Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
HIS EYES LIFT
Then they settle somewhere
over my shoulder, grow cold.
He points.
Ask him.
Grandfather
has come into the room, silent as
still air. I don’t have to turn to feel
him there. The tension is solid.
His trembling voice falls, a bag
of marbles, over my shoulder.
You. Get out of my chair.
Trey does not comply right
away. But as Grandfather starts
to move, he stands.
Tell her.
Grandfather limps slowly
toward his chair. He is pale
as paper. I stay silent as
he sits and meets my eyes.
We were just trying to protect
you, Cora and I … we …
He pauses too long, so Trey
expands,
They kept moving
around when you were little.
THINGS FALL INTO PLACE
Suddenly. Frequent
moves to different
little Texas towns.
Different schools.
Different friends.
Different boyfriends
for Aunt Cora. Phone
numbers. Addresses I
could never quite recall,
and if I did, there were
frequent reminders
frequent lectures
frequent warnings
not to share them,
because a stranger
could get hold of
them, might come
kidnap me away.
Hidden photos.
Hidden paperwork.
Hidden stories
about my family.
To protect me from
my mother. Father.
And who else is out
there? Who else might
want to know what
has happened to me?
SUCKER PUNCHED
I can’t find air, and it has nothing to do with illogical panic.
It’s shock. Pure. Simple. Rational. “How could you?”
How could they make me believe I was a throwaway?
Grandfather is completely white, and the folds
of his eyes crease with pain. Good. I want him to hurt,
like he and Aunt Cora have hurt me.
I’m sorry
, he says.
“Sorry? Do you understand how it feels to believe
your parents don’t want you? Don’t tell me they didn’t
deserve me. I already know that. This isn’t about them.”
The look I shoot Trey withers him slightly. But his eyes
glitter defiance. A desire so different from any I’ve
known before strikes suddenly. “I want to meet her.”
TREY STRAIGHTENS
I can see the wheels
creak-turn in his head.
He looks at Grandfather,
says to me,
I’ll take you.
You should meet her.
Just don’t go thinking
she’s going to be like
some perfect mom. Kristina
is all about Kristina.
Far as I can tell, that pretty
much goes for everyone.
“Really? You’ll take me?”
Why not? I’d like to see
her again myself. I used
to love the bitch. Maybe
I can figure out why. She’s
on her way to Albuquerque
to see her dad, but will be
at her mom’s for Christmas.
Plenty of time for a road
trip. You’ll be a nice surprise.
GRANDFATHER IS SHAKING
Anger. Fear. Goat flu. Not sure
which is to blame. Maybe all three.
You’re not serious
, he says.
You
can’t take her. I won’t let you.
I want to go over. Give him a hug.
I want to go over. Slap him. Hard.
That’s the indecisive part of me—
well-known. A strange, new take-
charge part jumps in, “Yes, he can.
If I don’t go now, it may never happen.”
Grandfather crumbles.
You’re going
to leave me alone on Christmas?
I could thaw if I let myself. But no.
“Austin isn’t so far. Call Aunt Cora.”
My heart flip-flops in my chest. I might
meet my mother. It may very well turn
out all bad, but how else will I know
that? “I’ll go pack some clothes.”
BY THE TIME
My suitcase sits, barely half-full,
by the door, my anger has mostly
subsided. Grandfather slumps,
wounded, in his ratty recliner.
“Did you call Aunt Cora?” I ask
him. When he doesn’t reply,
Trey says,
He wouldn’t, so I did.
She said she’s on her way.
Which means we’d better go
before she gets here and tries
to make me change my mind.
She could probably do it.
I go over to Grandfather, put
my hand on his cheek. “I’ll be back.”
He refuses to meet my eyes.
I’ll be right here, waiting.
WHEN I OPEN THE DOOR
I’m surprised to see the car
parked at the curb. It’s a late
model Cadillac. White. Pin
neat. Wait. This can’t be Trey’s.
Suddenly I understand how
little I really know about him.
Am I making an awful mistake?
Wasn’t he in prison for grand
theft auto, among other things?
“Uh. Nice car. Whose is it?”
He pulls the key from his
pocket, waves it in the air,
pushes a button that opens
the trunk, puts my suitcase
inside.
Actually, it’s my mom’s.
Get in.
He waits for me to
make up my mind. It takes all
of two minutes before he says,
Well? Are you coming or what?
He starts the car. Exactly
the motivation I need. I slink
into the front passenger seat,
fingers tingling. Plush white leather
sucks me in. The stereo plays
metal and my heart drums along.
My nose wrinkles at an overpowering
stench of stale tobacco. The ashtray
practically overflows. “Will
you empty that, please? And you
won’t smoke with me in the car?”
I meant it as a question, sort of.
He takes it another way.
Kind
of demanding, aren’t you? I don’t
have to do this at all, you know.
Still, he opens the door, dumps
the ashtray into the gutter,
replaces it. Nice. Really nice.
I should haul my butt out of
the car, back into the house
where I belong. But I don’t.