Authors: Ellen Hopkins
“Won’t happen unless you say you’re sorry.” Her shoulders
drop and her hands
fall to her sides.
But still her eyes
glisten anger.
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Sorry.
It almost sounds like she means it.
I shouldn’t have said “fucking.”
NOT EXACTLY AN APOLOGY
So I’m kind of blown away
when Jace’s anger dissipates
in a cloud of inappropriate
laughter. “What’s so funny?”
It takes a few seconds for him
to hiccup to a stop and say,
She just reminds me of me is all.
I once said something similar to
my dad. The main difference
being, he kicked my ass. I don’t
guess I feel the need to kick
your ass, Mikayla. But regarding
Dylan and the game, my answer
is still the same. And until you show
us a little respect, as far as I’m
concerned, you’re still grounded.
Her fuse quite obviously lights
again, but Jace doesn’t stick
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around for the explosion.
He leaves the disarming to me.
I’VE ALWAYS CLAIMED
My kids could come to me, tell
me anything, and I’d welcome
the conversation. But words
do not find me easily now. So
when I tell Mikki, “I’m really
glad you and Dylan are in love,”
I listen to her go on and on about
how sweet he is instead of saying
what I know I should: don’t hurry
away from us, daughter; don’t rely
on a boy for love, when we have
more than enough for you right
here, and he will probably break
your heart. When she finally has
to catch her breath, I can’t believe I hear myself say, “I’ll see what
I can do about ungrounding you.”
And listen to another volley about
summer beaches and bike rides
with Dylan instead of warning
her: being in love doesn’t mean
you’re required to have sex. And
while sex is most certainly enhanced 225/881
by love, love isn’t necessarily better just because it comes with a penis.
GAME TIME
Is seven p.m. To beat the crowd, we arrive at five thirty. The team is autographing.
Bri goes all fan girl.
Please, please, please,
can we get them? I especially want …
She rattles off some names I’ve never heard of. How does she know them? Jace and Trace are more interested in hot dogs, so I volunteer to stand in the signing line with Bri. Mikayla promises to
meet us at the seats after a restroom run. I watch the progression of signature seekers. Most are younger kids with parents.
But there are also several college-age girls, and they’re probably looking for phone numbers beneath the players’ names.
Can’t blame them. A couple of these guys are really kind of amazing, especially this one. Number thirty-two. Who smiles 227/881
at Bri while fondling me with barely blue eyes. When we turn away, she says,
Hey, Mom. I think he liked you,
with something approaching awe in her voice.
We find our seats, and while we wait for the rest of the family, my dirty little brain starts composing a new story:
Big Bat Groupies.
Starring number thirty-two, and opening in the home team locker room.
I’ve got him just about down to his jock-strap when the boys arrive, loaded down with goodies.
Where’s Mikayla?
asks Jace.
I pull my head out of number thirty-two’s pants. “I haven’t seen her, but I could use a potty break myself. I’ll go look for her.
Don’t eat my hot dog.” It’s a hike to the ladies’
room. I don’t see Mikki anywhere, but on a sudden hunch, I circle the grandstands, to the rapidly filling grassy hillside above right field. And, of course, my suspicions 228/881
are confirmed. Right there, back to me, is my older daughter, kissing Dylan Douglas.
A DAUGHTER
Is a rainbow—a curve
of light through scattered
mist that lifts the spirit
with her prismatic presence.
Is
a shadow—a reminder
of something brilliant
ducking out of sight, too
easily drawn away. She is
an
aria, swelling within
the concert chamber, an
echo
reverberating across
a miniature sea.
She is a secret,
whispered, a hint
of
what we cannot know
until it finds us.
She is a sliver of her
father, a shard of
her mother.
A daughter is a promise,
kept.
Marissa
AN UNINTENDED BENEFIT
Of buying this old house, perched high in the Reno foothills, was it came
with a giant deck that has a spectacular vista of the city. It’s especially lovely at night, when windows light in quick succession, glittering gold like fairy dust, and multicolored neon creeps up tall casino walls. And on certain evenings, when the city fathers so decree,
they shoot fireworks over the concrete below. New Year’s Eve, usually.
And always on the Fourth of July.
Most locals have to drive to see them, fighting for parking and a view location.
But all we have to do is step outside the sliding glass door and settle into our comfortable patio chairs. When Shane was little, we hosted fireworks parties 231/881
for his friends. And our friends. Back when we still had friends. When we still had each other. Too much heartbreak ago.
TONIGHT, FOR THE FIRST TIME
Shelby will watch fireworks.
Even in July, evenings here
can be cool. Or windy. Neither
is good for lungs battling
to breathe. But tonight is warm
and breeze-free. So Shelby and
I will have our own fireworks
party. Shane is off with some new
friend. Could be a boyfriend,
I suppose. Other than the usual
“safe sex, please” warnings, I try
not to probe too deeply into that
part of his life. I don’t need, or
want, the details. Would I feel
differently if he were straight?
Maybe. But seems to me a father
would be more interested in his son’s sex life than a mother would. I don’t think Christian wants to know the details of our gay son’s sex life either, though.
When Shane came out two years
ago, Christian kind of turned his back 233/881
on him. Of course, by then he had
long since turned his back on me.
WHEN I LET MYSELF THINK
About it, sometimes I get angry.
