Authors: Ellen Hopkins
As per my bedtime routine (even when drunk on my butt), I used the Waterpik, brushed the residual goo away. Rinsed with plaque-killing mouthwash. Washed my face with age-fighting cleanser, toner. Slathered on the priciest night cream I can afford.
The “fine lines” (aka wrinkles) aren’t fooled by my ridiculous attempts to keep them at bay, but at least I can say I tried if I ever find someone to not-quite-impress but me.
In the winter, I wear flannel to bed, but in summer I slip between the sheets with nothing to mitigate the cool
envelope of cotton against my skin.
Not quite an hour later, that’s how 746/881
Jace found me. Enveloped. Awake. Naked.
I SWEAR, AGAIN
I did not believe he would come.
Hoped, yes. Meditated, yes, pressing mental invitation out my door, down the hall to the room, not my daughter’s that particular night, but offered
to a stranger-friend in desperate need of consolation. Yet who was more
in need? What happened after my door whispered open could not answer
that question. I closed my eyes, feigned sleep. He tiptoed bedside, assessed the rise and fall of my chest. When he asked,
May I please sleep here
tonight?
the request belonged to a child.
I rolled toward him, lifted the edge of the top sheet, and when he inched in, he smelled of straight soap,
fruity shampoo, and mint, atop a haze of merlot. He was naked too. But not in a hurry. There was no demand
within his request to share my bed.
There was only a dusk-soft plea, one I met with a necessary question.
748/881
“You won’t be sorry tomorrow, will you?” Wine or guilt, our lovemaking
that night was slow. Clumsy exploration, as if neither of us had ever done it before. We laughed about it, though.
And when we woke the next morning,
plaited together, we tried again. Much better. We both called in sick, fell back into bed. The third time was close to perfect. When we finished, sex scent hung thick as incense in the air. Jace held me, ear against his chest. I listened to the
whump-whump
. “Are you sorry?”
No.
His fingers combed through my sweat-damp hair.
I just don’t
know yet what this means. What
about you? Are you sorry?
“Not yet. Some things take time
to process. I suspect this is one.” Just then, Holly called. The necessary interruption snapped us into the moment.
I watched Jace go into the bathroom, new stories etched in the leather of 749/881
his skin. That’s how I’ve remembered him, over and over, for the last three days.
STORIES IN LEATHER
Once you celebrated
skin, bared
it on altars of sand,
anointed it with scented oils,
invited Apollo’s kiss.
It wasn’t like it had to be
suede—seamless,
buttery—and the muscles
underneath weren’t always granite
contours. But you didn’t care
who looked when you peeled
off faded jeans,
flaunted youth,
dove into sun-dimpled surf,
emerged, shedding sequins
of ocean. Oh, the cool
of cotton beneath your back,
desire a hot seep, lured
to the rain between
parted legs.
Nakedness comes harder
now, decades from Pacific cliffs—
eroding landscapes
751/881
crushing passion
into fossil,
skin a word-scarred journal,
creased around the eyes.
Holly
A JOURNAL
Is a dangerous thing to keep.
When you’re young, you have to
hide it from your parents, at least if it has anything interesting inside.
First crush.
First kiss.
First feel-up.
First fuck.
My high school journal recorded
all these, plus the details. I stashed it between my mattress and box
spring. One day Mom decided
to flip the mattress with a change
of sheets. That’s right, she found all my secrets, in one little book.
She went ballistic. Mama never
relied on grounding. She was more
of a belt person. You would think
wearing welt tattoos for a week plus might have made me more careful.
753/881
Reckless.
Irresponsible.
Egocentric.
Narcissistic.
Jace has accused me of being
all those things, and you know,
he’s right. I could throw a few
applicable terms in his direction.
Emotionally absent.
Short-tempered.
Unadventurous.
One-trick pony.
But what would be the point?
We’re pretty much stuck in limbo.
He knows the stuff in this very adult journal is mostly true. He’s hurt,
of course. I could try to tell him
he’s partially responsible. But it
doesn’t matter at all. The end result is still the same. I’m miserable here.
Jace, though miserable too, seems
oddly at ease the past couple of days.
Maybe he went out and got a revenge piece of ass. Wait. No, this is Jace.
Dedicated.
Faithful.
The epitome
754/881
of loyalty.
HE NEVER TOLD ME
Where he spent the other night, and I had zero right to ask. He came home, went about his business, and that was that. Except the wedge was wider.
Which means he probably
was
at his parents’ house. But you know, now that I don’t have to worry about keeping Jace happy, I sure don’t have to worry about pleasing his parents, do I? Bet they’d be pissed to know he and I are still sharing a bedroom. Cohabiting, totally to keep the kids in the dark.
School starts today. Mikayla launches her senior year, eight weeks pregnant, give or take. She’s determined to stay in school as long as she can. Deliver a healthy baby. The rest is still up in the air. And her father still doesn’t know.
756/881
We bribed Trace to keep his mouth shut with the promise of driver’s training, so he can get his license as soon as possible. He’ll be sixteen in January.
All he wants, he said, is a regular way to escape the insanity that is his family.
