Authors: Ellen Hopkins
not reviewed in the same fashion—
their fashion hopefully better
suited to the bedroom
than the boardroom. And,
you
know, homosexuals not
really being “men,” cannot
be judged equivalent
to their stiffer-wristed brethren.
On religion, well, some Christians are willing
to make room for a Jew or two
in their inner circles. But Mecca-
facing prayer must be met
with flaming crosses. Close your eyes to
the details, the big picture
can still be viewed through
rose-colored glass. But
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go
any distance beyond
the rhetoric, truth
becomes a shadowed lens.
Andrea
All RHETORIC ASIDE
I’m kind of happy that little prick Chad tossed Harley’s affection
to one side.
I hate seeing her hurt. And I hope
she’ll find it in her heart to forgive Brianna,
who I’m really quite sure did nothing to encourage Chad’s interest in her.
Well, except
to let him kiss her. Harley thinks Bri led him on, but she is an innocent
thirteen.
Holly says she’s mortified, and I believe it. Just have to convince Harley to believe it
too. Meanwhile, she’s not dying to visit Steve every day. Hooray. And it’s all because of
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that little prick, Chad. Valuable lesson, learned before love plunged her into a sea of regret.
FIVE DAYS AFTER THE FACT
Harley is still fuming, however. That girl knows how to hold a grudge. Hmm.
She might have gotten that from me.
But unlike me, who scarfs everything in sight when I’m mad, Harley will
hardly eat a thing. I keep telling her I’ll have to take her in for intravenous fluids and she keeps telling me not to worry, and anyway, I’d probably pass out at the sight of that big hollow needle, poked into her skinny arm. When did she get so wise? Even worse than not eating is how she stays in her room, only coming out to exercise, pee,
and once in a while argue with me.
Thank God Mom talked her into
going with her, Dad, and Shane to
Tahoe tonight. Harley’s first rock
concert will be Bob Dylan. “Harley!
You almost ready? They’ll be here
soon.” Out of her dark dwelling
she comes. Too much of her legs—
summer-browned from the walking—
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poke out from beneath a very short
denim skirt, and the skimpy tank
top grips her, tight as skin. Yowza!
“Uh, wow. Where did you learn to
put on makeup like that? And where
did you get it?” Pink eye shadow. Black liner. Blue mascara. Cranberry gloss.
I actually know the answer before
she says,
Cassie bought them for
me, and she showed me how to
do my eyes. She says my skin
is flawless. I don’t need foundation.
I could tell her she, in fact, has
a small ribbon of freckles across
a face often pale, but now sun-tinted.
Instead I just say, “No, you don’t
need foundation. You look great.”
She looks like a child trying
too hard to look like an adult.
But had I said that, she wouldn’t
have rewarded me with her beautiful smile, the way she does now.
Thanks.
A horn honks, outside and near.
“That must be Gramps and Gram.
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You have fun. But be careful. You
never know what kind of …” Don’t
finish it. “Never mind. Go on, now.”
WHY DO I FEEL
Like she’s headed off on her first date or something? I watch her try to imitate a slink, but seductress she isn’t. Not yet.
Speaking of vamps, however, Holly
called and asked if I wanted to go
with her to Rumble from Down
Under tonight. Beefy guys, stripping to thongs, have never seemed all
that appealing. But Holly being Holly, she talked me into it.
It’s free! Sahara,
from my writing group, scored the tickets.
And guess what. She pulled some
strings and got us into the wrap
party.
Holly didn’t mention exactly what kind of strings, but if anyone could pull them, I’d expect it to be her. This Sahara must be a real piece of work. Whatever. I haven’t been
out in a while. I’m game. I guess.
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And only a smidgen worried.
WORRIED ABOUT WARDROBE
What does one wear to watch
overbuilt Australian men strip
down to their underwear? And
the bigger question. What does
one wear to party with those men
after they’re finished stripping?
Maybe I should have asked my
daughter to help me pick my outfit.
Maybe I should call up Cassie
to come over and teach me how
to line my eyes much too heavily.
Maybe I should call Holly and tell
her to forget the whole freaking
thing. On the other hand, maybe
I should take a lesson from Harley
and throw all caution to the wind.
I’ll never compete with Holly,
but I can take a page from her
handbook (
The Holly Handbook—
ha!) and wriggle into the smallest
dress I possibly can—a size eight.
Whoa. Diet and exercise
do
work.
Have to thank Harley for that too.
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Now, if I can just find shoes that go.
TEETERING
On heels that don’t quite work
for me, in a dress I can’t quite believe fits again, I meet up with Holly
and Sahara at the Atlantis. I’ve always liked this casino because it isn’t all the way downtown. Easy parking.
