Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
Hunter
SATURDAY
The alarm blares again.
Second snooze cycle?
Third? Behind my eyelids,
morning is bright. Eightish?
I roll over and open one eye.
Almost nine. Damn. Up I go.
I’ve got to land an earlier
air shift, at least if I have
to keep doing remotes.
Live broadcasts are fun.
But it’s not good to do them
with bags under your eyes.
Not if you want to look
like a radio star. Okay,
maybe I haven’t reached
“star” status. The stars do
morning or afternoon
drives. I pull ten p.m. to two
a.m. twice a week. But
they
are
weekend nights,
so at least a few people
are up late, listening.
I even have groupies.
Hey, maybe I
am
a star.
THE REMOTE
Is at the football game.
The UNR Wolf Pack versus
the Boise State Broncos.
Boise is a powerhouse
team and generally cleans
our clock, but UNR has got
one radical quarterback
this season, plus an all-state
running back. Never know.
We just might take ’em.
Wolf Pack fans are ready to howl.
The game should be packed.
Which means I’d better
get a move on. Traffic
will be a bitch. A glance
out the window confirms
it’s a crystal-edged October
day. Perfect football weather.
I shave. Shower. No time
for breakfast, a quick brush
to excise morning mouth.
Jeans. Long-sleeved blue tee
sporting the X logo. It’s a little
wrinkled, but the black leather
bomber will camouflage that.
Socks. Socks? My sock drawer
is empty. Oh, well. Yesterday’s
shouldn’t be too bad. Mom’s always
griping about my dirty laundry.
All you have to do is get it from
your room to the laundry room.
Twenty-five steps total. How hard
could that be?
The word isn’t “hard.”
It’s “organized.” Not my best thing.
Yesterday’s socks it is. New pair
of Nikes, barely scuffed at all.
Out the door in twenty minutes.
If I’m lucky, I won’t be late.
IT’S A HALF-HOUR DRIVE
To the station. Another forty
minutes to load the remote
broadcasting equipment
into the company van.
Just about the time
I’m ready to roll,
a beater Pontiac burps
into the parking lot.
Oh, no. It’s Montana.
Her real name is Corrine,
but she wanted her air
name to play off
Hannah Montana.
Don’t ask me why.
Morning
, she breathes,
in her best “I’m trying
not to sound like
the dingbat I am” voice.
(Not that it works.)
Awesome day, huh?
“Uh, yeah.” I load
the last speaker. “Well,
I’m about ready. As soon
as Rick gets here …”
Montana’s head swings
side to side.
Didn’t you
get the message? Rick
has a major flu bug.
She moves closer. Too
close. Her lips are four
inches from mine when
she says,
It’s me and you.
No, no, no! It’s bad
enough working a remote
with Rick the Brick Denio,
whose “I’m God’s gift
to the world” attitude
has thirty years in radio
to back it up. Montana’s
“hey, I’m the shit” pose
comes from bottled
blond hair and way-
too-round-to-be-real
36DDs. And, fake or
no, those babies were
designed for Montana
Disney (no lie!) to steal
the show wherever she goes.
ESPECIALLY FOOTBALL GAMES
Especially with those DDs
encased in a gray angora sweater,
and her equally impressive ass
advertised by a short, tight navy
skirt. Wolf Pack colors are silver
and blue. She’s a one-of-a-kind fan,
one every guy walking by can’t help
but notice. It’s irritating, but what
really pisses me off is how she just
stands there, flaunting fuzzy silver
and tight navy blue, while I do all
the work, setting up the X tailgate
party. Even Rick would have helped.
At least we have a designated
parking spot in the alumni lot. People
are parked down the hill, a half mile
or more away. By the time they reach
us, they’re huffing and puffing.
Montana sympathizes.
Long walk?
Well, come on over here and have
a hot dog and soda, on the X.
MOST OF THEM
Are already drinking beer.
But they take the dog, if only
for the chance to stand that
close to those amazing ta-tas.
I have to admit, Montana
is great advertising, if a mediocre
on-air personality. She knows
jack about music. She’ll probably
go on to fame and fortune as
a spokesmodel or something.
Anyway, I watch her work
the mostly male crowd until,
finally, a couple of cute girls
wiggle up to me.
Are you Hunter
Haskins?
says the curvy redhead.
’Cause I
really
love your show!
Yeah
, agrees the slender brunette.
I listen every weekend. You’re good.
My turn to flirt. “Sweetheart,
I am so much better than good.”
Then I remember, “Hey, are you
interested in a hot dog?”
The girls dissolve into laughter,
and I realize how that sounded.
I flush, hot despite the nip in the air.
“Uh, I meant a Polish sausage.”
That makes Red laugh even
harder.
Is Haskins a Polish name?
The brunette’s eyes are watering.
And just how big is that sausage?
Wow. Obnoxious. So why does
the thought of a threesome
cross my perverted mind?
“I’ve never had a complaint,
if that’s what you mean.” A gasp
behind me makes me turn….
AND THERE IS NIKKI
And not only that,
but there is Nikki with
her parents, UNR alumni
and rabid Pack fans.
But not exactly fans
of Hunter Haskins.
Surely they realize this
is part of the radio
personality game?
“Oh, hey!” I reach for
Nikki, who shrinks
back a little. “Great
to see you all here.
How about a …”
Shit. If I say hot dog,
my groupies are gonna
howl. I turn my back
on them completely.
“Want some lunch?”
I gesture toward
the gathered X fans
all happily munching
Polish sausages. Nikki,
red-faced, shakes her head.
Her mom, all stuck-up,
slides her arm around
Nikki’s shoulder.
No.
Her dad looks slightly
amused, but his voice
is stiff.
We already ate.
“Oh. Okay.” How do
I make this right? “Nik,
can I talk to you a sec?”
She starts to say no,
but if I don’t fix this
now, it might be unfixable.
“Please?” I take her
arm, pull her away
from her mother’s grasp
and off to one side. “Hey.
Those girls are listeners.
You are the one I love.”