Authors: Ellen Hopkins
I wake to voices in the hallway.
[Don’t move. Pretend you’re still asleep.]
Mom:
I’m going to wake her up.
Leigh:
Let her sleep. I’ll take care of Hunter.
Heather:
She did look exhausted last night.
Exhausted barely covers it.
[And now you’ll be swamp-headed.]
Mom:
I don’t know what’s up with her lately.
Leigh:
Having a baby so young can’t be easy.
Heather:
Her dieting must take a toll too.
Okay, she definitely knows.
[But is she going to tell?]
Mom:
Dieting? What do you mean?
Heather:
She barely touched dinner last night.
Leigh:
And you know how she loves Italian.
Heather barely touched dinner either.
[Yeah, but she’s a better bullshitter.]
Mom:
She
has
lost a few pounds recently.
Leigh:
Rapid weight loss isn’t good, though.
Heather:
I’d love to know how she’s managed it.
I’m going to kill her.
[You don’t, I definitely will.]
Recedes and I tug myself out of bed.
I thought I did a good con job at dinner
last night. Now I’ll probably catch
an earful about rapid weight loss from Mom.
Heather is definitely on my shit list.
But apparently the loosening
of my jeans has not escaped notice.
Now if I can just run into Trey.
I’d call him about scoring for Dad,
but Stockton is too far away. So
last night, when everyone wandered
off to their bedrooms, I called Grade E.
I kept the request cryptic, of course,
and asked to meet away from the Sev.
Wouldn’t do to get busted there, where
I’m supposed to start work on Monday.
Speaking of Grady, what time is it,
anyway? The clock says ten thirty.
Crap! I was supposed to meet him
at ten. I jump into clothes and dash
for my phone. Great. A message.
It’s Grady, and he isn’t happy.
Where the fuck are you? It’s ten
fifteen. You’ve got five minutes!
I hit call return, fingers crossed.
“Hey, Grady, it’s me. Sorry I’m late.
I…uh…got hung up with my mom.
I can be there in a couple of minutes.”
He agrees to meet me at the state
park.
But I’ll want a taste.
I hope he means a taste of crystal,
not a taste of Kristina.
Get out the front door without
someone stopping me. One excuse
comes easily to mind. I locate
my keys and the money Dad gave
me and don’t even stop to brush
my teeth or hair. [Ugly picture!]
I hear everyone in the kitchen.
Perfect. “I’ll be right back,” I call,
stowing the excuse for later.
I go straight for my car, jam
the key into the ignition, and as
I back out, I notice Mom at
the door, hands on hips. Her lips
are moving, but I wave and keep
going. Within a quarter mile
my cell rings. Caller ID says it’s
Mom, and I consider letting
it go to voice mail. Better not.
“Hi, Mom. Yes, I know I was rude.
Yes, I’m grateful Leigh volunteered
to get up with Hunter. Yes, I know
we’ve got lots to do today. Yes, I
understand how important tomorrow
is. Where am I going?” [Thought
she’d never ask!] “I woke up
majorly on the rag and out of
tampons. Had to get some ASAP.”
She mentions the obvious—
that she has a box in her
bathroom. Couldn’t I have
asked instead of taking
off like a bandit in the night?
“Heh-heh, yeah, I suppose
I could have, huh? Sorry for
being so dense, Mom.” I hold
my breath and, lucky me,
she goes for it, hook, line, and
bobber. (I hate sinkers. My
bait always gets stuck in
the muck when I use them.)
Anyway, I shouldn’t waste
a lot of time doing blow
with Grade E. He’s parked
at the far end of the parking
lot. And guess what.
He’s not alone. From
a distance I can see
two guys, bobbing heads.
They’re doing toot, and it
looks to me like they’re
doing it the old-fashioned
way—with a straw and mirror.
Wonder whose crank
they’re snorting. Wonder
how short the ball will
be. [The two-hundred-dollar
price tag makes sense now.
We’re getting street crank,
not ice.] Wonder how cut
it will be. I pull into a near
parking spot, and when I do,
the face that jumps into view
makes me forget about every
question I had only seconds
before. He’s dark
and cute and he looks like Hunter.
It’s Brendan, and I want to puke.
I can’t
turn and run and
I can’t
look weak and
I can’t
even get nasty until the
deal
is done.
Brendan flashes a smile laced
with
evil. I can’t stand him. I despise
him.
And now I have to look
him in the eye?
I won’t
give him the satisfaction of turning away.
I won’t
get in his face, or out of his face.
I won’t
give up my secret.
No, I will never,
ever,
not in a billion years,
confess
the unimaginable result
of his despicable act,
that
it created beauty.
Will never confess that
my son
[can evil be genetic?]
is his son.
Never to see Brendan again,
but I guess it just goes to show
that as much as Reno has grown,
it’s still a compact city. And just
my luck, Brendan still lives in it.
I’ll take the high road and if
the low road seems necessary,
I’ll let Bree get behind the wheel.
One thing for certain, though,
I’m not getting into Grady’s car.
I roll down my window; Brendan
does likewise and I speak past him.
“Hey, Grady. Thanks for waiting.
Come over here, will you please?
I’d rather handle this in private.”
Aren’t you going to say hi?
