Authors: Ellen Hopkins
of reliving that day. And, as
always, anger taints it all.
I flip on the light switch
so I can see to straighten
the covers on Luke’s bed.
“Wouldn’t want you to come
back for a visit and think
I’ve lost respect for you,
little man.” Great. Talking
to ghosts now. Out loud, even.
As I reach for his pillow, I can’t
help but notice an evil waft
of stink emitted by my armpits.
Kind of disgusting. Guess I’d
better take a shower after all.
Stench-Free
Hair combed and clothes hanging
mostly straight, I check my phone
for messages, find what I’m hoping
for:
DON’T WORRY. YOUR HEAD’S
PRETTY FROSTY MOST OF THE TIME.
LOVE YOU. SEE YOU TOMORROW.
It’s almost eight by the time I leave.
I’ll catch a burger before I pick up
Marshall. When I open the front door,
the smell of lit tobacco wallops my nose.
Canopied by the porch awning, Mom leans
against the side of the house, drink in one
hand, cigarette in the other, watching
the drizzle. Dad hates when she smokes,
which is why she does it outside. Don’t
think he cares much about the gin, in
or out. Mom glances sideways at me.
Where you goin’?
Not her first drink,
or maybe she did, in fact, use it to
chase a Xanax. “Gonna grab a bite,
then see if I can track Hayden down.”
She Takes a Deep Drag
Exhales slowly. Yellow smoke
clouds the damp evening air.
You’re being careful, right?
I grin. “Caution is my middle name.”
But, wait. “What do you mean, careful?”
She can’t be talking the condom talk.
You know. With that girl. When you . . .
“Now, hold on. Hayden and I aren’t
doing
that.
Go—” Her eyes go wide
and I drop the
d
, modify, “Gosh,
Mom, why would you think so?”
Don’t lie to me, Matthew. All boys
your age are doing
that.
It’s nature
.
“Not lying to you. I love Hayden
with all my heart. But, nature or no,
condoms or no, we are not having sex.”
The furrows between her eyes tell
me she doesn’t believe it. Before
this conversation can devolve, I’m out
of here. “You should go in. It’s cold.”
Those Six Words
Slide out of my mouth,
soft as meringue. I think
we both choke on them
a little. I keep my eyes
straight ahead, even after
Mom calls,
You smell good.
But Matthew, please be careful.
Okay, we’ll call that a draw.
I can’t believe she’s so
positive I’m boinking
Hayden. Of course Mom
doesn’t know my girl
very well. In fact, she
doesn’t know her at all.
I avoid mixing downers
(like Mom) with uppers
(like Hayden). What’s
the point of dropping
low right before working
yourself up? I suppose
that’s what I do, dating
Hayden. Work myself up.
One thing abstinence
education doesn’t teach you
is how hard it is to maintain
an intimate relationship
that doesn’t include actual sex.
Frustrating, that’s what it is.
But I love Hayden so much
I have no choice but to respect
the boundaries she puts in place.
Problem is, the lines she draws
aren’t always real straight.
Gut complaining, I head on
over to Carl’s Jr. No lunch,
so what the hell? I order
the Memphis BBQ Six Dollar
Burger, with Pulled Pork (two
p
words in one) and onion
strings, add guacamole for
vegetable matter. Plus fried
zucchini. I’m in the mood for
z
.
Eight Thousand
Greasy calories later, I’m ready to party.
I pull up in front of Marshall’s and he sprints
to the truck, jumps up inside, bounces on
the seat. “Chill, dude. What’s with you?”
Nothing!
One word and it’s obvious he’s lit.
I borrowed a couple of my sister’s diet pills.
Lainie’s coming tonight and I wanna
be sure I can, you know . . . no problem.
“Lainie Brogan? First of all, in what
possible universe would Lainie want to
‘you know’ a little squeak like you? And
second, do you have regular dick problems?”
I’m keeping both eyes fixed on the road,
but I’m pretty sure he just clenched his fists.
Bet he’s about to pop a brain vein!
My dick’s
A-OK, thanks. Adipex just keeps it up longer.
“Longer than six hours, call your doctor.
But personally, I don’t want to know.”
Freak Lives In
A big dilapidated mobile home,
way out of town on ten acres of trees.
They form two crooked lines on each
side of the gravel driveway. At the end,
where road meets trailer, vehicles
litter the unpaved parking area. Mud,
that’s what it is. Squishy red slop.
It slurps at my shoes as I follow Marshall
to the door, noticing for the millionth
time in my life the incredible scent of wet
cedar. How do people live in the city,
where all you inhale is exhaust and piss
and subterranean steam? Of course, it
doesn’t smell a whole lot better inside,
where it’s booze over BO over a vague
fart stench, all fogged with a blend of
smokes—tobacco, weed, something else.
Eau d’party! Now to figure out just how
much “eau” I’m up for. I’ll start with a beer.
