21 Questions: A Novel
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Synopsis
Brock Parker is the new bad boy at school; he deals drugs to the high school clientele for his parents, who work for a Mexican drug lord. Though Brock and Kendra come from two different worlds, sparks fly when they meet at the homecoming dance—their attraction is magnetic. When they start a game of 21 Questions one night, they begin to learn more about each other—and, surprisingly, about themselves too. But some questions aren’t answered with the whole truth; after all, Brock can’t tell Kendra what his parents do for a living.
As Kendra and Brock experience all of life’s most exciting firsts, they prove that even when life throws you the perfect storm, you can make it through and come out stronger than before. 21 Questions is a coming-of-age journey packed with passion and heartbreak, risk and romance.
Release date: August 3, 2021
Publisher: SparkPress
Print pages: 315
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21 Questions: A Novel
Alexandria Rose Rizik
KENDRA
I always knew I wasn’t meant to be a human. I thought of myself more as a mermaid—maybe even closer to a dolphin. But definitely not human. At least that’s how I felt every time my toes touched the water.
Its salty flavor filled my throat as it collapsed over me. It is what it is, I repeated to myself as the overwhelming wave fumbled me around, somersaulting me to shore. It was the mantra I chose when angst tried to creep its way into my mind.
I started to panic as I lay on the sand, trying to catch my breath, eyes shut. Thoughts of doubt cluttered my brain, but I pushed them away, focusing on inhaling and exhaling, reminding myself, I can breathe. The anxiety wasn’t always bad, only sometimes. Never while I was in the water—mostly when the waves plummeted me to shore, forcing me to face reality again.
A shadow cast itself over me. I opened my eyes to find Coach Harkins standing above me, his wet, blond locks dripping onto my face.
“Come on, Ken! You need more explosive maneuvers.”
I sat up and nodded my head. He was right; he was always right. I paused before grabbing my surfboard and heading into the water. The ocean felt like home. If only I had gills, I’d probably never touch the earth’s land again.
I paddled out past a few small waves, then sat on my board waiting for a larger wave to form as Coach Harkins stood on the sand. I took in the sun’s rays beating down on my skin.
“This one, Ken! Come on,” he yelled to me.
I eyed the wave coming toward me, unsure if we were friends, but I knew I could easily introduce myself. The water was the one place I didn’t question myself; there was no time for awkward silences or prying thoughts of uncertainty. I knew how to flow with its currents and tides.
I paddled a ways before hoisting myself onto my board. My adrenaline surged as I attempted to nail a backside air reverse in the water. I could hear Coach Harkins screaming when I landed the move perfectly, my board gliding against the wave and then launching into the air, landing a perfect 360 back down onto the water, surfing the wave to shore.
I walked up the beach where he was waiting for me.
“Rough start, but good work today,” he said.
I was preparing for the quarterfinals in the USA Surfing Prime West.
We always ended practice with a five-minute meditation. Coach taught yoga part time—something he had discovered after a terrible car accident. He’d been drunk driving and was told he’d never be able to walk again, let alone surf. But he’d proved the doctors wrong.
What I admired most about him was his honesty regarding his struggle to become sober. Although it sometimes felt repetitive listening to his frequent lectures on staying away from “that crowd,” I appreciated his sincere concern. But believe me, I knew firsthand all about “that crowd”—they’d been a permanent fixture in my house during most of my childhood, along with the substances they brought and the death of my brother that followed. The thing was, they weren’t bad people. No. They were lost people—at least that’s how my dad always explained it.
Coach was the one who introduced me to meditation, and it changed my entire mindset. My dad had tried family counseling and shrinks—one who diagnosed me with a type of anxiety called panic disorder. They even put me on a small dose of medicine for a while when I was twelve, but it didn’t work. The side effects were too overwhelming—nausea, joint pains to the point where I couldn’t even surf. But the worst were the night terrors. Thankfully, I met Coach, and he sparked my interest in utilizing the Eastern approach to managing anxiety. Not just in surfing, but in most aspects of life, from school to just overall facing daily fears. I used to have panic attacks quite often, but learning how to control my breath really changed things for me. I didn’t think it would ever be truly cured, but at least it could be managed.
Coach and I sat across from one another on the sand in a shaded area. My eyes fell upon his throat where a trach scar from his accident remained. Coach seemed like a completely different person than he was before, from the stories he’d told me. It’s weird to think though that scars are always there to remind you of who you once were.
“All right, close your eyes,” he said.
