Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
I KNEW HE WAS USING
He never tried to hide it. In fact,
offered to share. But even if he
hadn’t been honest about it,
his mood swings were obvious.
I just never realized how big
a part of his life it was. Not
sure why I didn’t see it. Guess
when you choose to be blind,
you really are. Don’t think it
would have changed a thing,
had I known. And now, seeing
him fight his demons for me,
I love him all the more. Even
if he is a complete grouch.
It’s the nature of the crash.
Better now than years down
the line.
I never got into
it that much
, he swore.
But without you, who knows
where I might be tomorrow?
HOPEFULLY, BY TOMORROW
We’ll be in a hotel room
in Mammoth, reward enough for
a week sleeping cold in a pickup truck.
Three nights at Lake Isabella, hoping no
one would come looking for us.
Kind of surprised when
nobody did. Another
three nights camped just west of
Lone Pine, in a sage-carpeted camp-
ground, more primitive than the first.
It was there, listening to coyote
song and eagle cry, that
Kyle crashed like iron
for two days. I gave him a wide
swath of privacy, exploring the brush,
gathering firewood, and otherwise
tending camp while he slept
morgue-dweller sleep.
When he woke up,
all groggy and weird, he was
so hungry he finished off two-thirds
of a bag of jerky. His face flushed
with color and the shivering
slowed. Resurrection!
THAT WAS YESTERDAY
And when we made love
last night, a blanket of frost
settling over the sleeping bag,
it was different than ever
before. Slower. Gentler.
Less demanding, more giving.
Hearts quickening in lockstep.
Breath like moth wings aflutter
against moonlighted window glass.
I love you
, he sighed along
my skin. And
I love you
,
desert wind blown into my hair.
And when we were finished,
we drew into each other’s
arms, warmed within our harbor.
Something happened in
the night, happened as we
dreamed. Something unexpected.
For on awakening, blinking into
the murky dawning, needful love
had transformed into blissful love.
MAYBE IT HAD SOMETHING TO DO
With sleeping under the Christmas
star. Yeah, I know it’s actually a planet
or something. And I know if it were
really the Christmas star, it would
be shining tonight. But whatever it is,
this morning it looked like a platinum-
set diamond in the lightening sky.
I burrowed into Kyle’s body heat,
ignoring the quite randy smell.
“If you believe in wishing on stars,
you’ll never get a better chance,” I said.
“That one belongs to Christmas.”
I have to believe in wishes, or
I wouldn’t be here with you. Right?
Then he laughed.
Even if you don’t
exactly smell like roses. Phew!
“No offense,
mi amor.
But I smell
a hell of a lot better than you.”
Guess you’re right. Definitely bath
time. You up for Mammoth?
WITH LUCK
We’ll be there tonight. Sooner
is better than later. The trail mix
is stale, the jerky gone. A hot meal
is my idea of heaven right now.
I dig in my backpack, count every
penny. “Sixty-six fifty-two.
Think we could get McDonald’s?”
I hate McDonald’s. But I hate
stale trail mix even more.
Kyle exits his shell of silence.
I think we can do better. I’ve
still got a few bucks myself.
“Enough for a room, too?
Just think … a hot shower.
Soft, warm bed. Reality TV.”
He laughs.
We’re living reality
TV. But yeah, we’ll find a cheap
room somewhere. Looks like
winter has arrived up there.
The resort will open soon.
I’ll put in an application.
I turn on the radio. Not much
available out here, despite
Kyle’s monstrous antenna.
Don’t use “seek,”
he instructs.
Try dialing by hand.
I do,
and from a distant city, through
the static, I discern a familiar voice.
You procrastinators don’t have
much time left. Santa’s almost here….
“That’s my brother,” I tell Kyle.
“Hunter. He works at a station
in Reno.” Nostalgia whacks me.
Really? How come you never
told me you have a brother?
He turns up the volume, but
the meager signal has dissolved
completely. “I have three brothers,
actually. Oh, and a sister, I guess.
I hardly ever see my brothers, and
no one bothered to tell me I had a sister
until a couple of weeks ago.”
Wow. That’s tough. I love my sister.
Can’t imagine not …
His voice
catches as he considers what
he’s about to say.
Can’t imagine not
seeing her, let alone not knowing
she even existed. How’d you find out?
I shrug. “My dad got drunk—
that night he got the DUI, in fact—
and it kind of just slipped out.”
Kyle thinks that over. Finally says,
My dad was drunk when he told
me about my mom going into the river.
Said we were better off without
the bitch. If I had been as big as I am
now, I would have made him sorry.
No wonder he hates his dad.
Mine’s a major screwup, but
at least he isn’t corpse-hearted.