Authors: Helen Frost
If I had my own key like their son,
I coulda got in last night when I finally got a ride
from Carmen. It was midnight, and the house
was dark. Carmen thought I'd gone inside. I tried to run
and catch her, but she didn't see me standin' out
there in the dark streetâno house, no food, no ride.
I didn't run off. I shivered in the backyard, waitin' for the sun.
SOME LITTLE THINGÂ Â Â Â Â
CARMEN
I'll be sixteen in seven months,
and I know how to drive.
When Dontay had to find his own ride home,
Grandmama was asleep. I know where she keeps
her keys. I borrowed them and drove as careful as I could
out to that house he's stayin' at. By the time I left
him off, it was after curfew. I turned left
on Main Street, thinkin' 'bout the time we all got stopped last month
in that same place, thinkin' I could
go a different way. Shoulda done that, but I thought I'd drive
that short way, take my chances. Tried to keep
an eye out, but I got stopped before I made it home.
That is, to Grandmama's houseâwhat I call home
since Mama and her boyfriend left
for Cincinnati. I keep
thinkin' she'll be back, but it's five months
now, and I've about stopped hopin' she'll drive
up any minute. I guess it could
happenâprob'ly won't, but could.
Anyhow, for now, Grandmama's house is home.
Or was until she woke up to flashin' lights and saw the cops drive
up. They gave her back her keys, told her I was DUI. Left
me handcuffed in their car tryin' not to cry. I'll prob'ly get two months
this time. Don't know why I keep
on gettin' in this kind of trouble. I keep
tryin' to do rightâthought I could
help out with this month's
rent. Now it looks like I won't be home
or makin' any kind of money for a while. I'll miss what's left
of school, or at least too much to make up. This could drive
you crazy: Just try to do some little thing like drive
a friend that needs a ride, and you keep
findin' yourself locked up, nothin' left
to do but sit around thinkin' how you could
be out with friendsâor home.
You think about that stuff for months,
and when those months are finally over, everything you left
behind is different. You feel like jumpin' in the nearest car and drivin'
outta town, keepin' goin' till you find someplace that feels like home.
I got invited to the winter dance.
Think how that's supposed to be: Mom, Dad,
there's someone I'd like you to meet,
someone special in my life, someone
who loves me as much as I love him.
Freeze frame on that one word: Did you say
him
? I used to try to think of how I'd say
it, how I'd let them know there'd be no dancing
at my wedding, no grandkids. Finally I just told them about him
and watched my world explode. What it meant to Dad
was that he didn't know me. I turned into someone
he's hated all his life. He wouldn't meet
my friend.
Why would I want to meet
the person who ruined your life?
I couldn't say,
No, Dad, I ruined his.
They couldn't imagine just someone
I loved who loved me. Now Mom and Dad and I can't dance
around the subject like we used to. Dad
said if I didn't have enough respect for him
to
act normal
, how could I expect him
to keep supporting me? I couldn't meet
his eyes when he said that. I was ashamed of Dad
and myself at the same time. I didn't say
much, but after that, the winter dance
seemed like a childish game. Overnight, I became someone
differentâolder, tougher, on my own. Someoneâ
meâwith no parents to support him.
I was scared enough to ask a girl to the dance,
thinking I could bring her home to meet
my parents. Maybe they'd let me come back. I'd say,
It was just something I went throughâreally, Dad,
it isn't true. But she said no. Anyway, Dad
would never have believed me. I can't pretend to be someone
I'm not. No matter what Mom might say
(and she's not saying much), to him
I might as well be dead. There's just no way to meet
halfway on this. I didn't go to the dance.
What made me think I could have danced with him
in public? Now I can't even say his name out loud. Dad
scared me into breaking up. I don't even want to meet someone.
I sleep in my sleeping bag in a room
with a lock in the basement of the place
on Jackson Street. And I feel safe.
If Keesha wants to talk to me, she knocks
first, and if I want to let her in, I do.
If I don't, I don't. It's my choice.
There's not too much I really have a choice
about. Mom would say I chose to leave my room
at home, but that's not something anyone would do
without a real good reason. There's no place
for me there since she got married. Like, one time, I knocked
her husband's trophy off his gun safe,
and he twisted my armâhard. I never feel safe
when he's around. I finally asked my mom to make a choice:
him or me. She went,
Oh, Katie, he'll be fine.
Then she knocked
on our wood table. I blew up. I stormed out of the room
and started thinking hard. In the first place,
I know he won't
be fine.
I didn't tell her what he tries to do
to me when she works late. In a way, I want to, but even if I do,
she won't believe me. She thinks we're safe
in that so-called nice neighborhood.
Finally, Katie, a place
of our own.
And since she took a vow, she thinks she has no choice
but to see her marriage through. No room
for me, no vow to protect
me
if he comes knocking
on my door late at night. He knocks
and then walks in when I don't answer. Or even when I do
answer:
Stay out! This is my room
and you can't come in!
I could never be safe
there, with him in the house. So, sure, I made a choice.
