Authors: Ellen Hopkins
He dropped me off around the corner from my house,
gave me a stick of gum and a big, wet good-bye kiss.
It might have been the perfect day except just
as I closed the door, Scott happened to drive by.
I learned a valuable lesson about lie construction
and Mom gave me plenty of time to consider
how to do it better.
GUFN Again
I
sat on my bed, absentmindedly
tracing the lopsided
heart-shaped scar,
didn’t
read, didn’t write. All I did
was think about my personal
evolution. Where did I
belong
with my relative innocence
gone? Where did I fit?
I felt like I had fallen in
to
a critical state of limbo.
With my old friends mired
in status quo, how could I explain
my
summer enlightenment? My new
crowd—if three guys and Guinivere
qualified—was not what my
mom
(or I) expected. I wondered if I should
confess that her sweet, intelligent
little Kristina did not exist
anymore.
Leigh Headed Back to School
Mom drove her to the airport.
I waited until they hustled off, late,
then asked to stay home, claiming, “Cramps.”
Mom gave me a look, but I could prove
the cramps were real. Leigh gave me a big,
tense hug, made me promise to behave myself.
The minute the car turned the corner,
I was on the telephone, completely
misbehaving. “Come over, Chase.”
Now?
“Right now.”
Where’s your mom?
“Just hurry.”
Need arose like an angry red dawn.
I paced until the dogs warned
a stranger had just arrived.
How much time
do we have?
“Not enough.”
What do you
want?
“Everything.”
Will I get you in
trouble?
“Probably.”
I didn’t care. I needed to feel
good. We snorted, we smoked.
I asked for, “More.”
Don’t think you
should.
“Please!”
Take it easy,
Kristina.
“Can’t.”
Your mom will be
home soon.
“I know.
That’s why I
can’t.”
Chase Left Me with Goodies
He didn’t want to, told me
no way,
but Bree, mistress of persuasion,
knew a trick or two
to get her way.
Kristina swore to keep her in
check and she tried, but
no way
to slow the electric impulse flow,
our brain began to plot. How
to get away
from the confines of GUFN?
Sweet-talk Mom?
Little chance
of that working, a crazy
idea soon hatched
to sneak away
for one spectacular last
summer fling.
Insanity,
that’s what it was, school
starting in only two days.
I Watched the Window
as I picked up the phone and dialed.
Bree cooed a throaty hello.
Hey. I’d just about given up on you.
I could not admit to GUFN. Not
again. I concocted
some lame excuse.
No problem. Want to get together?
I did. Chase or no Chase, I wanted
to see what Brendan was made of.
Bricks, mortar, flesh, bones.
I’ll pick you up. Where and when?
Let’s see. Wait for everyone
to hit the hay, extra half hour,
scale down the wall …
That’s pretty late.
Very late. But I’d definitely be
awake. I coughed up the fact
I was sneaking out.
Okay by me. Just don’t get caught.
No duh. I didn’t plan on
getting caught. Still, what could
they do if I did? Ground me forever?
What sort of party would you like?
Damn, direct. Not even sure
if he indulged, I said I’d bring
the toot if he’d bring the beer.
Sounds like a deal I can live with.
Mom’s SUV turned up
the driveway. Deal sealed,
I said good-bye.
See you tonight, luscious.
Luscious? Plain old white
bread me? I liked it. At least
I thought I did then.
I Hid Out in My Room Until Dinner
made sure to gag down every scrap of spinach,
so both my mom and my mouth
would keep quiet.
I still had a valid cramp excuse so I packed it
in early. Uh-huh. Sat in the dark, lit
as the starry sky.
Listened to the sounds of my normality: familiar
footsteps in the hall; whispers; laughter; baying
at the moonlight.
And it occurred to me for one uneasy moment
that every move I had made lately might have
started a landslide.
What if I couldn’t go back? What if I died in the crash?
Almost immediately, the monster soothed
me, confused me with a deeper question.
What if the ride was worth it?
I mean, who wants to trudge through life, doing
everything just right? Taking no chances means
wasting your dreams.
How can I explain the pure chilling rush of
waiting to do something so basically not right?
No fear. No guilt.
How can I explain purposely setting foot on
a path so blatantly treacherous? Was the
fun in the fall?
I Hoped Not
As I softly opened my second-floor window,
peered down at the cement walk below, took a deep breath.
