Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Everything changes.
You might call it
distorted
reality
and as much as I once
might have disagreed,
now the silence
closes in,
like in those B
scary movies where
a crypt forms around you,
walls you in,
brick by invisible
brick, regret the mortar
sealing the chinks,
until
there’s only a tiny hole
left, one pinhole
between you and
suffocation.
I finally started my period,
the bad part of that being that it
was a doozy. I bled like a butchered
pig for over a week. Don’t
know if that means I miscarried
or my body just jumped back
in, balls out. Either way, I’m not
pregnant. And that is a very good
thing, especially now that it’s over.
I’m marking the date on my
calendar so I have some idea
when to start being careful.
Oops. Don’t have to be careful.
Trey won’t be home until spring
break, and that’s still weeks away.
[Remember that ob-gyn thing?]
Yeah, yeah. I’ll get around to it,
maybe even before spring break.
Jeez, maybe I can’t get pregnant.
Maybe having a baby at seventeen
screwed up my uterus, confused
my hormones. [Wishful thinker,
aren’t you?] Anyway, I’m safe
for now. A couple fewer possibilities.
Stopped to see my Mexican amigo,
he explains.
Es muy bueno!
The new batch is really good.
Why is it I don’t doubt that?
As we eat dinner, my stomach
churns in anticipation. I can’t
afford to buy much, but I hope—
no, I know—he’ll be generous.
Homework, baths, then bed!
Spoken like a true dad.
We help the girls with their
assignments, hustle them off
to the tub and sweet dreams.
I even read them a bedtime story.
Once they’ve dozed off, Brad
knocks on my door.
In the mood?
I know he means for a couple
of tokes, but something else
creeps into my warped brain.
“I’m always in the mood.”
He smiles, and shows off his new
stash, as good as or better than the last.
I’ve been thinking things
through for a while. After
several very smooth hits,
I say, “You know I’m tight
on cash. I was hoping maybe
I could off a little for you, in
exchange for some personal.”
His response is long, slow.
Do you know people who you
can trust? I mean, you’ve been
out of the loop for a while now,
and I have to be very careful.
He is very careful, has to be because
of his kids, and I understand that.
“Yeah, I know a couple of guys
who’d go ballistic if they saw
meth of this quality. Don’t worry.
I’d keep you my bestest secret.”
He grins.
I trust you, Kristina.
I just want you to be careful too.
You’re the best nanny in Reno.
I can’t imagine being without you.
We share a couple more bowls,
then he stands, kisses me on the cheek.
Better go. My mind is going places
it shouldn’t. See you in the morning.
The door snaps shut behind him.
My mind is going places
it shouldn’t too. I call Trey,
before my body follows.
About counting on someone else
to help you do the right thing
is they’re not always available.
In Trey’s case, that’s often.
The downside of smoking ice
is when you can’t get hold of
someone, sometimes you get mad.
In my case, that’s tonight.
As usual, I get Trey’s message center.
Tonight, I need to hear his voice,
live in my ear. Where are you, damn
it all? Can’t you just once pick up?
Buzzed, antsy, I try TV for company.
But late-night tripe won’t backfill
the gaping hole inside me. The longer
I sit here, the more cavernous it grows.
I go into the bathroom, turn on the
shower, hot enough to redden my
skin, scrub away the building desire
in a release of sandalwood steam.
No such luck. All it does is remind
me of sharing this small, encapsulated
place with the person I love, the one who’s
supposed to love me, but doesn’t call.
I brush my teeth with the same energy
I used on my body, notice a streak of blood
in the spit that spirals down the drain.
No worries. That’s normal, right?
Cleansed, scented, hair wet and cool
down the length of my spine, I feel like
a goddess, jailed in her Olympus. Little
wonder, how the gods toyed with humans.
Toyed with women, to watch
them squirm, pollinate the seeds
of despair; toyed with men, to
satiate their Seven Deadly Sins.
I know it’s not right, that I have
no right at all to do what I’m about
to do. Maybe he’ll say no, send me
back here to swim in emptiness.
But a thigh-length button-up shirt,
barely buttoned, I creep down the hall.
Stop outside the girls’ door, poke
my head inside. Lights out. Totally.
One step at a time, silent as night,
I keep going until I reach Brad’s room.
One ear to the door. Not a sound.
I knock softly and he says,
Come in.
He’s lying in bed, alone in the dark,
only moonlight to let me know.
I hesitate, but Bree gives me a shove.
[Go on. It’s only between the two of us.]
Brad draws back the quilt and I slither
beneath it, into his arms.
I was hoping
you’d come.
Now he’s kissing me, and
it’s nothing like how Trey kisses at all.
But it’s good. Great. And his strength
becomes mine. But before we do
more, I have to tell him, “I know
this isn’t right, but I need you.”
And he says,
We need each other.