I toss a five-spot into the “Keg Donation
Can,” on top of maybe six single dollars.
Considering probably twenty people
are slurping suds out of red plastic cups,
I’m thinking Freak’s going to come up
a little short. Since he earns his keg cash
selling dope, no one’s too worried
about kicking in, but I like to pay my way.
Don’t want to be beholden to anyone,
except maybe Hayden, who would be
horrified at the red mud getting tracked
everywhere. She and my parents would
see eye to eye on that, at least. Personally,
I’m kind of enjoying all the “shoe painting”
going on. It’s so not-neat it gives me shivers.
My eyes are welded to the floor, so when
someone taps my shoulder, my arm
jumps, tossing something-I’m-guessing-
is-Pabst into the air and over my shoulder.
Hey! Not much into wearing beer! Try to
keep it in the cup, okay?
But then she laughs,
and before I can turn to face her, I know
it’s Alexa. We’ve laughed together before.
She Follows Me
Over to the keg, where I rectify the spill,
refilling her cup, too. Someone has turned
on music, if you can call Slayer music.
More like a growl with a beat and some bass.
Whatever. All I know is it’s really loud.
“I’m going in the other room where my ears
can take a vacation.” It comes out invitation-
like and Alexa takes me up on it.
We manuever carefully through a tangle
of partying people and it’s a challenge
to make it to the back room—once a bedroom,
but now set up like a den, with crippled chairs
and a seedy sofa where, unbelievably,
Marshall is tongue-to-tongue with Lainie
Brogan. Guess she was swayed by the promise
of an everlasting boner. I’ll never look at her
the same way again. There’s one open seat,
and Alexa sinks into it. I opt for the arm,
pray it holds. It’s either converse with her
or keep staring at Marshall, who has coaxed
Lainie onto his lap. Oh, hell, no. They’re
not going to get it on right there, are they?
“Holy crow. What got into her?” I ask,
and Alexa knows exactly what
I’m referring to.
Vince broke up
with her yesterday. She’s just trying to
make him jealous.
Sure enough, on the far
side of the doorway stands my ex-good
buddy Vince Rosario, looking unnervingly
like the Incredible Hulk. He’s even a pale
shade of green. “Damn. Hope Vince
hasn’t changed his mind. He could snap
Marshall in two without even trying.”
Instead, he watches the sordid scene
for a couple of seconds, turns, and walks
away. Pretty sure Marshall never knew
he was there. I’m also pretty sure Alexa
was right. Lainie knew. She’s smirking
around her semi-exposed tongue. “Man,
some girls are downright disgusting.”
Alexa laughs.
Ain’t it the truth?
And most guys like them that way.
True Enough
Except, “Not me. Personally, I prefer
class ladies to crass women.” There seem
to be mostly the latter here tonight.
And we class ladies appreciate that.
Alexa’s smile seems more predatory
than classy, but I keep that to myself
and change the subject. “So why were
you in Carpenter’s office today?
Curricula-tory problems?” She cocks
her head, perplexed. “Sorry, lame joke.”
Oh.
Now she looks consternated, but
tells her story anyway.
Believe it or not,
Carpenter called me in because of a post
on my Facebook page. I called Karla Decker
a whack and said I wished someone would
cut off her head so she’d finally shut up.
I guess someone saw it and sent it to Karla,
who told her mom, who reported me for
making threats against her daughter.
Jeez, man, I didn’t say I was bringing
my chain saw over, you know? I guess
zero tolerance isn’t enough with all
the gun violence in the news. Now they
feel the need to investigate any little burp
that might be a sign of stomach cancer.
How about you? Did you burp or what?
“More like a major silent-but-deadly fart.”
I tell her about my supposed infraction.
It takes a while, including a cup refill,
but I get to the end, omitting the “amen”
at home. Alexa listens without comment,
other than a nod or vocalized
Yeah.
I want
her to say, “That’s so fucked up.” I want
her to say, “Why in the hell would they be
worried about a freaking essay dismissing
God?” Instead, she goes to straight to Luke.
Well, Luke, Plus
The first thing she says is:
I kind of hope there is a heaven.
Wouldn’t it make you feel better
to know Luke isn’t really dead,
and that he’s watching over you?
To which I reply:
“Considering I was the one who
always had to supervise Luke,
I think he’d do a piss-poor job of
watching over me. Next question.”
Slightly stung, she continues:
I’m not big on church or religion,
but I want there to be something
more. Wouldn’t it be cool if we
could come back, get another chance?
I’ve considered that, actually.
“I don’t think it’s possible, so I’ve
decided to up the ante on the cards
I’ve been dealt. I don’t need another
chance if I kick ass in the present tense.”
Speaking of Kicking Ass
There seems to be a little row in the other
room. Everyone here crowds that way,
anxious to see what’s up. That action
pries Lainie and Marshall apart, and when
someone yells,
Get him, Vince
, I start
thinking maybe it’s time for Marshall