Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
BUT SHE’S ON MY MIND
As Dad weaves down the rutted
dirt toward the highway, Kortni
chattering like an irritated crow.
Unusual, considering the amount
of beer they’ve apparently consumed
since breakfast. The smell of cheap
brew, mixed with stale tobacco,
gags me slightly. “Uh, Dad.
You sure you’re good to drive?”
Damn straight. Why wouldn’t
I be?
As if to prove he’s too
damn straight, he pulls out
a joint, hands it to Kortni.
Light that, would ya, babe?
Gotta keep my eyes on the road.
Just perfect. Can I get high
from secondhand pot smoke?
“Uh, Dad? My asthma?”
Kortni torches the blunt
anyway.
We’ll just open all
the windows. You’ll be okay.
They’re smoking. I’m steaming,
despite the fact that it’s pretty
damn cold, moving freeway-speed
with all the windows dropped.
Whatever. Usually I don’t think
much about Kortni at all.
Right now I’m thinking how
much she resembles a Pekingese,
double-inhaling pot smoke
up her smashed-in nose, snorting
a little with each exhale. I bet
she’s one hellacious snorer.
As Dad’s girlfriends go, I guess
she isn’t the worst. Not that I’ve met
them all, or wanted to. A couple
were prettier on the outside, evil
ugly inside. Zoe tops that list. Not
sure exactly where that puts Mom.
Old pictures I’ve seen at Grandma
and Grandpa Haskins’s house prove
Kristina’s exterior was stunning once
upon a time, in a land before crystal
meth. Amazing how fast that drug
can age you. It’s a zombie, sucking
youth right out of you, lifeblood.
Then again, if she hadn’t fallen
into that lifestyle, she wouldn’t have
met Dad at all. And then there
wouldn’t be me. A perverse question
bubbles up. Perverse, because I know
it’s going to bug Kortni. Like wheezy
me cares. “So, Dad. How exactly
did you and Mom meet?” We’ve never
discussed it. And he doesn’t
really want to now.
Um. Why?
You writing an autobiography?
Big word. Wrong word, but big.
“No. That would be
your
memoir,
not mine. I just want to know is all.”
Oh. Here’s our exit. We’ll talk
about it later, okay?
Saved by
Carrows. Lucky Dad. For now.
HOLY CRAP
Can’t believe this place is so crowded.
Must have been a whole herd of mooing
Thanksgiving burgers. We have to wait
outside for almost a half hour.
Dad and Kortni smoke. Regular
cigarettes, thank God. I move upwind,
stand off to one side. Don’t want to
think any more about Mom right now.
So I’ll think about Kyle instead.
I’d rather be spending today with
him, think he probably wishes
the same. Poor guy. Dysfunction
pretty much defines his family
too. His mom died eight years
ago, a DUI fatality. “DUI” meaning
“diving under the influence” into
a fast-running but shallow section
of the Kern River. The coroner
ruled it an accident, but Kyle
believes the act was purposeful.
Sick of Dad’s shit
, he called it.
The bitch went and left us alone
with him. Just goes to show
how little she cared about us.
“Us,” meaning him and his sister,
Sadie. Deserted by their mother.
Left with an alcoholic father
and his own string of girlfriends.
Probably why Kyle and I are
so good together. The old
saying, “takes one to know
one,” definitely applies to us.
I’ve got a saying of my own:
“Takes one to love one.” Mom
told me something like that once.
The topic of discussion was Ron,
who had just left bruises on
three-year-old Donald. I was
on a rant. “How come all the men
in your life have been losers?” I asked.
She barely reacted to the word
“loser.”
I could never have
a relationship with someone
who didn’t understand addiction.
Nice phrasing. Translation:
She could never be with a guy
who wasn’t an addict himself.
No wonder she can’t stay clean.
THERE I GO AGAIN
Thinking about Mom. I have so
got to stop that! Think about Kyle.
Think about Kyle. Think about …
The door opens and a senior-
citizen-type hostess chirps,
Kenwood, party of three.
Not sure you could call us a party.
Then again, Dad is pretty much
a walking, talking party all by himself.
There it is
, he says, opening
the menu.
The Mile-High Burger.
My mouth is watering already.
He orders the cholesterol-
ridden nightmare, plus a beer.
Kortni dittoes. I go for the Mile-
High Turkey Stack. Hey, it’s got
the requisite (for me, anyway)
poultry, plus some vegetable matter,
on a flaky croissant. Homage
to the day! The beer arrives.
Disappears. A second round
comes before the waitress can
deliver our meal. Dad slams
that one too. By the time
our Mile-High feast hits the table,
he’s barely coherent enough to
order another one. “Dad,” I warn,
“I know we’re celebrating and
everything, but maybe you’d
better slow down a little.”
Before he can argue, Kortni
jumps to his defense.
He’s fine.
And anyway, you’re not his mother.
If I were Kyle, I’d simply blow.
Being Summer, I’ll choose
a more covert route to revenge.
In silence, I pick at my sandwich,
watching Dad and Kortni wolf
theirs down and chase them
with even more beer. I wait until
their mouths are full, then venture,
“So, Dad. Tell me how you met Mom.”