Fingers clutching the upper sill, toes stretching
for the first-floor trim, I managed to touch down
safely. It may have been the safest moment
of the night, in fact. Gulped into darkness,
I let my eyes adjust, felt the breeze lift
goosebumps, listened for signs of household disturbance.
No motion. No sudden snitch of a light switch.
No sound but distant coyote song, I silenced
my conscience, quieted my screaming nerves
and slipped away unnoticed, for the moment.
No streetlights, no headlights, the world
seemed to sleep beneath my feet as I ran,
a mustang over moonlit playa; a cheetah
in high gear. No fear, no brakes, consumed
by some irrational itch to cruise along
shadowy thoroughfares, traveled by demons.
Brendan Was Waiting
in a battered mud-colored Bronco.
Climb in. You look great.
Winded. Hair plastered by my
escape sprint. He was a liar.
A smooth, gorgeous liar.
Wanna go up to Chamberlain Flat?
Secluded five miles up a rutted
dirt track, the played-out mine
was a notorious party spot.
Supposed to be a party up there.
Anything could happen at a party
up there. Good things. Bad things.
Truly evil things.
Ever hear about Evan Malone?
Evan Malone, urban legend—eighteen
and in league with Satan, skinning
goats up at Chamberlain Flat.
My brother went out with his sister.
So he was more than just a parental
fabrication meant to scare kids
away from abandoned mine shafts?
He was real, okay. Kyle met him.
Met him and what? Dressed up like
Halloween, prayed to the devil,
and sacrificed hoofed animals?
Shared a bong. Said he was creepy.
Major understatement, if the dude
was really for real! If pot made you
buddy up with Satan, you could keep it!
But don’t worry. Evan’s long gone.
I reached for a whiff of courage.
Far fuckin’ out! Beer’s in back.
We Bumped up the Road
Doing 40 or so spilling some
foam of summer-warmed brew
and busting our guts, laughing.
I watched Brendan’s muscular hands
try to shift, missing gears,
try to steer around potholes,
not quite evading most of them.
I studied his face, mentally tracing
bone structure a model would kill for,
high cheekbones perfect white teeth
all sheathed in Mediterranean-
flavored skin, iced mocha,
begging to be sipped, so I did.
I swear, every guy you kiss is
so different. Each has a unique
essence, each a significant style.
Brendan was eau de lavender, vanilla,
Heineken, Crest and top-notch speed.
His style was
“No is not an acceptable
answer.”
He was Bree, with a penis.
Saturday Night
postmidnight, 30-some hours till
back to the books, the party had
hit high
gear. Pot smoke hung, a skunky
green curtain, but I didn’t want to
fall low
so I indulged in another big snort
before inhaling a couple of tiny tokes,
mostly
to satisfy the incredible urge to pollute
my lungs. I topped that off with a Marlboro,
landing
on just about the perfect plane, just about the
place I wanted to be. Not too speedy, not even close to
straight
falling into the yo-yo rhythm of crank, pot,
beer, tobacco, the sensational motion and emotion,
up and down,
Brendan hanging tight, though I suspected
he might desert me, take off on a flirting binge. And,
oh, god,
the jealous stares of girls I had envied
not long before, girls suddenly, strangely on fire to
know me,
though they had never once in the past returned
my smile. And now, instead of Kristina, they got to
know Bree.
Brendan Stoked the Fire
Let’s take a walk.
I was game to play the game. We wandered
off, found a soft sitting
spot in a patch of crispy brown wild wheat.
Come here, Bree.
As he pulled me onto his lap, I wondered if
I should confess my double identity.
Instead, I let him kiss me. Hard. Hot.
Oh, man. I’m hot
He shed his shirt and the moon revealed
perfect, tanned muscles. He started
to unbutton mine, silencing my protest.
Shhh. Don’t say no.
“I can’t. I mean, I never …” Crank-enhanced
goosebumps lifted as he moved
his hands gently across my skin. “Stop.”
You know you want to.
“I do, Brendan, I really do. But I can’t.
It’s the wrong time of the month.”
I’d decked him. He slapped back.
Then, why did you call?
I let Bree answer. “Not to get laid, incredible
as you are. Is that all you think I’m
about? What if I told you I’m a virgin?”
I’d call you a liar.
Bree wanted to joust, but Kristina thought
about a long walk home and put Bree
back into her box. I looked him in the eye. “No lie.”
Paydirt!
Hair Mussed
clothes cockeyed,
makeup smeared,
I would have looked
fairly suspicious if I
had walked through
the door that night.
But I didn’t have