Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
THE DOOR FLIES OPEN
Before we make the welcome mat.
Some sort of chaos, after all?
But no. It’s just a jacked-up Aunt Cora.
Come in! Everyone’s here.
She snatches
Grandfather’s elbow, tugs.
All right
,
he snarls, tugging it back.
I’m working on it.
Maybe his suave exterior is nothing more
than a barely disguised case of nerves.
I follow, cradling my cranberry surprise
as if it might jump from my arms. Aunt Cora
leads us into the kitchen, where most
of the celebrators have gathered.
She sidles up to Liam, pulls him over
to meet Grandfather, who has yet to
have actually made his acquaintance.
This is my dad, Leroy. Dad, this is Liam.
Grandfather shakes his hand but looks
uncomfortable.
Glad to finally meet you.
This is only the beginning of a long round
of introductions. We meet Liam’s mom and
dad; his brother, Tom; sister, Laurel; two aunts;
three uncles; a cousin or four. And that’s just
the ones in the kitchen. I can hear voices
in some other unidentified room. I don’t think
I made nearly enough cranberry sauce.
Throughout the entire process, Aunt Cora
hangs on to Liam as if letting go might make
some imaginary tower tumble. Finally, all of
us not quite knowing one another’s names,
Aunt Cora’s eyes stop traveling the room
long enough for her to notice.
Oh.
You wore the skirt. It looks amazing.
Suddenly everyone is looking at me.
My palms start to tingle. Before I can lose
my breath, I excuse myself. “I could use”—
blood jackhammers my brain—“some air.”
I START TOWARD THE FRONT DOOR
But someone catches my arm.
Come on out here
, he says.
The backyard is real pretty.
It’s one of Liam’s cousins. Beau?
Michael? Whichever, he is a couple
of years older than me and wears
Irish good looks in long, straight
black walnut hair, white linen skin,
and eyes the color of violets.
I catch my breath, shadow him out
into a miniature botanical garden,
with ponds and statuary and trees
in full autumn dress. It’s stunning.
Very Zen. My heartbeat slows in
appreciation of the almost solitude.
Almost, but for what’s-his-name.
You okay now?
His voice is satin.
You looked right about ready to bolt.
“I’m good, thanks. I, uh … sorry.
Can’t remember your name.
Too many thrown at me at once.”
He grins, showing perfect pearl
teeth.
Micah. This is a big family
,
okay. And we’re not even all here.
Mi
cah
, not Mi
chael
. Good name.
But why is he being so nice?
“Funny. Our family
is
all here.”
Not exactly accurate. But close
enough to the truth, I guess.
Family is about connection.
Nothing wrong with a, uh
,
compact family. Long as
you’re good to each other.
Are we good to each other?
Not bad, I suppose. But all
I can do in response is nod.
Silence closes in, squeezes.
Micah releases its grip.
You
do
look pretty in that skirt, you know.
Cheeks flaming, I stutter
something like, “Thanks,” just
as someone inside calls out,
Dinner!
A GIANT FEAST
Is laid out, buffet-style, on the long kitchen counters.
We form a line, help ourselves, then find places to sit.
The older adults claim the formal dining room, leaving
us younger people to choose our seats at folding
tables in the kitchen. I fill my plate sparingly, pick
a chair, wait to see if Aunt Cora will join me. She doesn’t.
But Micah does, sitting beside me.
Do you mind?
I shake my head, making his recent compliment rattle
around inside my brain:
Pretty in that skirt … pretty …
In the next room, Mr. Cregan recites grace and
before the amen, Micah’s thigh leans gently against
mine. This can’t be happening! But it is, and it’s warm,
and all those newly discovered body parts alert.
The conversation around me blurs to a buzz. I do
my best to tune out and eat my turkey and stuffing
without dripping gravy on my blouse or (pretty!) skirt.
This is just dumb. Not four hours ago, I was fantasizing
about a private Thanksgiving with Bryce. Now here
I am surrounded by Cregans and, for some unfathomable
reason, leg-to-leg with probably the best-looking member
of the clan. This cannot be happening. Maybe I’m asleep
and this is all a dream. Blood whooshes in my ears,
damping a gush of laughter. Somebody told a joke?
Suddenly metal clinks against glass, like a bell.
All attention turns toward the dining room, where
Aunt Cora and Liam are standing.
Excuse us, but
we have some happy news
, says Liam. Aunt Cora
catches my eye, smiles.
We’re getting married.
Summer
DAD’S IDEA
Of a Thanksgiving meal,
Turkey Day treats
, in his
vernacular, is going out
to my all-time favorite place
,
(are you ready for this?)
Carrows. Best burgers, ever.
Burgers for Thanksgiving?
Poultry gives me the trots.
No pumpkin pie, either?
Bet Carrows will have it.
Carrows pumpkin pie?
Think I’ll skip it. Burgers?
Maybe they have turkey
burgers. Jeez, man. Even
foster homes celebrate
Thanksgiving, trying to
make up for real parents
who aren’t real parents.
Hey, I’ve never been much
of a cook. And Kortni?
Let her do a turkey, we’ll all
get the trots. And anyway
,
the important thing is being
together, right? Thankful
we can be like a real family.