Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
I PURSUE SAID TROUBLE
Like a buzzard sniffing after
roadkill. “Okay, Leah. What do
you have for me?” It’s a loaded
question, and she’s quick to
react. She smiles, leans into me,
and I appreciate how beneath
her unzipped jacket, a low-cut
black sweater reveals truly
stunning cleavage.
Let’s walk.
We go five blocks, silent.
Cut across a hectic parking lot.
Turn down a sleepy street.
Finally she tugs me to a stop.
I scored some amazing smoke.
Thought you might like a taste.
Smoke? Argh. Tempting.
I’ve been out for a while.
Oh, what the hell? “Okay.”
Just keep walking
, she says,
lighting an already rolled J.
Pretend it’s a cigarette.
I do and she does and somehow
we get away with smoking weed
out in the open, on a city street.
I’d be lying if I said it didn’t
lift my stomach, roller-coaster-
style. Definitely a thrill, getting
away with illicit behavior.
More of that is brewing, for sure.
Leah slips her hand into mine,
and my first thought is of Nikki.
I suspect where this is headed. So why
am I still going along with Leah’s
plan? Stunning cleavage or no,
Leah is not the right thing to do,
literally or figuratively, despite
how soft her hand is in mine,
or how the jasmine perfume of her
reminds me of a warm June evening.
Stop it, Hunter, stop it. You are
not just another guy, lusting after
an easy piece. You are not …
BUT APPARENTLY I AM
Leah turns her face up toward mine,
daring me to kiss her. God, she is
luscious, ripe fruit temptation,
serpent coiled in expectation.
I can hear Nik whisper,
You’d never
cheat on me, would you, Hunter?
The snake strikes, and I pull back.
“Leah, I have a girlfriend, you know.”
Her hand falls out of mine, and
relief escapes in a long-drawn sigh.
But she will not so easily be dismissed.
Her fingers settle gentle on my inner
thigh, move slowly higher.
Yeah. So?
I’m not asking for commitment, and
I don’t want to mess up your life. I just
want to give you a little piece of me.
She boosts up on tiptoes, looks
into my eyes as she kisses me.
I am pulled into the liquid emerald
of her eyes, the invitation—no, demand—
of her pillowed pout, her experienced
hands. And I’m helpless. Weak. Convinced.
She pulls me down a narrow alleyway,
backs me against a splintered garage door.
I pretend protest, but we both know
claiming I don’t want this would be a lie.
Shush
, she pleads.
Don’t say a word.
Just let me take care of you.
She kisses
me again, encourages my hands
along the hilly contours of her body.
And in one long, sinuous movement,
she is on her knees. In total control.
I CLOSE MY EYES
But what materializes
out of the darkness there
are shadowbox photos of Nikki.
Those, and the snap of December
against uncovered skin
might be enough to make
me stop, but when Leah senses
my wavering, her urgent
please
closes around me, pulls me
in. I look up at the froth
of clouds. Cappuccino sky.
The summer scent of jasmine
lifts from a tide of titian
hair, and there is no hesitation
now, no U-turn, no braking,
only relentless forward motion.
Propulsion. A kaleidoscope
of titian. Jasmine. Cappuccino
clouds. And every trace of Nikki
dissolves in Leah’s warm rain.
ONLY AFTER
We are finished,
clothes zipped up,
hair smoothed,
does the thought
cross my mind
that someone
might have seen.
Enjoyed watching.
Got off themselves,
maybe. My cheeks
burn. Can’t say why.
Only after we have
exited the alley,
started back along
the sleepy street,
toward the hectic
parking lot, does
it occur to me that
the fame that brought
me here belongs to
me, not to my mom.
I like how that feels.
WE WEAVE
Through the thinning crowd.
Some have taken their children
home, out of the crisp morning,
away from the threat of snow.
A stab of intuition makes me
survey the knot of people nearby.
Did Nik decide to come after
all? That could be very bad,
all things considered. But when
I assess faces, the one my eyes
grab hold of does not belong
to Nikki. I do not recognize
the man standing just there,
scanning the human sea. So why
do I think I know him? Someone
ducks in front of him, and I lose
momentary sight, but when his
eyes at last connect with mine,
they are green-dappled gray. Piebald.
He turns away suddenly, as if
whoever he was looking for
found him instead. He melts
into the tide of bodies. Faces.
One of them very much like mine.
ZAPPED
As if by a stun gun,
by the most unexpected
encounter, the entire
top of my head tingles.
I stand
trembling, unable to
totally comprehend
what seeing those eyes
might mean to me.
Awed.
Frozen in place. Heart
quickstepping. Breath,
a shallow draw.
I am pulverized
by
the weight of one fragile
moment. Denial descends,
a threadbare shroud. Maybe
I have it all wrong. But
simple
reasoning convinces me
otherwise. I don’t know why
I’ve never seen my father
before, but I reel in the
recognition
that I’ve seen him now.
I just want to know,
who is he?