Authors: Ellen Hopkins
and I've decided I prefer men after all.
And though her remark was meant
to slice into me, sever the tie between
our hearts, I understand why she said
it so matter-of-factly. I don't believe
it, and the hurt she attempted hit
its mark square. I still have my cell,
and I've texted her dozens of times
in the two months I've been here
at House of Hope, where I'll stay
until Gram can get the guardianship
paperwork in order, take a day off,
plus find babysitting for the kids
and Iris, who is too sick to care for
herself, let alone her offspring.
Wonder if she'll let us call her “Mom”
now that men won't be coming around
and aging is the least of her worries.
She spent her youth on a slow death,
creeping closer for years, though
she was clueless until recently, when
a flu bug wouldn't go away. Tests revealed
advanced HIV-inspired lymphoma.
With her immune system compromised,
there will be no cure for her cancer.
Is a corny name, and I'm not sure
how much hope is actually here.
It's nice enough, and the food is good,
and the staff pretends like they care.
There are other sex workers here,
some younger than me, who happens
to be something of an anomaly because
my skin is white. The population is
largely divided by race, at least as far
as room assignments go. Hispanics and
black girls don't get along very well.
Their 'hoods are separate, and they stay
that way beyond those boundaries.
My roommate, Miranda, is Latina,
and pretty, though her plump face
makes her look younger than she is.
She says she'll be fourteen in two
weeks. She's thirteen, going on thirty.
Miranda was suspicious of me at
first, but after I told her my own
sob story, she decided to open up.
Right now, we're sitting on the lawn,
enjoying the mellow November sunshine.
After the god-awful heat of the past
few months, this feels like heaven.
The tale of horror Miranda's sharing
right now, however, is totally hellish,
and I have no doubt it's true.
My brother Ricardo runs dope
for Los Sureños. He uses also,
and too much on credit. He owed
Papacito a lot of money.
“Papacito,” I interrupt. “That means
Daddy, yeah?” Lots of pimps insist
their stables refer to them as Daddy,
as if a father would sell them the same
way. Truth is, I guess, some fathers
do.
SÃ,
she answers.
I don't know any
other name, only he makes all the girls
call him Papacito. One day after school,
I'm talking with friends and a big car
pulls up. Ricardo is inside with Papacito.
He tells me to get in. I say goodbye
to mis amigas, and we drive out of
my 'hood, away from El Monte. I've never
been so far from home. When we stop,
I don't know where, Ricardo gets out.
“Do what he says and you'll be safe.”
He closed the door, and I never see
my brother again, and not Mamá,
either. Papacito, he drive me all
the way to Las Vegas before we stop.
When we get here, he drives down
the strip. I never saw nothing like this
before. “Isn't it beautiful?” he asks.
“I know all the best places to show you.”
He takes me to a house. It's nice
on the outside. Nice on the inside.
Except, what happens there is not
so nice. There are other girls, too.
This one, Belinda, she said she'd be
mi mamá now, she'll take good care
of meâbuy me pretty clothes, teach me
makeup. Make me even prettier.
I say, “Mi mamá está en El Monte.”
Papacito grab my arm and squeeze
real hard. “Your mamá, she doesn't
want you no more, so Ricardo give
you to me.” I thought about that.
Mamá and I had a fight because
I told her about her man, how
he came into my room when
she wasn't home. How he touched
me. She said I was a liar. A puta.
But I didn't lie. . . .
Her eyes water,
and it's the first time since I've been
here that I've seen real emotion in
the girl. “I believe you. It happened
to me, too.” I don't add the part about
my own mother pimping me out.
Miranda nods.
It happens to many
of us. Men are coyotes. I was eleven
the first time. Twelve when Ricardo
traded me for his debt. I found that
out later. But that day, I believed
it was Mamá's punishment. “But when
can I go home?” I asked. Papacito
tell me never, I'm his now. “Do exactly
as I say,” he said, “and Belinda, too,
or I will hurt you so bad you'll wish
you were dead. But if you are a very
good girl, I will be your boyfriend.
¿Quieres un novio, no? Someone
who'll love you forever?” Every girl
wants a boyfriend, and I had no place
to go. The other girls seemed happy, so . . .
It isn't a unique story, but it
is
hers.
I think of my sister, Mary Ann, who's
about the same age, and pray it will
never happen to her. “Weren't you scared?”
She nods.
But not so scared then
as later that night, when Papacito
come to my bedroom. “Such a pretty
little girl,” he said. “Now I will make
you my woman.” I knew what he meant
and tried to say no. He slapped my face
so hard I thought my head would snap off!
Then he grabbed my neck and squeezed.
I couldn't breathe. I begged him to stop
but he choked me until I almost blacked
out. I wore the marks from his fingers
for many days. I had no fight left then,
and he threw me on the bed, made me
his wife for real. When he finished,
he sent five friends to break me in
better. After that, what did it matter?
