Authors: Helen Frost
I need some food.
I know where my parents hide the house key
and where they keep $100, in case
of an emergency. I know when they're at work.
And I know my rights.
They don't have the right
to throw me out with just the clothes
I'm wearing. I might not start work
for a couple weeks, and I need food
till I get paid. In this case,
I think two wrongs do make a right. Still, this key
feels wrong somehow.
Calm down. Put the key
in the lock; turn it to the right.
I don't call this stealing, but I have a bad case
of nerves all the same. I'm only taking my own clothes
plus some cereal and cans of food
that my parents should've given me. If Dad came home from work
and caught me here, would he say,
Look, I'm sorry, let's work
this out
, or would he take my car keys
too, so I wouldn't have a place to keep the food
I “steal” from him? I don't know. Right
now, I think I better grab my clothes
and get out fast. King wants me to play. Sorry, boy, it's not a case
of me not having time for you. It's a case
where I'd like to take you with me, but it just wouldn't work.
It's hard enough to sleep and change clothes
in my car; I couldn't keep a dog. The key
to making it from one day to the next right
now is: Keep it simple. Food.
A sleeping bag. A place to park at night. The food
has to be easy to eat. I keep it covered, in case
anyone looks in my car. If I do everything just right
I can make this work.
(I hope I get a job.) Okay, where did I put the key?
I'm out of here. Clothes,
food, sleeping bag. Pillow, shampoo, towel. Close
and lock the door. Key right back where I found it.
Case closed. Go somewhere warm and do my homework.
It snowed last night, eight inches deep.
Keesha knocked and said,
No school today
,
so I wrapped my blankets close around me
and I slept and slept. Every time
I tried to make myself wake up, something pulled
me back into the deepest sleep I've had for months.
It was noon when I woke up. I read last month's
Teen People
, drank some coffee, took a long, deep
breath, and looked out at the snow. A memory pulled
me back ten years: it was snowing like today,
but colder and no wind. When's the last time
I felt that safe? Dad bundled me
up in my purple snowsuit and took me
sledding on the hill behind our house. It had been months
since he'd taken any time
off work, but that day the snow was too deep
for anyone to drive, deeper than today.
He sat behind me on our yellow sled and pulled
me close to his warm chest. We flew together down that hill, pulled
the sled back to the top. Over and over. To me,
that memory is like a clear glass marble I can hold today.
It was that same year, maybe that same month,
that, as Mom puts it, Dad
went off the deep
end.
I didn't know what she meant the first time
I heard that. All I could picture was the time
I jumped in a swimming pool and the lifeguard had to pull
me out. Mom said,
No, Katie, this is the deep
end!
But all that made no sense to meâ
Dad was a good swimmer. Why was he gone for months?
Why didn't someone pull
him
out? Days like today
when I have time to remember, I understand. Today
I know what the deep end is, and there are times
I'm scared I could go off it too. Last month
when Mom's husband came in my room and pulled
me toward him, tried to put his hands all over me,
I fought back hard. I made four deep
scratches on his shoulder. I guess I went off the deep end that time,
and as of today, no one's pulled
me out. Sometimes I just want to sleep for months.
WE PASS EACH OTHERÂ Â Â Â Â
STEPHIE
I first met Keesha in seventh grade
at a citywide field day where we
competed in long jump and hurdles.
I thought she could fly! I watched
her take the hurdles, one at a time,
like her life depended on clearing each one without touching.
Or was it that she refused to let anything touch
her? She won everything in eighth grade
too, and then in ninth I found out she went to Marshall. When the time
came to try out for the track team, we
both made it. She is so determined! I watch
her practice harder than everyone else and take first in hurdles
at every meet. Lately, I've been thinking about the hurdles
people face in their lives. It's like us kids are just touching
the starting line, with everybody watching
where we stand in sports and in our grades.
They measure us against each other, but no one knows what we
go through to get where we start from. The time
I spent last month at Keesha's house, and the time
talking to Mom since then, make me think about those hurdlesâ
those private things that no one knows about. We
judge people by certain standards that don't touch
who they really are. I know I'll get bad grades
this term, but what do they say about
me
? Is anyone watching
what I'm going through inside? Or are they only watching
how my body changes, talking about me all the time
as if they knew me:
Terrible, a girl in tenth grade
having a baby she can't support.
I wonder what hurdles
they've faced. Most of the time, we pass each other without touching.
I look at people in the halls, kids we
think are losers, and I think: We
don't know them. Everyone is watching
Jason now to see what he'll decide about next year. I can't touch
whatever is going on with him, no matter how much time
we spend talking. Is he the one I want to face life's hurdles
with? I don't even know. He gets good grades.
He's good at sports. Good-looking. Most of the time, that's all we
watch. But how does someone face an unexpected hurdle?
That touches on what counts. And there's no grade for that.
When Stephie's number showed up on my pager last night
in the locker room, I was confused.
It was the first game of the tournament, I was sure
she'd be there early, and the game was starting
in less than half an hour. I'd suited up already,
but I got to a phone and called. Her brother answered.
