Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Parents, #Social Issues, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse, #Emotions & Feelings, #Stories in Verse
What happened that night.
Tried to blame the meth.
The booze. The situation.
I even tried to forgive him
because Hunter is an angel.
But I can’t forgive him.
Can’t forgive that he forced
himself on me, inside me.
If he’d only been patient,
I probably would have
said yes. Okay. Let’s.
But I was scared, and
he knew it, and my
being afraid pushed
some kind of on button.
And it seems to me
if that happened once,
it will likely happen
again. I should have
called the cops. Turned
him in, seen to it he’d
never get the chance
to flip that on button
again. And if it wasn’t
for the monster, I would
have. So who is really
to blame? Brendan?
The monster? Or me?
Hey, guess what. It
doesn’t matter, anyway.
For tomorrow evening. Barring
complications, my car should
be running by then. I guess
I should be a little scared,
but I’m not. It’s not like he can
rip off my virginity twice.
Later I’ll call Grady, who’d
jump in front of a moving
train to score glass like this.
Hmm. Maybe I should have
arranged to meet Brendan
down by the railroad trench.
Next time. Meanwhile, looks
like I’ve gone into business
for myself. Entrepreneurship,
the American Way. Although
I doubt Warren Buffett ever had
anything like this in mind.
It’s simple. [If not exactly legal,
but then neither is that insider
trading shit.] It doesn’t take a
college degree. [Or even a GED.]
And it’s lucrative. [Only if you’re
not dipping into the profit margin.]
Therein lies a major problem
for me. Wonder, if I quit using
and kept the profit, if I could
actually make some money, save
it up, even. Wonder if I could
quit. [Don’t make me laugh.]
To quit
a bad habit, one
that has come to
define you?
To cease
using a substance—
any substance—
that you not only
need but enjoy?
To stop
yourself from
lighting up that
cigarette? It’s going
to kill you, but hey,
you’re going
to die
someday anyway,
why not die happy,
why not die buzzed,
why not die
satisfied? Why not
die sooner, with
fewer regrets, than
later?
He picked up the radiator on
his way home last night, and
he’s already out in the garage
working. Okay, we were up
all night, so he got an early start.
The new stash is all it should be.
Good thing Brad is handy with
tools, and the LTD presents few
surprises. Bolt this here, screw
that there, new hoses, new fluid.
Voila. The car is ready to go by
noon. He comes into the kitchen,
all greasy. I smile at the black
gunk smeared across his forehead
and dotted at the end of his nose.
“I owe you one. I mean, another
one.” And he just looks so cute
I can’t help but go over and kiss
him. We’re lip-locked, temps
rising, when all of a sudden,
Hey! What are you doing?
You can’t do that with Daddy!
We jerk apart, and there’s
LaTreya, hands on hips.
Okay, this one isn’t nanny
material. It’s up to the daddy
in question to assuage her ire.
But he sputters, helpless, so
I offer, “I’m just thanking him
for fixing my car. Okay, honey?”
No! It’s not okay. He’s my
daddy, and daddies are only
supposed to kiss mommies.
You’re not my mommy, so you
better not kiss him anymore!
She storms into the other room.
Brad smiles apologetically.
Sorry bout that. Jeez, she’s
more like her mother than I
imagined. Who knew such
a little girl could have such
a big temper—or opinions?
I’ve never really asked
about Angela before. This
seems like as good a time as
any. “Tell me about Angela.
What happened between
you? Why did she leave?”
He shakes his head.
Not
much to say. We got married
and had kids, right out of high
school. One day she said she
needed some space. Guess
she found some she likes.
And so do I, but thinking
about leaving kids behind
has made me want to see
Hunter. I pick up the phone.
“Hey, Mom. My car’s on the
road again. I thought I’d
drop by this afternoon. Uh,
maybe around three?”
I’m meeting Grady at five,
Brendan a half hour later.
That should give me plenty of
time to reconnect with my baby.
Brad weighs out an ounce
into eight balls. I’m not exactly
sure how much they’ll want,
or how much they can pay.
He is rightly concerned.
Promise you’ll be extra careful.
An ounce is trafficking—
definitely heavy jail time.
“Hey, no worries. I’ll drive
like an old woman. The last
thing I want is to get popped.
I’m too busy to spend time in jail.”
Brad walks me to my car,
looks right and left before
bending down to kiss me.
Call if you’ll be late, okay?
I’m going to worry until
you get home.
He’d probably
worry a lot more if he knew
just who I’d lined up to score.
