Authors: Ellen Hopkins
to leave, just in case this is a matter
of misplaced rage. “Hey, Lainie. You
didn’t know Vince would be here, right?
I mean, you wouldn’t set up my buddy,
would you?” If there’s one thing I hate,
it’s games, especially the kind that get
my naive friends into trouble. Lainie’s eyes
narrow, and she gives me a vile smirk.
Why don’t you shut the fuck up, ass licker?
What I do is none of your business.
“Nice mouth. Careful you don’t catch
something ugly hiding in there, Marshall.”
With a chorus of groans, the group in the hall
swells backward into the room, and there’s
a loud thump just beyond them. “Time to
go, I believe. Marshall?” Against all that
is logical, the dimwad shakes his head.
Nah. I’ve got plans for little Lainie girl.
You go ahead without me. You’ll get me
home, won’t you, Lainie?
Totally unfazed
by the commotion in the hall, he kisses her
again, and she kisses him back, in the most
ludicrous display of igorance I’ve ever
witnessed. “Well, I’m going,” I tell
Alexa. “At least, if I can find a way
out. Think I could fit through that window?
Okay, probably not. Thanks for the company.”
I stand, but before I can take a step, she puts
her hand on my forearm.
Take me home?
I actually rode with Lainie. Looks like
she’s got more on her mind than me,
and it’s a very long walk in the rain.
Or even not in the rain. But you know—
I’m babbling, aren’t I?
Her grimace
makes me smile. “I happen to admire
those who babble, and if you can help me
safely escape the morass, I’m more than
willing to drive you home, milady.” Now
I’m babbling, but I think she likes it.
She Takes My Hand
You go first, and fast.
I’m going to be sick. Got it?
I do. If there’s one thing more
imperative than watching a fight,
or even winning one, it’s getting
the hell out of the way of a likely
vomit blast. I’d duck myself.
“Too much beer! Move, man!
You like the smell of Pabst puke?
Out of our way!” Like magic, the mob
parts, and we hustle by the human heap
on the floor—Vince pounding on . . . ?
No clue who. And I really don’t
care. Best of luck, Marsh. Sweet
little actress Alexa keeps her
fist to her mouth, approximating
the sounds of imminent upchuck.
We escape into the mist-mellowed
night, laughing and surfing mud
all the way to my truck. I open
the passenger door, sort of boost
her up inside. “Quite the performance.”
I thought so myself.
She looks at me
with eyes the approximate color of ripe
blueberries, and in those eyes I find
recollection of a time when Alexa
and I might have merged into coupledom
had I not fallen instead for her best friend.
Well, her then-best friend. The tiniest tip
of her tongue comes to rest against her
upper lip and I know what she wants and
for some insane reason, I sway toward her,
wanting to kiss her, and I am a millimeter
away from doing exactly that. “I can’t.”
It comes out a hoarse croak. “Sorry.”
She pulls her feet inside, and I close
the door, walk around to the driver’s side,
climb up beneath the steering wheel.
Wordlessly start the engine. We withdraw
to separate cubes of space, only feet apart,
but a universe away from each other,
both of us wondering what that meant.
We Are Quiet
For a mile or so.
Very quiet. Finally,
she tosses a pebble into the silence.
You’re really in love with her.
Splash. Glug, glug, glug.
“Hayden is easy to love.”
Really?
“Really.”
I don’t see it.
“Why not?”
Because you two are not
the same kind of people.
“That’s true. I’m a guy
and she’s definitely not.”
You know what I mean.
She’s starting to get pissed.
“Actually, I’m not sure I do.”
Come on. She’s a raging Jesus
lover. You’re anything but.
“Well, there is that. . . .”
The small injection of humor
goes unnoticed, or ignored.
Doesn’t that bother you?
“Once in a while.” More like
often
, but I keep that to myself.
She reflects for a second or two.
Don’t you want to, you know . . . ?
Okay, this word duel grows old,
not to mention hard to keep up
with. “Don’t I want to what?”
She tsks irritation.
Stop being dense.
Don’t you want to have sex with her?
Because I’m pretty sure she’s not
going to do that. Not without a ring
around her finger and a Bible verse
before—God-inspired foreplay.
Enough!
“Why in the hell is everyone suddenly
so interested in my sex life? Mom’s
positive I’m getting some, you’re sure
I’m not. And Marshall thinks I need
pharmaceuticals to masturbate.”
The last, of course, is total bullshit,
meant to elicit a reaction, and it does.
Alexa snorts laughter.
Wh-what?
“Nothing. I made up the part about
Marshall. Just wanted to see if you
were paying attention. But I did have
to defend my actions—or lack of them—
to my mom. Just because she got knocked
up her senior year, guess she figures—”
Wait. Your mom got pregnant . . .
with you?
Now she’s way too serious.