How can that be wrong? I still love
Angela, and I know you love Trey.
Can’t you and I love each other too?
I haven’t thought past loving Trey,
never considered loving someone else,
especially not at the same time.
Can I love more than one person?
Would that make me love Trey less?
I have no answers now, need no
answers now. Except one.
“Are you saying you love me?”
Not with words, as if
vocalizing his response
would give it too much
weight. His silent reply
is heavy enough.
Silent, but for the
shush
of skin against skin;
the sigh of heightened
senses; the exclamation
of bodies, no longer
strangers.
Is that it changes everything.
Brad and I are still friends.
But we’re a different kind
of friends. More than pals.
More, even, than fuck buddies.
It’s like we’re stand-ins
for the true loves of our lives.
And the only way to be that
is to let ourselves love
each other.
When you love someone,
you don’t want to hurt
them, even if they deserve
to be hurt. When you love
someone, you want to hurt
them, even when they don’t
deserve to be hurt. It’s totally
messed up, and so are Brad
and I. Totally messed up
because of—and over—
each other.
We don’t talk about the future.
Don’t talk about what will
happen when Trey comes
back, or if Angela decides
her husband and children
mean something to her,
after all. We’re taking things
one day at a time. One night
at a time.
Is similar. It changes
everything. The monster
and I are still friends.
But we’re a different
kind of friends. More
than pals, fuck buddies.
Six months since we met up
again, we are inseparable,
an intricate weave.
No longer do I believe
this is a temporary fling.
More like total commitment.
More like I have walked
down the aisle, holding
hands with the monster.
I don’t think about the future,
or what life would be like
without crystal. It’s almost
always here, within easy
reach. I don’t think about
what it might be doing to
my brain, or my heart.
I know people die from doing
too much. But I’m in control.
Okay, mostly in control.
I am thin. But that’s how
guys want girls to be, right?
I do grind my teeth, and
every now and then I lose
a chip from one. But those
can be fixed, right? Probably
the worst thing is how I’m
kind of edgy. Sometimes
I lose it completely. Once
in a while, I even scream
at the girls. But kids can
be obnoxious and a nanny
should keep them in line.
Right?
It’s not like I hit them. I can stop myself
before things get that out of hand. The most
physical I’ve gotten is giving Devon a good shake.
She deserved it. I mean, she was crying—
freaking out—because I said no to ice cream
after she got home from school. Ice cream?
I told her to go watch TV while LaTreya did
her homework. Devon screamed,
Mommy
would give me ice cream
and then she just
stood there, yowling like a dying cat. Nerves
frayed, I stomped across the kitchen,
grabbed her cheeks in one hand, squeezed.
“Shut the hell up.” But would she? No!
She looked me right in the eye.
I’m gonna
tell my daddy
. Definitely not the right
thing to say. I took her by the shoulders,
shook until her head snapped back and forth.
“I wouldn’t do that if I were you.” Her eyes
went wide and snot flew everywhere. But
she finally shut up and went to watch TV.
Okay, it wasn’t nice. Blame it on the monster.
Is being stuck here, no way to go
anywhere unless I walk, or wait
until Brad can take me. It’s like
being stuck in childhood again.
Fixing the LTD will make life
easier, and everyone happier.
I called around, and Pick ’n’ Pull
has a used radiator and fan I can afford.
I just have to find a way to get them,
then talk someone into installing
them for me. I happen to know someone
who’s tool-friendly, and Brad is cooperative.
I’ll pick them up on my way home.
It will give me something to do
this weekend. Oh, I’m getting a new
shipment, so if you still think you
know someone you can off some to,
you might want to give them a call.
My car is getting fixed, and so
is my dwindled stash. Life is good.
In Reno who would be interested
in scoring some killer ice. Well,
I might know more, but two for sure.
Both, however, are problematic.
I’ll have to get hold of Grade E
at the Sev. And I can’t do that until
after eleven. And if he wants some,
I’m not sure how to arrange a meet.
The second person is one I hate
with every ounce of my being. One
I swore never to talk to again. Can
I get past all that to make a deal?
[Why not get back at him the only
way you can—make a bundle
off his greed.] It’s a delicate dance,
but using him has a certain appeal.
Despite whatever brain cells
the monster has eaten, I remember
his number. Dial it? Don’t? God,
I hate indecision. Kick me, Bree!
[If you don’t deal with him, Grady
will. Why not be your own middle
man?] All it takes is a glance in my
lockbox. Empty, but for a few bucks.
Fine. I’ll call. But he’d better not
get the wrong idea. The phone rings
and rings, and I’m starting to think
that’s the way it should be, when
he finally answers. The sound
of his voice sends chills through
my body. And not good chills.
Your dime. Start talking.
And I’m trying to, really I am,
but my own voice sticks in my
throat like a big wad of taffy.
At last I manage, “Hello, Brendan?”