Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Since when has that concerned you?
Christian was raised Methodist and
attended church regularly when
we met. But as the years progressed 428/881
and life got busier, Sundays began
to blur into every other day
and he made time for services less
and less. He slammed the door
on religion completely when a hit-
and-run driver took out his mom
in a crosswalk, a few weeks before
Shelby was born. I haven’t heard
him mention salvation since.
Now, he says,
I’ll pray for you.
Cinches tight the cloak of silence
I know so well. Shane recognizes
it too.
Well, Dad, if you really
believe in God, you’ll quit worrying
about me. Because if there
is
a God,
he wants me this way. This is the way
I was born. This is the way he made
me. You, on the other hand, weren’t
born with a whiskey bottle. Maybe
drinking isn’t technically a sin,
but the way it makes you treat
your family surely must be. Don’t
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bother praying for me. Pray for
yourself. He leaves before he can
see Christian’s eyes fill with tears, to overflow. He leans his head into
his hands. Could he be praying?
WHEN HE LOOKS UP
His eyes are dry. Mushroomed.
Tinted crimson. But totally dry,
tear quota used up for the day.
I want to hug him. Instead,
I settle for, “Maybe you should
go back. To church, I mean.”
He flushes.
What are you
saying? That I need saving?
Or God’s forgiveness, maybe?
“I didn’t say—or imply—any
of that. All I meant was, it used
to be important to you, a source
of comfort. I hate to see you
hurting this way. And I wish you
could reconcile with your son.”
Fine. Sorry. Shouldn’t have
snapped at you. But faith is
a personal thing. I don’t even
know if I own faith anymore.
I think God has deserted me.
No, worse. He kicked me after
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he knocked me down. Okay,
I haven’t been perfect. But who
deserves what he’s handed me?
“I think you mean us, right?
Last I looked, we were in this
together. That hasn’t changed,
at least, not for me. You have
pulled away. That is obvious
to everyone, especially Shane.
Can’t you see how he’s hurting?
Is it really because he came out—
told the truth about such an integral piece of who he is? I guess
you don’t have to accept it.
But gay, straight, or ambiguous,
he is still your son. Would
you really push him out of
your life? For any reason at all?”
He stares at me silently for
a good long while. Pours
another coffee, plus. Finally,
he answers with three one-syllable
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words, not the ones I want—or
expect—to hear.
I don’t know.
BY NATURE
I am Earth Mother.
Solid. Placid.
Caregiver.
Peacekeeper.
Sometimes, I’m told,
I become Wood.
Hard. Smooth.
Immovable.
Predictable.
I also have Water days.
Cool. No, cold.
Conflicting currents.
Eddy. Whirlpool.
But at this moment,
I am Fire.
Rash. Brash.
Indomitable.
Unstoppable.
Words rage up in me.
Flare. Burn.
Scalding.
Blistering.
Shoot from my mouth,
dragon flames.
“You bastard.
Shane is your son.
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Like it or not, he always
will be. Damn it, you used to
love him so much. What the fuck
happened?” How can love disappear?
LOVE DISAPPEARS
Like raindrops pelting
lake water. Splash by splash,
spattering concentric rings,
small
reminders
left upon the storm-mirrored
plane. And in the geometry,
integral to the pattern,
a hint
of
immortality—the recurring
journey of the Genesis sea,
earth to sky, and back again,
what
was
and what will be, inextricably
married. The promise
of tomorrow, buried in
once
upon
a time.
Andrea
Buried in Books
That’s where Harley’s been since
her blowup with Brianna. She even
quit exercising, and her moping
around is getting to me. Which is
why Holly and I planned a little
surprise for the girls. Hopefully,
it will lead to reconciliation, rather than all-out war. I’m pretty sure
Harley will balk if I tell her where we’re going—even without
the information that her “former
BFF” is coming along. So I grab
her swimsuit, pack it with mine,
a couple of towels, and a healthy
lunch. Still liking how the size
eights are fitting. Think I’ll leave the hot dogs alone. I find Harley
where I figured I would—in the old
recliner, nose-deep in some dystopian tale. I tap her shoulder. “Let’s go.” 437/881
The book falls back against
her face and her eyes roll up—
just barely—over the cover.
Where are we going?
she mumbles from behind the chunky sheaf of pages.
“Never mind. Just come on.
You can bring your book.”
Harley follows me dutifully out
to the car. I start to throw the beach bag in the back, and it hits me
that I forgot sunscreen. “Be right
back.” I rush into the house—it’s hot in the car—and as I come inside,
the telephone is ringing. I let it go to voicemail, run for the SPF 30.
But as I start toward the door,
I can hear the voice on the answering machine.
