Authors: Stefanie Lyons
Tags: #teen, #teen fiction, #ya, #ya fiction, #young adult, #young adult fiction, #novel, #young adult novel, #romance
Home
I take the long way home:
Division Street to Western Ave.
My stretch of Chicago.
I receive sisterly questions:
Where were you, Sam?
How come you didn't call?
Did you take Angie Hippo off my bed?
I'm telling Mom.
She's Jane.
And she's not my mom.
I trail behind the household police:
Melanie.
a.k.a. My five-year-old sister.
I walk through the family room:
Vote Henderson!
signs
I seeâ
Jane.
a.k.a. Queen Vanilla.
pixie cut
breakingbreaking
properly combed
pearls poised
breakingsm
on collarbone
make-up made up
small
diamond studs
She's camera ready.
A posture-perfect picture of primness.
Dad:
sm
Samantha, where have you been?
Me:
sm
Thinking.
Dad:
sm
You're seventeen. How much you got
to think about?
Funny guy.
Suggests I “think” about attending his upcoming rally.
Dad:
sm
Miguel wants the whole family there for pictures.
Primness and ralliesâ
Equally fake.
Falling fast out of fashion.
My father fawns over Queen Vanilla feigning a
back ache
small
headache
small
something ache
for attention.
Jane:
sm
Dinner will be ready in ten minutes, Missy!
Name's not Missy â¦
I wrinkle my nose at Jane who's pretending to be
head of the house
sitting upright
uptight
in her chair
trimming and folding
trimming and folding
her campaign contribution.
I bound
up the stairs
thinking it'd be funny
if her perfect pearls
or other jewels
suddenly went missing.
⦠and you're not my mom.
My Mom
My mom is, graceful.
Her long, wispy limbs balance dishes while dancing.
With standing ovation, I watch a wine glass rest on her head
dazzling
vibrant.
My mom is, doting.
Her grand gasps and glowing accolades, hang on my
artwork.
With reassurance, I gladly give up my Gauguin imitations
encouraging
visual.
My mom is, lively.
Her kinky curls jump as she cracks kooky jokes.
With fascination, I join her clever chorus of “knock knock ⦠”
witty
vivacious.
My mom is, dead.
Politician for the People
Before he was a
politician for the people
my father was a
devoted son-in-law for Grandpa's business
coach for my soccer team
study partner for spelling bees
supporter for opening Mom's ballet school
cheerleader for my report cards
jokester for April Fool's Day
pizza pusher for movie night
storyteller for bedtime
doting husband for his sick wife
dedicated dad for his only daughter.
But now,
he can't be all those things
for me
and
for everyone else
For the PeopleâMiguel
My father's favorite helper.
His little lackey.
My surrogate brother,
as Dad likes to say.
Miguel
makes everything go away
or come to life
rushing and researching
sm
recommending and reporting
rephrasing and reworking
sm
rebutting and rebuilding
relabeling and realigning
sm
reacting and readdressing
recouping damages
repairing reputations
rewording stump speeches
reviewing voter turnout
restructuring schedules
rethinking and rethinking and rethinking and rethinking.
He's a fixer of problems.
He's along for my father's political ride.
And he's doing it all while receiving his M.B.A.
restructuring his classes
refusing a social life
reassessing his career path
repeating the mantra
A politician for the people, not payoffs!
He's focused and fearless
and sometimes I wonder,
Is it ever rewarding?
For the PeopleâSam
Some of the people
mainly this person
is for a particular future,
my future.
For the People of Me!
Preparing for senior yearâ
college at RISD
East Coast bound
Rhode Island and me
where I will learn to be
my own masterpiece.
Setting my goals
setting my sights
painting my way into my own
picture.
In My Bedroom
I set up a fresh canvas.
Study the stark surface.
Prepare for an email from Gavin:
When can I meet this Romeo?
Or pseudo-apology from April:
R U mad at me? Don't be mad at me!
I had to take Ralph's call, right?
I place pink paint
onto the pale canvas
sm
feet dancing
sm
plié
sm
pirouette
sm
lifting tip to toe
like Mom used to teach.
Not Jane
.
A tiny hint of yellow, I
outline the edge of my shoe.
My ballerina shoe.
While the paint dries, I
open my laptop.
My BFFs both email.
I know them so well.
Gavin:
sm
Let's face it. I must meet this dreamboat
.
April:
sm
Sorry to ditch your call for that rat.
Ralph's a rat, right?
My Gavin
my go to
my guru
my glue
my
Green isn't your color
my Geronimo
my GPS
my getaway
my gouache pusher
my Gwen Stefani
my Google
my Gatorade
my gossip column
my gaydar
my gems of wisdom
my granite
my gut instinct
my Geico insurance
my get-'er-done
my gofer
my guardian angel
my goalie
my German Shepherd
my girlfriend
my guy friend
but not
my boyfriend.
April
She's flighty
funny
super bossy
fantastic busybody
flair for drama
and hair color
lip gloss
baggy shirts
and cool-girl kicks.
She loathes pretentious words like
ergo, nouveau riche, lexicon,
loquacious (although she is)
and describing people as fabulous
(apparently until now).
