Authors: Ellen Hopkins
and that good shall prevail,
disregarding completely the
variables
that allow evil to take root,
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sprout. Branch out. Flower.
Andrea
FLOWERING
In a protected alcove just outside
my front door is a magnolia tree.
Everyone said it was impossible
to keep my tree alive. That one
hard-frosting winter would take
it out, right down to the roots.
That it would never grow. Never
flourish. Never, ever gift me with
its luscious fragrance. But we—
that tree and I—have proved ’em
wrong. It takes a lot of work: piling compost around its slender trunk
as autumn claims its leaves.
Blanketing its naked head when ice
and snow threaten. Uncovering it
when faux spring days deny winter’s embrace, and when late-season clouds march toward us, covering it again.
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Maybe it’s the super-tree strength
of one special magnolia. Maybe it’s all on me. But yes, we proved ’em wrong.
SYNERGY
That’s what we have, my magnolia
and me, and when I think about it,
I have to wonder if all relationships can be maintained and, more, made
to flourish, with the right combination of synergy and energy. All around me, I see them in various stages of meltdown: My parents’. My sister’s. My best friend’s.
Can they be salvaged with enough energy?
Lacking proper synergy, should they be?
When I consider how many years and
tears I invested in my own failing marriage, only to have it crumble because Steve and I had zero synergy except hormonal, the weight is suffocating. So why would I dare take a chance on believing there might be a future for Robin and me, totally on the strength of three days of great synergy, 537/881
most of it involving food, wine, and sex?
Call me an optimist. Or just call me crazy.
CRAZY
Because as of tomorrow, Rumble
from Down Under, with Robin
firmly at their helm, return to
Las Vegas, their home ground.
You might think that would be Sydney or Melbourne, but apparently American women are more into male strippers
than Aussie women are. Or at least
they tip better. And one of the major Vegas casinos is happy to ante up
regular male-stripper salaries to keep those women coming in to eat, drink, and play slot machines on their way to the showroom. From the start,
Robin made it clear that Reno was
a temporary gig. But, hey, Tahoe
was just a date. One that turned
into delectable sex. So when he asked to see me again, uh, was I going
to say no? The third time was
the talisman that made me want
to believe in magic again. So, yeah.
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I know I’m crazy. But Vegas isn’t so far away. A lot closer than Sydney.
SO TONIGHT
I’m cooking him dinner—the way
to a man’s heart and all. And he will meet Harley, a very big step for both of them. I have never introduced her to one of my post-Steve relationships.
They have never felt permanent enough.
This one doesn’t exactly feel that way, either. But it’s the closest I’ve come, and maybe it’s good for her to realize my life isn’t over because her father and I split up. He has moved on. Why shouldn’t I? “Thanks for helping with the apples.” She peels them carefully, trying not to take too much fruit along with
the skin.
No problem.
It’s the most she’s said since I invited her participation.
I think she wants to talk about Robin but isn’t sure how. Guess I’ll have to start. “You’ll like Robin. He’s from Australia, so he has a really brilliant accent. Plus, he’s cute. And funny …” Her knife action speeds up, then slows.
She starts to say something. Shakes 541/881
her head. “What? Talk to me, Harl.”
IT’S A VERY LONG FEW SECONDS
Before she finds her voice.
Finally, she spits it out,
I just never
thought about you falling in love.
“Whoa, now, wait a minute.
I never said anything about love.”
I know. But since you met him,
you’re … different. Happier, I guess.
“And that’s a bad thing … how?
You don’t want me to be happy?”
I want you to be happy because
of me. Not him. Not anyone else.
The knife begins to tremble. I go
to her, steady her hand with mine.
“Harley, you totally make me happy.
Well, except when I see you crushing on Chad …,” I try. But the joke fails to make her smile. “Look, you know
how you feel when Chad smiles at
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you? Every woman wants to feel that way. Being a mom doesn’t change
that, not even when you’re the mom
of the best kid in the universe.
Anyway, I’m just having fun with
Robin. We’re not getting married
or anything like that. You know?”
Still, the smile eludes her.
Not now,
you’re not. But that might change.
Irritation prickles. This is just dinner.
We’re not moving in together. “Harley, how come it doesn’t piss you off that your dad found someone new?”
I never expected anything different
from Dad. He’s got personality flaws.
Total crackup! “Ha!” I spit. “Ain’t it the truth? Ain’t it the truth?”
She’s laughing too, thank God.
“Honey, don’t worry, okay? Robin
and I have only gone out a few times.
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He’s leaving for Vegas tomorrow.
It’s a friendship, not a commitment.
