Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse, #Self-Esteem & Self-Reliance, #Dating & Sex
It’s the girl’s father.
Duh.
Maybe the voice is the voice
of reason.
Oh yes, I’m reasonable.
I sit, waiting. Not sure what for.
Hope the people who live in
the house I’m parked in front
of don’t think I’m scoping out
the place. Last thing I need in
my life are cops. After a little
while, blue-haired-girl’s front
door opens again. The man
comes out, lugging a set of golf
clubs. He carries them to an aged
SUV parked in the circular
driveway. And off he goes.
Golf, huh? He’ll be gone for
a while. Think he knows
what the girls will be up to?
What Will The Girls Be Up To?
I really, really want to know.
Guesswork and imagination
are so unfulfilling. Frustrating.
Come on. You know what girls
do. You’ve seen it in magazines.
Movies, too. Remember that night
with Cara. It was a girl-on-girl
scene that got her all turned on.
Hey, maybe it’s your fault. Maybe
you
helped flip her gay. How ironic.
No. Not me, and not the movie.
Gayness comes built in, right?
That’s what everyone says.
Yeah, everyone who’s gay. You
don’t really believe that, right?
“Goddamn! Would you just shut
the fuck up? I can’t think straight.”
Nope. All you can think is homo.
God. Cara might be in there,
with that girl, doing … what?
Are they naked right now?
Playing naked lez games?
No way to know for sure.
Ever heard of windows? You
know, those glass things you
can look through to see what’s
on the other side? Just be careful
in case Mrs. Golf Dude is at
home. And you might not want
to let any of the neighbors see.
Windows Are Made To Look Through
Other than the cars zipping by
faster than they probably should,
the street seems quiet enough.
I get out of the truck, don’t lock
the doors, in case I need to leave
in a hurry. What is that noise?
High power lines? My ears
don’t like the thrumming.
I try to look like I belong on
this sidewalk, like I have a legit
purpose for walking along it.
But the winter-bared trees
seem to be the only things
that know I’m here. Not too
worried about fooling them.
I slow as I approach the house.
Glance around, trying not to
look like I’m glancing around.
The front door is flanked by
windows, shades drawn.
Shouldn’t peek in the front
windows, anyway. I veer
into the unfenced side yard.
It’s screened from the neighbors’
view by a tall evergreen hedge.
Two white-framed windows
break up the red brick. I draw
back, against the wall. Listen.
Yeah, listen to that. Lord, what
are those two doing to each other?
From behind the first window
come the sounds of nasty girls.
Check it out. Come on. Hurry,
would you? Don’t worry. They’re
looking at each other, not at you.
I duck under the window, then
cautiously lift my face to the glass.
The voice was right. They are way
too into each other—literally—
to notice me. The head of the bed
is toward the wall opposite me.
Blue Hair is on top (of course),
which has Cara’s feet pointed
toward me. But even if she wanted
to look at the window, she couldn’t.
Her sweater is pulled up over
her face. The rest of her
beautiful body is bared,
and opened to Blue Hair’s
mouth. Tongue. Fingers.
No fair! That should be me!
Watching is torture. But I can’t
turn away. Cara moans, and
I want her to moan for me.
Me! And then she screams.
I Love You
That’s what she screams, only
not for me. The thrumming
swells into the sound of a billion
crickets rubbing their legs.
And, Viagra or no, I am hard.
Quick! Your cell. Come on!
I don’t get it until he says,
The camera. A picture is worth
a thousand words, remember?
And two thousand screams.
My cell. Right. I locate it,
fumble to find the camera setting.
No flash. Hold it right up against
the glass so it doesn’t glare. Zoom
it in. Perfect.
Now get out of here.
I Don’t Bother With Stealth
On the way back to the truck.
In my pocket, the camera bumps
against my groin. The boner
is gone, a sticky glaze left
as a reminder inside my boxers.
Sick. I am sick, right? I start
for home, in a fairly straight
line on well-traveled roads.
A picture is worth two thousand
screams. It’s her turn to squirm.
I see Cara squirming. Building.
Hear Blue Hair tell her yes, now.
I am seeing through red lenses again.
Don’t get mad, dude. Get even.
You can wreck her. Simple upload.
Yes, now.
Wreck her.
Get even.
Andre
Even Now
After so much time nearly
inseparable, connected by
experiences and emotion,
she
can shut me out. Turn
away, as if our investment
in each other
doesn’t
carry weight beyond
the moment. Is it possible
that she doesn’t really
know
how much I need her?
Can’t hear truth when I tell
her how much she means to
me,
that she has changed the way
I look at life, at the future?
Does she even care
at all?
Some Things You Can’t Fix
For someone you love, no matter how
much you want to.
I can’t make Jenna’s sister stop being a star.
I can’t change last quarter’s report card
so her parents will let
her get her driver’s license. I can’t insist
her father stop being a racist jerk. And there
is absolutely nothing I can
do about his upcoming wedding. All I can
do is be available to listen, and maybe offer
comments to help her process
the disappointments in her life. Not that she
would call them that. She thinks she’s handling
them just fine, rising above
them, as it were. But I seriously disagree.
She’s Disintegrating
The fracture occurred a while ago. I noticed
the fissure last week,
after her sister landed a major modeling job.
I can’t believe it. The guy loved her. He made
her a spokesmodel for this
major new teen fashion line. Not that most of
us are skinny enough to wear it and look half
decent. God. It’s big bucks.
National exposure. It’s all Kendra can talk
about, and it’s making me sick. Then there’s
Mom, who keeps saying,
“All our hard work is finally paying off.”
Our
hard work? She hasn’t even noticed
that Kendra isn’t eating
again. Or maybe she’s just overlooking it.
She went on longer. And all I could say was,
“The eating thing is a problem.
But as far as the job, you should be happy
for her. It’s her dream, and she’s worked hard
to accomplish it, right?”
I still hadn’t—haven’t—mentioned my own
dream, and my decision to pursue it. I started
to do that one time, but when
she cut me off to talk about Kendra’s probable
anorexia, somehow the subject of dance just
didn’t seem important.
It wouldn’t have been to her, anyway.
My supporting her sister pissed Jenna off.
I’m sick of her always
getting the stuff she wants. All because of
her looks? She hasn’t worked hard. All she
does is starve herself. And
my mom doesn’t even care about that. That’s