Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Psychopathology, #Young Adult Fiction, #Psychology, #Family, #Drug abuse, #Family problems, #Social Issues, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse, #General, #Parents, #Addiction, #Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #Novels in verse, #Problem families, #Romance, #Dating & Sex, #Health & Fitness, #Schools, #Cocaine abuse, #Pregnancy & Childbirth, #High schools, #Pregnancy
Like it was his business. He
reached for his Marlboros, took
one, offered the pack. My lip
curled. He lit up anyway.
Quit once. Your mother bitched
me out of the habit.
I watched him inhale, blow
smoke signals. Exhale. Beyond the ochre haze, city turned to suburbs. Not pretty suburbs.
25
She was the bitch queen. I started
again soon as I moved out.
The Geo limped into a weather-chewed parking
lot. I escaped the front
seat. Aired out in blistering heat.
Here we are. Home sweet home.
What's mine is yours.
I'd made an awful mistake.
Daddy wasn't the Prince of
Albuquerque. He was the King of Cliché.
26
You
Call This a Castle?
Cracked cement ramparts, a less than mighty bastion, swamp cooler overflow, drool down the battlement.
Behind the stockade walls, faceless generals barked
orders to their private troops, drilled their little soldiers.
* *
Welcome to my castle.
* *
You call this a castle?
Heat throbbing off the parking lot convinced me to chance crumbling stairs.
And there, step four, flight two,
I bumped into my White Knight.
Okay, maybe more like gray.
I'll compromise with silver.
27
Not My Type
No shirt
hot bod.
His, that is.
So why did
I
break out in a sweat?
* *
No shoes
barefoot, bare chest, with a bare, baby face to make the angels sing.
* *
Nothing but ragged
cut-offs, hugging a tawny six pack, and a smile.
28
No pin up pretty boy
could touch, a smile that
zapped every cell.
He was definitely
* *
not my type.
29
At
Least I Had Something
to think about besides my dad's
less than palatial
apartment.
* *
If he qualified
As royalty in this true
blue collar
kingdom,
* *
I had zero desire to see how the working class
lived.
30
D
ad Had to Go to Work
Work?
You've heard of work.
You couldn't take
one day off?
You don't know my boss.
Does he know about me?
She knows you're here.
Your daughter
comes to visit...
She doesn't know.
Know what?
That you're my daughter.
Who am I, then?
A long-lost relative.
31
H
e Worked in a Bowling Alley
Under the table,
so I don't screw
up my disability.
* *
Unsticking stuck
balls, fitting stinky
shoes, collecting
cash from the crop
du jour of the great unwashed.
* *
No one there's
gonna tell. They
got their own secrets,
* *
No worries about bubblegum, athlete's
foot, or the current
flu, passed bill to bill, ball to ball, shoe to shoe.
* *
Like who's making
out in the back room,
who's striking out.
32
Geo unlocked in a parking lot
where the color of your jacket might
mean your life, wrong
night, wrong time.
* *
It's not the best
neighborhood, but
hey, come along.
33
I
Opted Out
Long trip, long day, no thanks,
I'll stay.
* *
Okay.
34
Not
Quite Silent
The empty boxes
Dad imagined
rooms.
* *
Glurp... glurp... glurp
* *
Hot drops into deep kitchen
stainless.
* *
Plunk......... plunk
* *
Cool drips on chipped bathroom
porcelain.
* *
Chh-ka-chh
* *
Sleepy branches
scratching bedroom
glass.
35
You crazy sonofabitch!
* *
Neighbors through thin plaster
walls.
36
T
he Screaming
flashed me back to a time
when Mom and Dad were still together
if you could call
miles apart together.
* *
Leigh and I would huddle close under the blankets, whispering, as if the whispers of two little girls
could blot out the barrage of hateful words beyond our bedroom's thin plaster walls.
Dad's vicious slurred epithets came through too loud and too clear.
37
But it is Mom's low, level threats I best remember.
You
do not deserve these children and
when
I'm through with you in court
you'll
be lucky to get visitation.
* *
She was right.
And I still had not forgiven her.
Maybe he wasn't perfect.
But he was still my dad.
38
Of Course, When I Was Little
I didn't understand the terminology of words like infidelity.
Nor the implications of my father's sundry
addictions.
I only knew my wicked
mother took us far away, kept us far apart.
* *
Time passed, with little
word from Dad.
* *
But, having experienced
Mom's growing
frustration at a stalled career and family life's daily
limitations
I put the blame squarely on her. As for Dad,
I could have forgiven
39
him pretty much anything, even his silence.
