Authors: Ellen Hopkins
that means. Cracked leather skin.
Pitted thighs. Watery memory.
Passing men without their noticing.
Envy sizzles, though I don’t care
about
her
. Don’t care about
him.
It is the
they
of them that plucks the jealous chord. They are what I want to be half of, and the half that I strive to be is why I run. And as I pass, I wonder 556/881
if they, one or both, have others,
waiting for half of them to come home.
EXACERBATING EVERY DOUBT
Is the day—my fortieth birthday.
Forty. Likely halfway to death,
and what do I have to show for it?
River rushing by repeats:
halfway, halfway, halfway.
A tidy little life. Decent husband.
Privileged kids. Showcase house.
Enviable lifestyle, looking in.
Distant traffic echoes:
tidy life, tidy life, tidy life.
But spend some time behind my
walls, you come to understand
the truth of living a cliché.
Crow on the high wire caws:
cliché, cliché, cliché, cliché.
I have no dreams that belong to
me. Not one personal goal to aspire to. No obstacles to conquer.
Breeze through the willows:
no dreams, no dreams, no …
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What happened to the girl who
believed her touch could demolish
the conventions choking the world?
THAT WAS ME, ONCE
I didn’t know exactly how I was going to do it, but I believed that I could. And that I would.
All I had to do was escape the straitjacket hold Mama and Papa had on me. Find my way beyond small-town rules and expectation to the freedoms a university afforded. Against heavy odds, I succeeded in that, and though I was still breaking trail, the journey had begun. And then I had to go and fall, butt over brains, in love.
Yes, I could have done worse than to tumble for Jace. But what I was too naïve to understand was the importance of self-discovery. Sucked up by the vacuum of filling him, I lost the essence of me. I should have known, having witnessed Papa unweave the tapestry of Mama’s dreams.
Filament by filament, it tattered into rags until she was eager enough for death to take her. What good is a tomorrow void of hope?
I’M NOT READY TO DIE
Not even close, but if I am halfway there, I’m damn sure going to do
some things first. I turn back toward where I parked my car, pick up my pace, composing my bucket list as I run:
One. Compete in and finish a marathon.
I don’t have to come in first or even in the top twenty, but I will not cross the line in the very back of the pack.
And so, I will train even harder.
Two. Experience things other people are afraid of. Skydiving. Bungee
jumping. Rafting class-four river
rapids. Maybe a taste of the S & M
scene. Maybe even more than a nibble.
Three. I will find Sarah Hill and demand to know if she is my mother. And if she is, I’ll ask her what she ever saw in a son of a bitch like Paul Driscoll, who won’t admit to sex with anyone but his wife.
Four. Remain open to possibilities, while doing my best not to damage
current relationships. But should it 561/881
come down to a choice between love
and responsibility, love will prevail.
BUCKET LIST COMPLETED
And run accomplished, I towel
off, head for home. When I get
there, I push loudly through
the door. The kids are planning
a surprise party for me. I, of course, know nothing about it, nor about
how tonight’s fancy birthday dinner with Jace is a total setup. Wink-wink.
I haven’t let anything on, not even to Jace. When I come in, the sneaks are in the kitchen, and when they hear me, their harried conversation quiets beneath a blanket of
Shshshshs.
“Hey, guys,” I call loudly. “Where
is everyone? Did you fix your
old mom a birthday breakfast?”
Uh, yeah,
Trace shouts back.
Special K, with a candle. I
can make you some toast with
ice cream too, if you want.
By the time I reach the coffeepot,
my children have attained covert
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status.
Thanks for reminding us
it’s your birthday,
says Brianna.
Yeah,
agrees Mikki.
We probably
would have forgotten all about
it. That would suck. How old
are you again? Oh, yeah, forty.
I give my sweet daughter a scathing look, pour a deep, black mug of coffee.
“Thanks for reminding me of
that.
It had almost slipped my mind.”
Trace comes over, gives me a bear
hug.
No worries, old woman. You
don’t look a day past thirty-nine
and three-quarters.
When did he grow into such a smart-ass, emphasis
on the “smart”? Takes after me
in that way, I suppose. “Keep
talking, and I’ll keep thinking up
ways to spend your inheritance
before I kick the bucket. Which
means, I guess, that I’ll have to hurry and spend it, since I’m getting so close.” Mik and Trace laugh, but Brianna
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is her usual serious self.
Do not say
stuff like that! Oh, and you stink.
Why don’t you take a nice bath?
SEMI-REBUKED
And totally amused, I agree to go
destink myself. First, I refill my mug, then head upstairs to my bedroom,
leaving the kids to their plotting.
Brianna was right. The scent of dried perspiration follows me, though I kind of like how it smells—like triumph.
I check my cell for messages. There are four.
From Jace:
I made six p.m. reservations
at Glen Eagles. Can we meet there?
How romantic. Maybe we should
go Dutch. The second is from Sahara:
Hey, girl. Call me. I want to shoot
something past you.
