Authors: Ellen Hopkins
People are still coming in as
the music starts to play. I wave
to Bri, who just got here with
her family. As usual, her dad
and mom are miles apart, even
though they sit side by side.
If Mom Can’t See That
She’s totally blind, and she’s def
checking them out. When she turns
back around, she looks sad. But
everyone looks pretty sad, especially
when the minister starts to talk
about how Shelby is home now,
and whole in God’s arms. So weird,
thinking about how some energy inside
you might escape when your body
dies. That it might go someplace,
become something different. An angel.
A whole other person. I don’t know.
But I’m sure there’s nothing left inside
the Shelby-looking thing in the casket.
I’ve never seen a dead person before.
Now people get up to talk about her.
Gramps goes first. He calls her
a little blossom who nourished
us with the nectar of her laughter.
Our lives are enriched because of her.
Gramps is a poet. Who knew?
Now Gram says a few words,
and Mom does, too. And then
Shane’s boyfriend, Alex, stands.
I’ve only known the Trask family
a few months. But I am grateful
for the short time I had with Shelby.
She brought light into my life, and
wherever she is now, it is a brighter
place because she’s there. I miss you,
Shelbs, I . . .
But his throat knots
up. He can’t go on, so he returns
to his seat beside Shane, whose face
is in his hands. Almost everyone
here is crying, the one huge exception
being Aunt Marissa. She looks like a marble
statue—hard, white, unmoving. In fact,
she could be dead, too, except every now
and again she blinks dry eyes. Maybe you
only have to die
inside
to turn into a zombie.
After the Words
And Disney Channel music are finished,
the casket is closed. Shane, Alex, Gramps
and Uncle Chris carry it to the hearse
and we form a car parade to follow it to
the cemetery.
Will you please ride with
Gram and Marissa?
Mom asks me.
I want
to talk privately with Gramps.
She offers
no other explanation, leaving me totally
wondering, again, what’s up with her.
More too-adult-for-me-to-know-about
stuff, no doubt. But what can I do except
say, “Sure.” I sit in the back with Gram.
All of us wall ourselves up into invisible
boxes of silence. It’s a fifteen-minute
creep-along ride, and I steal a few to text
Lucas.
FUNERALS SUCK. CAN I C U
TOMORROW
? I have no idea how I’ll
sneak away, but I’ll think of something.
In the past week, we’ve seen each other
three times—the day after the rib cook-off,
when he and Kurt came out to Washoe Valley
and picked up Bri and me at the 7-Eleven; and
twice after school. I’m glad he has a car.
Each time, we found a private place to park.
He keeps trying to get me stoned, but
so far I’ve been good. What I’ve been bad
about is making out. He’s the best kisser
in the world. The last time I even let him
go to second base. Amazing! But the days
I don’t see him just seem so long. Especially
since they’ve been all about death. I need
a big injection of life. It will have to wait
for a while, though. Right now, I get out
of the car, follow the people procession
to the gravesite where what’s left of Shelby
will be left to decay beneath Nevada sand.
A Gentle Slant
Of September sun spotlights
the casket as they lower it
into the ground. At the cemetery’s
edges, the rabbit brush is blooming.
The air is thick with its pollen and
its bittersweet scent mixes with the perfume
of Gram’s citrusy shampoo. Together,
they smell like rotting oranges. The coffin
hits dirt with a soft
whump.
I watch
them pull the canvas straps out of the hole.
The minister says some final words,
invites us to take a single purple rose
from the vase beside the grave, toss
it inside.
Tink. Tink. Tink.
They hit
the casket lid. My ears go hypersensitive.
A jet landing. A dove moaning.
Sniffling. Distant traffic. A train passing
nearby. Music. A symphony of death.
After the Dirge
We go to party. The wake is at
my house. Whoopee. I think
it’s weird that people celebrate
dying. Is that something I’ll get
when I’m allowed to be grown-up?
Gram and Gramps spent all day
yesterday cooking. I ride home
with them, ahead of the rest, so we
can start putting food out on the long
table Mom borrowed. Everything,
from the tablecloth to the napkins
to the centerpiece flowers, is purple
and pink. Shelby’s favorite colors.
It was a nice ceremony,
says Gram.
Don’t you think so?
Gramps and I
mutter agreement. I mean, how nice
can a funeral be? People start arriving
within a half hour. Oh, good. There’s
Bri, with Trace, Mikayla and their dad.
Mrs. Carlisle isn’t with them. Not into wakes?
Bri and I Load Plates
Leave Trace and Mikayla surrounded
by talkative adults, go back into my room
to eat. I take the time to check my cell.
No text messages. No voice mails.
“Wonder what’s up with Lucas,” I mumble
around a bite of Gram’s homemade pizza.
Mm-mm-mmh,
is the best Bri can do.
Then she swallows. But before she can
comment on Lucas, she notices something
outside my window. I can see her eyes
following movement. It’s her dad and
my mom, on the patio. They are alone,
and caught up in some conversation.
Mom’s lips move and now he looks
kind of sad. He leans toward her,
but she steps away. Shakes her head.
Whatever he said, I see Mom’s clear
resolution. “What the heck is that about?”
Bri shakes her head.
I have no idea.
Brianna
What’s going on anymore.
Everything feels tenuous,
like standing at the ocean’s
edge, the licking waves
eroding
the sand from beneath
my feet. My best friend
is turning herself into
somebody new, steadfastly
changing,
and maybe not for the better.
My sister is clinging to
some weird fantasy, make-
believing she is
slipping
toward happily ever after.
And my parents have become
an unknown equation. Two,
divided by
x
, and the farther
apart
they push from each other,
the likelier they will never
bounce back.
Mikayla
That’s how I’ve felt ever since
I found out I was pregnant. Torn
in two, one half insisting on the easy
solution, the other on doing the right
thing. When I got home from Vegas
and told Dylan I had decided to keep
the baby, he gave me an ultimatum—
It’s me or it, Mik. I love you. But if
you keep it, you will lose me. And
don’t expect any help from me.
Each word struck like a jagged blade,
piercing skin, flesh and heart.
I can’t imagine life without Dylan,
and I changed my mind again. I totally