Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Orphans & Foster Homes, #Social Issues, #Adolescence, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse
KYLE EXITS THE FREEWAY
Swings in the correct direction.
“What about your dad?” I ask.
“What are you going to tell him?”
We are bumping along the dirt
by the time he answers.
He won’t
even know I’m gone for a week.
Any other week, maybe. But,
“Uh … Christmas. Remember?
Anyway, your sister would notice.”
He thinks for a while, and I see
his shoulders slump slightly.
Forgot about Christmas.
Sadie will miss me for sure.
Then he brightens.
At least
I’ll get to spend it with you.
Anyway, holidays bring out
the asshole in my dad. He starts
drinking at breakfast, goes
all day until after dessert or
until he passes out. And every
drink just makes him meaner.
AS WE PULL INTO THE DRIVEWAY
I think about my own dad’s drinking.
He starts early, finishes late. But
he doesn’t very often get mean.
Maybe that’s ’cause he mostly
drinks beer. But I don’t think
his mean streak is very big.
Maybe when he gets out of
jail we can figure out how to
grow closer. That would mean
coming back from … wherever
Kyle and I end up. It would also
mean forgiveness on both sides.
Forgiveness isn’t my best thing.
Easier staying pissed. But I’m
tired of being pissed all the time.
Tired of feeling hurt by stuff that
can never be fixed because it is
an indelible part of the past.
KYLE STAYS IN THE TRUCK
While I circle around back, where
I know a certain window has a broken
lock. I left my house key in Fresno
with the rest of my meager possessions.
I shimmy up the dilapidated vinyl siding,
squeeze through the smallish opening,
drop into my old bedroom. An odd pang
of homesickness presses, weight
enough to make my eyes water. Why
am I so sad? I hate this place. Hate
what it represents—the threadbare
remnants of my childhood, few enough
happy memories woven into that cloth.
A strange foreboding chills me, and
I creep into the hallway. “Is someone
here?” I call, though I know the place
is empty. Ghosts. That’s all. They smell
of old tobacco. Dribbled beer. Cheap
perfume. Detritus-caked dishes left
to molder in the kitchen sink. Trash.
I sneak into my dad’s bedroom, a thief
who has already cased the place. I know
where the spare change jar is kept beneath
the canvas liner in the clothes hamper.
Sometimes there’s more than change
in the jar, and this is one of those times.
Kortni’s tips have been good lately,
and without Dad’s bad habits to support,
she has squirreled away almost four
hundred dollars. I take a fistful, leave
the rest to help replace the clothes
I borrow. She’s a little bigger than me.
But baggy is better than nothing, and
nothing is what I have now. Two pairs
of jeans. A couple of sweatshirts.
A plaid flannel shirt. Underwear.
That’s the creepiest thing, but panties
are expensive. At least they’re clean.
I help myself to five pair, trying not to
think about what has worn them.
Finally I go to the kitchen, find paper
and a Sharpie, write a note:
I am okay.
Have not been kidnapped. I had to
leave Fresno because Walter scared
me. Tell Shreeveport to keep an eye
on him. I had to borrow a few bucks
and some of your clothes. Promise
to pay you back. Love, Summer.
I GATHER UP
The fragments
of my shattered
dignity. Exit through
the front door, paper
bag filled with
pilfered necessities
heavy in my hand.
I look at the horizon,
hung low with charcoal
clouds. Storm gestating.
Kyle waits, fingers
thrumming impatiently
against the steering
wheel. Can’t say
I blame him. We
really must go. Need to
run. One chapter closed.
Another almost begun.
THREE HUN IN HAND
We chance a quick stop at Wal-Mart.
I’ve been thinking about which way
to go
, Kyle says.
I think we should head
up Highway 395. No one will expect us
to take that route. Not this time of year.
There are lots of places we can camp
,
and I could probably find work at
Mammoth, once the ski resort opens.
But I think we’ll have to sleep in my truck
,
at least until I can make enough money
to get us a place. It’s going to be cold up
there. We’ll need two good sleeping bags.
A little food. Cereal. Jerky. Nuts.
Or maybe trail mix. Water. Flashlight
and spare batteries. Toilet paper.
Toilet paper? Seriously? Logistically,
this is terrifying. I’m not exactly
a mountain man (woman?). But I go
along, hoping we don’t blow our entire
money stash. We hurry the cart
through the store. As we pass
the feminine products section, it hits
me that maybe it’s the right time
of the month to consider tampons.
But how do I buy them with Kyle?
How do I manage a period camped
out in the bitter-cold wilderness?
My resolution to make this happen
falters. But then I look at Kyle,
who is totally determined to see it
through. I grab the tampons,
throw them into the cart. And,
knowing my body the way I do,
I add a small bottle of generic
ibuprofen. Last thing Kyle needs
is to hear me bitch about cramps.
I blush when he smiles at my
selections. But he only shrugs,
puts a box of condoms into the cart.