Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
WE LEAVE THE “HOW”
To the future.
Settle for being together
right now. In this moment.
I’m pretty sure
I won’t see him again for
a while. Maybe a long while.
We’ll celebrate
Christmas safe and warm,
at least. Not buried by snow.
After that,
and after the truth
of our situation emerges,
we’ll just have to see.
GRANDPA SCOTT
Reaches the hospital around ten.
I see him wandering down the corridor,
looking for me. Age has not
much diminished his fair good
looks, and the nurses smile
appreciatively. I nudge Kyle.
“There’s my Grandpa Scott.”
Kyle locks eyes with Grandpa,
who stands outside the door,
assessing.
He doesn’t like me.
“He doesn’t even know you.
How can he not like you?
I mean, he might be a little
annoyed. But he’s here.”
I go give him a giant hug. “Thanks
for coming. Sorry you had to drive
all this way on Christmas.”
He draws back to give me
a good once-over.
Are you
sure you’re okay? We’re just
happy you weren’t hurt.
“I’m fine, Grandpa. Someone
was watching out for us, for sure.”
After quick introductions, Grandpa
excuses himself.
I’ll go take care
of the paperwork. We should
probably hit the highway soon.
Was good meeting you, Kyle.
I don’t want to leave, but I know
I have to go. I give Kyle a long,
sweet kiss. “I wish I could stay, but …”
No. Go on. We’ll talk when you get
back….
He pauses there. Neither
of us knows when or where I’ll get
back to.
Merry Christmas. I love you.
ONE LAST KISS
And without looking back,
I go to find Grandpa.
He’s at the nurses’ station,
where he has dropped a signed
copy of Grandma Marie’s latest
book for Officer Strohmeyer
to come pick up later. I watch
Grandpa Scott totally schmooze
a plus-size nurse with orange
hair.
I’m sure we can find
another copy for you. Write
down your address and I’ll make
sure you get one. I can pull
strings with the author.
He winks,
turns to me.
Ready to go?
Before I know it, we’re out
the door and in Grandpa’s new
Lexus SUV, cruising toward Christmas
dinner, me fiddling with the seat
heat control, mostly because
it gives my hands something
to do besides tremble. By some
unspoken agreement, neither
of us says a word until we’re
well on our way out of town.
THE HIGHWAY IS MOSTLY CLEAR
But Grandpa drives cautiously.
Have to be careful of black ice
,
is his explanation. It is all he says
for a while. But finally he broaches
the necessary inquiry.
So we
hadn’t expected you this year.
And Kristina didn’t know you were
coming either.
He pauses. Waits.
“It was a last-minute decision,”
I try. “We wanted to surprise you.”
You definitely did that.
His voice
is gentle, tinged with humor.
And
you surprised everyone else, too.
We called your dad’s to let him know
you were okay. Someone named
Kortni answered. She said your father
was in jail and as far as she knew
,
you were in a foster home in Fresno.
He lets the weight of his words sink
down around us.
Was she wrong?
OBVIOUSLY HE KNOWS
She wasn’t wrong. And I’m just
too tired of it all to try and make
up a lie. “No. She was right.”
Despite the Lexus’s luxury, I have
become extremely uncomfortable.
Oh, well. Fabrication is useless.
I launch the story, omitting only the parts
about making love beneath the stars
and Kyle’s farewell to the monster.
Grandpa Scott absorbs it all
in silence. When I finish, he thinks
about things, then spends some
time crafting his comments.
Running away is never a good
decision, Summer. There has
to be a better answer, though
to tell you the truth, I’m not sure
what it is. Let’s get through today
as best we can, then make
some decisions tomorrow.
This should be interesting.
I point as we pass the place where
Kyle and I plunged off the highway
yesterday. Last night’s heavy
snowfall has covered most
of the evidence of the accident.
“You can’t even tell it happened,”
I muse. What I don’t say is how
scary that is. If circumstances
were just a little different,
we could still be down there, buried
in a giant snowdrift. Suffocating.
Or left to slow starvation.
Even without my voicing
those thoughts, Grandpa Scott
gets them.
Someone was watching
out for you, all right. You’ve got
something important to do
before you check on out of here.