eBook - ePub
Summer's Edge
About this book
“Absolutely enthralling and genuinely terrifying.” —Kit Frick, author of I Killed Zoe Spanos and Very Bad People
I Know What You Did Last Summer meets The Haunting of Hill House in this “psychologically chilling and unforgettable” (Kirkus Reviews) teen thriller following an estranged group of friends being haunted by their friend who died last summer.
Emily Joiner was once part of an inseparable group—she was a sister, a best friend, a lover, and a rival. Summers without Emily were unthinkable. Until the fire burned the lake house to ashes with her inside.
A year later, it’s in Emily’s honor that Chelsea and her four friends decide to return. The house awaits them, meticulously rebuilt. Only, Chelsea is haunted by ghostly visions. Loner Ryan stirs up old hurts and forces golden boy Chase to play peacemaker. Which has perfect hostess Kennedy on edge as eerie events culminate in a stunning accusation: Emily’s death wasn’t an accident. And all the clues needed to find the person responsible are right here.
As old betrayals rise to the surface, Chelsea and her friends have one night to unravel a mystery spanning three summers before a killer among them exacts their revenge.
I Know What You Did Last Summer meets The Haunting of Hill House in this “psychologically chilling and unforgettable” (Kirkus Reviews) teen thriller following an estranged group of friends being haunted by their friend who died last summer.
Emily Joiner was once part of an inseparable group—she was a sister, a best friend, a lover, and a rival. Summers without Emily were unthinkable. Until the fire burned the lake house to ashes with her inside.
A year later, it’s in Emily’s honor that Chelsea and her four friends decide to return. The house awaits them, meticulously rebuilt. Only, Chelsea is haunted by ghostly visions. Loner Ryan stirs up old hurts and forces golden boy Chase to play peacemaker. Which has perfect hostess Kennedy on edge as eerie events culminate in a stunning accusation: Emily’s death wasn’t an accident. And all the clues needed to find the person responsible are right here.
As old betrayals rise to the surface, Chelsea and her friends have one night to unravel a mystery spanning three summers before a killer among them exacts their revenge.
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Yes, you can access Summer's Edge by Dana Mele in PDF and/or ePUB format. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Year
2022Print ISBN
9781534493124eBook ISBN
9781534493131SUMMER OF EGRETS Present Chelsea 1
The lake house hasnāt changed in the ninety-one years of its distinguished existence. Solid, stately, a relic of the Rockefeller and Durant era, it has survived three hurricanes, countless termite infestations, and a flood. Itās survived death itself. A bold claim if you can make it, but in this case, it happens to be true. Last summer, it burned to ashes with Emily Joiner trapped inside, and it was simply resurrected in its own image by its benefactors. Itās indestructible. Impervious to death and all that nature and beyond can summon. Iāve always thought of the lake house as a special place, but as I stare up at it, risen from ruin a year after its demise, the word that comes to mind is miraculous.
Has it really been a year?
To the day.
I pull the stiff, custom-made postcard from the pocket of my faded army-green capris, a pair that Emily designed herself. On the front of the card is a gorgeous snapshot of the house. It was built in the Adirondack architecture styleāa million-dollar mansion with a rustic stacked-log-and-stone aesthetic, a wraparound porch featuring delicate columns of hand-carved trees with branches winding up to the roof, and a sculpted arch of briar framing the door. Out back is a killer view of Lake George, a serene little corner exclusive to the handful of neighbors scattered sparsely along the coast. Completely secluded by majestic pines, the lake house is something out of a fairy tale, a lone cottage in a deep dark forest.
I do think it gets lonely. I would.
The house is in its own little world, buffered from civilization by the wilderness and a strict back-to-nature philosophyāno internet, no cable, no Netflix, satellite, or cell service; just peace, quiet, sun, swimming, boating, and plenty of misbehavior. Itās been our summer haven for the past ten years. Me; Emily; our best friend and my ex-girlfriend, Kennedy; Emilyās twin brother, Ryan; his best friend, Chase; and as of two years ago, Chaseās girlfriend, Mila. Last year should have been the last year because that was the year of the fire. The year we took things too far. The Summer of Swans. The year Emily died.
