Authors: Ellen Hopkins
I go downstairs, where
the whole crew has once
again gathered. Suddenly
everyone starts to sing,
Happy birthday to you…
Even Hunter seems to coo
along. It’s enough to almost
make me feel guilty. Almost.
Leigh gives me a huge hug.
You made it. Happy birthday.
She hands me a big package,
all done up in chartreuse.
[Heather must have chosen
the wrapping paper. It sucks.]
Go on. Open it,
urges Leigh.
It’s a leather trench coat,
and not an inexpensive one.
“Way cool! Thanks a ton!”
I slide into it, cinch it up.
You look great,
says Scott.
Mom comes over, puts one
hand on each shoulder,
looks me straight in the eyes.
[Dilated—will she notice?]
I want you to know I’m proud of you.
Okay, that has to be a lie.
But it makes me tear up
anyway. “Thanks, Mom.”
[Even if I don’t believe you.]
Promise not to stay out too late.
“I’ll do my best.” Okay, so
I traded a lie for a lie. No
doubt everyone knows it.
“Oh, there’s Dad now.”
Don’t tell him I said hi,
jokes Leigh.
At least she found her sense
of humor. I kiss Hunter on
the forehead. “Be a good boy.
Tomorrow’s
your
big day.”
He gurgles and smiles. He loves me.
But I have to admit I don’t think
about him more than a couple
of times as Dad, Linda Sue, and I
dive into the half-ass crank.
Dad’s got a big glass tray, which
he sets on the cracked Formica table
in their dog-eared motel room.
Let’s see what you’ve got there,
he says.
“It’s…” I think about apologizing,
but decide to wait until he comments.
He opens the bindle, says nothing
about the powder inside.
It’s what?
“A little shy, I think. The guy
I got it from took his cut up front.”
Ah, well, a dealer is a dealer,
I guess.
Dad draws huge lines.
He hands me the straw.
The birthday
girl always goes first, right?
One long, deep inhale up the right
nostril, followed by another up the left.
Oh, it’s been a very long time. Probably
a good thing the purity is only maybe
60 percent. My nose complains,
anyway. [I’m complaining. I want ice.]
Oh, yeah,
says Dad.
That’s what I’m
talking about. Hey, L., how about you?
The fairy shakes her head.
I don’t
know. I don’t like being high in public.
You’ll be fine. Everyone’s high in Reno
on Saturday night, right, little girl?
“I haven’t been out on Saturday night
in a long time, but I doubt it’s changed
much since the last time. It’s definitely
an up-all-night kind of town.”
See?
He slides the tray under her
face.
Anyway, tonight’s a special night.
A girl only turns eighteen once, you
know. Let’s give her a night on the town.
I’ll never forget the first night Dad
gave me a “night on the town.”
Only it was really Adam that gave
it to me. Dad just tagged along.
And we didn’t go anywhere except
the back room of a bowling alley.
Too many ghosts in that memory.
Oh, well. A few more lines [even
half-ass lines], I probably won’t care.
In fact, I’m almost there already.
There are three kinds
of nights on the town:
good clean fun,
like skating or movies
or [God forbid] bowling,
boring and safe
and definitely not
what Dad’s got in mind;
totally nasty,
like swap clubs or strip
clubs or titty shows,
places that check ID,
and eighteen won’t get
you inside one of those;
and games of chance,
sports betting or black-
jack or slot machines,
guaranteed to suck you dry.
Eighteen isn’t old enough
for casino betting either,
but all it takes is
a game plan, and dear
old Dad has already figured
a strategy.
The Silver Legacy, Eldorado,
and Circus Circus casinos
are all connected by skyways.
We can play at one for a while,
then move to another. That way
we won’t draw much attention
to ourselves. Sound good?
Table games are riskier,
so we’ll hang out in the big banks
of slots, nickels unless we get lucky.
I have to admit it’s kind of exciting,
and not the unlikely idea of winning
but of maybe getting away with playing.
If you win really big, they won’t
let you keep the money, but anything
that drops in the tray is yours,
Dad says.
Let’s take a snort, then go give it a try.
He pulls out his little amber bottle,
the one with the tiny silver spoon
attached to the lid by a little chain.
The crank is definitely mediocre,
but it does the job if you do enough,
keep going back—and back—for more.
I’ll go get some rolls of nickels.
You two scout out a quiet corner.
If a cocktail waitress comes by, I’ll
take a Coors. Can’t fuck that up!
What he means is, they bring players free
drinks—notoriously awful free drinks,
mostly mixers, to keep on the cheap.
We find a nickel slot island, well
back in one corner, away from bars,
restaurants, and the main traffic pattern.
Found you guys. Can’t hide from
me,
jokes Dad, handing Linda Sue
and me each two rolls of nickels.
Go
ahead. Spend it all in one place.
We spend a good deal of time
doing exactly that. My machine
is a greedy prick, but oh, well.
