Read Forgotten: Seventeen and Homeless Online

Authors: Melody Carlson

Tags: #Christian, #Juvenile Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Religious, #high school, #Social Issues, #High Schools, #Schools, #School & Education, #Christian Young Reader, #Homeless Teenagers, #Christian Life, #Homeless Persons, #Homelessness & Poverty

Forgotten: Seventeen and Homeless (4 page)

BOOK: Forgotten: Seventeen and Homeless
6.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

With only a couple minutes left in the game, I realize our team is down by six points, and I am still obsessing over my mom. Worst-case scenario, my mom will lose her job, collect some unemployment, and I'll have to find some part-time work to help ends meet. Naturally, it will be the end of my short-lived social life. We'll have to move to some cheap housing and, consequently, I'll need to disappear from this crowd. But hopefully I'll get to finish high school ... and get a scholarship ... and go away to college next fall. Really, I wouldn't be that much worse off from my previous school. And someday this will all be over and I will be on my own. Because I've seen enough to know that until I'm on my own, I will always be pulled under ... whenever my mom gets pulled under. That's just the way it works with us.

Suddenly the game is over and our team made a comeback, winning by one point! Everyone is cheering and jumping and hugging. And to my surprise, Jayden grabs me and hugs me tightly-and I hug him back.

"Did I do something to offend you?" he asks me while we're still embracing.

"No, of course not," I say as he releases me from his arms.

"But you switched seats."

My cheeks flush as a thrill rushes through me. "I didn't think you'd even notice."

He frowns. "I noticed."

"I'm sorry." Just then I glance over to see Bristol nearby. She's pretending not to be watching us as she chats with Isabella, but I can tell what she's really focused on.

"I just didn't want to rock anyone's boat," I explain to Jayden. "You know what I mean?"

His frown fades. "Yeah, I think I do know. So, are you still coming with us for pizza?"

"If you want me-"

"Don't be ridiculous." He links his arm in mine and leads me down the bleacher steps. "I'm starving, people," he calls out over his shoulder. "Let's get this show on the road."

And just like that, the rest of our group follows. As we trek through the parking lot, I try not to think about Bristol, but I can hear her and Lily talking behind us. Then Lily yells over to another friend, a guy I barely know named Caleb, offering him a ride and asking him if he wants to go have pizza too. So that means Bristol will be there as well. Not that there's much I can do about it one way or the other.

Once we're back in Ethan's car, Jayden looks curiously at me. "Is something bugging you?"

I shrug. "Not really ..."

"Hey, don't let Bristol get to you," Isabella says from the front seat.

"What ... uh ... do you mean?"

Isabella throws back her head and laughs. "Right, Adele. Don't tell me you don't know what's going on with Bristol. I know you're not stupid."

I let out a loud sigh. "Okay, Lily told me that Bristol was kind of into Jayden last year. But I guess I thought it was over with."

"That shows how well you know Bristol." Ethan starts his car.

"Anyway, I get the feeling she's not too happy with me right now," I admit.

"Not too happy?" Isabella chuckles. "That's putting it mildly."

"Great." I groan. "Are you guys trying to tell me that just two weeks into the school year, I've made a serious enemy?"

"Be flattered." Isabella turns to peer at me. "Bristol wouldn't waste her jealousy on you if she didn't think you were worth it."

Now Jayden laughs. "Don't worry, Adele. Bristol is mostly harmless."

"Mostly harmless?" I eye him in the dimly lit backseat.

"Just a little backstabbing here ... a drop of poison there ... a bit of Facebook scamming," Ethan says dramatically. "It wasn't too bad, was it, Isabella?"

She lets out a hoot of laughter. "Not if you're tough."

I lean back in the seat and actually giggle. The mere fact that we're even having this conversation has left me a bit lightheaded. Does this mean that Jayden is seriously interested in me? And if he is, how do I feel? Besides elated, that is?

"Actually, I am pretty tough." No way will I ever admit to what's toughened me up over the years, but it's the truth -I am tough. At least I thought I was ...

Jayden slaps my knee and nods. "Good for you, Adele Porter. Because I could use a tough woman by my side."