The car’s running great, and I feel no
sense of fear, despite the large quantity
of fine Mexican methamphetamine
beneath the front seat. It’s a forty-
minute drive home, at the speed limit,
and I have to admit getting away
from Red Rock, Brad, and the girls feels
like freedom. Guess I’m finding space I like.
On a lark, I hit Trey’s number on my speed
dial. I about drop the phone when he actually
answers, and on the second ring.
Hey, you.
Must be ESP. I was just thinking about you.
My first thought is, He’s thinking about
me! [My first thought is, Yeah, right.]
We talk for ten minutes and every doubt
about what he feels for me dissolves.
There are a few uncomfortable moments,
like when he asks,
So, what’s up with Brad?
The Bree in me has a ready smart-ass answer,
which I quickly squelch in favor of telling him
Brad fixed my car. [Oh, he fixed more than
that, didn’t he?] But Trey’s next query, about
“availability,” elicits an “Oh, duh” moment.
When I tell him, “No problem,” he says,
Cool. I’m thinking about a quick trip over
the mountain. You’ll be around, won’t you?
Well, where else would I be, especially with
him coming? My heart hammers, blood
pumping wildly until I pull into Mom’s driveway
and realize he’s coming more for glass than for me.
When Scott opens the door.
Hello, Kristina.
Cool as sleet.
He gives me a noticeable up-
down-and-sideways, and if he’s
half as savvy as he thinks he is,
he has to know the score.
Regardless, he steps aside, lets
me in. Jake comes out of the
kitchen, carrying Hunter. How
long since I’ve seen him? Two
months—just after Christmas—
and he’s grown. Changed.
His hair falls in long dark waves,
almost to the bottom of his neck.
His coos and gurgles sound
suspiciously like words:
M-m-m-a.
When he spots me, he smiles, and
beyond his lips are two little teeth.
I reach for him and he draws
back, seeking safety in Jake’s
arms. Anger flares, but only
briefly. After all, thanks to Mom,
he knows Jake better, trusts
Jake more than he trusts me.
Your mother had to run into Reno,
says Scott.
Jake, why don’t you
put Hunter in his walker?
I
follow them into the family room.
Comfortable in his baby bumper
car, Hunter rises up on his tiptoes.
He scoots across the hardwood,
laughing. Finds the TV, punches
at buttons without success.
He’s determined. Determined,
like the person he so resembles,
the one I’ll see much too soon.
At home
seems kind
of surreal. Okay,
maybe that’s partly
because I’m two-days
buzzed, brain a little fuzzy.
Beyond that, I know the room
upstairs still has purple butterflies,
fluttering on mauve walls. [Are you
sure? Maybe it’s an office, with turquoise
angelfish on blue walls.] No, I don’t think so.
Being here with Hunter is weird too. Kind of a
synthetic state of mother- hood, not so different from
being a nanny, because I know no matter what I do,
no matter how fucked up I am or become, he’s not
really my responsibility. Okay, morally, Hunter is
my responsibility. But Mom took it upon herself
to usurp the mommy role, so great. She taught me a
lesson. But who’s really getting hurt here? Not me.
[Huh. Really? Well, you sure could have fooled me.]
And that’s fine by me. Nothing
to say to her, anyway.
Nothing.
Next stop, Grade E. We set up
the meet at his house.
Not far.
He opens the door and his eyes
practically pop
clear out
of his skull.
Wow. You look
great.
See? What
did I tell you?
Guys like girls thin. “Uh, can
I come in?” He steps
out of my way,
ushers me back to his bedroom.
Mom won’t be home
till later,
so we’re cool.
We sit on his bed,
and that makes me
slightly uncomfortable.
When I open the baggie,
give him a taste, he
just about
goes ape shit.
That’s what
I’m talking about.
Where
did this come from? Local?
He’s right where
I need him to be.
So I say, “I can get more.
But it isn’t cheap.”
He makes a buy.
A half ounce. And he says,
I’ll be calling for more.
I made a nice little profit,
plan to make a bigger
profit at my next stop.
Brendan and I hook
up around back
at the Sev.
Can’t do
the deal here.
Get in,
he says, but
I insist “No, we’ll take
my car.” It’s bigger. Safer.
And, behind the wheel, I’ve got
the power. We drive in silence
a mile or so up Virginia Grade.
Despite being gravel,
the road is icy, the
shoulders piled
with snow.
It will be
tough to turn
around, so I keep
driving until I find a place
where I can do that. I want to
be parked in the direction of quick
escape. Just in case. Finally Brendan
says,
I was surprised you called.
Yeah, me too. “Water
under the bridge,” I
answer. What
else can I
say—
I
want your cash?
But it’s really hard to
look at him, especially after
just being with my baby. His
baby. Our baby. God, that stings.