Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
WHY DID I CALL?
It wasn’t just the boredom.
It was the question that had
been burning inside me for
three days. Mom prompted,
Okay, then. Why did you call?
And out it came, slick as
a baby pig. “Why didn’t you
ever tell me how you and Dad
met, and that I have a sister?”
Very long pause.
Who told you?
Duh. “Who do you think, Mother?
Anyway, that doesn’t matter.
Don’t you think I have the right
to know something like that?”
Even longer pause.
I guess so.
Anger seethed. “You guess
so? I know we don’t talk much,
and when we do, it’s usually
all about you, but—”
No pause.
Now, wait a minute—
BUT I WAS ON A ROLL
“No, Mother. We usually
do
only talk about you, and obviously
not about stuff that matters….”
My eyes stung, and the words
I wanted to say tried to stick
in my throat. I coughed them out.
“I have a sister. Where the hell
is she? What’s her name?
I already know who her father
is, and how you hooked up with
Dad and all. Have you always
been that way? Don’t you ever
feel bad? I mean, for God’s sake,
how can you just keep sleeping
around, piling one guy on top
of the next? How can you just
keep making babies, then tossing
them away? How can you …?”
Right about then I noticed
she had hung up the phone.
KORTNI BAILED DAD OUT
The next morning.
They might have
just booked him
and let him go,
except for a couple
of pertinent things.
One: Not his first DUI.
He had one less
than two years ago.
Blood alcohol level:
point zero nine.
Two: Weed under
the seat. Less than
an ounce, but not
only fineable, also
contributable to his
condition that night.
He’s looking at
thirty days’ jail time,
license suspension,
and a big chunk of
change, and if he
can’t pay it, more
jail time. He goes
to court this week.
HE’S PRETTY MISERABLE
And I almost feel sorry for him.
Not that I didn’t try to warn him.
And I almost want to comfort him.
Not that he’s often been worthy of that.
And I almost want to give him a hug.
Not that I want anyone but Kyle to hug me.
And I almost want to say it will all work out.
Not that I really believe it will, for him. Or me.
And I almost want to tell him I love him.
Not that I have, since I was a little girl.
And I almost think I should fix that.
Who knows when I might have another chance?
HE’S ON THE PORCH
Smoking and, of course, sucking
up suds. Who knows when he might
have another chance at a good buzz?
Kortni went to town for groceries.
(She still has her driver’s license.)
So there’s an empty chair. I sit.
“Hey, Dad. I just want you to know …”
Say it. Say it. Say it. Can’t. Not yet.
“I’m sorry about what happened.”
He doesn’t look at me. Just stares
across the winter-bared fields.
Me too. Sometimes I’m plain stupid.
All the time. But I don’t tell him
I think so. Say it. Say it. Say it.
Ah, what the hell. “Love you, Dad.”
Now he looks at me, eyes drawing
slowly from the dirt, across dead
air, to my face.
What did you say?
He didn’t hear? Didn’t believe
it? And now I have to repeat it?
“I said, uh … that I love you.”
I EXPECT
A reciprocal declaration—an “I love
you, too.” Or maybe condemnation—
a “Why don’t you say it more often?”
Anything, really, but what he does say:
Why?
“What do you mean, why? You’re my
dad, right?” Sounds lame, even to me.
So?
His one-word responses are pissing
me off. “Shouldn’t I love my father?”
Not necessarily.
Two words. Communication.
I realize, however, that he’s right.
Loving your parents is not required.
He inhales the last drag of his cigarette.
Get me a beer?
WHEN I RETURN
He is ready to talk, as if words
suddenly materialized in his brain.
First, a long drink of brew.
Then his mouth opens.
I’m sorry I’m such a shit-
for-brains. I thought I’d
be a better dad. Wanted
to be. Really, I did. But
then I let my bad habits
get the better of me.
I watch him pull another long
swallow. Light another cancer
stick. “It’s called addiction, Dad.”
I know. Can’t stop. And
to tell you the truth, even
if I could, I don’t want to.
You’re the only good thing
in my fucked-up life. And I
couldn’t even be thankful
enough to look after you
right. They took you away….
I want to shout, “No, you
shoved me away!” Instead
I say, “You’re selfish, Dad.”
He shakes his head, smoke
escaping side to side from
the corners of his mouth.
Not always. Nope. At first
it was all about your mother.
I loved her. God. Never love
someone that much, because
you’re sure to end up hurt.
I would have married her.
Would have raised up your
sister like my own. Would
have raised you better….
This is the most he’s ever
spoken to me at one time.
Ever. “So what happened?”
When she got pregnant with
you, I told her all that, begged
her to give up the crystal.
To be fair, she tried to clean
up. For you. Tried and mostly
failed. Meth is a mean mother
monster. But even if she could
have given it up, the fact is
she loved Trey more than she
ever loved me. Or anyone.