Authors: Ellen Hopkins
PLAN IS TO STOP BY ON MARISSA’S
BIRTHDAY. ANYTHING SPECIAL
IN THE WORKS? LOVE, M.
Someone should do something
special for Missy’s birthday,
that’s for sure. Maybe hire
an assassin? Okay, maybe not.
I answer:
NOTHING SPECIAL PLANNED
YET. LET ME THINK ABOUT IT.
And now, even though Miss
specifically told me not to,
I spill the whole lurid tale
of spousal deceit. When I finish,
I consider the delete button.
But I don’t use it. Maybe Mom
can talk some sense into my sister.
Mother to daughter, from someone
who’s tripped in those sandals.
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I’ll get an earful from Missy,
or maybe the silent treatment.
But at this point, I think she needs solid, emotion-free advice.
I MEANDER OVER
To Facebook, where I find
two new friend requests.
The first is from Brianna:
HARLEY GAVE ME YOUR
FB ADDY. FRIEND ME, PLEASE.
DO YOU PLAY FARMVILLE?
A quick check of Harley’s page
shows three friends: Mikayla,
Trace, and Brianna. I make four.
The second request is from Vern.
NEW TO THIS FACEBOOK
THING. I NEED ALL THE FRIENDS
I CAN GET. HELP ME OUT?
Looks like he’s got plenty already, many of whom work at the DMV.
Wonder if they Facebook there.
I go ahead and accept. Why not?
There is also one new message.
From Robin.
THOUGHT THIS WOULD BE
A GOOD WAY TO STAY
CONNECTED. LET’S BE FRIENDS.
WHY HAVEN’T I HEARD FROM YOU?
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Piss-poor timing. I don’t
send him a friend request,
but I do return a message:
DIDN’T YOUR GIRLFRIEND
TELL YOU I CALLED?
DEFINITELY TIME
To get out of here for a few hours
of personal mother-daughter bonding.
“Harley,” I call. “Put on some shorts and tennies. We’re going for a ride.” The south shore Tahoe bike trails
are lovely this time of year—snaking through thick tracts of old-growth
evergreens, not far off the water’s edge. Harley and I have ridden them once or twice annually since she still pedaled a bike with training wheels.
Even in the heat of summer, altitude plus shade plus lake cooling mitigate heat, make the sugar pine–infused cruise pleasant.
It’s a short drive from the south end of Carson, maybe a half hour. Harley remains fairly quiet for the few miles up the mountain, past Cave Rock and Glenbrook, then through downtown South Shore, where 646/881
three blocks of casinos remind us we are still in Nevada until an unnoticeable state line crosses us into California. Snared by my own musings, I don’t think much about the dearth of chattiness until we reach the Y where Highway 50 goes east, while 89
turns west. As I choose the latter, it comes to me. “You’re awfully quiet.” The remark draws a huge sigh and I know whatever’s bothering her is big.
What if someone
tells you a secret, and you promise not
to tell anyone else, but it’s the kind of secret
somebody else really needs to know?
Is she psychic or something? “Well …
sometimes you do have to break a trust, if not telling means a person’s welfare might be in jeopardy.” Physical or mental.
Okay.
That’s all she says for the moment.
I expect more. But I give her the space she needs to make that decision
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without encouragement from me.
I SQUEEZE INTO
A crowded turnout. Other bikers
and hikers are already out on the trail.
We unload our bikes, check the tires for air, start on our way, Harley still silent. We pass Pope Beach. I can’t not think about that day here with
Robin, and I tumble into a regular funk, so I pedal faster, hoping to outpace the vacuum trying to suck me in.
Harley has no problem keeping up.
Her coltish legs are stronger than
mine. A mile or so on, out of breath, I pull to the side of the bike path where a little bridge crosses Taylor Creek. Harley and I watch the water for a few minutes. Finally, she decides to spill.
I promised I wouldn’t
tell, but I have to, even if Bri
gets mad at me. She heard Mikayla
on the phone, talking to Dylan.
Mikayla’s pregnant. She’s trying
to figure out what to do. She doesn’t
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want her parents to know, but I
think they have to, don’t you?
Not just big. A whopper.
SPILLING A SECRET
Whatever its size,
will have varying
consequences. It’s not
possible to predict
what will happen
if you
open the gunnysack,
let the cat escape.
A liberated feline
might purr on your lap,
or it might scratch
your eyes out. You can’t
tell
until you loosen the knot.
Do you chance losing
a friendship, if that
friend’s well-being
will
only be preserved
by betraying sworn-to-
silence trust? Once
the seam is ripped, can
it be
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mended again?
And if that proves
impossible, will you be
okay
when it all falls to pieces?
Holly
FALLING TO PIECES
That’s how my life feels. Fractured.
Crushed. Disintegrating. And the weird thing is, it’s all because of that stupid little word: love. I’ve fallen in love with Bryan, and it’s tinting everything normal about me with shades of insanity.
