Authors: Ellen Hopkins
in the back, right through his heart.
I don't much take after my bastard
father, except when it comes to revenge.
Eighteen is too fucking young to die.
I didn't say I thought twenty-one was too
young to die, and it seemed a distinct possibility
for him, or any soldier, in search of revenge.
About his father. I didn't know him well enough,
nor had I consumed nearly enough alcohol. Later,
I learned that Bart Gleason, who left Cole's
mom two days before Cole's ninth birthday,
was serving a life sentence for murder.
Seems the girl he left Mrs. Gleason for
wasn't such a sweet, young thing after all.
Bart heard rumors about her sleeping around.
He followed her one night. Waited long
enough for her to get naked and knotted
up with another guy, then calmly blew
out both their brains with his favorite
.357 magnum. Probably a good thing
I didn't hear the story that night. My own
parents are big subscribers to the old
“apple doesn't fall far from the tree” theory.
I'd heard it all my life, and maybe believed
it, at least a little. By the time I found out
about Cole's father, though, I loved my Marine
way too much to even think twice about it.
For me is a once-in-a-lifetime,
planets-aligning-at-the-exact-
right-coordinates kind of thing.
I guess I always hoped it was
possible, but never let myself
believe it would happen any time.
I definitely wasn't looking and
so I didn't see it right away.
The kiss at the beach was sweet.
But it was only memorable in
retrospect. The kissing on
the couch quickly moved from
tentative cool to electric hot.
You can tell a lot by the way
a guy kisses. Cole kissed like
summer rainâbarely wet,
the temperature of August
sky, thunder-punctuated. Delicious.
Heart thudding, I came very close
to giving him a lot more. I wanted to,
despite forever declarations to never,
ever invite one-night stands, and surely
that was all it would be. Cole is all-man,
and I can't say he didn't try, but when I
slowed him with a simple, “Can't. Not yet,”
he respected the request, though not without
comment.
You positive you're a California
girl?
He wasn't clear about whether he'd
heard all California girls were loose or only
if all the ones he'd met so far were. “Meaning . . . ?”
He started to answer just about the time
Darian came stumbling down the hall
to the kitchen, hair like an eagle's nest,
and wearing nothing but a T-shirt that
barely covered her crotch. Barely.
Hey,
she slurred, sort of giving us the twice
over.
Sorry. Thirsty.
She grabbed a couple
of beers from the fridge. Staggered back
to her room. Cole and I looked at each
other and laughed. “Point taken,” I said.
“And if I don't want to look like that”â
nodding toward Dar, who just then faded
into her roomâ“I probably better get
to bed. That, or scare the bejeezus out
of you in the morning.” Cole accepted
that with a not-hot kiss, then asked,
Don't suppose you've got an extra
blanket? It's cooling off fast in here.
I went down the hall, pulled the spread
off my bed. By the time I got back, he was
lying there, still as stone, eyes closed.
I covered him, turned away, and heard him
say,
Thanks for the blanket. And for
the great evening. See you in the morning.
I liked how that sounded. And although I
was critically tired, it took a while to fall asleep.
It was full-on morning, light crashing
through the window in brilliant waves.
It took a few minutes to figure out why
I felt so anxious to get out of bed. Then
I heard a muffled male voice, Darian's
high-pitched laugh, and the night before
tumbled back. Marines. Right. I went
straight for the bathroom to shower,
brush my teeth, and put on makeup.
Slid into silk panties, knee-length satin
shirt, a sexy-casual compromise. When
I slipped into the hall, the place was silent
except for the creak of Darian's bed
behind her closed door. God. How
many times could you do it in a twelve-
hour period? I tiptoed past, not wanting
to bother them, or Cole, who I thought
must still be asleep. But no. The couch
was empty, the bedspread folded
neatly. He wasn't there, hadn't even
bothered to say good-bye. Disappointment
clawed. I went into the kitchen, noticed
the glasses on the counter, dishes
in the sink. When did that happen?
But the irritation I felt at the state of
my kitchen bordered on irrational.
I knew it, but couldn't say why.
I unloaded the dishwasher. Loudly.
And, even more loudly, started
loading the crusty dirties.
Hey!
Stop! I planned on doing that.
I jumped at the voice, strange but
not, falling over my shoulder; spun,
pointing a fork like a tined bayonet.
Cole's eyes glittered humor.
Careful.
I'm trained in hand-to-hand combat,
you know. Put down the weapon.
Slowly. Better yet, give it to me. Please.
I handed him the fork, which he put
in the dishwasher. “Jesus. You scared
the crap out of me. Where did you
come from? I thought you'd left.”
He shook his head.
Everyone was
still asleep when I woke up, so I sat
outside and . . . wrote. Hope you don't
mind I borrowed a piece of paper.
“Of course not.” It wasn't the paper
that bothered me as much as the idea
of him rooting around for it. “In fact,
you don't even have to pay me back.”
He smiled.
Maybe I want to.
