Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Psychopathology, #Young Adult Fiction, #Psychology, #Family, #Drug abuse, #Family problems, #Social Issues, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse, #General, #Parents, #Addiction, #Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #Novels in verse, #Problem families, #Romance, #Dating & Sex, #Health & Fitness, #Schools, #Cocaine abuse, #Pregnancy & Childbirth, #High schools, #Pregnancy
okay, then proceeded to thank
him as only Bree--and the monster--could.
313
H
air Mussed
clothes cockeyed, makeup smeared,
I would have looked
fairly suspicious if I
had walked through the door that night.
* *
But I didn't have to and never once
pondered getting
caught as I stood
tiptoe on the first-
floor window trim, stretching to catch the ledge and crawl
back inside my window.
* *
House dark, no sound but Jake's snoring through the wall, I
laid in bed, watching a ghost dance on the ceiling, nose sucking
314
up sweat, tobacco, and eau de Brendan, wondering what Adam was up to until the sun
poked through the curtains, less than an hour later.
315
High
For two days, too much crank, no sleep, liquid diet. The first
* *
day of school was a nightmare.
Good thing I wasn't a freshman.
* *
I'd have gotten lost, somewhere between gym and the chem lab.
* *
(Almost did, in fact.) I collected
handouts; tried to follow list upon
* *
list of curricular expectations; tried, failing miserably, to conquer
* *
new locker combinations; avoided
eye contact with teachers, staff, and
* *
most definitely school police; ducked Sarah and Trent so I didn't
* *
have to listen to their chitchat; spent lunch far from anything close
316
to food, even though I trembled from near starvation. All the while
* *
feeling like my head would burst from thinking so damn much when
* *
all my brain wanted to do was close down and fall deep into REM
* *
sleep. I considered climbing under the bleachers, letting it do just that
* * before I did something really dumb like passing out, but just about then
* * the final bell rang.
317
D
ay One
blessedly behind me,
I rode the belching bus
home
wondering how I would
possibly make it to school the next day. Craved down time when I had to gear up, sustenance
though I might throw it up, silence when I knew my
family
would be waiting to share
news of the day. The very
monotony
I had lately disdained
cried out to me:
I am
essential
without me you will
wither, like this
summer
folding up into fall;
freeze hard, water in
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winter
awaiting the first breath
of
spring; uproot, grass in
a
wind
blown into tornado;
parch, like earth denied
rain.
319
M
om's Car Wasn't in the Driveway
I thanked my, for once, lucky stars, went
inside, ignoring
Jake completely.
Scoped out the fridge, grabbed a handful of red
grapes so sweet
you could never
even fantasize them.
* *
Downed them like candy, went back for more, chased
them with fudge
swirl Haagan-Dazs.
No homework, I
went into my
room, fell straight into bed and the sleep of the dead.
320
Mom must have
thought me dead, when she found
me hours later, tried desperately to shake me from the devil's deep slumber
embrace, shouted for
Jake to bring icewater, threw it in my face
321
Which
Roused Me
riled me, made me
want to scream.
Instead
I made a major--in
retrospect, not the best--
decision.
I creaked to sitting, thought
twice, but when she insisted
I drag my
rubbery
bones to the dinner table,
322
I looked her in the eye and for the first time in my life, told my
mother,
"Fuck you."
323
M
ajor Mistake
Her eyes popped wide, her jaw
dropped like concrete. She reached
out and shook me.
What did you say?
Even caught up in confusion,
I knew better than to repeat myself.
I shook my head.
Tell me again.
Okay, she was testing me.
I flunked completely.
"I said, fuck you."
That's what I thought you said.
Mom's turn for firsts.
She slapped me so hard my teeth
rattled and snot flew.
Don't ever say that to me again.
I dissolved into exhausted
tears, wondering why I'd done it.
Mom broke down too.
Kristina, what's going on with
you?
324
I couldn't tell her the truth.
What kind of lie might do? I started with a genuine, "I'm sorry."
Oh, God, I'm sorry
too.
She sat down beside me on the bed, put her arms around me, hugged tight.
You're not in trouble,
are you?
Trouble? All sorts of trouble, oh, yes. But not the kind she was worried
about. "No, Mom."
These new friends... are they... okay?
Why couldn't she just say
what she meant, ask if they'd led
me down the path to hell.
You've got so much
promise....
Then again, if she did, would I
own up? Confess that I had taken the lead on this perilous journey?
Please don't throw it all away.
325
My mind churned love. Mom loved
me. Adam loved me. I suspected
Chase might love me,
I love you, Kristina Georgia.
(I was pretty sure Brendan
only loved the big "v.")
Who loved me more?
Who loved me most?
Now, please come down to
dinner.
