Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
I NOTICE THE WALLS
Are eerily bare. No photos. No
paintings. No cheap ceramics.
Apparently Tanya isn’t much into
the Martha Stewart school of
homey decor. Fine by me.
Even the Christmas tree, leaning
into one corner of the living
room, is noticeably bare.
I can’t not ask, “What, did
someone steal the ornaments?”
Tanya giggles (and I’m starting
the hate the grate of her laugh).
Oh, no. I’ve just been so busy
we haven’t put them up yet.
Maybe we’ll do that tonight.
Sorry I brought it up. The last
thing I want to do is hang gaudy
crap on a fake evergreen and
pretend like I’m part of a fake
family. Fake. Fake. Fake.
I pad along the fuchsia shag,
thinking about the tatters
of my real family. Dad in jail.
Kortni, happy not to have me
there. Mom. Mom. Where is she?
A RIPTIDE OF SADNESS
Pulls at me, but I will not cry.
Must not show weakness as
I meet my new fake sisters.
This is your room
, Tanya says.
It is not much bigger than a closet.
Take that bed over there.
She points to a small twin under
the window. The matching bed against
the wall is currently unoccupied.
Tanya gestures toward it.
You’ll
bunk with Simone. Not sure …
Simone?
she calls.
Come meet Summer.
A door (bathroom?) opens
somewhere and a wraith—
pale as death—appears suddenly,
followed by two darker-skinned
girls, probably sisters. Real sisters,
part of my new fake family.
Good, you’re all here
, says Tanya.
Summer, this is Simone, Eliana
,
and Rosa. Get acquainted.
SHE GOES TO SAY GOOD-BYE
To Shreeveport. I maintain silence,
cross the room in three steps, claim my bed.
I guess I should unpack my clothes.
Having been on both sides of the “get
to know your new foster sister” dynamic,
I choose the respectful route and turn
to Simone. “Are there empty drawers?”
All three girls drill me with their eyes,
and the air, hanging thick with unasked
questions, prods my temper. “What?”
Nothing
, says Ghost-girl. Simone.
Lainie had the right side of the dresser.
Her voice is wimpy, and I’m not surprised.
She sounds like she looks—washed out.
I suspect the answer, but ask anyway, if only
to break the insufferable silence. “Who’s Lainie?”
Young Rosa (maybe ten?) rushes
to respond,
She used to live here
,
but she ran away. Walter says
good riddance, but Tanya …
Shh. You talk too much
, scolds Eliana,
who is thirteen or fourteen and definitely
carries an air of older sibling.
Lainie
had … issues.
She spits the last word.
I can’t help but laugh. “Don’t we all?”
That shatters the iceberg, or at least
chips it heavily, as everyone contributes
to a chorus of giggles. We’re not exactly
friends, and trust will never happen
here, but at least we don’t hate one
another. And while the mood is halfway
relaxed, I might as well ask, “So what’s
with Walter?” Tanya is easy to read.
The communal amusement vanishes.
And though no one says a word,
I have all the answer I need.
WE CHANGE SUBJECTS
And within twenty minutes, I know
most everything there is to know about
Eliana and Rosa Garcia Famosa.
Their father came from Cuba to
the United States via Mexico, where
he met some very bad people who
he later went into business with.
In Texas, he fell in love (my take:
lust) with their mother, Irena, and
together they came to California,
where the girls were born. Irena
Famosa expected her husband to work
in the lush fields of the San Joaquin,
but Ignacio Garcia chose easy
riches, moving methamphetamine
for a Mexican cartel. One day
he went away and never came back.
Irena grieved for a time, but met
a new man. A very jealous man
who suspected her of things she
never did. He killed her anyway.
END OF STORY
Except for the fact
that this happens to be
the girls’ fourth foster home
in six years, and Rosa can’t
remember her mother’s
face. Sad, I suppose.
But “sad” is a main
ingredient in every foster
kid recipe. We must choose
to accept it, or go off the deep
end ourselves. I could
easily dive in
over my head right
now. The others wait for
my story, but this will not be
a straight exchange. “I’ve been
with my dad, but he just
went to jail for DUI.”
Familiar excuse. Nods
all around. And Mom? Why
is it always easier to talk about
Dad than her? “And my mother
has pretty much written me
off.” The truth bites.
I KEEP UNPACKING
As I talk. It doesn’t take long.
My history or unpacking. Everything
I own pretty much fits in three
drawers plus five coat hangers.
Too aware of the three pairs
of eyes, inventorying every article
of clothing and five favorite
books, I find a way to keep my
cell phone discreetly stashed.
Some things need to stay secret.
All I want to do at this moment,
though, is pull out the phone, dial
Kyle’s number, hear his satin
voice promise he’s waiting for me.
Is he waiting for me? Or has he
completely forgotten me already?
IMPOSSIBLE, I KNOW
But even considering it makes me
want to pace. My heart accelerates,
like something wild, snared. Caged.
I can’t let the others see it. As nice
as they seem, if they intuit weakness,
I have rewarded them with a weapon.
I deliberately plop down on the bed,
calm my arterial stutter. No pacing
now, damn it. Now or ever, not here.
Instead, like an imprisoned wildcat,
I lock eyes with the human just
beyond the bars. The one staring
at me with interest I cannot tolerate.
“What about you, Simone? Why are
you here?” Come on, Ghost-girl. Tell
me your story, although I’m half-afraid
to hear it. Half-afraid. Half dying to, because
the eyes mine are locked to are haunted.