ISBN 0-689-87031-0

  ISBN 13: 978-0-689-87031-6

  eISBN 13: 978-1-439-12139-9

  In memory of Jill Tuck, as fine a mother, surfer’s wife, and all-around wonderful person as most of us will ever have the privilege to know

  This book is dedicated to the dawn patrol—Fred Tuck, and John and Fraser Moncure.

  One

  Flat again.

  Kai and Bean were sitting around a picnic table on the terrace outside Pete’s Hubba Hubba Seaside Saloon, eating chili cheese fries. In the slanting late-afternoon sunlight, Bean tapped his fingers against the tabletop with uncharacteristic nervousness. He gave Kai a questioning look. “You’re sure you want to do it tonight?”

  Kai gazed out at the horizon, where the dark blue water met the light blue sky. Here and there a cotton ball pink-edged white cloud dotted the blue heavens. The ocean was as still and flat as a photograph. He looked back at his friend. “I have to, Bean. I don’t think I have a choice.”

  Before Bean could reply, Booger joined them at the table. “Can you believe this?” he complained, pointing at the ocean. “It’s been like glass for five days.”

  “Toilet bowl water,” said Bean.

  It was dinnertime and the terrace at Pete’s was crowded with teens in shorts and bathing suits, talking loudly, laughing, chatting on cell phones. Lately Kai had been taking as long as he wanted for dinner. Strangely, his father, Big Chief Hockaloogie, didn’t seem to care. But this evening was going to be a major test of the Alien Frog Beast’s patience.

  The air was tranquil and warm, the beach still crowded despite the late hour, as if the Sun Haven vacationers couldn’t tear themselves away from such a beautiful scene. The brightly colored umbrellas that had stood open like flowers all day in the bright sun were now closed, poking up from the sand like skinny trees. The ocean was smooth except for the random spots where bluefish had forced bait fish to the surface and were causing the water to boil in the massacre.

  Bean let out a loud sigh. Just moments ago, before Booger joined them, Kai had quietly told him the plan for that evening. The tall, thin eighteen-year-old with the long braided black ponytail was not happy.

  “What’s with all the sighing and finger tapping?” Booger asked him.

  “Uh, nothing.” Bean straightened up self-consciously. “Just itching to surf again. That’s all.”

  The door from the saloon to the terrace swung open and Everett, the dreadlocked black kid from Lucas Frank’s crew, stepped out with a drink in one hand and a red-and-white-striped paper box of chili cheese fries in the other. The door swung closed behind him and Everett stood for a moment, scanning the patio for a place to sit.

  Kai waved at him. For an instant Everett didn’t react. As if he had to make a major decision. And the truth was that, in a way, maybe he did.

  Everett started toward them. Kai slid over on the bench to make room at the picnic table.

  “You guys know Everett, right?” Kai said.

  Booger and Bean nodded. Kai was pretty sure that both of them realized that Everett joining them was a major deal.

  The dreadlocked kid sat down and nodded toward the beach and the vast blue liquid flatness stretching to the horizon. “What a drag, huh?”

  Only another surfer would understand what he meant. Otherwise, it looked like a beautiful summer evening beach scene.

  “The calm before the storm,” said Bean.

  Booger looked up, excited, and asked, “There’s a storm coming?” Again only a surfer would understand that a storm was something to be welcomed. The funny thing was, Kai knew Bean was referring to something that had nothing to do with the weather. Instead, it had to do with a certain “mission” they were going to undertake later that evening.

  “In a couple of weeks hurricane season’ll start,” Everett said. “Best time of year.”

  The patio door swung open again and Shauna came out with a drink and a chili cheese dog. Wearing a bright green T-shirt that read I SCREAM FOR ICE CREAM, she was on her dinner break from her job making cones and sundaes.

  “Hey, guys.” She sat down and smiled at everyone as if it was perfectly normal to find Everett there.

  “Shauna, you know Everett, right?” Kai said.

  “I don’t think we’ve ever been, uh, formally introduced,” Shauna said. “So, hi, I’m Shauna, otherwise known as the newbie kook surf chick.”

  “I’ve seen you out there catching waves,” Everett said. “You’re gettin’ it.”

  Shauna lit up with pride. “That’s it, guys. My day’s just been made.” She looked around. “Where’s Spazzy?”

  “Julian said they were going to a movie,” Bean said. “They like to go at dinnertime during the week, when there won’t be as many people around to freak out when Spazzy does his thing.”

  “So I hear you really ripped at the Fairport contest,” Everett said to Kai.

  “Best single-wave score of the day,” Bean said, patting Kai proudly on the shoulder.

  Everett turned to Bean. “And you took first in the long board.”

