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Authors: Ellen Hopkins

Tilt (51 page)

BOOK: Tilt
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over there it occurs to me that I don’t
have to sneak around anymore.
It’s dark by the time we hook up.
I leave my car, get into his, slide close
for a kiss that feels awkward. “Can
we go somewhere?” I touch his thigh,
the way I know he likes. “I want you.”
Rock Creek?
I agree and he starts
to drive to one of our favorite parking
spots.
So how was the funeral?
It’s
the kind of question you ask when
you don’t know what else to say.
“Sad.” I know he wants to ask if
I have rescheduled my appointment,
but I don’t want to tell him until
I have the chance to touch him. Kiss
him. Make him remember our love.
We Are Barely Parked

 

 

And I am all over him

because I want him
because I need him
because I love him

can’t bear the thought of

losing him
going on without him
seeing him with someone else

I cover his mouth with mine

give him my kiss
open his lips
with the tip of my tongue

And now we are naked

skin rubbing skin
bone against bone
flesh into flesh

I tell him I love him

a murmur
a scream
a moan

Right at this moment there is

no baby
no worry
no one but the two of us.
Dylan

At This Moment

I

have never loved her
more. She has possessed
me, this demon girl,
infiltrated me, and I

don’t

know how to exorcise her.
If I found the right words,
some damning incantation,
would I even

want

to

use them, command our hearts
apart? More than lust connects
us, so why doesn’t she understand
how much there is to

lose

if she pursues this ridiculous
plan? I refuse to be dragged
along. And, love or no love,
that will mean leaving

her

behind.

Shane

The Plan

To eradicate every reminder of Shelby
while we were all at the funeral
seems to have gone like clockwork.
Alex and I arrive home before everyone
else, and I go straight for the bedroom
I used to avoid. Emptied. No furniture.
No TV. No VCR. Lung assist machine?
Gone. Donated to a family who needs
one but can’t afford it. One small measure
of good. Thank you, Shelby, wherever
you are. You
are
there somewhere, right?
What a fucking joke. I snort a half laugh.
Alex looks at me with curious eyes.
What’s so funny?
Good question.
He probably thinks I’ve lost
it, and maybe I have. “Nothing, really.
Just pondering the Great Beyond.
You know, the Giant Void, and all that.”
Now he looks at me, surprised.
Giant
void as in space? Or as in the place
you used to call heaven?
“What’s the difference? It’s all a huge
bowl of nothing, isn’t it? And just what
the fuck is the point of any of it?”
That isn’t you talking, Shane. I really
think you need to give it some time.
Do you want me to stay or should I go?
“I think I want to be alone for a while.”
We exit the immediate void. Alex tries
to kiss me goodbye, but I’m not
in the mood.
Call me if you need me,
he says, starting toward the front door.
When he’s almost there, he turns back
to me.
Just so you know, your unshakable
faith, despite everything, is a very big part
of why I fell in love with you. It’s who you are.
It’s Who I Was
I watch him leave, go to my room,
turn on my computer. Enter “Death”
into the search engine. Holy crap.
Pages and pages of definitions
and theories and obituaries and stories
about people dying. Death pictures.
Death videos, including YouTube vids
labeled “gruesome.” What kind of freaks
post those? And who the fuck wants
to watch them? Oh my God. There
are more than a dozen beheadings.
Car wrecks. Executions. Maybe I do
want to watch them. See if I can find
any evidence at all of souls, fleeing.
Morbid curiosity is getting the best
of me. I believe I need to see one, and
am just about to click on it when I hear
familiar voices coming through the front
door. Footsteps follow, some moving
toward the kitchen, others up the hall.
Suddenly, there is screaming. A high,
sharp keen. Mom? I run toward the sound
and almost trip over Gaga, scrambling
for haven under my bed. Dad and Gramps
hurry from the other direction. We all know
where we’ll find Mom. Her siren wail
echoes in the emptiness of Shelby’s room.
No! No! No! How could you? Bastards!
We don’t try to stop her. It isn’t anger
she’s screeching. It’s pain, and we can’t
make it go away. She paces the perimeter,
mascaraed tears striping her face. When
she sees us, she raises the volume.
Who
did this? Whose idea was it? Christian?
It was Dad’s idea, but it is Gramps
who says,
We thought it would be best.
Mom turns on him.
Oh, you did?
You thought it would be best to wipe
my daughter from my life, scrub away
the last five years as if they never happened?
How dare you?
Her voice rises, approaches
hysterical.
How dare any of you assume
what’s best for me? How . . . how . . .
And now she breaks down completely,
throws herself onto the floor where
the carpet is darker from Shelby’s bed
having covered it all these years. Dad
and Gramps and I exchange silent
questions. Should one of us go to her,
urge her to her feet? Finally, Dad shakes
his head. We back out of the room, leave
Mom to her tear-drenched memories.
I Go Back to My Room

So I Do a Search for “God”

BOOK: Tilt
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