Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse, #Self-Esteem & Self-Reliance, #Dating & Sex
winter heart, when what
you
must do to salvage
your sanity is forget her.
What Have You Done?
Tempted fate once too often. Tempted
the wrong man. Dangled
your bait in the wrong place, and the wrong
fish took it right off the hook. Oh, Jenna!
Why couldn’t I save you?
Why couldn’t I make you love me enough?
You lie here, sleeping. The bandages can’t
hope to hide all the damage
to your face. But it will heal eventually.
I wish I could be that optimistic about your
heart. I want to touch you,
but I’m afraid even the slightest caress
will cause you pain. I close my eyes, lay
my head on the bed next
to you. The sheets smell of bleach. But lingering
beneath the Clorox is a faint scent of rot.
Is it from your bloated
wounds? Or is it decomposing dreams?
As If Hearing My Thoughts
She stirs. Her fingers test my hair,
recognize it.
Hey.
Her
voice is raspy.
Thanks for coming.
I lift my head, look into the slits where
her eyes must be. “Welcome.
Just so you know, you look like crap.”
Better than how I feel, then. Guess
you know what
happen …
the rest is swallowed by
a coughing fit. “Stop talking for once
in your life, would you?
Yes, I know what happened. I’m sorry.”
I should h-have l-listened …
and now
she’s crying, at least
I’m pretty sure she is. It’s hard to tell.
“Doesn’t matter now. What’s done is
done, as my grandma
Grace always used to say.” The thought
of her, overseeing my childhood, sears
my heart almost as much
as seeing Jenna like this does. “Listen, now.
First things first….” Another Grace-ism.
“You heal up. Once all
those stitches come out, my mom wants to
see you. She’s a regular wizard, you know.
Making girls beautiful
is what she does best. You can skip the boob
job, though. Yours are perfect, as is.” I stand.
“I should probably go now.
Let you rest. I’ll come see you again soon.”
W-wait. You never told me about your
audition. Wha-what
happened? Are you going to Vegas?
I Sit Back Down
“Okay, I’ll tell you the story, but only
if you’re positive you
want to hear it, and only if it won’t make
you too tired.” She gestures for me to go
on. “The show isn’t quite
the cattle call that some of them are.
They solicit auditions from some of the best
dance studios in the country.
Which means it’s extremely competitive.
Liana choreographed an amazing routine
for Shantell and me.
We aren’t going to Vegas—yet. But we have
been called back for a second audition.
Out of five thousand
dancers, we are in the top one hundred.
Our next audition is in Los Angeles in
three weeks. Liana thinks
both Shantell and I have a decent shot.”
Jenna does her best to touch my hand.
I’m
re-really happy for you.
Know what I think? That you’re going to
Vegas. Kn-know wh-what else? I’m glad
you have the guts to go
for your dream.
All the talking is tiring her.
“Tell you what. If I make the top ten, I’ll
make sure you have tickets.”
I whisper-kiss her forehead. “And don’t worry.
Jazz isn’t nearly as boring as ballet.” Her
eyes close, and I think
she must be asleep again, so I start to leave.
Psst,
she says, eyes still closed.
Know what’s
bad here? No alcohol.
But know what’s good? Killer drugs.
What I Didn’t Tell Her
Is that I still haven’t decided whether
or not I’m going down
for that second audition. One of the judges,
this brilliant Broadway choreographer,
totally loved me, at least it
seemed that way. He gushed about technique,
and when he found out I’ve only been training
for a relatively short while,
called me one of the greatest natural talents
he’s ever seen. Not sure if that was meant
for the camera or for real,
but I may have a very good chance of finishing
in the top twenty. Which means they’d want
me to do the TV show.
Just appearing on
Now This Is Dance
almost
guarantees work, and I’m just not sure that
dance can take me where
I want to go. Liana says don’t even worry
about all that yet.
You’re awfully full of
yourself, aren’t you?
was actually what she said.
You haven’t
even made it past the second audition,
and you’re already
worrying about how to spend your prize
money and organize your tour schedule?
One step at a time,
Andre. Now, let’s work on that solo.
Prize money wasn’t even on my radar.