But then, the postcard came.
I flip it over and read it again. Itās a hot day, and my car is like an oven. It only takes the interior of a car about half an hour to reach a deadly temperature when itās in the mid-sixties outside. The gauge on my dashboard reads 81. I pull back the dark frizzy curls clinging to my neck and twist them into a bun on top of my head, yank the keys out of the ignition, and kick the car door open. A cool breeze sweeps off the lake and touches my face, fluttering my T-shirt against my skin. Itās like a blessing from the lake gods. The sound of wind chimes rings softly, an arrangement of notes both strange and familiar, like a music-box song. I imagine the sound of my name in my ear, a whisper in the breeze. I am home. I take my sunglasses off and close my eyes, shutting out the light, and allow the delicious air to wash over me. The scent of pine and soft earth. The promise of cool, clear water on my skin. The taste of freshly caught fish, charred on the grill; gooey marshmallow, melted chocolate; Kennedyās lips, sweet with white wine. Our voices, laughing, swirled around bonfire smoke.
Jesus. I open my eyes, and the bright sunlight makes me dizzy. Charred. Smoke. Just thinking the words gives me a sense of vertigo, even now. My mouth feels bitter, full of bile, and the phantom smell of smoke stings my nostrils and makes my eyes water. How could I think about fire in that way, here of all places, today of all days? Where Emily died. Where her bones were burned black.
I donāt know that for a fact. She may have asphyxiated. The rest of us were assembled on the lawn, in shock, immobile, separated from Emily. My parents wouldnāt let me know the details. I havenāt been allowed to find out for myself. Itās been a nightmare of a year. A year without my friends. A year without any friends. Any fun. Of seclusion, doctors, fucking arts and crafts and therapy animals. Which, yes, theyāre cute, but itās insulting. Five minutes petting a golden retriever before heās ushered away into the next room does not repair an unquiet mind.
And witnessing your best friend die because of something you didāor didnāt doāis as disquieting as it gets.
Youāre asking, okay, yeah, why go back, then.
The answer is opening the door.
āYou came,ā Kennedy says. She lingers in the doorway, holding a frosted glass with a lemon wedge stuck on top. Her long, copper hair hangs loosely around her sunburned shoulders; I can see a navy swimsuit strap underneath her pale blue sundress.
I hold up the postcard wordlessly, then glance down at it again.
One last night, before we all go.
The Hartford Cabin.
June 17th.
Or what was it all for?
The card stock is thick and creamy, the kind they use for wedding invitations. Expensive-looking. The words are handwritten in a deep, watery blue; a practiced, whimsical scrawl so light and airy it seems to dance off the postcard. I recognize it instantly. Itās Marilyn Monroeās handwriting. More accurately, itās Kennedy Ellis Hartfordās best imitation. Kennedy, in some bizarre, ironic twist, has been inexplicably obsessed with Marilyn since we were in kindergarten.
I havenāt spoken to Kennedy for a year. I shouldnāt be grinning at her, my body filling with lightness, the soles of my feet starting to bounce involuntarily like this is the reunion I want it to be. I have so many questions. Why did she leave things the way she did? What the hell was she thinking, inviting me back to the house that burned down with Emily trapped inside? And is this a private party, or was everyone else invited?
I think in the end, I had no choice. I had to come. There was no other way to get closure after how things ended. And I need that. After a year of mantras and painting and snuggling with furry animals, I need closure like a motherfucker.
āChelsea.ā Kennedy waves me over.
I resist the urge to run to her, and open the car door, taking my time retrieving my bags, then walk the gravel driveway slowly, pebbles crunching under my sandals. āNo Beamer. Are your parents on a supply run?ā
āThey couldnāt make it.ā She presses the glass to her forehead. One luxury the lake house does not have is air-conditioning. Her parents insist on some semblance of authenticity, of getting back to nature, hence the lack of technology. A whole summer of it would be torturous. But itās a weekend home. And it was always worth unplugging now and then to get away from the noise and politics of high school and my summer job at the mall, peddling fast food along with half the rising junior class. Until now. Now, I have the awkward task of plugging back into my friendsā lives.
