Authors: Ellen Hopkins
WHO IS THIS MAN?
In the glass, he is a stranger,
yet his scent is familiar
and the hand at your elbow
feels proprietary there.
What
this means, you do not know,
so you walk a little faster. But
he keeps pace. The hair at
your collar pricks, though you
are
not in danger. The hour
is busy, the sidewalk
crowded. All you have to
do is scream. But before
you
open your mouth, his velour
voice calls your name, stirring
leaves of memory, coaxing
them to float, and now you’re
afraid
they won’t. When you turn
to study his face, something
in the way he looks at you
makes you search for the us
of
you, buried in the deep
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of his eyes. Yes, you knew
him once, but he is a changeling.
Metamorphosed. And you run.
Andrea
THE
PROBLEM
WITH
HEALTH
KICKS
Is they work best if everyone living under the same roof shares them.
Honestly, I’m proud of Harley and
how she dove headfirst into the whole eat-right-and-exercise-daily thing.
We even found her a special summer
program: Healthy Eating + Exercise =
Live Longer, or HEELL, which is
supposed to read “heel,” not “hell.” And hell is kind of what it’s become.
Because the thing about programs
is someone has to facilitate them.
And for Harley, that someone is me.
I am her HEELL sponsor, I guess.
Which means trying to fulfill her request that we eat all organic. But Sak ’n Save is between work and home, while
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Whole Foods is twenty minutes out
of my way, not to mention out of my budget. Hope she never discovers
I’m saving containers and bags marked organic and putting regular produce inside them. Hell hath no fury like a scorned farmers’ market devotee.
MY SECOND JOB
As her facilitator is helping her
count calories, fat, and sodium
content in every foodstuff that
goes into her mouth. Oh yeah,
and into my mouth too. Who knew,
in a regular one-patty fast-food
cheeseburger, with condiments,
a person consumes:
Calories
359
Fat calories
178
Total fat
19.8 grams
Saturated fat 9.2 grams
Sodium
976 milligrams
And you don’t even want to look
at french fries or a Big Mac.
Fast food is now officially excised from our diet, as is “anything white.” Meaning potatoes, pasta, rice, or bread, except for whole-grain particleboard.
Dessert? Sure, as long as it’s sugar-249/881
and fat-free. I’ve taken to keeping a big bag of M&M’s in my desk.
Hiding candy from my kid. Nice.
AND THE BEST THING OF ALL
Is the exercise program.
Harley is up before dawn
every morning so she can walk
or take a long bike ride before
it gets too hot. Worse, she wants
me to come along.
Please, Mom.
You could drop a few pounds
too. And exercise is more fun
if you don’t have to do it all by
yourself. Anyway, I want you
to live a long, healthy life.
That one got to me a little. I do breathe too hard after an uphill chug,
and my heart beats way too fast.
So I’m awake with the sun,
trying my level best to keep up
with my thirteen-year-old
daughter. My only hope seems
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to be that she’ll grow tired
of the rigid routine. It’s only
been a couple of weeks. Right
now, she’s still going strong.
RIGHT THIS MINUTE
She’s going strong at her summer
program and I am on my lunch
break. I brought a nice chicken
salad from home—low-cal dressing
and all. But because I can’t help
but rebel at least a little, I am at Starbucks, where I will indulge
in a “Caramel frappuccino …
Okay, make it light and … skip
the whipped cream.” Damn. Good
habits will rub off on a girl, if she isn’t careful. I take my change
and am putting it away when
someone behind me says,
Hello,
Andrea. It’s been a while.
The voice—Geoff’s voice—tugs
on a string of emotions. None
I can’t smile my way out of,
however. “Yes, it
has
been a while.” I move sideways to let him order,
and as the barista pours his
large coffee, the darkest roast
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you have,
I collect my too-sweet dessert-substitute frappuccino.
MOMENTS LIKE THESE
Are awkward. I don’t know what
to say. Whether or not just to turn away, find a seat, and expect him
to leave me alone. He saves me
worrying about it.
May I join you?
I’d love to catch up a little.
I shrug. “Sure.” He leads me to a table for two by the window, and it feels all déjà vuish. Except he’s drinking Seattle roast instead of Grey Goose.
We sit, studying each other for
several hushed seconds. He looks
clear-eyed, and somehow softer
around the edges, like he’s shed
an armored shell. Someone has to
break the silence.
How have you
been? And how is your daughter?
Nice of him to ask about Harley.
“I’m fine, thanks. And Harley is
thirteen. Which pretty much tells
you all you need to know.” Chitchat 255/881
definitely sucks. “What have you been up to?” Go ahead. Ask him. “And
how’s your wife?” A Russian transplant.