Maybe because I never
expected to get this close. Shantell, however,
was not surprised.
God, Andre. What did
I tell you? When some
snooty choreographer says you’ve got an
incredible natural talent, you get all excited,
but when I told you the same
thing, you thought I was blowing smoke?
You have to do this. It’s a once-in-a
lifetime opportunity,
and if you don’t, I swear you will be
sorry. You can always go to college,
but if you decide to
leave dance behind in favor of school,
you may never come back to it. You’ll
end up in some dull
career, with a bucket full of regrets.
Shantell wouldn’t dream of
not
going
for it, whatever
the outcome on the far end. Maybe that’s
what I’m
really
worried about.
Not
winning.
Not succeeding. I’ve
never failed at anything. Except Jenna.
She’s Sleeping Now
Off someplace too deep to dream in, thanks
to the morphine drip
fed into one of her veins. Good drugs, indeed.
I wonder if this girl can be saved, and why
she won’t save herself.
“I love you, Jenna.” I know she can’t hear
me, and maybe that’s for the best. “Bye, baby.”
One thing I do know
is that I can’t watch her self-destruct anymore.
I glance at the big clock on the wall. Almost
two. I’ve got a lesson
at three. With Shantell, who will be after
me to make a decision. God, hospitals stink.
All the cleaning they do
can’t erase the dirt of sickness and death.
I don’t look into open doors as I head for
the elevator. Don’t want
to consider what’s on the other side. Instead
I look down, counting tiles until I reach
the bank of elevators.
Just as I get there, a set of doors opens,
and who walks out of them but Kendra.
And her father. Oh shit.
“Hello, sir,” I say, hoping for civility.
His face goes all red, and hatred feeds
his ugly glare.
You.
This is because of you, you goddamn—
No!
Kendra stops him cold.
This is
not
because of him, Dad.
It’s because of you!
It’s
your
attention
she wanted, just like when she was little.
You left her, Dad. Me
too. Left us for …
She shatters. Sobs.
Her knees buckle, and I move forward
as she starts to fall.
But it is her father who catches her.
His eyes, wild just a few seconds ago,
soften.
I’m sorry.
Then, to me,
Go get someone. Please.
I turn toward the nurse’s station, but
someone is already coming.
Can’t make a scene like this without
being noticed. By the time the nurse
gets to us, though,
Kendra has reached into some reservoir
of inner strength. She is on her feet,
pushing her father
off.
I’m okay. Let go. Sorry, Andre.
“It’s all ri—,” I start to say, but she is
already on her way
to Jenna’s room. Mr. Mathieson follows
without a good-bye. The pretty nurse
looks at me and
I shrug. “Just another day in paradise.”
Cara
Paradise
A concept embraced by almost
every culture. A land of peace
and harmony. Some say it
doesn’t
belong to the earth, that there
is no Shangri-la, no utopian
wilderness for the living.
Only
heaven. Elysian fields. A House
of Song. Afterworlds where
the righteous dead
exist
forever in a state of pure
bliss. But I wonder if there
isn’t some blessed place
for
souls in search of the sacred
path. Hungry souls, and lost.
The souls of those who aren’t
believers
yet reach for redemption,
in ways small and large.
Those who love and ask for love.
Love Is Chocolate
The unprocessed kind. Dark. Bitter.
But always with the promise of sweet
perfection. All it takes is sugar—
that certain someone’s kiss, flavored
with possibility. If Dani has taught
me anything, it’s that life is brimming
with possibilities. Every single day
brings choices. Make a bad one,
you deal with the consequences.
Make a good one, you get a reward
of one kind or another. Bad choices
or good, if you never take chances,
someone else will build your life
for you. What if you decide you don’t
like their vision? What if they put you
up on a pedestal and you hate the view?
I’ve never been much of a thrill seeker,
mostly because I’m afraid of falling.
I’m eyeing the mountain. But I’ll never
climb it with my parents calling the shots.
Possibilities. Choices. Decisions.
Influencing my own fate scares me.
But it’s better than the alternative.
I think. Right now, the future stares
back at me, posturing. Challenging.
Graduation is two weeks away. June
was supposed to be my escape, but I
wish I could hold on to May just a little