  “Considering that there were only five long boarders in
the whole contest, I’m not sure that means a whole lot,” Bean said.

  “That roundhouse cutback you finished with would have scored huge points anywhere,” Kai said.

  “What’s this about you getting yourself disqualified on purpose?” Everett said to Kai. “So Spazzy could get into the final.”

  “Meant a lot more to him than it would have to me,” Kai answered with a shrug. “So how come you weren’t at Fairport?”

  Everett grinned. “Remember how fine the waves were that day? Think about what Screamers was like without all you mutts stinking up the place.”

  “You had Screamers to yourself the whole day?” Booger let his jaw drop in exaggerated surprise.

  “Just about,” Everett said. “Sure beat sitting on the beach at Fairport waiting for a twenty-minute heat once every two hours.”

  “That settles it, dudes,” Booger said. “I know where I’m gonna be next time there’s a surf competition around here.”

  “Where’s that?” someone behind them asked.

  They turned to find Jade, the shapely young woman who worked the counter at Sun Haven Surf. She was wearing pink shorts and a skimpy green bikini top that was clearly stretched to the limit by the twin demands placed upon it. Booger, especially, appeared transfixed by the sight.

  “Uh, here at Beamers,” he stammered. “I mean, Screamers.”

  “Well, guess what?” Jade handed them sheets of bright orange paper. “You won’t be alone. Its gonna get pretty crowded around here.”

  Kai read the handout. The $5,000 Northeast Open Surfing Championship was going to be held at Sun Haven at the end of August, sponsored by Sun Haven Surf, Quiksilver, Roxy, O’Neill, Sex Wax, Pro Traction, Bonzo Kreem, and other companies. Top prize in each category was $500, except the men’s short board, which would be $1,000 with a second prize of $500.

  Across the table Booger had not yet looked at the handout. He was still staring at Jade. Bean folded his sheet into a paper airplane and hit Booger in the forehead.

  “Hey!” Booger yelped in surprise.

  “It’s not polite to stare,” Bean lectured him.

  Booger’s face turned bright red. He looked down at his french fries. “Sorry.”

  “Oh, I don’t mind guys staring,” Jade said, shooting a quick glance at Kai. “Especially the right guy.”

  Shauna crossed her arms and pouted.

  “Could I be the right guy?” Booger looked up and asked eagerly.

  “Sorry.”

  “Aw.” Booger’s shoulders slumped.

  Jade pressed her finger down on one of the orange handouts lying on the table. “This is the one competition you don’t want to get yourself disqualified from,” she said to Kai. “It’s the biggest deal of the year around here. Prize money, media coverage. Guys even pick up sponsorships.”

  “I bet that’s not all they pick up,” Shauna muttered.

  The patio door swung open again. Lucas Frank came out, followed by Slammin’ Sam and that quiet guy, Derek. All three of them were carrying drinks and white paper plates with chili cheeseburgers and chili cheesesteak sandwiches. Lucas seemed to hesitate when he saw Kai and his friends, as if he wasn’t sure whether to go over or just ignore them. He focused on Everett, and Kai assumed he was wondering why a kid from his crew would be sitting with Kai and his friends.

  It was Sam who started toward them.

  “Hey, there he is,” he said to Kai. “Mr. Competition. What happened at Fairport, tuna, the pressure get to you? Was it just too much for the chicken of the sea?”

  Kai stared at the big jerk. Slowly and deliberately he started to get up. “I told you what would happen if you ever called me that again.”

  Two

  Bench legs screeched against the concrete patio as half a dozen people jumped up and placed themselves between Sam and Kai. The entire terrace outside Pete’s went silent as everyone became aware of the sudden potential for violence. Kai had no intention of struggling against the hands he felt pressing on his shoulders and gripping his arms. He just wanted to get eye to eye with Sam.

  “I’m not going to fight,” he calmly told Bean and Everett, who were among those holding him back. He felt the hands on his arms loosen and the bodies slowly move out of the way until he and Sam faced each other. Sam had a strange look in his eye. Half aggro, half puzzlement.

  “I think you and I should have a talk,” Kai said.

  “I said everything I got to say to you,” Sam taunted.

  “Then maybe you should shut up and listen,” Kai said. He felt the hands on his arms tighten again. Sam bristled.

  “If you want to fight, just tell me when and where and I’ll be there,” Kai said. “It’s that simple, okay? But in the meantime, you have to stop calling me these dumb-ass names. This isn’t kindergarten, dude. You have to grow up.”

  It was so quiet you could hear the scratching of the small brown sparrows who snuck under the tables and pecked at crumbs. Sam’s face was red. Kai could see the guy’s pulse throb under the black barbwire tattoo around his neck.

