Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
SOMETIMES, WHEN IT’S JUST
Grandfather and me, if he’s downed
the exact right combination
of pills and brew, he’ll talk
about growing up in a little
backwater town maybe
six hours north of here.
Sweetwater may not be so
very far from San Antonio
,
but it’s a wide world apart.
We were possum poor and not
exactly unhappy being that way.
’Course we didn’t know better.
My pa was a born-again Baptist
,
and Sunday was the best day
of the week because Baptists
respect the Sabbath. Weren’t
no cotton rows hoed on Sunday
,
that’s for sure. Not a single one.
His accent is honey-thick Texas.
But Aunt Cora’s is a mild imitation.
She moved to California young,
when Maureen divorced Grandfather.
Still, she carries a hint of Good
Ol’ Boy (Girl?) in her inflection.
Me? I’m fighting it, though it may
be a losing battle. Still, despite
living in Texas for most of my life,
somehow it isn’t Home. And
the really messed-up part of that
is, I have no clear idea where
Home might be. It’s not here
in San Antonio. Not with Grandfather
or Aunt Cora, though it really
should feel that way. Not with
Trey, wherever he might settle
down if they actually let him go.
No, Home is somewhere else.
I don’t know if it’s a place
I’ve already been, or one
I’ve yet to find. But I’m pretty
sure the answer is tangled up
in Where I Came From.
AND WHERE I CAME FROM
Is tangled up
in those faces
I see. At least,
I’m pretty sure
it is. No one here
will tell me much
about why I’m here.
Other than the jail
thing, which I get.
But I know I must
have more family
somewhere. Why
have they never
tried to get hold
of me? It’s all so
confusing, especially
when the people
I do have insist
on keeping secrets.
I HAVE MANAGED
To learn a handful
of assorted details
about the jigsaw
puzzle
that is my beginning.
Nothing what you’d
call solid. Bits and
pieces.
I know I was born
in Nevada. Reno,
I’m told. But I
don’t
know if my mother
still lives there.
When I ask, I
always
get the standard
answer:
You don’t really
want to try and
connect
with her, do you?
Well, what if I do?
Do they
think if I found her,
I’d love them less?
ALL THINGS CONSIDERED
I’m not sure if I want to connect
with her or not. And even if I do,
I have no idea where to start. Not
like Grandfather will share information.
Reno? Maybe. But it’s a big place,
and Nevada is bigger. And why
think she still lives there? Besides,
I don’t even know her name.
I wonder
if she
remembers mine.
Maybe she’s dead. Disabled.
Brain fried too crispy to even try
to stop by and say hello for fifteen
years. I was two when Aunt Cora
took custody of me, which was just
about the time the State of Nevada
took custody of my parents. Locked
them up that time for a couple of years.
Aunt Cora says
the monster
swallowed them.
THE MONSTER
Is what they called their crystal.
We learned about it in school.
How it messes up your brain.
Makes your teeth go rotten.
Blasts caustic chemicals
through arteries and veins.
How just a little spoonful
keeps you up for days,
no desire for food, high
until you crash. Nosedive.
How using once or twice
can hook you. Take your mind
captive. Agitate cerebral cells
until you wind up psychotic.
What they didn’t say is how
the monster chews up families.
MINE ISN’T THE ONLY ONE
But it’s the only one I’m qualified
to talk about. I don’t know if my parents
were ever in love, but for argument’s
sake, I’ll imagine they were.
So along comes the monster. Then what?
Sex, obviously, or I wouldn’t be here.
Good sex? Bad sex? Group sex?
All of the above? I mean, why did any
of that have to change because they
decided to get high together? I don’t
understand. Did they both go gay in
lockup? Decide they liked same-sex
sex better than sex with each other?
Did they ever even try to put things
right with each other after they got out?
Did they ever even once think about me?