Tilt (14 page)

Read Tilt Online

Authors: Ellen Hopkins

BOOK: Tilt
4.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
weird and all, but that’s why they’re awesome.
I watch Bri carefully folding clothes, just
to stuff them into a backpack. Talk about
obsessive. “Are you OCD or something?
All that stuff is gonna get messed up.”
She smiles.
I know. But at least it won’t
be wrinkled when it gets messed up.
“Don’t forget sunscreen. It’s gonna be
hot at Prosser. Hopefully Gramps found
a campsite in the trees. Closer to the water
there isn’t any shade.” Bri nods, goes to
the bathroom, returns with SPF 30.
Hope this is strong enough. And I also
hope there will be boys at the lake.
My new swimsuit is really cute. See?
She holds up a flouncy bikini,
in a tropical print. “Really cute,”
I agree. “I’m waiting to lose a few
more pounds before I get a new one.”
I’ve been meaning to tell you how
great you look. Is it hard? Dieting?
“Only when I smell french fries.
It’s harder for Mom. She sneaks
M&Ms and thinks I don’t notice.
But she walks with me every morning.”
Pretty soon you’ll be running, like
my mom. Just don’t get crazy about it.
“Don’t worry. That’s not gonna happen
in a million years. Running is not my style.”
Hey, you guys!
It’s Trace, calling
down the hall.
Time to hit the road!
Mom Plays Chauffeur
For the hour drive to Truckee
and beyond, to Prosser Reservoir.
Bri and I sit in back, watching
the landscape morph from high desert
scrub to mountain evergreen.
When I start talking about Chad,
I notice how Mom turns up
the volume on her soft rock station.
I don’t care. That way she doesn’t
hear me tell Bri, “I think he really
likes me. At least, a little. I mean,
he doesn’t completely ignore me.
That’s a good sign, right?” Like
either of us would have a clue.
She shrugs.
I think I’d have to
see how he acts around you.
“You could tell? How?” Maybe
I’ll have to invite her over to Dad’s.
Bri shrugs.
I know how ridiculous
Trace looks when he’s all hung
up on a girl. And Mikki? When
she even talks about Dylan,
she goes zombie-eyed.
Mom
chuckles at that, so I guess she’s
been listening after all.
I have
to make a quick Starbucks stop,
she says.
I promised Gramps
I’d bring him some real coffee.
No drive-through here, she runs
inside, and I take the opportunity
to tell Bri, “Next time I go to Dad’s,
I’ll ask Cassie if you can come, too.”
No use upsetting Mom. And no use
asking Dad when Cassie’s in charge.
Prosser Reservoir
Is an exposed expanse of water—
snowmelt, run down the Truckee River
from Tahoe, then stored for Reno use.
This being a holiday weekend, its shores
are crowded with RVs and tents and boats.
And people. Gramps was lucky to have
found a spot beneath the big trees.
Their shade, and the breeze whispers
disturbing it, make the heat tolerable.
It is midafternoon by the time we arrive
and manage to track down my grandparents,
who live a nomadic life in the big fifth-wheel
trailer they tow around the country. Bri
has been my friend since we were still
in diapers, so she’s met them before.
Good thing, or she might just disown
me, seeing Gram in her mini muumuu,
and Gramps, with his long gray braid
hanging most of the way down his naked
back. Remnants of their hippie days.
Mom doesn’t talk about it much, but
before moving to Reno, she grew up on
an Oregon commune. Not sure exactly
what that is except a lot of people living
together and pooling their stuff.
Commie-
style,
Dad told me once,
with plenty
of sex, drugs and rock ’n’ roll tossed in.
Don’t know how accurate that was,
and don’t really care. Gram and Gramps
are awesome. We get out of the car
and I run to give them hugs.
It’s so
good to see you!
says Gram. Then
she stands back.
Let me look at you.
Gramps actually whistles.
Wowzers.
What happened to you? Grew up
and slimmed down. What a beauty!
Beauty?
Whatever, Gramps. Lots of gossip
and settling in later, Bri and I slip
on our swimsuits and sunscreen up.
“We’re gonna take a dip before dinner,”
I tell Mom. She’s busy yakking with
Gram, but warns us to be careful,
and back in an hour. The sun starts
a slow slide behind the western hills.
Guess we didn’t need to worry
about the sunscreen,
says Bri.
Oh,
well. At least we smell really good.
True. Like coconut. But we’re also
greasy. We hit a little beach covered
with people. It’s a diverse crowd—too
young to walk. Too old to swim.
Too shy to take off their cover-ups.
Too proud of their assets to hide
them. I mean, some of these girls
are showing off just about everything.
So why are guys checking out Bri?
Brianna

Showing Off

Is so not my style. Maybe

that comes from too many

years watching my sister

exposing

more than she should, all

to win the attention of guys

I wouldn’t want to look at me.

Her taste leans way

too much

toward creepy. And then,

there’s my mom, who loses

weight and all of a sudden

flaunts

her assets like no mother

should. I mean, she’s almost

forty! Even if she has

the inner

desire to stay youthful

and feel attractive, why

must she dress less like

a mom and more like a

slut?

Shane

Three-Day Weekends Suck

At least, summer three-day weekends.
I like the ones that get me out of school
for an extended period. But the long
July Fourth weekend means two things.
One—Alex has to work extra hours.
And Dad doesn’t. He’s home, which
is pretty much keeping me sequestered
in my bedroom. I don’t even want to
go to the kitchen. Running into Dad
almost always leads to an argument.

Other books

Honoring Sergeant Carter by Allene Carter
Courting Disaster by Joanne Pence
The Blackbirder by Dorothy B. Hughes
Legacy of Blood by Michael Ford
Friday's Child by Kylie Brant
Town In a Lobster Stew by Haywood, B.B.
One Night Standoff by Delores Fossen