Authors: Ellen Hopkins
to assail me with advice. As her daughter,
it's my prerogative to take it or leave it.
When it comes to Cole, I mostly ignore
what she has to say, and completely shun
Dad's sage wisdomâ
I don't understand
why you want to commit to someone
whose entire life is following orders.
Dad doesn't care much for rules, except
for the ones he makes. He's brilliant,
but hated school, and could never
have worked for someone else. He never
had to. In college, he became obsessed
with technology, way down to nano
level. His crazy scientist inventions
have kept us living well, especially out
in the country, a very long commute
to the Silicon Valley. Dad is impatient
with conventions, or silly things like
my longstanding desire to teach.
Stupid
is actually what he called it.
Too little pay, and even less respect.
My liberal arts BA, according to Dad,
was,
A serious squander of time and
money.
I figured it gave me options.
Dad says it just proves I'm wishy-washy,
and maybe he's right. I chose an MSW
over an MFA. Social work seemed like
the right direction at the time. But writing
and teaching call to me, too. Which explains
why I'm taking poetry as an elective.
“Creative expression as therapy” was
the explanation I gave to my advisor.
I have, in fact, encouraged the veterans
I've worked with at the VA Hospital
to write as a means of sorting through
the scrambled thoughts inside their heads.
A few showed me their ramblings. I could
fix their grammar. But not their memories.
The writing seemed cathartic.
I might use that as my thesis,
if I get that far next year. I went
for a three-year program, hoping
to give myself a little breathing
room. I talked Dad into paying
for it, so I guess it's fair he's a bit
pissy, especially because he also
agreed to let me quit my part-time job.
I loved working at the preschool, but
it didn't pay very well, and it crowded
my days. And a couple of incidents
made me question why some people
have children. A certain mother made
me a little crazy. Jacked up my stress
factor, not to mention blood pressure.
Parents like her are why the world
needs social workers. Poor, little Soleil
deserves better. Every kid does. Dad
says I can't change the world. Maybe
not. But I'm damn sure going to try.
I suck it up, put distraction away,
and try to jump into writing my paper.
I kind of love most poetry, though
I do prefer writing it to dissecting
some of it, especially Chaucer. He is not,
as the English (Old, new, or anywhere
in between) might say, my cup of Earl
Grey. Still, I manage almost three pages
on his contributions to the
Oxford English
Dictionary
when my cell signals
a new text message. Happy for
the interruption, I go ahead and
investigate, discover it's from Darian.
HEY, GIRL. A BUNCH OF US ARE GOING
OUT ON SATURDAY NIGHT. WANT TO
COME WITH?
Some best friend.
Zero communication for weeks at a time,
then she invites me out with a “bunch”
of her new pals. Military wives, none
of whom I know. The ones she hangs
out with. Works out with. Goes out
with, more often, obviously, than
she does with me anymore. I suppose
I should be grateful she thought about
me at all. Part of me is. And part
of me wishes I had a valid excuse
to say no. But I really don't, and how
would saying no make me a better
friend than she's been to me lately?
Anyway, I could use a few hours away
from here. Out of this apartment,
and into the land of drunk living.
I text back:
SOUNDS FUN, BUT I HAVE
TO BE CAREFUL OF MY CASH. LOOKS LIKE
I'M FLYING TO HAWAII NEXT WEEK
.
She, of course, knows why. Which reminds
me:
HOW'S SPENCE?
Her husband,
and Cole's good buddy, has been
in country for several months. Behind
the wire, at some uber-protected
Afghanistan airfieldâwherever they
keep the helicopters that need a little
tweaking. Spencer is a self-proclaimed
master copter mechanic. Darian's answer
is slow to come. In fact, I'm just
about ready to believe she has put
away her phone when:
OKAY, I GUESS
.
WE HAVEN'T TALKED IN A FEW DAYS
.
Spencer should have fairly easy access
to a computer, if not a phone. E-mails
and even Facebook are rarely prohibited
when a soldier is safely behind the wire.
Communication, the brass believe,
is the key to harmonious long-distance
relationships. You're not supposed
to give away any really important
information, of course. Nothing
the enemy could use to his advantage.
But discussing family or work or school
(on this end) and what to put into care
packages (on the other) are encouraged.
Connection to home and loved ones
helps keep a warrior grounded in
a reality that doesn't revolve around
war. Except when the current battle
happens to involve someone at home.
When I ask Darian what's up with Spence
and her, she responds:
WE HAD A FIGHT
LAST TIME WE TALKED. SAME OLD BULLSHIT
.
Wish I could jump straight to her defense.
But there's a lot I don't know about her
at this point. And a lot more that I suspect
myself. Once, I could have come right out
and asked her if she was sleeping around.
Darian and I have been best friends since
the fourth grade. We used to tell each other
everythingâconfessed big secrets and little
lies. San Diego State was a shared dream,
mostly because, growing up in Lodi, the idea
of moving south and living near the ocean
seemed akin to heaven. We were stem-to-stern
California girls. Funny we fell in love with
heartland guys. Spencer is a corn-fed Kansan.
