Authors: Ellen Hopkins
But kissing led to touching led to
the overwhelming need to explore
each other in the most personal ways.
And that means sneaking around,
something I hate. I'm an in-your-face,
this-is-me-take-it-or-leave-it kind
of person. I'd rather just let everyone
know that Brielle and I have connected
because this feels like we're living
a lie, and dishonesty sucks most of all.
Still, after dinner, rather than follow
the group down the hall to watch TV,
I go to my room, wait a few minutes
for the others to settle in, then I slink
the opposite direction, to Brielle.
She's waiting for me on her bed in
a fuzzy blue robe. She opens it, and
there is nothing underneath but
toasted-oat skin stretched over soft
flesh. She is all curves, a complete
contrast to Alex's taut, straight lines.
Turn off the light,
Brielle whispers.
Darkness shades the room, but
not completely. The moon is bright
through the window, offering just
enough illumination so we can see
each other's silhouettes. Brielle
coaxes me closer. I'm nervous,
but more about someone finding
out than about what we want to make
happen. I approach slowly, peeling
back my blouse and dropping
my skirt to the floor. “What about
your roommate? Should we worry?”
No need to rush,
she purrs.
Sonya
is cool, and I asked her to please
give me an hour alone in exchange
for some help with her algebra.
“Good. I do appreciate a smart
woman, not to mention excellent
planning. But I've got something
more exciting than algebra in mind.”
Beside her, open my arms, and
she settles into them like a warm
mist. Her lips seek mine, and our kiss
is sweet and gentle at first, but quickly
blossoms into passion. Brielle rolls
onto her back, urges me on top
of her, and the skin-to-skin contact
lifts the rich scent of cocoa butter.
“Mmm. You smell like chocolate.
Hot chocolate.” We giggle softly,
like little girls, though the response
of our bodies is all woman. With Alex,
I was never in control, something
that always bothered me. I take charge
now, and it's a feeling like no other
to give pleasure before asking for it
in kind. Emotion wells up, seeking
release along with the rise and fall
of her breasts. I don't dare admit
to having fallen in love, though,
not to her or to myself, so I find
other words, hope they convey
how very much I care: “You are
beautiful, do you know that?”
Unreasonably, her muscles contract
and grow tight.
Don't say that.
Don't lie to me. I'm ugly enough
to scare crows dead off a high wire.
My initial reaction is to laugh,
but I stifle it, knowing she means
what she said. “When was the last
time you looked in a mirror?”
She sighs.
Every time I look in
a mirror I see that girlâthe one
my classmates made fun of. I can't
find anyone else there. Just her.
“That is so wrong. Whoever told
you that you were ugly was obviously
blind. I wish heâor sheâcould see
you now. You are amazing.”
I kiss her to prove it, and she relaxes
again. “That's better,” I soothe, then
spend thirty minutes convincing
her how wrong that person was.
Four or five times.
I try to keep my mind
solidly here with Brielle,
but comparisons seem
to be inevitable. Alex
made me take, take, take.
Brielle opens herself to
my giving. Truthfully,
I have always been on
the receiving end, whether
by invitation or because
I had no choice. This is so
new I might have no idea
how to enjoy it, except it's
instinctive. My own joy
comes from making Brielle
sigh with pleasure, and at
last cry out that yes, this
is right, and yes she feels
beautiful. And I love
that I can do that for her
when I couldn't manage it
for Alex. I am turned on,
alive, because I am powerful.
No time to revel in afterglow,
we slip back into our clothes
before Sonya can return to claim
her bed. “I wish we could sleep
together.” Thinking about it,
I've rarely slept alone. Before
I left Gram's, there was always
at least one sister tucked in beside
me. And then there was Alex,
who I loved to snuggle up against,
though as time went on, she pulled
away from me more and more.
That would be nice,
says Brielle.
But that will probably never
happen, and it makes me sad.
Why did we have to connect now?
“The natural cussedness of things,
that's what my gram used to say.
It's like the good stuff always hits
at the exact wrong time. Sucks.”
She comes over, slides her arms
around my neck, kisses me sweetly.
Are you really leaving day after
tomorrow? Why do you have to go?
I push her gently away, look
down toward the floor so I can't
see the sadness in her eyes. “Gram
needs me. And I have to figure
out who I am. I don't know who
that is, or who I want to become.
I only know who I was, and this place
is a constant reminder of yesterday's
Ginger, the one I have to leave
behind. I just wish I didn't have
to leave you, too. I never expected
to care about someone again.”
Brielle pushes closer, lifts a hand,
and her fingertips flutter against
my cheek.
I'll go you one better.
I never expected to care for anyone,
period. I've worked very hard to
avoid it, in fact, which is why
everyone thinks I'm cold. Maybe
I am, but it's because I'm afraid
of getting hurt. Love wasn't meant
for people like you and me. You
have to be strong and brave to fall
in love. And maybe a little stupid.
