Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
A MEMORY SLAMS INTO ME
A different room.
A different house.
A different town.
I was young.
I was small.
I was afraid.
He was big.
He was strong.
He was supposed
to keep me safe.
No one saw when
he came to me,
put his hand over
my mouth, and said,
If you tell, I’ll make
you sorry. Understand?
He was all over me.
He was on top of me.
He was inside me.
I never told.
I never screamed.
I never healed.
A different night.
A different place.
A different girl.
I NEVER TOLD
I’d already been
pushed aside by
my mother
and my father.
I’d already lost
my Grandpa Carl
and Grandma Jean.
I’d already been
shuffled through
one foster home,
another, one more.
That was the fourth.
Why didn’t anyone want me?
What was wrong with me?
What if that place
was my last chance?
Was that what it took
for someone to care?
No, I never told.
Another girl did.
MY BODY
Healed quickly. But the wound
to my psyche was deep.
Wide. First aid, too little, too late,
left me hemorrhaging inside,
the blood unstaunched by psychological
bandage or love’s healing magic.
Eventually it scabbed over,
a thick, ugly welt of memory.
I work to conceal it, but no matter
how hard I try, once in a while
something makes me pick at it
until the scarring bleeds.
In my arms, Ashante cries,
innocence ripped apart
by circumstance. Bloodied by
inhuman will. Time will prove
a tourniquet. But she will always
be at risk of infection.
ANGER MUSHROOMS
Inside me, swells to fill every crack, every pore,
every cell until I burn fury. I carry Ashante to
the bed, throw back the blanket, cocoon her with it.
“Stay here.” She starts to protest, but whatever
she sees in my eyes makes her acquiesce. “Don’t
worry,” I soothe. “She won’t ever touch you again.”
Not as long as I have anything to say about it.
My head throbs. My hands shake, sweat.
It’s hard to open the door. When I do, I notice
the silent hallway, remember the hour. Don’t really
care. Light trickles from beneath Erica’s door.
She’s wide awake when I storm through it,
into her room. “What the fuck have you done?”
SHE STARES AT ME
With meth-emptied eyes,
and when she smiles in silent
defiance, she is death, grinning.
I want to shake her. Want to
kick her ass. But what for?
She’s not even here. Still,
I can’t let it go. Girl. Man. Mostly
dead or no, a predator is a predator.
You can’t let it roam unshackled.
“What did you do to Ashante?”
I demand, stomping right up
in front of her and grabbing
her by her hair. I expect her
to jerk away, swing at me, or
something. But she just sits
there like a mannequin.
I didn’t do anything to her
,
but she did plenty for me.
ZERO REMORSE
Zero guilt. Zero emotion.
She really is evil, or at
least what she smoked
this afternoon is. I can’t
take it. I want her to hurt.
I swing a stiff backhand,
slap her face. Hard.
She animates suddenly
and we are on the floor.
She is stronger than I thought.
Her right hand connects.
Fingernails bite into my
cheek, sink through my skin.
All the hate and pain and fear
I’ve ever felt in my life ball
up into one vicious biting,
scratching beast. “Fuck you,
bitch!” I scream. She is Zoe.
She is my mother. She is …
him. Stop. I have to stop. Can’t …
SUDDENLY, I AM JERKED
Into the air,
kicking,
swinging.
Strong bands
of muscle
encircle me,
pin my arms
against my side.
What in the hell
are you doing
,
Summer?
It’s Phil. Of course.
Have you
totally flipped?
“No! It’s not me!”
“It’s her!” I yell,
nodding toward
Erica. “She did it,
not me!” But
even as the words
spit from my mouth,
I know I look like
the crazy one.
I MAKE MYSELF GO LIMP
What happens next
can go a number of ways,
I realize. Darla has pulled
Erica off to one side of the room.
Surely Darla notices the state of her high
or the stench of meth sweat.
Ashante stands in the doorway,
holding my blanket and sucking her thumb.
“Tell them,” I plead. “Tell them what
she did to you.” Her eyes look like
they’ll pop right out of her face.
Suddenly I notice crimson
drip-dripping onto my shirt. I try
to reach up, find the source,
but Phil still has a death grip
on my arms. “Am I bleeding?”
His squeeze relaxes some.
Let me see.
He spins me around,
draws in his breath.
Uh, yeah.
You’d better clean that up.
He lets
go of me.
Come right back, okay?