Authors: Ellen Hopkins
no doubt bowling
off his own buzz,
so I asked Adam in.
We stayed up all
night, smoking,
talking, I struggle
to remember
exactly what
about.
Boys
Chicks
School
Detention
Art
Sports
Reno
Albuquerque
Mom
Mom
Dad
Long-gone Dad
Stepdads
Boyfriends
Gay sister
O.D.’d brother
Buddy
Bree
Adam
Kristina
Love
Love
Dawn Broke
A rose-colored rain
over distant hills.
We kissed for about
the thousandth time,
No promises,
no demands,
Just solid rebuilding
of shattered trust.
Then I said it.
He said it too.
I love you.
And everything
that went before
meant nothing.
About That Time
Dad stumbled in,
looking like the monster
had boogied on off.
You still up?
Up, and flying high.
Was I supposed to go
to sleep?
Better get some sleep.
I walked Adam
to the door, promised
to see him later.
You two didn’t do anything
I wouldn’t do. Did you?
No way, Daddy dearest.
And where were you
when I needed you?
’Cause a girl could get
into real trouble.
Clueless
Dad went to bed.
I laid on the couch,
closed my eyes, let
the night slip into
replay
Exhilarating,
rocketing into my
mind, reaching
unimagined
highs.
Depressing,
knowing when
I left, Adam would
stay. Would he
downplay
spectacular
times together,
forget the best,
remember the
lows?
As if I had
never entered his
life, never existed,
would he
toss
all promise of
tomorrow,
tumble headlong
into old
routines?
As if
he had never
told me he loved me?
I Was Supposed to Sleep?
Thoughts bulleted
in my brain, ricocheting,
creative side to practical side,
lustful half to hateful half.
Sleep? Yeah, right.
I got up, located cleanser
and sponge, scrubbed
the bathroom,
washed the dishes,
waxed the kitchen floor.
Wrote a four-page
letter to my sister,
told her I was in love.
With a boy.
I think I asked
for her forgiveness.
Wrote a poem, an epic, tinged
with dark humor,
decided to give it to my mom
because this was all her fault.
Somehow.
Went to the bathroom,
considered my growling stomach,
but the thought of food made me want to heave.
Settled for a beer. That went down fine,
so I had another.
And another.
After the Fourth
No more writing paper,
nothing left to clean,
I turned on the TV,
thanked God for the
Jerry Springer marathon,
six great hours, filled
with pitiful people,
whose lives were way
worse than my own.
Hard to believe
the world is such
a screwed-up place.
I needed food, sleep,
but the monster denied
every bit of it.
Playing wasted couch
potato was all that I
could ask for.
And more.
Fading speed buzz,
escalating alcohol,
it was all I could
do to stay upright.
So I didn’t.
Used Up
Burned out, adrift on a sea
of uncertain synapses,
a place where
your eyes
refuse to focus
and your brain
refuses to function.
Somewhere between
the transvestite
who slept with his
(her?)
mother’s boyfriend
and the perky
blond
(transvestite?)
evening
weathergirl.
Everything
shut
down,
cerebral
ghost
town.
I
fell
into
sleep.
Deep,
dream-free
sleep.
Woke to Pounding
on the door,
insistent vibration,
building noise.
Bree? You there?
Late-day sun
filtered through
cracks in
the blinds.
It’s me. Open up.
Late-day? How
long had
I slept? Only
hours?
I need to talk to you.
Twenty hours,
as it turned
out. I tried to
open my eyes.
Please, Bree?
Adam’s tone
forced me into
the moment.
“Hang on.”
Something happened.
My mouth tasted
like dead speed,
dying beer, and
foreboding.
There was an accident
Coming
Jumped up, dashed
for mouthwash,
forgetting the
uncertainty
of legs, unused for
twenty hours, but
spurred to confront the
fear
in his voice, and
something more,
something too like
guilt.
Oh God, who was in
the mirror? Not Bree,
not Kristina, but some
evil
incarnation glaring
back at me, a horrid
red-eyed crone,
materialized
as if from darkest
dementia, nightmares
to come, hibernating
inside of me.
I Filled the Sink
with cold water,
dunked my whole head
under,
counted to ten,
came up,
repeated the process.
Came up again and
she had retreated,
still close,
I suspected,
but far enough
to let me
go to the door.
His Demon Showed in His Eyes
He stumbled in, tumbled
against me, clutching
like a scared little boy,
in need of his mama’s grace.
