Authors: Ellen Hopkins
worth a shit, except in the stew pot.
A weird smile crept across his face.
Let's have a little fun. What do you say?
For me to answer. Before I could
even consider what might come
next, he put the truck in gear.
Punched it. By the time the rabbit
realized squashation was imminent
and reacted, it ran straight on up
the road. Big mistake. Jackrabbits
are quick. V-8s are powerful.
Faster than small mammals.
The rabbit feinted right. Cole
followed. Left-right. Veer-veer.
That would have been one dead
animal except it got lucky.
Goddamn little bastard!
Cole
yelled at the rearview mirror.
The Avalanche had good clearance
and went right over the top of
the petrified bunny. Had the tires
hit it,
Taps.
By the time Cole got
the truck turned around, Mr. Rabbit
had taken refuge in a hole somewhere.
Cole was pissed.
Hope I scared
it to death, anyway.
I didn't say
a word all the way to Palm Springs.
We got there, I had mostly convinced
myself that Cole had just been messing
around. Having, as he said, a little fun.
He didn't really want to run over a poor,
defenseless rabbit. He didn't mention
it and I never brought it up to him again.
We checked in to a nice hotel with
a jetted tub in the bathroom and two
pools outsideâone hot water, one cool.
I thought it must be very expensive
but Cole said not to worry about it.
What else was he saving up his money
for? We had a fabulous dinner
at a pricey French bistro. Neither of us
ordered the lapin. Just seeing rabbit
on the menu made me cringe. Cole had
the venison medallions. I chose a nice
vegetable ragout. Chocolate soufflé
for dessert. And cognac. Lots of cognac.
By the time we stumbled back into our room,
took a hot (hot!) bath together, and fell
into bed, I did not dream at all. Especially not
about wildflowers, jackrabbits, or artillery fire.
That time wasn't too difficult.
I knew I'd see him again when
his battalion came to California
for pre-deployment training
at Twenty-Nine Palms. Plus,
he'd get leave again before
they sent him back overseas.
Best of all, we planned a summer
trip to Hawaii for me. It would be
my first time visiting the islands
and Cole would have his off-duty
hours to spend with me. With only
a couple of months until school
was out, I didn't think I'd miss
Cole nearly as much as proved
to be the case. Because that man
had insinuated himself totally
into my life, under my skin. Our
last night together before he had
to return to base was amazing.
He knew exactly what to do, how
fastâor slowâto do it for maximum
effect. He made it all about me.
Called me beautiful, and made
me believe it. Whispered,
I love
you. I need you. Always will. I want
to eat you. Drink you. Breathe you
in.
And he did. Again and again.
In the middle of the frozen
night, to inhale the warmth
of you, exhale the fear of you,
no longer in my life.
A drift
of perfume lifting
off the silk of your skin,
a waking mist
of heaven.
Drink it in. Drink it in.
I never understood
the desire for eternity before.
But then you appeared,
midst
the chaos of my youth,
taught me how to love
when I swore I never would
again, extinguished
the coals
of desperation singeing
me inside, branding me
untouchable. Unsalvageable.
I am exiled to the wilderness
of hell
no longer, because of you.
You give forever meaning.
Cole Gleason
Oahu must have been incredible.
So much raw beauty was bound
to draw humans, intent on messing
it up completely. First they came
from neighboring islandsâwho knows
how they managed to outrigger all
that way? Settle in, make the place
home, and the next thing you know,
a more advanced people come along,
conquer you, set up housekeeping
in the very huts you built! Turnabout
is fair play, however, because just
when Group Two thinks everything's
coming up pineapples, Captain Cook
and crew sail into view, carrying
fabulous stuff like cholera, measles,
and Jesus. And once white people
discovered this little corner of heaven,
next thing you know, relatively speaking,
it's high-rises on top of volcanoes,
strip clubs peddling a lot more
than leis, concrete, and asphalt
choking sand, and jet fuel blowing
in the breeze. Honolulu represents
the worst of all that. Yet every time
I fly in, anticipation begins to build
just about the time I think I'll go crazy,
stuffed into a narrow airliner seat
between honeymooners and retired
couples looking for Shangri-La.
I'd like to tell them to hold on tight
to that person beside them, because
that's where they'll find paradise.
It is not a beach or a palm tree grove
or the brim of a smoking black crater.
It's a plateau inside their hearts, one
that can only be reached in tandem.
And as the plane circles to land,
I draw closer to my Wyoming mesa,
not so very far from me now. Wonder
what he's doing right this minute.
Cleaning his weapon? Scrubbing latrines?
Running laps or lifting weights?
In my mind, he is a snapshot, frozen
in time. I don't picture him in motion.
Wonder if he's imagining meâour last
time together, where I am at this moment.
How I'll look when he sees me. What I'll be
wearing. If I've cut my hair or lost a few
pounds. Do men even think that way?
The jet bumps down on the tarmac.
Some people sigh relief. Others laugh.
Not a few are already on their cell phones.
Conversation picks up, speeds up.
We are safe on the ground in Honolulu.
