Authors: Ellen Hopkins
So without actually thinking
it through, I told him, “Sure,
I’ll go with you. I’m a whole lot
more than talk, baby.” Something
I’m discovering more and more
is true.
Really? Then I want details.
Should we play Truth or Dare?
“Okay. I’ll go first. Truth or Dare?” He chose Truth, and I asked, “Have
you ever cheated on your wife?”
Lies come easily to men, so I was
surprised when he admitted,
Many
times. But I’ve never had an affair.
Third mojito polished off, I sort of sputtered, “What’s the difference?”
Emotional attachment. My turn.
Have you cheated on your husband?
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“Once.” I would say it was a fib,
but Grant will never count. I did add,
“With a woman,” omitting the part
about her being a mutual acquaintance.
But somehow he knew.
Another
writer, perhaps? Oh, don’t be shocked.
Sahara is a voracious woman—
an omnivore, if you know what
I mean. And yes, I speak from
experience. Be very careful of her.
That emotional Velcro I mentioned?
That’s what she’s hungry for, not that
I can blame her. She’s been used
and abused, and if she was ever loved,
it must have been a very long time
ago.
His last remark ignited a flicker of guilt. I am loved. But there was zero judgment in his observations, and that realization extinguished the spark.
Drinks finished and Truth or Dare
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enlightening us both, Bryan settled the check and walked me to my car.
WHAT HAPPENED THERE
Goes into my journal now, not as
an
Essential Oil,
but simply as memory.
And beneath an indigo sky, beaded gold like Versace, he cupped my jaw in plush-leather hands, lifting my chin
so our eyes connected. “You are stunning,” he said.
Then he kissed my forehead, kissed my eyelids closed.
And when his mouth covered mine, there was nothing tentative
about the way his tongue parted my lips, reached inside.
Jace has never kissed me like that, not even when our love
was brand-new. That’s how our kissing felt too. Young.
But Bryan’s kiss was knowing. The kind of knowing that made me wonder just when I’d revealed so much.
No one could assume to understand the part of me I’ve worked so hard to keep hidden …
A door slams.
Mom!
Brianna’s footsteps slap the hallway tile. I shut the cover of the journal, stash it away.
I hate her!
It’s not my fault. I didn’t do anything.
I can’t help it if he likes me. Mom!
Uh-oh. Boy problems? Since when?
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I slip out of “temptress,” downshift into parent. Guilt grinds the gears.
Priorities. I can’t ever forget about those.
PARENTAL PRIORITIES
Are generally unpopular,
all the way around. And yet,
they are integral to keeping
family peace. A
Top Five
list can be useful, if agreed
to by all parties, then posted
in a prominent place, lest
someone forget one or more
prohibitions.
Try organizing in order of
importance. For instance: No
sneaking out,
particularly if said activity
is meant to accommodate
unsupervised parties,
and most especially if said
partying will be enhanced
by the illicit use of
drugs and alcohol,
which invariably lead to
unsavory outcomes, perhaps
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the very worst being
unprotected sex.
Marissa
NOT THE WORST DAY
Not the very best either, although it was mostly good, I guess. And, for once, the bad wasn’t in my ballpark.
It was a shame Andrea had to run out on the party. But I understand. Your kids must come first, no matter how much fun you’re having without them. Or maybe she wasn’t having fun. Maybe she
was relieved to get called away.
Mom’s offhanded comment about
her murky paternity really seemed
to bother her. I thought she knew
or at least suspected that communal hooking up meant everyone on the farm belonged to everyone else, in some
fashion. I quit worrying about it years ago. Pretty much, anyway. What good does it do? But even without Andrea, I enjoyed 376/881
spending time with Mom. The movie
was a tearjerker. The shopping netted three new outfits, like I have anywhere special to wear them. Should something come up, they’re there. Oh, and I got a makeover—new cosmetics to enhance my natural “beauty.” What a joke. But hey, the just-barely-out-of-high-school
department store “expert” managed to sell this “in need of advice” middle-aged hag three hundred plus dollars’ worth of lotions and creams, which do make my skin feel plumped and moisturized. Plus concealer, foundation, blush, liner, shadow, and mascara, which definitely highlight my cheekbones and bring out my eyes. Not that I’ll remember how to apply them or find the need to. But Mom is content now that she spent the requisite number of hours with me to assuage her own guilt about not being around more, or her possible genetic input into Shelby’s condition. But considering the whole commune thing, 377/881
who can say where the mysterious factor came from? And at this point, who cares?
STILL, AS WE MOTOR UP
The last hill toward home, I ask,
“So, Mom. Any regrets? I mean
as far as Oregon and the farm.”
What good are regrets? she snaps.
The echo of my own sentiment,
in a voice so like mine, is
unnerving. Yet I persist. “If you
could change one thing about
those years, what would it be?”
You really want to know? Okay,
then, I wouldn’t have stayed.