* *
As long as I could forever
stay his little princess.
40
Okay, Over the
Last Few Years
I may have gained a little perspective.
Mom struggled to raise two kids on her own, at least until Scott
blundered into her life.
* *
Jake was a late addition, one the workout queen accepted
* * and loved despite killer stretch marks and sure-to-sag-even-more boobs.
* *
As for Dad, well, truth be told, his love of drugs surpassed his love of family.
* *
And when we were small, he just
happened to install cable TV, giving him every opportunity
41
to experience the wild side of bored, stay-at-home housewives, eager for entertainment.
* *
So it was, perhaps, ironic
that I discovered...
42
D
ad Hadn't Paid His Cable Bill
Three fuzzy channels
hissed and spit a rerun of
Friends,
extra-inning baseball, and soap opera, en español.
* *
I should have gone
straight to bed, counted cracks in the ceiling.
Instead, I went outside.
* *
Cigarette smoke, toxic curls in the stairwell at my feet, soft voices rising, pheromone fog.
* *
He was still there, my silver knight, flirting with some
fallen Guinivere in short shorts and a cropped T.
43
I kept to the shadows, observing the game
I hadn't dared play, absorbing the rules with adhesive eyes.
44
T
he Rules
Uncomplicated, this
child's game.
* *
He says,
Please?
She says, "Can't."
He,
Why not?
She, "I'm not that kind of a girl."
* *
Then she spends twenty
minutes disproving the theory, until
* *
Mother calls,
Hija!
She answers, "Mama?"
Mother,
Come inside now.
She, "Be right there."
* *
It's a lie. He pulls her into his lap, silencing
meager protests with full-lipped kisses.
45
He insists,
Now.
She resists, "Later."
He,
Promise?
She, "Cross my heart."
46
S
he Went Inside
I wasn't sure if I felt more
disappointed or relieved.
Guinivere really had him.
* *
So I shouldn't want him. Should I?
I didn't really want his perfect
pout, reaching hungrily for my own timid lips.
* *
I didn't have a clue how to kiss.
Didn't really want his hands, investigating the hills and valleys of my landscape.
* *
I'd never been touched by a boy.
Didn't want his face, burrowing into my hair, finding my neck. Tasting.
* *
I'd never even said hello to such a complete stranger.
Didn't want his smoke, making me gag, making me
want to taste something so gross.
47
It was all so confusing, I mean,
I didn't want a boyfriend, no summer fling to make
me want to stay in this alien place.
* *
Anyway, I'd be speechless if he asked.
48
I
Must Have Moaned
Hey
.
He popped above the stairs suddenly, a wild-eyed Jack-in-the-box, anticipating the pay-off crank.
Oh, it's you.
Like he knew me, knew I had no life, suspected I'd come
spying, set up the game
just for me.
I waited for you.
I coughed a hello, stamping sweaty
palm prints into not-so
wrinkle-free jeans.
Could he read minds?
49
I know what you're thinking.
Smile. Nod. Say
something witty before he finds
out what an incredible
geek you are.
That you're too good for me.
He topped the staircase, slinked closer, golden
eyes narrowing, reached
out and touched the flush of my cheek.
But you're wrong.
50
The
Wind Blew Up
My mind raced.
My heart joined in.
I shook my head, mute as snowfall.
What, then? Why do you look
At me that way?
What could I say?
That some stranger inside me couldn't
keep her eyes off him?
I know you can talk. I heard
you before.
I felt her stir, like a breeze blowing up off the evening sea. My
wind had awakened.
You know, you're kind of cute,
in a stuck-up sort of way.
She pumped through my veins in hot, red
bursts. Blood pressure
rose in my face, blush.
51
You here for the summer? What's
your name?
Her tongue curled
easily behind my teeth, and her words melted between my lips.
* *
"My friends call me Bree."
52
Bree?
Who Was She?
And where did that name
come from? I'd probably
heard it once in my life!
Pretty name, Bree.
Okay, good call.
Confidence flooded our
brain like hormones.
Our turn. Who was he?
My friends call me Buddy.
Hardly a handle for a white knight.
Bree asked for the name on his birth certificate.
Mom called me Adam.
Better. We liked it. So
why didn't he use it?
(Forgetting completely about the Kristina thing.)
Hard name to live up to.
Not really. It isn't hard to fall from grace. Revisit
Genesis. Maybe I'll go with you. Might be fun.
53
You're a
strange girl.
I had to agree. What was up with this person,
Bree? And was she a permanent fixture?
But I'd like to get to know you.
54
I
Wanted to Know Him, Too
Wanted to know