Each of Brendan’s words is
a stab.
I heard you had a baby.
Deep stabs, severing arteries.
You look good, anyway.
Ever chivalrous, that would be
Brendan. “Hi, Brendan. Yes,
I had a baby. And you look
exactly the same. Grady,
will you please come here?”
Grade E obliges. I shut my
window, turn my back on
Brendan. [Why didn’t you do
that before?] Bree? Lecturing
me? Am I totally schizo or what?
Brendan knows I’m back in the monster’s snare.
And what a coincidence. [Coin cide is two
four-letter words!] Shut the hell up, Bree.
“I didn’t know you and Brendan were friends,”
I say as Grade E slithers into the front seat
beside me. “I didn’t know he
had
any friends.”
I wouldn’t exactly call us friends.
More like business acquaintances.
Grady winks, hands over a bindle.
Even without opening it, I know
it’s short, and I can feel it’s mostly
powder. What kind is uncertain.
The look on my face must say
volumes.
It isn’t the best
crank I’ve ever seen, but it works.
“You got this from”—I wag my head
backward—“him? Did he know it
was for me?” [You mean for Dad.]
The thought brings meager satisfaction,
especially after Grady says,
Um, I might
have told him. What’s up, anyway?
I shrug. “We have a history.
And it wasn’t exactly romantic.”
[Nope, not with him. Never was.]
Grady gets down to business.
Ahem.
So the eight ball is two hundred.
Are you going to share a little?
I open the bindle. Short, okay.
Bree handles the clod. “Looks to me
like you already took your cut. Yes?”
His face flares but he has to admit,
We did a couple of lines. Not much
of a finder’s fee, if you ask me.
“Not asking. Thanks for taking
care of this. Now I’ve got to run.
Mom’s on a regular rampage.”
Grady pauses a beat or two,
as if he’s got something to say.
But then he exits the car silently.
Good damn thing. Not sure
I have the
cojones
(or even
that I want them!) to tell the jerk
off, but Bree most definitely does.
Let her out of her box and no
telling what might happen.
I drive away without looking back.
No good-byes for either of them.
I’ll never deal with Grade E again.
As I drive home, it occurs to me
that this might just have been
for the best. Not seeing Brendan.
No, that will never be a good thing.
What I mean is, the pitiful state
of this meth. I’ll go out tonight
with Dad and Linda Sue.
We’ll blow through this awful
eight ball. Then I’ll move
on without the monster
breathing against my neck,
begging me to do one more
little whiff. That’s it, okay.
One more all-nighter, then
I’ll quit cold [lukewarm] turkey.
A little after four
P.M.
Guess
troll and fairy “rested up”
for tonight’s plotted
devilry.
I spent the day with Mom
and “the girls,” shopping
for Hunter’s baptism
outfit.
It’s adorable—a tiny white
tuxedo, with dancing Poohs
and Tiggers on the satin
cummerbund.
Afterward, we stopped by
Pastor Keith’s lair. He
pounced, a white-
collared
tiger, with God’s A to Z
of baptism. Who knew
it was so hard to
qualify?
On the way home I mentioned
Dad’s plans for the coming
evening, omitting
you-know-what.
The scowl in the rearview
mirror said a whole
lot more than Mom
needed to.
“Jeez, Mom. I’ve only seen
him twice in the last
nine years. Cut me
some slack.”
That’s double what I’ve
seen him,
says Leigh,
and that’s way
too much.
Dad’s picking me up in an hour.
We’re supposed to have dinner,
but I’m betting food is the last
thing on his mind. Mine, too,
for that matter. After looking at
Grade E’s ten-watt crank, I want
a toke of my hundred-watt ice.
And I don’t want to share it. It’s
my
birthday. I don’t have to share,
do I? Hey, it
is
my birthday. At
last, today, I’m the big one-
eight, so why don’t I feel any
different? Because I’m still
treading quicksand, that’s why.
Okay, I need to get high, totally
out-of-my-head wasted, so I
don’t keep thinking about
the same old shit, only
compounded by all that’s
going on around here, not
to mention hearing about
Adam and having Brendan forced
down my throat [not for real, only
figuratively], all in the space
of twelve hours. Talk about
mega déjà vu, of the not nice
type. Happy fucking birthday
to me. Come on. Let’s celebrate!
Lucky me, I’m [not even close]
almost alone in the house. Mom
ran to the store, Scott ran to
pick up Jake from his [girl-]
friend’s house, and Leigh took
Hunter for a stroller walk around
the block. Heather? Who knows?
Who cares? I’m birthday partying
with the monster, and we’re
starting right this minute.
OMG. The rush is beyond
what I expected—hot then
cool, and my head lights up
like casino neon. Startling.
Another whiff. Double or
nothing, two somehow more
than twice as good as one.
I open my window to
let the smoke escape,
notice Scott’s car come
puttering up the street.
Can I get away with one
more? [Go for it, quick!]
I turn on a fan, spray a
big dose of Ozium, dash
to the bathroom to do
the big three—you know,
shit, shave, and shower.
Crude? Yeah. And bound to
get cruder as the evening
progresses. It’s Bree’s
birthday too, and for
a change I’m going to
let her cut loose. After all,
you only turn eighteen once.