Authors: Ellen Hopkins
the worry I put you through,
and for not being there to help
when you needed me. I never told
you what happened, but meant
to, and then I got sucked intoâ”
We don't have to talk about it
now. Or ever, if you don't want
to. I know you wouldn't have
run off like that without a reason.
“No, I wouldn't have. But I do want
to talk about it. It's important to me
that you know.” I tell her everything,
start to finish, going back all the way
to Walt, the first of my so-called
mother's men who paid to have
a little fun with her daughter or,
as Iris put it, “to make me a real
girl” by ripping me apart. I don't
try to remember all the others
I've invested so much effort into
trying to forget. I just tell Gram
Walt wasn't the only one, finishing
the bulk of my confession with
the man who forced my hand that
day, convinced me running away
was my only option. “Also, so you
know, not that it matters I guess,
Alex and I did strip for money
in Vegas, but I never let a man
touch me, and I probably never
will in the future.” I keep the part
about sleeping with girls to myself
for the time being. What I just shared
is more than enough. She gives
it some time to sink in, and I keep
my mouth shut while she does,
staring out the window at desert.
It isn't a beautiful landscape,
and it won't improve by the time
we reach Barstow. Someday I'll live
in the forest or near the ocean, or
maybe find a place where I can have
both. Northern California or Maine.
West Coast or East, makes no difference,
as long as there are trees and water.
Finally, Gram takes a deep breath,
releases it in a low whistle.
I never
even suspected anything like that,
Ginger. Why didn't you tell me?
“I'm not sure,” I admit. “I was
hurt. Embarrassed. Scared. But
mostly I was pissed at Iris. I couldn't
stand to look at her. Couldn't take
a chance on her doing something
like that again, and she would have.
I'll never forgive her. I hate her.”
My voice has risen in volume and
pitch, building toward a wail before
total breakdown. “I'm s-sor-ry.” It
escapes as huge sobs. “But I don't care
that she's dying. Is that wrong?”
For a very, very long time.
Is she angry? Disappointed?
Have I managed to smother
every hint of good cheer?
Finally, she opens her mouth.
I'm going to tell you something
I haven't talked about in many
years. I never thought it was
proper to share this, but now
I think you should know. I told
you Iris's childhood was no walk
in the park. Military brats never
have it easy, but what happened
to her at Fort Irwin was beyond
terrible.
She falls quiet again,
gathering her thoughts.
I believed
the neighborhood was safe, and
I let her outside to ride her bike
all the time. Turned out I was naive.
Not every soldier is a good guy,
and one evening as she rode home
one of the not-good ones got hold
of her. She was only seven. That
man raped her, almost killed her,
and would have, except Markâyour
grandfatherâheard Iris screaming.
He beat that bastard within an inch
of his life, but the damage to your
mother was already irreversible.
I will forever carry a heap of guilt.
It's why I've continued to support
her, and even apologized for her
behavior, despite the awful choices
she's made, including how she earns
a living. Now I'm not claiming
the incident in any way pardons
the things she allowed done to you,
but it does explain, to some extent,
why she went the direction she did.
I can't tell you it's best to forgive her,
but what I can say with certainty is
holding on to resentment won't make
you any happier, and banking hatred
inside will eat your soul alive.
No! I don't want there to be a reason
for what she did. I want to hate her.
Forgive her? I've never forgiven anyone.
I have no clue what the word even means.
That's what it is,
like having a bucket
of ice water splashed
into my face, and as
chilling. I have never
offered forgiveness
to a single living person.
Or to a dead one, either.
Even after his death,
I never pardoned my father
for deserting Mary Ann
and me, leaving us at
the mercy of Iris's whims.
Instead, I've choked back
a giant grudge, held it in.
Pointless, really. As for
people still breathing,
the men whose scars
I'll always wear aren't
worthy of clemency.
But Gram is totally right.
Stowing hatred for them
does nothing but deny me
any chance at happiness.
The problem, of course,
is how to free myself of
the rage, welded into
the iron jaws of memory.
And then, there's Alex.
In some ways, she hurt
me more than the others
because I gifted her with
trust, something I don't
own much of. And while
she claimed to love me,
slowly, slowly, she excised
me from her life, declared
my devotion dependency.
Unnecessary, when in my
eyes it was affirmation that
I could, in fact, experience
such depth of emotion.
That wound still bleeds.
Will forgiveness suture it?
Finally, Iris. Mother. Traitor.
How do I reach beyond my own
pain, tap into hers, and find
a measure of sympathy?
Has never looked so welcoming,
and that's before we go inside,
where my family is waiting.
Gram pulls the minivan into
the driveway.