Robin. From the Atlantis
the other night…
Like I wouldn’t recognize the accent …
enjoyed
talking with you and wondered if
you’d like to go to brunch with me …
A familiar horn honks outside. Harley is losing patience. I don’t pick up but do pause long enough to write
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down the number he leaves.
Not one hundred percent certain
I’ll call him back. Men are distractions.
Then again, he was a pleasant enough distraction. Guess I’ll think about it.
I START THE CAR
Head north, toward Reno.
Harley asks again,
Where
are we going?
Adds,
Mother?
She saw the beach bag and
sunscreen. Might as well tell
her. “Wild Waters.” But now
I detour off the main highway,
into Washoe Valley.
Why are
we going this way, then? Mom?
Only one reason why we would.
She has to know. So, “We’re picking up Holly. And Trace. And Brianna.”
No way! Why would you do
that to me? I’m not talking to
Bri, and you damn well know it.
“Excuse me? You did not just cuss
at me, did you?” She rarely even
raises her voice. “Unacceptable.”
Sorry,
she says. But she is fuming.
This is a dirty trick.
We skirt the serpentine edge of Washoe Lake, 440/881
little more than a shallow
silver waterhole this time
of year. Still, the landscape
is serene. As we maneuver the curves, steeped in silence, I can feel Harley’s anger ease. “You and Bri have been friends for a really long time. True friends don’t let other people come between them, especially not guys. Face it.
You’re miserable without her. I’m
betting she’s miserable without you too. Find a way to work things out.”
Whatever
is what she says, but I know she’s thinking it over.
When we get to Holly’s, I give three short honks before I open the door
and am sucked into a vacuum of early August heat. Usually, the weather
tempers by now. But today, mid-
morning, no animal moves and no
bird flies. I leave the car running, air-conditioning on. “We’ll hurry,”
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I promise. “If you wouldn’t mind,
though, I’d appreciate you getting
in the backseat.” I’m pretty sure
she
does
mind, and also relatively certain she’ll honor my request.
SHE DOES, OF COURSE
Holly and kids are ready to go,
so we return to the car in short
order. Harley is in the backseat,
scrunched up against the passenger
side door. She makes a point of
keeping her face against the window while Brianna and Trace climb in
beside her. Bri pushes her brother
into the middle position.
Hey,
he complains.
Chill, would you?
You chill,
says Brianna.
But first,
move over. You’re squashing me.
She gives another shove and Harley
snaps,
Both of you are squashing me.
Please stop bickering!
says Holly.
I’ve got a major headache.
I don’t have one now, but if the day progresses like this, I definitely will.
“Ibuprofen in my purse, water in back.” 443/881
I turn onto the main drag, behind
an eightyish woman, snoozing along in a big Pontiac. “What’s up with Mikayla?
She didn’t want to come?” And now
the guy behind me lays on his horn.
Mikki is grounded again,
says Brianna.
Got caught sneaking out the window.
Yeah,
says Trace.
She really ought to
get a life besides screwing Dylan.
Must you air all our dirty laundry?
asks Holly, chasing Advil with Dasani.
Not all. Only the stuff with used
condoms in the pocket,
jokes Trace.
That makes us all laugh, even Holly.
At least until the guy behind us honks again.
Stupid noise!
Holly turns, flips the guy the bird.
Big beep, little penis.
Harley gasps. I wish I could see
the color of her face right about now.
Mom!
exclaims Brianna. But she 444/881
is still laughing. Like the rest of us.
ICE BROKEN
I concentrate on driving
(thank God Old Woman
has turned off and Pickup
Dude passed me, even if
it
was
on a blind curve.)
Holly reclines her seat,
much to Harley’s chagrin
(she doesn’t comment,
but the huff is audible),
closes her eyes to the light.
I can’t help but listen in
to the conversation behind
me (as opposed to an actual
argument, though it moves in
that direction), in snippets:
Brianna:
I don’t want to
fight anymore, okay?
Harley:
What would you say
if I kissed your brother?
Trace:
Hey, wait just a sec.
Bri:
I’d ask why you didn’t
have better taste in guys.
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Trace:
Hey, wait just a sec.
Brianna:
I’m really sorry. I swear,
I only like Chad as a friend.
Harley:
I like Trace as a friend.
Doesn’t mean I’d kiss him.
Brianna:
I only let Chad kiss me
to know what it’s like. I figured
since he’s older, he’d be good.
Trace:
Kinda too much info.
Harley:
So … was he good?
Brianna:
I’m not sure what
good is, but if that was it,
I’d hate to know what bad is.
Trace:
I know what bad is.
Harley:
What wasn’t good?
Did he have yucky breath?
Brianna:
No. It was just kind of
icky wet, and we crashed teeth
together. And then, his tongue …
Trace:
Enough. Holy crow! Way
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