“That’s what they tell me. I was born
approximately five months after
a fancy shotgun wedding. Pretty sure
my grandfather wishes he’d pulled
the trigger. Then again, pretty sure
sometimes my dad wishes so, too.”
There’s a Lot More
To this tale of regret, details gleaned from Dad’s
inebriated ramblings. Confessions not confided,
but rather overheard. Like how he was a junior
at UOregon, a star forward on the Ducks
varsity basketball team, and head-over-heels
in love with another girl the night he met Mom,
who was much too young to be hanging out
at a frat party. How, despite a team prohibition
against alcohol, and a personal vow to remain
faithful, he went ahead and indulged in a drink
or four, which loosened his inhibitions enough
to make him forget about the love of his life
and engage in a fifteen-minute ride-of-his-life
with a wicked eighteen-year-old wild child
from out in the sticks. How, despite the guilt,
and swearing to himself he’d never again
cheat on his girlfriend, when Mom showed
up at his door he invited her in for an encore.
Three times they had sex, that was all, but
apparently that was more than enough to get
Mom in a family way, and even though
his heart belonged to someone else,
he agreed to do the right thing and marry
Mom, losing both the love of his life
and his shot at a career in the NBA. Not
to mention, gaining a wife who rocked it
in bed but was pretty damn boring otherwise,
followed by a couple of problematic sons,
an upside-down mortgage, and a tidy job
only made interesting by the coaching gig.
Now all they do is play the blame game,
especially after what happened with Luke:
If only; you should have; why did you?
But that’s a lot to say before I drop
Alexa off, so I hold it all inside
and make do with this: “The last thing
I want for myself is a shotgun wedding.”
I expect her to reply with a comment
about the availability of birth control.
Instead, she says,
So, you’re afraid
of your life becoming complicated,
and Hayden makes that easy for you.
I Want to Deny It
But I can’t, not completely. So I stutter,
“B-b-but, that’s not why I love her.
She’s beautiful and smart and sweet . . .”
And uncomplicated, yes, and I really
don’t need complications in my life.
You’re right. She’s all those things, but
there’s something else there, a nasty
little undercurrent. I mean, I thought
I knew her, but . . . Just, be careful.
Second time tonight someone’s told me
to be careful while referencing Hayden.
I should probably jump to my girl’s defense,
but Alexa’s right. Hayden can be snippy.
“No worries. I can fight her off if I have to.”
Alexa’s laugh is warm, rich gingerbread,
and I’m glad I didn’t have more to drink.
I most definitely share my father’s genes.
Don’t want to have his history in common,
too. But I don’t have to worry about that
with Hayden, do I? Suddenly, it strikes me:
Alexa hit
that
nail square on the head.
If There’s Anything Worse
Than the professional psychotherapy I endure,
it’s amateur pysche dissection, intentional or not.
Spot on or not. So I’m happy when I turn off
the main road into Alexa’s unassuming, well-kept
neighborhood. I attempt a return to small talk.
“So, what are you up to the rest of the weekend?”
Her shrug releases the scent of her leather
jacket, a hint of some citrusy lotion.
Not much.
Filling out college applications and FAFSA
forms. Tedious and silly. I’m not going far.
“Me either. UOregon, and I’m thinking about
taking a year off before that. But when I told that
to Mr. Wells, he acted like it was a dead-
end alley to residence behind a Dumpster.”
Well, I think it’s a great idea, especially
if you explore a little of the world beyond
the Willamette. Everyone should travel
before they decide where to settle down.
I pull over on the dirt shoulder in front
of Alexa’s small tract house, which
is shuttered by the night, no hint of light.
at the windows. “You here all by yourself?”
As a matter of fact, I am. My parents went
to the movies in Eugene. They won’t be back
for a while.
She feathers my hand with her
fingertips.
Want to come in and play?
I lift her hand from mine, bring it up
to my lips, kiss it gently. “You tempt me,
milady. However, I shall have to decline
your generous offer. Perhaps another time.”
Fine,
she sniffs, but at least she smiles.
In that case I’ll just have to go play alone.
I watch her walk to her door, appreciate
the arc of her hips, their metered swing.
I could change my mind, follow her in.
Instead, I’ll go home and play. Alone.
Well, Not Quite Alone
It’s a little after midnight, and Dad still
isn’t home. Postgame on Friday nights,
he regularly goes out with his buddies
and gets wasted. On more than a few
occasions, he’s arrived home courtesy
of a designated driver, usually a wife,
called out into the cold to save her husband’s
butt, not to mention his friends’ butts.
They never call Mom, who is home
and passed out on the sofa, snoring
like a chain saw above the soft play
of HBO on the TV. She is on her back,
long reddish hair a tumble of waves over
the pillow, her face worry-freed by sleep,
and in this one glimpse, this momentary
standstill of time, she is the mother
I always imagined she could be—warm
and caring. Not pierced, heart and soul,
by fragmented dreams and splintered
memories. But now she rolls to one side,