Then
he looked at me so intently I had to
turn away, inventing some necessary
chore. “You a coffee person? I think
I could use a cup.” I reached up
into the cupboard for the Folgers.
Let me help.
The weight of my long,
still-damp hair lifted suddenly.
Mmm.
You smell good.
His lips brushed
my neck, and it was like stepping
outside in a thunderstormâa hint
of lightning initiating goose bumps
in places both seen and hidden.
I turned into him, and he lifted me,
sat me on the counter. Wrapped
my legs around his ripped torso,
pulled me into him until the pulsing
between my legs rested against
the throbbing beneath his breast bone,
zero between them but silk and skin.
It was nothing I'd ever experienced
before, this sudden blush of desire
so intense I couldn't believe it belonged
to me. And significance infused our kiss.
I think we both knew it then, though
it took time to acknowledge that some
brilliant stutter of fate had connected
us in such a profound way. I can't speak
for Cole, but for me, the world as I
understood it to be ceased to exist.
In that exact moment, I couldn't have
reasonably claimed to have fallen in love
with him. But in that exact moment,
I still wasn't sure I believed in love.
Anyway, it was enough to be snared
by passion so intense, it bordered surreal.
Swept away, unable to swim and barely
finding air, I would have let him carry
me into my bedroom, make love right
then and there. Instead he pulled back.
Not quite in unison, but staggered closely,
we both had one thing to say. “Wow.”
Wow.
Without follow-through is a huge
turn-on. While Darian and Spencer
spent the day following through,
Cole and I wandered the hills
of the San Diego Zoo. The air
was winter-spiced but I barely
noticed. Everything about me
felt warm. And, while I studied
the animals, I noticed other things.
Like how Cole's hand was nearly
twice as big as mine. And warm,
when it gloved my exposed skin.
Like how I tucked completely
under his arm, the sculpture
of his biceps. Like the way
he adjusted his stride, my legs
no match for his, until we walked
in perfect step. Like how he liked
the big cats best, especially
the jaguars, who paced in short
strokes of sun. Every time we stopped,
we kissed, and lacing every
kiss was desire, rising up big
and bold, voracious as a leviathan.
Sleeps. Dreams fitfully
of sand, unstained from
horizon to horizon, while
overhead
silence floats in mirrored
sky. Disturbing. No pleas.
No screams. No sound
of distress. Not even
the drone of
tear-muffled prayer.
Leviathan wakes. Yawns.
Stretches haunch and claw.
Cocks his head and finds
the ghostly moan of
danger, distant,
but alive. Leviathan cracks
a smile, reveals fear-sharpened
fangs. Sheds the shadow
of nightmares
born within hibernation.
Leviathan embraces blood
hunger. Rises, lifts into
the startled blue, dragon
on the wing.
Cole Gleason
At Camp Pendleton. Like most military
bases, the sprawling chunk of oceanfront
California is pretty much self-contained,
with schools, fast food, golf, and religion
just beyond spitting distance from jets and
helicopters, tanks and heavy artillery.
Some spouses use their housing allowance
to live off-base nearby in one of San Diego's
neat, suburban neighborhoods. The thrifty ones
bank that money and stay with generous
relatives. But from the start, Darian wanted
to cozy up to other military wives.
They understand what I'm going through.
Like I don't. Like a marriage license
somehow ups the ante on emotion. Pissed
me off when she first said it, and it still
makes me mad that she might actually
believe it. It's a chink in the once-solid
armor of our friendship. That makes me sad.
Anyway, on base I can get by without a car.
Her beater Civic broke down not long
after we moved here. She'd mostly
made do bumming rides from me.
But after her wedding, she decided
to quit school, move into base housing,
and play housewife. How can she stand it?
Are, overall, a lot more fit
than other women in their age
groups. Uh, yeah. The gym spells
reliefâstress relief, Mommy duty
relief, and serious tedium
relief. Looking at Dar, I can
see she definitely spends time
utilizing the workout facilities.
But is that the
only
way
she relieves tension and
boredom? Better to know
for sure than to keep guessing.
I can't ask her now. She won't
discuss the subject here. Not
in front of these three women.
Military wives talk,
Celine said,
and Darian knows that's true.
She came with them, but maybe
she'll let me take her home.
I look at Celine, whose seniority
makes her the de facto team
leader. “Would you mind if
I drove Dar back to the base?
We haven't had time to catch up.”
But they are caught up
in their own conversation
and don't notice a thing.
Carrie:
 . . . heard the draw
down is going to happen
sooner than they thought.
Meghan:
Is that good or
bad? I mean, are you ready
for a full-time husband?
Carrie laughs.
Maybe not.
But don't worry. There's
always another shithole . . .
I tune back out. Trying to
second-guess the brass is
a fast track to disappointment.
Celine smiles, as if reading
my mind. Then she shrugs.
I'm good with you driving
Darian back as long as she
is.
We both look at Dar, who
is slow dancing with the guy
from the bar. Slow grinding
might be a more apt description.
“I'll ask as soon as the music stops.”
Darian will be pissed at the interruption