Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #General, #Adolescence, #Family, #Social Science, #Human Sexuality, #Novels in verse, #Family problems, #Emotional Problems, #Psychology, #Social Issues, #Prostitution, #Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #Women's Studies, #Families, #Emotional Problems of Teenagers, #Dating & Sex, #juvenile
investments I made was in a sapphire blue satin nightshirt
*
with matching bikini panties.
Good thing my cute stalker,
Bryn, didn't see me buy
this outfit. He would have
*
followed me home for sure.
I still have his card in my purse.
Not sure what for. Anyway, all dressed down in sapphire
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satin, damp hair, and smooth
skin perfumed with ginger,
I feel sexier than I ever have
before. Could I really
be
sexy?
204
Lucas Makes Me Wait
Almost two hours. It's closing in on noon by the time he decides to grace me with his presence.
I've chewed three fingernails
*
clear down to the quick, yanked several strands of hair
out of my head. Not great
ways to deal with nerves,
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and I know it when I'm doing
them, but can't seem to stop
myself, especially just sitting in limbo next to the window.
*
By the time his Eclipse streaks into view, I'm totally in need of fake nails and my scalp
pulses pain. And I'm pissed.
*
But when I open the door, see Lucas standing there, in all his tanned hotness, anger
morphs back into neediness.
*
He checks me out, gives a low
whistle.
You should dress like that more often. Nylons and heels, you'd be just about perfect.
205
The pout that pops up is not
manufactured. "What do you
mean, 'just about'? Not the right
thing to say to someone you
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kept waiting for two hours."
I let him in anyway, and he rewards me with one of his luscious kisses. Def perfect.
*
Too soon, he pulls away.
Sorry I'm late. But I wanted
to pick up a little something
to make the afternoon interesting.
*
He reaches into his jacket
pocket, pulls out a small metal
can. Inside is a miniature baggie, a razor blade, and a short length
*
of drinking straw.
All we need is something to chop this up on.
Something glass, like a mirror or maybe a picture.
*
I'm not sure what's in the bag, let alone if I want to try it.
So why do I jump to my feet to go find something glass?
206
What's in the Baggie
Is a half-dollar-sized chunk of something yellowish white.
It sparkles in the sunlight.
Lucas slices off a thin section
*
and tells me,
Cocaine, clean as you can find anywhere.
My brother knows the importer.
Wait until you try it.
*
I don't want to admit the idea
scares me. Weed is one thing.
Cocaine is another. I've seen it waste people. Seen it waste
*
entire families, in fact, when
one parent or the other (or both)
invests everything they have into staying buzzed on coke.
*
Lucas keeps chopping, but my
silence alerts him.
You've done
coke before, right? No? Oh, baby, you're gonna love it.
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You're totally gonna fly.
Don't worry.
He grins like a leprechaun.
You're safe
flying with me. Mostly anyway.
207
I Watch Lucas
Suck two long, thin, sparkly
yellowish lines up his nose.
Then he hands the picture to me.
Not too hard or you'll sneeze.
*
I inhale gently, one line up the right nostril, the other up the left. Immediately, both sides of my nose go
*
cold and numb. Now, just like that, my heart is racing and the hairs on my arms rise, sending little chills throughout
*
my entire body. OMG. No
wonder people like this drug.
I look at Lucas, who's watching
me carefully. "More, please."
*
He laughs.
Careful now.
A little of this goes a long
way.
But he indulges me, and himself, with two more.
*
Every nerve jumps to attention.
I can't feel my mouth or nose, but other parts of my body are begging to be touched.
208
Lucas indulges them, too, with his hands and his mouth.
I love how he kisses, love how his fingers move over my body.
*
Everything is hard. Everything is warm. No, cold. No, warm.
I've never felt so alive. Never
felt so in love. I glance at the clock.
*
Not even one. We have plenty of time. But I don't want to do it here on the couch. "Let's
go to my bedroom, okay?"
209
I Don't Have to Ask Twice
Lucas scoops me up into his toned arms, carries me down the hall, like a groom
clutching his bride. The thought
*
makes me blush, and I have
no clue why. I rest my head against his chest for the entire
ten-second journey. Then
*
he lays me gently on the bed, unbuttons my shirt, peels
back the blue satin, stares at what he has uncovered.
*
I am totally exposed, totally
flying high, and yet I do, in fact, feel safe with Lucas, even as he lowers himself
*
over me. Every ounce of me
wants what he's about to do, and yet for just an instant, regret stings and I say, "Wait."
*
He pauses.
What? You
don't want me to stop, do you? Because I don't
think I can. I need you. See?
210
He lowers my hand to feel his need, and my heart screams,
"Hurry!" Still, my brain whispers,
"You can never take this back."
*
I look up into Lucas's eyes.
"I don't want you to stop.
But please don't go too fast.
I'm afraid..." Afraid it will
*
hurt. Afraid it will change me.
Afraid... afraid... the word
thumps in time with my heartbeat, even as Lucas soothes,
I'll go easy.
*
And he does. And I'm ready.
And it does feel good, despite the pain, because it also hurts.
And then, it's just over.