I closed my eyes, focusing in on my third-eye chakra, trying to clear my mind of worrying about school and everything I had to do. It took me out of my head and into the moment.
“I want you to take a deep inhale through your nose for five seconds,” he guided me. I inhaled. “Now hold that breath for five seconds … three, two, one, and exhale for five.”
I let out a heavy breath through my nose. I could feel it in the back of my throat as we repeated the exercise. It felt good. I began to feel lighter, my body naturally and unconsciously swaying back and forth as if I was going to float away.
“Exhale an audible breath out of your mouth,” he said.
I sighed as I let my breath go.
“Remember you can always come back to this place. Whenever your mind wanders away, come back to the breath. It allows you to be present—and really, life can only exist here in this moment. So, live it. Breathe it. Be it.”
I welcomed the smile peeking through as Coach’s words resonated with me.
“Gently open your eyes, Ken.”
I slowly allowed my eyes to open, the sun somewhat overwhelming. I caught sight of the hills covered in houses beyond the fog. Laguna Beach was magical, especially in the morning.
“How do you feel?”
“Amazing.”
Coach stood up and stuck out his hand for me to grab. I held on as I lifted my calm body back up. I was in a whole different space. I stood there, taking in the breeze. The ocean. The sun. The sand between my toes. Everything around me.
What I loved most about my bike rides home in the morning was watching all the cafés open up down South Coast Highway. I loved the smell of coffee brewing and the sound of forks clinking against plates. I could hear the waves crashing from a distance, the ocean calling me to come back with every crash and roll of its tides. What I would’ve given to be able to surf all day, every day.
My stomach gurgled as I passed by all of the bakeries tempting me with their fresh pastries sitting in the front windows. I was famished.
Thankfully, when I got home, there was food waiting on the table.
“How was practice, doll?” Harry asked.
Harry was my dad’s fiancé and, in a sense, a maternal figure—being that I didn’t have one. I mean, he took responsibility for all the obligations that a mother would normally have.
“It was good. I’m starved.”
I devoured the food—I swear I could have eaten the plate itself. Harry handed me a glass of orange juice as his phone rang. He checked the caller ID and silenced the call.
“It’s Zola … too early to talk business.”
Zola was an old friend of Harry’s who he’d met back in cosmetology school when they were in their twenties. Now they were opening up their own salon together.
“Have you told your parents yet?” I asked.
“About the salon?” He shook his head, clearing his throat as he redirected his gaze to the ground. I felt bad for bringing it up.
“They won’t talk to me, Ken. You know that.”
I nodded.
Harry’s parents were very old school and could never quite come to terms with the whole “gay” thing. They thought my dad and Harry were destined to go to h-e-double-hockey-stick—total opposite of my dad’s parents. And no, I didn’t cuss. I know I was sixteen and that seemed weird, but I just didn’t like it. When I heard other people swear, it sounded so vulgar and dirty. I tried to do everything the opposite of my brother, except for surfing. He swore a lot.
My dad walked in the house from his morning run, sweat dripping from his naked head down to his nose.
“Morning, sweetheart.” He greeted me with a kiss on the forehead.
“Hi, Dad.”
He walked over to Harry and gave him a kiss.
“Bruce, we need more bacon.”
“I thought you went vegan?” he asked as he replaced his prescription sunglasses with his regular bifocals.
“Yeah, that didn’t work out too well,” Harry said, stuffing a steaming hot sausage into his mouth.
My dad laughed. Harry went through many phases; last week he bought a ten-class package for a Pilates studio. He went one time and was too sore to even sit the next day, so he decided that the owner was a “narcissistic b-word” and that Pilates was a total scam. In his words: “Working out is supposed to invigorate you, not disintegrate you.”
Skittles, my Pomeranian, ran into the room, barking.
“Morning, Skittles!” I fed her a sausage.
“Ken, no human food,” Harry lectured. “She’ll shit all over the house, and I’m the one who has to clean it while you’re at school.”
“Speaking of school, I have to go or I’m going to be late.”
I threw my bag into the basket of my bike and started for school. When I got there, all my friends were sitting in the courtyard.
“Hey, Ken!” Ashleigh came up and hugged me. I noticed she was wearing the bracelet I got her for her last birthday.
“Cute bracelet. Who got you that?” I teased.
“Some bitch.”
We walked over to the rest of our group. They were all circled around Ashleigh’s boyfriend, Ashton, and one of his soccer teammates. The two of them had their fingers pressed up against each other’s necks.
