"Are we there yet? This is getting very, very serious. I'm not kidding."
"Just hang on," Kagome Higurashi said. "I swear, Sango, you've got the
bladder control of a two-year-old."
Sango Lennox shifted her position in the sizzling hot front seat of
Kagome's battered red Buick convertible. "I /i you to pull over
two Snapples and Poland Springs ago."
"You can pee when we get there." Kagome lowered her shades and smiled. "It
will be your first experience of Ocean City. One of those MasterCard
'priceless' moments."
Kagome was in no mood to stop now, not when they were almost to O.C. Not
when she could already smell the salt and sweat and suntan lotion on the
wind.
The scrub-pine forest that lined the high-way suddenly gave way to sand and
sea grass and Kagome drank in the air. Intoxicating. It was hers, all hers,
all summer. And this time she'd be on her own. No more visits to a rented
beach cottage with her family. No more curfews, no more rules.
And, she thought with sudden wistfulness, no more Inu Yasha.
Maybe it was the hot sun teasing her bare shoulders, maybe it was the
promise of the ocean in the breeze, but the closer she got to Ocean City,
the more she found herself recalling his kisses last summer. Not just any
kisses, either. The slow-burn, take-your-time, lingering kind, the kind
custom-made for a sultry afternoon on the beach. The kind that made you
forget everything except you and him and maybe the sound of the waves
breaking in the distance.
And now, as she headed back to Ocean City, they were all Kagome could
remember of the summer before. The kisses of a guy who was long gone by
now, far away with his own memories of Ocean City.
"Can't you pick up the pace, Kagome?"
Sango's pleading voice snapped Kagome back to reality. "Two more miles,"
Kagome assured her. "I promise."
"That's what you said two miles ago." Sango laced her hands behind her head
and turned her face to the sun. "Next time, I'm riding the 'hound. At least
buses have bathrooms."
"They also have twitching, drooling old men who want to sleep in your lap,"
Kagome added. Sango was your basic first-class-only kind of traveler. Her
parents were quite well off—not polo-playing, butler-hiring wealthy, but
they were rich enough to keep their youngest daughter from ever riding in
something as common as a bus. "When have you ever been on a Greyhound,
anyway?"
"I've seen commercials," Sango said, propping her legs up on the dashboard.
"Besides, a girl can dream, can't she? From now on, I intend to live
dangerously."
/i wasn't the first word that came to mind when Kagome
thought of Sango. Unpredictable, impulsive, a little flaky sometimes, but
Sango was too nice to be a danger to anyone.
Kagome glanced across the seat. Sango had one arm draped outside the care,
her hand open to catch the wind. With the toes of her left foot, she
fiddled with the radio knob, searching for a better station. Her mahogany
skin glistened with a fine sheen of sweat. She was wearing a red tank top,
an orange sarong, and one red flip flop with a pink fabric flower attached
at the toe. Sango had designed this statement-making piece of footwear
herself. She'd made a pair for Kagome, too, but in a more subdued color
combo of brown and tan to match Kagome's wardrobe of hiking shorts and T-
shirts.
That was the difference between them. If Kagome was earth tones, Sango was
all bright colors and swirling energy. She was a talented artist who saw
the world not in simple blues and greens and reds, but in teals and
emeralds and vermilions, a person of sudden decisions and instant
enthusiasms. Sango was sweet and maybe a little sheltered but she had a
rebellious streak Kagome loved. It kept her just unpredictable enough to
make life interesting.
Kagome had never really allowed herself to feel sheltered and safe. She'd
always gone out of her way to look for challenges, from rock climbing, and
skydiving to chasing A's and academic honors.
She was tall, slender, and raven haired, although her hair was beginning to
gain bluish highlights over time from its original ebony black. Her eyes
were clear blue. She thought of them as cool and penetrating, while Sango's
were laughing brown, coy and inviting.