How to reply, we hear footsteps
outside the door. Brielle pops up
onto her bed and I hustle over
to the cracked vinyl chair near
the window, making sure my
clothing is straight and buttoned.
My butt is barely planted when
Sonya comes in, humming
a Maroon 5 song I recognize
from back when I still listened to
music. She stops when she sees me.
Considers. Smiles.
Oh. Hey, Ginger.
I don't really care if she suspects,
so I meet her expression head-on.
“Hi, Sonya. Thanks for giving us
a little space. We were just talking
about how you have to be brave
to fall in love, or maybe stupid.
What do you think?” I address
Sonya, but give Brielle a wink.
Sonya laughs.
I think you have
to be stupid to hook up in a place
like this. And if that leads to love,
well, you get what you deserve.
Because I'm not sure if she's being
serious or totally sarcastic or even
if she means it in a bad way or good.
However she spun it, it's accurate.
“Know what? You're right. Okay,
I'll let you two tackle that algebra.
I've got some reading to do.” I stand,
then turn to Brielle. “Gram says love
lives inside every one of us. We just
have to accept that it's there. Don't
believe it wasn't meant for you and
me. We deserve it more than most.”
Deserving and accepting are two
vastly different things, of course.
I go back to my room, digesting
the past hour. There was making
love, yes, and it was new and
satisfying, in a whole different
way. Surprising. Something
I want to experience again.
But I think there was a fair
amount of love, the emotion, too.
I wish I was better acquainted with
it. How do I know if I'm right?
If they're right about love?
Pretty sure there's no way
around trial and error, and
hopefully learning from
your mistakes when it comes
to things like listening to
the arguments of your heart.
Argh! I'm so totally absorbed
in thinking about what just
happened with Brielle that it takes
several minutes for the scene
in my own room to solidify.
When I go inside, I notice
Miranda's presence. See,
from the corner of my eye,
that she's sitting on her bed.
But it isn't until I turn to look at
her that it becomes apparent
she's in shock, her Latina face
the color of oatmeal. “What is it?”
She doesn't say anything, but
offers whatever she holds in her
hand. It turns out to be a printed
page, ripped from the local newspaper.
That's what the headline screams.
I skim the story, which shares
the grisly details in lurid
tabloid fashion:
Shayleece Reynolds just turned seventeen.
She should have been struggling with chemistry
and reading Jane Austen novels. Instead,
the former child prostitute was found beaten,
raped, and left to die in a remote stretch of desert
north of Las Vegas. In a highly publicized trial
last week, Ms. Reynolds testified against
Lawrence Reynolds, her pimp and alleged
biological father (court-ordered DNA testing
has yet to return results) for murdering her mother,
another prostitute. Ms. Reynolds disappeared
on her way to a dental appointment and was
reported missing by staff at Walk Straight,
a child prostitute rescue group home.
It is believed her death was retaliation for
her testimony, which resulted in Lawrence
Reynolds's conviction for first-degree murder
and pandering a child under the age of fourteen,
which in itself carries a life sentence in the state
of Nevada. This case highlights the growing problem
of trafficking children for sex in Las Vegas and
across the US. Just last year, an FBI task force . . .
“Where did you get this?”
I've never seen any of the girls
look at a paper. Few enough of them
keep up with anything newsy.
From Belinda. I was outside
reading when she drives up, stops,
and opens her window. She doesn't
say anything. Just throws the envelope
with this inside. I don't know how
she knows where I am, Ginger.
How did she find me?
The message
is clear: Keep your mouth shut.
Miranda is supposed to testify
against Papacito in a few weeks.
They've been building a case against
him and want to go to court before
the end of the year. “Did you tell
anyone?” She answers with a shake
of her head. “Why not? You have to!
They should take you somewhere safe.”
Where? If Papacito can find me
here, he can find me anywhere.
He'll kill me, just like that other
girl. I have to leave. I need to hide.
“No, Miranda. Where can you hide?
You can't go home. Papacito knows
Ricardo, and your family would be
in danger. You don't have anywhere
else to go, do you? Better to let
your caseworker know, so . . .”
Her head swivels side to side.
“Listen. If you don't tell, don't
follow through and testify, Papacito
will get out of jail and go right back
to working those girls. You don't
want that to happen, do you?”
She thinks it over, but not very
long.
Doesn't matter who goes
to jail, someone will make the girls
work. Today, Belinda, tomorrow . . . ?
Her eyes shimmer with frightened
tears. “Listen, I know you're scared.
I'd be scared too. But someone
has to make them stopâ”
Not me! Why me? I'm just a kid.
I can't change it. I can't change
anything.
Rather than dissolve
as expected, she goes totally blank.
Only a single staff person here.
It's Bethany tonight. I'm afraid
to go looking for her and leave
Miranda alone, so I open the door,