“Uh, what are they doing?” Ashleigh yelled.
“Playing the pass-out game,” our friend Taylor replied.
“They’re going to hurt themselves!” Tiny Ashleigh walked into the middle of the circle and pushed them apart. Ashton accidentally hit her in the face when he jerked his hand back.
“Ashton! My nose!” she said, flipping out. Ashleigh swore that her only insecurity in life was her nose. She thought it was too big for the rest of her face. But I didn’t see it. I mean, maybe. The only flaw I could see in it, really, was a small bump that she said was from breaking it as a child. “Please, it’s already big enough!”
“What are you doing, Ash?” Ashton snapped. I used to tease them and refer to them as Ash Squared, but they didn’t get it. I personally thought it was adorable.
“You’re going to kill each other, dumbass!” she scolded him. Ashleigh was like one of those Chihuahuas that thought she was a pit bull. Something that I wish I had more of in me. But I was more reserved. I guess we balanced each other out.
“It’s just a game! You don’t need to always butt in.”
“Annoying bitch,” Ashton’s teammate muffled under his breath. Ashton and Ashleigh jerked their heads toward him.
“Hey!” Ashleigh whined.
“Don’t call her that again, dick,” Ashton defended her. “Or I’ll make you pass out for real, next time.”
The first bell of the day rang, giving us five minutes to get to our classes.
“Shit, I can’t be late for chem again. See you at lunch, Ash.” Ashton grabbed his bag, running off to class. He and Ashleigh had been dating on and off since we were in eighth grade. We’d all had pre-algebra together with Miss Benson. Ashton used the back of his pop quiz to write her a note asking that she meet him at the park after school—he said he knew he was going to fail the quiz anyway, so he didn’t even bother turning it in. Of course, she made me tag along. They made out on top of the monkey bars, and I’d been third wheeling ever since.
Ashleigh and I walked inside together. Lockers lined the hallway.
“Are we doing a limo for homecoming?” she asked.
“I don’t even have a date—”
“Ken, you’re not backing out. Sorry. Not allowed.”
I had hoped that I’d somehow be able to get out of going to the dance. I don’t know why I’d even agreed in the first place. I would rather be surfing than at some school dance I wouldn’t even remember in a few years.
“I know, I know,” I said as I pulled The Great Gatsby and my study guide out of my bag. “I’ll see you later.”
I opened the door to my English class; only four other people were there so far. No one usually showed up until a minute before the late bell rang. I liked to be extra early, as just the thought of walking in late with a bunch of people already seated gave me heart palpitations. Mr. Paul sat on his desk at the front of the room, shuffling through his papers.
“Morning, Mr. Paul.”
“Hello, Miss Dimes,” he greeted me.
A few more of my classmates scattered in. I opened up The Great Gatsby to where my bookmark was stuffed between the end of chapter eight and the beginning of chapter nine. I skimmed through chapter nine as the door opened and twenty-something other people boisterously entered the room. The late bell rang as they took their seats.
“All right, everyone, settle down, please.” Mr. Paul tried to be calm, but I could see his face flush, and he did this thing when he’d get angry where his chin jutted out.
When everyone sat down and faced the front of the room, Mr. Paul stood up.
“I hope you all brought your books and study guides. We’re going to review chapter five and then go over the study questions.”
“Can I look at your book with you?” Michael Bradley asked me.
“Yeah. Sure.”
I scooted my desk closer to his so he could see. He smelled like a mix of BO and peanut butter, but I didn’t want to offend him—I decided the only solution would be to breathe through my mouth for the rest of the period. It wasn’t his fault he had football practice before first period. Michael and I had a lot of classes together throughout high school, but I didn’t know much about him except that he was on the football team. I’d always been good at keeping people at arm’s length. The closest friend I had was Ashleigh, although even she didn’t know my past. No one in Laguna did.
“We saw a lot of themes coming out in this chapter. The theme of social class was a big one.” Mr. Paul went on for a good forty minutes talking about social class during the 1920s while Michael was basically asleep on my lap.
When I looked up at the clock—which Mr. Paul insisted had to be analog because “these days, teenagers just have it too easy”—there were barely two minutes left of class. I drew the conclusion that time flew by when you read ahead.
“All right. Before I let you go, I want to cover a few of the symbols. One that stuck out was the green light.” Mr. Paul glided between the aisles of desks.
“Miss Dimes, what would you say is significant about the green light?” he asked me.
