Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse, #Self-Esteem & Self-Reliance, #Dating & Sex
“He never …? Oh yeah, he meant to hurt
me. In fact, he used to fucking wail on me.”
Ha! Said It
And it had the exact effect I wanted.
Disbelief. Shock. Dawning realization
that the guy she fell in love with—
my father—is so not the man she thinks
he is. “Oh yeah. He’d come home
drunk. Angry. Didn’t matter at what.
Mom was good at disappearing.
Not me. Jenna was too little. Too cute.
Too much the daughter he really
wanted. I was chubby. More butt to belt
without doing real damage.
That’s
who you fell in love with. That’s what
the world would have seen had
it ever actually bothered to look.”
For once, the mirror tells me that
the girl looking back at me is skinny.
The Skinny Girl Crumbles
Tries to fall, but the woman behind
her—only a moment ago her rival—
gathers up the pieces of her, attempts to
squash them back together.
Oh, honey.
I’m so sorry. Please try to believe
your father is not that man anymore.
I can’t tell you that he’s sober. He’s
trying, but he backslides. Alcohol can
be a monster. It’s an addiction, but it
starts as learned behavior. He learned
it as a boy, from the man who beat
him.
Abuse is a learned behavior too.
“Sounds like an excuse to me.” On the far
side of the mirror glass, the skinny girl
stares back at me. And, safe in the refuge
of a stranger’s arms, she disintegrates.
People Are Starting To Gawk
Not in a good way. I pull myself together.
“I’m okay.” Not. My makeup is smeared
and my hair’s a mess. “I like the dress.”
Much cooler than I feel. “Not sure how
it would look on Jenna.” They do have it
in a ten, though. And where is she, anyway?
I go back to change, and am still only half-
way into my jeans when Shiloh knocks.
Urgently.
Hurry, honey, okay? We have
to go. Right now. Leave the dress.
The tone of her voice hustles me into
my shoes. “What is it?” As soon as I unlatch
the door, she takes my arm, rushes me
toward the exit.
Your mom tried to get
hold of you, but couldn’t. Your cell
must be dead. It’s Jenna….
The Hospital Is Five Minutes Away
Mom and Patrick meet us there. Mom
is freaking out.
I don’t understand.
How could this happen? Oh, Patrick.
She
reminds me of the skinny girl falling
to pieces. “What happened?” Neither
of them will look at me. “Please. Tell me.”
Patrick draws me to one side of the waiting
room.
We don’t have all the details yet.
He sucks in a big breath of antiseptic air.
Your sister was raped. And … hurt.
We sit in a stiff row, waiting for details.
Finally a doctor comes to give them. Raped.
Beaten. Cut. Left to bleed out. Some
good Samaritan jogging by saved her life.
Broken bones. Stitches. And all because
she asked the wrong guy to buy her booze.
Sean
Broken Bones
Are preferable to broken
dreams. A broken heart.
A solid future smashed
like porcelain into
dust.
How do you reconcile
love that won’t let go
with the overpowering
resentment of being cast
off,
leftovers for scavengers?
How do you scab over
wounds that deep?
Some believe faith can
move
a mountain. I say that’s
not possible if it
isn’t strong enough
to build tomorrow
on.
You Could Power The World
On anger. All you’d have to do
is tap into a deep well of it,
extract it, fill up your tanks.
It’s clean burning, too. All
except for a thin exhaust.
Anger is fueling my days. It gets
me up. Out the door to school.
Reminds me that I need to pass
my approaching finals. Have
to maintain that GPA to stay
on track for my scholarship, and
I will
not
give that up, Cara or
no Cara. Restraining order or
no restraining order. Stanford
is a very big campus.
She
can
figure out how to stay away
from
me.
She’s done a pretty
good job of it here at Galena.
I’ve barely seen her at all
since she got me locked up.
Okay, other than the initial
arrest and holding cell time,
I didn’t go to jail. Uncle Jeff’s
lawyer got me out on my own
recognizance. And when I went
to court, the judge gave me
community service and
warned me any behavior
even vaguely resembling
stalking would immediately
land me in an actual jail cell.
Some people might say I
got lucky, drew the right
judge. I say Cara deserves
a little comeuppance for
causing me sleepless nights
and five days picking up
trash along the Truckee River.
But, as they say, revenge
is a dish best tasted cold.
Especially If I Want
To keep playing baseball.
The thing is, anger has also
powered my bat. It’s all in
the focus. Uncle Jeff showed
me that.
It’s okay to be mad,
he told me.
What you have
to do is gather up all that
anger, hold it right between
your eyes, and when the ball
releases, laser it. Your arms
will follow.
It took a time or
two to get what he meant,
but once it clicked,
bam.
I’ve
put them over the fence
pretty much every game.
The very best part of that is
it keeps Guy Behind My Eyes
mostly quiet. Lately, he only
talks to me when I’m alone,
something I try hard not to be.
The Main Thing
He keeps telling me is that
I need to lay off the ’roids.
I’ll stop talking if you do.
You might shut me up forever.
Chad agrees. He says I’m
borderline schizo and that
he won’t supply me anymore.
At least, not for a while. Not