And Cole's a Wyoming boy. Both were raised
gun-toting, critter-hunting, Fox Newsâloving patriots.
They met in basic training at Camp Pendleton,
became instant friends. We connected with them soon after.
Darian and I were roomies then,
sharing an off-campus apartment.
She grumbled a lot about school.
About feeling shackled. About menâ
the ones she'd been dumped by,
the ones she couldn't seem to find.
One Friday she seemed ready to lose
it, so I suggested a night of drunken
revelry. “Who knows?” I prodded.
“Maybe you'll find Mr. Wonderful.”
We chose an Oceanside hotspot, too busy
for the bartender to give our fake IDs more
than a quick glance. We ordered margaritas,
found two seats at a table not too close to
the speakers pounding base-infused music.
I didn't notice Cole and Spencer walk
in. But Darian did. She nudged me.
Hard.
Check it out. Hot Marines.
Military issue was not my type,
at least I didn't think so then. I did
have to admit, however, that whatever
hoops they'd been jumping through
had left them buff and bronzed.
Which one do you want?
she asked,
as if hooking up with them was in
the bag.
I kind of like the dark one.
Spencer swaggered. That's the only
word I can think of to describe the way
he moved. “Cock-sure,” my grandpa
would have called it. Definitely more
Darian's overhyped style than mine.
Cole, I wasn't sure about. He carried
himself straight up and down, stiff
as a log. He looked deadly serious,
until he smiled, revealing a hint
of something softâalmost childlikeâ
beneath his tough infantryman veneer.
Some things are meant to be, it seems.
I mean, we weren't the only women
in the club. There were way too many
vampiresâgirls hoping to hook up
with a military sugar daddy. Someone
whose paycheck would see them
through when he was sent away.
I didn't know about them then,
but it didn't take long. That night,
they prepared to swoop in on Cole
and Spence. Except, there was Darian.
Darian, though, is flirt enough for
two. Not to mention, bold enough
to move in before the vampires
could reconnoiter.
I'll be right back.
She walked straight up to the bar,
insinuated herself between Spencer
and Cole, ordered drinks, even
though the ones we had were barely
half gone. Then she turned and
looked Spencer square in the eye.
My friend and I want to thank you
for your service. Next round's on us.
It wasn't a question, and one minute
later, I found myself thigh to thigh
next to this quiet guy with intense
topaz eyes. It wasn't love at first sight
or touch or whatever. If it had just
been the two of us there, he would
have been vampire bait. But our
BFFs hit it off immediately. I was more
than a little jealous of the chemistry
between Darian and Spence, even
though helping her find Mr. Wonderful
was supposedly my plan from the start.
I'd never experienced that kind
of instant attraction, however. Not even
with Cole, who I found cute enough,
but rather aloof. In retrospect, I was (am)
much the same way. It took a while
to warm up. Not like we had much in
common, at least not on the surface.
But with Spence and Darian crawling all
over each other, Cole and I could either
stare off into space or attempt conversation.
Despite all the pretty vampires eyeing
him, he chose to take a chance on me.
For me, never the first girl
in any room who men zoomed in on.
I'm slender, and pretty enough
in a serious way. Just not what
you'd call eye candy. I didn't dressâ
certainly didn't undressâto impress.
I'd had boyfriends, even semisteady
ones, but none worth giving up
dreams for. I wasn't exactly a virgin.
But neither was I looking for sex,
and I suppose that showed.
I had been called an ice queen
before, but though I didn't realize
it right away, something inside me
thawed that night. It was a slow melt,
like Arctic ice beneath high polar sun.
Maybe it was how Cole kept his eyes
locked on mine, instead of scanning
the room for easier prey. Maybe it
was the way he talked about homeâ
the stark beauty of Wyoming.
I swear, you can see straight into
forever. No damn buildings to get
in the way. And the sky is the bluest
blue you ever saw. You will never
look up and see gray, like here above
the ocean. Not even if a storm's blowing
in, because then the prairie sky turns
black and purple, like God balled up
his fist and bruised it.
He paused.
What?
Mesmerized, that's what I was, but
I didn't realize my face showed it.
“Uh, nothing. It's just . . .” I couldn't
not say it. “I hope this doesn't insult
you, but you're a poet.” I half-expected
him to get pissed. Laugh, at least.
Instead, he smiled.
Why would that
insult me? I write a little poetry every
now and then. Hell, the first time I got
laid was because I wrote her a love
sonnet. We broke up over the limerick
I wrote about her, though.
He laughed
then, and so did I. I have no idea
if any of that was true, but in the years
since, he has written poems for me.
Hopefully, he hasn't squirreled away
an Ashley limerick to break out one
day. But the revelation that this
country-bred soldier could find poetry
in his heart and inspiration in the Wyoming
sky touched me in a way no boy had ever
come close to. Not even the ones who
had straight-out lied and told me they'd
love me forever. Poetry doesn't lie.
Turned out, Cole was feeling a little
homesick. His mom had just come