Authors: Ellen Hopkins
UNEXPECTEDLY
Shane gets up, rinses his plate,
puts it in the dishwasher, then
comes over and puts a hand on
my shoulder.
I can take care of
Shelby for a couple of hours.
You go to the baby shower.
I shake my head. “If something
happened, it would take me too
long to get back. And it’s not
that important for me to go.”
Mom, you never get to do any-
thing. It’s really fucked-up of
Dad to load everything onto
you. She’s his daughter too.
He’s saying everything I’m
thinking. “I know. But it is
what it is. Right now, will you
please help me take her outside?”
Sure. But only if you stop crying.
Then he does something he hasn’t
in I can’t remember how long—
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he hugs me. Like he loves me.
Shelby will have to wait a few
more minutes. Tears fall in earnest.
A FEW MINUTES
Late waking, you could
miss a train. But while
you wait for the next one,
your
world might start spinning faster.
Someone new saunters
off the subway and into your
life
with nothing more than
a smile at the exact right
moment. Sometimes fate
is
generous. The challenge is
acknowledging the gifts
she offers. They are
not
always obvious. At times
one appears, subtle
as a moon shadow. A smile,
the same
as a thousand other smiles,
except for the intent
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behind it.
Andrea
IF I HAD TO TELL THE TRUTH
Every time I opened my mouth,
my sister wouldn’t be speaking
to me right now. Because the truth
is, I could have waited a couple
of hours to go pick up Harley. Not
like her dad is on his deathbed.
But Shelby is. I see her slipping
closer and closer to her destiny.
And it’s a damn hard thing to watch.
Poor Missy. She deserves a few
hours away from the overwhelming
pressure. But today, I just couldn’t take the weight myself. I feel selfish.
I feel relieved to be in my car, almost to Fallon—a forgettable town at
the very edge of the Great Basin playa.
Farmers and Navy families. (Whose
idea was it to put a naval air station 100/881
smack in the middle of sand dunes?) And not a few antigovernment
libertarians, one of them being my ex.
A HIGH SCHOOL HOOKUP
That’s what we were, me a stoner
and Steve a defensive lineman
jock who liked getting buzzed
when he wasn’t knocking down
quarterbacks. Not a partnership
made in heaven, but dating anyone
on our state champion football
team put you at the top of our
very short social ladder. I liked
being up there, even if it meant
taking a fair amount of verbal
abuse from the boy who supposedly
loved me. Back in the day, I didn’t classify getting cussed out regularly as abuse. Maybe because my dad
treated my mom the same way.
It was normal. And so was sex,
of the unprotected variety. I had
an unforgettable senior year—
cherry popped just before Christmas.
Pregnant by Easter. Married right
after graduation. I miscarried a week 102/881
later. After I healed, I went straight to Planned Parenthood for birth control.
Steve found work as a roofer. DMV
was hiring, and somehow I qualified.
The daily fighting began. But I refused to admit our marriage was a mistake.
Four years into the ugly mess, for
some ridiculous reason, I decided
a baby could fix things. Harley
was like an umbrella in a hurricane.
When I had to take maternity leave, Steve worked ever-longer hours.
He came home, relaxed with a beer
or ten. Then he took a major fall.
Back surgery. Hospital bills. Meds
for the pain. Addiction to meds.
It isn’t an unusual story. But it
turned out to be his story. Mine too.
I stayed with him way too long.
At the end, the decision was easy
to make. Harley was six and in
school. I already had a decent
job, with bennies and a generous-
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enough salary to pay rent, utilities, and feed my daughter and me.
Steve didn’t even try to keep us.
IT’S AN HOUR
From Reno to Fallon. At least
on the return trip, I’ll have
Harley’s enthusiastic conversation
to keep me from getting swept
away by a river of painful reverie.
Steve is sitting outside, smoking
with an auburn-haired woman, a few
years younger than he. She is tall, and straighter than she should be
considering the size of her breasts in relationship to relative body fat.
Fakies, for sure. Not that he’d care if they’re real or silicone. Not that I care, either. Steve doesn’t bother to introduce us, so I say, “Hi. I’m Andrea.” That’s all it takes.
Harley’s mom,
right? God, she is just the sweetest
thing. I’m taken with her, ya know?
Uh, yeah. She’s my kid.
Oh. I’m
Cassie. Cassandra, but, ya know.
I don’t exactly know much, but
I’m starting to guess a lot. She talks about a hundred miles per hour
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and weighs about the same number
of pounds. “Where
is
Harley?”
FINALLY
Steve opens his mouth.
She’s inside,
playing XBox 360 with Chad.
Okay, but “Who’s Chad?” Somehow,
I guess the answer before it comes.
Cass’s kid.
