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
* *
What's your name, anyway?
If I told him my real name, they might call home anyway. "Uh..."
* *
Tough question?
It never crossed my mind I
couldn't get out without it.
* *
You have to answer it sooner or later.
"Bree," I said. "Bree... Wagner."
456
I
Wasn't
Scared--Yet
They asked me lots of questions.
I made up every answer, the most important one being,
* *
"My parents can't be reached.
May I call my brother?"
They handed me the phone.
I could only hope he was home.
Brrrng... brrrng... brrrng...
* *
"Chase? It's Bree--your sister?
Listen, I got picked up for curfew..."
I had rousted him up out of deep crash hell. It took a few
minutes for him to come to.
* *
"Since our mom and dad are out of town, they brought me to Wittenberg..."
Somehow he got my drift. He
told me to chill, he'd see what he could do.
* *
No more questions. No tests. Not even the rush of a strip search.
They marched me down to a holding cell, gave me four solid
hours to wonder what came next.
457
No word from my family. Not
Kristina's. Surely not Bree's.
They took my clothes, gave me
baggy gray sweats, assigned me a bed in the dormitory.
* *
I joined the general population.
I wonder where that term came from.
They were not general at all.
Roomie #1, Lucinda, was a gangbanger, involved in a drive-by.
* *
Roomie #2, Felice, was in for wrecking a Caddie, carjacked at knifepoint.
Roomie #3, Rose, had beaten up her mother--with the butt of her gun.
Of course, she had a good excuse.
* *
All of us had one thing in common: a total infatuation with the monster.
Tell you the truth, that scared me a little. But not that much.
458
Tough
Girls
I spent much of Sunday listening to them talk.
* *
Trash talk.
Honest talk.
Tagging
Expression
Street fighting
Courage
Color
Family
Hunger
Need
Speed
Crashing
Connections
Scoring
Trafficking
Shooting up
Popping a cap
Remorse
Doing time
* *
I let Bree do my trash talking.
Kristina stuck with honesty.
Somehow, Lucinda and I found an odd rapport.
* *
And by the time Chase called my parents to let me know where they could find me
(can you believe it takes a
real
parent to get you out of juvie?)
459
and they released me bright and early, Monday morning,
* *
I was a tougher girl with a new connection.
460
C
ause and Effect
The admitting clerk was irate.
She had to redo all the paperwork, using my real name.
She made me wait for almost two hours
while she drank coffee and shuffled files.
* *
The counselor assigned to my case was unsympathetic. He read my folder, nodding and
hmmm
ing.
He told me being a loser was easy, then
ordered 24 hours community service.
* *
Scott sulked like a pissed puppy. He
would have preferred lockup to my
picking up trash along the highway.
He refused to say one word, and his silence told me all I needed to know.
* *
Mom manufactured a plethora of tears to accompany her long-suffering mother diatribe.
She had plenty to say about deceit, distress, and sexually transmitted diseases.
461
Jake was enthralled by the whole
idea of my temporary incarceration, and the reasons behind it.
He wouldn't shut up, just kept
asking inane questions.
* *
As for me, I was less than contrite.
Picking up trash wasn't so bad. There were ways around GUFN.
And I now had a direct in with a monster manufacturer.
462
Back
in My Room
My life closed in around me. I was no longer my own.
Mom had poured through all
* *
my stuff, scoured
my journal, letters, and address book.
She did find a bit of evidence--a
* *
crumpled Marlboro
wrapper and a new
lighter. Hey, it made her day to discover
I was a hard-core
* *
tobacco user. More
lectures, more useless
promises on my
end. She went off to work on her book.
463
A sudden wave of exhaustion swallowed
me. I'd walked through the last few days in a total haze. My system
* *
had finally purged itself of "go fast." It was time to shut down. I laid down and surrendered myself to the comfort of dreams.
464
R
esolutions
I awoke the next morning, semirefreshed.
As I got myself ready for school,
I made the following resolutions:
* *
* One week to the end of the quarter, grades slipping into gutter, I would ask for some extra credit work.
* *
* I would help out more around the house, show my parents
I
was
grateful for the many things they'd given me.
* *
* I would write to my Grandma once a week, even if she might not be sure who the letters were from.
* *
* I would reconnect with old friends. And my dad.
* *
* I would finish up the many projects I'd started while under the influence--a macramé wall hanging, a portrait of John
Lennon, a song I'd written about my walk with the monster.
465
* I would never shoot up again. I would smoke less, toot
less, keep my bad habits manageable. (Notice I didn't say
quit them.) I would also avoid sipping other people's blood.
* *
* I would go to Planned Parenthood and get on the pill. Making
love with Chase was awesome, and we didn't need a baby
spoiling that.
* *
The problem with resolutions is they're only as solid as the person making them.
