Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
EVEN SO
One thing I do know.
I don’t ever want to
make him mad at me,
and he does not much
care for the “oh, poor
me” routine. So I’ll suck
it up. Still, my melting
smile must signal
disappointment. “That’s
okay. We’ll get together
tomorrow, right?”
Couldn’t keep me away.
He reaches for my shirt,
pulls, and not too gently.
Again, we are connected
by the kind of kiss that
should be integral
to every single good-bye.
I WATCH THE DUST
Of his retreat lift
into the bitter
blue sky. Not
a single cloud
to catch it.
Clear.
Cold.
Empty.
Like how I feel
right now. Love
is strange. One
minute you’re
jungle fever.
The next
you’re
Arctic
winter.
I’M GETTING DRESSED
For our like-a-real-family Thanksgiving
Day jaunt to Dad’s all-time favorite
Carrows when my cell warbles.
Kyle! I scramble to find the phone
hidden in the chaos that is my dresser.
But no, it’s not Kyle. (Why did I think
it would be?) When I see whose number
has in fact materialized on caller ID,
I consider pretending I never heard
the very loud ring tone. Still, it is a holiday.
Guess I should pick up. “Hey, Mom.
Happy Thanksgiving.” I expect some
sweet, if bogus, holiday greeting.
Instead she launches verbal mortars.
I called Darla and Phil’s to say hello
and they told me you’re not there
anymore. You’re living with your dad?
Why didn’t you bother to let me know?
My first instinct is to lob a grenade
right back at her, but something in her
voice says she doesn’t want to go to war.
She sounds ready to implode. “You okay?”
That’s all it takes to light the fuse.
She’s falling bricks.
No. I’m not okay.
The boys are with your grandparents
in Reno because Ron set me up….
The fifteen-minute rant nets some
pertinent information. Mom’s fragile
life has shattered yet again. Ron beat
her up, possibly left a stash of meth
where the cops who came calling
could, or even would, find it. And now
it’s up to her, in a couple of weeks,
to try and convince a judge that she,
a proven liar and twice-convicted
felon, is, this time, completely innocent.
Best of luck, mother-of-mine. I don’t
believe you. Why should a judge?
BUT THAT’S NOT WHAT SHE WANTS
To hear. So I listen without commentary.
And, I guess, less sympathy than she,
for some stupid reason, expects.
Well
? she finishes.
Nothing to say?
Her supercilious tone irritates me.
“Sucks to be you,” is the best I can
do. What does she want from me?
How can you be so … so mean?
Now, somehow, it’s on me? My turn
to blow. “God, Mom, are you stupid
or what? Why don’t you move the fuck
away from there? Go somewhere
Ron can’t find you. Start over …
Get a real job. Take care of your kids.”
How would I do that? I don’t have—
“Don’t say it. Don’t say you don’t have
the resources. Grandma Marie would
help. You know that. You’re just a …”
A what?
Her breathing sounds tattered.
I should feel sorry for her. But I don’t.
I can’t. I’m sick of her freaking
excuses. “A goddamn coward.
It’s easier to keep on living like you
do. Day-to-day. No thought for
the future or the past. Not caring
about the shit you’re always crotch-
deep in. What about the boys,
Mom? What about any of us?”
She is quiet for a very long time.
I hope it’s because something I said
actually sliced through her denial.
But no.
Happy Thanksgiving to you, too.
And she’s gone. Suddenly I want
to take it all back. Damn her, anyway.
I love her. I hate her. I wish
I didn’t know her. I ache to know
her better. My glass bravado
cracks. Splinters. Crashes down.
I NEVER CRY
Never, ever cry over Mom
or the charade that is my life.
But tears fall now. And I do
nothing to try and stop them.
God, how I want to let her in.
But I know she’d only shut me out.
Doesn’t matter why—meth or
men or something I can’t fathom
at all—the fact is, she’s incapable
of loving me like a mother should.
So I can’t let myself love her
like a daughter should. To unlock
myself in such a way would simply
be an invitation to heartbreak.
ALMOST DONE
Feeling sorry for myself when
a little warning chimes in my head.
Mom is the queen of denial.
Not her meth? Maybe not, but
odds are
decent she’s using again.
Wouldn’t be the first time
she jumped off the wagon.
One time she came to visit so
high
that she didn’t realize the guy
she was putting the moves on
happened to be my caseworker.
Not like we all couldn’t tell
she
was lit. Her sweat-sequined skin
leaked a smell like tar remover.
When Darla asked if she wanted
to join us for dinner, Mom
lied,
claiming a bad case of fast-food
poisoning. And when the cute
clean-cut dude finally mentioned
his official relationship
to me,
she added disgusting details
about her fabricated illness,
used them to make a hasty
escape. Like anyone believed her.
MEMORY LANE
Is an ugly stroll. I’m working hard
to turn the corner when Dad finally
calls,
Let’s go, girls. I can hear
a big ol’ burger mooing my name.
Does he have even the faintest
idea how stupid that sounded?
Maybe not. But evidently Kortni
does.
Burgers don’t moo, idiot.
Idiot. Nice. This little outing should
go well. I settle into the rotting
backseat of Dad’s decrepit Chevy
Impala. Stinks like cigarette-
tainted armpit drip. Reminds
me again of Mom. How can
she ruin every holiday (even
the ones that don’t feel much
like holidays) without even being
there? Why can’t I just forget her?