Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Sleep is impossible,
anticipation swelling
and ebbing like some
sort of crazy tide.
Strange,
how when I close my
eyes, try to concentrate
on that little door between
them that opens into
dreams,
I fee l high already,
locked in a battle
between the need to dive
into REM slumber and the
desire
to start the damn party
already! I remember
that awful tug-of-war well.
So why jump right back in,
release
the monster to stalk
my days, haunt my nights;
to bite through my skull
and suck on my brain?
From
a purely omniscient
point of view, it makes
no sense whatsoever. I
have freed myself from
physical
addiction, no rehab but
to endure sweating, puking,
and cardiovascular jumping
jacks. The mental
bonds,
however, seem as strong
as ever, and the piece
of me that recognizes
that knows I might be
making a very big mistake.
When Hunter makes
his daily plea for
a three
A.M.
breast
milk feast, I call
to Mom, “I’ll handle it.”
He’s now four months
old, and drinking
formula supplements
from a bottle—a conscious
decision on my part.
I had hoped to have
him weaned—and my
breasts completely
my own again—
within five months.
My new game plan
will expedite that
schedule, I realize,
and I have to admit,
that makes me sad.
I change his diaper,
marveling for about
the millionth time at
his perfect little body.
The body I created.
All clean and dry,
I carry him back
to my bed, cradle
him in one pillowed
arm, unbutton my top.
And as the milk begins
to flow, so do my tears.
“Mommy loves you,
Hunter Seth. No matter
what, Mommy loves you.”
He looks up at me
with spectacular green
eyes and, around my
very sore nipple, smiles
a toothless baby smile.
That tender scene might make
me change my mind, and truthfully,
I have thought twice.
But I don’t want to think again.
I MapBlast directions to Robyn’s
apartment, load a small ice chest
with soda, to fight the wah-wahs
sure to strike on my way home.
If it gets too late, promise me
you’ll stop and spend the night,
Mom insists.
Here’s some money.
She hands me a crisp $100 bill.
Suddenly it strikes me that I
haven’t even thought about the money
end of the transaction to come.
Lucky me. A hundred will just
about cover it. Still, if prices
haven’t risen with inflation,
another hundred will score
an eight ball instead of a gram.
Yeah, yeah, my thought processes
have already graduated from casual
to daily use. But I don’t want
to have to drive to Stockton
too often. Hell, an eight ball
will last me just about
forever. Won’t it?
Another hundred dollars?
In lieu of an allowance,
Mom and Scott buy
diapers and baby formula.
My savings account is
still closed to me, and will be
until my eighteenth birthday.
That impressive turning point
is only a couple of weeks away,
but not soon enough to score
the monetary birthday rewards
I hope for from relatives, far
and near. No, only one place
comes to mind, an easy
place, all things considered—
Hunter’s rainy-day piggy bank.
All those very same relatives
sent him a little cash, right
after he was born. I was going
to open a college savings
account, but haven’t gotten
around to it yet. No problem.
I’ll replace it as soon as I get
my birthday stash. Meanwhile,
Hunter won’t miss it. And
neither, I hope, will Mom.
Pack an overnight bag, just
in case,
she says, interrupting
my thoughts.
Always a good
idea to plan for that rainy day.
Handing me her keys,
helping me pack, giving
me money. I’d like to
blame
her for what may come,
take dead aim and whack
this big ball of
guilt
across the net,
into her court, wait
for her well-deserved
volley.
But that wouldn’t
be accurate,
wouldn’t be
right.
I know as I climb
into the SUV, crank
the engine, that what’s
left
of Kristina will have to
battle the reemergent Bree,
that despite my plan to come
back
and pick up where I left
off, only more positive
and energized to go
forth,
get my GED and a great
job, find a nice little
place, make my own way,
the odds
of things ever being
quite right again are
clearly, completely,
not in my favor.
Is not my best thing, so
I stow every single nagging
doubt and head off to Stockton.
It’s a gorgeous blue September
day, and I take my time.
South on a straight stretch
of Highway 395, turn west
on Highway 88, leaving Nevada
behind, just out of Minden.
The winding highway
carries me past Kirkwood,
my family’s favorite ski resort.
Even without snow, the steep
angular mountain brings back
memories of stepping off cornices
and hanging, midair, for a scant
second before dropping down
long, deep black-diamond runs.
I can almost feel the sizzle
of adrenaline, pumping
from the back of my skull, zooming
down my spine and into my legs,
making them reach
for even more speed.
Turn. Turn. Don’t fight gravity.
Suck into its jet stream.
Once in a while I’d make a mistake,
catch an edge. Or a mogul.
Most times, I corrected
before taking a tumble.
Once or twice, I wasn’t so lucky,
dumping headlong down the hill,
sliding out of control
until the landscape leveled.
And that made the adrenaline
pump even faster.