People collect their things, prepare
to join tours or embark on self-guided
adventures. Few except me arrive solo.
No soldier, either. I won't see Cole
till tonight, after his workday ends
and he can drive the fifteen or so miles
from the base to me. Meanwhile,
I'll catch some sun. Cole doesn't care
much for the beach here. Says the sand
is filthy. Dirtied by tourists and their trash.
Maybe. But it's warm this time of year,
unlike San Diego sand. I plan on a nice,
long walk, a little warm ocean swimming
and time to sit, doing nothing but watch
the surf break. I grab a cab to the Waikiki
hotel Cole suggested we try, an affordable
high-rise two blocks from the ocean.
As affordable goes, it isn't bad. At least,
the lobby is well kept and the desk
clerkâSherryâseems friendly. When
I give her my credit card and ask to leave
a key for Cole, she smiles.
Marine wife,
huh? We've had a few check in today.
I could correct her on my marriage
status. Instead I just smile back.
“They're deploying soon. Again.”
The tone was sadder than I expected.
“You'd think I'd be used to it by now.”
Sherry shakes her head.
I've got one,
too. But mine's coming home soon.
He's transitioning into the Reserves
then. It will be weird, having him
around on a regular basis.
I nod. “You kind of get used to being
alone. The waiting is hard sometimes,
though. I wish Cole and I could have
a little more time together before
he has to go, but he used up most
of his leave last summer. His mom
was really sick, and . . .” I realize
I'm running my mouth. Shut it
before too much personal stuff spills
out all over this total stranger. “Sorry.”
Sherry smiles understanding.
Hey,
no apologies. I've been there.
Tell you what . . .
She consults her
computer.
I'll upgrade you to a room
on the water side. Very romantic.
I thank her, carry my small bag up
to the room, and before I change, text
Cole:
IN THE HOTEL. OUR ROOM IS UP
HIGH, ON THE PACIFIC SIDE. I CAN SEE
THE WATER FROM HERE. LOVE YOU
.
Until he gets off duty. But I want him
to know he's the first thing I thought
about when I arrived. I open the sliding
glass door. Step out on the balcony. Salt
wind blows warm through my hair, weaves
it with the potpourri of plumeria, jasmine,
diesel exhaust, and streets wet with recent
downpour. One day I'll explore the other
islands, inhale the tropical air outside
of this city. Cole and I never seem to
have enough time to do that when I visit.
I add it to my bucket list, go back inside.
I slip into the purple bikini Darian
sent to Hawaii with meâher excuse
to put Kenny and me in the same place
at the same time. She got what she came
for. Manipulator. I do love the swimsuit,
though. The full-length mirror says
I've dropped some weight. Can't imagine
why. But it does look good on me.
Regardless, I cover up my midsection
with a short pink shift. Tie back my hair.
Off I go. It's really lovely outside. Not too
hot. The rain has raised a gentle steam.
It wraps around me as I walk along
the quiet sidewalk. Late October lies
between the heaviest tourist seasons.
The street vendors are voracious.
As I pass by, moving
toward me and shouting,
Discount tickets!
Sunset cruises!
Learn to surf!
Pearl Harbor bus tours!
Best luau on Oahu, guaranteed!
A massive Samoan guy
in a loud Hawaiian shirt
shoves a coupon into my hand.
That gets you in, no cover,
at the Pink Cherry Club. Single
women are always welcome.
I keep walking and a greasy-
haired haole drops in beside me,
meters his steps to match mine.
Hey there, pretty lady.
You here all by yourself?
Want some company?
I lower my head, shake
it. The negative answer
doesn't discourage him.
How about some pakalolo?
Best green bud in Waikiki.
Give you an awesome deal.
With a quiet, “No, thank you.”
But when I speed up a little,
he does, too. So I brake to a halt.
He comes around in front of me,
looks into my eyes, and I can't help
but notice his pupils are completely
dilated. When he opens his mouth,
the condition of his teeth confirms
my suspicion that he is into much
more than weed.
Don't want to go
down? I can take you up. Way up.
He reaches into his pocket, extracts
a small plastic bag.
Asian ice. Pure
as it comes. One little hit keep you
going for days.
His breath, when he
exhales, smells like rotten cabbage.
It makes me gag, and for the first time
a small rush of fear lifts the hair
on the back of my neck. I shove it
aside. We are on a public sidewalk,
within rock-tossing distance of one
of the most populous beaches in
the world. He's not going to hurt
me here. “Leave me the fuck alone.”
What? You don't like me?
He grabs
my arm, jerks it, gives a strange,
little laugh and it strikes me that this
man is totally out of his head. I try to
remember the limited self-defense
moves I know, when he suddenly
releases my arm and without
a word, slinks off, a weasel into
the shadows. I turn to see what
spooked himâa hulking cop,
double-timing toward and now
past me. Looks like he's after the ice
man, who's obviously a known
quantity. All of a sudden, walking
the beach by myselfâeven with plenty
of other people aroundâhas lost
its appeal. I look up at the hotel
in front of me. The flamingo pink
Royal Hawaiian. It's a Waikiki