211
Still Buzzed
And yet also drained, we lie
together for a while. I don't
know if it was good for Lucas or not. I want to ask, but I don't
*
want to ask because if I do and he says no, it will leave a scar.
I don't even know if it was good for me, because I'm not sure
*
what "good sex" is. Your first time
probably isn't so good, right?
Because I didn't exactly feel
fireworks. Maybe I was too
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numb. Doesn't matter. What's
done is done, and I love Lucas
even more now because he is my first. My ear rests against
*
his chest. I listen to the promise of his heart, and suddenly
my mouth is moving and what
spills from it is, "I love you."
212
I Wait for Him
To tell me he loves me, too.
After several seconds, I notice
I've been holding my breath.
I grab air as he rolls out of bed.
*
It's getting late. Don't want
to get busted.
He stands, looks
down, at himself and the bed.
But not at me. Why won't he
*
look at me?
We'd better clean
up. And you might want
to wash your sheets. You're
not on your period, are you?
*
"No, not for..." Now I notice
how the front of him is splashed
red, and the crimson stain
flowering on my bed. My face
*
burns. "It's not my period."
How could he not know that the first time can make a girl bleed?
Or did he maybe not believe...?
213
A Poem by Ginger Cordell
Bleed
Open a vein, feel the rush, exodus, delicious.
Don't be afraid, there's no pain in the letting, delectable.
Watch the red
flow, let it go, drip, make it slow, drip.
If you've done it right, you won't
wake from the night's
indescribably peaceful
dream.
214
Ginger You Would Think
The possibility of losing a child would be a wake-up call.
Not for Iris. No way.
*
Sandy is still in a coma, wandering around somewhere
deep inside his brain.
*
The doctors don't know
if he's going to make it.
They say we should pray.
*
Gram's done a whole lot of praying. She's the one who sits by his side, day
*
after day. Iris says it's too
hard to see her little boy
that way. She's only been
*
to the hospital two or three
times. Makes Gram mad.
Makes me mad too. Iris
*
doesn't give two squirts who she pisses off. All she cares about is herself.
215
It's Been a Month
A month of worry, of guilt, of my having to play the role of "Mom" even more, because
*
Gram isn't there to help
me do it. A month of
Mary Ann, withdrawing
*
into a silent, blank-eyed
world where accidents
don't happen, especially
*
not on her watch. I try to help, but she isn't ready to quit blaming herself.
*
A month of mounting bills--
doctor bills, ambulance bills, hospital bills--that Gram
*
is determined somehow to pay.
Where there's a will, there has to be a way.
*
A month of Iris diving
deeper and deeper into bottomless bottles of numb.
216
She Has a New Boyfriend
A big-boned truck-driving
son of a bitch, with eyes like a crow's--black, dead.
*
I've seen eyes like those
before, on another of
Iris's badass lays, one
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I can't forget. I do my best
never to think of him, what he did. Try never to remember
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that place in my childhood, but sometimes it pops into view despite all my efforts
*
to keep it hidden. I was almost
ten, and we lived in Pahrump, the butthole of Nevada. Iris
*
worked at a cathouse, making
money her usual way, only without walking the streets.
*
Walt was a miner, and though he was a regular paying
customer at Mimi's, he had
217
an appetite for younger
meat. Iris was younger then
too, but even at twenty-six,
*
she was way too old for Walt.
Still, he paid for her, then he followed her home. She let
*
him move in for a while.
I remember his sour sweat, coming in after working backhoe.
*
I remember how he touched
Iris, and how she didn't care
that her kids could see.
*
I remember his Marlboro breath
falling all down around me when he said,
Let me show you something.
218
On Another Day
It wouldn't have happened, couldn't have happened.
Too many witnesses around.
*
But for some odd reason, that particular afternoon,
Iris had taken the other kids
*
to play in the park.
You stay
and start dinner,
she said.
We won't be gone very long.
*
I didn't mind. I was too old for swings, and I've always
liked spending time by myself.
*
But it wasn't more than ten
minutes before Walt came through the door. He didn't
*
ask where Iris was, or why the house was so quiet.
He didn't say one word.
*
I opened a can of refried
beans, spooned them into a pot. I had no real reason
219
to be afraid. So why did
my hands shake? I kept my back to him but could feel his eyes,
*
carving into me. Finally, he started toward the living
room.
Bring me a beer, sweets.
*
I dug one from the fridge.
But he wasn't on the couch, as expected.
Back here,
he called
*
from Iris's room. He was already
out of his jeans. I didn't know
much then, but I knew there was
*
something very wrong about that. Still, I took him the beer, holding my breath against his
*
stench. He grabbed my hand, jerked me hard against him.
Let me show you something.
*
I tried to run, but he was faster.
Tried to fight. He was stronger.
Tried to scream. He choked my cries.
220
When He Finished
(Thank God it didn't take long), he rolled off me with a grunt.
Reached for his beer. Slammed it.
*
Ripped and pried, swallowed up by the shame of what that
meant, I crawled into the bathroom
*
to scrub away the evidence.
Not that I'd dare tell anyone.
Not when he followed me,
*
stood in the doorway, watching