Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Psychopathology, #Psychology, #Family, #Family problems, #Social Issues, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse, #General, #Parents, #Addiction, #Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #Novels in verse, #Problem families, #Dysfunctional families, #Aunts, #Christianity, #Religion, #Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon), #alcoholism, #Teenage girls, #Christian, #Self-Esteem & Self-Reliance, #Identity, #Mystery & Detective, #Sex, #Mormons, #Physical & Emotional Abuse, #Values & Virtues, #Nevada, #Religious, #Identity (Psychology)
Justin Took Off His Heimet
Climbed off his quad.
Tiffany did likewise.
The others--Brent and Melina on quad #2, Derek solo on #3--
remained astraddle.
Hey, Fat,
tittered Tiffany,
Watcha doing all the way out here?
I stood, .22 by my side, taking deviant satisfaction as her eyes went wide.
Justin surveyed the rifle.
Target shootin, huh?
My voice tried to stick behind my tonsils, but somehow I
choked out a solid, "Uh-huh."
He slithered over.
You any good with that thing?
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I nodded, heart hiccuping at his proximity. "Good
enough, I guess."
He moved behind me, stood way
too close.
Okay, then. Show me.
I couldn't, not with my
hands trembling like saplings in a summer zephyr.
Justin noticed, whispered in my ear.
Im
not making you nervous, am I?
88
He WasMaking Tiffany Nervous
Or maybe I was.
She shifted from foot to foot.
C'mon, Justin.
Wait. I want to see her shoot.
Okay, I'd show him.
I took two steps forward, sighted in, steadied . . .
Dänin! Six clean shots. Not bad. . . .
Here it came. The old
"for a girl" addendum.
But no, he said instead,
Can I have a try?
It was the most attention
he'd ever paid to me.
I could take more. "Why not?"
Hey, Tiff. Set up the cans.
She was irritated, and it showed, but she did as instructed. Justin took aim . . .
Shitfire! One out of six.
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As the others climbed off their quads, I suggested ways to improve his performance.
Three out offive. Right on!
Now everyone wanted a turn. Everyone, that
is, except for Tiffany.
Come on, Tijf. Give it a try.
You know I hate guns.
They're stupid.
She stood off to one side, simmering.
Fuck you, bitch. This isfun.
90
We Had Fun
For an hour maybe
more. For once, I
lost
track of time, found
I didn't care what
time it was, not in this amazing
space
I was somehow in.
After a while, I didn't
even
feel like the odd
girl
out of this decidedly
in
clique. In fact, I felt more "in"
clique. In fact, I felt more ' off by herself, carrying
on
about firearm
danger
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and her personal
safety.
I didn't feel
bad about being with boys, and thinldng not quite
good
thoughts about them.
My heart insisted it wasn't
wrong
that they weren't Mormon, either, though my head said it wasn't exactly
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I Barely Flinched
When Brent pulled out a pack of cigarettes, lit one for Melina, another for himself.
"Hey," squealed Tiffany,
"what about me?"
Justin handed me the rifle and fished inside his pocket for his own nicotine stash.
He gave one to Tiffany, offered one to me.
Cigarettes are high on the list of Latter-Day sins.
The smoke, hanging like smog, made me queasy. So
why was I tempted to join in?
Watching them inhale
poisonous fumes, I shook
my head. But maybe I looked
envious, because Derek pulled
closer.
Have you ever tried?
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Don't be stupid!
said
Tiffany.
Don't you know?
She's a Mormon.
The word seethed from her mouth like spittle.
Derek measured me with cool blue eyes.
Could havefooled me.
I didn't know Mormon
girls were so pretty.
Okay, it was a line, but it put me in a heady new space.
No one had ever called
me pretty before.
Not even my mom and dad.
94
Derek Wasn't Exactly Justin
Not pinup gorgeous or hot bod built, but he wasn't bad:
Tall
around
6'2, slender, with black
coffee
hair
and
vivid
blue
eyes
that
could
pierce
you
through.
His hands were soft.
I discovered that when he brushed my cheek.
95
So what's a nice Mormon
girl like you doing in a place like this?
96
We Laughed at the Old Joke
And talked and talked about nothing much, while the others kept their lips busy in much
more interesting ways.
Lightweight conversation with a guy of Derek's
caliber, clique-wise, was way beyond my
loveliest fantasy.
