Authors: Ellen Hopkins
“So formal? I thought we were on
a first-name basis.” I pretend hurt,
and he pretends to be hard of hearing.
Please go on back to class, Miss Clarke.
Alexa and I do a mutual eye roll
thing and as she leaves I call, “Always
important to understand motives.
Thanks for letting me know he cares.”
Without turning around, she flips a hand
up over her shoulder. To slaughter I will go.
Hi-Ho-the-Merry-O
That’s what I’m humming as I take
the seat on the far side of Carpenter’s
desk. He looks at me like I’ve lost
my mind, or lost it even worse than
he figured I’d lost it, or whatever.
I could ask what’s up, I guess. But this
is his party. It’s up to him to kick it off.
I suppose you’re wondering why
you’re here.
He looks at me like
I really should know. But I seriously
don’t. “Uh, yeah. I mean, I hear I have
a twin, and people see him smoking
sometimes. Personally, cancer scares
the crap out of me, and—”
His head rocks side to side.
Don’t mess
with me, Mr. Turner. This isn’t funny.
Damn. He really looks concerned.
“Mr. Carpenter, my grades are jake,
I’m not abusing drugs, I don’t beat
my girlfriend. I have absolutely no
idea why I’m here. Please enlighten me.”
The Weight of His Sigh
Could crush an elephant.
I mean, really, what could
I have done to rate that?
He moves a folder from atop
a stack of papers, pushes a thin
sheaf across his desk. Oh. Duh.
Ms. Hannity thought maybe this
was worthy of some discussion.
It’s my senior essay:
Take
Your God and Shove It.
I thought the title was a nice
play on words. “I’m sorry, but
what, exactly, is the problem?
Looks like she gave me an A.”
It’s not the grade, obviously. But
the content raises a red flag or two.
My first reaction is a wholly
inappropriate snort, courtesy
of the picture that popped up
in my head—paragraph two,
page four, hit the last word and
“Taps” plays as a scarlet banner
lifts off the page. But as that vision
fades, and I consider why I wrote
what I did, every crumb of humor
disappears, smashed into powder
by a huge fist of anger. Adrenaline
thumps in the veins at my temples.
I summon every ounce of will.
Detonating will accomplish
exactly nothing. “I’m afraid
you’ll have to be a little more
specific, Mr. [
Carpentah
] uh,
Carpenter. What worries you?”
He clears his throat.
Let’s start
with your thesis statement. . . .
Which Would Be
There is no God, no benevolent ruler of the earth, no omnipotent Grand Poobah of countless universes. Because if there was, there would be no warring or genocide in his name; those created “in his image” would be born enlightened, no genuflecting or tithing required; and my little brother would still be fishing or playing basketball instead of fertilizing cemetery vegetation. And since there is no God, this nonentity has no place in government or education and certainly not in constitutional law. The separation of church and state must remain sacrosanct.
No bonus points for using the word
sacrosanct? “I’m sorry, but was I not
clear enough? Or was it the ‘Grand Poobah’
thing? Because if that’s offensive,
I don’t mind changing it. Although—”
That’s enough. You know, Matthew,
some people might find your biting
sarcasm humorous. But I have to
wonder what lies beneath it. Tell me.
Just what are you trying to hide?
Fucking Great
The last thing I need is more therapy
courtesy of some armchair shrink.
“Surely the school district isn’t paying
you to attempt psychoanalysis?”
I summon my best pretend smile.
His shoulders stiffen like drying
concrete.
Ahem. See . . . uh . . .
Ms. Hannity thinks I should
mention our concerns to your par—
“You mean Mizzzzz Hannity, right?”
I interrupt. A change of subject
matter is probably wise. “You know,
if you’ve got nothing more important
to worry about than my essay,
maybe you don’t have enough to do.
So, here’s what I think. You should
petition the Lane County School
District to verify the authenticity
of Ms. Hannity’s birth certificate.”
Consternated. That’s the only way
to describe the look on his face.
Wha—wha—what do you mean?
“Well, it’s obviously fictitious,
don’t you think? Jeez, man, my brother
talked me into watching
Gone
with the Wind
once and Mizz Hannity
is sooooo not Scarlett O’Hara.”
His jaw literally drops, exposing
a mouth full of fillings. Old silver
mercury-laden ones. When I stare,
he snaps his mouth closed.
Shut up.
I mean it. This is really not funny.
“Okay. Look, I’m sorry. Didn’t
mean to offend you, let alone
question the veracity of Ms. Hannity’s
Southernness. I just think this is all
much ado about nothing, to quote
the Bard. An essay should express
an opinion, correct? My opinion is that
it’s inappropriate to allow religion—any
religion—to influence the laws that
govern this country. That’s a valid
viewpoint, right? And even if it’s not
somehow, it’s mine, and I’m allowed
to hold it, not to mention argue it.”
He Tries Another Tack
I watch as his whole demeanor softens,
like gelatin on a hot plate.
