Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
THE REVELATION
Throws me, but I’m not
sure why. Dad came into
Kristina’s life when she
was only five. It was he
who picked her up,
put her on his shoulders
to “see the world from way
up high,” just like he later
did for me. It was he who
put her on her feet
when she took a spill
off her bicycle, not
Grandpa Who’s-it in
Albuquerque. The story
goes it was Mom who
told her to leave home,
because she had turned
all our lives inside out
and we wanted them right
again. It was Mom who
said a sad but firm good-bye.
So why has it always
seemed to me that it
was Dad who so firmly
and irrevocably
closed the door behind her?
I REALIZE SUDDENLY
That Dad is waiting for me
to say something. Why did
I call again? Oh, yeah. Tickets.
“How long will Mom be in Vegas?”
Not sure
, he says.
The kids
need someone to take care
of them. That’s why she had to
drop everything and go. Why?
“Uh …” Santa’s sleigh just
crashed. “Nothing. I thought
I might see you guys at the parade
tomorrow is all. I’ve got a remote.”
Not this year. Sorry. You know
how Nevada Day traffic is
,
and I want to be available
in case your mom needs me.
“No prob, Dad. I understand.
Tell Mom I love her, okay?”
And, not quite an afterthought,
“Hey, Dad? Love you, too.”
A WARM GINGER FOG
Spills across the floor. Nikki
trails it into the blind-darkened
room, drying her long golden hair.
Backlit by the bathroom glow,
her silhouette belongs to an angel.
A Victoria’s Secret angel, but still …
Her voice holds a hint of incredulity.
Did you just tell your dad you love him?
My eyes burn, but I force a laugh.
“Why? Does that surprise you?”
Not the loving him part. The telling him
part.
She sits on the bed.
What’s wrong?
I don’t like to discuss the Kristina
crumbs of my life. Not even with Nikki.
“I scored some David Cook tickets for
tomorrow night. Mom is a fan. But she had
to go to Vegas, spur of the moment.”
Segue to … “So, you wanna go with me?”
To Vegas or David Cook?
Okay, bad
segue.
Either way, I can’t. I have to
work. Nevada Day weekend is Big Tip
Weekend at Bully’s, you know?
Especially for a cocktail waitress
with Nikki’s attributes. “Gotcha.”
She’s not done with me yet, though.
Why did your mom have to go to Vegas?
I could lie. Omit. Make a joke. Too
much work. “Why else? Kristina.”
She knows enough to know that’s not
good.
Your mother’s in trouble again.
“Previous mother,” I correct. “Or
the uterus I once spent nine months in.”
Nikki smiles, but asks with concern,
Is your previous mother okay?
I shake my head, echo Dad’s earlier
words. “Kristina will never be okay.”
I’M SORT OF AMBIVALENT
About that. I should feel
bad, right? I mean, some
jerk beat her bloody. No
one deserves that, right?
So why, when Nikki asks,
What happened to her?
do I shrug and say, “Guess
she walked into her ex’s
fist,” with pretty much
zero emotion attached?
And why, when she says,
Oh, no! That’s terrible!
do I respond, “Her fault, really.
The only guys she ever invites
into her life are felons, failed
AAers, and other assorted losers”?
And why, when she says,
But
no woman deserves to be hit
,
do I dare voice my opinion
that, “Not true. Some women
damn well beg for it”? I bite
down on the copper taste of anger.
Nikki takes a step back,
as if I might think she had
damn well begged for it.
But I could never hurt her.
So why, oh why, when she
asks,
How can you be so cold?
do I walk toward Nikki, flexing
my fingers? “Look. If Kristina
doesn’t kill herself, some guy
will probably do it for her.”
And why, when she says,
You are just plain mean
,
do I let loose a tsunami? “And
you know what? If something
bad did happen to Kristina,
I’m not sure I would care.”
Disbelief floods her eyes.
You can’t feel that way.
Rage-fueled words froth
from my mouth. “That’s
exactly how I feel, and if
you don’t like it, fuck you.”
NIKKI’S EYES
Go wide, and I realize what
I just said. “I’m sorry,” I try.
I reach for her, but she slaps
my hand away. She stands,
goes to the closet for clothes.
Her voice is dead calm
when she says,
You never tell
me how you feel about anything
,
Hunter. You never communicate
at all. In fact, you might want
to rethink your major. And while
you’re doing that, you’d better rethink
you and me. If we can’t talk about
things like your “previous mother,”
we don’t have much of a future together.
I don’t know what to say.
All this because of Kristina?
I watch Nikki slip into jeans,
a curve-hugging jade green
sweater. For the millionth time,
I think how beautiful she is.
But what is it with women
and talking? Some things were
meant to stay private, right?
She comes over to me, touches
my cheek.
Still nothing to say?
Goddamn it, I hate when you just
stare at me like that.
Her hand
jerks away and her eyes harden,
morgue-cold with anger.
Fine.
Fuck you too, then. Take your shit
,
get out, and don’t come back.
I can’t deal with this anymore.
She storms from the room, slams
the door so hard a picture rocks
off the dresser, falls to the floor.