326
I
Did
I sat at the table, brain blank, head
spinning, something
that sounded
suspiciously liquidy
whooshing between my ears, trying not to look like the space cadet
I felt like, struggling to form coherent
sentences around megabites of chicken and corn bread, waiting for the ax to clobber
me. But Mom never
said a word about the reason
327
for the red marks across my cheek, and not
only didn't punish
me, but let me off
GUFN.
Forgiveness
granted, I made some
decisions: appreciate
family, focus on school and hunt for Kristina.
328
I
Mostly Managed That
for the next week.
Hit a reasonable
educational stride, settled into the rhythm of classrooms, quizzes, study halls, homework.
* *
Hung out with
Sarah and Trent, swapped summer
vacation stories
(majorly editing mine), tried out for honor choir and actually made it, despite a voice gone raspy from excess and mushrooming allergies.
* *
Did my best to absorb the energy of family, meals, Sunday church, and a Labor Day camp out.
And I managed all that, barely thinking
329
about the monster or wondering what
Chase or Brendan or Adam
might be up to.
* *
Until in one fateful day
Adam wrote, Brendan called, and Chase showed up to drive
me home after school.
330
B
ackpack Bulging
I climbed into Chase's truck, slid close. "Where ya been?"
We moved to Sparks. I had to transfer.
Solid explanation. Still,
"Why didn't you call?"
I
did. You were grounded. Remember?
That excuse was shakier.
"Not for the last two weeks."
I
wanted to give you some space.
Pregnant pause, giving
himself some space.
Kristina,
I know I'm not exactly your type.
I looked him in the eye.
"I don't think I have a 'type.'"
I
thought it might be the lifeguard type.
Reno wasn't the "biggest
little city." It was a small-town gossip mill.
Not that w
e have an exclusive thing, I know.
My cheeks burned. "No, we
don't. But I really like you."
I
needed to
hear that. I like you, too. A lot.
331
"I went out with Brendan because I was flattered."
I dared to confess, "I never
had a boyfriend until last summer."
That's hard to believe, Kristina.
Taking that totally wrong,
I huffed, "Why?
Because I'm such a slut?"
No. Because you're so beautiful.
Tell me about last summer.
By the time I finished, I still
loved Adam. But I was falling for Chase.
332
So
Why
was I so hot to return the phone message, waiting for me to come home?
* *
Brendan:
* *
Give me a call. I want
to see you again. This time
I'll bring the refreshments.
* *
"Refreshments?"
* *
I'd perched on my
pedestal for a whole week.
How fast could I make it down?
333
As
I Considered My Answer
I noticed Adam's letter, sitting on the counter.
* *
Dear Kristina,
* *
How's school? I hope I can make it through this year. It's really tough, what with worrying about Mom, Ralph (can you believe she'd like a guy named Ralph?), and Lince. She's talking better now, and can get herself to the bathroom. I guess that's good.
* *
I saw your dad the other day. It was kind of strange because he never even mentioned you. Of course, he was with a new woman. (Not bad, considering she's with your dad. Ha, ha.) Maybe he doesn't want her to think he's old enough to have a daughter your age.
* *
Are you going out with anyone special? Half of me hopes so. The other half wants you to always be mine. There's a pretty cute girl at school, Giselle, giving me the eye. She looks a little like you, in fact. I think I might ask her out.
334
Maybe you didn't want to hear that. But you're my
very best friend, the only one in the whole world I could tell that to. I want to hear everything about you, too. Kind of weird, huh?
* *
So do you have a boyfriend? Is he a jock or what? (Wink, wink.) How safe are these letters, anyway? Does your mom read them? I wonder if Giselle parties. Doesn't everyone? Okay, maybe not.
* *
Write soon. Love, Adam
335
Giselle?
He liked some girl named Giselle?
Did she speak French (or just give it)?
* *
Maybe
I didn't want to hear that?
Why did I read his letter anyway?
* *
And what was up with Dad?
Why hadn't he called?
* *
Was he a Daddy Judas?
Had he sold me out?
* *
Should I call Brendan?
Set myself up?
* *
Would I truly let him be first?
Was I ready to lose the big v?
* *
Should I call Chase instead?
Ask him to score for me?
* *
Would he do it if I asked?
Walk a slender wire for me?
336
Did I want to risk honor-roll status?
Chance further alienating my mom?
* *
Had I lost my mind completely?
Did I really want to get high?
337
You
Bet I Did
The monster
shouted,
Where have you been, my
sweet Bree? Hurry back to me.
My blood pressure bloomed, my head
pounded.
Need rose up, pumping violently through my veins. All I could
think of, as I reached for the phone on my
nightstand, were fat ivory lines, waiting to whisk me to a netherworld, far beyond my
door.
Chase was "busy" Friday night. So I
did a really intelligent thing.
Called Brendan for a date and asked
him to make a buy. "Can you get me an eight ball?" I figured an eighth of an ounce would last awhile. It cost