Authors: Ellen Hopkins
stay in school as long as it’s viable.
He studies me with creeping eyes.
When are you due?
When I tell him
mid-March, he nods.
We have a good
virtual academy available. Really,
the question becomes when to move
you into it. I’m not sure how you feel
about everyone here knowing you’re
pregnant. If you don’t care, I’d suggest
moving at the semester break. If you do . . .
Do I Care?
I still don’t know, and I’ve thought
about it a lot. “I . . . I haven’t figured
that out yet. I have time to decide.”
Some time,
Mr. Taylor replies.
But
it will go faster than you think.
I assume Dylan Douglas is the father?
Now any sense of embarrassment
segues to anger. “Of course he is!
Why would you think anything else?”
Calm down, Mikayla. I’m not judging
you, and it wouldn’t be the first
time a fling resulted in unwanted
pregnancy. . . .
His pause can only be
translated as,
It
is
an unwanted
pregnancy, right?
Which pisses me
off even more. “It was just a mistake,
and it’s Dylan’s baby, if that’s your
concern. Why is it important, anyway?”
Mom starts to interfere, but Mr.
Taylor lifts a hand.
Look. I don’t
know where Dylan stands on this,
but the fact is, he might not want
the rest of the school to know
about the baby, either. He has a right—
“Bullshit! It’s my baby and my life
and, hey, if Dylan is concerned
about how his friends feel, well,
he should have thought about that
before he convinced me the rhythm
method would work fine one or two
times. What is it with men, always
cheerleading for the guys in this
situation? That’s totally fucked up!”
Mikayla Jean!
huffs Mom, as if
she never heard me swear before.
You apologize to Mr. Taylor right now.
As If!
Mom glares at me, and Mr. T. looks
like “fuck” is a foreign four-letter word.
“Did I offend you? You know, I really
don’t care. And I don’t care who else
I might offend, either. This is a baby,
not some kind of a burden. And, while
it might have taken two of us to create
this baby, the only opinion that matters
here is mine. I’ll stay in school for now,
unless you want to suspend me for f-bomb
usage. If so, write me up. If not, I’ll see
you bright and early tomorrow morning.”
I don’t wait for an answer, but as I go,
I hear Mom apologize for me.
I’m very
sorry. She’s a bit emotional. . . .
Her voice,
and his response, fade into the ether.
When I Pass Through
The office this time, I tip my head high,
meet everyone’s look with a straight-on
glare. Apologize? When hell freezes
solid. The last bell rings as I swing into
the long corridor, now swarming with
kids. I wind my way through them and
nobody gives me a sideways glance.
How will I feel when that changes?
When everyone stares at me? I turn
down the hallway toward my locker.
Skid to a halt when I see Dylan shoulder
to shoulder with Kristy Lopez. She reaches
her own locker, and when she stops to
open it, the way he watches her is almost
protective. Simmering anger boils
into fury. I stomp right up to them. “Can
I talk to you, Dylan? Or, are you too
busy to give me a couple of minutes?”
Kristy Smiles Triumph
And suddenly I understand
that I have lost Dylan. Still,
he follows me outside.
I turn into him.
Fall against him.
Look up at him.
Imploring him.
So in love with him.
“Talk to me, Dylan.”
What do you want me
to say? I told you what
would happen if you
decided to keep the baby.
“You never said you’d
leave me. Never said
you’d go back to her.”
I am not going to be
a father, Mikki.
Anger and sadness melt
into one. “Yes, you are.”
I Gentle My Hands
Against his cheeks. Find sadness
in his eyes, too. “Even if you never
once see this baby, you will be its
father, Dylan. You can’t change that.”
So what do you want from me?
I have no way to pay child support.
“I’m not asking you for money.
I’m asking you to stay in love
with me. Begging you, in fact.
How can I do this without you?”
He pushes my hands away.
You
figure that out. It’s all on you.
He pivots, and I watch him walk
away. “You said you loved me!”
I call after him. “You promised.
Love doesn’t just die, Dylan.”
He turns back long enough to say,
Maybe not. But sometimes people kill it.
Stunned
Stung, as if I just disturbed a hive
of yellow jackets, I stumble
to my car, slide under the steering
wheel and rest my head against it.
All my earlier bravado fades
into a black mist. I let myself sob
until a knock on my window coaxes me
out of the dark cloud. Mom. I lower
the glass. “What do you want?”
I just want to know if you’re okay.
“Do I look okay?” It slips out softly.
I don’t want to yell. I want someone
to hear me. “Dylan just broke up with me.”
Do you want to talk about it?
I nod, and she says she’ll drive me
home. I scoot over and she takes
the wheel. I want to talk about it more
than anything, but as we’re backing up,
I notice Dylan walking Kristy to his car.
My voice drowns in a downpour of tears.
Kristy
To Dylan about why he has
made this one-eighty.
When summer started
he and Mikayla were
inseparable,
twisted together so tightly
I thought they’d smother.
But now, it seems their
indivisible
days were numbered. Part
of me is gleeful, grateful for
another chance. But I also
need to know what made his
incessant
devotion to her dissolve, sugar
into vinegar. Clearly, he loved
her, and I thought he loved me
once. How can I believe that
emotion
is something he’s capable