Matthew,
the truth is, I’m worried about you.
I’m not sure you’ve really processed
Luke’s death. It’s been almost six months.
Don’t you think it’s time to move on?
That fist of pissed again, only this time
it smashes me square in the face.
“Dude, I
have
fucking moved on.
I don’t call him to dinner anymore.
I don’t think I hear him coming in
the back door. I hardly ever dream
about how he looked when . . .
when I found him. But if you mean
I should accept what happened,
you’re out of your mind!” Winded,
I catch a breath, realize I’ve been
yelling, lower my voice. “I never will.”
Mr. Carpenter studies my face, and
what he finds there—truth, that’s all
he can possibly see—seems to make
him sad.
I’m sorry you feel that way,
Matthew. But what happened to Luke
wasn’t God’s fault. Why blame him?
For a Counselor
This guy is awfully dense. “I’m not sure
how you draw the conclusion that I blame
God when I clearly state I’m one hundred
percent certain no such creature exists.”
I don’t understand.
His eyes hold
genuine confusion. Maybe even shock.
“I’m an atheist. You know, a nonbeliever.
Considering Lane County demographics,
you must have run into another one before.
I can’t be the only sane person in this school.”
He yanks himself together.
That may
be. But the others don’t brag about it.
Blah, blah, blah. The game grows old.
“All I did was state my opinion. Do you
actually see that as bragging? Because
seriously, Mr. Carpenter, I don’t.”
But there’s more.
He loses steam.
It’s . . . it’s the tone of your writing.
The tone? Angry? Yeah, but more.
Bitter? Closer, but not quite. Acerbic?
Almost. Caustic. That’s it. Still.
“Everything’s fine. Totally fine.”
It’s a Total Lie
Not sure there’s been a single day of my life
when everything was totally fine. And now?
The best I can say is once in a while I’m not
somersaulting in chaos. I sink into my well-
practiced bullshit-the-shrink tone of voice.
“Look, Mr. Carpenter. It
has
been a rough
few months. Losing Luke
did
throw me
off balance for a while, but day by day
it gets a little better. I appreciate your concern.
Ms. Hannity’s, too, and I understand where
it comes from. The truth is, you’re right.
I will never forgive the people who are
ultimately responsible for Luke’s demise.
But I don’t really see why I have to.”
Maintaining your sanity?
He gives a tiny
smile.
Anyway, be very careful of the blame
game. It can get you into all kinds of trouble.
And it’s always possible that you’re wrong.
Doesn’t Matter
If I’m wrong or right (not that I’m wrong).
All I want is out of here, so I agree, keeping
a perfectly straight face. “I know. And thanks.”
Unbelievably, he lets me leave without another
comment, not even another warning to play a less
provocative game. He’s not stupid, and neither
am I. We both understand what’s at stake,
and it’s more than my sanity. It’s my freedom.
Lockup’s the only thing that frightens me.
The one insistent whisper of fear has kept
my temper mostly in check these past few months.
More than once, I thought about taking a dead-
of-night slow cruise through certain neighborhoods,
drawing a long bead on designated silhouettes
shadowing their bedroom windows. One squeeze
of my Glock’s trigger, and
BLAM!
Eye-for-an-eye justice,
just like their Good Book calls for. But then that
niggling little voice would ask me to consider life
walled in by concrete and metal bars. That would
do me in, and I’m not quite ready to check on out
of here yet. I’ve got some living to do. Hard living.
First Things First
And right now, top of the list is simply to make
it through this day, which bumps right up against
a nice extended weekend. Time off the rat race
to celebrate the life—and death, I suppose—
of a charismatic black leader. Carpenter gives
me a pass back to class, but I’m not in a huge
hurry to use it. I only took physics for Dad.
I suppose some of it is fascinating enough,
but what would I ever use string theory for?
I time it so I’m mostly in my chair when
the lunch bell rings. Perfect. It’s a dreary,
soggy day, de rigueur for the Willamette
Valley in January. Sometimes I bring lunch
and eat outside. But not in winter. Juniors
and seniors are allowed to leave at lunch,
and I usually jet as soon as I can round up
Hayden. But today I can’t seem to locate her.
She’s not at her locker. Not exiting the gym,
hair wet from a post-PE shower. I try attendance
office, just in case. She’s not here, but a flyer
in the window reminds me where she must be
right now.
YOUTH MINISTRY MEETING,
11:55 A.M. FRIDAY IN THE LIBRARY
.
Guess I’m Eating Solo
Angers shimmers
red hot
white hot
silvery hot.
Not because
I can’t stand
eating alone
thinking alone
immersing myself in alone.
But because
she knows I hate
her church
her youth group
her condescension
when she goes
all fucking missionary
on me. Not talking nouns,
talking adjectives
moralistic
preachy-whiny
holier-than-thou.
Okay, I Know
That’s not exactly fair.
That she’s truly worried
for my immortal soul.
That, in itself, is rather
endearing. And so is
the fact that she loves
me at all. Little enough