Authors: Ellen Hopkins
yourselves at home
, he says, patting the sofa
beside him. Orgy? Don’t think so. Thank
God Dylan is on the same page as me.
Uh. Not now, thanks. Mik and I would
appreciate a little alone time, you know?
Ty waves us down the hall.
You can have
my parents’ room. Just be sure to clean
up after yourselves, okay?
His bluntness
stings, but not enough to keep me from
following Dylan, feeling like I’m about
to do something really filthy in a stranger’s
bed. Which sort of makes me wonder
what has gone on in that bed before we
got there. Dylan pulls me through the door,
and his kisses are filled with intent. “Wait,”
I say, going into the bathroom to get
a big clean-looking towel. I put it over
the pretty paisley spread and as we start
taking off our clothes, it comes to me that
we’ve barely said a dozen words to each
other tonight. That’s plenty for Dylan, who
pulls me down on top of him. I look into
his eyes. “I love you.” Does he know how
very much?
I love you, too. Totally.
We are kissing. Licking. Biting. Moaning
louder than the TV in the other room.
He’s ready. Wants inside me. But
there’s something important missing.
“Not yet. Where’s the condom?”
I forgot it. But it’s okay. I’ll pull
out. Don’t worry.
Don’t worry?
We didn’t use one last time. It was
right after my last period. But now
it’s been a couple of weeks. “Dylan.
This is dangerous. I can’t get pregnant.”
He Rolls Me onto My Back
Strong. Sure of himself. Then he smiles
down at me.
I know what I’m doing.
Promise. I won’t get you pregnant.
And I have to have you right now.
He hesitates, waiting for my answer.
Everything about me is shouting yes,
so I nod and lose myself in the moment.
Making love with him is so beautiful.
We rock together, in rhythm. One.
As he starts to tense, I remind him with
a subtle lift of his hips. He withdraws just
in time, slicking my belly.
See? All good.
I am happy for the towel beneath us.
Happier to lie together, bathed in sweat
and the sticky proof of our love. It is, for sure,
all good. At least, until I get home.
Tyler
Dylan, my almost brother.
The top of my list of best
buddies
and yet I have never once
confessed that I loved Mikki
before he did. Why that fact
should
bother me now, I have no idea.
I mean, he and she are superglued.
Maybe it’s because Emily and I are
not
inseparable anymore. Caitlin
is a diversion, that’s all.
I will never
covet
time with her, like I did with Em.
Like I once hoped to with Mik.
Dylan and I have been
each other’s
sounding boards. But when it
comes to what really counts
to us, and between us,
things
border on secretive.
Shane
Should never be admitted outside
a confessional. Should be written
on scraps of paper. Shredded. Burned,
their ashes allowed to lift upon the wind
toward heaven. Whispered apologies
to the only One capable of forgiveness.
Other secrets should be shouted long
before they ever are. Should be sung,
solos in front of the choir. Given voice
and melody. Arias, swelling to fill
the dead, empty space around deception
with the unbearable lightness of truth.
And then there are those that can only
be whispered. Shared between trustworthy
friends, if only to lighten their weight
in the telling. Secrets meant to be kept
like treasure—secured in a concealed
lockbox, tucked away inside your heart.
Why?
That’s the question I keep asking myself.
Why did I have to fall in love with someone
destined to die early? Impending death
hangs thick around here already. I’m steeped
in it and its cologne does not wash off
easily. Okay, I know Alex isn’t, like, even
close to checking out. His HIV is under
control for now. He’s not even sick, not really.
I’ve researched the virus in the past—
just needed to know the facts, man, before
ever expecting to tumble for some guy
who was actually infected. I get that he isn’t
going to croak any time soon. Understand
that there are ways to be together without
catching it myself, even if our relationship
grows beyond chastity, all the way to passion.
I’m Tired
Of living chaste. Damn it, today
I’m sixteen years old. And I know
that isn’t exactly over the hill, but
I want to see what sex is all about.
Most of me wants to find out with
Alex. But the little piece that’s afraid
is completely paranoid. The kind of
paranoid love struggles to conquer.
I’ve smoked weed with him. Held
his hand. And I’ve kissed him—
full-on making out, so much better
than anything I expected or could have
invented in my warped imagination.
But when I get home, I take massive
doses of vitamin C and zinc. Stupid,
I know. Like Airborne could ward off
HIV. Still, it’s a start. Anyway, I don’t
have a choice. Though I haven’t admitted
it to him yet, wrong, right, dangerous or harmless,
I am totally in love—and lust—with Alex.
Later, We’re Going Out
To celebrate my birthday. Not
like anyone here at home is planning
a party. I mean, what a surprise
it would be if one of my parents
actually acknowledged the occasion.
As usual, Dad was out the door before
I even got up this morning. And when
I sat across from Mom, drinking coffee
as she read the newspaper (complete
with the date and everything!), she barely
looked up. “Hey, Mom,” I said. “Any
plans for the
day
?” But she just kept
skimming the pages.
Nope. Nothing
special. How about you?
Articulated
like she actually gave a half damn.
“Having dinner at La Strada, with
my b—my friend, Alex.” It’s one
of the fanciest restaurants in Reno.
A date restaurant. But all she said was,
That’s nice.
Wherever her head was at,
it was certainly not thinking back to