Authors: Ellen Hopkins
it was worth it or not. I confiscated her car keys. And her cell phone.
And she’s just so bored. Maybe
what she needs is a part-time
job. Something to keep her mind
busy and off Dylan. At the moment,
the most exciting thing about her
life is sparring with her brother, who makes every effort to approximate
a burr, working its way into her
hide. The bickering is relentless.
Someone has to referee, not to
mention make sure Mikki plays
by the rules. Mostly, it’s been me.
I can hardly wait to escape
the house tonight, the second
Wednesday in July. Maybe I’ll
even read a little of my writing.
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Beyond that, I’m really looking
forward to seeing Bryan again.
SO I’M A LITTLE DISAPPOINTED
That he isn’t at Starbucks tonight.
In fact, it’s all women—Betty, Sally, Sahara, a younger girl, and me, in a micro-mini that will go unnoticed by Bryan.
Welcome back, Holly,
says Betty.
You remember Sally and Sahara.
And this is Grace. I hope you brought
something to read tonight. I don’t
know about everyone else, but I
wouldn’t mind listening to a little
erotica. It’s been a little chilly
at home, despite the hot weather.
Everyone laughs, which only makes
my face burn hotter. “I brought some,” I admit. “But I don’t want to go first!” That isn’t a problem, as group protocol dictates we start with the youngest member. Grace reads a tolerable
ten pages of wizards and warriors.
Not my thing, so I don’t feel qualified to comment, except to say, “I could really visualize the world you created.
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And Lambert sounds really hot.”
Betty has more to say about unwieldy sentence structure, something
I struggle with myself, so I listen to her suggestions with interest.
As the second youngest here,
it now becomes my turn. Oh, why
not? I extract the journal from my bag, start with an apology. “It’s really rough, and it’s the first thing I’ve tried to write since college.” Everyone encourages me to continue, so I launch into
Vanilla,
read the whole thing, lowering my voice when I come to the words “fuck” and “cock.”
Don’t worry,
says Sally.
No one’s
listening, except for everyone within
earshot! I think that couple over
there are going to go home to bed.
Not a bad piece of writing,
Betty says.
A couple of suggestions.
Consider writing third person, so
it sounds less autobiographical.
And if you have kids at home,
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you might think about writing
only on your computer and locking
your files. The journal is a bust.
NOT SURE IF SHE MEANS
She thinks it
is
autobiographical, but either way, she’s probably right about both the third person and
the journal. “Thanks. I’ll keep that in mind.” After a few more pats on
the back, we move on to Sahara,
whose memoir is every bit as spicy
as my attempt at erotica. Wow.
She has lived a fast—and painful—
life. When she finishes this chapter, a humiliating episode of abuse at
the hands of her ex-husband’s father, we are all speechless. Sahara looks each of us in the eye.
I know it’s hard
to believe. But every word is true.
Oh, I believe it,
says Betty.
That
must have been extremely difficult
to relive, let alone write. Brave girl.
Major understatement. Respect
blossoms for this woman, who
has survived more than I’ll ever face.
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I can hardly concentrate on bodice
shredding and passionate lovemaking in a corporate boardroom. But I try.
POST-CRITIQUE
Sahara invites me to her place.
It’s quiet, and the alcohol is free.
She lives in a pricey subdivision,
in a perfectly kept three-thousand-
square-foot Mediterranean-style villa.
The spoils of war,
she calls it, and considering what she read tonight,
that sounds accurate. Inside, it’s painted in warm colors, and original artwork hangs on the walls. All in all, it is tasteful but comfortable, with overstuffed leather furniture, modern electronics, and lots of greenery.
Make yourself at home.
She lights several scented candles.
Do you drink wine? I’ve got a nice
cellar.
I ask for red, and she pours a pricey pinot noir into a couple
of Riedel glasses. Everything about 272/881
Sahara is a complete surprise.
Including the way she sits next to
me on the loveseat, though there’s
an entire empty sofa beside it.
She draws her long, suntanned
legs sideways up beneath her, so
that her bare knees kiss my leg.
I liked what you read tonight.
Was that fact or fantasy?
She sips her wine and appraises me with frank eyes. “A bit of both, though the fact didn’t measure up to the fantasy.”
She smiles.
It rarely does. I thought
marrying into gaming royalty
would make me a princess. But I was
just a concubine, with benefits.
“I’m sorry,” I say, and I mean it.
“But you would never know it, just
to look at you. You seem so together.
And writing a memoir. Wow. That’s …” 273/881
Probably really stupid. But even
if I never try to get it published,
the writing has helped me sort
through the bullshit, you know?
We drink wine—one bottle, two—
and discuss bullshit, though hers
outweighs mine, one thousand to
one. I am conscious of the thick
scent of candles—apple custard—and
the silk of her skin, where her knees have lifted the small hem of my skirt and now rest against exposed thigh.
She is talking about dancing—how
the girls so valued for their beauty quite often have low self-esteem,
something men eagerly take advantage of. I am tipsy as hell when I sputter,
“I heard lots of those girls are lesbians.”
