Authors: Stefanie Lyons
Tags: #teen, #teen fiction, #ya, #ya fiction, #young adult, #young adult fiction, #novel, #young adult novel, #romance
Texts
DAY ONE
X:
sm
4give me
DAY TWO
X:
sm
need u 2 believe me
DAY FIVE
X:
sm
sam? plz â¦
DAY SIX
Me:
sm
y?
X:
sm
she lives!
X:
sm
y? cuz I'm innocent
X:
sm
cuz I miss u
DAY SEVEN
X:
sm
cuz I luv u
X:
sm
cuz it's no fun w/o u
DAY NINE
X:
sm
cuz u r crazy bout me ;)
X:
sm
& â¦
DAY TEN
Me:
sm
& what?
X:
sm
& it's what henri paul wud do
Me:
sm
paint me an apology portrait?
X:
sm
if that's what it takes
Me:
sm
I'm grounded
X:
sm
I'll wait
Me:
sm
2 wks
DAY ELEVEN
X:
sm
look out ur window â¦
Summer to Falling
Out thereâ
hot
sm
hazy
sm
heat
steaming up from the pavement,
the sidewalk.
Out thereâ
pretty
sm
pink
sm
hearts
forming a chalk path
to my sidewalk.
Cars honk
sm
radios blare
sm
laughter flies
around bouquet after bouquet of flowers
red
up against a tree.
resting
sm
insisting
sm
waiting
X
marks a spot, a path
leading to my heart
red
like the roses.
My heart leaps upon discovery.
Romance still lives
in the air
in my lungs
in my heart
in every petal of every rose
beside the tree.
I pick them up
carry them back to my room
smell their scent for the next
few days.
My rose-apology portrait.
After I serve my sentence,
the first thing I do
is see
X.
Thousands of Years â¦
⦠could pass by like fearless nations
at war
at peace
in love
we are back
to life as we knew it
beautiful
floating
our own oasis of
Vespas flying down city streets
black coffee
walks along Division Street
vandalizing
VOTE HENDERSON!
signs
learning to play bocce ball
at the park where we swing
swoon
seal
our love for each other.
Cheesy
silly
summer fun.
Dating Up
Up since noon
love in tune
high in thrill
strong in will
bold 'n' young
come undone
deep in play
light in day
without care
each aware
Political debates?
Adventure waits!
Taller tree
vaster sea
more worldly
mon ami
stronger coffee
makes me
a
better me.
Meeting His Mom
We arrive in the western suburbs
identical houses line the streets circa 1940.
Two-story homes with tiny patches of lawn
white awnings, blue mailboxes
flag up, flag down.
A narrow living room holds
mismatched furniture, dead flowers.
A woman's voice calls from the kitchen,
the scent of homemade hot sauce greets me.
She sits at the kitchen table
hunched over bills, adding and sighing.
X kisses her cheek.
She tells him she's making tamales.
We sit. We talk.
My name. My family.
Her:
sm
Henderson? Any relation to the one running for
state senator?
I cannot escape my roots
even out here in the middle of the 1940s.
X visits the basement,
while I help mush masa.
Her:
sm
You have the most interesting eyes.
Her eyes burn into me like Lady Elba's hand on my chest.
Her:
sm
Oh, you must get that all the time, you're so pretty.
Not really.
Her:
sm
They're so big. I've seen your dad on TV â¦
Oh no, not this about Dad again.
Her:
sm
He's got tiny eyes. You must have your mother's eyes.
Do I have my mother's eyes?
See what my mother sees?
Her:
sm
I'm sorry, X always tells me I'm nosy.
She pats my hand in a comforting
motherly way. Her skin,
sm
pale
sm
soft
sm
cool
sm
delicate
like Mom's skin,
before the tests
sm
before treatments
sm
before “that time.”
X returns, wraps an apron around his waist
his arms around his mother's midsection.
X:
sm
My two favorite gals.
She smiles, proud, loving, ready to
mix the spices
mold the corn husks
make the most of her time with us.
Suddenly,
the smell of cumin
and the coziness of this kitchen
make me see a new side.
X as
compassionate son
talented tamale maker.
X as
a partner in caring
as well as
a partner in crime.
If Tamales Could Talk
After we taste the tamales,
X
revisits the basement
hoists a very large duffel bag
over his shoulder.
X:
sm
Okay mama, see you in a week.
We leave.
Me,
thinking of what it would be like to
visit again.
X,
scrolling through his phone for messages
or something.
The secret nature of things feels funny,
and too familiar.
When we get back to town, he says
there's a party â¦
could be fun â¦
we should go â¦
When we get back to town, I remember
there's a political event â¦
won't be fun â¦
I have to go â¦
And my father's clauseâ
Sam must support family in all events leading up
to election
fresh in my mind
from serving my time
being grounded.
X tells me to blow it off, be with him.
My heart wants to, but my head wins tonight.
Me:
sm
I can't.
He stares at the steering wheel. Says I'll miss a great party.
So he plans on going?