Other times, I mostly feel numb.
But every now and again, sadness
descends, bone-brittling cold,
a deep of winter hailstorm, and
I am defenseless in the face of it.
I look through the polished glass
at my husband, asleep on the couch.
There, lost in sleep, his face wears no worry, and I glimpse a ghost
of the man who wrote me love letters.
Time has stolen more than sonnets.
I SLIP PAST HIM
And down the hall to Shelby’s room.
When I come in, her eyes turn
eagerly away from
Cinderella
and toward me. “Are you ready
to see fireworks?” It takes several minutes to maneuver her out of
bed and into the stander. She weighs next to nothing. I could fold her
like a pie crust. She is a dryad,
soon to return to her sacred woods.
“It’s a beautiful night. Perfect
for sharing. Oh, look. Shelby’s got wheels.” She smiles at the old joke, and we’re off on our adventure.
As we roll past Christian, still snoozing, Shelby points and sings something
very close to
Daddy.
The word drops gently into whatever dream
he’s maneuvering, because his body
responds with a definite twitch.
“Daddy’s sleeping,” I whisper.
“He had a very hard day.” Not true.
He spent the morning working in
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the study, then started on the whiskey at lunch. Home, sweet home.
IT REALLY IS GORGEOUS OUTSIDE
Not quite nine o’clock, the evening sky reminds me of agate—black, swirled with auburn and indigo. Stars scatter across the breadth of it, though you can see them best above the mountain, away from the distraction of the city’s lights. “Look, Shelster.
There’s the Big Dipper. See how it’s shaped like a giant spoon?” Her eyes glitter, and she holds her palms toward the heavens, as if trying to catch any small falling piece of them.
Pri-ee
, she says. Pretty, and I think I must show her more prettiness, sooner rather than later. We sit for several minutes, soaking in the honeysuckle perfume as the night grows dark enough to light the fuses. And finally, they do.
Shelby’s eyes grow wide with delight as the sky bursts with color. Red. Blue. Green.
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After the second mushroom of light, the door opens and, sleep-mussed, Christian comes outside.
Fireworks. I almost forgot about them.
May I join you ladies?
He pulls a patio chair over beside Shelby. Reaches for her hand. I am without words. Without breath. Afraid to even try and breathe, because if I do, this unexpected moment might vanish into ether. We are too far from the source to hear the percussions, so we sit in semi-silent awe of the aerial beauty, the exception being Shelby’s barely there
Ooh. Pri-ee’
s. I hold her other hand, and we are a three-link chain. For the first time in a very long time, we don’t feel broken. The twenty-minute display ends too soon. A slight breeze now blows over the hills, and I must take Shelby inside.
“Okay, little girl. Time for bed.” I hope she dreams of fireworks and unbroken chains.
BEDTIME
ROUTINE
ACCOMPLISHED
Shelby is well on her way to Dreamland.
I leave her with a kiss on her forehead.
It’s almost eleven, and Shane still hasn’t come in, though his curfew
is fast approaching. I think about
waiting up for him, but Christian is here.
Might as well let him play the part of disciplinarian. I can hear him in the kitchen, so I go to join him
there. When I slip into the room,
he turns from the counter, two drinks in hand.
Thought you could use this.
What the hell. Maybe just one.
I take the glass. “Thanks. And thanks for tonight. You made Shelby very
happy.” I try a sip—cognac, neat.
My favorite, once upon a time.
He remembered. That surprises me.
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Christian gulps his own drink.
She deserves
happiness. Glad she saw fireworks.
And now it starts to feel awkward.
I take a bigger sip, enjoy the slight burn, and the pleasant way my head
is starting to buzz. Call me a lightweight.
“Okay, well, I’m going to bed. Shane is a little late. You might want to call him?” Christian agrees and I go to my bedroom, finishing my drink on the way. Before I do anything else, I turn up the volume on the intercom. Just in case. Brush my teeth.
Wash my face. Slip out of my clothes and between the black satin sheets—my own bedtime routine accomplished. Brain pleasantly fuzzy, I slide toward sleep.
And the door opens. Shuts. Footsteps cross the floor. It’s Christian. “What’s wrong?”
Nothing.
The covers lift and he finesses into bed.
I wanted to sleep in here. Okay?
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My first instinct is to tense. But then a deeper, needier instinct takes over. “Okay.”
HE SMELLS OF WHISKY-BEADED
SWEAT
But permeating that is the scent
of male. Testosterone or pheromone, wherever it is carried, it cannot be ignored.
Though his back is to me, I reach for him, and when he turns, I throw myself into his arms and we are kissing with a ferocity that only strangers share.
His hands snarl into my hair, pin
my head to the pillow as his mouth
travels my neck, teeth and tongue working in unison, to the taut knots that are my nipples.
He grows rigid against my leg and I sigh but say nothing, afraid words will wake me from whatever dream this has become.
One hand comes loose from my hair.
It moves down between my legs, finds undertow. One finger, two, go inside me.
Three. Plunging. I am close but fight cresting with all I have. He licks along my torso, and his face seeks the V
between my thighs, tongue joining
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fingers. This is something remembered.
But when he pushes inside me, the intensity of his thrusts is nothing I’ve ever known.
Who is this man? Does he belong to me?