Oh, Trace. You’ve only chipped the ice-berg. Brianna begins her freshman year, all breathless expectation. Mikayla bought her sister’s silence with clothes.
Mik’s wardrobe is to die for, and they wear the same size. (At least for now.) Bri will be the best dressed in her frosh class, hands down. I watch my kids now, at the far side of their childhood, hustling around the kitchen, making lunches and approximating breakfast.
At least they didn’t have to catch
that damn six-thirty a.m. school bus.
Mikayla will drive them. Next thing 757/881
you know, they won’t need Jace or me at all. Freedom, as Papa used to say, is a spit and holler away. There’s a slingshot ride straight back to Elko.
I’VE BEEN THERE
A lot these past few days, in daydreams and in a nightmare or two. Returned to its house-heavy hillsides and flat tracts of playa and steep canyon climbs up into the Ruby Mountains. Relived great days, cheering at football games, and bad days, upchucking algebra. Recalled
the faces of good friends and boyfriends and sneaking off campus for a smoke and making out in a backseat or two.
And snaking through all of that, Mama and Papa and church and praying
I wouldn’t really, as Mama always said,
go straight down to the devil when
you die, because God doesn’t love
whores and liars.
Which I mostly was, in her eyes, because
the apple don’t
fall far from the tree. Only through
discipline and God’s loving-kindness
will you end up different than your mother.
My birth mother. Sarah Hill, no
longer a figment of my imagination.
A flesh-and-blood birth mother, whose 759/881
voice—gossamer thin as dragonfly
wings—I have committed to memory.
THE TIMING OF HER CALL
Couldn’t have been much worse.
My entire existence is in upheaval.
Emotionally, I’m a wreck. And right smack in the middle of it all, here comes the call I’ve been hoping for since I was old enough to understand what adoption was. It seriously took me an hour to process the idea that she might be inviting me into her life.
I picked up the phone to call her back three or four times. Finally, Mikayla dialed the number for me. When
Sarah answered, I could barely choke out, “Hi. Uh … this is Holly?” It came out a question. “Uh … you called
earlier?” Another question. Sheesh.
Holly. Yes. Well, this is awkward,
I know. But I was so happy to hear
from your daughter. Mikayla told
me you’ve been looking for me.
I never left Nevada, just in case.
I hoped … prayed …
Her voice 761/881
cracked. One big, long fissure.
And then we were both sobbing.
TURNS OUT
She lives just outside of Vegas.
Has been married twice but
not to my birth father, who is,
in fact, Paul Driscoll, who did,
in fact, have sex with someone
other than his wife,
several
times,
according to Sarah, and one of those times
resulted in me. Soon after
Sarah delivered me, she moved
to Tonopah with her parents,
one of whom still lives there.
My grandfather died several
years ago, but my grandmother,
Sally, is seventy-six and
looking to
live forever,
Sarah said.
I also have a half sister,
Tia, whom I will meet
in exactly five days, when
I fly down to Vegas with Mik.
After all her persistence
on this, not to mention
the results, I figure she
763/881
deserves to come with me.
And maybe, hearing Sarah’s
story firsthand will make
Mikki think long and
hard about having her
baby, and the probable
advantages of adoption.
ULTERIOR MOTIVES
Can come back to bite a person,
but I think a hunk of reality
is in order for my daughter.
Anyway, I don’t want to go alone.
I need someone to hold my hand.
I wish it could be Bryan, but that
would be completely inappropriate.
I thought about asking Andrea,
making it a girls-only birthday bash Vegas weekend. She turns thirty-seven on Friday. But that didn’t seem right, either. Sahara would totally make it that kind of a trip, so no.
And of course, Jace is a definite
uh-uh. Even before the implosion,
he was not supportive of my search.
Though we’re barely speaking
at this point, I had to let him know where Mikayla and I will be off to.
His response was not unexpected.
Whatever, Holly. Add a little more
765/881
shit to your plate. On the other hand,
maybe filling in the blanks will make
you feel complete. Sorry I couldn’t.
A VERY BIG PART OF ME
Is sorry he couldn’t too. Today
is my family’s thirteenth “first day of school.” I remember Mikayla’s
first day of kindergarten, how anxious she was to leave our little fold, unlike Trace, who flat refused to let go
of Jace’s leg. Is Jace thinking about that now, as he starts arranging
the few minutes left before the kids have to go?
Okay, lunches in backpacks. Everyone have their supplies?
Do you remember where to meet
after school? Mikayla, is your car
gassed up? Here’s some money.
Be sure to fill up on the way home.
Trace, could you please comb
your hair? Bri, you look beautiful.
You aren’t nervous, are you?
767/881
If I close my eyes and just listen, I can almost fall back into “normal.”
FALLING BACK
Is a multidefinition phrase.
There’s the clock, rewound
an hour to encourage early rising
in the shadowed months,
though the low slant of light
doesn’t
make crawling away from
the warm hearth of dreams
easier. In a way, this achieves
forward movement.
Falling back can also
mean
hurried retreat—a reverse
scattering, in earnest hope
of escaping injury, death, or
capture. The term might
also apply to a procrastinator,
starting
off well after the gun, unhurried
and unworried about finishing