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Hannah Moskowitz

Teeth


2013. 288 S. f-c matte lam cvr w- no SFX. 209.55 mm
Verlag/Jahr: SIMON & SCHUSTER US; SIMON PULSE 2013
ISBN: 1-442-44946-2 (1442449462)
Neue ISBN: 978-1-442-44946-6 (9781442449466)

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A gritty, romantic modern fairy tale from the author of Break and Gone, Gone, Gone .

Be careful what you believe in.

Rudyīs life is flipped upside-down when his family moves to a remote island in a last attempt to save his sick younger brother. With nothing to do but worry, Rudy sinks deeper and deeper into loneliness and lies awake at night listening to the screams of the ocean beneath his familyīs rickety house.

Then he meets Diana, who makes him wonder what he even knows about love, and Teeth, who makes him question what he knows about anything. Rudy canīt remember the last time he felt so connected to someone, but being friends with Teeth is more than a little bit complicated. He soon learns that Teeth has terrible secrets. Violent secrets. Secrets that will force Rudy to choose between his own happiness and his brotherīs life.
one

AT NIGHT THE OCEAN IS SO LOUD AND SO CLOSE THAT I LIE awake, sure itīs going to beat against the houseīs supports until we all crumble onto the rocks and break into pieces. Our house is creaky, gray, weather stained. Itīs probably held a dozen desperate families who found their cure and left before weīd even heard about this island.

We are a groan away from a watery death, and weīll all drown without even waking up, because weīre so used to sleeping through unrelenting noise.

Sometimes I draw. Usually I keep as still as I can. I worry any movement from me will push us over the edge. I donīt even want to blink.

I feel the crashing building up. I always do. I lie in bed with my eyes open and focus on a peak in my uneven ceiling and pretend I know how to meditate. You are not moving. You are not drowning. Itīs just rain. Itīs your imagination. Go to sleep.

That pounding noise is pavement under your feet, is sex, is your motherīs hands on your brotherīs chest, is something that is not water.

Itīs not working, not tonight. I sit up and grab my pad and pen to sketch myself, standing. Dry.

Sometimes the waves hit the shore so hard that I canīt even hear the screaming.

But usually I can. Tonight I can, and it hits me too hard for me to draw. I need to learn how to draw a scream.

I close my eyes and listen. I always do this; I listen like I am trying to desensitize myself, like if I just let the screams fill my ears long enough, I will get bored and I will forget and I will go to sleep.

It doesnīt work. I need to calm down.

Itīs just the wind.

Not water. Not anyone. Go to sleep.

Some nights the screams are louder than others. Some nights theyīre impossible to explain away, like my mom tries, as really just the wind passing through the cliffs. "Like in an old novel," she says. "Itīs romantic." Her room doesnīt face the ocean.

Fiona, down on the south end of the island, says itīs the ghost, but Fionaīs bag-of-bats crazy and just because weīre figuring out some magic is real doesnīt mean Iīm allowed to skip straight to ghost in an effort to make my life either more simple or more exciting. God, what the fuck do I even want?

I should figure it out and then wish for it and see what happens. Who the hell knows? Magic island, after all.

Magic fish, anyway. They heal.

Thatīs the real story, thatīs the story everyone knows, but itīs hardly the only one that darts around.

There are creatures in the water no oneīs ever seen except out of the corner of his eyes.

The big house is haunted.

Maybe weīre all haunted.

I only take the legends seriously at night. The house is rocking, and the stories are the only thing to keep me company.

Stories, me, and ocean, and however the hell many magic fish, while my family sleeps downstairs and my real life sleeps a thousand miles away.

At home I never would have believed this shit. I used to be a reasonable person. But now weīre living on this island that is so small and isolated that it really feels like itīs another world, with rules like none I learned growing up. We came here from middle America. We stepped into a fairy tale.

And my brother is better but isnīt well, so color me increasingly despondent, magic fish.

Out in the ocean the shrieks continue, as high and hollow as whistles. I get up and press my face against the window. My room is the highest part of our kneeling house.

The panes on my windows are thick and uneven. Probably the windows were made by hand. Even if it werenīt so dark, Iīd still hardly be able to see. Everythingīs distorted like Iīm looking through glasses that donīt belong to me.

But I can just make out the waves, grabbing on to the shore with foamy fingers and sliding back into the surf. I squint long enough and make out white peaks in the dark water.

"Go to s