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Authors: Ellen Hopkins

Tilt (6 page)

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Harley

I Hide Hurt
Behind a fake smile. I wear
it all the time. Everyone says how
I always look so cheerful.
Shows what they know, I guess.
Not that things are so bad.
When I think of little kids starving
in Africa, or old people freezing
to death, my life seems pretty good.
Mom’s got a decent job at DMV.
There’s plenty of food in the fridge.
I wear semi-nice clothes, and I’ve got
stuff—a cell, an iPod, a laptop.
School is okay, at least up till
now. I start high school end of
August. I have good friends,
including my excellent BFF, Bri.
Which leaves one thing missing.
My dad. I hardly ever get to see
him, even though he only lives
fifty miles away in stupid Fallon.
So This Weekend Visit
Was a surprise. When Dad called,
I swear I went all fan girl. (Can you
go fan girl over your father? Dumb.)
Hey there, Sugar,
he said.
I sure
have missed you. Want to come
out to the sticks for a couple of days?
My heart started hammering and,
for once, my smile turned real.
After I said, “Sure,” I added, “Daddy.”
I like to try and guilt-trip him that way,
not that it works. As far as I can tell,
he’s totally guilt free. The highway from
Carson to Fallon is flat and plain.
“I wish you didn’t live so far away
so I could see you more often.”
Dad keeps both hands on the steering
wheel and his eyes on the road.
Glad
you said that. Looks like I’m moving
back to Reno. Cass . . . uh . . . my new
girl has a house there. And I landed
a job at Terrible’s. So I’ll be closer.
I’m all jumbled up. Happy, because
he’s going to live closer. A little scared,
because I don’t know what that means.
And a lot jealous. Dad has a girlfriend,
and this time it sounds serious. “You’re
moving in with her? How long have
you been seeing each other?” I ask, even
though it doesn’t matter at all. I stare out
the window as the power poles zip by
and try not to scrunch my nose at
Dad’s obnoxious cigarette-and-sweat
smell.
I guess it’s been about six months
now. We met just before Christmas.
You’ll like her. She’s funny and sweet
and really cute. Not as cute as you, though.
Usually
I like when people say I’m cute.
But not when it feels tacked on.
And not when comparing me
to someone else. And especially
not when the someone doing
the comparing is my dad,
stacking my cuteness against
his new, serious girlfriend’s.
Anyway, cute is okay. But I’d
rather be pretty. Beautiful.
Hot. (Okay, not in my father’s
opinion. That’s just gross.)
I want boys to look at me like
they look at Brianna. It’s hard
having a best friend who draws
everyone’s attention when you
never do. I keep hoping some
of Bri will rub off on me, but
so far, no. Mom says I’m a late
bloomer. But it’s summer already.
Well, Officially
Summer is still two weeks away.
Maybe I’ll bloom by then.
Dad turns off the highway, zigs and
then zags and we pull onto a cracked
cement driveway. He doesn’t live
like a king, that’s for sure. The house
is a prefab, and an old one. The beige
siding is chipped and brown paint
peels from the eaves like scabs
leaving skin. Eww. Disgusting.
Bent chain link surrounds a yard
that looks like it once had grass.
A few green patches remain midst
the crusty brown stuff. “You should
water the lawn once in a while.”
But Dad is already out of the car
and headed toward the house.
He turns long enough to say,
Grab your stuff and come on.
Cassie is anxious to meet you.
She Stands in the Doorway
Tall and too thin and melon-boobed,
with long wavy hair the color
of fall scarlet maples. She
isn’t cute. She’s pretty.
She reaches for Dad
and they’re kissing
like people do in
the movies. I
can see their
tongues
moving
from here.
That part
grosses me
out. What’s
worse is how it
looks like they’re in
love. It’s not fair. How
can he love someone else
when he can’t find enough love
for me to keep me solidly in his life?
Mom’s right. He is one selfish bastard.
I Stuff All That Inside
Find my phony grin and go to meet
Dad’s new girl. As I get out of the car,
they stop the tongue dance. Thank goodness.
At least I don’t have to see it up close.
Hi!
(Her voice is all breathy.)
You must
be Harley.
(Duh.)
I’m Cassie. Well,
really Cassandra, but Cassie for short.
(Double duh.) She does have a nice
smile, though. What do I say that
she hasn’t already said? “Uh . . . hey.”
Cassie pokes Dad’s shoulder.
You
didn’t tell me how gorgeous Harley is.
Gorgeous. A bit over the top, but I
have to admit it thaws me a little.
Come on inside and meet my son.
(Great. She probably wants me to babysit.)
Cassie holds out her hand and I don’t
know what else to do but take it. Her skin
is softer than I expected and when her
hair moves it smells like cinnamon over
tobacco. She tugs me gently across
the threshold. The place looks like a tornado
blew through, depositing clothes and
fast-food wrappers everywhere.
Sorry about the mess. Your dad isn’t
so good about picking up after himself.
That will have to change when he moves
in with me. Chad! Come say hi to Harley.
It takes a few seconds, but eventually
footsteps clomp down the hall. Heavy
footsteps. Either he’s a really big little kid
or Cassie is older than I thought. OMG!
BOOK: Tilt
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