Authors: Ellen Hopkins
happy to kill you the rest of the way.
One thing about Vince, he's blunt. Cool.
I'll return the favor. “Even in the midst
of all the bullshit, I never stopped loving
Ronnie. Truthfully, one of the
only
things
I feel guilty about is letting her down.
I won't hurt her again. Not if I can help it.”
Looking for hints of dishonesty,
ready to call my bluff. But this is
a solid bet. I mean every word.
Well, that's good, then. Because if
I think for one moment you're playing
her, just so she'll hang around until
you get whatever support you can
wring out of her, then decide to dump
her . . . I told you what would happen.
“Look, Vince. I never asked for her
help. In fact, I gave her every reason
to make a graceful exit from my life,
including coming totally clean
about the sewer I'd been swimming
in. I don't want her here because
she thinks it's the right thing to do.
I don't want her pity. I want her love,
something I don't deserve. But if
she's willing to give it, wants to invest
time and effort into what's left of me, I will
love her back, with all my heart. I can't
say what that means as far as the future.
I have to take it one day at a time, but every
day is a million times better with Ronnie in it.”
Is lopsided. Is it the first time
I've seen him smile, other than
his big-ass leer when he claims
a giant pot at the poker table?
That's good to hear because
it means I can offer my help, too.
One, I have a friend who customizes
autos, and he's willing to look at
your car and see what he can do
to make it work for you. I know
buying another one is probably
out of the question financially.
Leon is talented. He'll get you on
the road. Two, I don't know what
your house is like, but I'm sure it'll
need some alterations for accessibility.
One of our cousins is a damn good
handyman, and he'll work for cheap.
I hear you're moving to a rehab
hospital soon. How long will you be
there? Do you know? Maybe he can
have everything finished before
you go home. And three, anytime
you need to talk, man, call me.
Just happened? We went
from murderous threats
to offers of help in less
than five minutes. “Jesus,
Vince. I have no idea what
to say, or how to thank you.”
Keep your mouth shut and
stay good to my sister, we can
be friends. I treat my friends right.
My eyes sting suddenly.
Can't cry in front of Vince,
or he'll change his mind.
No one needs a friend who
spontaneously bursts into
tears. But that's exactly
what I do, and he looks
petrified. “S-sorry. It's just,
no one except maybe Jack,
my stepdad, has ever been
so kind to me. Not even Mom,
and that's supposed to be her job.”
Yeah, well, don't let it get
around. I've got a reputation
to uphold, and “kind” isn't it.
Okay, then. One question,
though. “This isn't because
you feel sorry for me, is it?
'Cause I don't want pity
from you, either. I'd be happy
to accept your respect, though,
and I'm more than willing to
earn that, whatever it takes.”
He's quiet, thinking it over.
Finally, he says,
Since we're friends
now, here's a story I don't tell
many people. My high school
sweetheart was this amazing
girl. Smart. Gorgeous. Going
places. A week after graduation,
a semi hit her car. She survived,
but lost a leg, and her face wasn't
ever going to be as beautiful
again. I did everything I could
to persuade her life was still
worth living, but she killed herself
that summer. You want respect?
Get your ass up out of that bed
and onto your feet again. You can.
To my cheer squad. Weird.
So goddamn weird. “Sucks
about your girlfriend, dude.”
It was a tragedy. What about you?
You've thought about suicide,
yeah?
He looks at me intently.
“Strangely, no. I mean, I did
ask the Great Squash to please
haul my ass home to the pumpkin
patch in the sky, but he ignored
me, and I'm way too much
of a coward to do the deed myself.”
He laughs, but then grows
serious.
But . . . All right, I know
this is really personal, but any
chance you can have children?
Not that you need a dozen
next month or anything, but
historically the Carinos are big
on offspringâyou know, like
populating the planet with Italians.
“I don't need a dozen, ever,
and I'm not sure I'll even want
one or two. But I felt that way
before this, and if I change
my mind, apparently the semen
factory is still functioning. It's
the delivery method that's in
doubt. Anyway, you're not saying
you want me to knock Ronnie up?”
His amusement grows.
You do,
and I'll kick your ass. Unless
that's what she wants one day.
“Just so you know, my ass can't
feel a thing, so kicking it would be
irrelevant.” Am I really joking
about this? “As for the rest,
I guess it's one step at a time
(figuratively, of course) for now.
Tomorrow is a long way away.
The challenge is figuring out
how to get through today.”
Fair enough. Listen. I'm happy
to get hold of your mom about
your car and the house renovation.
But would you please let her know
I'm going to call, so she doesn't think
I'm out to scam her or something?
