Authors: Ellen Hopkins
To break up the party.
It’s great to see you again.
she says.
But it’s getting late and
I do have some projects to finish.
“Late? How late?” I still
have to drive all the way home.
I twist Trey’s arm until
his watch reveals the time:
nineteen minutes past one.
No wonder my boobs hurt,
having not been emptied
in so many hours. They’re
hard as stones and leaking
a little. Another twinge
of guilt. No more
breast milk for Hunter.
Trey hands me a scrap of paper.
Here’s my number, and give
me yours, too, okay?
In case you forget to call.
His hand brushes mine
like a summer kiss. Heightened
by the meth spinning circles
in my brain, his simple touch—
not to mention his request—
sparks shivers, thigh to neck.
But it
is
time to go. I spent
my motel money, and anyway,
I’m much too buzzed
to sleep. Might as well drive
on home. Three hours will
go by like nothing, this buzzed.
“Thanks for everything, Robyn.
Awesome meeting you, Trey.
Hope to see you again soon.”
Real, real soon.
Reconsider, knowing I’ll
want to stop for a small
pick-me-up along
the long road home.
“Oh, hey. Can you spare
a piece of tinfoil and
maybe a straw? I’ve got
zip for paraphernalia.
Let’s make you a pipe,
Trey
tells me.
How about a light
bulb, Robyn?
She obliges,
and in a matter of minutes,
Trey turns it into a smoking
device.
Be careful. It will get
really hot. Oh, and you’ll
probably need this, too.
He reaches into his pocket,
extracts a lighter.
Now just
drop a rock, right in here….
He demonstrates with one
of Robyn’s.
Hold the lighter
right about here…. A thin
plume of smoke lifts, and
Trey is quick to inhale.
As Robyn and I help him
finish it, Trey says,
So,
Kristina, next time
you’re up for the score,
call me. This shit travels
the US-95 corridor up from
Mexico. My connection lives
near Reno. Ironic, huh?
No wonder Trey gets
to Reno sometimes.
Ironic barely covers
it. But hey, next time
I won’t have to drive
all the way to Stockton.
(Let alone have to deal
with Robyn’s evil eye.)
“That’s good to know,
Trey,” says Kristina.
Then Bree takes over.
“Next time you come
over the mountain, be
sure to give
mea call.
I’ll pay you back the
hundred. And if you talk
real nice, I just might
add a little interest.”
Holy crap. Team Bree
with the monster, you
never know what you
might get. But Trey
laughs.
And just what
do you have in mind?
This is Bree’s game. So
why does she disappear
now? I shrug. “For me to
know and you to find out.”
Guess I’ll have to make
it soon, then. The curiosity
might do me in.
He wraps
the hot bulb in a napkin,
walks me to the door, bends
to bring his lips close to my
ear.
Careful driving home. I
want you all in one piece.
All in one piece.
But does that mean
he wants me?
I take the stairs slowly,
head turning cartwheels.
It’s been so long
since anyone has
wanted me.
At the bottom of the stairs,
I turn to look over my shoulder.
I want to believe
that he wants me.
But it’s impossible.
Trey’s backlit silhouette
is still in the doorway.
Maybe it isn’t
impossible. Only
highly unlikely.
He raises a hand, waves
a good-bye. Closes the door.
I never used to
second-guess
myself. What’s up?
The porch light winks out.
Is Trey staying the night?
Well, of course he is.
Why do you think
Robyn wanted you gone?
Jealousy wells up inside.
I want him to stay with me.
Wanting and getting
are two totally
different things.
I want him to take me in
his arms and kiss me.
Why must I torture
myself? He’s with
Robyn. Right now.
I want him to touch
me all over my body.
Cut it out, Kristina.
You’re just making
things worse.
I want him to tell me
he needs me. Loves me.
What am I thinking?
I don’t want
that at all.
Yes I do want that.
I want to be in love.
Stop it! Don’t you
know talking to yourself
is a sign of insanity?
Not quite warm
September night,
the obsidian sky
brimming
with stars. An orange
harvest moon lights
the semideserted
highway, and my
confidence
in my ability to
reach home, all in
one piece, grows with
every mile left
dissolved
in my wake. I am
wide awake, buzzed
to the nth degree.
I drive slowly, lost
in thoughts
of Hunter, hopefully
sleeping soundly;
of the things that led
up to having him;
of what life
would be like if he had
never been conceived.
I would never have
thought I
could
consider living without
him; never would have
thought I might
easily
distance myself from
him. But I want
someone—other than
a baby—to love, and
soon.
I miss feeling special.
Miss feeling beautiful.
I only hope I haven’t
become
impossible for a guy to look
at with lust in his eyes.
For a small pick-me-up,
not because I particularly
need it (my eyes are wide,
wide open), but because I can.
I have stash. It’s talking to me.
One little hit, my heart revs
high, then settles into quick-
step mode. How I’ve missed
that race and pound. How
I’ve missed the lack of control.
It makes no sense. I know
that. But I’m sick of making
sense. Sick of being sensible.
As I consider that, it hits me
that I haven’t called Mom.
Now it’s much too late.
Is she pacing the floor, ready
to pounce when I walk
through the door? Has she gone
to sleep, assuming I stayed
overnight and forgot
the cell phone in my purse?