She's constantly changing
constantly obsessed with her
boyfriend
not-boyfriend
boyfriend
not-boyfriend
boyfriend
not-boyfriend
problems with Ralph.
She's the cheeriest person in every
hallway, classroom, café, lunchroom, gymnasium,
theater, shopping mall, taxi, or bus
unless, of course, she's discussing
The Problem with Ralph
.
Regardless,
she's the world's most loyal friend.
The Problem with Sam
Sam washes dishes.
She babysits her sister.
She folds her socks.
Sam saves her money.
She makes her bed.
She flosses.
Sam applies for college.
She wears clean underwear.
She washes her hands.
Sam studies for finals.
She eats her broccoli.
She waxes poetic.
She waxes the kitchen floor.
She attends political rallies.
Sam aims
Sam shoots
Sam misses
her
life,
love.
Next Time I See X
I'm in my favorite faded black jeans,
Gauguin's
Woman with a Mango
T-shirt,
pink and purple charm bracelet,
and my Chuck Taylors.
I'm indie and girlie
at Café Hex.
Pretending to read
Life of Gauguin
I study the paintings
and X's flushed cheeks.
I'm stealthy and artsy
at Café Hex.
He stops by my table.
X:
sm
After my shift, can I accompany you home?
He really says
accompany
.
No high school boy would
accompany
me.
Certainly not Ted.
Jock-head Ted.
High school Ted.
It feels chivalrous, so I agree.
Walking and Falling
We walk
down the tree-lined streets of Bucktown.
Sweet gardenias
blooming from balconies.
Sidewalk cafés
sprouting from nowhere.
Chicago in spring.
We talk
over the finer points of coffee.
Countries and climates
where beans come from
tasting bitter,
tasting bold.
X and me.
He wants to ride his Vespa
through the coffee fields of Columbia.
A tendril of hair flies in his face.
I tell him how I
hate Geometry
love Gauguin.
X:
sm
Sam Henderson. Smart
and
artistic.
Hearing him say it, I actually feel it.
Artistic
.
I can say
sm
anything
sm
everything
sm
nothing
and he will understand.
Are high school boys really that difficult to talk to?
Or
maybe I forget myself when he
looks at me.
Secrets
It only takes his look
a glance.
And suddenly, shivers
a need.
I need to share my secret dream
of painting in Paris.
Even though I know my dad would think it dumb.
Flitting off to Paris to paint?
Me:
sm
I want to be an artist.
X:
sm
Looks like you already are.
He taps the Gauguin book in my arms
making me feel like a canvas
crisp and new
waiting for the acrylics.
It only takes my smile
a grin.
And suddenly, candor
a confession.
He swears he's never shared his dream
of a media empire like Hugh Hefner's.
His laugh is stealth,
like the funny things he says
just slip out the side, unnoticed.
X:
sm
Not the naked girls, of course. His media empire.
He smiles again in that way.
X:
sm
Hef changed the way people looked at stuff.
I'd like to do that.
His sideways gleam
sets the butterflies free in my stomach.
Who is this boy with these charms? These
beguiling gazes, languid movements
and crazy-new thoughts?
A breeze sweeps through the trees.
We stroll down the sidewalk. Me,
not wanting to ever reach
home.
In Flux
We pass a faded blue car
resting like Rip Van Winkle.
Rust spots eat their way through the fender
the front wheel's locked down by the boot,
tickets wallpaper the windshield.
X's car.
An Oldsmobile Rocket.
Says he loves old stuff
sm
records
sm
vintage shirts
he touches my T-shirt
Is he flirting?
and cars.
He looks longingly at his.
I can't tell if his touch is light or loaded,
he's still looking at his car â¦
X:
sm
She doesn't run right now so I'm storing
her on the street.
His cheeks flush
pink
crimson
burgundy.
His jet-black hair flops to one side.
He tucks it back like he's folding a blanket
hand to hair
sm
tuck behind ear
sm
repeat.
Two guys pass us.
Guys:
sm
Great party.
They pat X on the back
sm
smile at me
sm
walk on.
People know him
sm
like him
sm
party with him.
He places his hands in his pockets,
bows his head.
Is he embarrassed to be with me?
I study his
T-shirt
sm
faded
sm
hole starting along the sleeve
shoelace
sm
untied
sm
trailing as we walk.
His life isâ
in a cast
in the boot, or
in flux.
In flux.
Much more exciting thanâ
in high school
in political rallies
in finals week.
Me:
sm
Well, this is me.
X:
sm
A brownstone.
He nods, flicks his hair.
Melanie peeks out from behind our bay window.
X:
sm
Your sister?
Melanie rests her face against the glass, staring at us.
Me:
sm
She came with the house.
X:
sm
You're funny.
Inside my head,
I throw a party for my brilliant wit.
Outside my head,
I smile.
X:
sm
So, want a lesson in coffee-tasting next time?
I nod, casually.
Neurons snapping in my brain.
A date?
A date!
A date?
A date.
Saturday afternoon
casual
sm
cool
sm
cups of coffee.
X:
sm
You're going to love it.
He winks
I smile
hoping I'm also not blushing
sm
pink
crimson
burgundy.
Me:
sm
Okay. See you Saturday.