“The green light represents a couple of things, one mainly being Gatsby’s hopes for the future—”
The bell interrupted my train of thought. Michael jumped up out of his sleep, drool hanging from his mouth. Everyone swiftly packed up their bags, ready to bolt for the door.
“Hold on there! The bell doesn’t release you, I do,” Mr. Paul said.
The class settled back into their seats.
“Remember to read chapters six through nine this weekend.”
He paused, looking around the room.
“You’re free to go.”
Everybody darted out of the room as I took my time gathering my things up and placing them into my bag.
“Thanks for letting me use your book, Ken.” Michael smiled and winked at me.
I smiled back. “No problem.”
As Michael started for the door, a mint container fell from his bag. I picked it up and hurried to his side. It was one of those red tin Altoids packs.
“Hey, you dropped these.”
“Oh,” he said, quickly taking the small container from me and shoving it back in the front pocket of his bag. I couldn’t help but notice the way his face went blank. “Thanks.”
He rushed out of the room without another word.
I turned back around to grab my bag from the desk and headed for the door. It was a relief to breathe out of my nose again.
“Good job, Miss Dimes,” Mr. Paul said as I passed his desk.
“Thanks. Have a nice day.”
BROCK
I hated Thursdays—they were so close to Friday but not close enough. I mean, it almost seemed like a pointless day, like the word um—why not just get to the point? The fucking weekend.
I let my cigarette hang from my mouth as I strummed a cord on my Fender—it was one of several guitars that hung along my walls. It wasn’t my favorite, but it was still a beautiful piece—a ’65 Stratocaster.
My thoughts drifted with the sound of each note.
Fuck school, my mind sang to the melody as I noticed the time on the clock; punctuality wasn’t my forte. Then again, nothing that required structure really suited me well.
All teachers ever did was talk, talk, talk, blah, blah, bullshit. They never let us speak, only expected us to listen to their textbook theories on nothing. Music spoke and listened. It was a mentor and a student. It spoke a language that anyone could understand, and it understood what people had to say when they couldn’t speak at all.
I was running so late that when I finally did decide to make it to second period, I figured stopping for a coffee wouldn’t matter. I pulled up to the drive-through and ordered my usual: a hot coffee with a tablespoon of cinnamon, four sugars, and a quarter cup of cream. There was nothing better after smoking a morning bowl. It was, like, an odd counter-buzz.
I pulled up to school just as the bell rang, releasing everyone from their first-period classes. Before I got out of my car, I squeezed a drop of Visine in each eye. As I was walking through the courtyard to the front doors, Billy, the security guard, stopped me.
“You need to go through the office to get a tardy slip.”
“Come on. Really, Bill?”
“Really.”
I looked him up and down; he was your typical high school security guard. He was tatted from his neck down. He was probably in his mid-fifties and most likely just got out of jail or rehab. His potbelly stuck out past his toes, and his beard was full of cracker crumbs from the night before. I put my hand on his shoulder, looking him straight in the eye.
Without changing my gaze, I reached into my pocket and pulled out a bag of coke. There wasn’t much in it, and it was cheap shit anyway. I was going to use it up later or try and pawn it off to this fucking nerd in my math class in exchange for completing my late homework.
I dangled the bag in front of Billy’s face.
“This will be yours for free, if you let me through.”
His eyes widened a little.
“What?” he said, playing dumb.
“Billy,” I started, “how long you been clean for?”
“What? How would you know I—”
“You have the chemical compound for coke on your calf and sober tatted on your wrist.”
His eyes were wandering all over the place until he snatched the bag out of my hand and stuffed it in his coat pocket. I proceeded to the doors. That was even easier than I anticipated.
“Have a nice day, Billy.”
When I walked into school, it was still passing period.
“Hey, babe.” Annie slapped my ass as she walked by.
I wanted to fuck her right then and there.
“You want to ditch second?” she asked as she stuffed something into my pocket. I reached in and felt a condom wrapper. One more period wouldn’t hurt.
We walked outside, passed the football field, and headed for the baseball diamond. No one used it during school hours. We sat on top of the bleachers and started making out. She lay down and I lay on top of her. I unbuttoned her jeans as she worked her lips down my neck and pulled down my pants.
“I’m about to blow your mind,” she whispered as she grabbed ahold of my most vital of organs. I was so hard. She worked her mouth down my chest to my stomach and then all the way. She knew all sorts of tricks—tricks I was more than willing to let her demonstrate on me.
She looked at me as she did her thing. It really turned me on when she kept my gaze like that. It was a sign of confidence.
