Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
ZERO RESPONSE
So I prod just a bit. “Come on.
I told you my sordid little tale.”
Nothing.
I look over at Eliana and Rosa.
Both are wide-eyed, silent.
Nada.
Hmm. This one must be good.
“Is your dad, like, a serial killer?”
Zilch.
She shoots a dry-ice glare.
“Okay, fine. I don’t care, anyway.”
Empty.
I wish I were rooming with
las
cubanitas
. Even three to a room.
Vacant.
THANKFULLY
Tanya calls from way down the hall,
Girls! I need some help. Hurry!
There is some sort of a muffled crash.
The tension in the room, god-awful
heavy just two seconds ago, falls
away, like shedding a heavy robe.
Eliana and Rosa rush out the door.
I start to follow and suddenly Simone
transmutes, phantom into flesh.
Wait.
I can’t tell you
, she whispers.
Ever.
She is human after all. Real. As real
as the fear alive in her eyes.
I nod my head. “I know.” I know
because I never told either. Her
story is mine, only with a different “he.”
I understand as only someone who
has been there can understand. We
have something in common after all.
APPARENTLY I MADE TANYA FEEL GUILTY
Because by the time
Simone and I
reach the living room,
she and the girls are
elbow deep in red and
green and gold.
Rosa’s eyes are wide.
Ooh. Look. Can
I hang this pretty one?
Lights first
, commands Walter,
untangling a long
strand.
Then ornaments.
It all looks so normal—any
family anywhere—
it’s almost enough to
make you forget
how abnormal this “family”
really is. Two
artificial parents; two
orphans. One
total mystery. And me.
LIGHTS, GARLAND, AND ORNAMENTS HUNG
The tree still looks sad to me.
It’s not that the decorations
are old (and they are). It’s that
they were all arranged without love.
This isn’t the first loveless Christmas
I’ve spent. Foster homes, however
solid, are all barren of that emotion.
You don’t dare care about someone
you probably won’t know in a year.
But I’ve had beautiful holidays
with both sets of grandparents—
Carl and Jean. Scott and Marie.
The ones with Grandma Marie
were especially special because
Hunter was there too. My brother.
The one I hardly ever get to see.
But when I do, he’s always pretty
much amazing to me. Because
he gets to be with his sister (me).
The one he hardly ever gets to see.
Those Christmases I understand
the power of family. My three
brothers will be there this year.
I so wish I could be there too.
THE ONLY PLACE
I’d rather be is with Kyle. He’s all I can
think about as I help make dinner,
Tanya chattering away about how much
you’ll love Roosevelt
and
church on Sunday.
All I can think about at the table, Walter
griping about the
goddamn power bill.
All I can think about as Simone and I
load the dishwasher in total silence.
Wonder what he’s doing, as I brush
my teeth, get ready for bed. Wonder
if he’s thinking about me, too, as Eliana
borrows one of my well-loved books.
Wonder if I’ll ever see him again as Rosa
practices for her Sunday School pageant.
Wonder if he’s written me off already
as I crawl between the scratchy sheets.
IT IS WALTER
Who comes to handle the lights-out
bed check. He knocks, but doesn’t
wait for an invitation to enter.
Simone, in a short, gauzy nightgown,
barely covers her long legs, and Walter
is all eyes. I swear, he starts to salivate.
No. No way. Not her. And not me.
Good night, ladies.
He flips off the lights,
closes the door. Did Simone notice
the demon-wolf in his eyes? Her voice
drifts toward me on dark wings of night.
I hate him. He reminds me of my brother.
Without telling me, she has shared
her secret. A half-dozen questions
pop into my head. Real brother? Step?
When? How? Who told? Why did
that mean she ended up here? But in
the long run, the answers don’t matter.
BEFORE TOO VERY LONG
Simone’s breathing falls shallow.
Rhythmic. She’s wandering deep
within some sort of dream. A good
dream, I guess. She laughs softly
in her sleep. Do I ever find happiness
in my dreams? I rarely remember
them. Sleep will not come easily
for me tonight. Not in an unfamiliar
bed, in an unfamiliar room. The night
itself is a different shade of dark.
Loneliness strikes suddenly,
a cobra sinking its fangs into my
heart, venom pumping. My eyes
spill into the strange, lumpy,
bleach-perfumed pillow. Salt soak.
I should be used to this by now.
Should expect the slow opening,
the hollow place inside. I am oddly
not afraid, though I recognize
the thirst in Walter. Who knows
how he might try to quench it?
I swear I will never let him, or
anyone, take a long swallow of me
unless it is my choice. And I only
choose to be water for Kyle.
HOW LONG WILL IT BE
Before living here
becomes unbearable?
How long before the
Bear pays a call on me?
How long before I have
to find a way to flee?
Sometime before dawn
my eyes finally close.
And though I’m not quite
asleep, I feel myself drift.
Float toward that hole
behind the bridge of my nose.
If I can just fall in,
I think I might find Kyle.
If I can just reach in,
I know I’ll touch his face.
If I can just take his hand,
will we leave together?