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
And I, being new to the deal, didn't know enough to cut it.
I sold it like I bought it--rich, yellow, moist, and stinky.
* *
I offed the half, went
back for more, offed that, too.
My friends were happy.
Roberto was happy--
enough to front me even more.
* *
And I was nonstop wired.
Nonstop tired,
I needed more and more just to get through the day.
More and more just to feel okay.
479
Who knows how much I'd be doing now!
Who knows how much money I might have made?
Who knows if I would
have smoked up all the profits?
Who knows if I would have
ended up in prison--or worse?
* *
But one morning in early
November, I woke up and the moment I got
up, I heaved until I hurt.
It might have been the flu or a bad reaction to Mom's sloppy Joes.
* *
But it wasn't.
480
Clear Blue Easy
was clearly blue.
* *
But there was nothing easy
* * about finding
out I was pregnant.
* *
I didn't know
what to do.
* *
I didn't know who to turn to.
* *
You've probably heard
that story before.
But until you're in those shoes,
* *
wearing them seems so straightforward.
* *
Keep your baby?
Give it away?
* *
Abort your baby?
Give it life?
* *
If you think you
have a clear idea,
481
try throwing drugs into that picture.
* *
Not quite so cocky
now, are you?
* *
So tell me. How
would you choose?
482
I Went
Through
the next few days
pretty much like a zombie.
* *
People wanted crank.
I sold it to them.
* *
Teachers wanted homework.
I gave it to them.
* *
Jake wanted to razz me.
I let him.
* *
Mom wanted to know what was wrong.
I had nothing to say.
* *
The monster called to me too.
For once,
I refused to answer.
* *
Friday night, I crawled into bed, sank way, way low.
483
Submerged myself in a world of watery dreams:
* *
Tears. An ocean of tears.
And a baby, a boy, afloat in that salty sea.
* *
He cried out to me.
Could I swim away solo?
Would I drown saving him?
484
Saturday
I spent the day:
Throwing up.
Sweating speed.
Shivering.
Shaking.
Tingling all over.
And otherwise fighting the symptoms of withdrawal.
* *
Sunday
* *
I spent the day:
Throwing up.
Sweating speed.
Off-balance.
Confused.
Weeping.
Tumbling end over end, deeper and deeper into the throes of depression.
485
Monday
* *
I spent the day:
Throwing up.
Eating.
Emotional.
Dazed.
Lost.
Alone.
Finally, I went to the pay phone and made two calls. One to
Planned Parenthood. The other to
Chase.
486
My
Appointment Was at Two
Chase picked me up at noon.
Pale, shaky, I climbed in beside him.
Hi. You look awful.
* *
I smiled. "Whose fault is that?"
We laughed at the not-funny joke and headed into town.
Are you okay?
* *
I shook my head. "I'm pregnant, remember?" I leaned into my hands, let the tears flow.
Please don't cry. I'm here for you.
* *
Here? He was going off to sunny
Southern California. I didn't need
him anyway. Did I?
I
love you. More than I realized.
* *
"I love you, too. But I'm scared,
Chase." He pulled to the side of the road.
I'll
take care of you. The baby, too.
487
Was he giving me another choice?
Could I make that decision?
I was only 17.
Marry me, Kristina.
* *
My knees buckled. My stomach
churned. Chase had stepped up to the plate.
The pitch was up to me.
488
P
lanned Parenthood
was a cinder-block
nightmare. It felt like prison without the comfort of bars.
Ugly in orange, the waiting room
made me want to throw up. So I did.
* *
A dozen women
gave sympathetic
looks as I returned from the bathroom.
* *
One by one, they
disappeared as a stern woman in white
called their names.
* *
Chase held my hand as we watched them
reappear, one by one, ashen as ghosts.
489
A procession of wraiths, that's what it was. And I was in the back of the line.
* *
I rocked against the hard plastic chair.
Finally the woman
called, "Bree Wagner."
* *
Chase flinched, then
whispered in my ear:
I prefer the sound
of Kristina Wagner.
490
I
Already Knew My Options
I listened patiently as the saccharine
Ms. Sweetwater outlined them again.
* *
She did confirm that should I choose
abortion, my parents would not
have to know. All I needed was $500 and someone to drive me home.
* *
She gave me the name of a local adoption agency, urged me to consider placing
my baby in a loving home.
* *
And then she asked me the date of my last period.
Hard as it was, I thought
back to a night up at
491
Chamberlain Flat, when I used
that period as an excuse to say no.
It was the weekend before school
started. Add a couple of weeks and...