I’d have to be crazy to walk away
from nineteen years of marriage. Crazy to rattle the lives of my three children.
Crazy to break up the home I’ve so
carefully crafted. Find a way to support myself, when Jace takes great care of me.
And even if I decided to do all that, Bryan is married too. He’s made it clear he’s staying with his wife, no matter what.
A very big part of the “what” is
he swears he’s in love with me too.
He even wrote a poem for me. For me!
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I’ve read it a dozen times, almost have it memorized. I fold the paper, tuck it into my journal. Dedicated to Holly:
DRY SPELL
You are like rain, forecasted
to quench a summer’s thirsting,
thirst grown beyond easy need, to life or death.
I watch the clouds
approaching windward mountains, slate
bruising black beneath expectation.
The western window
darkens as, laden, the curtain falls,
descends to veil peaks and rifts, draws nearer.
Is it thunder that I hear?
Or is the sudden rumble but the flurry
of hurried birds, on wing against unceasing drought?
One warm, wet spatter
stings the dust, stamps its ragged mark,
imprints a welt of hope upon the arid parchment.
Promise sizzles in the air,
wrapped in threads of ozone, electric
with desire so bold it borders ecstasy.
Claim this vacant sky.
Cast your shadow, speak to me in thunder,
throb against thirsting skin and flesh grown fallow.
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Oh, give me rain!
Gift me with downpour, fill this empty well,
the reservoir drained to grit by lingering dry spell.
THE LAST STANZA
Gives me chills. Being with Bryan
is like walking in a downpour, thunder booming in the distance, the electric smell of ozone hanging in the air. He captured us perfectly. Thinking about him gets me up in the morning. Walks me through the day. Makes me smile, when nothing else can. It’s all wrong, and I know it. But what else can I do but steal as much time with him as possible? One very big
problem now is having sex with Jace.
I really don’t want him to touch me.
And he’s starting to notice. I’ve been trying to sneak into bed after he’s asleep.
That’s easy enough on weeknights, when he has to be up early the next day.
But on Fridays and Saturdays he stays up later. The last time I claimed a migraine he said,
Another headache? Funny,
you never used to be prone to them.
Better get in and see your doctor
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before I have to whack off so hard
my pecker gets blisters.
He smiled, but I don’t think he was being funny.
WONDER WHAT HE’D THINK
About the Holly who
flashed her boobs
for a free drink before
offering herself up like
a sacrificial piece of ass
at a club called the Topaz.
I worried about that girl
for years in the back of
my mind, though I didn’t
know why until the night
I first saw her in action.
Okay, I realize she’s always
been stashed inside of me,
and if she’d had an earlier
opportunity to reveal
herself, I would have
found that Holly sooner.
Marriage is a cover.
A safe place to stash
those unseemly desires
society doesn’t sanction.
Asylum. Not
for
the insane.
The kind that actually makes
you go just a little crazy.
I went a little crazy
that night. And it felt
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great. And now I’m afraid
I’ll want to do it again.
Remembering it almost
makes me horny enough
to go find my husband.
ALMOST, BUT NOT QUITE
I start to send Bryan a text. Reconsider.
His wife is on vacation this week,
so they’re spending it together in
San Francisco. Beautiful there, late August. Wish I were with him, riding cable cars and maybe taking in a Giants game at AT&T Park. And I hope
that’s all they do. Can’t stand the thought of the two of them sharing a bed
at the Fairmont. That should be me!
Does Bryan ever get jealous, thinking about Jace and me together? Does
he simply expect that’s what I’d do?
This territory is all so new. How can I be jealous of him with his wife,
when seeing him actually having
sex with Lorraine didn’t bother
me at all? Oh, I know. It’s that damn little word again, only in a whole
other context. Does he love his wife?
God, it’s just all so confusing, and I’m totally straight. Maybe that’s what I need.
A late-morning Bloody Mary, to help 661/881
put it all in perspective. Perfect. Why not turn into an alcoholic too?
I’VE JUST ABOUT SOLD MYSELF
On doing exactly that, when the phone rings. Home phone, not cell. Can’t be Bryan, not that I’m obsessing about him or anything. Nope. Andrea. “Hey, girl.” Long pause. Deep sigh. Then,
Holly, I probably have no business
telling you this, and in fact, I’ve
debated whether or not to keep
quiet for a few days now. Harley
told me something that Brianna
confided in her. Something you
really need to know. I only hope
my waiting so long didn’t allow
Mikayla to make a bad decision.
“Mikayla?” What is she talking
about? Another long pause, and
finally she says,
Mikayla’s pregnant.
Brianna overheard her discussing
the problem with Dylan on the phone.
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She’s considering her options.
IMPOSSIBLE!
That’s my first thought. Mikki has
been grounded all summer. But, no.
Not quite all summer. And then
there were those nights she went
out her bedroom window. Those
early mornings we caught her
sneaking in. I realize Andrea is
waiting for my response. “I … uh …
Are you …?” But no, she can’t be