Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
I DON’T NEED HER HELP
I’ve made this recipe twice a year
(Christmas, too) since I could tell
the difference between a saucepan
and a skillet. It just seems strange,
going through the familiar motions
laughter free. The kitchen throbs
silence. The sound of my sock-padded
footsteps echoes, wall to wall to wall.
I yank open the cupboard, grab
the necessary utensils, clanging them
cacophonously. Noise to battle
the hush-edged aloneness.
Then I line up ingredients in correct order.
Cinnamon. Cranberries. Oranges. Sugar.
CRANBERRIES SIMMERED
Sugar, orange peel, and cinnamon
added. Everything in a pretty glass
bowl, gelling rich red in the fridge,
it occurs to me that contributing
to the eardrum-slicing quiet is the fact
that Grandfather has not yet appeared.
We should leave before too very
long. I explore. Living room? Empty.
Hall? No sign of anything living.
Foreboding strikes suddenly. I march
right up to Grandfather’s bedroom door.
Knock, half expecting no answer.
But on the far side, a drawer closes.
The sound precedes footsteps
across the complaining wood floor.
Coming
, Grandfather calls.
Coming.
Twice, as if convincing himself
he really needs to get a move on.
I imagine him pajama-clad
and candy-stripe-eyed, but
the grandfather who opens
the door is one I’ve never, ever
seen before. “Wow. I didn’t
know you even owned a suit.”
A genuine grin creeps cheekbone
to cheekbone, and his eyes—
clear as a cold-water creek—fill
with delight.
Dug it out of mothballs.
Today is a special occasion.
Thought Cora might appreciate
you and me dressing to the nines.
Go put on something real pretty.
It’s an order. But a gentle one.
THE WHOLE THING
Is so unexpected, I’m halfway
changed into a plum-colored silk
blouse when my fingers start to
tingle and my breath stutters short.
Wait. Why now? Nothing’s wrong
except … Except for this sudden
feeling like the world just flipped
upside down. South Pole on top.
Santa’s lair at the butt end. I close
my eyes, sip in air through clenching
teeth. What is going on with me?
It’s just one dinner at the home of total
strangers. One stupid holiday meal,
Grandfather and me putting on the dog
to impress … who? One Thanksgiving,
not a commitment, not forever … Dread
stuffs itself into my head, and I can’t say
why, let alone know how to fight it.
IT’S NOT EXACTLY UNUSUAL
For anxiety to trill suddenly.
But usually, somewhere in my brain,
there’s a certainty that it’s ridiculous.
This doesn’t feel that way. This feels
like a warning of coming chaos.
I finish buttoning my blouse,
tuck it into the striking tie-dyed skirt
Aunt Cora gave me on my last birthday.
I’ve never worn it before. It seemed
like a treasure. One to hang in
the closet, a safe place to keep
it. Now that it’s on, it’s only cloth.
I finish dressing, brush back my hair,
tie it loosely with blue velvet ribbon.
Grandfather will be pleased.
But I’m frightened by what
I see, held completely still in
the mirror’s glass grip. The girl
captured there, staring back at me,
is someone I don’t recognize.
THAT GIRL
Curves softly
inside flounces
of fabric. She looks
like the woman
I’m afraid to grow into.
Lifts her hand
with uncommon grace.
She could pass for
the sophisticate
I’m too clumsy to be.
Touches cheeks
blushed berry in
steep hollows.
I wish I knew who
sculpted her face.
I don’t know
that girl. The only
thing familiar about
her is how she wears
fear in her eyes.
IT IS THAT GIRL
Who gets in the car with
Grandfather. That girl who
rides, silent as a ghost, for
ninety-three minutes, barely
even acknowledging her
grandfather’s faltering small talk.
That girl who stares out
the window, counting water
tanks and watching big and
bigger American flags flap
in the wind. That girl who
quick-freezes after arrival.
Coming?
asks Grandfather,
exiting the driver’s side and
then, in a most gentlemanly
fashion, circling the car to
open the passenger door.
What can that girl do but join
her grandfather on the wide
sidewalk? Together, the two
assess the Cregan place—
a huge, upscale tract home.
One of those houses that
resembles its huge, upscale
neighbors to a creepy
degree. The houses come
in three hues—beige, gray,
and not-quite-white. Not much
to distinguish one from another
except the number of stories,
size of the garage, and gravel
color. Even the plants—native
Texas species, known to thrive
in this climate—are the same.
All, no doubt, must be approved
by the homeowners’ association.
Part of me likes the conformity.
The order. Part of me wonders
if anything ever disturbs it.
Wind? Rain? Hurricane?
Birth? Divorce? Argument?
What difference does it make?