* *
I gained a terrible insight.
Chase was not the baby's father.
* *
Brendan was.
492
The
Realization
was like jamming a paperclip into a light socket:
profoundly stunning;
* * like cinching a garbage bag tight around my neck:
completely suffocating.
* *
A mad surge of blood rushed to my brain, pounding temples and eardrums
* * before draining
away completely.
My face went Arctic, diving deep freeze,
* *
glacier blue.
Graveyard cold
hugged me tight, rattling teeth and bones.
493
Chase called my
name. Ms. Sweetwater
skittered to her feet and everything went black.
494
P
assing Out
is the strangest thing.
One minute
you're here.
* *
Then with a mere
cerebral flutter, you're not
* *
Part of your brain
insists you're dead.
Of course, you're not.
* *
Another part says it's
better there, in the dark.
Where, exactly, are you?
* *
Somewhere, you hear
voices, urgent.
Could you be in limbo?
* *
A thin beam of light
calls to you.
495
Will you reach heaven?
* *
Brighter now, white and beautiful.
You hurry in that direction.
* *
Your eyes acquiesce, and open to discover...
you're back in hell, after all.
496
Voices
Chase
Sweetwater
Nurse
Doctor
* *
Kristina?
"Bree?"
"Honey?" "Young lady!"
Hello?
"Hello?"
* *
"Heart rate?" "Accelerated."
Wake up!
"Wake up!"
* *
"Breathing?" "Shallow."
Please?
"Now!"
* *
"Here she comes." "There she is."
Talk to me.
"Talk to us."
* *
"She'll be fine." "She's fine."
You fine?
"She's just fine."
497
Oh
Yeah, I Was Fine
Dandy in fact
Pregnant by a sex fiend.
Starving for the monster.
Scared to admit either
* * to those close to me who remained
* *
clueless
eyes closed to every
negative
thing about me, or dying
To know every
dirty
little tidbit.
* *
And the only one who knew every little
negative, dirty thing
would have
* *
forgiven
me anything
498
C
hase Steadied Me
as we walked to his truck, hand in hand. He opened the door, helped me inside, slid in behind the wheel.
* *
So tell me.
* *
I considered playing
ignorant, but knew he wouldn't let go.
"About the baby..."
* *
My eyes unlocked from his, but not quickly
enough to conceal the truth.
* *
Brendan is the father.
* *
My throat constricted, like a rubber band twisting around my admission.
499
"Oh, God, Chase.
It's all so wrong!"
* *
Our eyes reconnected.
In his, I found sympathy.
And jealousy.
* *
It doesn't matter, Kristina.
We can make it right.
500
He Drove Me Home--Slowly
My stomach flip-flopped with every curve and brake.
* *
Finally, he asked,
So what do you think?
I had no answers.
None at all.
* *
So he joked,
Should be a cute kid, anyway.
Which made me smile but still gave me no answers.
* *
He offered,
Don't answer me now.
Not then, but soon.
I was already six weeks p.g.
* *
He probed,
I
know it's a tough decision.
501
Tough. Too tough.
And all mine to make.
* *
He dared,
but life is full of tough decisions.
Like a guy would ever
have to face
this
one.
* *
He suggested,
Maybe you should talk to your mom.
502
My Mom?!?!
The ice princess? The bitch queen?
The "mother" of all mothers?
* *
What was he thinking?
How could I talk to
her?
* *
We hadn't really talked in months.
What would I tell her now?
* *
That I was pregnant?
That I was pregnant because I was raped?
That I was raped because I would have done
* *
anything
* * for just one more taste of the monster?
* *
Where would I start?
Where would I finish?
How much to admit?
How much to hide?
503
How much to confess?
* *
Where would I find such nerve without crank to open my mouth?
* *
And if I did dig down deep enough to find it, would I crumble and weep?
* *
Would she?
504
T
he Kitchen Was Warm
and carried a scent of hot butter, wrapped in cinnamon.
* *
It reminded me of when I was little.
* *
Before Jake.
Before Scott.
Despite Dad.
* *
Back when I still believed
Mom was the perfect mother.
She, Leigh, and I were the trinity.
* *
We baked together.
Canned together.
Planned together.
505
Plotted birthdays and holidays around homemade gifts
that didn't cost much but time and love.
* *
And the fun was not only in the giving, but in the shared creation.
* *
I adored Mom then.
* *
Could my own child
ever love me so?
506
S
omehow She Didn't Notice
the wavering tone of my "Hi, Mom."
* *
I sat down at the table and she brought