Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Thank you for downloading this eBook.
Find out about free book giveaways, exclusive content, and amazing sweepstakes! Plus get updates on your favorite books, authors, and more when you join the Simon & Schuster Teen mailing list.
or visit us online to sign up at
eBookNews.SimonandSchuster.com/teen
To best preserve formatting of complex poems and elements, we recommend that this book be read at a smaller font size on your device.
This book is dedicated to all those committed to helping victims of traffickingâchild or adult, sex or laborâbecome survivors.
Special thanks to those who shared their stories with me, opening up so freely about painful situations. You've chosen to remain anonymous, and I've pledged to respect your privacy. Here's to your future as survivors. Walk forward proudly.
The courage to leap
the brink, free-fall
beyond the precipice,
hurtle toward
the abyss,
end the pain. Mine.
Mom's. Oh, she'd feel
the initial sting, cry
for a day or two, but it
would be
short-lived, a quick
stab of grief. Finite.
A satin-lined coffin
and cool, deep hole are
preferable to
walking a treadmill
over a carpet of coals,
enduring the blistering,
skin-cracking flames of
this living hell.
A slow swim toward the light, breaking
the surface to crawl back onto the beach,
here in the land of the living. It seems
like a worthy goal. So why do I wish
I'd died instead? Should that be the first
thought to pop into my head?
I open my eyes. Snap them shut again.
I've been treading dark water for . . .
I have no idea how long. I test the light
again, and the fluorescent glare against
white walls makes me bury my head
in the pillow. Bleach stink assaults me
immediately, fights the antiseptic smell
that confirms I'm in a hospital. Hospital, yes.
That information sinks through the fog
licking inside my head, syncs with
the onslaught of noises. Monitors
beeping. Ventilators whooshing. And
somewhere, there's a game show on
TV. Tubes jut from my arms, and some
sort of brace wraps my midsection, limiting
movement, but I manage to swivel my head
toward the rhythmic snore marking time
very near my right elbow. Mom's dozing
on a gray plastic chair beside the bed.
Her voice floats from memory.
Come back
to me, Cody boy. Don't you dare leave me too.
And I remember her hands, oh God,
soft as rose petals, and fragranced
the same way, as she stroked my face
over and over, urging,
Please, son.
We'll make it through this. We always
make it through. But I can't do it alone.
I want to help her make it through.
I want to go back to sleep. Except
I've finally accomplished what she's been
waiting forâresurrection. “Mo-mom?”
I have to force the word through
a thick soup of phlegm and it exits
my mouth a hoarse whisper. She doesn't
stir until I clear my throat.
Cody . . . ,
she mumbles, and her eyes stutter open
to find my own staring at her.
Cody?
Are you really here?
She jerks upright.
Oh my God!
She jumps to her feet,
rushes bedside, and grabs my hand.
Too hard. A wicked buzz, like a static
shock, zaps the base of my skull.
Almost a growl, leaks from my lips.
Mom drops my hand like she's the one
getting shocked, backs away like maybe
I'm contagious.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
Did I hurt you? Hold on. I'll get
a nurse.
She pounds the call button.
“It's okay. I'm okay.” Except I'm not
sure I am. A shimmer of pain, muted
but present, radiates from my neck.
It spreads across my shoulders,
down into my chest, swelling to fill
the space defined by my rib cage,
finally settling in my belly. It stops
there, having traveled pretty much
everywhere. Everywhere, except . . .
Anywhere below my waist. Weird.
What the hell? I see Mom watching,
assessing me in some alien way.
With great effort, I reach down,
poke my right leg. Nothing. Left?
Numb. “What's wrong with me, Mom?”
My voice slurs. My brain is slow.
I'm drugged, yeah, that's it. A phrase
comes to mind: morphine cocktail.
I'll have another, please, bartender.
That cracks me up, and I laugh like
a madman. Mom looks terrified.
“Don't worry, Mom. I'm just loaded,
you know? They gave me some pretty
good drugs.” She nods agreement, but
her expression argues there's more.
Where's that nurse? I'll be right back.
She hustles off, calling for someone
to come right away. Wonder how long
I've been here, hooked up to these
machines. A day? Two? A week?
Logic argues it's probably been
a few days at least, or Mom wouldn't
have been so worried that I wasn't going
to wake up again. And now, duh, it hits
me that must be a big part of the reason
my legs feel so weird. They're still asleep.
