Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tracking wet snow,
LaTreya has joined the party.
Devon runs over, jumps up
and down.
I’m cooking, Daddy.
LaTreya keeps stirring a thick,
creamy batter.
Me too. Pancakes.
Brad takes in the domestic
scene.
Good thing. I’m hungry.
Then he turns to me.
I drove all
the way to the freeway, but couldn’t
find your car anywhere. It’s either
buried or they towed it.
“Mom called. They towed it.
I tried your cell, but no answer.”
Devon happily interrupts,
’Tina’s gonna draw my picture.
LaTreya shoots an envious look.
How come? What about me?
Before I can answer, Brad does.
I’m sure she’ll draw you, too.
But first let’s eat. I haven’t had
pancakes in a really long time.
I smile at him and he silently
mouths,
I need to talk to you.
The girls go upstairs to play
dress-up while Brad and I wash
the dishes. He waits for them
to leave the room, then says,
I’ve been thinking. Day care takes
a big chunk of my paychecks.
How would you like to play nanny?
Room, board, and a hun’ a week.
I make a few quick calculations.
A hundred a week isn’t much,
but it’s under the table, and hey,
I’ll also have food, a place to stay,
and nowhere I have to be but here,
so gas is not a concern. Just one little
thing. “That’s Monday through Friday,
right?” I still want my weekends free.
He grins.
Monday through Friday
works fine, party girl. And speaking
of parties, we can have one later.
I just got a delivery last night.
“Are you buying my cooperation?”
Fresh stash, works every time. Which
reminds me. “Oh, one of the guys
in the band wants an eight ball.
“I told him I’d check on it. But no
way can I deliver it to him now.”
Brad grows serious.
How well
do you know the guy?
It’s the first
hint of paranoia I’ve seen. “Not well.
But I’ve known Quade since we were
kids and Damian looks like more than
a casual user. I don’t think they’re narcs.”
Tension falls from his shoulders
like boulders off a cliff.
If you’re
sure, no problem. Maybe Trey can
take you when he finally gets here.
My turn for tension. “If he gets
here. He says not till the roads clear.”
Brad’s eyes travel the contours
of my body.
I promise. He’ll get here.
It has snowed all weekend,
and several feet of the sticky
wet white stuff cover everything.
Still, the day dawned critical
blue and the plows are busy.
Damian got his eight ball.
We met at the convenience store,
made a quick trade—awesome
ice for a pile of cash, including
fifty extra for me. Dealer me.
Quade didn’t come along. Part of
me hoped he would. Most of me
knew he wouldn’t. He definitely
doesn’t like the idea of his buddies—
or me—dancing with the monster.
Brad is home today. Not much
in the way of construction
jobs when you need a sleigh
to deliver nails. Wonder if Santa
could contract with the Home Depot.
Probably too busy today, it being
Christmas Eve and all. I put in
a call to the impound yard, but
the phone message says to try
back on Wednesday. Tick, tick.
Higher and higher go those
impound fees. Brad says
they’re twenty dollars a day, plus
the initial fifty for paperwork,
plus a hundred for the tow. Tick.
Around one
P.M.
Trey calls.
I’m on my way. Can’t wait
to see you. I’ve got something
special for you too. Hope
you like the way I play Santa.
I can’t
believe I
will finally get
to see him in the flesh.
Touch his flesh. Taste his
flesh, and beg him to taste mine.
I want to be in his arms again, sleep
in his arms again, and wake, skin to skin.
Just thinking about it breaks me out in a cold
sweat, sends quivers through me, all the way to the
very center of me. How long has it been? Only a few
weeks? It seems an eternity. They say the best things in life
are worth waiting for, but patience is not my best thing. Still,
he’s coming, and will be here in just a few short hours. So I’ll do
my best to sit here,
arms crossed. Yes,
it’s going to be an
extremely merry
Christmas after all.
The phone rings and I rush
to answer. It has to be Trey, and
I need to hear his voice, closer now.
Kristina?
It’s only Mom.
What’s
the game plan? Should I come pick you
up for Christmas Eve services?
Christmas Eve services? A yearly
family ritual. But I can’t leave.
Not now. “Uh, sorry, Mom. I have to
take care of the girls.” A lie. A big
fat lie, and on Christmas Eve! “Oh,
did I tell you I’m their nanny now?”
Hugely pregnant pause.
No, I
guess you forgot to mention that.
Well, what about tomorrow?
Tomorrow? Christmas. Presents
and dinner with the family. And Hunter.
[He’s too little to care this year, anyway.]
I have to make a decision. Family.
Or Trey. Spending Christmas making
love with Trey. Easy decision.