What was I doing here?
With them? With him?
And why his sudden interest in me? I mean, we weren't
exactly strangers, but we'd never exactly been friends, either.
97
Looking back, I guess it was kind of stränge.
At least for me, who'd
never been that close to a boy before.
But I liked him.
I liked his optimism, his easy way with words.
Most of all, I liked
how he made me feel
that I--Pattvn
Von Straften--
mattered.
98
After a While
Brent pulled Melina to her feet, dragged her off for a private minute or ten.
Justin winked at Tiffany.
Sounds like the right idea to me.
I had a general idea of what they had in mind. Envy jolted.
You like him, huh?
I gulped down the truth and said
simply, "He's not mine to like."
That doesn't stop most people.
"I'm not most people, Derek."
Even if I did, in fact, like him.
So I'ue noticed.
With a drift of tobacco and sun-scented
skin, he moved very close to me.
What I can't figure out. . .
My heart tap-danced as he slipped his arm around my Shoulder.
is why I never really
noticed
you
hefore.
99
With His Arm Around Me
I asked what happened to Carmen, the girl he'd been linked with practically forever.
He shrugged.
Don't know.
Guess we grew apart.
Then he asked,
What about you?
I knew what he meant, but not
how to respond. So I said,
"What about me . . . what?"
He smiled and his hand
toyed with my hair.
Any good
Mormon guys on your line?
On my line? I had to laugh.
"No way," I admitted.
"I don't think I've got the right bait."
Derek turned my face so I
couldn't avoid his eyes.
Don't seil yourseif short, Pattyn.
100
Oh God! This was crazy.
I thought he just might try to kiss me, when Tiffany yelled,
Shit! It's almost four. My
mom is going to kill me.
Let's go, you guysl
101
Almost Four!
I'd never stayed
out in the desert
this long, and I
had a good half-
hour walk home.
What would my own
mom say? Anything?
I didn't want to think about Dad at all, although he and Johnnie were no doubt
pretty
cozy by then.
Luckily
(happily),
Derek
offered to save me some
time:
Can
I give you a ride?
102
No Spare Heimet
Derek promised to go slow and told me to hang on tight.
Rifle in my right hand,
I wrapped my left around his waist, leaned my face against his back.
If I turned my head,
I could hear his heartbeat, a steady drum, unlike my
own hummingbird pulse.
It was all too incredible, like a scene from a movie or a page from a book, one
you read again and again.
My head swam with the scent of him, the promise of him,
103
and I never once stopped to think that being with him
could mean the end of Pattyn as I knew her up until that day.
104
He Dropped Me Off
Right where the dirt trail
segued into pavement.
I'll see you Monday, okay?
Was that a promise?
A generic blow-off?
I watched him motor
off, then started for home.
Slowly. Thinking. Trying to process the weight of my day.
For once, I didn't feel like an outcast, a major loser.
Whether or not Derek
ever spoke to me again,
I had fit in with the in crowd, if only for a while.
Not only that, but one of the in crowd had put his arm around me.
105
Maybe almost kissed me.
And I would have let him.
So what did that make me?
106
When I Got Home
None of that mattered.
Reality
rushed in around me.
Crushed
me, like the watery
weight of the deepest sea.
Jackie ran out to warn
me Dad had already
drowned
himself in Johnnie WB,
Mom had asked where to find me, and the kids were yelling for me. I went inside, all remnants of the newfound me
smothered.
107
Later On
I lay listening to the music of sleep. Inhale. Exhale.
A symphony of breathing, hearty, steady, frail.
I shimmied out of bed, tiptoed to the bathroom.
Listening for movement,
I sat a moment in the gloom.
Then I turned on the light above the narrow mirror, needing to analyze the face that appeared.
Funny, but I rarely
studied my reflection, rarely allovved myself
such tedious inspection.
But someone--a boy--
had liked my face and I liked that he liked it.
Flad I tumbled from grace?
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What had he seen that
I'd
always missed before?
Plain amber eyes. Straight auburn hair.
Was there something more?
Something indefinable, that somehow made me pretty, like how brilliant neon lights
cheer the dirty streets of a city?
All I saw in the mirror's depths was a spatter of freckles, sharp angles, too much flesh here, not enough
there, imperfect teeth, dry skin, and tangles.
So what had he seen in me?
109