Scar of the Bamboo Leaf
by Sieni A.M.
Release
Date: 07/09/14
Summary
from Goodreads:
"That
boy is like the bamboo...foreign and unknown in this environment. But like the
bamboo, if you plant and nurture it in the right soil, it has the potential to
grow vibrant and strong."
Walking with a pronounced limp all her life has never stopped fifteen-year-old Kiva Mau from doing what she loves. While most girls her age are playing sports and perfecting their traditional Samoan dance, Kiva finds serenity in her sketchbook and volunteering at the run-down art center her extended family owns, nestled amongst the bamboo.
When seventeen-year-old Ryler Cade steps into the art center for the first time, Kiva is drawn to the angry and misguided student sent from abroad to reform his violent ways. Scarred and tattooed, a friendship is formed when the gentle Kiva shows him kindness and beauty through art, until circumstances occur beyond their control and they are pulled away.
Immersed in the world of traditional art and culture, this is the story of self-sacrifice and discovery, of acceptance and forbearance, of overcoming adversity and finding one’s purpose. Spanning years, it is a story about an intuitive girl and a misunderstood boy and love that becomes real when tested.
Walking with a pronounced limp all her life has never stopped fifteen-year-old Kiva Mau from doing what she loves. While most girls her age are playing sports and perfecting their traditional Samoan dance, Kiva finds serenity in her sketchbook and volunteering at the run-down art center her extended family owns, nestled amongst the bamboo.
When seventeen-year-old Ryler Cade steps into the art center for the first time, Kiva is drawn to the angry and misguided student sent from abroad to reform his violent ways. Scarred and tattooed, a friendship is formed when the gentle Kiva shows him kindness and beauty through art, until circumstances occur beyond their control and they are pulled away.
Immersed in the world of traditional art and culture, this is the story of self-sacrifice and discovery, of acceptance and forbearance, of overcoming adversity and finding one’s purpose. Spanning years, it is a story about an intuitive girl and a misunderstood boy and love that becomes real when tested.

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Poised along the
far wall to avoid distraction, Kiva perused the students scattered around the
room, heads and shoulders bent over their wood carvings, the clink and thud of
the chisel and mallet competing over each other. Mau paced his time with each
student evenly, making his way around, offering guidance when needed. Kiva
couldn’t make out his words from where she sat, only a few low mutterings
accompanied by the shake or nod of his head.
Her eyes strayed
until they settled on the boy with the mysterious tattoo. Ryler. Her suspicions
were correct about his work when she noticed the slab of wood with the sliced
words in front of him. He hadn’t spoken a word to any of the other boys, didn’t
acknowledge them, and they avoided him too, as if he’d erected an invisible
wall and they were aware of it.
Her uncle had no
problem stepping through it though. He was with him now, speaking in low tones
and gesturing to his work. What was he saying? Kiva strained to hear, but
nothing came to her over the cacophony of sounds in the room. A muscle in
Ryler’s jaw ticked as he sat, head bent, listening to him. Mau remained with
him for some time, talking and listening, acknowledging the need to spend more
time. Finally, he gave him a tap on the shoulder and a satisfied nod before
moving away.
Kiva
noticed when Ryler picked up a carving knife, pausing in concentration, his
face tentative and contemplative, before he met it with wood, the muscles in
his broad back contorting and flexing from the grip and release of the tool.
What had he decided to carve? Kiva wanted to inch her way forward to find out
but kept herself firmly planted. An hour passed and still she sat riveted to
her spot.
A
couple sharp drops on the roof were the only warning to the torrential downpour
that followed.
“Makiva!”
Hana’s voice shouted from across the yard and made her jump. “It’s raining! Get
the laundry!”
Kiva
scrambled off the floor, the noise drawing attention, and limped as quickly as
she could to the line. The knifelike raindrops hit her on the back, stinging,
and soaked through her shirt. Ignoring the pricks, she rushed to unpeg each
piece of clothing, throwing it in the bucket and returning for more. The rain
came down harder and faster, blurring her eyesight, the sound of a thunderclap
roaring in her ears. Tea towels, Mau’s shirt, Hana’s school skirt. Breathless,
her quick movements had long ago uncoiled her hair, wild and swirling in the
wind; the pencil slipped out, lost somewhere. She was nearing the end of the
line, grappling with a sheet, when she glanced up and noticed the boys running
from the center to the van, their lesson over.
Ryler
appeared last through the door, his brown eyes trained on her, and descended
the stairs with heavy, deliberate steps. Kiva stared wide eyed as he stepped
into the rain and came toward her with unhurried, even strides. She watched as
raindrops pelted his gray shirt, soaking through to his shoulders until the wet
dots spread and connected.
When
he was a foot away, he lifted his hand.
“You
dropped this,” he said, his voice low and hoarse, as if he was just getting
over a cold. He smelled of wood dust and sweat.
She
glanced down at his hand and saw the pencil she used to pin up her hair. It
must have fallen in the art center in her haste to get to the laundry. Reaching
for it, she noticed the deep scars on his left wrist and paused. From this
close they looked even worse.
“It’s
not what you think,” he answered, interpreting her thoughts.
Kiva
snapped her eyes to his face. His brown eyes penetrated hers, thick lashes
dripping from the rain, a line formed between his eyebrows. She tried not to
fidget under his gaze and glanced to the right of his face. She saw a scar near
his eye, something she hadn’t noticed before.
She
calmly returned her gaze to him. “And what do I think?”
Ryler took a
step closer. “You think that I did this to myself on purpose.”
“Did you?” She
breathed.
He shook his
head. “It was from a fight. The other guy had a broken bottle and I tried to
block him.”
Kiva hissed as
if she had been the one cut open and bleeding. Her eyes found the scar again
and her stomach plummeted at the thought of the pain it must have caused. She
felt suddenly light-headed and blinked to clear the blur clouding her mind.
The sound of the
van’s horn blared from the drive way.
“Ryler! Hurry
up, we’re going!” A superior impatiently gestured for him in the rain.
“You better go,”
Kiva said hastily. “Thanks for returning this.” She took the pencil from his
hand and curled her fingers around it.
Ryler remained
unmoving. Why wasn’t he going? Did he want to get into trouble? He finally
stepped away and turned, jogging over to the waiting van, his shirt now
drenched through and stuck to his retreating back.
Kiva watched him go before letting out a
shaky breath. She gathered her long hair in a bun, wrapped it once, twice,
before stabbing the pencil through.
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