Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
GRANDMA MARIE’S KITCHEN
Has always felt like sanctuary.
Some people might think
that’s a cliché, but compared
to any other kitchen I’ve ever
spent time in, this one is always
the gathering place. Warm.
Spice-scented. Spilling laughter
and conversation. Today there
is more. Today there is reunion.
And, for some of us, relationships
too new to quite comprehend.
Grandma Marie is at the counter
kneading dough. Aunt Leigh
and Aunt Misty play cards at the table.
Autumn hovers in a corner, trying
to make sense of what these women
mean to her. I know the feeling well.
Might as well try the direct approach.
“Hi, Autumn,” I call across the short
expanse of tile. My feet follow, until
I stand in front of her. “I’m Summer….”
SHE IS WARY
Like a caged cat, escaped,
but unsure of the wild lands
beyond the bars. I understand.
Already, we walk common ground.
It is tenuous turf, riddled with
the rifts and earthquakes of our
personal histories. We confess
scenes. Abbreviated clips.
With her soft Texas drawl
and faux hippie wardrobe,
on the surface she is nothing
like me. But just below the skin,
we find connection. I shudder
to think why that might be, because
our common denominator is
someone I don’t want to resemble.
Autumn and I talk for an hour,
while the house fills with holiday
cheer. I don’t know where we’ll go
tomorrow, but today there is communion
here, and now I have a sister.
There is power in that. Today
I am surrounded by family
and affection, uncluttered by need.
Hunter
SURPRISES
Are rarely good things
around here. Today they
are kind of a mixed bag.
Good: Meeting a sister I only
half believed existed.
Not-so-good: Meeting a guy I always
half blamed for Kristina’s
return to the monster.
Good: Watching Summer and
Autumn test the choppy
waters of sisterhood.
Not-so-good: Watching Kristina pay
more attention to Trey
than to her children.
Good: Seeing how well David
and Donald are coping
despite being ignored.
Not-so-good: Seeing that no matter
how some things change,
others never will.
THE BEST SURPRISE
Of the day was Nikki
opening her arms, allowing me
back into her life.
I have to remember how bad
being closed out felt.
I know we’re young,
that we have a long way to go,
and love has a way of
fading. I can’t promise her we can
keep ours alive, but
I can promise to give
it a damn good try. Temptation
is something I can’t
control. Flirtation is a whole
different thing.
As afternoon slants
toward evening and she hasn’t
arrived, anxiety nips.
What if she changed her mind?
Should I call her?
But then the doorbell
rings and I know it’s her and
now it really feels
like Christmas. Thanks, Santa,
for the best gift ever.
DESPITE HER MOM STARING
I pull Nikki into my arms, kiss
her like we don’t have an audience.
Then I notice the bags her mom
holds. “Let me take those for you.”
I peek inside. Eggnog and brandy.
This could prove an interesting
afternoon. I lead the ladies into
the kitchen. “Look who’s here!”
It is a busy place. Mom slices
turkey. Leigh mashes potatoes.
Misty spoons cranberry sauce,
trying not to trip over Sasha,
who sits, tail wagging at
the prospect of some offered
tidbit. David obliges, slipping
her bits of roasted poultry skin.
Autumn and Summer have
tag-teamed the table setting.
Nikki and her mom see what
they can do to help. It might
be a scene right out of a Norman
Rockwell painting. Except,
of course, it isn’t. It can’t be.
Because this is our family.
Autumn
DINNER IS READY
My grandfather—Grandpa Scott,
he said to call him—has announced
that it’s time to eat. We all gather
at the table, which has two large
folding tables placed at one
end, and still we’ll all barely fit.
Once everyone has found a seat,
two chairs are too obviously empty.
Hunter goes to the door, calls loudly,
Kristina! We’re all at the table.
Are the two of you planning to join
us? Room service is closed.
His voice carries thinly veiled anger,
and his girlfriend shoots a warning
glance that says,
Watch your temper.
Earlier, I heard Hunter talking
to Grandma Marie.
Why is Kristina
outside?
he asked.
Why isn’t she
with her kids? Why can’t she just
act like a mom? Doesn’t she care
about them? Doesn’t she love them?
Grandma answered right
away, as if she’d thought about
the question many times before.
I think she wants to love them.
Wants to love all of you. But
she can’t. I told you how meth
eats into the brain. Well, the part
that gets chewed away is
the part that lets people love.
I think about that as Kristina
and Trey finally find their way
to the table. How sad if they
really aren’t able to love.
It explains a lot. But it also
raises more questions.