Authors: Ellen Hopkins
I Gave Up the Bus
in favor of rides with Robyn,
with a detour or two along
the way to indulge
in some Homework Helper.
(Like it really helped!)
A couple of afternoons she
had cheerleading practice.
(How could she do back flips
and cartwheels
without killing herself?)
Those days, Chase came by
to take me home and stop
by the park for a good long
make-out session.
I invited him to share my stash.
He took a snort or two,
but declined
the tinfoil routine.
I let him get away
with it the first time.
On his second refusal,
I asked why not.
He shrugged.
I’ve set boundaries.
I Meant
to analyze
Chase’s limits
that very weekend,
to learn
just how far
I could stretch
him at the edges,
to judge
how wide
I might warp
his self-imposed
morality.
Don’t ask me
why I felt the
incredible need
to test
this person that
meant so very
much to me,
to fathom
his most
personal thoughts,
coolly dissect
his psyche.
I only know it was
on the table for
that Saturday until
fate intervened.
Okay, the Air Races Intervened
September is Air Race month
in Northern Nevada—four
fabulous days of warbirds,
jets, and homebuilt aircraft,
racing wingtip to wingtip,
balls out, around pylons.
It’s a must-see event, and
we’d made it a family event
every single year since Jake
was a tiny baby, snoozing
soundly in his stroller, despite
ear-splitting military flybys.
We always went on weekends
and I always begged for more,
so it would have looked pretty
damn suspicious to say I didn’t
want to go. Besides, I did want
to go. I just wanted to go high.
So when Mom reminded us at
dinner that we’d have to get
up early and dress in layers, I
cleared my throat as if to protest.
Instead I asked if I could invite
my friend Robyn to come along.
Again, I’d made the perfect
preemptory strike. Mom was
so happy I would participate
without incident that she not
only gave her blessing, but
let me ride in Robyn’s car.
Robyn Was Game
Scott’s company had box seats
and plenty of tickets. Robyn got
comp tix, with a can’t-beat view.
But that was only for starters.
You bet I’ll go. Those flyboys
are soooooo cute!
You can guess what we did on
the drive north of town. We
arrived, diamond-eyed,
behind dark sunglasses.
Aviator glasses. Ha! Hope those
pilots aren’t as wired as I am.
I hoped so, too. We sauntered
down the flight line in tight
jeans and tiny tank tops, turning
more than a few heads.
You’d think they’d never seen girls
before. Maybe they think we’re lezes.
You thought I was a vamp!
I couldn’t come close to
Robyn. Even Bree had to
work hard to keep up.
Wanna give ’em a show?
Have you ever kissed a girl?
The only girls I’d ever kissed were
relatives, and only lip-to-cheek.
Lip locking another female? Never!
And in public? No way!
Come on. It’s just for fun. Promise
not to slip you the tongue.
OMG. If I hadn’t been so
wound, I would have died on the spot.
Instead, I jumped right into
Robyn’s shameless game.
Wolf Whistles
made me pull away,
completely red-faced,
but LMAO.
(You do know what that means, right?)
Okay, my a-double-s was still
attached, but I couldn’t
quit laughing.
(In retrospect, it wasn’t
that
funny.)
At the time, it seemed
like the funniest thing
I’d ever done.
(What’s the funniest thing you’ve ever done?)
Don’t get me wrong.
I’m completely hetero,
and that experience proved it to me.
(I decided that later, when I had much too much
time on my hands to think about such things.)
But seeing the look
on people’s faces—some
horrified, some fascinated—
made my day.
(How would you look, seeing two
pretty teenaged girls making out,
right there on the tarmac?)
We Found Our Box
took seats behind Mom, Scott,
Jake, and a couple of guys Scott
worked with. Robyn nudged me
as Mom leaned over, showing off
cleavage to the cute young blond.
He took a good, long look, then
whispered something no doubt funny
and off-color into Mom’s ear. She
giggled and flirted and carried on
like Scott wasn’t even there.
Worse yet, Scott pretended not
to notice. Or maybe, tied up in
conversation about the latest
microchip technology stocks,
he in fact didn’t notice. He turned
the tables nicely when his boss
and Mrs. Boss (in a very short
skirt) joined the lineup. My parents
set an extremely poor example
for us impressionable (ha ha) kids.
