Authors: Ellen Hopkins
new sense of self.
I never knew
I could play the vamp,
do it so well, flirt
with total aplomb,
and not only that, but
look good doing it.
Before Bree I never
knew such sheer, depraved
forwardness could
be so much fun.
So I went with it,
jumped right into the role
of shameless flirt.
Girls responded
with pointed whispers,
haughty laughter and, as
I myself have often done,
with evil eyes.
Bree, of course, couldn’t
care less. In fact she thrived
on any and all attention.
Guys responded
to that with solid
once-overs, come-on smiles, and
in Brendan the lifeguard’s case,
with phone numbers.
As If That Weren’t Enough
I sprinted off in search of my friends
and (literally) bumped into Chase
Wagner, Reno High’s stoned bad boy.
Kristina would have offered a quick
apology and scurried away.
It’s not like Chase was in
the running for Mr. America.
He looked like a linebacker,
one who didn’t play much
in the sun—the freckles on his
cranberry skin almost pulsed pain.
But Bree found his bedroom
eyes—glacier blue—and brooding
demeanor quite the turn on.
“Hey, Chase,” she cooed.
He scoped me out like an old
tomcat, ogling a brand-new canary.
Do I know you?
Kristina knew enough about
him
to think she ought to flee.
Chase Wagner could be
hazardous to a person’s health.
You look familiar, but not, so maybe
I’m thinking of someone else.
What’s your name?
Just like that, she had him.
If she wanted him. Her game was no
less dangerous than his. “Call me Bree.”
Right Then, Three People
shouted, “Kristina!”
Time to beat a face-saving retreat, so
I smiled and told Chase I’d catch him later.
I looked around and saw Mom,
waving to come and eat,
Leigh, minus Jake,
gesturing to come share a towel,
Sarah, at the top of Black Widow,
watching Trent’s wet ride down.
“Not hungry yet,” I shouted to Mom.
To Leigh, “Be there in a few.”
Then I joined my oldest, bestest
friends in the world, tried to think
of something to talk about
besides lifeguards, bad boys,
and this person named Bree,
growing stronger inside me,
convincing me to be someone
I never dreamed I’d want to be.
I know you should be able
to share such news with best friends,
but I felt pretty sure they’d never
relate and maybe refuse to forgive
me for trading in the tried-and-true
for a test drive of the dark side.
Still, When Brendan Came By
I left my friends with my sister, took
a walk to the back of the park, the eyes
in back of my head noting envious stares.
Brendan noticed, too.
You related to those people?
“Pretty much.” I bummed a cigarette,
inhaled like it was the healthiest
thing a person could do.
The pretty one looks like you,
but the others don’t
My turn for a jealous jolt. But I had a secret
weapon. “The pretty one is my lesbian
sister. The others are my cousins.”
Lesbian! Really? I never met
one before. How about you?
I laughed. “Of course I’ve met one, if my
sister is one. Oh, you mean do I lean that
direction? No way. I prefer male hardware.”
I like what you’ve got, too, li’l
sister. At least, what I can see.
Male hardware? Must have read it in
Cosmo.
Whatever. Brendan touched my hair, made
a move like he just might kiss me….
Damn. There’s my boss. Back
to work. Call me, okay?
I wondered if I could. I’d always waited
for boys to call me. Which is why I never
talked to any except Trent. And Adam.
By the way, beautiful, what’s
your name? In case you call.
Twice in one day! I almost told him
the truth but realized the fantasy was better
and rested completely in Bree’s hands.
I Went Home
tired, tanned, and
stuffed on barbecue,
Scott insisted
high on life,
nicotine, and
purloined booze,
Chase invited
elated, pumped
up, full of Bree’s
magical ego,
Brendan inflated
chastised, brought
back down
a notch or two,
Leigh instigated
then all the way,
chest-deep into
shit when
Mom finally noticed
the tattoo, my
meaningless, forever
symbol of love. Still,
Bree swore
whatever
punishment
lay ahead,
only one thing
could have
improved
that phat,
fabulous day:
a big bite
of the monster.
Grounded UFN
Until further notice. No
excursions, no calls.
How unfair could you get?
Couldn’t she just decide how mad to be,
then mold the consequences to fit?
I’m so disappointed in you!
What else was new? She was only good
with “all I could be” when it involved
a straight-A report card.
Don’t you realize this could
scar you forever?
Well, duh, Mom. It already had,
though not in the way you imagined.
Couldn’t you have asked about that?
Why can’t you be more
like your sister?
Did she mean look more like her? Be
PhD bound? Or maybe she wanted me
gay? Lesbians and pregnancy rarely mix.
How can I trust you to make
good decisions?
Oh, great. Here it came. No driver’s
training, no driver’s license. Their
way of keeping me cooped up forever.
