Authors: Ellen Hopkins
or at least tell me where you are so
I can come find you. I promise, no
matter what has happened, we'll make
things right again. I don't care what
your parents think. All my love, Andrew.
Beautiful words. I want to believe
them, need to trust in him. But how?
The love we shared ran marrow deep,
but the Eden he knew died behind
the walls of Tears of Zion. “Ruthie”
is who I am here in Vegas. Walk
Straight needed to call me something,
so I offered my middle name, Ruth.
Sarah added the “ie” to make it feel
“friendlier.” Less biblical, for sure.
But I don't want to be Ruthie
anymore. She represents a short
chapter of my life I'm determined
to edit out. And if I'm no longer Eden,
who'll I be if I return to Idaho?
I think about how to respond.
At some point, I'll have to break
down and tell him the truth. Not
possible to construct a solid future
on a foundation of dishonesties.
Doing it this way would give him
time to consider the implications
and change his mind about wanting
me back in his life. He wouldn't
even have to write a reply to say
goodbye, he could simply excise
me from his life with his silence. Plus,
I don't have to look into his eyes,
absorb the hurt and anger that will
surface there if I admit the ugliness
face-to-face. I'm a coward. Too
cowardly, in fact, to come clean
right now. To keep moving forward,
I have to maintain at least a minimal
amount of hope that Andrew and I
can be together again. Still, I need
to give him something, so maybe
a bare-bones explanation of why
I simply evaporated one day.
The story begins with Mama.
That's where I take him, not so
far back, not really though
it feels like years ago, and what
has transpired between then and
now has aged me more than months.
“Dearest Andrew. I am safe, for
now, in a shelter in Las Vegas.
I do hope to return to Boise, but
I'm not sure when, because I told
them my parents were dead,
something I plan to rectify today.
I won't tell you everything now,
but want to confide some of it.
Remember the last time I saw you?
My family was at church, at least
I thought so. But when I got home,
Mama was there, and I was sure
she'd beat me again. Instead she brought
me into the kitchen, made tea laced
with sleeping pills, and as I passed
out, she blamed Satan for me falling
in love with you. I woke up eleven
hours later, out in the middle of
the Nevada desert, at a rehab
center called Tears of Zion. . . .”
My routine, the lack of sustenance
and human company. Underline
the hopelessness I felt when I learned
my time there had no set termination
point. Now comes the hard part,
but without it there's no explanation
for how I got here. “All I could think
about was finding a way to escape,
to get back to you. One of the orderlies
had a crush on me. God forgive me,
but I promised he could be my boyfriend
if he helped me get away.” I won't give
Andrew the disgusting details; he can assume
them or not. “It worked. When we stopped
for gas, I hid from him. A nice rancher
gave me a ride and I wound up in Vegas.
I tried to call you, but your phone was
disconnected. I didn't know my parents
had you arrested until your mom told
me. I'm so sorry. For everything.”
I spend a few minutes stressing over
how to sign off. “Love” isn't strong
enough, and he used the preface “All my.”
I choose, “I'll never stop loving you,”
hit send before I change my mind.
Of life in hard-core juvenile
lockup don't really need
to be repeated. My brother
Cody would never let me
live it down. I won't argue
the system got it wrong, that
I'm
not qualified to be here.
Break into a home,
then whup the owner's
ass until she's lying
still
on the ground,
they'll put you away
if they catch you. Problem
is, there isn't
a kid
in this place
who won't walk away
tougher, meaner, calloused,
no hint of child left
inside.
I thought a lot about being locked up
when they first sent my little brother
to jail. Not saying Cory didn't deserve
it, or that it didn't maybe save his life.
The path he was headed down
could have ended with him slamming
face-first into a brick wall. But it made
me a little crazy to consider the day-
to-day of containment in a little cement
room, only let out for meals, classroom
bullshit (like anyone there gives a fuck
about school), and an hour of exercise.
Yeah, that pretty much seemed like hell
to me. But, with luck and good behavior,
Cory will be released one day. He didn't
manage to kill the woman he knocked
senseless, and since she recovered, he'll only
be incarcerated until he turns eighteen.
The cost of my indiscretions, which
should've resulted in nothing but pleasure,
was life, in prison in a useless body.
Into the next, a huge brown smear
of hospital shit. There's nothing to do
but watch TV, hour upon tedious hour.
The food sucks, but even if it was gourmet
I'd avoid it because eating only means
someone's gloved finger massaging
my anus to make me take a dump. Not
that I can feel it, but knowing that's what's
going on is more than enough to drop
me into a cavern of depression, a place
I fall into regularly, with or without
a latex-sheathed pointer exploring my ass.
Mom brings me books, and the unread
pile continues to grow, along with a stack
of magazines.
Sports Illustrated. People.
National Geographic.