Kennedy sets her drink down on the porch railing and gathers me into a hug. Itās odd. I expected a burst of emotion, an apology maybe, some swelling moment of⦠something. Like maybe weād broken up suddenly in the midst of a horrible tragedy and hadnāt spoken for an entire year. This should be a poignant moment in the story of us. Instead, itās like we just saw each other a couple of days ago, around when the last day of school would have been, and now here we are, where weād be every year, first weekend of the summer, always the first to arrive.
I press my cheek into her hair and close my eyes. Any other year, this time, Emily would have been standing behind me, politely waiting her turn, Ryan faded somewhere in the background, digging their luggage from the car. Emily was never one to pack lightly, even for a weekend trip. Kennedyās parents would be inside, her father strutting around in a too-tight swimsuit, juggling a craft beer and fishing pole, her mother mixing up ice-cold pitchers of lemonade and sangria.
A cloud moves over the sun, and I lift my eyes to the single window on the third floor, the attic window. I picture Emily inside, and for a moment, I see her pale face looking back at me. The sun returns from the cloud cover, and the sudden blaze of light burns spots into my eyes. I press my palms against them, blinking hard against the aching sensation and the momentary panic fluttering in my chest. When my vision clears, sheās gone. Just a trick of the light.
āCome in,ā Kennedy says, but her voice is drowned out by the sound of a second car winding its way down the long gravel driveway. I turn to see whoās here. Chaseās jeep screeches to a halt and he bursts out, beaming like a supernova, and before I can even get a word out, Iām swept up into a crushing bear hug.
āItās been too long, kid,ā he says with affection. Chase smells like summertime, salt and sunscreen and slushies. His attention turns to Kennedy before Iāve caught my breath. Chase is warm, genuine, a true friend, but his attention is difficult to hold.
So it wonāt be just Kennedy and me this weekend. That makes sense. The lake house isnāt a romantic getaway. Any romance by the lake is as private and intimate as the secrets told here: kept among friends, and youāre never truly alone. Thereās nowhere to hide in this house. Still, I canāt help a little sigh of disappointment. I want to talk about what happened. Not just with regard to Emily, although I want to talk about that, too. Someone needs to talk about that. But I also want to talk about what happened with us. It wasnāt fair to leave things the way Kennedy did. Silence is worse than the cruelest words, because it leaves room for hope, even when logically, there is none. Goodbyes are messy, and Kennedy hates a mess. But I needed her this past year. I would have assumed she needed me too. But Kennedy doesnāt need anyone. Sheās made that clear with her radio silence. I just thought I was different. I know I was. Until the night of the fire.
A shiver runs through me at the thought, because seeing Kennedy and Chase again in this place, in the shadow of the lake house, surrounded by the whispering pines and under the watchful eye of the summer sun, feels too familiar. Like nothing has changed, Emily is still here with us, and we havenāt learned a thing.
2
Can you hear me?
I hope so.
Iāve been so lonely this past year.
3
By the time everyone has arrived, itās nearly sunset. Iāve settled myself into the old hammock with the rusty chain on the screened-in sundeck with a dozen pillows and a battered copy of Murder on the Orient Express. Chase is off in the game room playing Ping-Pong with Mila, who arrived in a lime-green barely-there bikini and is still wearing just that, although the temperature has dropped considerably. Kennedy is whipping up some spaghetti and pesto with fresh basil from the herb garden, and Ryan has just arrived, uncharacteristically late. I see Kennedyās shoulders tense as he passes through the kitchen before he reaches my side. He settles down in a beach chair across from me, silhouetted against the screen panel, a shadow figure against the brilliant painted backdrop of pink and purple sky over the dark, still water. I struggle to raise my eyes to look at him. Emilyās twin, her other half. The guilt I feel just thinking about him is overwhelming.
āAm I interrupting?ā he asks.
