Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
SO FAR
I’ve refused.
Refused the meth.
Refused the scene.
Refused Kyle’s kiss.
Well, sort of.
Once he cornered me.
Once he held me close.
Once our lips connected.
Matt was gone.
Away from school.
Away from town.
Away from me.
I almost gave in.
Almost relented.
Almost submitted.
Almost said okay.
But I remembered.
Kyle is a stoner.
Kyle is a player.
Kyle is Matt’s best friend.
I THINK OF THEM BOTH
As I lie in bed, body
asking for sleep
while my brain insists on
flashing
cerebral photographs.
Phffft.
Matt and me,
last summer, making
out
like there was no tomorrow.
Love that phrase. Because
without tomorrow,
what’s wrong with
some
spectacular today?
Phffft.
Kyle, touching me,
in a totally different
kind
of way than Matt could
even imagine.
Phffft
.
Matt, a solid dream
of a
guy telling me,
I love
you
, as we lie together
in a tall field of wheat.
Warning!
The next photo is X-rated.
And when I wake, I am still
warm from the night before.
MAYBE WHAT I NEED TO DO
Is make us a threesome.
If I belonged to some weird
religious sect, that’s what
I’d do. Except don’t all those
weird religious sects expect
two girls to a guy, instead of
the obviously better way to go?
What is wrong with women,
anyway? Two dudes. One you.
Yeah, baby. That’s what I’m
talking about. It’s stupid
as hell to think that way,
but WTF? It’s my effing
daydream, isn’t it? I keep
dreaming it right through
breakfast. On the short bus
ride to school. But then, as
I pace the sidewalk, waiting,
a sudden realization hits. Two
guys. One girl. Can’t do that.
If I did, I would be my mother.
I WATCH THE PAIR
Of them now, coming up the walk, cutting
through the herd trying to make first bell.
Matt is two inches taller. So why does Kyle
loom larger? Why should that matter at all?
Kyle spots me first, waves. There is much
in his smile that Matt can’t see. But I can.
Matt says something to Kyle, slaps his shoulder,
turns away from him, heads toward me.
I love the confidence in his stride,
goal in sight, no hint of hesitation
until he reaches it. Reaches me.
Hey.
Not exactly eloquent, but that’s okay.
Lips have better uses. The kiss they bring
is autumn rain—wet, warm, wished for.
Matt bracelets me with strong arms.
He smells clean, but not perfumed,
like Tide detergent and Ivory soap.
I am safe here against his chest,
where his heart thumps desire.
This is all any girl could want.
So why do my open eyes stray over
his shoulders? And why am I satisfied
to see Kyle staring back at me?
He gives a little shrug, continues
inside, just as the first bell blares.
Matt pulls away reluctantly.
Guess
that’s our cue, huh?
He gives me
another quick kiss, slides his arm
around my waist, hustles me toward
the door and the long row of lockers
just beyond. At the far end, Sierra
Freeman has cornered Kyle. Only
his body language loudly says he’s
not exactly frantic to get away.
MATT WALKS ME
To my first-period class—
AP English. Thank God
for advanced placement.
The regular curriculum
would drive me bonkers.
I taught myself to read
before kindergarten.
I lived with Grandma Jean
and Grandpa Carl then,
and books were everywhere.
Grandpa helped me learn
to count. After that, math
was easy. Two grandparents,
take away one (goddamn
cigarettes got him too young)
leaves one. And when that
one goes just a little crazy
having lost her husband
of thirty-nine years,
two grandparents take away
one equals zero. Anyway,
words and numbers have
always been easy for me.
And even without people
who care, my grades rock.
Matt, who is clueless
about much more than
my relatively curvy
exterior, likes to tease
me.
Who knew a brainiac
could be so much fun?
is one of his favorite
lines. “Fun,” meaning
I let him cop regular
feels of those curves.
He knows I take all AP
classes, but somehow
has no real idea just
how brainy I am. Okay
by me. It’s an advantage.