Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
I HATE WHITE
The sun through the south window
makes it much too bright in here
by day, and at night, artificial
light glares, wall to wall to wall.
If this move ends up permanent,
I’ll have to talk to Mom about paint.
My plan, though, is to give Nikki
time. Then gently wear down
her defenses. She’ll have to forgive
me eventually, right? There must
be some way to make that happen.
I can’t believe how much I miss her.
And not just the way she fills my bed
with velvet skin and satin hair and
warm spice scent. Without her,
I am incomplete. The worst thing
is, I have no excuse for what happened
with Leah. The message that bitch
left on my phone gave no room
for misinterpretation. Nikki knew
for sure I had betrayed her. And how.
SO FOR NOW, IT’S WHITE
And not just in here,
but outside, too. It
started to snow four
days ago. And it just
keeps on coming down.
Semester break, no
classes for three weeks,
I only have to worry
about driving for my
air shifts. Holidays
mean the “stars” go
home too, so I’m
pulling a few extra.
But mostly, if for no
other reason than to get
out of the guest room,
I’m helping Mom with
her Christmas stuff.
Decorating. Wrapping.
Baking cookies, even.
That’s what we’re doing
now. She tried to get
the boys to help. But
Donald thinks it’s lame.
And David prefers the pup.
GOOD THING
Someone wants to play with Sasha,
I guess. She’s at that gangly stage—
all floppy feet and squirrelly tail,
wagging into the cupboards while
Mom and I measure flour and sugar
and butter.
David
, says Mom,
would you please put on your coat
and take Sasha outside to play in
the snow? If you wear her out, maybe
she’ll take a nice long winter’s nap.
David is willing, so off they go.
Donald and Scott are shoveling
the decks. I’ve got Mom all to
myself, a rare thing around here
lately. We haven’t talked much
since I came back. All she knows
for sure about Nikki and me
is that we had a little fight.
I’ve got a lot more than that
to tell her about, though.
I watch her cross the kitchen
floor. Graceful, like a dancer,
and fit, especially for a woman
her age. Still working out at sixty.
Wonder if I’ll have her energy.
SHE TURNS
Finds me staring, gawking in
admiration like a regular fan boy.
What? A booger or something?
“Nope. Just wondering where
you get all your energy from.”
Can’t slow down. Too much to do.
I have to smile. “You’ve been
saying that since I was a little kid.”
Yeah, and? Nothing has changed.
Still dealing with the fallout of choices,
not her own, made twenty years ago.
Anyway, slow down, you grow mold.
Another favorite saying. “But don’t
you ever get mad about … stuff?”
Hunter, I used to live “mad.” Didn’t help.
I REACH WAY BACK
Into memory, to another
Christmas. I must have been ten.
Kristina was here with Donald.
He would have been three.
Ron was supposed to come
with them that year, so Mom got
them a hotel room.
That man
will not stay under this roof.
She didn’t give a reason, and
I wondered why she was so angry.
On their way out of Vegas,
Ron was arrested. Kristina claimed
it was an outstanding traffic
ticket. We found out later it was
for a domestic violence warrant.
Kristina came alone, checked into
her room on Christmas Eve,
and when she didn’t show up for
our usual family dinner, Mom
was mad.
You can’t ever rely on her.
But she was also worried
and sent Dad out to look for her.
Turned out she was in the ER.
She claimed it was food poisoning.
Poor little Donald hadn’t had
a bite to eat all day except for a candy
cane a sympathetic nurse gave him.
You’d think a nurse would know better.
I didn’t understand until I watched
him bounce off the walls all night.
Kristina came over the next
morning. Spent Christmas Day, and
I mean all day, on her cell phone,
talking to Ron, who was already out of jail.
Mom stewed big-time.
She’s using
again. Six years clean for what?
I overheard her tell Dad. I thought
she was wrong. Turned out she was spot
on. The ER visit was bad dope.
And Kristina was pregnant with David.
MOM WAS ANGRIER THEN
Is anger something
you can outgrow?
Can anyone do it
with practice? Dad Maybe it’s a gender
has never quite thing. I think I take
mastered the talent. after Dad, carrying
anger like he does,
tight in my muscles,
unable to quite let go.
I don’t feel like I’m
mad most of the time,
but it isn’t hard to let
all that stored anger But it’s hard to talk
come rippling out. about resentment,
I should get help. bottled up inside.
I have it easier than
most people. So why
feel sorry for myself?
Not like very many
people have intact
families. One parent
or the other is likely Looking at it that way,
absent. Shacked up I’m pretty normal. So
Knocked up. Fucked up. why do I feel like some
sort of a freak? Bigger
question: Why take it
out on people I love?