Even after the meth, the sorrysorrysorry, pink hearts, red roses?
He drops me off in front of my house
as I wonder if he will ever meet my dad,
shake his hand.
Would it be better?
Or worse?
“So you're going?”
“I have to.”
Whose words to whom?
We kiss goodbye
slow and sweet.
It burns a little
just like homemade tamales.
Vive Le Senator!
Tonight's soirée takes place
in a French restaurant.
C'est la vie, I'm not hungry.
Miguel rushes around
thanking donors for their money.
Merci. Merci. Oh please!
Dad gushes about us being
one big, happy family.
Quelle surprise, that's what he sees?
I play along with
joie de vivre
the more supportive I am,
the less he notices of me.
I hone my acting skills.
We sit at the front table.
Dad shakes hands with everyone.
Vive le Senator!
Whose hand does X shake tonight?
Why would he go without me?
Why would he
want
to go without me?
I slurp my soup with Melanie
until Jane yells at us.
Queen Vanilla has a migraine.
Quelle horreur!
More and more people show up.
So many so, I become claustrophobic,
duck out the side door and
get some fresh air.
Vive la blah blah blah
.
French Lessons
Outside, I call X.
It rings and rings and rings.
I leave a message,
something stupid,
sounding insecure.
Merde
.
As I contemplate my needy state
I notice a guy smoking a few yards away
seeming equally as bored.
He looks interesting
sm
avant-garde
sm
Eiffel Tower tall.
I approach him for a cigarette.
It's the only thing I can think ofâa cig.
I'm bad at smoking
worse at flirting
but, if X can party without me
I can try and smoke with a cute boy.
I brush a curl out of my eye
brush up on my French, say hello.
He turns around. I gasp,
Sacrebleu!
Ted.
He looks at me like I'm from Planet Lame.
He's
sm
calm
cool
careful.
Ted:
sm
Think your dad will win?
Like this is what's primarily
on both our minds.
I shrug, say I don't care.
I look closer at the Ted
du jour
longer, floppy hair
Chuck Taylors
Long Live Anarchy
bracelet
He's
au contraire
to the Ted I knew
buzz cuts
preppy shirts
basketball obsessed.
The space between us feels tense, yet
for the first time everâelectric.
Did he become interesting, accidentally, over the summer?
A je ne sais quoi oozes out of him
like laissez-faire took over
his Type-A personality.
He asks about “the college dude” as if spitting out escargot.
I shrug.
How should I know?
He's at some party not answering his phone.
I start to ask about his girlfriend,
realize I have no clue who she is
I've been so wrapped up in
me and X.
He tells me her name, and that it's over.
I try to act casual, yet my stomach flops a little.
Was that a pity flop?
Or â¦
Ted:
sm
So is there a reason you came over to talk to me?
Me:
sm
Maybe. There a reason you're here?
Ted:
sm
Maybe.
Not getting anywhere, I resign.
Me:
sm
I should go back inside.
Ted mumbles something
about me looking all serious
like Madame Roulin.
I smile at him.
He knows Gauguin?
Smokescreen
Inside, I run smack into my father
and
Ted's dad:
sm
Your father tells me you're really focused
on those SATs.
I shrug.
Ted's dad:
sm
Good. The more you study, the more you
increase that X factor.
Yes, I'm focused on the X factor.
Dad wraps his arm around me
pleased, puffed up with pride
Henderson blood coursing through both of us.
Ted's dad:
sm
Wish some of your discipline would rub
off on Ted.
No wonder Ted's sporting
an anarchy bracelet instead of a basketball.
A woman shakes Dad's hand,
asks for a favor in return for her vote:
get the loud drug parties on her block to goâ
disturbing ruckus â¦
reeks of chemicals â¦
kids who should be in college â¦
not carousing â¦
Dad agrees, whole-heartedly.
She gives her address
which sounds vaguely familiar.
Party Betty's house?
Sweating, I excuse myself.
Dad gives me a little hug,
asks why I smell like smoke.
I smile at his guests as if he's whispered something
sweet in my ear.
Alone, I check my phone
sixteen times
pit in my stomach
finally, one text from Gavinâ
I hope LA crumbles into the Pacific!
nothing from X.
Positive Energy
Twenty-four hours later
no word from X.
WTF?
Not one to sulk, I call April,
tell her about X and Ted.
Talk some sense into me!
What's going on?
Did something change,
something happen
at the party?
He just went to a party, and I didn't.
Is that a big deal?
Am I being a baby?
Do college girls get paranoid?
Or is this just high school insecurity?
Me:
sm
Tell me I'm not crazy.
April:
sm
You're not crazy.
Me:
sm
Did I misjudge Ted?
April:
sm
You didn't misjudge Ted.
Me:
sm
But Ted's changed.
April:
sm
It's possible.
Me:
sm
Then it's possible for guys to change.
Thinking of X.
April:
sm
Not all of them.
Reading my mind.
My friend's good at
lifting moods
igniting hope
living in a Utopian
reality.
But just to be sure,
she suggests we consult Lady Elba.