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Authors: Ellen Hopkins

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“Big whoop. Doing things with me
or Brianna’s mom isn’t like hooking
up with someone you’re in love with.”
Believe it or not, it hasn’t been all
that long. You don’t know everything,
munchkin. And the problem with falling
in love is falling back out of it again,
usually because you’ve fallen in love
with a lie. That happens as often as not.
Munchkin!
She hasn’t called me that since
I was a little girl. I hated it then,
and I hate it worse now. Why not
just call me
Oompa Loompa
?
I think about what she said
and how bitter she sounded.
What don’t I know? Has she
fallen in love recently, and
back out again? No. I’d know.
She couldn’t keep something
that big from me, right? Darn it.
That’s going to bug me now.
“Hey, Mom. If you
did
fall
in love, you’d tell me, wouldn’t
you?” She says of course, but
not with much conviction.
I am totally bothered the whole
time we shop for healthy food.
And as soon as we get home,
I call my best friend to discuss.
Brianna

A Best Friend

Listens when you rant

about the bad, the blah,

the totally stupid.

A best friend

comments when you want

her to, shuts her mouth

when you don’t. She

is

the one who laughs at your

jokes, no matter how idiotic.

She can interpret the tone of

your voice,

cries if she hears pain,

smiles at each hint of joy.

She will tell you to stop

when you

don’t see danger or twist

toward wrongdoing. She is

your conscience when you

can’t find it.

Mikayla

A Conscience

Can be an annoying thing.
Especially when considering
a major deception, like sneaking
out to meet your boyfriend.
Tonight won’t be the first time
I’ve done it since I’ve been
grounded. I’ve mostly given
up on listening to that stupid
little nag inside my head. Every
now and then it insists I’ll be
sorry, and maybe I will. But if
Mom and Dad won’t lighten up,
I don’t have much choice but
the covert route to Dylan. So I wait
for all the lights in the house
to extinguish. For every voice
to quiet way beyond whispers.
And then I wait just a little bit
longer before texting Dylan to come
pick me up. The tiny voice complains,
“You even pilfered Brianna’s cell
to send the TM.” And I argue right
back, “Yeah, but she never uses it,
except to call Harley, who’s busy
helping her dad move. And I couldn’t
exactly ‘borrow’ mine from off Mom
and Dad’s dresser, now could I?”
Anyway, I didn’t really steal it.
I’ll put it back in Bri’s backpack first
thing in the morning. She won’t miss
it at all. I check my makeup, lotion
my hands so when they touch Dylan
they’ll be satin-soft. Spritz perfume—
just a little. Don’t want to smell, as Trace
would say, like a Fourth Street hooker.
Luckily, his bedroom is on the other
side of the house. I’m pretty sure
if he heard my window creak open
this time of night, he’d be sure to let
someone (like Dad) know immediately.
So I’m Very, Very Quiet
As I urge the window open,
slip through the gap, holding tight
to the sill. The house is built into
the hill, but it’s still a drop from
my upstairs room to the ground.
Getting back in is harder, but I’ve
figured out how to shimmy
up the rough siding, using the family
room window frame as a boost.
It’s a perfect June night, warm
with a soft sigh of breeze and
star spatters splashed across
the blue-black sky. My heart
skips as the neighbor’s old dog
yaps. Trying to bust my escape.
I hurry down the driveway,
turn toward the main road through
the valley. Dylan’s headlights find
me before I reach it, though.
Just seeing his face, illuminated
through the windshield, fills me
with happiness. I jump through
the passenger door. “Let’s go!”
He gives me a quick kiss, then
guns the Wrangler.
Ty’s parents
are out of town. He said we can
hang out there if it’s okay with you.
I consider our limited options.
The back of the Jeep isn’t very
comfortable, and who knows when
a nosy cop might decide to
check out the usual summer night
party spots. The last thing I need
is my uncle or one of his buddies
eyeing my boobs again. Tyler’s is
safer, and it’s close. “Sounds good.”
Out of the Loop
For a couple of weeks, communications
limited to a covert phone call or six,
I have not been privy to gossip concerning
my posse. Turns out, Ty walked in on
Emily and Clay. Caught them mid-dirty.
Dylan informs me of this so I’ll know what
to say, or what not to say, when we get
there. And then he makes the comment,
I didn’t know your friend was such a slut.
Em and I have been tight since third
grade. My first reaction is to jump in
and defend. But then I remember the last
time I saw her, how she told me she just
wanted to try something new. I look at Dylan,
all iron-jawed in his conviction. “Neither did I.”
Now I’m torn between asserting a semi-
warped sense of morality and standing up
for a friend. My best friend, really. If the Ugg
were on the other foot, would she react
differently? Ack. Relationships are so
complicated. I’ll think about it later.
Meanwhile, until we get to Tyler’s, I let
my hand crawl up Dylan’s thigh, all the way
to the burgeoning bulge.
Quit,
he says.
God, girl, don’t you have any idea how much
I’ve missed being with you? I’m desperate
to show you. Just not here. Five minutes, okay?
It takes three to reach Tyler’s. Thirty
seconds to get through the door, kissing
each other like we’ve never done it before.
The house smells like skunk. Green weed.
Now I know the source. Ty is sitting on
the couch watching TV with Caitlin Bowers.
They barely look our way and suddenly
I hear the canned moans that can only mean
they’re watching cable porn. Disgusting.
Guess he’s not really missing Em.
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