I mean, I hit a few times.
Tink
-
tink-tink
comes the meager payoff.
But Dad, now, is one lucky sucker.
Guess it’s my night,
he says, as
the nickels keep plunking into his
tray.
I’m thinking it’s time we move
on, with a quick pit stop, you know?
A pit stop, amber bottle in hand,
he means. And that’s just fine by
me. This is getting boring, you know?
Linda Sue and I follow him
from casino to casino, machines
to tables, just watching him win.
He even hits big on the Wheel
of Fortune, which has the worst
odds of anything. Oh, well, I’m
extremely buzzed and it’s fun
watching
somebody
win.
No one hassles us, no one
mentions ID or that I look too
young to be standing around
watching my dad walk off with
a fair amount of casino money.
Of course, it’s Saturday night—
actually Sunday morning now—
and the casinos are raking it in,
so losing a little to Dad doesn’t
mean much. Besides, if
no one
won,
no one
would ever play.
Anyway, beyond watching
Dad, I’m watching people.
It’s amazing to see how eager
they are to exit Reno totally
broke. So many ATM machines,
so little time to drain them dry!
Dealers in black slacks and white
shirts. Cocktail waitresses
in tight, tiny skirts and super-
deep necklines. Janitors, in jump-
suits and spit-shined shoes.
Scowling pit bosses in perfect
tuxedoes. They’re all fun to watch—
covertly, of course—as they go
about their nightly business.
People-watching in casinos
is completely consuming.
And it’s only by accident
that it doesn’t consume a very
important moment in Hunter’s
little baby lifetime.
If it’s nighttime or day
when you’re inside
a casino. The windows
are tinted almost black,
and the neon inside defies
the notion that it might be
getting light outside.
But one thing I do
finally notice is how
the restaurant lines
are growing longer.
People want breakfast.
Which means it must
be later than I thought.
“What time is it?”
I ask a passerby, and
his answer blows me
away. Six after nine.
Twenty-four minutes
until church starts.
We’re going to be late!
Just let me finish this
hand,
Dad says, watching
the blackjack dealer flip
a card and bust.
Oh, yeah!
Guess I’m cashing out.
Why am I cashing out?
I’m on a regular roll.
“Cash out, Dad. We’ve
got to go. Hunter’s getting
baptized in less than half
an hour. I probably ought
to be there, don’t you think?”
The church isn’t far as
the crow flies, but it’s all
surface streets to get there.
Dad finds a cashier and
we hurry to his car, parked
in the garage at the far
casino. Round and round,
down to the exit. Straight
down Sierra Street to
McCarran, Reno’s major
loop road. Speed limit
or under all the way
(a good idea, all things
considered), we limp
into the parking lot, looking
exactly like we’ve stayed
up all night, at nine forty-
seven. Everyone’s inside.
Everyone, that is, except
Mom.
I’ve
ever
seen her so pissed,
and believe me, I’ve seen
her pissed before. But nothing
like this. She lights into us
before we reach the door.
Nice of you to show up
for your own baby’s baptism,
Kristina Georgia. I can believe
something like this from
him….
spittle foams at the corners
of her mouth.
But not from you.
Where the hell have you
been?
Dad jumps in with a monster-
fueled lie about car trouble,
dead cell phone batteries, and
more. He looks like crap
and I know I can’t look much
better, but no time to worry
about that now. “Can we talk
about this later? I imagine
everyone’s waiting for us.”
And, of course, they totally
are. Baptisms usually happen
before the sermon, but Pastor
Keith wisely forged ahead,
assuming [praying] Hunter’s
wayward mother would
appear sooner or later.
All eyes turn as we come
through the door, and I know
every single pair must ascertain
exactly what the problem is.
Better not to think about that.
Leigh has saved Mom and me
seats up front. Dad and Linda Sue
sit at the back of the sanctuary.
Somehow, we maintain
when they call the baptismal
party up to the font, repeat
a flurry of meaningless
words. Resplendent in
his white tuxedo, Hunter
smiles up at me as Pastor
Keith pours water over
his head, makes him a child
of God. I was baptized once
too, and I silently ask, “So,
Big Guy, am I still Your child?”
Well, actually, it’s time
for the postbaptism reception.
I decide I ought to ride home with
Mom, who decides not to get into a
big discussion now, not with Leigh and
Heather in the car and a regular parade of
friends and family trailing us home.
We’ll
talk about this later,
she promises, and I
think I’m glad I’ve turned eighteen so I
can hit the streets if I must. [Uh-huh,
right. With a baby, three hundred
dollars, and no place to crash.]
Okay, that’s not the best
idea either. Oh, well.
Why worry about
it now? Just make
it through the
afternoon. Get
some sleep tonight.
Get up early tomorrow
morning, start a
not-so-exciting
job at the not-so-
exciting 7-
Eleven. Whoopee!