Leashing the Tempest

Leashing the Tempest Read Free

Book: Leashing the Tempest Read Free
Author: Jenn Bennett
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intrigue.
    â€œ Back? ” I said.
    Lon groaned, then exhaled heavily through his nostrils. “Look, we’re all here now. Where’s your marine biologist?”
    â€œSorry, he got sick. Just me today.”
    Lon squeezed his eyes shut. I think he was counting under his breath. Sometimes I could see his lips move when he did that, usually when he was close to losing his shit over something Jupe had done. “I want to take photos of whales or dolphins. That’s what I paid extra for. Not the TV or the Wi-Fi—I couldn’t care less about those.”
    â€œProbably for the best. My router’s on the fritz. Anyway, I know the perfect reef for dolphin spotting. You don’t want to dive, right?”
    â€œYes!” Jupe said at the same time Lon said, “No.”
    He shot Jupe a firm look and clarified. “No diving today.”
    â€œGood. Leave it to me. I can have you at a perfect spot in about an hour.” The captain turned to Jupe. “Would you like to help me at the helm, little man? Maybe you and your Oriental beauty, here?”
    Kar Yee and Jupe wore twin faces of contempt.
    â€œSuit yourselves,” the captain said cheerily as ominous thunder rumbled in the distance. “Let’s get under way.”

L a Sirena’s boardwalk grew smaller as we motored away from the pier. Sandwiched between rocky driftwood-strewn beaches and craggy cliffs, I could make out the quaint buildings that made up the town center, which locals called the Village. Next to it stood the castle-like wall that housed Brentano Gardens, the old-fashioned amusement park where Lon and I first witnessed Jupe’s demonic ability, which began manifesting a month ago—a couple of years earlier than the typical time frame for Earthbound kids coming into their preternatural gifts.
    The memory of what happened that night was one of the factors that led Lon to suggest the boat trip as a good opportunity for Jupe to experiment with the ability: unlike the amusement part, this was a controlled environment with a limited number of people. “Better to defuse a bomb out in the ocean than in the middle of a town,” he’d joked.
    The bomb in question was busy trying to impress Kar Yee with his talent for identifying every building in the receding skyline. And after the town disappeared from our line of sight completely, we sat on the deck at the back of the boat, watching the storm darkening the sky behind us, and broke into the cooler.
    â€œHey Dad,” Jupe said. “If we buy a boat, will it be this big?”
    â€œAbsolutely not.”
    â€œWell, maybe you should compromise and get a smaller one with a hot tub, because then, when it’s cool like this, we can get in the hot tub and relax.”
    â€œNo hot tubs.”
    â€œJust think about it,” Jupe said smoothly, as if he was conducting a business deal.
    Lon ignored him and turned to Kar Yee. “You don’t get seasick, do you?”
    She shook her head. “I rode a ferry in Victoria Harbor every day until I was a teenager and left Hong Kong. My parents own a boat.”
    â€œA junk?” Jupe asked.
    â€œA speedboat. You sound like that racist captain, describing me like I was a rug or takeout food.”
    Jupe’s face tightened with indignity. “I’m not racist. I’m biracial.”
    â€œMaybe you are just ignorant about Asians.”
    â€œNo way! My best friend, Jack, is Japanese—”
    â€œMmm-hmm,” she said, cocking a brow as a breeze ruffled the collar of her designer jacket. “The old ‘I have Asian friends’ excuse.”
    â€œWhat? No! I—”
    She winked at him. “Only teasing, ‘little man.’ My dad’s a lawyer, not a fisherman. Lawyers in Hong Kong don’t own junks.”
    â€œHow am I supposed to know? I’ve never been outside the States. All I know about Hong Kong is from travel shows on

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