Authors: Ellen Hopkins
of smells: tuna casserole, over-
cooked broccoli, onion laced
salads. Booze, in assorted flavors.
Flowers. Didn’t know all their names.
But their combined perfumes
smelled like death. Mom sat on
an overstuffed sofa, vacant-eyed,
silently sipping vodka on the rocks.
Daddy gulped whiskey, and might
have passed out quietly except…
Someone stumbled through the door,
wearing an aura of Scotch and a marble
expression on her face—the one I just
barely remember. She went straight up
to her son.
You!
She shoved him
into the wall.
L-look at you, Raymond.
All red eyed and drippy nosed.
You don’t fool me. Don’t f-f-fool them….
She gave a vague wave.
W-we all know
just what you are—a m-monster!
I Don’t Want to Relive
That scene, which grew as ugly
as any my mind can replay.
Grandma and Daddy sparred. Verbally.
Then physically, until someone
pulled them apart, spitting poison
as they separated, not just for that
evening, but, at least if Daddy
has his way, forever afterward.
That’s the last solid memory I have
of her, broken by secrets. Splintered
by pain. Escorted into the night, out
of our lives. Does she really dare
try to reenter now? What if I decide
to let her back in? I’m guessing
I’d be crematorium fuel. No
coffin. No flowers. Just a hot
white fire, melting me into
bone fragments and ashes.
Then Again, the Sad Fact Is
My parents might think cremation
too good for me. As I slide books
into my backpack, it comes to me
they might just weight me down
and throw me into Cachuma.
Down, down, into that cold blue
lake I’d go, no one the wiser.
Who would even miss me?
Maybe Ian, but after the last
couple of days, I’m not so sure.
We’ve got drama today.
Hopefully our little love
scene will warm him (me?)
up some and we can talk
after. A long conversation,
like we used to have all
the time. That’s what we need.
But first I have to get to
school. Which means it’s time
to poke the sleeping bear.
As Expected
It’s a less than pleasant
experience, starting with
the obnoxious breath
coming out of his open
mouth. “Daddy? Wake
up. You’ll be late for work.”
He snorts and his eyes
flutter open.
Wha…?
What happened? Where
am I? What time is it?
“You’re in the living
room. You fell asleep
on the sofa. It’s a little
after seven and I have to
hurry to catch the bus.”
After seven?
He jumps
upright, too fast. I can
see the pounding in his
temples.
Why didn’t you
wake me sooner?
“I tried, but you went
back to sleep, I guess.”
Total lie. But he’ll never
know it. And right now,
all he’s thinking about
is how his head feels.
Shit. I’ve got a heavy
docket today.
Finally
his eyes focus.
And I
feel like a truck ran
over the top of my head.
“Sorry you don’t feel
well, Daddy. But I’ve
got to run. See you later,
okay?” I grit my teeth
and take a step toward
the front door.
That’s as far as I get.
Daddy’s hand clamps
around my wrist.
Wait
just a minute. Do you
remember last night?
Now my teeth grind
uncomfortably. What
about last night, exactly,
does he want to discuss?
“Uh, sure, Daddy.”
All right, then. No rides
with any Brittanys,
okay? I want you all
in one piece.
He doesn’t
say just what for.
So of Course
Who comes chugging up
as I wait for the bus
but the very Brittany
in question.
Wanna ride?
She’s alone in the car,
an explanation at the ready.
The guys got in trouble
for being late yesterday.
Well, so did I, but I don’t
want to talk about it. “Ah.”
Get in. My mom bought me
all new tires, so you’re safe.
Not really, but I don’t want
to say that, either. “Um…”
You’re not scared, are you?
She almost looks hurt.
I glance around, see no sign
of Daddy. “Oh, why not?”
Cool. Let’s go. Don’t want
to be late two days in a row!
No, we most definitely
don’t want that.
We Actually Arrive
Ten minutes early. And I have
to admit even Brittany’s nonstop
chatter wasn’t as bad as listening
to freshmen guys talk about zits.
I can’t believe I actually defied
Daddy in such an overt manner.
But it feels good. Even better,
in fact, than missing the zit talk.
At least as long as I don’t get
caught. That probably wouldn’t
feel too great. So far so good,
though you never know where
his spies might be hiding. No
use worrying about them now.
Brittany parks. A bit crooked,
but what else could I expect?
She giggles.
Even new tires
can’t help my peripheral vision.
I’m supposed to wear glasses,
but they make me look ugly.
Oh, wonderful. I can just see
the news:
Judge’s daughter
killed in accident with not-ugly
half-blind friend at the wheel.
I File That Away
Thank Brittany for the ride,
head toward the human knots
clogging the locker breezeways.
Pre-first-bell yells. Catcalls.
Laughter. A few tears.
Nothing out of the ordinary.
But just as I reach my own
locker, a loud guffaw makes
me turn to search for its source.
It’s Shaun, apparently the chief
of a small tribe of geeks. When
I draw my glare even with his eyes,
he turns his back to me, lowers
his voice, and says something
to his not-so-braves that makes
them all laugh out loud.
Something inside me snaps,
almost audibly. I slam
my locker, take dead aim at
the geeklets’ chieftain. Straight
up in his face, “Something funny?”
His eyes dart back and forth
among his stick figure friends.
But no one comes to the rescue.
Uh. No. Not really.
Then he tries
to draw strength from numbers.
We were just talking about girls
and what they do for attention.
He pulls himself up as tall as he
possibly can.
What do you do?
If his buddies think about
laughing, the look on my face
must make them think twice.
Ice-cold anger pulses in my veins.
I can feel it in my temples. And
something else, too. Something
brand-new. “Anything I do is no
business of yours, you little shit.
But if you want my attention,
here it is.” That something new—
courage—brings my palms flat
against his shoulders. Hard.
Hard Enough
To make him stumble backward,
bump his head against a post.
I’ll probably get in real trouble
for this, but at the moment I couldn’t
care less. “Enough attention?”
This time his friends do laugh.
Shaun’s face turns the color
of strawberry jam.
What the fuck
is your problem? Not my fault
you’re a trashy little skank.
Suddenly a hand is at my elbow
and a voice falls into my ear.
C’mon. This is beneath you.
Ian!
He turns on his brother.
You shut
your mouth and keep it that way.
Ian puts his arm around my
shoulder, guides me away from
the dissolving drama. Dueling
emotions take aim inside me.
Relief. Hurt. Happiness. Fury.
We turn a corner and at the far
end of the building, few eyes
to see, Ian pulls me into his chest.
My eyes sting and my legs go weak
and I let myself gather his strength.
The first bell rings and I start
to pull away, but his arms grip
tighter.
Tell me what happened.
He looks down into my tear-
blurred eyes, and next thing
I know we’re kissing. Really,
truly kissing, like it’s from the heart
and we really mean it and there’s no
one else, never will be. Finally I have
to come up for air. “I love you.”
It Just Slipped