Read Perfect Chemistry 1 Online
Authors: Simone Elkeles
late?"
To have her yell at me over the phone, and then again when I got
home? No way. But I can't tell her that. "I didn't think about it," is all
I say.
"Do you ever think about this family? It's not all about you,
Brittany."
"I know that, Mom. I promise next time I'll call. I'm tired. Can I
just go to bed now?"
She dismisses me with a wave of her hand.
On Saturday morning I wake up to my mom's screaming. Throwing
the covers back, I rush out of bed and run down the stairs to see what
the commotion is all about.
Shelley is in her wheelchair, which is pushed up to the kitchen
table. Food is all over her mouth and splattered on her shirt and pants.
She looks like a little kid instead of a twenty-year-old.
"Shelley, if you do it again you're going to your room!" my mom
yells, then places a bowl of her blended food on the table in front of
her.
Shelley swipes it on the ground. My mom gasps, then narrows her
eyes at Shelley.
"I'll deal with it," I say, rushing to my sister.
My mom has never hit my sister. But my mom's frustration is in
overdrive, which stings just the same.
"Don't baby her, Brittany," Mom says. "If she doesn't eat, she'll be
tube fed. Would you like that?"
I hate when she does this. She'll talk about the worst possible
scenario and not work on fixing what's wrong.
When my sister looks at me, I see the same frustration in her eyes.
My mom points her finger at Shelley, then at the food on the floor.
"That's why I haven't taken you to a restaurant in months," she says.
"Mom, stop," I say. "You don't need to escalate the situation. She's
already upset. Why make it worse?"
"And what about me?"
Tension starts building, beginning inside my veins and spreading to
my fingertips and toes. It bubbles up and bursts with such force I
can't keep it inside any longer. "This isn't about you! Why does it
always go back to how everything affects you?" I scream. "Mom, can't
you see she's hurting? Instead of yelling at her, why don't you spend
the time figuring out what's wrong?"
Without thinking, I take a washcloth and kneel beside Shelley. I
start wiping her pants clean.
"Brittany, don't!" my mom yells out.
I don't listen. I should have, though, because before I can move
away Shelley's hands go in my hair and she starts pulling. Hard. With
all the commotion, I forgot my sister's new thing is pulling hair.
"Ow!" I say. "Shelley, please stop!" I'm trying to reach around and
push down on her knuckles like her doctor told us to do to make her
release her grasp, but it's no use. I'm in the wrong position, crouched
at Shelley's feet with my body twisted.
My mom is swearing, droplets of food are flying, and my scalp feels
raw already.
Shelley isn't loosening her hold, even though my mom is trying to
pull her hands away from my hair.
"Knuckles, Mom!" I yell, reminding her what Dr. Meir suggested.
Holy crap, how much hair has she pulled out? It feels like an entire
section of my head is bald.
After my reminder, my mom must have pressed hard enough on her
knuckles because my hair is released.
Either that, or Shelley pulled out whatever chunks she'd grabbed.
Falling onto the floor, I immediately put a hand to the back of my
head.
Shelley is smiling.
My mom is frowning.
And tears come to my eyes.
"I'm taking her to Dr. Meir, right now," my mom says, shaking her
head at me so I'm aware she's blaming me for the situation spiraling
out of control. "This has gone on long enough. Brittany, take your
father's car and go to O'Hare to pick him up. His flight comes in at
eleven. It's the least you can do to help."
SIXTEEN : Alex
I've been waiting at the library for an hour. Okay, so it's been an
hour and a half. Before ten, I sat outside on the cement benches. At
ten I came inside and stood looking at the display case, pretending to
be interested in upcoming library events. I didn't want to look overly
eager to see Brittany. At ten forty-five I sat on the couches in the
teen section, reading my chem book. Okay, so my eyes skimmed the
pages even if no words registered.
Now it's eleven. Where is she?
I could just go hang with my friends. Hell, I should go hang with my
friends. But I have a stupid urge to know why Brittany blew me off. I
tell myself it's an ego thing, but in the back of my mind I'm worried
about her.
She'd hinted, during her freakout in front of the nurse's office,
that her mom isn't a candidate for a Mother of the Year award.
Doesn't Brittany realize that she's eighteen now and can leave home if
she wanted? If it's that bad, why stay?
Because her parents are rich.
If I left home, my new life wouldn't be so different from my old
one. With a girl who lives on the north side, a life lacking designer
towels and a maid to pick up after you is probably worse than death.
I've had enough of standing here waiting for Brittany. I'm going to
her house, to confront her on why she ditched me. Without thinking it
through, I get on my motorcycle and head to the north side. I know
where she lives . . in the big honkin' white house with pillars flanking
the front.
I park my bike in her driveway and ring her doorbell. I clear my
throat so I don't choke on my words. Mierda, what am I gonna say to
her? And why am I feeling all insecure, like I need to impress her
because she'll judge me?
Nobody answers. I ring again.
Where's a servant or butler to answer the door when you need
one? Just as I'm about to give up and slap myself with a big dose of
what-the-fuck-do-I-think-I'm-doing, the door opens. Standing before
me is an older version of Brittany. Obviously her mom. When she takes
one look at me, her disappointing sneer is obvious.
"Can I help you?" she asks with an attitude. I sense either she
expects me to be part of the gardening crew or someone going door-to-
door harassing people. "We have a 'no soliciting policy' in this
neighborhood."
"I'm, uh, not here to solicit anythin'. My name's Alex. I just
wanted to know if Brittany was, uh, at home?"
Oh, great. Now I'm mumbling uh's every two seconds.
"No." Her steely answer matches her steely glare.
"Do you know where she went?"