And Vince says goodbye, and as
I watch his retreat an odd sensation
settles over me: contentment.
Not at my condition, or the things
that led me here, but at the vague
possibility of a meaningful future.
The first step is acceptance, that's what
they keep telling me, and I understand
that my only real choices are to accept
or take the quick way out, like Vince's
girlfriend. My seventeenth birthday
is still a month away, three days after
the current year melts into the next.
I should be thinking about football.
Junior prom. Geometry, chemistry,
and American history. Psychology.
I should be worrying about Christmas
and what to buy for Mom and Ronnie.
Those things are lost to me, but what
remains is more important, and vital
to my struggle to, as Vince said,
get my ass up out of bed and onto
my feet again. I've got love. Support.
And at least a couple of friends.
Funny, but I never really thought
about my friendsâor lack of them.
I had lots back in Kansas, and I
probably would have qualified
some of the people I knew from
school here in Vegas as buddies,
but no, not really. And of the girls
I went out with, only Ronnie
qualified. As for Vince, I saw him
as a means to an end. I had it all
bass-ackwards, and in hindsight
I see everything I did, every damn
goal I set, revolved totally around
me. Why did it take something like
this to clear my vision, shine
a spotlight on what's truly importantâ
not money or dope or winning a bet,
but treasuring the people who love
you? Figuring that out is the upside.
The downside is I didn't get it while
Jack was still around, or before I could
step in and stop Cory's downslide.
But any chance of that has evaporated.
Ditto the happiness I felt moments ago.
Zaps my spine, electric pain
just south of my disconnection.
“Jesus!” I fling the word toward
the wall, and it bounces back, too
loud in the hospital silence.
The effort sends another bolt
down, where I have no feeling
to speak of. How is it possible?
My finger starts working the call
button again and again. Overkill,
and I know it, but I want relief now!
Footsteps come pounding and Nurse
Carolyn hustles in.
What's wrong?
She hurries to the side of the bed.
Pain? What kind, and where?
I'm familiar enough with the vocab
to tell her, “Lumbar region, neuropathic.”
The kind initiated by my short-circuited
nerves, rather than musculoskeletal,
which is muscle or joint discomfort,
caused by overloading them. This is not
overwork. “It's bad. Real bad. Please,
can you give me something?” She nods
and goes to get permission while I sit
here wondering if the source of this
searing static isn't my stressed-out
brain informing my body that I
deserve to hurt. Maybe I should
keep my appointment with the shrinkâ
the one I've been avoiding, as if I
don't need a psyche adjustment.
Carolyn returns with both meds
and my mom in tow. Mom watches
me swallow a dose of relief, and
waits for the nurse to go.
I need
to talk to you about the houseâ
“Hey. Ronnie's brother, Vince,
stopped by. He says he has a cousin
who can help with the alterations. . . .”
Another sharp stab in my lower
back makes me wince, and Mom's face
creases with concern. “Don't worry.
I'll be okay as soon as this pill
kicks in. Anyway, Vince says maybe
he could have it done by . . . what?”
She pulls a chair over close to me.
Takes my hand.
I didn't want to worry
you about anything outside of here, but . . .
To worry about, starting with Mom
hasn't been able to put in very many
hours at her already low-paying job.
She's behind on bills, chief among
them the mortgage. Jack's life
insurance kept her head above water
for several months, but she can't see
a way to satisfy the bank. She's thinking
about letting the house go to a short sale,
which means we'll have to live
somewhere else.
Uncle Vern will
let us move in for a while. There isn't
a rehab hospital close by, but there's
a gym not far away. Hopefully we can
find a decent physical therapist.
“Go back to Kansas? No fucking way!
What will I do there? I can't farm. I can't
fix tractors. Hey, I know. Maybe I can
find work as a scarecrow.” Anger carves
into me, a white-hot blade. “No, Mom.
I won't leave Ronnie or give up on my rehab.
I'll figure something out.” Where can I
find a big wad of cash? Is there a market
for sex with a guy in a wheelchair?
That lovely name
is what I was called
in elementary school.
All it took was one
vile
boy informing everyone
on the playground
that my clothes were Goodwill,
and my face was
ugly
enough to scare
crows dead off a high
wire, and the other kids'
laughter
inspired a whole line
of barnyard jokes. It took
years to understand how that
defined
the way I looked at myself
and perhaps explained
why I changed myself so
drastically. I became one of
the painted
women I saw on TV,
and that inspired
all the wrong people to steal
piece after piece of
me.
And then Ginger came along.
To spend with Brielle has totally
been a challenge. You're not
supposed to hook up with other
residents here, and since we're all
girls, that isn't a problem for most.
At first, it wasn't an issue for us, either.