I just wanted him to meet the girl
who will always be my top priority.
Let him see why I love you, okay?”
THE APPLES
Are peeled, sliced, and simmering
toward sauce before Harley asks,
Did you ever love Dad? I mean,
were the two of you really in love?
I expected the question long before this and have dreaded the discussion.
“I definitely thought so once. But
young love doesn’t always last.”
But it does sometimes, right? I mean,
look at Brianna’s mom and dad.
They’ve been together, like, forever,
and…
Anxiety edges her voice.
This narrow splinter of me wants
to pop her bubble. But for what
purpose? It will happen soon
enough. “Sometimes, it does.”
Have you ever been in love with
anyone besides Dad?
When I tell her not really, she nails me.
Then why did you get divorced?
I’ve answered this question one
hundred different ways. But
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ultimately, it came down to,
“Sometimes love isn’t enough.”
THE EVENING
Goes better than I hoped for.
Harley is completely charming.
Ditto Robin. The two joke and
discuss current events. At one
point, Robin looks at me.
Bright kid you’ve got here.
Then he winks at Harley.
Your mom takes after you.
The pork roast is juicy, hints
at the sage and garlic rub.
And when I tell Robin
he can thank Harley for
the applesauce, he smiles at
her.
Beauty, brains, and
a fabulous chef too? Where
have you been all my life?
After dessert, Harley vanishes
into her room. Robin glances
at me, but I cannot see a way
to engage in a lust-soaked
goodbye, so we settle for
several desire-laced kisses.
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God,
he says,
I’m really
going to miss you. But
we’ll see each other again
before too very long.
When I ask him if he promises,
he crosses his heart.
Promise.
MEANWHILE
It’s back to
the same ol’ grind.
The routine I have no choice but to adhere to.
Up early.
(Mostly) organic breakfast.
Dropping Harley at her summer program.
Work.
(Diverting) Vern’s flirtation.
Fixing other people’s problems, and lots of them.
Home.
(When possible) avoiding Steve.
Striving to be a good friend and better mom.
Dinner.
(Necessarily) watching TV with Harley before making her shower, scrub teeth, go to bed.
Nothing new.
It’s all the same as it was before, with one big exception. I can’t stop obsessing about Robin.
On a whim,
I call him. Just to say hello, that I miss him. His phone rings. Rings again. I’m about to hang 550/881
up when I hear,
Hello?
A woman. Not quite awake.
I ask for Robin.
Sorry, love,
she says.
He’s sleeping.
NOT QUITE AWAKE
That perfect state of being:
not here, exactly; not there,
completely. The beautiful,
horrible, lovely, awful place
where
what is and what might be
collide, merge. Create
alternative realities where
nothing is believable and
anything
locked inside imagination
is well within your grasp if only
you stretch a little taller. Shrink a little smaller. The key
is
on the table. At the bottom
of the rabbit hole, behind
the looking glass, whatever
your obsession is
possible.
Holly
YOU CAN’T OUTRUN OBSESSION
For quite some time, running
was my obsession—my major
fixation, anyway. It was a way
to gain control. Claim power.
The problem with power is
knowing what to do with it
once you finally get it. Some
people go a little crazy. Count
me one of them. Today, I’m
running along the Truckee River
bike path. I needed new scenery.
Something to make me forget
about the bog I’ve totally been
sucked into. Namely, falling—no,
smashing myself face-first—in
love with Bryan. It was supposed
to be fun. Innocent flirtation.
A little sex on the side, maybe.
It was
never
supposed to turn 553/881
into this all-encompassing need
to be with him. To hear his voice.
Return his kiss. Feel the heat
of him on me. Around me. Over
me. Inside me, where I absorb him.
I KNOW
Loving him is more than wrong.
It’s impossible. But I am snared.
We both have “others” who need
us. Others whom we are committed
to. And yet, we look to escape
our others. Search for hours away
from them, holding tight to what’s
right about us, midst the sin of us.
Early morning on the river, the air lifts, cool, though it will be ungodly warm come noon. I am surprised
to find myself approaching a couple, standing at the railing overlooking the rapids. They are younger—maybe
in their late twenties—and even from fifty yards away, everything about
the way they touch tells me they are insanely in love. I don’t want to look 555/881
like a voyeur, but I slow, savoring the interaction—connection oblivious to outside observation. Lost in each other, neither takes the slightest note of me. But I’m watching them—how
his hands never leave her sinewy body.
How her eyes never leave his striking face. Such beauty in youth! I will never be that young again, and while
I may be as beautiful as she, every day brings me closer to old, and what