466
O
ther Problems
Mess with a teacher, even one that has always
liked you in the past, you're liable to get screwed.
Ditch their classes, they might
give you makeup work, but they don't have to. I was four
out of seven toward screwed.
* *
I tried hooking up with
Sarah. She was nice but had
moved on to more reliable
friends. Straight friends.
Trent knew exactly what was what with his sister, and so with me. The Avenue most
definitely wasn't his scene.
* *
On the home front, I couldn't
buy Scott's trust by washing
windows or vacuuming. I had
zero idea how to turn it around.
467
Mom, she wanted her little girl
back. I couldn't go that far.
She wavered between forgiving, stern, spiteful, and loving.
* *
I did write Grandma a couple of times, lively, newsy letters.
She never replied, but I
didn't really expect her to.
Hopefully, I brightened a few of her last days. She would pass
away in January, cold and gray as a San Francisco winter.
* *
When I returned to the macramé, my fingers struggled over the knots. I scrapped that project, but did finish John Lennon.
As for the song, I had lost the melody and my will to find it. And the lyrics brought
me back to the fold of the monster.
468
Crank,
You See
isn't any ordinary
monster. It's like a giant octopus, weaving
* *
its tentacles not
just around you, but through you, squeezing
* *
not hard enough to kill you, but enough to keep you from reeling
* * until you try to get
away. Try, and you
hunger for its
grasping
* *
clutch, the way its
tendrils prop you
up, your need
intensifying
469
exponentially
every minute you
refuse to admit its
being.
470
By
Wednesday
I was starving for speed and for Chase, in that order. I bummed a snort from Robyn, borrowed her cell.
* *
I made the call with trepidation but Lucinda had given me all I needed to know--her name, her brother's name, and these very scary words: La Eme,
* *
"Eme" meaning M, for Mexican
Mafia, hardcore importers and traffickers, plus a few chemists, doing their thing in desert hideaways. Roberto already
* *
knew about me. (Lucinda had
used up one of her weekly calls and expected a favor one day.
La Eme is all about favors.)
* *
Roberto set up a meet for the following afternoon.
Then I called Chase's cell, asked him to pick me up
471
last period, take me to the bank. (I had a D in P.E.; what could one
more ditch hurt?)
472
The
Good
...
Seeing Chase's truck pull into the far parking lot. Hearing,
It's been a long four days.
* *
Kissing him, knowing better things
lay in store, right up the road.
I've missed you so much.
* *
Detouring to a secluded spot. Gentle
lovemaking, set to romantic sonnets.
It's never been like this for me before.
* *
Riding into town, head on his shoulder, listening to words of love.
My heart will always belong to you.
* *
He was the second person to tell me
that. The first, well, he had his Giselle.
473
... T
he Bad
...
Noticing the letter lying
open on the passenger-side floor.
I was going to tell you...
* *
Chase had been accepted by USC-- the University of Southern California.
They have an awesome film school...
* *
Early graduation, a full scholarship, for him, a dream come true.
I'll
leave after Christmas break.
* *
For me, a dream or three, annihilated.
I didn't know what to say.
Please don't cry. It's not so far away.
* *
It might as well be clear across the globe.
Out of sight, out of my mind.
474
... And
the Ugly
I was still upset when
we pulled up to the bank.
I was a ton more upset
* *
when the teller informed
me that Mom had restricted
my access to my own account.
* *
Okay, it had dwindled considerably.
But I had to have cash the next day.
You should not stand
* * a guy like Roberto up.
And I was in serious want of a fabulous bender.
* *
I'm not sure which one of the two made me more panicky.
I asked Chase if I could
* *
borrow some money.
But when I told him why, he told
me I was nuts and took me home.
475
I didn't even say good-bye, just slammed the door and went to check the mailbox.
I figured I'd better keep checking
* * it until my report card arrived.
It wasn't there. But something a whole lot
better was--two letters from Citibank.
* *
Inside one was Mom's new credit card.
Inside the other was a PIN.
476
I
Did Think Twice
about using that Visa, maybe
even three or four times.
But it was just so easy, like fate
had mailed it directly to me.
* *
Mom wouldn't miss it for weeks.
And then I would deny ever
having laid eyes on the thing.
* *
Robyn gave me a ride to meet
Roberto. He didn't look near as scary as he really was.
The buy was a piece of cake.
Except for one thing.
* *
Roberto wouldn't deal less than half-ounce quantities. That much, straight from the source, was relatively
cheap. And Visa paid for it.
477
I didn't need it all, of course.
The plan was to sell some, so my own stash would be free.
Every dealer thinks that until their nose gets busy.
* *
That's what I became that day. A dealer.
I had just taken a very big step up in the hierarchy of the monster.
478
I
Became an Instant Celebrity
out on The Avenue.
The crank was superb.