She’s hurt real bad.
Who?
Lince.
What?
Fell (or jumped) off the balcony.
When?
Yesterday.
Where?
Right outside.
I didn’t
dare ask
why.
Instead,
I let him
cry.
He Told Me Why Anyway
She came home from the bowling alley,
went looking for me.
Found me.
Here, with you.
Heard us inside,
talking, laughing.
Looked in the window,
watched us kissing,
watched my hands,
running all up an’ down you.
When your dad came home,
she waited for me to come outside.
Said she wanted to talk.
But she wanted more than that.
She wanted to erase you
from my heart.
Never could, Bree.
Never could.
And that’s what
I told her.
The monster rose up hard then,
hard in her eyes,
She looked like an animal,
crazy mad,
diseased.
Spit in every word,
she swore
she’d get back
at you,
at me.
Next thing I knew,
she was on the sidewalk below,
still,
except for the blood running
red from her head.
They say it was an accident,
she tripped,
or leaned over too far.
Crankin’, they said,
and she was.
Oh, yes, she was.
That’s what I wanna believe.
Maybe someday I can.
But right now I think something different.
I never saw it coming.
Never thought she would.
I would have stopped her.
Could I have stopped her?
My Brain Somersaulted
My heart picked up speed,
my stomach threatened
to 86 guilt,
drowning in bile.
Oh, God. I’m sorry.
Hold me.
I wrapped him tight,
hair dripping cool
around the stiffness
of his shoulders.
Not your fault.
Whose, then?
The answer, hanging
over my head like
a stubborn black cloud,
seemed obvious.
Mine.
Don’t say that
I pictured Guinivere,
golden-eyed wildcat,
crumpled against the
sad, cracked cement.
Whose then?
Plenty of blame to go around.
Too much truth in that.
And I never heard a thing,
dead to the world
for twenty hours.
We Sat on the Floor
Tangled up in each other,
a knot of emotions
desperate for release.
And the more we kissed,
the more we talked,
the more confused we became.
He loved me. He loved her.
He loved her, first.
He loved me now.
I loved him. I hated her.
I hated him for loving her.
I loved him for loving her still.
He wanted me. He needed me.
He needed more to go to her, let her
know he loved her still.
I wanted him. I needed him.
I wanted him to forget her, needed
more to let him tell her he loved her.
When he asked me to go
along, some masochistic
piece of me agreed.
Fifteen Blocks on Foot and a Bus Ride Later
We walked through big revolving doors,
into the Land of Antiseptic.
My empty stomach rocked
at the alcohol/bleach perfume,
yet somewhere in that revolting scent
a lovely memory floated,
ghostlike.
The receptionist told us Lince was in ICU
and asked if we were relatives.
I’d seen enough soap operas to know
to nod an affirmative answer.
Adam played along.
I’m her brother and this is …
I held my breath
…
my fiancé.
The lady didn’t even blink behind her thick
gray lenses. She directed us to
the elevators. We got off
on the 7
th
floor. A nurse said
we’d missed visiting hours,
but since we were relatives
she’d let us poke in
through the door.
Intensive care is not a private place,
big windows allowed unobstructed
hallway-to-room views.
It was a sea of white.
Uniforms. Sheets. Curtains.
Floors and walls.
Why did that feel comforting?
Lince Floated
in that white water world,
Guinivere upon the River Styx,
tubes intruding wrists and nose,
liquid-filled lifelines.
Adam let go of my hand
and I stopped in mute agreement.
This was his show.
I found the waiting room.
A dozen needs attacked me there.
I needed
food,
fluid,
soap,
shampoo.
I needed
Adam,
his heart,
his promises
his tomorrows.
I needed
to go home
’cause somewhere
deep down
I needed
my mommy.
And all that made me really
really need
a line.
Evening, When We Left
The breeze,
too hot
to cool
the blooming
flower of summer
night,
seemed to
ignite star
candles in a sky,
darkened as much
by mood as
time.
We found
the bus stop
in silence,
though I knew
he had something
to say.
Walked home
beneath
the celestial
cathedral. No kiss
at my door, only his
good-bye.
Not enough,
but how could
I beg for more? Did he
mean forever, or just for
now?
Dad Asked Where I’d Been
How’s she doin’?
I opened my mouth
to tell him, realized
I didn’t know. Adam
had given nothing away.
Heard it was touch-and-go for a while.
Still looked touch-and-go
to me, machines pumping
existence into her
through plastic tubes.