They laughed a lot together, always had, even in tough times, and they'd
been inseparable since they'd met in sixth grade. Kagome had been running
for class president, and Sango had volunteered to make her campaign
posters. Somehow Sango had gotten hold of a giant roll of paper from the
local newspaper and made a fifty foot long ad for Kagome, featuring
everything from wild campaign promises- iTen Bucks for Every A!/i - to
wicked caricatures of the teachers. Kagome had won in a landslide. She'd
always credited Sango's artwork, but Sango maintained that Kagome,
everyone's confidante, everyone's trusted friend, would have won, anyway.
"Close your eyes," Kagome instructed as she rounded the familiar curve.
Across a broad, flat bay was a thin strip of land, covered from end to end
with everything from high-rise condos to tiny wooden cottages. Ocean City.
A last, fragile outpost of land in the huge expanse of shimmering ocean, it
lay before them like a fragile silver of moon in a vast blue-gray sky. It
should have sunk long ago under the weight of all the hotels and
restaurants and well-fed tourists. It was breathtaking and trashy, serene
and wild. And it was theirs for an entire summer.
"Open," Kagome commanded, "And behold paradise."
Sango yanked off her sunglasses. "Whoa," she murmured. "Would you look at
that? 'Ocean City Beach Body Hottie Contest.'" She pointed to a billboard
on the side of the road. Two freshly panted Ken and Barbie types waved at
them seductively.
"That tacky sign is the first thing you notice about your new home?" Kagome
wailed.
"Can you blame me? Did you see the biceps on that poster boy?" Then she
turned her gaze toward the town itself and let out a satisfyingly
impressive gasp. "I didn't know Ocean City was so big."
"It isn't, really," Kate said. "It's long, but at its widest there are only
about four blocks between the bay and they ocean. Of course, on a busy
summer day they do manage to squeeze a hundred people in there, give or
take a few."
"It looks like Oz."
"It /i Oz. Oz with beaches."
"Oz with guys." Sango grinned. "Shirtless, well-muscled guys."
"Oz with intelligent, sensitive men who'll love us for our minds, not just
our...booty."
The girls laughed. "Booty" sounded completely wrong coming out of Kagome's
mouth.
"That's what I like about you," Sango joked, "You lead such a rich fantasy
life."
She reached to crank up the old Beach Boys tune on the radio as they eased
onto the two-mile-long causeway that spanned at the bay. Windsurfers glided
along on either side, and closer to the far shore someone was racing a Jet
Ski, painting curving white wakes on the placid surface of the bay.
i "No!"i Sango suddenly shouted. "The drawbridge is going up!"
Traffic slowed to a stop as the bridge rose toward vertical. "Relax. It
won't take long." Kagome pointed over the side of the bridge. "Look at the
sailboat. It's so quaint."
"This is not quaint," Sango said through clenched teeth. "This is not even
remotely quaint. This is now a matter of life and death and saving what's
left of your upholstery." She pushed open the door and climbed out.
"Can't you hold it for a few more minutes?" Kagome asked with a laugh, just
as an extremely good looking guy in a Jeep pulled to a stop beside them.
"No. I'm going to that Winnebago up there. They have mini-potties.
Traveling cans. What ever you call them."
"A Porta-John," said the guy in the Jeep.
Kagome glanced over just long enough to register a wide grin and a dimple.
She watched, grinning, as Sango hobbled off. The incredible thing was,
Sango would probably talk the people in that house on wheels into letting
her in. Then she'd talk them into making her a quick sandwich, too.
The Winnebago door opened, and an elderly woman in a bright pink sundress
leaned out. Sango spoke with her for a moment, then glanced back and gave
Kagome the thumbs-up.
"Here for the summer?"
Kate turned. The guy had moved over to the passenger's seat of his Jeep. He
was very blond, very tan, very gorgeous. He had on a ratty blue Yale T-
shirt and a pair of wire-rimmed sunglasses. She wondered what color his
eyes were and put her money on green.