When I start toward the door, Steve says,
Wait. I have something to tell
you. I got a job in Reno. I’m moving back
next week. I want to see Harley more …
Yeah,
chimes in Cassie.
I told him
a father needs to be in his kid’s life.
Thank you very much, Ms. Anorexia.
“Uh. Yeah. Well, we can discuss it.” Not right now, however. I semi-storm the door. Inside, my sweet, preadolescent daughter is sitting practically knee to knee with a completely adolescent boy who looks exactly like his mother. Minus the fake tits, of course, and plus a few zits. The two kids 107/881
are completely absorbed by some sort of gun-fire game. “Hey, Harley. What are you playing?” She doesn’t even look at me.
Wicked
Warfare. It’s really cool.
She does glance at Chad, and I do not like her expression—
total adoration. She just met this guy, and he’s not all that, and he’s way too old, and … “Okay. Well, we’ve got to go.”
Just one minute. Let me finish this
round.
She keeps blasting away at something on-screen … “Wait.
What are you shooting? Not kids?”
Don’t worry,
says Chad.
They’re not
American kids. They’re Muslims.
What the hell? “Harley …” I keep my voice controlled. “Let’s go. Now.”
Finally, she turns her face toward me, and what she sees convinces her I’m not kidding.
She puts down the controller.
Bye,
Chad. I’ll see you soon.
I only hope 108/881
she notices he doesn’t acknowledge
her, except to say,
Yeah. See ya.
ON OUR WAY
To the car, Harley goes over to Steve, gives him a big kiss goodbye. Then, against all reason, she rewards Cassie the same way. When was the last time she kissed me? A little monster, not positive of its color, but likely green, begins a slow nibble in my belly.
Not fair! Where was this man
through eight years of parent-teacher conferences? Where was he when
she sang holiday carols and recited two-line soliloquies in school plays?
As for his girlfriend, regardless
of how long she’s been in his picture, Harley never met her before yesterday.
She doesn’t deserve my child’s
affection. And neither does her son.
Guess we’re past due for that mother-daughter talk. Wonder if a churn of stomach acid can kill that little monster.
HALFWAY HOME
I’m still working on how to approach the subject when Harley saves me
the trouble.
How do I lose weight,
Mom?
She has always worn a few extra pounds, but not a whole lot.
“Fewer calories, more exercise.”
She assesses herself in the mirror.
Would you help me? Please?
“Of course. But why are you
worried about it, all of a sudden?”
I want to wear skinny jeans, like
Brianna does. They’re the style.
“You and Bri have totally different body styles, Harley. Even if you lose—”
I don’t care! All the boys like her,
and they never like me. I hate it.
Where is this coming from? Oh.
“This isn’t about Chad, is it?” It is.
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He’s really cute. And he’s really nice.
And he doesn’t have a girlfriend.
YIKES! MAJOR CRUSH
Her first, at least that I’m aware of.
And it happened so fast. Oh my God.
Do they all strike like rattlesnakes—
quick and venomous and relentless?
As she goes on about Chad and how
he taught her to play
Wicked Warfare,
something he said comes back to me.
They’re Muslims.
“So does Chad go to Fallon High?” Please, please say yes.
No. He goes to Reno High. Isn’t that
awesome? Cassie got Dad his new job
at Terrible’s, and they’re going to live
together. So when I go see Dad, I’ll get
to see Chad too. Isn’t that awesome?
I’m on a diet as of today. Can we stop
at the store and get healthy food?
’Cause you buy too much junk food,
and you know me. I can’t say no to …
I stop listening. Not even her chatter bombardment can keep me from plunging into that river of reverie. It’s not that 113/881
Harley’s growing up. That, I can (sort of) take. (Minus all the “awesomes.”) What I can’t take at all is Steve helping her do it.
REVERIE
Is a place to cozy into
when you’re alone and
in need of understanding.
It’s a familiar space
where
candles light the corridor
to yesterday. Or tomorrow.
Take the left fork to what
will be, the right into
memory.
There, in that vast,
mirrored hall where
dreams echo without
change, illusion
gains
transparency. Linger
awhile and the murky
water of recollection parts,
allowing essential
clarity.
Sometimes it happens
like that. Sometimes
you just get lost.
Holly
FAMILY DYNAMICS
Are not static. They can change with a choice.
A whim. Happenstance. Mikayla goes to a party.
Gets busted. Gets grounded. Without technology.
She actually picks up a magazine.
Time.
Sees a story about how the Internet is changing the way adoptees locate their birth parents.
Have you ever thought about trying this?
she asks.
I mean, c’mon, Mom. No-brainer.
And the weirdest thing is, no. I never thought about using Facebook to try to find my birth parents. I’ve talked about searching for years.