Authors: Ellen Hopkins
so not my problem to worry about.
LATE SUNDAY MORNING
Sierra Summit is relatively quiet—
people still sleeping, or maybe at church.
I went to early services. Wouldn’t Mom and Missy be surprised? No one knows I’ve gone looking for God. Not sure I’ve found him yet, but there is this huge emptied well in me that feels sort of half full when I melt into the small congregation, sit quietly, and open myself to the light.
Not looking to judge or be judged. Just searching for possibilities. Which reminds me of Holly. I can hear her now.
Possibilities?
You mean, like, the kind with penises?
I wish I could quit thinking about her.
Maybe the movie will help. I drive
around the parking lot, looking for Missy’s van. It’s easy enough to spot—
a hulking blue Ford, big enough to hold 350/881
Shelby’s special equipment. Not that Miss takes her out much anymore. The two of them are cave dwellers. Glad Shane talked her into venturing out into the real world. The one she inhabits is where nightmares germinate. I dial her cell.
She picks up too quickly. Waiting for it to ring? “Hey, girl. I’m here. Where are you?”
Mom thought Thai sounded good
for lunch. You ready to Thai one on?
Oh my God. A joke? She must be hitting the plum wine. “Sounds great. See you in a sec.” The restaurant is right next door to the theater, which is much too far across the blistering parking lot. It must be pushing ninety-five already. I can see Mom and Missy through the window. Wow.
The resemblance gets clearer every year.
Mom must have found the fountain of youth.
She could pass for Missy’s sister. Considering 351/881
the way pain has notched itself into the skin around Missy’s eyes, her not-much-older sister.
NOT ONE WORD
Of which I say, of course, as I join them at a simply appointed table.
Hope the food is spicier than the décor.
I slide into a stiff, straight-backed chair. “Hello, girls.” I look directly at Missy. “Great to see you out
in broad daylight. I was beginning
to think you’d joined the living
dead.” Missy’s smile slips and, too late, I consider what I just said.
Shit. Damage control. “What?
You don’t read vampire novels?”
The corners of her mouth twitch,
but her eyes hold zero humor.
Not a big fan of the genre, no.
Mom attempts rescue.
I am. Just
as long as the vampire doesn’t
sparkle his victim into submission,
or come in through her window
to hang out and watch her sleep.
Can’t stand boring bloodsuckers.
OKAY, THAT WAS FUNNY
Too bad I just took a big sip of water.
It comes snorting out my nose. That, at least, makes Missy laugh, though Mom looks horrified at the spray.
Andrea Dawn! You are disgusting.
If there was ever any doubt about
your paternity, this erases it. Uh …
Not that there ever was, of course.
Wait. What? The buoyant mood
sinks just a bit, but I can’t quite wrap my brain around the reason.
“Are you trying to tell me something?”
No, no. It was just a joke. But then
it didn’t sound like one and I …
should probably just shut up now.
What looks good?
She opens her menu.
Wow. Talk about planting a seed
of doubt. But he has to be my dad.
I inherited his skyscraper forehead, steep cheekbones, aquiline nose.
My eyes are the same peculiar
speckled blue.
Robin’s eggs,
Mom 354/881
has always called them. And always
she adds,
Just like your father’s.
Which should completely assuage
the disquiet sifting through me
right now. The waiter ambles over
to take our order. Mom requests
green curry with tofu—having
a vegetarian day, I guess. Missy asks for pad Thai, obviously the only
dish she knows. Somehow I’ve lost
my taste for Thai. But, lucky me,
they also have limited Japanese.
“I’ll have the tempura vegetables
and a California roll, please.”
The waiter nods, heads toward
the kitchen. Mom waits until
he’s out of earshot.
You have to
be really careful of sushi, you know.
One time your father got hold of
some badly prepared sashimi. Boy,
was he sick! I mean, geysering out
both ends. He never touched it again.
Perfect. I’ll probably never touch
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it again, either. And it’s long been a favorite of mine. “Thanks, Mom.
Maybe I’ll just stick to the tempura.”
THE CALIFORNIA ROLL
Goes untouched. I must be losing
it. Mom and Missy chitchat around
bites but, as hard as I try to tune in, my mind keeps sliding away from
now, into a slipstream of yesterday.
Black-and-white reruns of Oregon.
Missy and I, silent, outside the window as Mom and Dad loudly “discussed”
the emotional toll of communal sex
and possible outcomes. One of them
being pregnancy and hazy genetic
markers. Holy shit. I am mired there in the manure when my cell rings.
The conversation around me halts
as I reach for my phone. Harley.
In hysterics.
Mom? Come and
pick me up right this minute, okay?
Please. I want to go home, and
you have to take Brianna home
too. I freaking hate her. I thought …
She shatters, and I’m not there.
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“What did you think, honey?”
I thought she was my friend.
A FRIEND
Is a wellspring
of understanding.
