CHAPTER ONE
JAZZ
“Look, Jazz! Dolphins!”
I shield my eyes from the sun as I look where my sister is pointing. Sure enough, there’s a pod of five dolphins playing in the ocean. We’re at the top of the Pacific Place Ferris wheel, so we have an unobstructed view of them riding the waves.
My mom pulls Belle into her side. “What do you think their names are?”
The three of us play this game whenever we spot an animal. Belle insists that all animals have names, even strays or wild ones. My mom waits patiently as she pushes her long, dark hair aside. There’s a light breeze up this high, so she’s continually brushing it away from her face. My hair is in a messy topknot, and Belle wears hers in braids, so we don’t have that problem.
“Hmm...” Belle taps her lips with her index finger, deep in thought. “Sprinkles, Tulip, Petunia, Rainbow Rose, and...Tupac!”
“Do you even know who Tupac is?” Mom’s eyes twinkle in amusement.
“Sure I do,” Belle insists. “Kiara says back in like, the olden days, there was this rapper named Tupac Sugar. Kiara’s mommy grew up listening to his music all the time. Her mama says everyone knows the West Side is the best side!” Belle makes a peculiar hand gesture and somehow stretches that last word into three syllables.
Our mom laughs so hard, tears are welling in her eyes. “Back in the olden days, huh? How old are we talking here?”
“Oh, yeah.” Belle nods her head enthusiastically. “Like, you have to be really, really old to listen to him.”
“Hey!” I protest. “‘California Love’ is one of my go-to old-school jams. I listen to 2Pac, and I’m not old.”
Belle scrunches her little nose. “Uh...yeah, you are. You’re seventeen now. That’s way old.”
I raise my eyebrows. “If I’m so old, what does that make Mom?”
Belle glances up at her. “Really, really, really old. Like the dinosaurs.”
My mom laughs again, tugging on one of Belle’s braids. “Thanks a lot, kid. I can always depend on you to boost my self-esteem when it’s running low.”
There’s an underlying sadness beneath the sarcasm, adding a ring of truth to that statement. I stare at my mom as the wheel descends, wondering how her self-esteem could ever be lacking. Mahalia Rivera is the most beautiful woman I’ve ever met, inside and out. And she just turned thirty-five, which isn’t old at all. When the ride comes to a stop, we exit the bucket and head down the pier.
Mom loops her arm through mine. “Are you ready for your ice cream, birthday girl?”
I smile, my mom on one arm, and Belle on the other. “I’m read—”
“Eighteen-year-old female with penetrating trauma to the left lower abdomen.”
I spin around, wondering where that yelling is coming from. By the time I’ve made a full circle, my mom and sister are gone.
What the hell?
“Mom? Belle? Where’d you go?”
I shoulder my way through the thick crowd of people, looking for them.
“Mom! Belle! Where are you?”
Where could they have gone? They were just here! I tell myself not to panic, maybe Belle had to pee or something. That girl has a bad habit of waiting until she’s about to wet herself before notifying anyone she has to go. I can’t even tell you how many times we’ve had to jump off the bus early to duck into a public restroom. I keep searching, and the more time goes on, the more anxious I become. I check all the bathrooms and still no luck. I’m in tears as the sun begins to set, still unable to find them.
I run from one end of the pier to the other five times, sweating and panting as I take a moment to catch my breath.
“Mom! Please answer me!”
“Multiple contusions...Lungs are clear.”
Who is that?
As the sun dips below the horizon, I finally spot my mom at the opposite end and start sprinting back in that direction. When I reach her, Belle is nowhere to be found, and she has a bizarre look on her face.
“Mom, what’s wrong? Where’d you go? Where’s Belle?”
She smiles softly, brushing her delicate fingers against my cheek. “I love you so much, Jasmine. I’m proud of the woman you’ve become.”
I place my hand over hers. “Uh...thanks. I love you too, Mom. Where’s Belle?”
“It’s not your time yet.” She pulls her hand away. “You’re so much stronger than I ever was. You have to go back and find the truth. Show the world what monsters they truly are.”
My brows pinch together. “You’re not making sense. You’re the