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Authors: Laura Resau

The Jade Notebook (6 page)

BOOK: The Jade Notebook
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Racing from hole to hole, we absorb the awful truth: All the holes are empty. All the nests have been dug up and ransacked. There are no nests intact, covered in sand. No eggs left safely buried. Not a single egg remaining in any of the holes. No baby turtles will hatch.

Wendell closes his eyes, rubs his face, says nothing. He stays quiet for a long time.

Finally, I take his arm. “Hey, come on. Let’s make sure Grandma Turtle makes it back. Then we’ll figure out what’s going on, okay?”

He gives a slight nod. There’s deep sadness in his expression, but also a fierce protectiveness.

We head back to the lone turtle and watch her lumber back to the sea. She treks along, her pace so slow and patient. We’re watching something ancient, I realize, a link in a chain that started millions of years ago. The next link—the eggs that should grow to be turtles—is gone. Now she doesn’t seem clumsy, but tragic. Her mission has failed.

Just then, she pauses, maybe to rest. She turns her head, which is the size of a watermelon, and stares at us with her disproportionately small, half-closed eyes. And as if she’s spoken to him in some silent language, Wendell responds, “We’ll find whoever did this. It won’t happen again. I promise.”

I could swear the turtle gives the tiniest nod before moving forward once again. We watch her until she’s back in the sea, engulfed by waves, swimming gracefully away. I stand up, reaching toward Wendell.

“Let’s call the police,” he says, taking my hand.

I squeeze his hand. “I wonder how long the poaching’s been going on.”

He shakes his head. “I thought volunteers guarded the beach during nesting season.”

Wendell is quiet for the rest of the walk back to the cabanas. I sneak a few glances at his face, notice he’s struggling to hold back tears. I lean against him, kiss his cheek. “We’ll figure this out, Wendell.”

There is no room for poachers in our paradise.

A few hours later, I’m lying in the sunshine, an orange glow behind my eyelids, the hammock rocking me. Beneath my cheek, Wendell’s chest is rising and falling with his breathing. We’ve just gone for a swim, and the waves linger inside me, lifting me up and down, up and down. I open an eyelid and see a droplet glistening on Wendell’s skin.

“Hi,” I murmur.

“Hi.” Wendell’s voice is a gravelly whisper, his breath hot on my neck.

I push the sand with my toe, swinging the hammock. He’s been subdued all morning. “Hey, Wendell,” I ask hesitantly, “are you still upset about the poaching?”

He breathes out. “Nothing more we can do about it now. The cops said they’d deal with it. And I emailed my boss at the Turtle Center.” He hesitates, then says, “I don’t know
how to explain it, Z.” He struggles to find words. “It’s like it hurt me—
physically
hurt me—to see all those nests raided.”

I brush a strand of hair from his face. “I should’ve let you go last night. I’m sorry.”

“Not your fault, Z.”

I kiss his cheek. “We’ll make sure it doesn’t happen again. These turtles will be back in a week or so to lay more eggs, right?”

He gives a slight nod.

“We’ll protect them next time,” I assure him.

He makes an effort to smile, changes the subject. “So, Z, what else do you have planned for us in that notebook of yours?”

“Well,” I reply, trying to sound playful, “since you asked … I was thinking we could start looking for a certain J.C.”

He doesn’t look too surprised, not after our conversation last night. “You finally feel ready?”

I take a deep breath. “As ready as I’ll ever be.”

Wendell grazes my cheek with his fingertips. “Hey, remember the muddy speck of hope.” Kissing me, he gives the hammock another push. “Let’s start looking today. It’ll get my mind off those turtles. At least until we hear what the cops find.”

I curl against him, my arm draped over his bare waist. Our skin has darkened to nut-brown, almost indistinguishable from each other’s. Strands of our long hair intermingle, mine marked by reddish highlights.

The past few weeks, inseparable from Wendell, I haven’t
felt the disorientation I usually get during my first month in a new country. All this time together has made life feel like a hammock, cradling me.

I try not to think about his internship, which will start next Monday. It’ll be strange to have him gone every afternoon. Of course, that’s nothing, considering we’ll be spending the next year and a half together, going to college together, spending our whole lives together. Yet there’s a small, scared-little-kid part of me that worries about Wendell venturing out on his own. He could make his own turtle-loving friends, then drift out of my life, like nearly everyone else I’ve ever cared about.

Suddenly, a distant look comes over Wendell’s face, as though he’s staring at something invisible.

My muscles tense. I know this look. All I can do is wait for it to end. I focus on his breathing, my breathing, on the sound of the surf rushing out and in, the caws of seagulls.

After a torturously long minute, his face returns to normal. He sits up, his brows furrowed.

I touch his bare shoulder. “A vision?”

After a moment of hesitation, he nods.

“About?”

He rubs his face, squints at the sea. “You know the rules, Z.”

I close my eyes, attempt to stay calm. I’m one of the only people who knows that he can catch glimpses of the future. For years, he felt helpless, frustrated, at the mercy of his visions. Then, two summers ago, in Ecuador—where Layla and I were living and where Wendell was searching for
his birth family—he found someone who helped him manage his powers. The visions no longer take over his life. He’s learned to let things happen without interfering. And he’ll only share his visions if someone else is in danger.

