Fallout (86 page)

Read Fallout Online

Authors: Ellen Hopkins

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse

Summer
I’M SORRY

That’s what Kristina says.

We all look at her as if we haven’t

quite heard her correctly.

But she repeats,
I’m so sorry.
I never wanted to be a bad mother.
Maybe that’s why I kept on
trying, kept on begging for another
chance to finally do it right. But I
don’t have the skills, don’t have—

“Don’t you dare say it!” I yell.

“Don’t say you don’t have

the resources. You do, or

you could have. All you had

to do was ask for help.” Anger

oozes like blood from my pores.

Her anger is greater.
No!
she
shouts.
You don’t understand.
I can’t ask for help from people
I turned my back on. People
I stole from. Lied to. Hurt.
People whose love I threw away.

Hunter
KRISTINA IS OUT OF WORDS

Good thing, because
that’s all they are. Words
without conviction
have no meaning.

I look

down the long table,
past turkey carcass and half-
eaten pie, and ignoring
the shock-iced eyes that stare

at her,

I measure her lowered
gaze, the foreign
language of her body.

And I

find

in the cold iron set
of her shoulders,
the boulders of her fists,

defiance.

Apology without regret.
The desire to challenge,
still. And, obvious through
a red haze of my own,

anger.

Autumn
KRISTINA IS OUT OF STEAM

I can’t help but feel sorry
for her. She is a bird,
too broken to fly.

I look

across the granite width
of table, beyond crystal
glassware and cloth napkins.
Notice the way Trey smiles

at her,

as if telling her she has said
exactly the right thing. But
Hunter is not swayed. Summer,
too, seems unconvinced.

And I

find

in Kristina’s refusal to meet
anyone’s eyes, in her knuckles
that tap without rhythm,

fear.

And in the way she hugs
her secrets close, like I must
continue to hold on to mine
for a while longer yet,

deception.

Summer
KRISTINA IS OUT OF EXCUSES

I know that’s what Grandpa
Scott would say, and the rest
of us would no doubt agree.
My mom has said enough.

I look

to my right, where Leigh
sits, drop-jawed, gawking

at her

sister, as if she’s never seen
her before. On my left, Autumn
seems lost in some obscure
distraction. Wonder where
her thoughts have wandered.

And I

find

in the tears that drop from
my mother’s eyes into puddles
on her dinner plate,

doubt.

A growing desire to escape
the confines of this house,
no longer her home, by
her own design. And in that,

loneliness.

Hunter, Autumn, Summer
I HOPE FOR

Trust. Joy.

Courage. Honesty.

Belief. Belonging.

Attaining these
things may not
come easily.
Because, look
very long at
Kristina, I see
me
me
me.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The release of Marie Haskins’s and Kristina Shepherd’s highly anticipated mother/daughter memoir,
Monster
, was yesterday put on indefinite hold.
“We felt it was appropriate to wait until Kristina’s current round of chemotherapy has been completed,” said Haskins, whose novels
Crank, Glass
, and
Fallout
offer a fictionalized account of Shepherd’s twenty-year battle with methamphetamine addiction.
Shepherd said in June of the memoir project, “We want to fill in the blanks, not only for my mother’s readers, but also for my children, who still might not have all the answers they need.”
All five of Shepherd’s children currently reside with Haskins.
Shepherd, who reunited with her husband, Trey, after a fifteen-year separation, has recently undergone radical treatment for lung cancer. “The prognosis is about as good as you could hope for,” Shepherd said. “I throw it out there to the universe, pray God is listening and that he hasn’t given up on me.”

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