Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
WHAT MAY DO
Is the pill potpourri
still in my pocket.
Who knows what
they might really do, if anything. I reach
for possible Nirvana,
swallow it down with
two gulps of beer. Wait.
I plop on the plush
leather sofa, fake cheer
when Wisconsin scores,
slug down more beer. Wait. About the time
I think I must have
gagged down placebos,
my brain goes fuzzy
and my tongue thickens
in my mouth. Behind
my forehead, a
zzzzzz
sound lifts, like bees swarming, and my ears
feel like I’m diving
deep. Pressure. I close
my eyes, try to shut out
football. Shouting. Crying.
Clucking. Burnt butter
smell. Dinner should be
interesting. To say the least.
Autumn
WE’VE ALWAYS KEPT
Thanksgiving relatively low-key.
Grandfather. Aunt Cora. And me.
We spend the day cooking. Tasting.
Eating. Getting way too full. Just us.
But not this year. This year
we’re going to a big schmooze
at Liam’s parents’ house in Austin.
Aunt Cora wants to introduce us.
Not sure why she needed
to make the big intros today.
She knows how I feel about
breaking bread with total strangers.
Grandfather isn’t a whole
lot happier about it than I am.
But Aunt Cora can be pretty
convincing when she’s honey sweet.
It’s a skill I’m working hard on,
especially where Grandfather
is concerned. I’ve tried and tried
to get him to loosen my reins, at least
a little. It’s hard to maintain
a romance when most every
move is monitored. Grandfather
doesn’t trust me, which another time
I might find sort of funny. Me?
In need of watching? I mean,
considering his distrust took
root in a past defined by my father,
it’s not really fair to me.
Then again, considering
I’m not exactly anxious for
him to know any details about Bryce
and me, some people might
say I’ve earned it to some
degree. But, hey, a month
of secrets in seventeen years?
I’d say that’s not so bad.
And a month of romance
in all that time means I’ve got
a fair amount of catching up to do.
I HAVEN’T CAUGHT ALL THE WAY
Up yet. Haven’t gone all the way
“there,” not that he’s asked to.
Part of me really likes that—
that he respects me enough
not to pressure me into something
I’m probably not ready for. Part
of me wonders if I’m not good
enough for him to even want to try.
It’s warped. So am I. Although
I have to say, with Bryce in my life
I feel a little less distorted than
I used to. He grounds me. Not only
that, but for once, people at school
don’t look at me like I’m a complete freak.
Not with Bryce’s arm around my waist
as he walks me to class. Not when they see
us steal kisses (you’re not supposed
to swap spit in the hallways). Not when
they see us come and go in his car,
stereo blaring. Sometimes grunge,
sometimes country. I’m happy to listen
to Three Days Grace. And, with some
coaxing, he’ll agree to Toby Keith,
though I haven’t quite convinced him
Toby’s music is rock with a Texas
drawl. On weekends we manage
to steal some time together, if I can
talk Grandfather into letting me go
to a game, the mall, or the library. Bryce
will meet me and we’ll cheer our team,
window shop, or make out behind the stacks.
I must say, I’ve become a pretty good kisser.
And I’m starting to like how that makes me feel
in places I’ve always refused to think about.
YEAH, I KNEW I HAD THEM
I took sex ed twice
in middle school.
I totally get the
mechanics, and
when it comes
to spelling the
names for those
places, hey, I’m a
regular champ. But
up until now, the
idea of putting
that knowledge
to genuine use
seemed way too
complicated to
consider. Not to
mention more than
than a little messy.
Okay, when it comes to E X, I’m retarded. But
better late than never.