Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
THAT MAKES HIM WANT
A cigarette. He reaches into
the glove box for a pack
of Marlboros.
Want one?
I shake my head. “Don’t
smoke. It’s seriously
bad for my asthma.”
He looks at the cigarette
he’s about to light up.
Asthma?
Does he think
it’s a test? “Yeah. But go
ahead if you need to.
Not like it’s anything new.”
He thinks about it for
a second or two.
Put your
shirt on. Let’s take a walk.
It’s a brisk fifty degrees
outside—by Bakersfield
standards, a cool fall day.
Kyle lights his cancer
stick, takes my hand,
and steers me along
the riverbank. Summer-
fried grass chatters
beneath our feet, and
the water mutters along.
Smoke bothering you?
Kyle asks, blowing it
downwind, away from me.
“Not at all.” He finishes
his cigarette, stubs it out,
pulls me down into a soft
tuft, sits close, and leans
his face into my hair. Sighs.
Tobacco breath escapes
his mouth, yet somehow
it doesn’t make me gag,
and when he lays me back
to see the sky, I find myself
very near heaven.
Kiss me.
It’s more order than request,
but I don’t care. All I want
to do is lose myself in him.
I’M SO LOST
I barely notice when my shirt
comes off again, or how the cool
breeze plays strange melodies
up and down superheated skin.
The sharp tang of Kyle’s desire
rises into the chuffing wind,
and when my lips journey
his body, they come away
with a thin lick of salt. We are
moving quickly toward what
I didn’t come here for, but I am
powerless to stop him from
unzipping my jeans and peeling
them off me before sliding out of
his own. Am I ready for this after
all? The only things in the way
of “all the way” are red cotton
boxers and a pair of barely there
panties. Ninety-eight percent
of me is ready to say okay.
I close my eyes against the azure
glare. Kyle moves over me,
expertly tries to convince the last
two percent. Riffs of pleasure
trill through my veins. Excite
me. Frighten me. Delight me.
Off go the boxers. On goes
the latex. But just as he pulls
at the panties, I remember
that other girl, in that other
town, how she watched, terrified,
as the man who was supposed
to protect her chose instead
to harm her. My muscles go
rigid. I never told anyone. Now
someone will know. “Wait.”
He pauses, confused at jumbled
signals—my body screaming
yes, while my mouth says no.
It’s okay. I won’t hurt you.
My eyes sting. “I want to. I do.
But …” My face heats to flush.
I don’t want him to know. Don’t
want anyone to know. Tears spill.
Kyle brushes them gently away.
What’s wrong?
The answer
he waits for is painful. But for
us to work, I have to tell him.
AN INTENSE
Shiver
quakes me, initiates teeth
chatter. Kyle hands me my shirt
like an offering. Waits,
silent,
as I launch the lurid account.
I can’t look at him while I recite
it. Instead I focus on a skinny
sapling
wearing a single crimson leaf.
I am the fledgling tree, weighted
not by wind, but by memory. I
bend
but refuse to break. I finish
with a plea. “I’ve never told
this story to anyone
before.
Can we just keep it between
you and me?” The question
floats, a fallen red leaf in
the breeze.
KYLE HAS LISTENED
Without comment. Finally he says,
Who would I tell?
He cocks his head,
looks at me in an assessing way.
That’s why you never did it with Matt?
“Not with Matt or anyone else. But
how do you know we never did?”
He grins.
Because Matt isn’t the type
to get laid and not brag about it.
I, on the other hand, am very good
at keeping secrets.
He moves closer,
puts his arm around my shoulder.
I’m sorry that happened to you.
But it doesn’t change how I feel.
I love you. And if you really love
me, you have to trust me.
In one
swift motion, he shifts his body
and I am again reclining in autumn
gold grass. I learned a long time ago
not to place my trust in anyone.
You always get screwed in the end.
But when Kyle lowers himself over me,
the kiss that finds my lips is brimming
with promise. He lifts my wrists above
my head, pins them purposefully to the ground
with one strong hand, as if I might complain
about his other hand, voyaging over
my body, lingering in all the right places.
It already knows me. Such intimate
awareness deserves trust, and so I open
myself to it. And to Kyle. He takes complete
control. Instinct or experience? No matter.
My body surrenders. Reacts. Invites.
He is not gentle. But I am not afraid.
And as we rise and rise in symphony,
each note completely new to me, I think
I might never be frightened again.