He winces. Sips his coffee. Finally says,
Marina and I split up.
She couldn’t take the drinking …
or how I acted when I drank,
I guess.
He pauses at the way my head is bobbing.
I’m six weeks sober.
When Marina walked out, I had
a come-to-Jesus.
He stops again, perhaps hoping to find me still
nodding. “I’m sorry about your wife, Geoff. Are you sure it was …” I’m
embarrassed to finish it. Or even
admit I might have played a part
in their breakup. But he says,
It had
nothing to do with you, if that’s
what you’re thinking. She never
found out about you at all. No,
she left because of how I treated
her. I’ve had a lot of time alone
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to think about things, and I realize
I wasn’t very nice to you, either.
Now he reaches across the table,
slides his hand over the top of mine.
Looks into my eyes.
I’m sorry.
HE SOUNDS SINCERE
But liars often do. I pull my hand
away. “It’s okay. I’m over it.” Mostly true. Except for that annoying voice inside my head that keeps insisting the only part of me men want to
cherish is the welcome mat just
south of my belly button. And this
man was instrumental in making
me feel that way.
Look. I said
some really ugly things, but I hope
you know it was the booze talking.
Alcoholics tend to be assholes.
That makes me smile. “Can you
please tell that to my ex? He doesn’t seem to get it.” He definitely didn’t get it on the Fourth of July, which Harley insisted we share with
him, Cassie, and Chad. Poor young
man had to escort a thirteen-year-old sort-of-but-not-formally stepsister, not to mention one who’s really
crushing on him and is so too young 258/881
to be seen with, to and from the food and drink stands. Meanwhile, Steve
and Cassie were tying one on,
while I (who wished I could)
got to play the adult in the group.
Considering how childish Steve
and his girlfriend acted, somebody
had to. But it wasn’t exactly my job.
Next year, fireworks will just be
Harley and me. Please, God.
I thought your ex was pretty
much out of the picture,
says Geoff, interrupting the unpleasant
flashback.
Is he bothering you?
“Well, yeah. I mean, he bothers me
a lot. But he’s not messing with me, except he moved back to Reno and
Harley wants to see more of him.”
He grins.
Does that mean you
might have a few more spare
evenings for things like dinner
and dancing?
Is he actually saying he wants to ask me out?
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Apparently, he is.
I know I don’t
deserve another chance. But I hope
you’ll consider giving me one.
ANOTHER AWKWARD SILENCE
I really don’t know what to say.
So I glance at my watch. “Oh.
I need to be back at work in, like, five minutes …” True statement.
“I’ll think about it, okay?” I stand, and he does too. “I am sorry about
your wife. But I’m happy it made
you take a look at yourself. Be well.” As noncommittal as I tried to make
it, he asks,
So, can I call you, then?
“Uh …” Be firm. “I guess so.”
Wow, way to be firm. “But no
promises.” Okay, a little better.
Out the door. Into my car. Drive
six blocks to work. All the time
remembering his alcohol-fueled
rages. The awful names he called
me. The way he lied to me. The way
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he lied to his wife. His lust-filled eyes. (Okay, that was kind of a turn-on.) But turn-on or no, the rest counted more. There will be no second chance.
TURN-ONS
Are personal. One woman’s
Adonis is another’s Puck, and
a few open-minded fairies
might even find him to their
taste.
Curly hair. Straight hair. Zero
hair. Chest hair? A must for
some, and yet for others it
is
a deal breaker. Younger lover?
Older? On one hand, youthful
stamina is a powerful lure;
on the
other, experience might trump
it, especially in matters
regarding proper use of the
tongue.
Scent? Is sweat disgusting or
intoxicating? Cologne—leather,
forest, some exotic spice, or a hint of the
sea? And as for flavor, a swift
lick of salt may be repellent or
aphrodisiac. It’s all up to the
taster.
HOLLY
WHAT’S ROTTEN
About uncovering a child’s deception is that no matter how much you’d
like to overlook it, you really can’t.
Which wouldn’t be so bad, except
when you’re not exactly innocent
yourself. Regardless, poor Mikayla
is liable to stay grounded all summer at the rate she’s going. Catching her with Dylan at the game was unfortunate.
I thought about letting it go, and might have, except when Dylan noticed me
watching them and sputtered their kiss to a stop, Mikayla looked at me with such defiance that it basically pissed me off. I’m only human, and a human parent at that. Dylan read me
perfectly. Gave her another quick
kiss. Evaporated into the crowd.
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When I gestured for her to come
with me, I thought she just might
follow Dylan instead. But she chose obedience. Not sure if she thinks