Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
TELLING HIM
Was something like getting a cavity
filled. Without Novocain. Evil pain,
the words drilling through the roof
of my mouth to deep inside my brain.
It was raining that afternoon, the world cold
and gray. I haven’t yet shaken the chill.
Ms. Shreeveport gave me a three-day
reprieve, time for an early Christmas
celebration. So much to celebrate
and all. I didn’t tell Kyle when I called
him. Wanted to do that face-to-face.
We were actually belly-to-belly on
the seat of his truck when I started
to cry. “Hold me. I don’t want to go.”
I can’t hold you much tighter.
And you’re not going anywhere.
“Yes. I am. They’re taking me
to Fresno. To a new foster home.”
He looked down into my eyes.
When? How long have you known?
“Day after tomorrow. I just found
out yesterday. It’s because of Dad.”
He brushed the hair away from
my face. Dried my cheeks with
the back of his hand. Shook his
head.
I can’t let you go. Not now.
You make life worth living.
If you leave, I have nothing.
I lifted my face. Kissed him.
“I don’t have a choice. It’s all set
up. I start school at Roosevelt
after vacation.” He slumped down
on me. Heavy. Weighted. Then
he started to cry.
This is fucked up.
Which made me cry more too.
We cried together for a long time.
Finally I said, “Make love to me.
I need to remember how it feels.”
It felt rough. Like punishment.
Punishment for his own pain.
I REMEMBER HOW IT FELT
All the way to Fresno.
Ms. Shreeveport tries
to make conversation.
For about fifteen minutes.
I surround myself with
a silence-bricked wall.
Finally she gets it.
You’ve got a lot on your mind.
Well, yeah. Like not
knowing what’s coming
next. Like wondering why
my life can’t remain static.
Like thinking about
Kyle and me, on the seat
of his truck, learning
how much real love hurts.
Like remembering what
he said, when our tears
had dried. On the surface.
Don’t worry. I’ll figure something out.
I WASN’T IN LOVE
With Bakersfield. (Only
with a guy who lives there.)
But I already hate Fresno.
It may be the gateway
to Yosemite’s stark glory,
but unlike the Sierra
sneaking up behind it,
the city of Fresno is an
ucking fugly collection of
east-leaning buildings,
blade-bare lawns, and
half-digested asphalt.
Cool enough now, almost
Christmas, but hotter than
Sahara sand in summer.
Really can’t wait to live here.
RIGHT TURN, LEFT TURN, RIGHT …
Do that a dozen or so times,
you end up in the broken-down
neighborhood I now call home.
The houses are fifties era. Built
around the time kids still did
duck-under-your-desk drills,
as if that could protect them
from nuclear bombs. Ha! Maybe
that’s what happened to this
neighborhood. Wonder if I should
worry about radiation. Maybe
wrap myself in aluminum foil.
At last (so soon?) we pull up
in front of a totally inconspicuous
place. (Not!) “It’s fricking pink.”
Salmon pink, with rotten red trim.
“You’ve got to be kidding me, right?”
Who paints a house like this?
Doesn’t matter how it looks
outside. It’s what’s inside that
counts. You’ll like the Clooneys.
SO SAYS SHE
What else would she say,
anyway? She opens
the trunk, and I
grab my
bag. Not much in it, but
only one thing matters—
my cell phone. My
lifeline
to the real world.
The one I’m about to
walk into is
pretend.
The uneven sidewalk
tries to trip me. The step
sags beneath my weight.
I don’t
want to see what’s
beyond the door, but
it opens at the bell. I
need it to
be nice inside.
I need something
solid to
hold on to.
CAN’T SAY IT’S “NICE” INSIDE
But it isn’t horrible. My nose
says so. It smells of cinnamon
apple room freshener—fake
but not bad. You couldn’t call
the place neat, but it isn’t dirty.
Everything shrieks “seventies.”
Red/purple shag carpet. Thick
velour drapes. Linoleum in
the hall (and, no doubt, kitchen
and bathrooms). Dated. Used.
I notice all this without stepping
foot through the door. Too many
people in the way right now.
Ms. Shreeveport has to work
her way past a short, too-perky
blonde and a bear-sized, bear-
colored man. Brown hair.
Brown skin. Brooding brown
eyes. George Clooney,
he ain’t. Wonder who he is.
FINALLY, I’M IN
Introductions are passed round.
Blonde, with a loopy smile.
Hi, Summer, I’m Tanya.
Bear remains quiet, so Shreeveport
says,
And this is Mr. Clooney.
Bear finally opens his curtain
of silence, corrects,
Call me Walter.
I stand in wordless defiance.
Bear asks Shreeveport,
She’s
not, like, a mute, right?
I am so loving him already.
Shreeveport says,
Of course
not. Say something, Summer.
I use sign language: “Hi.”
Blonde (Tanya) takes the high road,
giggles.
Ha. Hi to you, too.
Shreeveport does not find it
funny.
Please don’t be difficult.
Bear (Walter) asserts control.
No such thing as difficult here.
I push back with a silent “Bet me.”
Tanya ignores my defiant look.
Come meet the other girls.
I shrug, start to follow her.
Shreeveport doesn’t quite drop
it.
Cooperation is important.
I grab my bag, turn shadow.
Walter goes all syrupy.
There’s a good little girl.
I try not to notice the way my skin crawls.