Try, try again. I pinch my right thigh.
Hard. Pinch my left thigh. Harder.
Zip. Nada. Man, this is excellent dope.
Bet old Vince would go for this shit.
Vince. Wait. There's something about Vince.
I need to remember. I close my eyes. . . .
in time to . . .
Vince's apartment.
A poker game.
I remember that and . . .
winning for once.
Did I win?
Yeah, that's right.
Six hundred . . . no,
six hundred and fifty bucks.
Played it smart.
Left the table still ahead,
like smart gamblers do.
Ronnie.
Oh, Ronnie, Jesus,
I'm sorry. I never meant
to hurt you.
That day, after work
(work?), I was going
to see Ronnie.
She wasn't mad.
I thought she'd be mad.
Quick stop at the bank.
Deposited the cash,
half in my account,
half in Mom's
before . . . my date?
I dated Ronnie.
It wasn't a date,
it was a three-way meet.
Oh shit, no. Misty . . .
The thought of her
makes me sad.
Sad? Why? Misty.
Sweet Jesus.
Ambulances. Stretchers.
Misty, but where is her face?
Under the sheet.
Dead.
Misty is dead.
Before that, what?
Misty in bed
with some squeaky guy
with a teeny dick
telling me to hurry.
Time is money.
Time.
Tick.
Bam.
Noise at my back.
Splintering wood.
A fist against my kidneys.
Down I went.
Crack-crack-crack.
The report of a gun.
Small. Sharp. Deadly.
You fucking whore.
You promised no more.
Chris. Misty's boyfriend.
But she didn't answer.
And you . . .
Addressed to me,
right before
his boots found my ribs.
Boom. Boom.
He took out two
just like that.
And then,
snap!
Electric. Brilliant
sizzling white heat.
A shattering
splintering of bone
in my back.
My back.
I felt it go.
He shot me in the spine.
Chris.
Shot.
Me.
He was at Vince's.
I taunted him.
He was crazy mean
and I knew that.
Why take chances?
My fault.
My fault Misty is dead.
My fault I'm lying here.
My fault that I can't feel . . .
No! Screw that!
I'm okay. I'm fine.
Just a little numb.
I'm just fucked up.
It's the killer dope.
Killer . . .
Tears spill from my eyes, track
my face. Spontaneously, one word
falls from my mouth, in quick
repetition. “No. No. No. No. No.”
I'm still babbling when Mom
returns with a nurse the approximate
size of a large gorilla.
Take it easy,
she soothes.
I've sent for Dr. Harrison.
She'll be here as soon as she can.
I'm sure you have questions and
she can answer them better than I.
Meanwhile, how's the pain?
I dissolve into hysterical laughter.
Both Mom and Nurse Gorilla look
ready to flee. “Can't feel a thing. Hey . . .”
I reach down to the approximate level
of my pecker. “Am I wearing a diaper
or what? How am I pissing?”
I pat, pat, pat. “Nope. No diaper. Do
I still have a dick? 'Cause I for sure
can't feel it if I do.” Jesus. H. Christ.
Laughter segues to sobs. Mom shifts
into Mommy mode, rushes to my side.
It's going to be okay, Cody. I promise.
She starts to reach for me. Remembers
what happened last time, withdraws
her hands. Her soft, rose-petal hands.
Nursilla steers Mom back into the chair,
and when she moves closer, her badge
tells me her name is Barbara.
Listen.
You have experienced major trauma.
Do you remember what happened?
At my nod, she continues.
I'd prefer
Dr. Harrison explain in more depth,
but I can tell you that you have a spinal
cord injury. The good news is it's in
your lower thoracic region, which
is why you've got the use of your upper
extremities and can breathe on your own.
Barbara lets that sink in. Spinal cord
injury. Lower thoracic region.
I have no clue what any of that means.
But, hey, I can breathe on my own,
and should that become difficult
I can still use my hands to pick my nose.
I'm about to ask what the bad news
is when two people bustle into
the room. The nurse introduces us.
Dr. Harrison, apparently my neurosurgeon,
is a tall, pretty woman, with toffee-colored
skin and striking blue-green eyes
that seem determined to look anywhere
but straight at me. Not a good sign.
The dude, who's Hispanic, stands a good four
inches shorter, but man, is he buff.
Federico will oversee your PT,
explains
Barbara. When I look confused,
Federico clarifies,
That's physical
therapy.
He extends a hand.
Awesome