Driver’s training is on hold.
And to keep you from feeling
cooped up, you can pull weeds.
Fine. I was almost 17, would never
drive, and now I’d spend my summer
yanking goats’ heads.
The Problem with Being Grounded
is it gives you a whole lot of
unavoidable time to
think.
Not even pulling weeds can
take away your ability to
plot
all the varied and wonderful
things you might do to
get even,
or at least to make up
just a smidgen
for time lost
to TV and yard work
and house cleaning.
Time better spent
camping with old friends
(even slightly annoying ones),
partying
with great-looking new friends,
and expending a few brain cells
with the monster.
She Cut Me Loose
Two weeks before | |
Back-to-School, | |
gave me her credit | Didn’t matter much. |
card and a ride to | Summer had dissolved. |
the mall, her way of | New clothes and a few |
apologizing without | new tunes just might |
saying she was sorry | improve my “sour |
for trashing my summer. | outlook,” as she so |
lovingly termed it. | |
Jake wanted to come | |
along, but I told him | |
I’d crawl into bed | I usually despise trying |
and stay there rather | on clothes but, finally |
than haul my little | free, I meant to make it |
brother around the | an all-day affair, shop |
mall. He went fishing | every store, including |
with Scott instead. | Victoria’s Secret. Guess |
who I ran into there? | |
The Reno High Varsity | |
Cheerleaders, all buying | |
new undies and bras to | I waved to Trent’s sister, |
shape those tight tanks | Robyn, then pretended |
and sweaters (football | to browse, watching them |
weather in Reno is an | yak a hundred words a |
exceptionally mixed bag). | minute, and I knew my |
suspicions were accurate. | |
Those goody-goody girls, | |
flipping perfect cartwheels | |
and pert little ponytails, | |
most definitely accelerated | |
their metabolisms. The only | |
question was: how? |
I Pondered That
while I picked out
my own underwear.
As I handed the saleslady
Mom’s credit card, someone
tapped my shoulder.
Hey, Bree. Can I see
your panties.
Chase! I tried to think
of a witty comeback,
managing mostly to look
like a stuttering fool.
“Uh-oh, uh—old or new?”
Either, or. Better yet, both.
What’s up? Where you been?
Like he’d been looking
for me since Wild Waters.
Like I’d been avoiding him.
You haven’t been avoiding me,
have you?
Why would I? What
he might lack in looks,
he more than made up for
in fringe benefits.
I explained about the tattoo.
You really wanna piss her off,
try a piercing. Want to see mine?
I couldn’t find studs in his
ears, lips, or tongue. Which
pretty much left one place.
“Didn’t it hurt?”
Like a mother. But it feels
awesome now.
He guided my hand
just south of his zipper.
Kristina recoiled.
Bree—well,
Bree was Bree,
to Chase’s great pleasure.
Hee hee. So want to take
a little ride? Got my truck outside.
I started to protest.
I had some serious
shopping ahead.
And Bree or no Bree,
I wasn’t about to do
Chase Wagner.
No strings. I just want to get
to know you better.
Where had I heard
a similar tale?
I was about to give him
a definite no when he
sweetened the offer.
I’ve got a little toot, if you’re
so inclined.
Did It Show?
I mean I’d
thought
about
the monster
dreamed
about
the monster
lusted
for
the monster
regretted
knowing
the monster
but I hadn’t
touched
the monster
in over a month.
Hadn’t even seen it.
Thought I might be over it.
Was it still alive in me?
Could it still have such
a solid hold on me?
We Drove Down by the River
parked beneath towering cottonwoods.
Strange, how intensely desire
builds when the monster waits
at the far end of a drive.
On the way I learned, for a bad boy
Chase was incredibly smart. Webster
would envy his vocabulary, he was up on
current events, could quote Keats:
Give me women, wine, and snuff
Until I cry out hold, enough!
You may do so sans objection
Till the day of resurrection; for
Bless my beard they aye shall be
My beloved Trinity.
No mirrors, no blades, Chase reached
deep inside a pocket, withdrew an
amber bottle with a tiny spoon attached
to the lid. He set it on his knee.
Hey, you’re shaking. You’re not
scared, are you? We don’t have
to do this, do anything at all. We
can just sit and talk if you want.
“I’m not afraid, Chase.” Not of him.
Not with him. In fact, I felt quite safe.
It was monster desire that made me
tremble. Chase noticed.
Take it easy with this stuff, Bree.
It brings even good people to their
knees. Don’t get me wrong. I
like it, too. Just keep cool.
One Spoon
I was cool.
Two, I was too
cool. Three,
sub-Arctic. Four,
my mouth hit
monster mode.
Chase could barely
keep up. We talked