Good thing Jake wasn’t sitting
behind them. Clueless, he
ooh
ed
at every aerial maneuver. Robyn
and I observed the whole show
(including the terrestrial maneuvers
in our box) with pure enjoyment. It’s
always great to watch the world’s
best pilots fly, and better yet to see
adults behave like juvenile delinquents.
Three Races
and two stunt performances
later, Robyn and I excused
ourselves for a trip to the outhouse.
We hustled off to the car to
“powder our noses,” then hurried
to pee before we were missed.
As we headed back to our seats,
a familiar form came striding
in our direction. Brendan.
Attached, as if sewn on, was a girl,
not more than 14, with a fashion doll body
and child actress face.
Her shorts, cut high on the thigh
and low on the hips, revealed a stud
in her navel. I thought about
turning around or ducking into
the swirling crowd but without warning,
Bree took over. “Hey, Brendan!
Great to see you again,” she gushed.
“Raped any schoolgirls lately?”
He maintained his frosty cool as he leveled
his eyes.
Can’t rape the willing.
“That’s what I’ve heard.” I turned to his sidekick.
“How about you? Are you willing?”
Still locked to Brendan, she quite obviously
deflated, and her face paled beneath
an overdose of cover-up and cheap blush.
“Well, have fun you two. Don’t do anything
I wouldn’t do.” I started away, calling
over my shoulder, “Watch your back, Barbie doll.”
Robyn Wanted the Whole Story
I told her, then she shared her own sordid tale:
I started crakin’ to keep up with schoolwork
around gymnastics, cheerleading, student
council, and other extracurricular crap.
You’d be surprised how many brownnosers
get high, and with so much around, I thought it
would always be easy to score. Sometimes it goes dry.
During one particular drought spell, I was hurtin’
for certain, and went looking for a new source.
Found him in a casino arcade, cruising for fresh meat.
He flashed a bindle and I followed him out to his car.
I still can’t believe I was stupid enough to get inside.
He drove east of town, all the way out in the desert past Mustang.
After a couple of snorts, he was all hands, all over me.
When I told him to stop, he said, “It’s a long walk back,
even if you don’t get lost. Anyway we both know what kind
of a girl you are.”
That stung, but not much. All I could do was ask for more
crank so maybe I could halfway enjoy it. I didn’t. He was dirty.
Smelly like he hadn’t showered in days.
And after he started, he got mean.
He did things to me—terrible things, I’ve still got the scars—
things no sane person would ever do. Of course,
he wasn’t exactly sane.
Afterward, neither was I.
Now, You Might Think
an experience like that
would serve as a stern
warning, make a person
do a quick about-face and
sprint in the other direction.
Didn’t happen like
that for Robyn.
Didn’t happen like
that for me.
Before I Met the Monster
But Now Nothing
Problem Number One: School
Getting up in the morning,
was it only moments after finally falling
into a state of semisleep?
Finding clean clothes
(I was supposed to put my dirties
in the laundry room, but who could remember?)
Sucking down coffee, nibbling a half cup
of honey-sweetened corn flakes
for a slight rush of caffeine and carbs.
Catching a ride with Robyn or one
of my Avenue buds, coaxing myself
mostly awake with a whiff of white.
Twenty minutes on the Avenue
before the bell rang, tempering
my morning buzz with nicotine.
Stumbling into homeroom, most likely tardy,
hoping Mrs. Twedt wouldn’t notice
and reward me with detention.
Making some classes, cutting others,
deciding which would be which
by which was which the day before.
And somehow I managed to convince
myself life with the monster
was not routine.
Problem Number Two: Relationships
Old friendships, tucked away
like treasures,
relegated to tokens of yesterday.
New friendships, faulty ground
to cultivate
and build a future upon.
Old boyfriends, a very short list,
abbreviated
further by definition and distance.
New boyfriends, one definite
but distracted,
and no shortage of Avenue wannabes.
Siblings, one too close and curious,
the other much
too far away to serve as confidant.
Parents, ever-present shade, dimming
my sparkle,
kryptonite to quell my bid for superpower.
Teachers, counselors, preachers,
scaffolding,
crumbled by the weight of my monster.
Problem Number Three: Connections
How to get high
and stay that way?
(Coming down was a bitch and a half.)
Finding crank
wasn’t really difficult.
Most of my new crowd knew
someone who dealt
(or knew someone who
knew someone who did).
Getting what you paid for