I left home and found my way to this place,
where I've been these past two weeks. And I found a place
to work, thirty hours a week. Today Mom knocked
on the door here. She wanted to talk. I told her,
You made your choice;
I made mine.
She wondered what she could do
to get me to come home. But when I said,
It's not safe
for me as long as he's there
, she left the room.
My choice is to be safe.
This room is dark and musty, but it's one place
I do know I can answer
no
when someone knocks.
I HATE TO BE THE ONEÂ Â Â Â Â
STEPHIE
It's Friday night. When I left home this morning,
Mom said,
We need to talk.
She noticed that I couldn't eat my breakfast
and she looked at me long and hardâthat mix
of sad and angry that I hate.
I can't face her. I'm not going home.
They probably think I've gone home
with Jason. I saw him this morning
before school, talking to a girl we both used to hate.
I walked away before he saw me. Let him talk
to her. My feelings about him are so mixed-
up right now. He used to be so sweet, eating breakfast
with his tousled hair and sleepy eyes. Breakfast
at their house is different than at home.
They're
peaceful
. If his brother mixes
a can of juice in a saucepan and leaves it out all morning,
nobody complains. And nobody expects you to talk
to them if you don't want to. Mom would hate
it. She likes everything in order. Dad too. They both hate
it if we haven't cleared away our breakfast
by eight o'clock, even on weekends. They talk
about how kids should have a home
where they know what to expect. Every morning
Mom gets up first, makes coffee, gets out a mix
of pancakes or bran muffins. Sometimes I watch her mix
it, like it's part of her job, like
I hate
this job, but someone has to do it.
This morning
she was saying,
If I get up and make you breakfast
I expect you to eat it.
I go,
Sure, Mom.
Then she goes,
I want you home
after school today. We need to talk.
I'm afraid of what she wants to talk
about. I don't want to mix
her words about this baby with my own. Home
to her and Dad means perfect, and I hate
to be the one to shatter that. Onlyâwhere will I eat breakfast
in the morning?
Oh, Mom ⦠it isn't just the talk I hate.
It's how we have to mix it up with breakfast.
Can't we just relax at home some morning?
SURPRISED TO HEAR MYSELFÂ Â Â Â Â
JASON
Stephie's gone. I went over Friday night
after the game, and her brother seemed surprised.
He said,
We thought she was at your house.
She used to do that sometimes. If it got late,
we'd pull out the couch and make a bed
for her, and then we'd go to school
together in the morning. Friday she wasn't at school.
I didn't think much of it, but that night
I really wanted to talk.
Maybe she went to bed
early
, I said. Her brother looked surprised
again. He shook his head. I went home. Then late
that night, her dad showed up at my house,
frantic. Everyone at their house
was out searching for her. They'd called the school
principal at home and found out Stephie had been absent. And late
a lot these past few weeks. Her dad said,
Son, last night
she seemed worried. Do you know why?
I was surprised
he called me son. And I was half asleepâhe got me out of bed.
He looked tired. Three a.m., he hadn't been to bed
at all, everything upside down at his house.
I told him Stephie hadn't talked to me all week. Surprised,
he wondered why.
Don't you see her every day at school?
I thought she'd been here every night!
She's been coming home late
a lot, but we just thought she was with you!
Later,
I thought about him sitting there on our couch-bed
in the middle of the night.
He looked like his whole house
had collapsed, like everything he'd learned in school
turned out false where he'd put true. I was surprised
to feel so sorry for him, even more surprised
to hear myself tell him the truth.
Her period's late
,
I said.
She's afraid the kids at school
will start to notice something.
After he'd gone, I lay in bed
thinking about them all at her house.
And where
was
Stephie in the middle of the night?
I got out of bed, drove around looking for her all nightâ
past the school, back and forth past her house,
surprised how much I want her back.
Is it too late?
QUESTIONS ABOUT JOEÂ Â Â Â Â
KEESHA
When Katie came, she kept asking questions
about Joe. Since he owns the house, she thought
he'd tell us what to do. She kept saying,
I can pay
rent. I can buy my own food. I'll work
for what I need.
There was one room upstairs with a bed
and a window, but she said she'd rather stay
in the basement room. We all stay
out of there unless she asks us in. No one asks questions
about why she keeps her door locked. The bed
in there is just a foam pad on the floor, but Katie said she thought
the room was heaven. We hardly see her, she's at work
so much. I think she's worried Joe might make her pay
some other way if she runs out of money. He says we can pay
him if we want to, but not much. Me, I want to stay
in school. I want good grades. So I just work
twelve hours a week, enough for food. I hate the questions
people ask though. Even my ex-boyfriend thought
the girls here must be going to bed
with Joe, or someone else. Not meâI won't go to bed
with anyone unless I want to. And I don't pay
for
nothin'
with
my
body! At first I thought
we should do something nice for Joeâhe lets us stay
here and he doesn't ask too many questions.
So if he was tired when he got home from work
I used to cook or do some kind of work
like clean up the house. Once I made his bed
for him, like Mama used to do. That raised some questions
in his mind, I guess. He said,
Keesha, don't you pay
me no mind. Everyone deserves a place to stay.