She smiled this half grin that said, Please fuck me.
“Sit up, babe.” She did as I said.
I quickly put the condom on.
She rode me fast and hard.
“Ah! You’re so sexy, baby!” she cried. I had her moaning and groaning so loud that Billy came rushing over to the diamond. When he saw it was me, he turned around and ran off.
A whole class period worth of bleacher boning later, we finished.
I threw the condom in the bushes as she put her pants back on. I pulled my pipe out of my pocket along with a small bag of pot, lighting it up and taking in a long hit before handing it to Annie.
“You going to homecoming?” she asked me, taking a second hit.
“I guess so. Are you?”
“Yeah. I’m taking this kid from Saddleback.”
“Cool.”
She handed me the pipe. The good thing about Annie was that there were no strings attached. I wasn’t big into commitments—they made me feel suffocated. The last time I had a girlfriend was in the eighth grade, and it lasted two weeks. I ended up hooking up with her older sister. The thing was it wasn’t like I was a bad boyfriend. I just made out with other people sometimes.
“I’ve got to get going to class. See you later.”
“All right.”
She grabbed her bag and walked back toward the main building. As I took another hit, my phone went off. It was a text from my mom.
Call me.
I grabbed my bag and headed to my third-period class as I called my mom, taking one last hit for good luck.
The rest of the day went by super fucking slow, even though I ended up ditching two of my other classes. I went to my last period, though, music class. It was the only class I bothered to go to really—and the only one I enjoyed. Mr. Brawling was a bad ass, and he didn’t give a shit about much. Like me. Plus, he never assigned homework, so he was automatically my favorite.
Today, he let me sit in the hallway and mess around on his custom Fender, while he played The Godfather in class and lectured on about the film score. The Fender had his last name written along the neck and everything.
We got to talking after class. He told me the guitar was from his rock band days when he toured in his twenties and Fender sponsored him. He seemed way too cool to be a teacher.
“You seem very passionate about music, Brock,” he said to me as I started for the classroom door.
“Thanks. I am.”
I may have loved music, but it was just a hobby. A passion as Mr. Brawling put it. But drugs and selling them were my world.
KENDRA
Friday wasn’t my favorite, especially this Friday. Homecoming was tomorrow, and the thought of dancing—in public, mind you—made my palms sweat.
I walked out of history, my brain throbbing.
“Hey, Ken.”
I looked to my right—Jason Wells was at my side.
“Hi, Jason,” I said as we continued down the hallway.
Jason was a super-senior and captain of the football team. To most girls, he was the hottest thing to walk Planet Earth. He wore a frequent tan—the result of many days at his mother’s tanning salon—that made his blond hair look even lighter. He had perfect teeth and perfect biceps. Everything he did was perfect really, minus his grades. I guess you can’t have it all, right?
“Did you write down the trig homework? I wasn’t in class.”
“Yep. I’ll give it to you later.”
“Sweet. You excited for the dance tomorrow night?”
“Duh! Are you?” I lied.
“For sure. But I have a problem that I think you can help me with.”
We left the building along with the rest of Laguna Tides High School, everyone heading for their cars.
“What’s that?”
“I don’t have a date.”
“Isn’t it a little late to try and score a date?”
“Yeah, totally. That’s why I need your help.”
“Most of the girls I know have dates, but maybe—”
“We could go together?”
My heart fell. Jason and I? We were just friends—and I wanted to keep it like that. He was cute and all, but I don’t know … he was Jason. He flirted with anything that crossed his path. Plus, I knew he only wanted me to go with him because I’d never hooked up with him before. Supposedly he and the rest of the football team had a bet going on to see who could hook up with the entire junior and/or senior class first—and I wasn’t about to be the girl who helped him win. At least, that was the story Ashleigh gave me, and usually her stories were only 50 percent accurate. The other half seemed to be lost or distorted through a game of telephone. But still …
“Oh, you wanted to go together?” I restated, the heightened pitch of my voice evident.
“Well, I figured since neither of us have a date and all.”
I quickly searched my mind as if it was a filing cabinet and I had to scan all of the documents labeled “Excuses.”
“That’s nice of you to ask but … it’s just such short notice.” Lame excuse, I know, but it was all I could think of when he put me on the spot like that.
“Y-yeah, I get it,” he stuttered. His bicep flexed as he scratched the back of his head, almost confused that I’d turned down a date with him. He was probably surprised. No one else in the whole school would reject the chance to be with Jason. ..
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