Some are, though many more are bi.
Being with other women is easy.
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Fewer demands. Better orgasms.
At my doubtful look, she says,
What?
Don’t tell me you’ve never … really?
She rocks up onto her knees.
Want to?
I know nothing about being with
a woman. I rely on her—and instinct.
IT
GOES
INTO
MY
JOURNAL
FIRST-PERSON
I can move into third during revisions.
Not that I’d change anything else.
Hyssop and Rose
She is bold, kissing me without clear invitation, or maybe I did invite her somehow. No matter.
I can’t help but kiss her back. Her pout is yielding, her tongue, the gentle flick of a serpent, testing.
And she tastes of berries. “Lie back,” she says.
She lifts my top, licks me from my navel upward, her hair a soft trickle over my belly.
It smells of summer—hyssop and rose, a hint of grass. I close my eyes, give myself up to the carousel whirl—slick gloss lips and practiced tongue, circling. Circling. Lifting me close and closer to the horizon. And when she goes down on me, there is an eloquence no man could match, and I understand why she said being with women is easy. Naïve about how to give back, all I have to do is try. I reach into my psyche, tap some ancient well of instinct.
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In the same way that she carries me skyward, I sample her salt, bring her to climax, find immense satisfaction in reciprocal flight.
SATISFACTION
There’s a reason why
Mick Jagger sang about
a lack of gratification.
If he couldn’t get none,
back in the day,
who
might reasonably expect
that they might? Anyway,
what the Stones forgot
is that even if a person
can
find plenty of girly action,
the desired result
is only good for so long.
You can have sex for hours,
with multiple partners, orgy-style, get
off until you’re downright
sore. But rest up for a day
or two, restore bodily fluids,
rebuild desire, you’ll want
some
more. Satisfaction is transient—
an interim state of mind.
Marissa
TRANSIENT DESIRE
Is an unfortunate thing, at least
if your partner is on a different
trajectory. I had pretty much
given up on sex, after such a large span of time with zero interest from my husband. Then, one transcendent
evening brought it all back to me—
the power in a kiss; the coax of skin; the brilliant bolt of love in crescendo.
Pragmatism should have told me not
to believe one night of fireworks
meant anything at all. Christian is still just as driven. Still goes to work early.
Comes home late or not at all.
Still sleeps in the guest room, and he hasn’t returned even once to the bed I still refer to as “ours.” Guess I could look at it as a one-night stand, something 279/881
I’ve never done. Does every one-night stand make you feel so used the next day? So unworthy of love? So alone?
ALONE ENOUGH RIGHT NOW
To make me seek refuge in
the figurative arms of my computer.
At least it’s warm. There’s an email from Drew, giving me the lowdown
on his fishing trip. caught my limit.
WISHED I LIKED TROUT. DO YOU? I’VE
got plenty in the freezer. Why do
people who don’t care for fish go
fishing, anyway? I write him back:
adore it. bring some over. I’m not
especially wild about trout. But I do enjoy seeing Drew. Next I come to
ITV’s quarterly newsletter. Often
I hit delete immediately, but this
one has Christian’s name prominently featured in the front-page headline:
VP CHRISTIAN TRASK ANNOUNCES
GAMRICH, THE FUTURE PERSONAL
IN-HOME GAMING SYSTEM.
The article goes on to describe how the gaming system will revolutionize gambling. People will be able to lose their paychecks (uh … play for big
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bucks) in the privacy of their own
homes. And they’ll be able to do it on their flat-screen TVs, much like they now play Xbox and Wii.
InnoTechnoVent, with Christian at
the helm, leads the charge toward
in-home gaming. All it will take
is a little tweak of the current law.
Working on that is the company’s
imaginative young lobbyist Skye
Sheridan, who, according to the
newsletter, JOINED ITV IN 2006
AND IS, SAYS TRASK, “A RISING STAR.” Unbelievable. I haven’t heard one
word about GamRich, though
it has been in development for
quite some time. I understand
now why Chris has been so busy.
Distracted. Absent. But there was
a day, not so long ago, that he’d
have shared this kind of news
with me. Kept me in the loop,
updated me on its progress.
And if everything is going so well, 282/881
why doesn’t he act excited? Why
doesn’t he come home at the top
of the world? Why does he hit
the bottle and loiter inside it?
I FINISH MY COFFEE
Think about hitting the treadmill.
Scrap that. It’s a nice morning.
I’ll take Shelby out for a walk.
We both could use a little fresh
air before the breeze lifts summer
pollen, stirs it into the afternoon.
Shelby is currently hiking with
Dora the Explorer, but I know
she’ll prefer the real deal. “Hey,
sugarplum. Mama could use some
exercise. How about we go for
a little stroll? It’s pretty outside.” She answers with a big grin
and a small
Ow … si…
As I begin the complicated routine of getting
her dressed and into her stander,
her smile stretches wider and
wider. I think, for the umpteenth
time, how lovely she is when
her essence escapes the bounds
of exterior handicap. Shelby