Mrs. Ellis closes the door halfway, probably hoping I won't peek
inside and see her valuables and be tempted to steal them. "I don't
give out information on the whereabouts of my daughter. Now if you'll
excuse me," she says, then closes the door in my face.
I'm left standing in front of the door like a complete pendejo. For
all I know, Brittany was behind the door instructing her mom to get rid
of me. I wouldn't put it past her to play games with me.
I hate games I can't win.
I walk back to my bike with my tail between my legs, wondering if I
should feel like a kicked dog or an angry pit bull.
SEVENTEEN : Brittany
"Who's Alex?"
Those are the first words my mom asks me after I arrive back
home from the airport with my dad.
"He's a guy from school I'm partnered with for chemistry," I
answer slowly. Wait one minute. "How do you know about Alex?"
"He was here after you left for the airport. I sent him away."
As if my brain is synapsing, reality hits me.
Oh, no!
I forgot to meet Alex this morning.
Guilt sets in as I think about him waiting for me at the library. I
was the one who didn't trust him to show, but I'm the one who flaked.
He must be furious. Ugh, I'm feeling sick.
"I don't want him near the house," she says. "The neighbors will
start talking about you." Just like they talk about your sister, I know
she's thinking.
One day I hope to live in a place where I don't have to worry about
neighbors gossiping. "Fine," I tell her.
"Can't you change partners?"
"No."
"Did you try?"
"Yes, Mom. I did. Mrs. Peterson refuses to reassign partners."
"Maybe you didn't try hard enough. I'll call the school on Monday
and make them--"
I whip my attention to her, ignoring the stinging, throbbing pain in
the back of my head from where my sister ripped out the chunk of
hair. "Mom, I'll handle it. I don't need you calling the school and making
me feel like a two-year-old."
"Did that boy Alex teach you how to talk to your mother without
respect? All of a sudden you can open a mouth to me because you're
partnered with that boy?"
"Mom--"
I wish my dad was here to intervene. But he went directly to his
study to check his e-mails right after coming home. I wish he'd act as
a referee instead of sitting on the sidelines.
"Because if you start hanging out with trash like that, people will
consider you trash. That's not how your father and I have brought you
up."
Oh, no. Here comes the lecture. I'd rather eat live fish, scales and
all, than hear this right now. I know the meaning behind her words.
Shelley's not perfect, so I have to be.
I take a deep breath, trying to calm myself. "Mom, I get it. I'm
sorry."
"I'm only trying to protect you," she says. "And you throw it back in
my face."
"I know. I'm sorry. What did Dr. Meir say about Shelley?"
"He wants her to come twice a week for some evaluations. I'm
going to need your help taking her."
I don't talk to her about Ms. Small's policy about missing pom
practice, because there's no use in having both of us stressed. Besides,
I want to know why Shelley is lashing out just as much as she does . . if
not more.
Thankfully, the phone rings and my mom turns to answer it. I hurry
into my sister's room before my mom can call me back for more
discussions. Shelley is sitting by her personalized computer in her
room, tapping at the keyboard.
"Hi," I say.
Shelley looks up. She's not smiling.
I want her to know I'm not upset with her, because I know she
didn't mean to hurt me. Shelley might not even understand her own
motivations for doing things. "Want to play checkers?"
She shakes her head.
"Watch television?"
Another shake.
"I want you to know I'm not mad at you." I go closer, careful not to
get my hair within reach, and rub her back. "I love you, you know."
No answer, no head nodding, no verbal approximation. Nothing.
I sit on the edge of her bed and watch as she plays with her
computer. Every once in a while I make comments, so she knows I'm
here. She might not need me now, but I wish she did. Because I know a
time will come when she does need me and I won't be there for her.
That scares me.
A little while later I leave my sister and head for my room. I
search my Fairfield High student directory for Alex's phone number.
Flipping open my cell, I dial his number.
"Hello?" a boy's voice answers.
I take a deep breath. "Hi," I say. "Is Alex there?"
"He's out."
"Quienes?" I hear his mom asking in the background.
"Who is this?" the boy asks me.
I realize I'm chipping my nail polish off as I'm talking. "Brittany
Ellis. I'm, uh, a friend of Alex's from school."
"It's Brittany Ellis, a friend of Alex's from school," the boy
relates to his mom.
"Toma el mensaje," I hear her say.
"Are you his new girlfriend?" the boy asks.
I hear a thump and an "Ow!" and then he says, "Can I take a
message?"
"Tell him Brittany called. Here's my number . ."
EIGHTEEN : Alex
Right now I'm standing inside the warehouse where the Latino
Blood hang every night. I just finished my second or third cigarette--
I've stopped counting.
"Drink some beer and stop lookin' depressed," Paco says, throwing
me a Corona. I told him about Brittany blowing me off this morning and
all he's done is shake his head at me as if I should have known better
than to go to the north side.
I catch the can in one hand, but toss it right back. "No, thanks."
"Quetienes, ese? This stuff not good enough for you?" It's Javier,
probably the stupidest Latino Blood. El buey can control his liquor
about as well as he controls his drug use, which isn't much.
I challenge him without saying a word.
"Just kiddin', man," a drunken Javier slurs.
Nobody wants to get into it with me. During my first year as a
member of the Latino Blood, in a clash with a rival gang, I proved my
worth.
As a little kid, I thought I could save the world . . or at least save
my family. I'll never be in a gang, I told myself when I was old enough
to join one. I'll protect mi familia with my two hands. On the south side
of Fairfield, you're either in a gang or against them. I had dreams of a
future then; deluded dreams that I could stay away from gangs and
still protect my family. But those dreams died along with my future the
night my father was shot twenty feet from my six-year-old face.
When I stood over his body, all I could see was this red spot
spreading on the front of his shirt. It reminded me of a bull's-eye,