Which reminds me.
I have not had an adrenaline
rush since I took my little detour,
one of nature’s irresistible highs, denied
by brain chemistry gone awry,
at the claws of the monster.
I might not know the cause
of such cerebral malfunction,
if not for an article I once read.
It defined for me exactly
how crank scours
the brain’s pleasure center,
scrubbing away dopamine,
adrenaline and other natural
highs. It didn’t stop me,
of course, but it did slow
me down for a day or two.
Not slow enough to keep
the damage from occurring.
Now only one thing can give
me that kind of feeling—like
I have the world by its throat.
And I am on my way to it.
I pass a small mountain
community, home to loggers,
retirees, and telecommuters.
My parents have friends
who live here, and for
about thirty seconds
I think about swinging
by. They have a pretty cute
son, who I once had a serious
crush on. We used to visit,
and on overnight stays Quade
and I would sneak out at night,
for nothing more than a little
conversation. Okay, we almost
kissed once. But I was such
a total tool, when he leaned
his face down close to mine,
looked into my dilated (by
the dark, not by stash, which
I still turned up my nose at)
eyes, and it came to me what
he had in mind, I actually
turned my face away, pretending
some nighttime noise
had drawn my attention.
Plain and simple, I didn’t know
how to kiss and didn’t want
him to know it. He was a couple
of years older, and a dark-haired
hottie who surely knew a thing
or two about kissing. Unlike me.
I didn’t learn those ropes
for another year or so.
Looking back, I wish I had
had a different teacher,
one who really cared about me.
Looking back, I wish
I had parted
my lips—opened my mouth
wide and invited his tongue
inside—for Quade. Maybe
every single thing that happened
in my life after that night
would have turned out differently.
Then again, maybe not.
I decide not to stop by.
My mom told me Quade plays
bass in a metal band, so he
probably isn’t as straight
as he used to be. Just like
me. Still, I have a destination.
I jot a reminder in my
mental notebook to look up
Quade one day very soon.
This time, maybe I’ll just
let him kiss me. I most
definitely know how.
In fact, thinking about it
is starting to make me
want it. I haven’t let myself
even consider going out
with a guy since Hunter
was born. Men are trouble.
But what the hell? I’m
looking for trouble right
now, aren’t I? And one
kind of trouble will
likely lead to another,
at least eventually.
The more I focus on
that
kind of trouble, the better
it’s starting to sound.
I do still have the problem
with paunch, but crystal
will help with that, too.
I just have to stay cool,
keep Bree reined in.
Little lines, maybe one
in the
A.M.
, to wake up
feel great, not eat
everything in sight.
Maybe another small
toot in the early
P.M.
,
just enough to limit
dinner calories and still
be able to sleep at night.
Or maybe go out at night.
No, no, no!
This isn’t
about going out at night.
Isn’t about partying.
Is
not
about turning into
a lunatic again. I am
and will remain in control.
Is an interesting little city—half
artsy, half-cow town, and home
to the Asparagus Festival and other
events that take advantage of its
watery location on the delta fed by
the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers.
Today I couldn’t care less
about any of that. All I want
is to find Robyn’s apartment,
not far from the University of the Pacific.
Driving by the brick-and-ivy campus,
I almost envy the students,
walking alone or sitting in groups,
looking at their books—and each other.
Guys. Girls. Tight jeans and T-shirts.
Big Gulps here. Cigarettes there.
It’s all so normal. Then it comes
to me that one of those
students is Robyn, who is anything
but “normal.” You can hide
a lot, or maybe just get away with
a lot, if you play your cards right.
I only hope the hand I’m about to deal
myself will hold an ace or two.
Building C-9. Third floor.
I’m early, but not too,
so I sit on the stairs to
wait.
And wait. Four o’clock
comes and goes. Still I sit,
not too worried about
Robyn getting home
late.
Even on her best days,
clock-watching was
never her greatest
trait.
Did she have a greatest
trait? Oh, yeah. That’s why
I’m here, huh? Patience!
Maybe she didn’t come
straight
home because she had
to make a buy on the way.
But when a watch-check says
eight
after five, I decide I’d
better try her cell. Dumped
into voice mail,
something I
hate
under any circumstances.
Just as I’m starting
to feel really pissed, this
great-
looking guy starts up
the stairs. Okay, this is déja
vu-ish. I met my Adam, who
I once believed was my soul
mate,
on a similar staircase. But
this guy goes way beyond
Adam—older, buffer, with
slate
gray eyes that fix on me,
eliciting chills that I can’t
describe. He looks at me
like a barracuda, scoping
bait.
Ravenous. Suspicious.
Curious. Delicious. (Him,
not me.) I feel like a
freight
train has steamed right
into me, and when he smiles
a hungry smile, I decide Robyn’s
tardiness must be
fate.