Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
WE STOP AT A DINER
In Bishop. Splurge on a meat loaf
dinner, the Christmas Eve special.
That’s a little weird, I guess, but
hey. Special is special. And cheap,
too. I eat every bite, mop the gravy
from the plate with the last crumbs
of a big homemade biscuit. Good
thing the place is semi-empty.
I probably look like exactly what
I am—a homeless person
who hasn’t eaten much in a week.
The waitress comes over to check
on us. She smiles.
Hungry, eh?
Can I get you another biscuit?
Then, to Kyle,
Don’t like meat loaf?
I hadn’t even noticed that he’s sort
of just picking at his.
It’s fine. Guess
I’m feeling a little under the weather.
He looks it too. Parchment pale
and a bit shaky.
She’ll have a biscuit.
I WAIT FOR THE WAITRESS TO GO
“You okay? It would be better
if you could eat something.
You’re running on empty.”
I know. I’ll try. It’s just the last
of the shit in my system making
me queasy.
He does force down
a few bites while I polish off
the butter-slathered biscuit Jeanine
returns with. “A good night’s sleep
in a big ol’ bed will make you
feel better,” I predict. “Tomorrow
is Christmas. Our first one together.”
The thought seems to brighten
his mood.
Our first, but definitely
not our last. And look …
He points
toward the window.
It’s going to
be a white Christmas. My first
one of those, too.
Outside, wisps
of snow have begun to fall. “Maybe
we’d better get going. It would
be good to get there before dark.”
THE LIGHT IS DUSKISH
By the time we’re on the road. It’s not
all that late in the day yet, but the peaks
to the west are tall, and as the sun dips
below them, its failing light is swallowed
up by hastening snowfall. Glad Mammoth
isn’t too far. The food Kyle managed
to get down seems to have helped
his system recover some. His color
is better, his energy level higher.
Hurray for meat loaf and biscuits!
As we start up the highway, the snow
begins to come down harder. It’s sticking on
the pavement, and once the temps
fall nighttime cold, it’s going to be icy.
“Hope you’ve got tread on your tires.”
Just got new rubber six months ago
,
he says.
And the truck has four wheel
drive. Think I’ll go ahead and put it into
four-by now, in fact.
It’s a simple turn
of a knob, and the obvious traction
boost makes me feel slightly less
uneasy. We start up a long grade,
making deep tracks in the road slush.
And still the snow keeps falling.
Giant flakes, plummeting from the sky.
Holy crap! Check out this dumb-ass.
The words are barely out of Kyle’s
mouth when a black Hummer goes
barreling by.
Hope the jerk doesn’t
have to stop fast. He’ll be toast.
Intuition, or maybe subconsciously
willing the universe to make it happen,
the Hummer’s brake lights flash,
and suddenly it is perpendicular
to us and drifting sideways, right into
our lane.
Fuck, fuck, fuck
, says Kyle,
hitting his own brakes and whipping
the wheel to keep from broadsiding
the bigger vehicle. No. This isn’t
happening. Everything seems to go
slow motion. Turning sideways
ourselves. Floating on snow toward
the Hummer. Toward the shoulder.
“Kyle!” I scream as we go face-first
off the highway. Over the side.
Gigantic bump. My head snaps
forward. Back. Someone praying.
Kyle? Falling. Somersaulting.
Can a truck turn somersaults?
Finally, no motion at all. And silence.
STUNNED
It takes a few minutes to understand
I am okay, despite hanging at an odd
angle by the shoulder harness that
doubtless saved my life. Kyle is beneath
me, against the window. “Kyle? Kyle!”
He doesn’t answer. But I can hear
him breathing. Okay. What now? If
I unfasten my seat belt, I might fall on him.
But I can’t just stay here, dangling.
“Help,” I call uselessly. My voice is thin,
and there’s no one to hear, anyway.
I test my body. Legs, okay. Arms?
Okay, I think. A little pain where
the harness caught hold of my collarbone,
but overall I got lucky. Please, God,
let Kyle be lucky too. I have to try
and help him, so I chance letting
myself out of the seat belt. With my arm
still looped through the shoulder
harness, I manage to let myself down
without falling on Kyle. Now that
I’m loose, I can assess our situation.
Not good. The truck is resting on
the driver’s side, nose against a big pine.
I can’t get out that way, and to
exit the passenger door, I’d have
to push it up, over my head, which
would be hard enough without
figuring in the fact that the rollover
smashed it. Maybe the window?
As I work through the logistics,
I hear voices somewhere. “Help!”
I try again. But it becomes obvious
they’re already coming nearer. I lift
my hands so they know someone’s
here.
Hang on! We’re coming.
I manage to get the window
open. Strong arms reach down
through it, lift me out.
Are you okay?
says the man, who I refuse to let go
of. Just want him to hold me.
Let me cry into his chest. “Help
him,” I stutter. “Please, get him out.”
And please get him out alive.
IT IS COMPLETELY DARK
By the time I see Kyle again.
I am sitting in the warm backseat
of a highway patrol cruiser when
they carry him up over the lip of
the highway. I jump out of the car,
run toward the stretcher. “Kyle!”
A cop stops me.
Let the paramedics
do their job. His arm is broken, maybe
his collarbone, too. And he’s got one
giant knot on his noggin. But it looks
like he’ll be just fine. The truck
is definitely not so lucky.
We watch two tall uniforms load
Kyle into an ambulance. Then the cop—
Officer Strohmeyer—opens the passenger
door for me.
Might as well sit up front.
He comes around, slips beneath
the steering wheel.
Gonna take
a while to pull the truck out of there.
We’ll tow it to Bishop. The question
is, who’s missing you right now?