Dad took her to the hospital.
He couldn't answer
any of my questions. That was the beginning of the longest night
of my life. Three reporters had already
interviewed me about the
big game.
I bet they were confused
when our team came out and I wasn't in the starting
lineup. Coach was furious, but I was sure
I had to be with StephieâI surprised myself, how sure
I was. I got there in record timeâ
What's wrong?
She didn't answer.
She was crying. Finally she told me,
I'm starting
to bleed. I might lose the baby.
I stayed all night,
holding her hand, not talking much. I'm still a little confused
by what I learned about myself: I already
think of myself as a father. The doctor had already
examined Stephie. He came back in.
Are you sure
you want this child?
She was confused
by that. She couldn't say. I answered
to myself,
Yes, I do. I want this child.
All night
the bleeding kept stopping and then starting
again. At 4:20, just when we were starting
to think she was okay, the doctor came back in. I wasn't ready
to hear what he said:
The fetus is no longer living.
The rest of the night
everyone was in and out, just making sure
Stephie was all right. She looked at me and said,
I have my answer
,
and then she fell asleep. I was confused
by that. What answer? Today she told me,
I've been confused
about my feelings for you. I was starting
to wonder if you're right for me.
The answer
she meant was
Yes, you are.
She's home already
and neither of us is sure
how we feel about what happened last night.
Starting last November, things have gone too fast. Tonight
we're both confused by this relief and love and sadness, sure
of some answers, already facing other questions.
I don't know what to do.
Tobias came over here last night with a burn
on his arm, under his sleeve where it won't show.
I thought it was something Dad
did, and I was about to say,
Stay
here awhile till things cool off at home.
But, turns out, it didn't happen at home,
at least not like I thought. He says all he was trying to do
was make a little money, and he meant to stay
away from drugs and gangs. But this burn
says to me, That won't be so easy for Tobias. Dad's
no help. I wish there was someone to show
my brother there's better ways to earn a living. I could show
him my little paycheck, but I can't make a home
for him. People like Jermaine and Dan step in where Dad
should be.
Look, all you gotta do â¦
Sounds so easy. You don't see them getting burned
when these big guys get greedy. I told Tobias he could stay
here for a couple days, but he said they'd find out where he stays,
and before too long they'd show
up here. Tobias says they told him,
Next time, we burn
your pretty li'l face.
They think he's hiding drugs at home,
and he says it's not true. I've heard about these guys. They'd do
what they say, and they'd make sure to come around when Dad's
not there. Should I try to talk to Dad?
Tobias says he's drinking worse than ever.
Just stay
outta this, Keesha. You don't hafta do
nothin' for me. I'll be okay.
When he tries to show
that brave face, I see how scared he really is. This home
I have is nice enough, but it's not really mine. I bandaged up the burn,
and Tobias left, looking small and lonely. Now I'm burning
up inside about his so-called friends, our so-called dad,
and how my brother doesn't have the kind of home
he needs. Say I let him come and stay
here. Say those guysâor the copsâshow
up. Then what would me and Katie do?
Not to mention Joe. I'd feel like I burned down the home
he's giving us. Joe's no dad, but he stays steady.
God, I miss Mama. She'd show us what to do.
RUNNIN' OUTTA COUCHESÂ Â Â Â Â
DONTAY
I'm runnin' outta couches. Been
to six places in four weeks. Now
I'm startin' over at Jermaine and Dan's.
Only trouble is, Dan think I owe
him somethin' if I stay here,
so I been thinkin' hard.
I'm hungry and it's hard
to say no to the money he talkin' 'bout. They been
feedin' me whenever I come over here.
OnlyâI know what I decide now
I gotta live with. I could end up owin'
somethin' I ain't got, or one of Dan's
friends could tell a lie about me. Dan
won't stop 'em if they come down on me hard
like I seen 'em do Tobias, sayin' he owe
'em $300 'cause they don't like what he delivered. Tobias ain't been
'round here much since then. Now
Dan need someone new, and here
I am.
Look, all you gotta do is take this bag from here
to Seventh Street and bring me back the money.
Dan
make it sound easy, and it look that way now,
but somethin' bound to go wrong. It's harder
to get outta this than in. I been
thinkin' 'bout Dad and Mama, wonderin' what I owe
them. One time Dad told me,
All you owe
anyone is, do the best you know how.
If he was here,
what would he say? Him and Mama been
locked up two years now. If I start helpin' Dan,
I could end up inside before they get out. Hard
to say what I should do. I need money now,
but somethin' tells me, run. Right now,
I'm hungry, but I don't owe
nobody nothin'. Tobias told me it gets harder
once you start that stuff. He gave me an address:
Here's
a place my sister Keesha stays. Let Dan
get some other underage to do what I been
doin'
. He's right. I don't feel right no more here at Dan
and Jermaine's. It's hard to go somewhere I never been,
but I'm goin'. I owe Tobias a big favor now.