What came next, she says, is he pimped
her online or sent her out to work
truck stops, demanding a minimum
$800 per night. He kept every penny.
For almost two years, until a national
trafficking sting operation took
Papacito down good. Pandering
children under fourteen carries a life
sentence, if they can convict him,
which means they want Miranda
to testify against him, something
she's more than a little nervous about.
Men like that have a very long reach,
and his ties to Los Sureños make him
dangerous, even in prison. Miranda's
advocate has convinced her to do it, but
what will happen after that is anyone's
guess. Her mother's boyfriend says
she can't go back to El Monte. So, yeah,
I really am lucky. The court has freed
me, forgiven me, allowed me to go home.
Gram says her house will always be
my home, and she wants me there, safe
and sound. I guess, despite everything,
I'm mostly sound. But I wasn't safe
before, and I'm not sure there is such
a thing. All I know is, I'm happy to leave
Vegas. This city annihilates souls.
Has taken a vacation,
hitched a ride
somewhere cool and clean.
Maybe the mountains.
I
haven't seen it in months.
Perhaps it's deserted
me permanently.
I should feel bad, but I
can't
muster sympathy
for the boy-become-man
who is me. Man. Gay
man. Kept man. You'll
find
the ultimate meaning
of that term
in the eyes of every boy
forced by circumstance to
sacrifice
the truth of himself.
I keep digging
for truth
but can't seem to find it
in me.
I'd never get used to living like this,
at the beck and call, and under almost
total control of another human being.
I say almost, because after Carl, my ex
sugar daddy when I moved in here
with David, I knew enough to find a way
to stash some cash in case I ever need
an escape plan. Carl, who brought me
with him from Louisville, a trophy
houseboy to decorate his Lake Las Vegas
luxury condo, allowed me no chance at
personal resources. He wanted ownership.
Slavery is alive and thriving in Sin City,
Nevada. Maybe that's why I gambled
on connecting with hot-stranger-in-the-gym
Jaredâthe growing need for rebellion,
or at least a taste of autonomy. Or maybe
it was simply because I'm only eighteen,
and still stashed inside is the belief
that love waits for me somewhere.
If I'm to be perfectly honest with myself,
is that my attraction to Jared was totally
fed by lust. Well, lust and loneliness.
Carl may have provided well for me, but
he wasn't much for companionship.
Working out, lying by the pool, and
improving my culinary skills didn't exactly
tally satisfaction. Even the sex with Carl
(and sometimes an added friend of his)
didn't add much spice to our relationship.
So, yeah, I was pretty damn hungry when
Jared showed up in the gym, and that man
was something to look at. Ripped, not
an ounce of flab, and the chiseled face
of a god. I never suspected he was a ringer.
Carl baited the hook, and I bit. Hard.
When he reeled me in, I felt about like a trout
who knew that fly hadn't looked quite right,
but just couldn't help himself. And then,
Carl gutted me, threw me into the frying pan.
Disowned me completely, gave me
twenty-four hours to vacate his life,
not even a few dollars to help me
accomplish that goal. Luckily, I had
made a couple of friends online and
was able to convince one of them to pick
me up. Lake Las Vegas is quite a distance
from downtown, and the Mojave summer
temps are killer, sometimes literally.
I was ride-less. Homeless. Totally broke.
I did manage to stuff some very nice clothes
into a duffel bag. I figured I'd be the most
suave street person ever. But Jacques
was cool. He invited me to stay at his place
for a couple of days until I could find a more
suitable habitation, not that he didn't expect
a little
something
in return. I was happy
enough to oblige. Exchanging blowjobs
for room and board was nothing new.
There was one slight problem with thatâ
Jacques had a boyfriend. But I crossed
my heart that Morris would never find out.
He never has, which I'm happy about.
I like Morris. He's quirky and gentle,
and happens to be one of David's dancers.
In fact, it was Morris who introduced us
at one of David's infamous parties. My first,
but definitely not my last. It was a week after
I moved in with Jacques. Maybe Morris
felt a little threatened, and hoped I'd stumble
upon a different circumstance. I doubt
he expected what happened. It was late
when he showed up at Jacques's.
Hey, boys.
There's a party at David's. Wanna go?
I had nothing better to do, and Jacques
goes along with anything Morris suggests,
especially when it's partying. “It's after
midnight. You sure it's still going on?”
Don't you know this city never sleeps,
especially not on a Saturday night?
But even if it did, the crowd at David's
wouldn't. Staying up all night is a hobby.
When we turned into the driveway
of David's amazing home in the Ridges,
a glitzy neighborhood, even by Vegas
standards. All lit up for the evening shebang,
the house looked like a five-star hotel.
Morris pulled his Prius right up in front,
where a hired valet took the keys. “You've got