  “Well?” Kai said.

  “Fuck you.” Sam turned away and headed toward another table.

  The tension on the terrace slowly evaporated like an early-morning fog under the rays of a rising sun. People at other tables began to talk again. Kai’s friends sat down. The sparrows hopped away and flew out of reach. Sam had gone, but Lucas remained standing near the table. He kept looking at Everett as if he couldn’t understand why one of his brahs was sitting with Kai and his friends.

  Lucas held up the orange handout announcing the Northeast Championship. “What about this?”

  “I don’t know,” Kai said. “Just found out about it.”

  “Yeah, yeah,” said Sam, who’d stopped between two tables a short distance away. “We’ve heard that one before. You gotta think about it. You always gotta think about everything. I never saw anyone who spent so much time thinking.”

  “Maybe I’m setting an example for you, Sam,” Kai said. “You might want to try it one of these days.”

  The people around them chuckled. Sam clenched his teeth in angry frustration and stomped away.

  “This is as big as it gets around here,” Lucas said, gesturing to the handout. “You do well in the regional championship and you might qualify for the nationals. Then invitations start coming in. Florida, California, Hawaii. Just think, dude. This could be your ticket back home.”

  “Could be,” Kai allowed.

  “Bet that’s something worth thinking about,” Lucas said. He turned to Everett and motioned to another picnic table where Sam and Derek were now sitting, eating their sandwiches and fries. “Come on, dude, we’re sitting over there.”

  Everett didn’t budge. The lines between Lucas’s eyes narrowed. Everett was one of his crew, and this was a serious breach. Kai caught Everett’s eye and motioned that he’d understand if Everett decided to join his brahs. But Everett merely picked up a french fry and bit it in half. He looked up at Lucas. The gaze Lucas returned was hard, as if he was trying to stare the guy down. Everett didn’t blink.

  “Thanks, but I think I’ll hang here today,” he said.

  Lucas’s forehead bunched ever so slightly. Then he turned toward the table where Derek and Sam were sitting. For a moment, no one at Kai’s table said a word.

  Kai flattened the orange handout on the table. “What do you guys think?”

  “There’s no bodyboard competition,” Booger said. “Otherwise I’d do it. What would I have to lose?”

  “What about the long board competition?” Shauna asked Bean.

  “Sure, why not?” Bean said.

  Kai turned to Everett. “What about you?”

  Everett shook his head. “There’s no point for me. I’ve never been into hard turns and slash-and-bash. Everyone knows that’s how the judges score. I wouldn’t make it past the first heat. But you … Based on how you did at Fairport, you could be a real contender.”

  “I just don’t know if that�
�s what I want to be,” Kai said.

  “There’s time to decide,” Bean said.

  At the mention of time, Shauna checked her watch. “Break’s almost over. I have to get back to work.”

  “Me too.” Everett started to get up.

  “Where do you work?” Kai asked.

  “Blockbuster,” Everett said.

  “Hey, that’s where I’m headed,” Booger said. “I’ll go with you.”

  Suddenly the only ones left at the table were Bean and Kai.

  “Guess it’s time for us to go,” Kai said.

  Bean leaned close and spoke in a low voice. “It’s breaking the law, you know.”

  “How’s that?” Kai asked.

  “I’m not exactly sure,” Bean said. “I just have a feeling. There’s still time for you to change your mind about this.”

  Kai slowly shook his head. “I already told you, Bean, this is something I have to do. But there’s time for you to change your mind.”

  “Do you want me to change my mind?” Bean asked.

  “No.”

  Bean sighed and heaved himself up from the bench. “Then come on, let’s get it over with.”

  Three

  The meeting place was the parking lot of a large, red barnlike club called 88s located on Seaside Drive about halfway between Sun Haven and Belle Harbor. The big white sign with black letters announced LIVE MUSIC NIGHTLY.

  Bean pulled the hearse into the parking lot and shut off the engine. The sun was low in the western sky, but had not yet begun to turn the orange of sunset. There was probably an hour of light left. Except for a few cars, the club’s parking lot was empty.

  “He’s not here,” Bean said, craning his neck and looking around.

  “He’ll come,” said Kai.

  Bean slumped in his seat and leaned his head against the headrest. “You know, it’s weird, Kai. I’ve lived in this town all my life and it’s pretty much always been the same. The cool locals have always owned Screamers. The rest of us have been stuck with Sewers. Guys like Buzzy Frank have ruled this town, and Curtis has always been a thorn in their sides. Every summer Spazzy would come down and watch us, but no one ever talked to him. That’s just the way things have always been. Nothing ever changed. Then you show up and everything changes.”