I would have left your father.
The momentous admission
is not what I expected at all.
“So … tell me, why did you stay?”
She hesitates, but not for long.
This will probably sound stupid,
but I stayed to spite my mother.
She told me things would not
work out. I was determined
to prove her wrong. Sheer
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stubbornness kept me there
on the farm. That, and making
sure you and Andrea were safe.
I mull that over as I make the last left to home. “But everything
worked out okay with you and
Dad, right? So why would
you do things differently now?
How would things be better?”
I can’t say things would be
better. But I wouldn’t have
invested my youth in someone
who didn’t cherish me. Your
father loved me in his own
way, I guess. But it was selfish
love. I didn’t see that for years.
And when it became clear, it was
too late to go looking for something
new. He’s tried to make it up
to me, but only because he’s
afraid of being old and alone.
“But if all that’s true, how can
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you stand living elbow to
elbow with him in an RV?”
She shrugs.
Once you’ve given
up on filet mignon, chuck steak
isn’t so hard to put up with.
HAVE I BEEN ASLEEP
All these years? Navigating coma?
So holed up in my own little surreal world I never bothered to venture
beyond its nightmarish boundaries?
What else have I closed my eyes to?
“God, Mom, I am so sorry. I swear,
I never saw it. I mean, I know you
two used to argue …”
Oh yes, that we did. But don’t
apologize. You weren’t supposed
to be privy to the ugly details.
Anyway, we don’t argue much
anymore. We finally found a way
to compromise our divergent points
of view. I hope you and Chris can
manage that too. But if you can’t,
don’t wait too long to change things.
After a while, you’ll settle. And you
deserve better
. She gives me the old tongue cluck as the house rolls into view.
I pull into the driveway just as the sky on the western horizon blazes tangerine 382/881
grandeur. If I believed in God, I might think he was trying to tell me something.
I STEP OUT OF THE CAR
Into the breezeless evening.
The first thing that hits me
is the scent of hickory-tinged smoke, and it’s coming from my backyard.
Smells like the boys have dinner
started, comments Mom.
“I … uh … didn’t even know
we still owned a barbecue. It’s been so long since …” Since lazy summer
cookouts, Christian and I sipping drinks with friends, Shane and his buddies doing laps in a low wading pool.
Shane wanted to surprise you.
He’s a pretty great kid, you know.
“I do, actually.” Even if he does piss me off pretty regularly. I can hear him laugh, and he isn’t laughing alone.
For the first time in hours, I think 384/881
about Shelby. They haven’t neglected her, have they? I leave the shopping bags in the car, hurry into the house, start down the hall toward her room.
The door is open. The room is empty.
Unreasonably scared, I turn on one heel, practically run toward the backyard noise, on the far side of the living room glass. But as soon as I reach the door, I stop. I would say this is a scene straight out of some television family drama. Except it’s more like a sitcom.
Dad is scraping the grill while Shane and some strange boy push Shelby
in her stander back and forth between them. I may not have ever seen her
look so happy. The barbecue puffs,
and I know the smoke isn’t good
for her, but the boys seem to have her upwind, and how can I possibly bring 385/881
her inside when she is enjoying
herself in such an elemental way?
I think back to Christian.
She’s failing.
Wish he were here to see her now.
BUT NO
Instead, he’s in New Orleans,
schmoozing clients. Or maybe
he’s on his way home. I’m pretty
much the last person to know
if he’s coming, going, or touched
down somewhere for a layover.
Mom comes up behind me,
carrying a platter of marinated
rib-eye steaks.
Can you believe
they got everything ready, all on
their own? Shane must be more
organized than his grandfather.
“Not usually. Guess we should
join the party?” I open the door
for her, and at the sound, everyone’s attention turns our way. Shelby
sees me and gives a little squeal,
approximating
Hi, Mama.
I go over to give her a kiss
and, when I straighten, find
myself looking the unfamiliar
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boy in the eye. He is tall but
narrow-boned. Handsome.
No … pretty, with emerald eyes
and Irish black hair and a killer
smile, which he flashes at me.
Hi. I’m Alex. Great to meet you.
Shane starts to stutter some
explanation, but it is Dad who
says,
Alex is Shane’s boyfriend.
Bam. Shane has never brought
anyone home before, and when
his eyes finally connect with mine, I find something brand-new in his.
Pride. Still, the situation makes me uncomfortable, and I might have
a harder time with it if not for
the way my parents act so accepting, like it’s just another day at the Trasks’.
Probably a good thing Christian isn’t here after all. “Uh, good to meet you too, Alex. And thanks for helping
Shane entertain his sister.” Kind
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of a lot to ask of a new relationship, come to think of it. Alex must be
a pretty good kid himself. God,
look how far I’ve come—light-
years, in the last fifteen minutes.
HOW FAR
We claim to have come—
accepting all men as created
equal. Gender being the requisite
qualifier, as women
are