Tilt (26 page)

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Authors: Ellen Hopkins

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Dylan,’ until finally security hauled him off.”
Gram told him to shut up and when he refused,
she went in search of a uniform. “And then,
there was my cousin, Harley. She’s only
thirteen. And boy, was she vamped
out in a really short skirt and really
tall heels and a really tight tank top
that made her boobs look really big.
I’ve never seen her dressed like that
before. She was even wearing makeup.”
Heavy makeup. Not quite trampy,
but close. “Some of those old guys
were checking her out. Perverts.”
Takes one to know one, sweetie.
I really like your grandparents,
by the way. Wish mine were more
like them. They hate me being queer.
“Mine are pretty cool, okay. Wish
they’d stick around more. Mom
could use their support.” They took
off for California. They’ll be back in
a couple of weeks. But then, who
knows? “Okay, parallel parking?
Check. Freeway merging? Check.
Now if I can just get that parent signature . . .”
The Last Time I Asked
Things didn’t go so well. I give
Alex the highlights now:
Me: “I’ve been old enough for
over a month.” Forgotten birthday.
Dad:
You can have it. When I find
the time to take you to the DMV.
Me: “You never have time for me.
And you pretty much suck as a dad.”
Dad:
You’re not exactly my idea
of a noteworthy son, either.
At which point, Mom jumped in,
trying to avert catastrophe. She said
she’d try to take me. I told her to chill.
She worries too much already.
Me: “All you have to do, Dad, is sign
the papers. I can use Alex’s car.”
Dad:
Alex. Perfect.
Said as he poured
himself another drink at ten a.m.
I watched the Irish whiskey glurg
into his coffee. Couldn’t let it go.
Me: “No wonder you don’t want
to take me to the DMV. You’d get busted
for drunk driving. Do you drink
at work too, Dad?” Which somehow
segued to him beating me down
over my sexual orientation.
Dad:
Do you screw your boyfriend
at school?
How one thing led to
another, I’m really not sure. But
suddenly, it wasn’t about my wanting
a driver’s license. It was all about
how my being gay is a sin, at least
in Dad’s eyes. I asked him when my
qualifying for heaven became a priority.
And all he could say as he slurped
Irish coffee was,
I’ll pray for you.
A Soft Whistle
Escapes Alex.
Wow. I knew your dad
isn’t exactly accepting. But I had no
idea it’s because he’s religious.
“He’s not. I mean, when I was a little
kid, we used to go to church all
the time. But then he started to travel
a lot. And then his mom, who was
the religious one to start with, got run
over crossing the street. After she died,
he never went to church again. If he
lost his faith, whatever. But that does
not give him the right to turn into
a no-good, nasty, loser drunk, or to try
and make me believe God hates me
because I’m some sort of an abomination. . . .”
I’m out of breath and losing steam.
But now Alex wants to know,
So, you
believe in God? I mean, considering . . .
“Considering what? That I watch
porn and smoke weed and have
a boyfriend? Yes, as unlikely as it
might seem, I do believe in God.
See, I never felt exactly ‘mainstream’
as a kid. The closest I ever got was
when we went to church and the pastor
would say stuff like we are all God’s
children and He made us in His image.
Christ was all about walking with sinners,
Alex, and paving a path to heaven for
whores and homos and such. I bet his disciples
even strayed now and again, you know?
I mean, after all, they were men walking
the wilds with other men for weeks at a time.”
I wink and he laughs, but then he gets
all serious and says,
And you believe
in heaven? That there’s life after death?
Death
I can’t stand thinking about
that word in relation to
Alex, but he’s waiting for me
to answer, and I think he needs
to hear what I’ve got to say.
“Yes, I believe that there is life
after death. Any physicist will
tell you that energy doesn’t die,
it only changes forms. What
makes you
you
, Alex? That
hunk of gray matter inside
your skull? No way. You—all
of us—have a life force. Energy.
Some people call it a soul.
Whatever you call it, it makes
you
you
. And when your body
dies, your energy will remain.
I can’t say for sure what heaven is.
But I have faith that it’s a special place,
and that you will be welcome there.”
Alex

Faith

Belief in unproven theory, in

what cannot be seen or heard

or touched, is something

I

have never known. Such

an amazing gift, to rise

above the realm of

wish-

ful thinking, all the way

to certainty of life beyond

the curse of early death. If

I

had been immersed in it

as a child, would I still carry

it with me now, and

could

it mute the throbbing

fear? If I reach for it now,

is there a chance that I will

find

it, sure as day follows night

follows day? If I hold Shane

tightly enough, can I absorb

faith?

Harley

If You Hold Someone
Tightly enough, can you make them stay?
Seems like everywhere I look, people
get together, only to break up again.
Especially people I care about, like Dad,
who broke up with Mom, plus a string
of girlfriends, before finding Cassie.
I hope they stay together, but sometimes
I hear them arguing. Can you argue and
still stay together? Is it worth it if you do?
Then there’s Mom, who broke up with Dad,
and who just hooked up with a really cute
guy a few weeks ago. Robin is from Australia,
and has a hot Down Under accent. Mom
has had dates before, but she never really
talks about them. This time, she actually
brought him home for dinner. Not only
that, but she asked me to help her cook
it, so I knew she wanted a heart-to-heart.
I was peeling apples when she launched
it, gushing about Robin and how wonderful
he was. When I didn’t say anything,
she insisted,
What? Talk to me, Harl.
Which made me confess, “I just never
thought about you falling in love.”
It was obvious that she had, and yet
she swore,
Whoa, now, wait a minute.
I never said anything about love.
Then she stood there, hands on hips.
“I know. But since you met him,
you’re . . . different. Happier, I guess.”
Totally true, and when she asked why
that bothered me, I said something totally
stupid. “I want you to be happy because
of me. Not him. Not anyone else.”

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