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img img Young Adult img Between the waves and you
Between the waves and you

Between the waves and you

img Young Adult
img 21 Chapters
img 2 View
img Diviner
5.0
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About

Emmanuella goes back to Bellharbor, the quiet seaside town she's loved since childhood, planning this visit to be just for the summer and a last memory before moving on. The town and Noah, her first love and heartbreak, remember her-his laughter once in every wave. When the past and present collide under salty skies, she's torn between what was and what could be. She meets Eli, who sees her in ways Noah never did; Lucas, who helps her breathe again; and Noah, still waiting beneath the same sky they once shared. Across four seasons, she learns that growing up means loving, losing, and remembering in new ways. Between the waves and her fears lies everything she's ever wanted to feel and to find again.

Chapter 1 The Town That Kept Waitng

The road to Bellharbor still carries the smell of salt and rain. Before I even spot the sea, I can feel it- the wind thickening, the light softening, a golden edge spilling over the horizon like a memory I can't quite reach.

It's been four years since I left this town. Four years since the summer that changed everything.

Now I'm driving back alone, windows down, a half-sad song drifting from the radio. My suitcase rattles in the back, full of clothes I probably won't wear and a heart that still won't stay quiet.

The Welcome to Bellharbor sign rushes by, chipped and rusted at the corner. Someone has scrawled "still beautiful" in blue marker underneath. I almost laugh. The town hasn't changed-and neither has the ache that comes with it.

Bellharbor isn't just a place. It's a memory that never leaves me alone.

The cottage is exactly as I remember: white wood siding, peeling blue shutters, a porch that sags when you step on it. Seaweed and wildflowers wrap around it like a hug. My parents sold the place years ago, but the current

owners rent it out during the summer.

Coming back here feels right-the same house, the same town, the same sea. Maybe I hoped the ghosts would still recognize me.

When I unlock the door, dust dances in the afternoon light. The air is still and heavy with silence. I drop my keys on the counter and stand there, just breathing.

The waves crash softly in the distance. The same rhythm as before. The same sound that filled every moment I struggled to find words for.

I walk to the beach barefoot. The sand is warm and soft, dotted with seashells and driftwood.

Every step feels like stepping back in time.

Memories come in flashes: Noah's laugh as he chased me into the water. How his hair curled when it got wet. The night we carved our initials into the pier post, promising never to forget each other.

We were seventeen and endless. Or so we thought.

That was before everything fell apart-before he pulled away, before I left without saying goodbye.

I bend to pick up a shell, smooth and white.

don't know why, but I slip it into my pocket.

Maybe it's something to hold onto when the memories get loud.

The sun begins to set as I head toward the boardwalk. Families gather around the ice cream stand, kids run with sparklers, gulls cry above the pier. Everything looks the same, yet nothing feels the same.

I buy a cone from the same old man who used to give Noah and me extra sprinkles. He squints at me. "Been a while since l've seen you around," he says. I smile softly. "Yeah. A while." "Still love the sea?" "Always."

The vanilla tastes cold and sweet, and for a moment I'm seventeen again, sitting on the dock with Noah's shoulder next to mine, watching the sky turn pink.

"Promise me you'll always come back here," he'd said. l'd whispered, "I promise." And I broke that promise.

When I reach the pier, the air gets cooler. The waves crash harder, alive and restless. I go to the edge where the wooden rail gives a little under my fingers. The ocean stretches on forever, the same sea that knows everything I've tried to forget.

That's when I see him.

Noah.

He's about twenty feet away, talking to someone. Taller now, broader, his hair a touch shorter and sunlit. He's wearing a gray shirt that clings to his shoulders, and when he turns a bit, the setting sun hits his face.

My breath catches.

He looks older, but it's him- the boy who showed me what love could feel like and what losing it could feel like.

I don't think he sees me. Maybe that's for the best. I'm not ready. Not yet.

I take a small step back and almost run into someone.

"Sorry"" I blurt, spinning around.

A guy stands there, about my age, tall with wind-tousled dark hair and a surfboard under his arm. His eyes are stormy blue-gray, almost silver in the evening light.

He grins.

"No harm done. You okay?"

"Yeah," I manage, though my heart's still racing.

"You look like you've seen a ghost."

I glance past him-Noah's gone. The spot where

he stood is empty, swallowed by the crowd.

"Maybe I have," I say softly.

The stranger tilts his head, curious. "You're not from around here, are you?"

"I used to be."

He nods and studies me, trying to place me. "I'm Eli," he says, offering a hand.

"Emmanuella."

"Nice name. Means 'God with us, right?"

I blink. "Yeah. How did you -?"

"My mom loves meanings. Named me after a prophet. Didn't stick." He smiles, easy and warm, like sunlight on water.

For the first time in a long while, I smile back.

We walk the beach, talking about nothing in particular-the kind of easy chat that happens between strangers who'll probably never meet again.

He's new in town, staying for the summer. "Just needed a change of view," he says. "Bellharbor helps with that." "Remember what you thought you forgot," I reply. "Remember everything."He

laughs softly. "That sounds dangerous." "It is."

By the time I head back to the cottage, the sky is deep indigo and the first stars shimmer. The sea glows faintly under the moon. I pause on the porch, watching the horizon.

There's a strange comfort in being back, like the town kept waiting for me.

Inside, the air smells faintly of sea salt and lemon soap. I kick off my sandals and lie on the bed. The window's open, and I can still hear the waves. Somewhere out there, Noah breathes the same salty air. Somewhere else, Eli- this stranger with storm-colored eyes-might be thinking of the girl who looked like she'd seen a ghost.

I close my eyes and listen to the waves until they sound like whispers.

They say my name. They say his. And they remind me that no matter how far I ran, some summers never end. They wait-quietly, patiently-until you come back to remember.

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