Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
SHE WAS MAD
But I was mad too. Not
at her, but that didn’t much
matter. Not right then.
In fact, I was mad enough
to let myself not feel too bad
about my little p.m. tryst.
But by bedtime, I felt emptied.
Nervous. Too, too alone.
I watched Nik come from
the shower, skin warm and
hair wet, and I wanted her
with every electron of my being.
Not just her body. All of her.
In bed with me, a piece of me.
No, all of me. Because without her,
I am nothing. I knew it then
and I know it now. And, thank
God, she allowed my hours
of self-pity, then showed me
again what it means to be
in love with an angel.
I WATCH HER NOW
My angel
getting ready for the Christmas
party. Perfuming her arms
and legs with ginger-steeped
lotion. Sliding sleek,
tawny
legs into gartered stockings.
Curling long ripples
into the honey lake of her
hair.
Enhancing already
impossible beauty with
a touch of blush against
flawless
skin. She slips into her
new dress—a seraph robed
in red. Then she turns to
face
me, the question in her eyes
as obvious as my answer:
“You are more than
beautiful. You are
perfection.”
BEST OF ALL
She is mine. I am acutely
aware of how other men stare
as we enter the ballroom.
They are not looking at me.
I love her on my arm,
an exquisite piece of jewelry.
A few of the women glare.
Nikki is the ruby
they wish they could
be. Their marble eyes follow
us to our table, leave us
there. I offer a chair
to Nikki. “Stay here.
I’ll go get us drinks.” The bar
is hosted, and no one
asks to see my ID,
so I order Chardonnay
for Nikki; Jack Daniels and
Coke for me. By the time
I get back to the table,
Rick Denio has closed
in. But star-striking Nikki
won’t be nearly as easy as
he expects it to be.
AMUSING TO WATCH, THOUGH
I circle the table, sipping my drink,
liking the whiskey burn. Rick is all
over Nikki, and she looks really
uncomfortable about it. He’s a jerk.
“Hey, Rick. Putting the moves
on my girl?” I hand Nik her wine.
Rick is in the game.
Your girl?
Didn’t know you had such good taste.
“There’s a lot you don’t know
about me. Uh, where’s your wife
tonight?” The station buzz is she
ran off. With another woman.
Rick’s face flames, but he remains
calm.
She had another party.
I can’t help but smile at the opening
he just gave me. “A girl party, huh?”
I haven’t had a spar-fest for a while.
This one could be fun, but Rick’s
done playing.
Not sure who all’s
there. Excuse me. There’s Montana.
THERE, INDEED, IS MONTANA
In a bold, backless dress, sparkly
silver. And with her, all decked
out in a complementary gray
tux, is … “Brendan,” I whisper.
Nikki looks. Looks again.
Harder.
Oh my God. You
do
look like him. I can’t believe
it. Hey, you’re okay, right?
Okay enough to chug my drink.
“Yep. Fine and dandy. Except
I need a refill. You good for now?”
She’s barely touched her glass.
Good. I can only carry two
glasses, anyway. I order twin JDs.
Doubles. Tip the guy five bucks
so he doesn’t reconsider the ID.
When I turn around, I’m only
half-surprised to see who has
joined Nikki at our table. Poor
Nik looks positively green.
Goes well with her pretty red
Christmas dress. Ha. I crack
myself up. Too bad I’m spoiling
to be in a very unfunny mood.
BEFORE I CAN SIT DOWN
Nikki sees my double-fisted
whiskey and Cokes. She jumps
to her feet, extracts the drinks
gently from my hands, sets them
on the table.
I’m starving. Let’s get
some food.
It is not a request.
Anger starts to build, like wasps
daubing mud. But then when
I glance at Montana, her eyes
harbor anxiousness. She wants
the evening to go well. So all
I do for the moment is say,
“Hey, Montana. You look great
tonight.” I know I should say
something to Brendan, but all
I can manage is a small wave.
Then I let Nikki steer me
toward the seafood-heavy buffet.
When Montana asked if they
could join us, I didn’t know how
to say no
, apologizes Nikki.
“Not your fault.” I concentrate
on loading my plate. Shrimp. Crab
legs. Oriental chicken salad.
Nikki’s plate makes mine look
greedy. “Aren’t you hungry?
I thought you were starving.”
I only said that because
I figured you should eat
before drinking all that booze.
The last thing you need to do
,
all things considered, is get
blitzed.
She cringes, as if hearing
the wasp daub. I will keep
my temper in check. But I also
plan on drinking whatever
I please. Free drinks don’t come
around every day. Still, I will
play her way. “I’ll be careful.”
I TRY, REALLY I DO
I eat everything on my plate.
(Chase every bite with a swig.)
Return for alcohol-absorbing pasta.
(Finish one drink; start second.)
Third trip is to the carving board.
(Polish off drink two. Back to bar.)
Finally, dessert. Chocolate cheesecake.
(Work on third—really fourth—JD.)
I think I’m doing pretty well.
(No way to converse when imbibing.)
And then Brendan starts talking.
(About how Sparks has grown. Swallow.)
Reminiscing about Wild Waters.
(His lifeguard days. Single-gulp glass drain.)