Cell phone! I yank it out,
and sure enough, there’s
a voice mail message
waiting for me.
When you
get this, please call and let
us know you’re safe. I don’t
care what time it is.
Mom
is pissed, and rightly so.
I look at the time. Two
twenty. Screw it, I’d better
call. Mom answers on
the second ring.
Hello?
Kristina, is that you?
Who else would it be? “Yes,
it’s me. I’m fine. I stayed
late at Robyn’s, decided
to come on home. No worries.
I’ve had gallons of coffee.”
No worries? Kristina Georgia
Snow! Have you no consideration
whatsoever for your family?
We’ve been so worried!
One simple phone call…
She’s right. Of course she is.
But I don’t feel like giving much
ground. “I’m sorry, Mom.
Go on to bed. I’ll be home
soon.” I hang up without
even asking about Hunter. I’ll
have to eat a table full of crow
in the morning, but why
worry about it the rest
of the way home?
And I totally know it.
And I totally don’t care.
That’s the monster talking
and I totally know that, too. But
I’m totally ready to listen to every
word, every excuse, every suggestion.
I feel great, for the first time in months.
I feel positive about the future, like
I actually might have a future
beyond babies and books. I
feel like I’ve got the world
by the balls. I just have
to remain cool, calm
down my parents, regain
my power. I ask the monster
how to manage that and he replies,
Simple. You need money.
Money! Of
course. Can’t have much of a life without
a steady supply of the green stuff. I
I do need money, and that means
a job. But what kind of job?
Only one thought comes
readily to mind.
A little before four. The house
is dark. Silent. Everyone fast
asleep. Except me, of course.
Rather than chance waking up
Hunter, I think I’ll run on down
to the all-night convenience
mart and pick up an application.
Almost every kid in the valley
works at the Sev for a month or two,
while waiting to go off to college,
get married, or find a better job. It
pays minimum wage, and the work
sucks, but beggars cannot be choosers.
I park off to one side, check out who’s
inside. Believe it or not, there’s a guy
playing a slot machine. They have slots
in Nevada 7-Elevens. And grocery
stores, airports. Anywhere people get bored.
Even up-all-night bored. Turns out I know
the guy behind the counter. Grady’s a year
older than me and a total loser type.
He’ll probably never work anywhere
but at the Sev, which is doubtless
just fine by him. “Hey, Grady,” I say.
He gives me a total loser smile,
the kind that gives you the creeps.
Hey, Kristina. You’re up early.
“I haven’t been to bed yet,
actually.” Those seven words say
much more than he needs to know.
Grady looks at my eyes, and his
grin grows real wide.
Oh, yeah.
I can see it perfectly now.
Whatever. If he knows, it’s because
he gets high too. “I came
by to pick up an application.”
Funny time of the day for that.
Let me see if I can dig one up.
He goes into the back room.
It takes a few minutes, but he
finally returns, application in hand.
You sure you want to work here?
Mostly what’s open is graveyard.
You’d have to put up with people
like him.
He points to the slot addict.
The guy doesn’t even turn around.
Fuck you,
he says, feeding
a ten into the money reader.
“It’s not like I really want to
work here, but I need a job
and my choices are limited.”
The monster goes on to tell him all
about Hunter. About living with my
parents, studying for my GED,
and wanting a way to escape.
“I’ll be eighteen in a couple
of weeks. But I can’t do anything
until I can save up enough
for a little place. Food. Diapers.”
I smile. “Miscellaneous.”
Yeah, well, if you ever need help
hooking up with that, give me
a buzz. You know where to find me.
And it was right here,
practically under my
nose (ha-ha) all the time?
As I start out the door,
the slot machine freak lights
a cigarette. Now, I haven’t
indulged that habit in quite
a while either. I quit when I
was pregnant—figured I
was eighty-sixing one bad habit,
why not lose that one too?
But meth and nicotine buddy up
real fine. The smell of fresh-
lit tobacco sucks me right up
tight against Slot Man.
“Could I bum one of those?”
I’m flat out of cash at
the moment, and still under
eighteen. Grady might
stroke me by pretending
he doesn’t know my age,
but the cameras are rolling
and stings for selling booze
or smokes to underage people
are common. I don’t want
to get him in trouble, not when
he might be helpful in the future.
Besides, one cancer stick, with
no more in a drawer, won’t
get me hooked again. Right?
Slot dude smiles a knowing
smile, shakes one from the
hard pack.
You owe me one.
Yech. He’s scruffy. Kind
of smelly. I definitely hope
he doesn’t think I owe him.
Grady hands me some matches.
No law against that, right?
“Thanks. I’ll be in touch.”
I retreat outside, into the cool
of sunless morning. My hands
shake a bit as I fire the Camel Light.
It tastes like heaven. Like
if I could just keep smoking
it, I’d never need to eat again.
If you’ve never smoked, you won’t
understand that, but if you have,
you know exactly what I mean.
I suck the poison slowly,
with great, immediate pleasure.
It’s almost as good as…
Okay, maybe not as good as
that. But it calms me,
convinces me to go on home,
do whatever is necessary
to keep my mom and Scott off
my back. Apologize like I’m
really, truly sorry. And, in
several ways, I really am. But
there’s no turning back now.