Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
KYLE’S EXCITEMENT
Is palpable, obvious
in the way he moves.
Every security camera
here is probably focused
on him right now. He might
be buying Christmas presents.
Except who wants trail mix for
Christmas? Or, uh, condoms?
Oh, well. We’re not doing
anything wrong. Wait.
Inaccurate. Okay, I
don’t feel like
we’re doing
anything wrong.
Even if we happen
to be paying for all this
stuff with “borrowed” money.
Could someone define “wrong”?
Is it wrong to take someone else’s
money so you can eat? Wrong
to leave relative security in
favor of unknown risk
at the side of some-
one you love?
SUPPLIES STOWED
Kyle checks out the map, decides
we should go by way of Lake Isabella.
It’s only about an hour from here, and
we can find a cheap campground there.
Highway 178 follows the meandering
Kern. We’ve been this way before.
And when we pass the place we first
made love, Kyle reaches to take my hand.
I’ll never forget that day
, he says.
It changed everything. You changed
everything. I thought love was bullshit.
Something made up for TV and movies.
“Me too. Or that people just repeated
those words to get them what they
wanted.” Sex. Drugs. Money. “You
always say the right thing, know that?”
If he had passed “our” spot and
said nothing, I would have seriously
questioned what I’m doing here.
Instead, I watch darkness descend,
a rain of night in the headlights,
washing away apprehension. Too
late to worry now, anyway. Might
as well soak up Kyle, enjoy the ride.
WE FIND A FIVE-DOLLAR
Per-night campground.
Some are free
,
Kyle informs me.
But this one has toilets.
That’s worth five dollars, don’t you think?
“Definitely. And since they’re here,
I’m going to pee.” The night air makes
me shiver. I slip into Kortni’s oversize
sweatshirt, grab the flashlight to show
me the way, happy to have both. When
I get back to camp, Kyle is messing
with a campfire.
Someone left a few
sticks of firewood
, he says.
Nice of
them. Too dark to be hunting for it now.
I sit on a big log, watching him work to
start it. Before long, a small flame slithers
up thin sticks of kindling, licking at a log.
Kyle’s face is handsome in the building
firelight. Rugged. “You remind me of
a cowboy. Or maybe a fur trapper.”
He laughs, sits next to me.
Guess that
makes you the lonely schoolteacher
waiting for me to come ravage you.
He kisses me, and it is sweet, despite
the smell of his smoke-stung clothes.
Too soon, he pulls away.
Hungry?
I nod, and he goes to the truck,
brings back nuts. Jerky. Water
to wash both down with. I chew
for a while. Finally I notice Kyle
hasn’t touched the skimpy feast.
“Aren’t you going to eat?” I ask.
He shakes his head.
Maybe later.
I’m not really hungry right now.
He goes to poke at the fire.
I close the bags carefully. Gulp
water, wishing I’d thought to buy
a toothbrush. “Are you scared?”
You kidding? Even if we get caught
,
it’s worth it. Being with you like this?
Fire’s low. Come on.
He has already
rolled out the sleeping bags in the back
of the truck. We climb in, and under
a meadow of stars, my cowboy ravages me.
BIRDSONG WAKES ME
Loud birdsong. A regular death metal
concert of birdsong, in fact. I keep
my eyes closed, snuggle into my bed.
Hard bed. A waterfall of light. Outside.
Sleeping bag. Cold metal beneath me.
And I am alone. I jump into a sitting
position, quieting the avian cacophony.
A flutter of wings. “Kyle? Where are you?”
An acrid drift of tobacco assaults
my nose just as I hear,
Over here.
He squats to one side of the fire pit,
trying to resurrect the dead embers.
Smoking. God. Cigarettes are, like,
seven bucks a pack. He needs to
kick that habit, and quickly. I slide
from the warmth of the sleeping bag,
into frosty December morning.
Go over to give him a kiss, steeling
myself against the stench of smoke.
But another, more insidious smell
leaks from his pores, despite
the cold. “Did you do crystal?”
His eyes, onyx-pupiled and crimson-
rimmed, are all the answer I need.
A bubble of anger rises. Pops.
Deep breath. “You did, didn’t you?”
He drops his gaze to the still-dead fire.
Just a little. Maintenance, you know.
A narrow column of bubbles lifts.
Pop-pop.
“No. I really don’t know.”
I’m down to a taste a couple times
a day. Keeps my head on straight.
A thick stream of bubbles.
Pop. Pop.
Pop-pop.
“Fine. Then I want to try it.”
His head shakes so hard, it must
rattle his brain.
Don’t want you to.
The bubbles become a low fizz.
It makes my eyes sting. “Why not?”
His eyes float up. He is crying
too.
Because I love you too much.
Hunter
COUNTDOWN TO CHRISTMAS
Less than two days to go.
Rick Denio being a brick
back in his native Texas,
I’m pulling a double air
shift.
Morning drive wrapped
up, midday well underway,
I am pouring a hefty shot
of vanilla International Delight
into
a strong cup of coffee
when the studio phone
rings. On the far end
of the line, an extremely
high-
sounding girl inquires
if I’d like some company.
“Leah. I told you to leave
me the hell alone.” I
gear
up to say something much
stronger when I notice
the mic is on. Just perfect.
Good thing the music’s loud.
“Go
away,” I tell her, mic muted.
How many ways are there
to say no, anyway?