A catch basin for grimy
little secrets that can
scarcely be voiced.
A friend
holds the tissue
box when you splinter.
Accepts confession, and yet
won’t
demand details,
regardless of perceived
juiciness, too intimate to
confide. A friend is never too
cross
to commiserate.
Never too busy to
pull up a chair. Never so
certain
about an outcome
as to insist you’ve made
a mistake. A friend is never
so unclear about the definition
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of friendship as to straddle its
boundaries.
Holly
NO RUN TODAY
Hangovers and jogging do not
mix well. Can’t believe I got so
toasted last night. Can’t believe
I did half the things I did last night.
Bryan and I were only supposed
to talk. But misery loves sympathy.
And I’m great at commiseration,
especially when fired up on rum.
We met up at a quiet little club.
Low light. Corner booth way in
back. He was already there when
I arrived, and the way his eyes
stopped scanning the room once
they found me made me feel
like the only woman in the place,
though that wasn’t even close to true.
I don’t think I’ve ever felt exactly like that, and it only got better
when he stood and held out his
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hand, coaxing mine into its warmth.
He tugged me close, put his mouth
against my ear.
Thanks for coming.
His voice was a low growl, and my
body responded with animal interest.
I tried to ignore the hollow
longing, but by the time our first
round was drained and another
on its way, it had swollen into
something I couldn’t ignore. Easy
banter was not enough distraction,
so I chose a direct route to distance.
“What’s up with you and your wife?” He was evasive at first.
How long
have you and your husband been
married?
The quick change of subject surprised me. I wasn’t there to talk about myself, let alone Jace or our relationship. I didn’t want to think about us at all. “Nineteen years, give or take. I was …” I wished I could lie about my age, but he knows how old
Mikayla is. I could have been pregnant 362/881
when I got married and all, but … oh, hell. “I couldn’t quite drink legally yet.” He smiled.
Hope you had champagne,
anyway.
Then he grew serious.
Tanya
and I have been married for twenty-six
years. Yeah, yeah, I’m older than I look,
and so is she. She looks absolutely
great for her age, in fact. I’ve no
complaints there. But after so many
years together, things have gotten
a little stale. She goes to work. I go
to work. We both come home tired.
We have dinner. I grade papers. By
the time we go to bed, well …
My head bobbed up and down
as he talked. “I know the ‘well’
intimately. Some of us get there
long before twenty-six years.”
His turn to nod.
I think most couples
get there eventually. The question is,
what next? For me, divorce was
unthinkable while our daughter
was with us. Now Rhiannon is in her last
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year of college. Still, I’ve been looking
for ways to avoid out-and-out mutiny.
The writing is one, of course. If I
manage to publish a book, it will
satisfy at least one very big desire.
I’m not sure the cerebral can totally
replace the carnal, however.
CAUGHT UP COMPLETELY
In my own little set of fantasies,
I did not expect what he said next.
He lobbed the words like grenades,
and they fell around me: splat, splat, kaboom!
Have you and your
husband ever tried swinging?
Call me naïve, but my doofy brain
only went as far as the playground.
Maybe it was the second mojito, almost finished. “Not since the kids were little.” Bryan tried not to laugh, without
success.
No. You know. Sex, with
another couple. Or maybe a three-way? Another woman, another man,
whatever.
My jaw must have dropped.
Yeah, that’s pretty much how my
wife reacted when I suggested we
should give it a try.
He signaled 365/881
the waitress to bring another round.
Have you never even considered it?
I PLUMBED THE QUESTION
And how, exactly, to answer it. Hell, he’d opened the door. “I’ve thought about it. But Jace would never …”
Are you sure? Because, in my truly-not-humble opinion, the guy
always
thinks about stuff like that first.
Then my comment seemed to sink
in. His emerald eyes traveled over
me with pantherlike zeal. The hungry cat in them only amplified the desire, pulsing like a heartbeat just in front of my pubic bone. Once again, I tried to redirect myself. “If Jace even suspected I’ve considered having sex with someone else, he’d insist on marriage counseling.” Bryan smiled with feline intensity.
So you
have
contemplated sex outside
your marriage? With multiple partners?
Just then, the waitress delivered
our drinks. I waited for her to leave.
Looked him right in the eye. “Yes.”
AND THAT LED
To an invitation I’d never imagined when I agreed to meet Bryan for drinks.
One I never even knew was possible
in a Podunk little city like Reno.
But Bryan knew.
Would you want
to give it a try? I’ve heard about
this place. You have to be a couple
to get in, so we’d have to become
one for a night. What say you?
Are you up for some fun, or …
“Or what?” I asked, half wondering
if he could hear the buzz in my head.
Or are you all talk?
He reached across the table, traced my lips
with one finger. It was almost
sexier than sex. Almost. He could
have taken me, right there in
that bar, with everyone watching.
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At least, I think I would have
let him. Actually doing something
like that is probably daunting.