āOf course not.ā I put the book down and struggle to sit up. Itās easy to sink into the ancient hammock and get impossibly tangled.
He hugs me awkwardly. Ryan is all angles and few lines. Itās hard to find a comfortable spot to hug. Thereās always a sharp bone jutting out, a shoulder in my throat, a hip in my thigh. I donāt know how he manages to arrange himself in that way. Heās skinny, but so was Emily, and she was a great hugger. A clinger at times. Ryan never quite got the hang of it.
āHowās things?ā He relaxes back into the chair, and I hover over him for a moment, directionless. Iām not going to sink back into the hammock.
āYou know.ā Itās hard to casually talk about the past year I spent in a psych hospital. Or his, mourning his sister. The one I left behind to die. All the words we havenāt said, paperweights. There are few casual details among us. But I can see how hard heās trying to make this all normal, and I appreciate it. āHanging in there.ā
He studies the hammock, the intricate tangle of rope, and the rest of the room. āThey did an excellent job.ā
They did. The whole building burned to ash, and Kennedyās family took pains to recreate it almost flawlessly. Itās difficult to find even a single detail out of place. But thatās the Hartfords. Stubborn, perfectionist, traditional. They wouldnāt let a fire, not even a tragedy, ruin the vacation home built by Kennedyās great-grandfather. One terrible memory of an event that Kennedyās parents didnāt even witness doesnāt outweigh four generations of pleasant ones. I wasnāt surprised that they rebuilt the house. Itās perfectly in character for the Hartfords.
It does make you wonder if thereās more to the restoration than appearancesāif there were some things the Hartfords wanted to stay buried. The demolition and reconstruction of the house left no evidence, no trace of the fire. And although they werenāt at the lake house that weekend, it was their house. Iām sure of one thing: If there was some code violation or structural flaw that contributed to the fire in the slightest, it will stay buried. Because Mr. Hartford, distinguished attorney, senior partner at Weston Hartford, would never admit to even the passing appearance of fault.
Itās where Kennedy gets it.
āHow are things going at home?ā I ask tentatively. āIām sorry I havenāt sent a card or anything.ā
āI understand. I know it hasnāt been an easy year for you, either.ā
āIt hasnāt.ā Such a delicate way of putting it. But Iāll allow it. Ryan is the only one who doesnāt make me feel like a weirdo. That means a lot these days. āHow are your parents doing?ā
He sighs. āI honestly have no idea. Theyāre so completely closed off itās pointless trying to talk to them. But the truth is, they were that way even before the fire.ā He glances at me out of the corner of his eye. āWhat about⦠your situation?ā
I laugh. āSmashing.ā
āYou donāt have to talk about it,ā Ryan says. āI donāt mean to bring up bad memories.ā
āOther people have it worse, you know?ā I really canāt complain to Ryan after all heās been through. I had the same issue in group therapy, where Iād sit frozen to the tiny cold plastic chairs, lips sealed, silently waiting out all these horror stories about lives way worse than mine. I felt like I didnāt deserve to speak. All I did was get out of the lake house alive. After the tragedy, I was afraid to sleep. I drank vats of caffeine. Stood for hours in icy showe...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 4
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 7
- Chapter 8
- Chapter 9
- Chapter 10
- Chapter 11
- Chapter 12
- Chapter 13
- Chapter 14
- Chapter 15
- Chapter 16
- Chapter 17
- Chapter 18
- Chapter 19
- Chapter 20
- Chapter 21
- Chapter 22
- Chapter 23
- Chapter 24
- Chapter 25
- Chapter 26
- Chapter 27
- Chapter 28
- Chapter 29
- Chapter 30
- Chapter 31
- Chapter 32
- Chapter 33
- Chapter 34
- Chapter 35
- Chapter 36
- Chapter 37
- Chapter 38
- Chapter 39
- Chapter 40
- Chapter 41
- Chapter 42
- Chapter 43
- Chapter 44
- Chapter 45
- Chapter 46
- Chapter 47
- Chapter 48
- Chapter 49
- Epilogue: Emily
- Acknowledgments
- About the Author
- Copyright
