Authors: Ellen Hopkins
breathing trouble, she looks thinner.
Transparent, almost. Barely there.
And yet, her will to live is palpable, an entity unto itself. She is a flicker surrounded by very dark shadows.
ONE OF THOSE SHADOWS
Drifts down the hall, tries to
overtake me too.
Why would she
leave Shelby alone with you?
Keep. Temper. In. Check.
“She didn’t have much choice.
You ‘couldn’t be reached.’”
Christian and I are like vinegar
and baking soda. Bad interaction.
“Important meeting, I take it?”
It was, in fact. So…
The words seethe from between his teeth.
What was the emergency, anyway?
He doesn’t know? “Shane, playing
David to some kid’s Goliath. Only
this time the Philistine conquered.” Chris registers zero concern.
Instead, all he shows is contempt.
What crawled under his skin? Idiot.
Bite. Back. Anger. “Apparently,
he was sticking up for Shelby.
Does that make him an idiot?”
307/881
Considering he’s at the ER, yes.
This philistine has lost all compassion.
You can go now. I’ve got it covered.
THE PHILISTINES
Of biblical fame were much
too bold for their britches—
er, kilts—eschewing their lovely
Greek isle homes in a bid
to conquer Egypt. A very
big
ambition, not to mention
irrational, iron or no
iron. Next they set their
sights on the Israelites,
sending forth armor-clad
dudes,
led by a hulking giant.
But a half-naked kid managed
dead aim into his brain
with a slingshot. You might
expect that Goliath’s fatal
tumble
might make them reconsider
their master plan for world
domination. But no. Battle
after battle, they went down
to defeat, until they crashed
hard
beneath the feet of Babylon.
Proving, then as now,
309/881
some people never learn.
Holly
SOME KIDS NEVER LEARN
You try and try to cut ’em
a little slack, and the more
rope you give them, the more
determined they become to
burn themselves with it. Case in
point, as she has been for months,
is my brash daughter, Mikayla.
Here, I finally talk Jace into
ungrounding her, and what’s
the very first thing she does?
Totally disregards our imposed
midnight curfew. And not by
a few minutes. No, she comes
bopping in three hours late.
Like she had no clue we might
be waiting up? Parents to Mikki:
this was a test. One you failed
miserably. Which means, dear
311/881
one, you are sequestered
again. Which is, doubtless,
a good thing. Less contact
with Dylan means less chance
of a summer STD. One can only
hope. Today, at least, she’ll escape her room for a barbecue at Jace’s
parents’ house. Whoopee. Wish
I could come up with a good excuse
not to go, but I’ve skipped out
on the family bonding thing too
many times in the past few months.
I’m putting together my not-quite-
world-famous potato salad when
Mik sweeps into the kitchen.
Mom!
She sock-slides across the floor.
Guess what! I found someone
who might know your parents.
Something like dread plummets
into my belly. Not the reaction
I would have expected. I turn
from my onion peeling. “Really?”
312/881
Mik, who quivers excitement,
misinterprets my watering eyes.
Don’t cry, Mom. It’s only kind
of a maybe right now, but
I think it looks good. This lady
used to be married to this guy—
Leon Driscoll—who graduated
from Elko High in 1970. She says
his little brother got a girl in
his class pregnant the same
year. Could be a coincidence,
but I don’t think so. She gave
me this Leon’s email address.
I’m hoping to hear back soon.
Mikayla sucks in air, waiting for
me to say something. “Sounds
promising.” It’s the best I can do.
Mik deflates like I popped a hole
in her.
But aren’t you excited?
Look how close we’re getting!
“Only maybe,” I correct, dissolving her smile. “Oh, Mikki. I don’t mean 313/881
to seem ungrateful. It’s just … scary.
I don’t want to get my hopes
up until we know for sure. But
thank you for doing this for me.”
I OPEN MY ARMS
And she accepts my hug, but only for a millisecond.
Jeez, Mom, you smell
like onions! You’d better wash your
hands with lemon juice.
It’s an old remedy.
In fact, you’d better shower
with it.
At least she’s laughing.
When her face lights up like that, I can see her as a toddler—all smiles and wonder.
What happened to my cherub?
Is her halo still there somewhere?
“Okay. I should be finished here in a half hour or so. Will you let your father know? He’s giving Tick a bath.” Poor dog was long overdue. I watch
my daughter’s exit—all willow branch legs and exaggerated hip sway. Where did she learn that? I return to KP duty, mixing in mayonnaise, mustard. Sweet relish.
315/881
Salt. Pepper. All without a taste test.
I’ll trust my instincts. And skip the calories.
THE SENIOR CARLISLES
Live a couple of miles away, on a sprawling five-acre ranchette, complete with a barn lacking horses and a pool they hardly ever use, except when we come over. The kids head straight for the backyard, where they’re greeted by a matched pair of lion-sized Newfoundlands. I can hear Brianna screaming about dog spit. Jace barrels through the front door, not bothering with the bell.
