Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
CHAPTER ONE
It started with a court-ordered
summer visit to Kristina’s
druggie dad. Genetically,
that makes him my grandfather,
not that he takes much interest
in the role. Supposedly he stopped
by once or twice when I was still
bopping around in diapers.
Mom says he wandered in late
to my baptism, dragging
Kristina along, both of them
wearing the stench of monster
sweat. Monster, meaning crystal
meth. They’d been up all night,
catching a monstrous buzz.
It wasn’t the first time
they’d partied together. That
was in Albuquerque, where dear
old Gramps lives, and where
Kristina met the guy who popped
her just-say-no-to-drugs cherry.
Our lives were never the same
again
, Mom often says.
That
was the beginning of six years
of hell. I’m not sure how we all
survived it. Thank God you were
born safe and sound….
All my fingers, toes, and a fully
functional brain. Yadda, yadda …
Well, I
am
glad about the brain.
Except when Mom gives me
the old,
What is
up
with you?
You’re a brilliant kid. Why do
you refuse to perform like one?
A C-plus in English? If you would
just apply yourself …
Yeah, yeah. Heard it before.
Apply myself? To what?
And what the hell for?
I KIND OF ENJOY
My underachiever status.
I’ve found the harder you
work, the more people expect
of you. I’d much rather fly
way low under the radar.
That was one of Kristina’s
biggest mistakes, I think—
insisting on being right-up-
in-your-face irresponsible.
Anyway, your first couple years
of college are supposed to be
about having fun, not about
deciding what you want to do
with the rest of your life. Plenty
of time for all that whenever.
I decided on UNR—University
of Nevada, Reno—not so much
because it was always a goal,
but because Mom and Dad
did this prepaid tuition thing,
and I never had Ivy League
ambitions or the need to venture
too far from home. School is school.
I’ll get my BA in communications,
then figure out what to do with it.
I’ve got a part-time radio gig at
the X, an allowance for incidentals,
and I live at home. What more
could a guy need? Especially
when he’s got a girl like Nikki.
PICTURE THE IDEAL GIRL
And you’ve got Nikki.
She’s sweet. Smart. Cute. Oh,
yes, and then there’s her body.
I’m not sure what perfect
measurements are, but
Nikki’s got them,
all wrapped up in skin
like wheat-colored suede.
Delicious, from lips to ankles,
and she’s mine. Mine to touch,
mine to hold. Mine to kiss
all over her flawless
deliciousness. Plus,
she’s got her own place,
a sweet little house near campus,
where I can do all that kissing—not
to mention what comes after
the kissing—in private.
I’m done with classes
for the day and on my way
to Nikki’s, with a little extra fun
tucked inside my pocket. Yeah, I
know getting high isn’t so
smart. Ask me if I care.
I AM GENETICALLY PREDISPOSED
To addiction. At least that’s what
they tell me, over and over.
The theory has been hammered
into my head since before I could
even define the word “addiction.”
Your grandfather is an addict and
your mother is an addict, so it’s
likely you will become an addict
too, unless you basically “just say
no.”
Much easier said than done,
especially when you’re predisposed
to saying, “Hell, yeah!” Anyway,
I’m more of a dabbler than a dedicated
fuckup. A little weed, a little coke.
Never tried meth. Don’t think I ought
to take a chance on that monster.
Catching a buzz is one thing. Yanking
the devil’s tail is just plain stupid.
NIKKI ISN’T HOME YET
I let myself in with the key
she leaves stashed under the plastic
rock by the door. Good thing
she doesn’t own much in the way
of expensive stuff, something
I’m sure the neighbors are well
aware of. This isn’t a bad street,
but it’s heavily stocked with students,
many of whom have forgotten
the Golden Rule, if they ever knew
it to begin with. Inside, the window
shades are cracked enough so light
filters through. A thin beam
splashes against the hallway mirror,
lures my attention. When I turn
to find it, the eyes reflected
in the glass are completely unique.
“Piebald,” Mom calls them.
Green-dappled gray. Definitely
not Kristina’s eyes. What I want
to know now, as always, is whose?
I’VE ASKED THE QUESTION BEFORE
“If Kristina is my biological
mother, who fathered me?”
Who
was her man of the month?
I’ve been told she slept
with more than a few,
but which
was
the one whose lucky
sperm connected with
the proper egg? Whose
genes sculpted the relief of
my
cheekbones, the stack
of my shoulders, the stretch
of my legs? Do the eyes staring
back at me now belong to my
father?
IN MOM’S BOOK
The story goes Kristina was
date-raped by some low-life
druggie lifeguard dealer.
When I asked if that was true,
Mom would only say that
the book is fiction,
based
on
fact, and that they aren’t one
hundred percent sure about
my paternity. But I think she
was trying to spare my feelings.
Who wants to believe they
were conceived of a rape, even
if the rape might have been
somehow solicited? What kind
of guy keeps going when
a girl says no way? And if a guy
like that really is my father,
could I have inherited a rape gene?
NOT THAT I’VE EVER ONCE
Insisted “yes” when a girl said
no
.
I’m not that kind of guy.
I’m smart.
(Except when loaded.
Then I can be kind of stupid.
At least till the buzz wears off.)
I’m witty.
(Except when I don’t get
enough sleep, which is often.
Then I lose my sense of humor.)
I’m compassionate.
(Except when someone
acts like a complete idiot.
Especially in my face.)
I’m understanding.
(Except when it means I can’t
have my way, so I try to avoid
people who won’t let me have it.)
I’m kind.
(Except for those days
when, for no apparent reason,
I hate pretty much everyone.)