"Kouga Daniels." He lowered the shades. Emerald greens. Bingo.
"Kagome." Her last name could wait. He could be an ax murderer, for all she
knew.
"Looks like your friend made it just in time."
"We've been on the road all day," Kagome explained. She wiped her damp
forehead with the back of her arm. With the car standing still, the intense
Jun sun was baking the ragged black seats. Even in her pale blue T-shirt
and frayed cut-offs, she was over-heating. She wished she'd thought to wear
her new bathing suit for the trip.
"So you doing the summer thing in O.C. or just down here for the weekend?"
"I have a job. An internship, really, at a place called Safe Seas."
"Yeah, I've heard of it. The fish people."
"Marine conservation."
"Right. Fish, like I said. I'm guarding with the Beach Patrol."
Her heart picked up speed a little. Inu Yasha had been a life guard last
summer. Kouga might have known him, might even still be in touch with him.
"Did you guard here last summer?"
"Nope. This is my first year."
Kagome felt strangely disappointed until she reminded herself she didn't
care about Inu Yasha anymore. He could be life guarding in Maui and it
wouldn't matter to her.
"I just graduated," Kouga said. He shook his head, as if he couldn't quite
believe it. "Free at last."
Kagome flicked the gold tassel swinging from her review mirror. "Me too."
She pointed towards the Winnebago. "Both of us, actually."
Up ahead the drawbridge finally began to lower. A few cars blared their
horns, a mixture of impatience and celebration. Kagome beeped hers, too,
mostly to get Sango in gear.
"I don't suppose you know anyplace in town to stay, do you?" Kouga asked.
"We're staying in a cottage the Safe Seas people lined up for me." Kouga's
eyes lit up. "But they tell me it's tiny," she added quickly. "Miniscule.
Barely big enough for us. Incredibly—"
"Small," Kouga finished for her. "No prob. I got a late start on house
hunting. And I hear that O.C.'s a total madhouse. By March the whole place
is booked. My family came here for years when I was a kid, and we always
used to reserve a place a year in advance."
Traffic began to move forward. Kagome leaned on her horn and was relieved
to see the Winnebago door open. "Good luck," she yelled to Kouga.
"You too," he said, putting his Jeep into gear.
Sango leaned out the door to the Winnebago, and Kagome drove up to meet
her. Sango hopped in on the left side, into the backseat then bounced up to
the front. As she settled into the seat, Kouga honked and gave a goodbye
wave.
"Jeez, Kagome. I leave you for five minutes and you're already putting the
moves on some poor unsuspecting guy," Sango teased. "You know, I have a
feeling this summer's going to be good for both of us. I'm going to
reinvent myself and in the meantime I'll be here to make sure you have a
life."
Me? I happen to have the most incredible summer job in the world waiting
for me."
"I meant a /i life."
"How about if I just fall in love with my work?"
"You can count only so many fish eggs."
"I i be counting fish eggs, Sango," Kagome replied. Or would she?
She'd been so excited about being selected for an internship at the Safe
Seas Foundation that she'd forgotten to ask for a job description.
Kagome's gaze was drawn to the top of the Ocean City Grand Hotel, the
tallest point on the skyline. It sat on one of the nicest stretches of the
beach—the beach where she'd first met Inu Yasha. The same beach, in fact,
where they'd very nearly made love late one evening after the lights of the
boardwalk were extinguished and the mood had sunk under the horizon.
iThat's all over,/i she reminded herself firmly. He'd moved away, and
she'd moved on. And today was a day for new beginnings.
They picked up steam and rolled over to the top of the drawbridge, the
sweet, salty wind whipping their hair to a frenzy. The city lay at their
feet, the ocean beyond, beckoning like an old fried.
"We're here, Kagome," Sango cried.
"We're free."
"And we're /i
They were finally on their own. Free from families, free from expectations,
free, at last, from high school.
And maybe even free, Kagome hoped, from memories.