Anybody home?
he yells. I follow him into the vaulted-ceilinged hall. Sunlight cascades from high windows, flooding the Italian marble floors. I’ve always loved this house, but not the way I feel when I’m here. I’ll never forget the first time Jace brought me home to meet his parents. Not sure if they expected something different in the woman their son would fall for, or if they were just a little jealous of Jace’s obvious attention to me. But that initial iced reception set the tone for our relationship ever since.
317/881
In here,
calls Marion, powering us toward the kitchen. She is busy, putting marinade on fat chicken breasts.
Henry’s
out back, deslobbering Brianna. Grab
a drink and take a dip. The water’s perfect.
She barely glances in my direction as I set the Fiestaware bowl on the counter.
Oh, you made potato salad again. Thank
you, dear.
How can anyone so readily make the word
dear
translate as “bitch”?
Help me! “How have you been,
Marion
?” I try to make the name Marion translate as “bitch.” Don’t think it worked.
Not
bad. The arthritis has affected my golf
game a bit, but I’m trumping Henry.
Well, yeah. Henry’s still carrying a full client load at work. He’s lucky to find time for golf at all. “That’s great,
Marion
.” Ha. That one almost sounded like “bitch.” Jeez, Holly. Grow up, would you? Marion leaves the chicken to soak up the sauce, washes—no, scrubs—her hands, including 318/881
using a brush to go under the nails.
Anything
new with you?
she asks, expecting me to say no.
I’m not about to discuss my writing, or the search for my birth parents, so I guess she won’t be disappointed. “Not really.”
SMALL TALK ACCOMPLISHED
I excuse myself for a bathroom
break, try unsuccessfully not to
Mama
look at the photos studding every
wall—a family history not only
never
complete but also celebratory.
Jace and his brother, Stan, at each hung
stage of growth. Henry, Jace, and
and Stan, fishing. Marion, cutting
a single
flowers. The whole clan, skiing,
camping, traveling cross-country. picture.
picture.
I detour to Henry Carlisle’s well-stocked bar.
Papa
Four fingers of Dewar’s might make this day possible to wade through. I gulp pointer finger.
never
Wait for the brittle buzz before going outside to observe today’s chapter of Carlisle history in touched the making. Jace and Henry talk law at the big picnic table. Marion chides Mik for tanning sans a drop. sunscreen. Trace and Bri race laps in the pool.
Beneath the barbecue smoke
lingers the perfume of fresh-
mown grass. The sky is a blue
You couldn’t write a more
so deep no single crayon could
ordinary slice of Americana.
replicate it. The Newfies pant
Jace is smiling. The kids are
in the shade of an old maple.
laughing. And all I want to
320/881
do is find a quiet chair where
I can power down Dewar’s.
I SCOOT INTO A LOUNGE CHAIR
Beneath the pergola, protected from UV threat. Slide on a pair of shades.
Lean back, close my eyes, welcome
the smog of alcohol, hope it will soften the grip of jealousy. Jace and I have been married twenty years. But I have never felt like a vital part of his family. There is only one photo of me hanging on
his mother’s walls—an uncertain bride and beaming groom, surrounded by
our wedding party. In it, Marion appears every bit as disquieted as I. I’ve always wondered why she chose that one.
I mentioned the dearth of my photos to Jace one time. His first reaction was to deny it, but upon wall inspection, he had to admit I was right. Then he excused his mother like this.
Well, you
have to admit you don’t exactly insist
on posing for snapshots with the fam.
Laid it right back on me. Truth is, he was right. The problem with wanting 322/881
too much to be a part of something is knowing you very well might be rejected.
WHICH IS WHY, I SUPPOSE
I am trying so hard to impress
myself. If you reject yourself,
for whatever reason, it’s time
to rethink. Reinvent. I watch
Trace and Bri play in the pool, still children in essence, despite maturing façades. I want to tell them not to hurry. Adolescence is the beginning of the end because the moment
you fall in love, you give away
the best part of yourself. I look at Mik, who I know has already made
that decision, and I want to tell her to take it back. Dylan will keep that part of her, no matter where the future leads them. I look at Jace, who I gave the best part of myself to two decades ago, and though I think he must still 324/881
carry it in his heart, I can’t help but want to take it back. If I could, would I give it away again?
NO TAKE-BACKS
Regrets are like molecules.
We’re all made up of a lot of them.
They are elemental. Building
blocks. The foundation of memory.
You
can dawdle in the past, allow
it to shadow you, or you can
walk forward into the light
of tomorrow. But you
can’t
altogether disregard what has
already been—byways chosen,
detours taken. The misbegotten
decisions you can never
reverse,
but only by sorting through
them can you find where
you took the wrong turns
and gain proper perspective.
Time
326/881
is a parabolic lens,
bringing hindsight into focus.