Easy-to-get-to restaurants. And now, an easy-on-the-eyes revue for girls.
At least, that’s what they promise.
I join the women—one friend,
one totally unfamiliar—at the bar.
Sahara assesses me like a real estate appraiser looking at a piece of aging property.
Holly has told me, like, everything about you. Hope none of it is true.
She laughs, but the joke is totally lost on me. Because, was it a joke?
“Cool. Holly hasn’t told me, like,
one little thing about you. Hope
it’s all true.” Wow. Did I just say that, alcohol-free? Instant dislike between 401/881
us, bad chemistry Holly doesn’t notice at all.
I didn’t know you wore makeup!
Let alone, a dress like that one. Brilliant!
Pretty sure that was not the right
adjective, but whatever. I almost
order my usual beer, reconsider.
This is supposed to be a let-your-
hair-down kind of night. “Mai tai,” I tell the bartender. We pay for our drinks and head for the showroom,
Sahara in the lead. Casinos are crazy.
This one has a tropical theme, with trees and waterfalls and palm fronds representing grass huts, all surrounding the usual flashing lights and coins clunking into slot machine trays
and people whooping through cigarette smog. At least the show will be smoke-free. A long chain of cackling, crowing women has already formed at the entrance.
Sahara opts for the invited guests line.
Apparently, we are that. She greets 402/881
the guy at the door like they’re old pals, and the next thing I know, we are whisked down the aisle, all the way to the front row. Figures. The seats fill and the room throbs with noise until the lights go down.
NOW THE ROOM THROBS
With music. Exceptionally
loud country. The crowd
claps and a few
Yee-haw,
and wouldn’t you just die being
with someone who did that?
Even Holly does not do that.
I suck my mai tai—strong!
Watch as a lineup of men
rodeos onstage in jeans and
cowboy boots. They are all
very different—long hair.
Spiked hair. Dark. Ice blond.
Slender. Thick. The one
thing they have in common
becomes clear as soon as the
shirts come open—six-packs.
Scratch that. Twelve-packs,
maybe. I’ve never seen abs
so sculpted. Not even on
those stupid exercise shows
Harley has been watching.
Holy crunches! These guys
really have spectacular bods.
They must live in the gym.
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Hey,
says Holly as the opening number ends.
How come their
pants are still on? I’m looking
for G-strings.
She slurps her mojito and signals to a cocktail
waitress, who makes her way
over.
No worries, mate,
says Sahara, imitating the [very hot]
host’s thick Australian accent.
Eventually, the pants do come
off.
And they do, with the very next number, a solo by a guy
with not much hair anywhere
and piercings that look like
they hurt. I turn to Holly to
ask if she would ever wear
a ring through her nipple,
despite knowing the obvious
answer—of course she would.
I find her leaning toward
Sahara, saying something into
her ear. Maybe it’s the mai tai,
or maybe it’s just selfish friend
me, but jealousy pokes viciously.
JEALOUSY
Is a rockslide—one pebble
of suspicion initiates
an avalanche, leaves sanity
buried beneath the slag.
Few
emotions attack with such
intensity and yet, with rare
exception, accomplish so little.
It can be difficult to
circumvent
the little green monster
who loiters, jaws snapping,
never far from view.
Decide to swim with him,
the undertow
will capture you, drag you
to deep, drowning places.
A word to the wise: never
underestimate the power
of envy.
Holly
THE POWER
Of connections is free tickets.
Front-row seats at sold-out shows.
Being called up onstage by men
with ripped torsos, who jerk off
their pants two inches from your
face, encourage you to touch
the bulge in their Speedos
before returning you to your
up-close seat. Andrea is currently
up onstage, on her knees in
front of a thong-clad Australian
hunk, who rocks toward her as if …
She looks half horrified,
half fascinated. She’ll either
kill me or kiss me when she gets
back. It was my idea to send
her up there, so I lied and told
the emcee that it’s her birthday.
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“Just play along with it,” I told
her. Okay, practically begged
her. I have to admit I was a little surprised when she said okay.
Then again, I’m pretty sure
it’s been a while since she’s had
anything quite like this guy
literally in her face. If ever.
I’ve never. But maybe that will
change later tonight. Only
for real. Only there is that
regular gossip about male dancers.
“So …,” I say, too loudly, but
how else will Sahara hear me?
“Is it true these guys are gay?”
Can’t speak for all of them,
but I know for a fact that at
least a couple are pure hetero.
Mr. Hunk pulls Andrea to her
feet, sends her offstage with
a slap to the ass. As she goes,
tilting a bit from the booze
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combined with skinny heels,
the music changes to
Happy Birthday
.
THE AUDIENCE SINGS ALONG