Authors: Ellen Hopkins
myself in a robe, scurry
back to my bedroom as
the house begins to warm
with voices. Waking up.
Heading for the kitchen,
where the scent of
pancakes, usually
tempting, but not today,
lifts into the morning.
Can’t do the family
thing. Instead, I dress
quickly, find my keys
and slip out the door,
quietly as I can. I think
maybe Bri sees me, but
that’s okay. Start my car,
point it toward town,
nothing really new about
that except what I suspect
a pregnancy test will confirm.
Brianna
Mom knew about her party
all along. Harley and I tried
our best to keep it secret, but
surprises
are hard to pull off, especially
with so many people involved.
Doesn’t matter. At least I
can
say everyone had fun, even
my stuffy grandparents.
We go over to their house
sometimes
and I feel like I shouldn’t sit
on their fancy furniture.
I didn’t know Grandma could
be
so sociable! She was kind of
like Cinderella, only a lot
older and a little bit more
ugly.
Shane
That was my parents’ reaction
when they found out about Alex’s
HIV. Okay, to be fair, at first Mom
thought it was me who was positive
when she came across the prescription
bottle Alex left in my room. It
didn’t have a label, so she researched
the actual pills. Wow. She freaked.
When I came in, she was shaking
so hard I thought she might crack
like overbaked clay. She jerked
me down the hall, into my room
and over to my desk, where
the bottle sat. She picked it up
gingerly.
Do you have something
to tell me? About these, maybe?
God, Shane . . .
Her eyes filled
with tears, but she held them back.
Tell me you’re not HIV positive!
I think she shrank about an inch.
When I told her they belonged
to Alex, and not to worry because
he’s got the virus under control,
she only relaxed a little. “And
anyway, HIV isn’t an automatic
death sentence anymore. Alex found
out early, and these antiviral drugs
will keep him from getting AIDS
for a very long time. When we’re
together, we’re very careful to
always use condoms. And the main
thing is, I love him, Mom. My life
would be empty without him in
it.” She shrank a little more, but
it’s the truth, and she knows it.
She kind of nodded, then left.
I know this only heaped more
worry on her already sagging
shoulders, and for that I’m sorry.
But it changes nothing at all.
It Might Have Ended There
But Dad happened to make a rare
appearance at home, only to find
Mom researching HIV, the word
flashing loudly on her computer screen.
Like her, at first he thought I
had it. But finding out it was Alex
changed nothing for him. He had
hit the bottle hard that morning.
I thought he was going to kick
my door in.
Open up!
It took me
a minute to react. Too slow for
Dad.
Goddamn it, you little shit.
Open this fucking door!
When
I finally unlocked it, he pushed
straight through, grabbed me
by the shirt.
Are you plain stupid?
He reeked of booze and his
eyes carouseled, unfocused.
I could have taken him if I let
it get physical. I decided to try
humor instead. “Is there another
kind of stupid? Like, uh, fancy
stupid? Or beautiful stupid?”
Guess he didn’t think it was funny.
He tore at my shirt. The motion
splashed whiskey out of the glass
he was holding.
Shut up. What
the hell are you doing? Trying to
die? You can’t mess around
with HIV. AIDS is God’s way of
saying “gay” is a very bad choice.
God again! Plus, the word “choice.”
I kept my voice low. “Do you
know how Alex contracted HIV, Dad?”
I described how Alex’s uncle raped
him. “No choice in that, Dad. None at all.”
His Face Flushed Beet Purple
And he let go of my shirt. And, though
he didn’t say a word, something inside
him shifted. I could see it in his eyes.
He made an about-face, exited my room.
Not long after, he left the house and I fell
into a big pit of black depression.
That happens sometimes, when too much
shit gets flung at me at once. It’s like
all the external pressure sucks into me,
then tries to escape again. But it can’t.
So it builds. Throbs. Makes me feel
like my skin is anxious to split. I think
that feeling is why some people cut—
little slices so they don’t shred completely.
I’m too much of a coward to cut.
That day, I closed my blinds. Turned off
the lights. Crawled into bed and turned
myself off, too. So I didn’t rip apart.
Later, Something Happened
I don’t know what, but it must
have been bad, because voices
cut through the artificial night
in my head. At first, just one.
Mom.
Talking to herself.