Mom’s still waiting to hear it.
Kristina? Do you need a ride?
I can pick you up in the morning.
Okay, I can’t tell her I’m playing
nanny tomorrow. What kind of excuse
would placate her? Hard answer: none.
“No, no. Don’t pick me up. I’ll try
to get a ride from a friend. What
time are you planning dinner?”
The same time it’s been your
entire life. You do remember
what time that is, don’t you?
No doubt, and she
has every right to snip.
Only problem is, right now
I’m unsnippable, shielded by glass-
plated armor. Another choice: Try
to find peace in the twilight zone,
or climb into the monster’s
rocket and lift off.
Plenty of time
to get buzzed anon. I’ll
try to slide into some manner
of sleep, to make up for what I’ll
miss later. “I love you,” I murmur,
knowing Trey’s not here, but
feeling him next to me
anyway. Next to…
Voices. Where
are the voices? I want
to find them. Need to find them,
can’t say why. But it’s dark here.
I run, searching, until some foreign
vine wraps itself around my
ankles, stopping my feet
cold, strapping
my body in
place while the rest
of me flies. Insane! It’s so
easy to fly, and I rise over ever
green spires, granite cathedrals,
slip into the troposphere,
surf vertical winds,
still seeking…
Voices, again. The same,
but not. Little voices.
Girls. Little girls.
Can’t find them now. I’m
flying.
Male voices, bigger.
One voice. Two.
Two men.
Not now. I’m
flying toward
Andromeda. Cassiopeia.
Pisces. Orion.
But the voices pull me back.
The interior me—the one
that flies—slips back inside
its shell, a turtle returning
home.
Home. That word again.
The one that makes me
want to release tethers,
fly away.
Don’t fly.
Must find the voices
instead.
Girls. Devon. LaTreya.
Men. Brad.
Trey.
Trey? I’m
flying again,
but not away.
Flying from bed.
Flying from dreams
into awake, aware.
Flying from dreams
toward love in the flesh.
I realize I must look like crap.
[Not to mention how you must taste.]
Quick detour to the bathroom,
and I do mean quick, to brush
teeth and hair, dab some perfume.
Screw the makeup, except to rinse
off what has puddled under my eyes.
Through the door, down the hall,
down the stairs and yes, while I flew,
Santa delivered my gift safe
and sound. He stands, moves toward
me, catches me in his arms, cinches
them around my waist, lifts me off
the ground. And now we’re kissing.
And I don’t ever want to stop kissing
him, even though the girls are squealing.
Ooooo! Cooties! Gross! Oooooo!
And we can’t help but laugh around
our kiss. And suddenly everything
is right. Everything forgiven. Every
minute apart and alone, forgotten.
Like a normal family—eating
and drinking and laughing together
like we’re a mom, dad, and uncle, plus a couple
of kids, instead of a father with two children
missing their mom and trying not
to resent their “nanny,” who has stolen
their uncle’s affection. Not that Trey
doesn’t play with them. He gets down
on the floor, helps them build a puzzle.
I watch, thinking what a great dad
he’ll make one day. I wonder if he could
ever become Hunter’s dad. [Stop it. Wishful
thinking will get you exactly nowhere.]
Brad builds a fire and lights the Christmas
tree, and if I were six again, I’d be chirping
“We Wish You a Merry Christmas” right along
with Devon and LaTreya. Finally, Brad
tells the girls they have to go to bed.
Santa won’t come if you’re awake, you know,
he says.
Come on. I’ll tuck you in.
The girls run ahead, and he turns to Trey
and me.
Hang on. I’ll break out the new stuff.
When he leaves the room, Trey pulls me into
his lap.
God I’ve missed you. I can’t wait
to give you your present
. He kisses me, hotter
this time, and beneath me, through his denim
and mine, I can feel the promise
of his Christmas gift soon to come.
With his personal stash.
[He can afford to be. Have
you ever seen so much uncut
meth in one place at one time?]
Once we’re sure the girls
are asleep, we help him play
Santa, filling the empty
space beneath the tree.
Gifts spill across the floor.
I wanted to make it up to
them for their mother not
being here,
he explains.
We share yet another
bowl, then Trey says,
It’s after one. We should
probably call it a night.
He pulls me to my feet,
and as we start upstairs,
I turn to say good night.
Brad’s looking at us
in an odd way. He smiles
and waves, but not before
I can interpret the look
on his face—envy.
We tiptoe upstairs, past
the pink bedroom where two
little girls dream of eight
tiny reindeer. My first Christmas
away from home. My first
Christmas in my new home.
My first Christmas with Trey,
and I pray it isn’t my last.