Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
AUNT CORA
Doesn’t seem to notice
the scent of change in the air.
She sings as she busies herself
in the kitchen, making breakfast.
Usually we all just settle for cereal,
but today I smell a hot griddle.
Pancakes? Something is definitely
going on. The domestic goddess
thing so isn’t her. “Morning.”
Her back is to me, and she jumps
a little before turning, red-faced.
You scared me half to death!
But she’s laughing, and I can’t
help but laugh too. “Kind of
an overstatement, don’t you think?
And what’s up with the pancakes?
Going Rachael Ray on us, or what?”
I watch her ladle thick, lumpy batter.
Rachael Ray? Ha-ha. Don’t think
so. Still, it never hurts to brush
up on your culinary skills, does it?
She flips a hotcake like a pro.
The weird thing is, I can only
remember her ever making them
maybe two or three times in
the past. “So what’s
really
going
on with you? Something to do
with all the late nights out the past
few weeks?” She’s been gone a lot
lately, and I’m pretty sure there’s more
to it than her working part-time at
Olé Tex-Mex and going to school
three days a week to learn massage
therapy.
Better late than never
,
she told Grandfather and me when
she embarked on her new career path.
I don’t want to wait tables forever.
What she didn’t say was she doesn’t
want to stay single forever either.
SHE DOESN’T SAY THAT NOW
But she does say,
Well, you never
know. I just might want to make
pancakes for someone special
someday. Uh … not that you’re
not special. I mean …
If her face
was red before, it’s pickled
beet purple now. The look
on my own face must communicate
something loud and clear, because
her shoulders slump slightly.
Okay
,
might as well confess. I met this
guy. He’s my teacher, actually
,
and he is incredible.
She spits
out a list of attributes:
tall
,
gorgeous, smart, professional.
Then, a major ding:
divorced.
Divorced? Like with alimony
and child support? How old
is the guy, anyway? Might as
well ask. “How old is he, anyway?”
I expect her to say forty-five,
maybe even fifty. So it comes
as a major surprise when she
answers,
Thirty-one. I know it’s
kind of weird to think about
going out with someone
who’s younger. But stranger
things happen every day, right?
She said
think about going
out with …
So … “Does
that mean you aren’t going
out with him yet, or what?”
Not sure why the idea of her
dating this guy bothers me so
much. He’s not like her first
or anything. But something seems
different.
No … yes … uh …
Not like real dates. No movies
or dancing or anything. Just
coffee and stuff. But I hope …
SHE PAUSES
At the
thump … th-thump
of Grandfather lumbering
like an old bear up the hall.
His question precedes him
through the doorway.
What is that
I’m smelling? A hot breakfast?
Aunt Cora puts a finger to her lips,
but it is the uneasiness in her eyes
that swears me to secrecy.
Yep
, she says.
I must have dreamed
about pancakes, because I woke
up half-desperate for them.
Thump … th-thump … thump.
Slower than usual. He must
have had a toss-n-turn night.
Pull up a chair
, instructs Aunt
Cora.
They’re just about ready.
Apple butter or maple syrup?
The only answer is both. I watch
Grandfather ease into a chair.
Aunt Cora sets a heaping plate
in front him. He inhales buttery
steam, takes a big bite.
Hope you
dream about breakfast more often.
He gives her a funny look, one
I can only interpret as sensing
something different about her.
She’s not about to fill him in.
If we had pancakes too often, you
wouldn’t appreciate them so much.
Grandfather downs a short stack,
then he says to me,
I have to run
an errand. Want a ride to school?
Unusual. He hardly ever
goes anywhere. But what
else can I say? “Uh, sure.”
THE FIFTEEN-MINUTE RIDE
Seems to take an hour. Unlike Aunt Cora,
Grandfather is definitely fishing the same
tide of anxiety I find myself trolling.
He is taut as a tug-of-war rope. Impossible
to slacken, despite the fact that lately he’s been
downing bourbon instead of beer, along
with bigger and bigger doses of meds. He falls
asleep in his chair every night around eight.
Even now, with coffee rather than booze
chasing his mood fixers, his voice is muddy
when he finally cracks the wall of silence.
Your father is getting out next week.
Just the way he says it—all quivery
and ice-cold—sends shivers through me.
“I thought it might be soon. I heard
you on the phone the other day.”
He says he wants to see you. How
do you feel about that?
He turns
a corner and the school pops into
view. Trey wants to see me? What for?
And how do I feel about seeing
him after eight years in prison,
eight more years of him being nothing
to me but sporadic collect calls?
“I don’t know,” I tell Grandfather
as he turns into the passenger drop-
off zone, pulls over against the curb.
“I’ll have to think about it.” I get out
of the car. What I said was a lie. I know
exactly how I think about it. I hate Trey
for leaving me. Wish I could love him,
but don’t have a clear idea how.
Do I want to see him? Part of me does.
The other part thinks he ought to take
a flying leap off a very short pier. Maybe
“I don’t know” wasn’t a lie after all.