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A loud lowrider rumbles along Capistrano, then a couple of Harleys. No silver Yukon.

Casey takes the elevator up to Bette’s room, knocks on her door, and gets the welcome he’s expecting: none.

He goes into the ice and vending alcove, where he can see her door, scans the offerings in the machines, gets a two-dollar bag of spicy shelled peanuts. He’s always hungry because that’s what the ocean does to you, but the day after a big-wave contest he’s always fully starved.

The dinner tonight was good but fairly skimpy and you didn’t get seconds, so Casey buys more nuts and some Funyuns and a raspberry smoothie.

Watches Bette’s door, checks his phone every few minutes, then heads back.

Three minutes after three, and a knock on his door. Pulls it open without checking the peephole.

Bette steps in, holding the beanie to her face.

Bloody everything: hands, seafoam duster, jacket. Splatters on her boots.

She lowers the beanie and looks up at him, eyes roaming his face. Lips puffed up, the upper split. Chin and neck streaked red. Cheeks scraped from blows, eye sockets purpling. Her left eyebrow is cross-cut and meaty at the edges.

Bette hangs her head. Casey holds her gently so as not to hurt her, like when Mae got hit by the car and he set her in his bed. He feels Bette’s sobs. Feels love.

And anger. The angriest he’s ever been.

“No police,” she blubbers through the swollen lips.

“Did you steal the money for Mom’s check from Jimmy?”

“No. The check is a forgery. I knew she wouldn’t take it. It was just to show her — show everyone — how good a friend I am. To you. This, Jimmy did for joining up with you. For being here with you. For disrespecting family. Me against the other girls.”

“I can’t believe he would let them do this to you.”

She gives Casey a broken look.

“He destroys what he can’t own and control,” she says. “Always been that way. My mother. My sister. His friends. Anyone he touches.”

“Now you.”

“This isn’t destruction. It’s a warning.”

He destroys what he cannot own and control, thinks Casey, his mind’s eye bright with windblown flames and melting surfboards.

“I know a doctor in Half Moon Bay,” he says.

“I make a call first. I want you to hear every word I say.”

Bette sits on the couch across from the fire, puts her phone on speaker, and touches a contact with a shaking finger.

Casey sits next to her, sees her bloody fingerprint on the phone screen, hears the quick pickup:

“You have reached Brian Pittman, Laguna PD. Please leave a detailed message. Speak clearly.”

Bette holds up the phone so she can look at Casey as she talks.

Casey’s anger stirs again, and his pity. Should he have seen this coming? Should he have protected her? Brock would sure as heck have never let this happen.

“Hello, Detective Pittman. This is Bette Wu. You remember me. I am calling to tell you that my father, Jimmy Wu, and his associates hired the arsonists who set the Barrel Restaurant fires and framed Monterey 9. I will tell you all details of how and why this happened. I have recordings. I am an eyewitness.”

She thumbs off the call and sets her phone on the coffee table.

For a moment, Casey feels like he’s atop a huge Mavericks right, about to drop into the chaos below.

“He’ll destroy you now,” he says.

She stares at him, a battered woman in a red-smeared seafoam-green ensemble.

Looks down.

“Sorry. So sorry. I did everything I could to talk them out of it. Dad laughed and threatened to disown me for disloyalty. So, I lied to you. Again.”

Casey feels betrayed and foolish, but most of all, battered by his failure to protect her, and by the angry sympathy within.

“Let’s get you to that doctor,” he says, placing a big arm softly across Bette’s shoulders, dialing his phone.

He thinks of getting Brock’s help here but Brock and Mahina left Half Moon Bay right after the awards dinner, bound for Hurricane Yvette, category three but building, and aimed directly at New Orleans.

40

Looking Back—

WHO WAS JOHN STONEBREAKER AND WHAT WENT WRONG AT MAVERICKS?

BY JEN STONEBREAKER

Part five of a special series for Surf Tribe Magazine

After twenty-five years it’s time for me to do my job and tell the truth.

The great writer Susan Casey once called Mavericks a portal to the dark side.

She certainly got that right, especially the wave that John caught late in his final heat: a fifty-foot blue-black peak breaking top to bottom, leaving a barrel five times taller than the man trying to ride it.

Onto which I towed John, then sped along and over the shoulder to safety, the rescue sled gliding behind me on its braided nylon rope.

From there I watched him drop into the wave, legs vibrating, feet locked in the straps, like a vertical arrow, John fastened to the pointed, narrow, big-wave gun, headed down fast, his arms out for control and balance.

He made the bottom turn, carving deep, leveling off, and backing into the barrel forming over him, raking his fingertips along the cylinder. In that moment, John was a daredevil in the barrel, somehow managing to look casual within a rifled, two-story tube.

I smiled to myself despite the danger he had chosen.

This is why we do this, I thought. Nothing we’ll ever do will match it. Not sex, not love, not being a mother or a father, which I know we will be someday. Not seeing God. Not making money. Nothing but this moment of freedom and velocity, this rush of nature of which we are a part. This mastery of power unimaginable. This pure, terrifying joy.

Then the heavy lip lunged, took John by the back of his neck like a blue-black leopard, and wrenched him off his board.

Leaving him suspended in midair, turning, head down and feet up, his board above, aimed down at him like a spear, its leash wobbling between them.

From my perilous angle — the jet ski rocking hugely on the building crest of the next wave, the rescue sled shifting with its own contrapuntal weight — I watched John vanish into the white avalanche of the kill zone.

I saw my opening, my moment to get there and help him.

But I didn’t crank the throttle, because I had something to tell John first.

And I did, firmly:

“I know you betrayed me.”

In that fraction of a moment, I hated him.

And in that half second I felt the wave bearing me up, as if I were an offering and I knew that there was no way I could get to him in time. I had missed my moment.

So now you know our secret.

My sons, Casey and Brock, were born just minutes apart, almost nine months later.

As many of you know, last month, Casey won the Monsters of Mavericks contest that killed his dad twenty-five years ago.

It was held during a massive swell, some of the biggest waves ever to hit Half Moon Bay. My boys rode those waves courageously, unpredictably, and artfully.

My beautiful boys!

I won worst wipeout on the women’s side, mostly because of a huge but handsome wave that took me in and held me close in its beating heart, then launched me into the impact zone like I was a stick. Pushed me under and held me down for a very long time. Lost consciousness. When I awoke I was back on the boat but I didn’t know who I was, or where, or how I’d gotten there.

Nietzsche said when you look into the abyss, the abyss also looks into you.