Welcome home,
Ginger. It hasn't changed much,
I'm afraid. Maybe one day I'll
hit the lotto and we can remodel.
I like the sound of “we,” and yet,
a sudden attack of nerves makes
me hesitate. The kids have always
looked up to me, and I am so not
a role model. Doesn't matter.
The front door opens, and out
spills the pack of my siblings,
running toward me, to a rousing
chorus:
Ginger! Ginger! Ginger!
Missed you. Where you been?
Wait till you see the Christmas tree!
Wait till you see your presents!
Now four pairs of arms wrap
around meâall except Mary Ann,
who stands back slightly, observing.
“Okay, okay, let me look at you.
Wow. I can't believe how big
you all are!” I barely recognize
them. How can so little time apart
make such a difference, or did I
somehow forget the way they
looked before? No, they've changed.
Honey and Pepper have grown
their hair to below their shoulders.
Porter is two inches taller at least,
and his cheeks have lost baby fat.
Sandy looks more boy than toddler
now, and that has everything to do
with the scars the accident left on
his face. Mary Ann has changed
the most. Not only does she look
older, but she also seems more . . .
worldly, I guess. Is it her makeup,
something she never wore before
I left here? Or is it something
else? Something more sinister?
Whatever it is, I wade through
the kids clamoring at my feet, go
straight to her side and open my
arms, inviting her hug. “Hey.”
She rewards my effort with
a reluctant embrace, pulls back
immediately. Everything is not
okay, but I refuse to believe
the worst until I hear it from
her mouth. “We've got a lot
to talk about, yeah? I know
I've got plenty to tell you.”
She nods, and her shoulders
relax a notch or two.
Just so
you know, I'm glad you're home,
but I'm still mad at you for leaving.
“I don't blame you,” I say, but
she's already walking away.
Honey and Pepper scramble
inside behind her, followed by
Gram and Porter, who carries
my small suitcase. Sandy slides
his little hand into mine, tugs gently.
Hey, Ginguh. Where ya been?
I reach down, scoop him upâ
he's not too big for me to manage
that yet. “That's a very long story.
Think I'll save it for another day.”
We always believe
we'll have another day
to make things right,
but the concept of future
reconciliation
is a pencil sketch.
Erasable by circumstances
beyond our power to foresee,
and what remains
isn't
predictable. The longer
you wait, the wider
the rift becomes,
and it isn't
always
possible to manage
the crossing before
continental drift carries
you too far apart. It's
a
sad fact of life
that distance weakens
bonds, and reconnection
is simply not a
given.
On such short notice was a nightmare.
I finally managed to book one into
Evansville, but the layover in Detroit
is impossible, and the price tag was
out of sight. Still, I'm going, and
I'm scared as hell, and not just because
I've only ever flown one other timeâ
when I left Louisville with Carlâand
the weather looks to be an ugly mess
of blizzarding snow. No, I'm terrified
that Dad will turn me away, even as
weak as I hear he is, tell me he can't
bear to look at me, his blood-born
abomination. It's almost enough
to make me forget the whole idea,
stay here where I feel safe, though
that right there is a ridiculous notion.
Look at me. “That right there.” “Notion.”
I'm thinking in Indiana vernacular,
something I've tried to culture away
for close to a year now, ever since
I first hooked up with Loren back
in Louisville, escaping field work
for cultivation of a whole different
kind. Loren. Wonder what he's up
to now. Preaching? Partnered?
Partnered and preaching? Funny,
though they look nothing alike,
Micah's soft-spoken determination
reminds me of Loren. Both, in fact,
are a bit too determined to succeed
in their chosen careers, no matter
what it takes, even if that means
love taking a backseat to their dreams.
Even if that means me, unfortunately,
taking a backseat to their dreams.
I think I can still convince Micah
to move in with me, but not until
I return from this trip. This sad, lonely
journey to say a final goodbye to Dad.
Aunt Kate, she gave it to me straight.
Despite decades of hard work, all that
sausage and gravy was not good for
Dad's heart. By the time he actually
decided something was wrong and
went in to see a doctor, hard-core
measures were necessary.
They sent
him by ambulance straight to St. Mary's
in Evansville,
she told me.
They performed
a quadruple bypass, but apparently there
was also extensive damage to the heart
itself. He was terribly sick already, and
has had complications. He's in intensive
care and the prognosis isn't good. Try
your best to get here right away. Sorry
to do this to you at Christmastime.
She never asked where I've been,
or what happened to make me go.
Dad must have told her something,
but it was not part of the discussion.
I suppose at some point it needs to
be. I won't hide who I am anymore.
Micah drops me off at the airport,
and I kiss him goodbye in full view
of a throng of Christmas Eve travelers.
“I wish you could come with me.