What’s up with her? Don’t need to know right
now. Next, a very subdued Andrea:
Can we talk? I need your advice.
Can’t remember the last time she
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asked for that! Finally, the person I wanted most to hear from. Bryan:
Can you get away Saturday night?
SATURDAY NIGHT
As the days go, one hovers above
the others when it comes to fun.
Sunday may run a close second,
being the favored day for resting,
but it’s really just a breather after Saturday
night
blazing. Those who value toil
above all else forget their shine
requires a weekly polish with
a healthy dose of play and Saturday is
when,
by and large, the most options
present themselves. Sidestep
every boundary, toss logic out
beyond the threshold, and
the
world
is just a marble spinning
on a plate of possibilities.
Little wonder, really, that
the man hell-bent on
making sense of it all often
goes
a little
crazy.
MARISSA
CALL ME CRAZY
Or, like Shane, call me ignorant
and self-absorbed, but I can’t help but wonder if his hooking up
with Alex, knowing the boy
is HIV positive, wasn’t just a way
to get back at Christian and me.
Or, at the very least, a way to
shake us up and seize our attention.
Shane says my concern is fake,
And anyway, he claims, HIV
is no longer an automatic death
warrant, but even if it was, he
never fails to use protection.
Condoms. Hardly infallible.
Why must he present me with
this kind of anxiety? Worry
has been a daily staple for four
years, and now the measure
has been doubled. Thanks, if
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the boys are to be believed,
to love. Young love. Young gay
love. My son’s young gay love.
Why is it harder to accept that
than to accept just plain “gay”?
GOD, I’M JUST SO SICK
Of digesting and redigesting
the facts of my life. Invariable facts that will not change, no matter how many times I regurgitate them.
I’m a one-trick camel.
I wish I could go back to flying.
Except, if I were wishing, and wishes did come true, I’d wish I could go back and become an airline pilot.
Not an aerial waitress.
And if I could take stuff back,
some other purser would have been
working first class that day, serving drinks and flashing cleavage.
I’d have been at the controls.
Only, there’s this. Changing
even the smallest moment means
every single thing about my life would no doubt be different. Everything.
Different isn’t necessarily better.
WHO KNOWS
Where I’d be without Shelby?
She keeps me grounded,
roots me firmly in
the “what is,” rather
than meandering
some “what could be.”
And every precious day
with her is a reminder
of the tenuous foothold
each of us has on this planet.
Who knows
what I’d be without Shane?
For every challenge
he tosses my way, the trade-off
is his indomitable spirit.
How he surrounds me
with it. The way it infiltrates
my pores. My cells.
I gave him birth, and yet,
he breathes life into me.
Who knows
who I’d be without Christian?
Would I be as strong?
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If I consider the breadth of our mutual years, must I not admit
that for every pain-infused minute, we shared twenty saturated with joy?
PHILOSOPHICAL MUSING
Is easy enough when the domestic
drama dies down and everyone
withdraws to their private corners.
An hour ago, everything blew to high heaven, the napalm being the news
about Alex’s HIV. I tried to keep it from Christian. But he happened to walk in on me, working at my computer. And up
on the screen was an HIV informational website. He thought the worst at first.
Of course, so did I. But while I reacted with fear, concern—anger, even—Christian, who was already well on his way to
drunk, detoured all the way to righteous.
A half-full tumbler of scotch in one hand, he marched straight to Shane’s room.
It was, of course, locked.
Open up!
he yelled at the wood. Shane, who was still sleeping off Friday night, took too much time.
Goddamn it, you little shit.
Open this fucking door. By the time
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Shane dragged himself out of bed and complied, Christian was agitated. He grabbed Shane by his tee shirt.
Are you plain stupid?
Shane fell straight into smart-ass.
Is
there another kind of stupid? Like,
uh, fancy stupid? Or beautiful stupid?
Christian gave the shirt a yank. The motion sloshed whiskey out of the glass and down the front of him, but he didn’t seem to notice.
Shut up. What the hell are you doing?
Trying to die? You can’t mess around
with HIV. The husky-voiced sentences
blurred around the edges.
AIDS is
God’s way of saying “gay” is a very bad
choice. Emphasis on the last word.
Shane remained unmoved.
Do you
know how Alex contracted HIV, Dad?
He was raped. Held down, choked,
and sodomized by his stepfather’s
brother. Good ol’ Uncle Stu. No
choice in that, Dad. None at all.
Christian turned a dozen shades of red.
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But he didn’t back down or apologize, though he did let go of Shane’s shirt.
He stalked to his room, changed his clothes, and slammed out the door with a parting
I’ve got some work to finish up.
THAT INEBRIATED
I’m pretty sure he won’t get much
work done. What he really needs,
I think, is some private room to
process today’s information slam.
He shouldn’t drive in that condition, of course, though I suspect he’s had a lot of practice. And what’s a wife to do? Try to wrestle the car keys
from his hand? I could worry. Should.
But what good would it do to shovel shit on top of manure? Shane remains sequestered in his room. I knock.