No
Hustler
, not that
it would do anything but remind me
what a worthless excuse for a man I've become.
No, my life will never be the same,
and worse, my future as a complete human
being was stolen by that low-life fucker, Chris.
Federico would tell me to shut the hell
up, cancel the pity party and get to work.
His idea of work? Learning to sit up.
That's another word for balance,
and apparently I've got a problem
with that. First of all, I've been lying
here for weeks, rolled side to side
from time to time so I don't get these
nasty things called pressure soresâ
.
wounds caused by staying in one
position for so long your bones
poke through your hide. I've seen
pictures. Disgusting. The worst thing
is, since I can't feel the wear and tear,
they could get infected before I even
realize my skin is rotting away.
But there's more. To keep from falling
over, your eyes, ears, and proprioceptors
have to work together. Proprioceptors
are sensors that tell you where your limbs
are positioned in space. Like, your right
arm is over your head, or your left foot
is two inches off the ground. And since
my legs don't have a clue where they are,
things get a little tricky. Federico insists
it gets easier with practice. Too bad
sitting up isn't on my to-do list at all.
That's what he said, and I do
believe he meant it. Best of luck
with that, old buddy. He's yanked
the sheets back, exposing most
of my uselessness, slack and pale
as the Cream of Wheat they tried
to make me eat for breakfast.
Okay now. The process is fairly
simple. Put your elbows flat
on the bed beside you and push
down, bending your head and
shoulders forward.
He stands there,
waiting, but I don't bother to try
and move. What's the point?
“Don't feel like it. Maybe tomorrow.”
His expression is priceless.
Look, Cody. Time keeps ticking
forward, and the rest of the world
isn't on hold waiting for you to
get on board. You're not going
to die, and the quality of your future
living is entirely up to you. I believe
you want to get up on your feet
again, and I also believe we can
absolutely make that happen.
Scratch that.
You
can make that
happen. People with worse injuries
than yours
have
made that happen.
But it takes heart and courage.
Out of breath with the effort of not
convincing me to budge an inch,
he lingers there, hands on hips,
with such genuine bewilderment
on his face I almost feel sorry
for him. But not anywhere near
as sorry as I feel for myself.
“Look, dude. I'm lying here with
a tube hanging out of my dick, leaking
piss into a plastic bag. That dick,
by the way, is totally useless for
anything worth getting excited about.
Yeah, yeah, Dr. Harrison told me
ninety percent of men with incomplete
injuries, T12 and lower, get it up, and some
higher than that, too. But that's not the real
problem, is it? Not like I want to go
above and beyond, just to whack off.
How many girls go looking for cripples?”
Half-annoyed, that's how
he looks now, like he needs
to dig for words of wisdom
but the shovel needs sharpening.
It's “disabled,” not “crippled,” and
so you know, there are millions
of couples living with disability.
Not only that, but there are plenty
of perfectly healthy partners who
don't have sex regularly.
He winks
conspiratorially.
You could ask
my wife, but she'd probably lie.
That actually makes me smile,
and I almost consider rewarding
him with the behavior he's seeking.
But then he has to go and ruin
the moment.
So, do you have
a girlfriend? Someone special?
With a stunning burst of memory,
the face of an angel materializes
from the ether. “Not anymore.”
He's gone too far, and backpedals
quickly.
You don't know that, do
you? Have you talked to her?
That's what I want to ask him,
quite loudly, but yelling is too
much effort. “Not since before . . .”
Look, at the very least, let's work
on mobility. You don't have to do
anything but roll onto your side.
I'll handle the heavy lifting, and
while I do, why don't you tell me
about your girl? What's her name?
“Ronnie,” I answer without
even thinking. “Well, Veronica,
but everyone calls her Ronnie.”
Federico rolls me onto my left
side, begins manipulating my right
leg. This isn't new, but I sense more
movement than before.
Ronnie.
Is she pretty? Bet she is.
Bend.
Lift. Backward. Forward. As
he continues the routine, I find
myself describing the girl who
still possesses my heart. “She's not
pretty. She's beautiful. Her hair
is the color of obsidian, and shiny
like it, too. And her body. Man,
it's amazing. You've never seen . . .”
I skid to a halt before I mention
her glorious tits. “But there's so
much more to her than that.
She'sâwasâmy rock.” My rock,
when my stepfather, Jack, got sick
and died. My rock when Cory melted
all the way down into a puddle
of booze-inspired anger. My rock.
And then I went and fucked it all
up with drugs and gambling and
financing those by offering myself
up for sale. Invincible, that's what
I believed I was. Untouchable.
Such conceit! And now, look at me.
Hard to maintain an air of vanity
while being posed like a nude mannequinâ
bend, lift, backward, forward, flip,
and repeat. Federico finishes each
side by massaging my legs and feet,