“It’s not—” I sputter. “I mean, you’re safe, right? You’d tell me if you weren’t?”

He presses his fists to his forehead, then glances at me, his eyes tired. “I don’t know, Z.”

I swallow hard, and despite myself, I ask, “Is it about my father?” I dig my fingernails into my palms. “You’d make an exception, right? If it was about him?”

He gives me a pained look. “Z, please. We agreed.” Holding his head, he stares again at the sea.

He knows he’s everything to me. He knows he needs to stay safe, above all else. Safe and with me. And he knows how much I need to find my father. He’s been there himself.

“All right,” I whisper, wrapping my arms around him. “I trust you.”

Later, Wendell and I trek through the jungle, immersed in green shadows and leaves and rich, dark soil and splashes of bright petals, reds and oranges, explosions of stamens and pistils. Lizards skitter here and there, and every so often an iguana shakes the leaves, crawls up a tree trunk. The humid air presses on us, dense with insect chirps and the intense smell of flowers.

We’ve officially embarked on the search for my father, heading toward our first destination—downtown Mazunte.
To get there, you can either take the dirt road for a kilometer or hike the shorter path through the jungle. We’ve opted for the jungle route, which is cooler and prettier and allows for more kissing along the way.

As we approach the Forbidden Territory, none of the usual jokes come to mind. When we pass the sign reading
TRESPASSERS WILL BE CURSED
I squeeze Wendell’s hand, and he squeezes back.

“Want to trespass?” I whisper.

“Really? You’re not a little freaked out?”

I shrug, regarding the sign. After the bone-chilling noise, it doesn’t seem so much joke-worthy as irritating. And the curious part of me is tempted to forge straight into the dense vegetation, find whatever’s hidden there, reclaim my paradise. “First things first,” I say finally, moving past the sign. “Finding J.C.”

Soon we step out of the forest onto the bright Mazunte beach. A few dozen people are scattered across the blinding sand, most sunbathing or sipping Coronas or wading in the turquoise water. Farther out, people are swimming and surfing. Older local men and women zigzag the stretch of beach, carrying their wares on their backs, chanting in nasal voices, “Hammocks!” “Necklaces!” “Skirts!”

This is the popular beach in the area, where locals and tourists alike gather. Although there are clusters of people here and there, it’s far from crowded; you can easily find solitary little stretches of beach. No one seems to venture away from here to Playa Mermejita, where the leatherbacks nest.
It’s less than a twenty-minute walk from here, yet people appear content where the bikinis and beer are.

“You think the locals have any idea about the poaching?” I ask.

Wendell considers this. “How would they? That beach is deserted.” He steps over a giant wad of seaweed. “It’s a good thing too. There’s no development there, no electric lights to confuse the turtles.”

“Confuse them?”

“The baby turtles always head toward light. For millions of years, the only light came from the sea—the moonlight and starlight on the water. If there were electric lights on the beach, the hatchlings would head in the wrong direction. They’d never make it to the ocean.”

I grab his hand, swing it in mine. “And here I thought the no-electricity thing was just Layla’s excuse to go crazy with candlelight. Now I know she’s just a turtle lover at heart.”

“Yup. Your dad would be proud.”

“Proud?” I watch a flock of gulls that flies up as we approach and settles a safe distance ahead.

“He loves turtles, right? I mean, that’s his nickname.
Tortue
. Turtle. He’d be proud of all the pro-turtle changes since he left.”

I try to imagine how my father would feel, returning after so many years away. Would he feel the same sense of homecoming that I do? Would people welcome him? He left Mazunte to escape something. And he supposedly returned to become the person he wanted to be. What problems did he want to resolve, exactly? What made him leave this paradise?

We turn away from the water and head down a path between buildings to downtown Mazunte. I take a deep breath and brace myself to find the answers.

Downtown Mazunte consists of a single paved street, with a few dirt roads branching off toward the beach. Wendell and I are planning to combine the father search with grocery shopping. Casually questioning market vendors seems easier than approaching strangers cold. And it will give us a chance to get to know the locals better. So far, in our whirlwind of gathering supplies and equipping the cabanas—not to mention lounging in hammocks—we haven’t taken the time to talk to people, introduce ourselves as new members of the community.

“Tortillas,” I say, looking at the scrap of paper holding my grocery list.

Wendell points to the
tortillería
, what must be the source of the delicious toasted-corn smell. Breathing in deep, we buy fresh tortillas from an elderly lady whose white braid is woven with a long silver ribbon. Her face is a friendly mass of wrinkles, her eyes clouded behind cataracts. Despite the oppressive heat, she wears a cardigan and a black shawl. A little radio on the table plays sad, romantic songs, all about love and loss, kisses and graves.

Suddenly, it dawns on me:
I might find my father today. Within the next few hours
. I have his name. It might be as simple as asking directions to his house. Am I ready for this?

BOOK: The Jade Notebook
10.89Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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