Okay, I have to laugh at that. Whether it's my frazzled nerves, the anticipation of romance, or just plain humor, I let myself go and laugh hard. We all do. And it feels incredibly good to just cut loose and be silly like this. I'm sure I needed it.

But then I think seriously about my situation. Why should I let some spoiled brat like Bristol get the best of me? Good grief, I have much bigger worries to freak over. In fact, my larger problems (aka my mom's problems) could soon put an end to my social life anyway. And if it's not going to last long, why not enjoy it while I have the chance? So in that moment I decide that Bristol or no Bristol, I am going to have as much fun as I possibly can before the roof caves in on me.

Because it will cave in ... eventually. It always does.

o my surprise and relief, week three of my "new life" is going exceptionally well. At least on the surface. And that's all I'm focusing on these days. The surface. Does that make me shallow? Maybe, but maybe I don't care.

The good news is that my mom seems to be going to work every day. I mean, she gets up and gets dressed, and she might be running late or coming home early, but at least she's still getting up and going. That in itself has been part of the battle in her previous jobs. So it still looks fairly good-on the surface. Beneath that ... well, it's anyone's guess.

But I'm not guessing. I just keep saying positive things to her, telling her that she's so smart and talented and how she's probably really great at work, flattering her about how fantastic she looks, asking if she's lost weight-whatever it takes to keep her going. I need her to keep going. And basically I will say anything I can think of to keep encouraging her. Because I'm still hoping that this time will be different for us. And if I don't think too hard, I can almost make myself believe it.

On the school front, I am fairly certain Jayden really likes me. But we're still at the flirting stage, which is actually kind of fun. And it's especially nice for me since this whole dating thing is pretty new. I'm not in any hurry. Although Isabella keeps assuming Jayden and I are a real couple, I keep telling her it's too soon to say. Fortunately, she's so into Ethan that there doesn't seem to be any jealousy factor with her. Apparently her interest in Jayden ended last summer. I wish I could say the same about Bristol. Because that girl is making my life miserable. I try very hard not to show it, and I seriously do not want her to hate me. I don't think I can afford it. But today in art, it takes every ounce of my self-control not to smack her.

"Your mouth looks nothing like that." She stands over my shoulder looking at what is supposed to be a self-portrait.

I just shrug and focus on the lower lip I'm sketching. And okay, I may have made the mouth a little too big, but I've always been told I have "full lips."

"Mr. Klein told us to exaggerate our facial features," Lindsey, the girl who shares a table with Bristol and me, quietly says. "See how I made my hair a lot fuller than it really is?"

I compare her straight shoulder-length black hair to the drawing and think it looks almost identical. Although the eyes in the drawing are much more dramatic and exotic than her serious gray eyes. Maybe that's wishful drawing on her part.

"Was anyone talking to you?" Bristol glares at Lindsey.

I give Lindsey a wimpy smile and wish I had the nerve to say something more. She seems like a nice girl, but for some reason Bristol seems to hate her almost as much as she hates me. Although, for the most part, Lindsey just ignores her.

"And your nose is all wrong too." Bristol continues her critique of my artwork.

"Thanks." I pick up the hand mirror we've been sharing to frown at my reflection now. "I broke it in grade school."

"I mean the nose in your drawing, stupid." She laughs. "Now that you mention it, your real nose could probably use some work too."

I study my nose, which is actually one of my better features. Although it has a little bump in the middle of it, a reminder of the time I fell off the monkey bars. But most of the time I don't even notice it. I check out my lips, too. I suppose I did make them too big in my drawing, but they are naturally full. I look up at where Bristol is still hovering over me and notice that her lips are rather thin in comparison. Not that I plan on mentioning this.

It's ironic because of my new friends-not that I count Bristol as a friend exactly, but out of the girls in our little group-Bristol and I probably look the most alike. We're about the same height, around five foot sevenish, we both have long brown hair, and we're about the same build - averageish. Although Bristol's figure is much better than mine-better than most girls, which she's happy to point out whenever she gets the chance. Another difference is Bristol's eyes are dark brown, whereas mine are a grayish blue.

Still, I wonder if she's extra aggravated over our similarities because of Jayden. I suspect she can't understand why he prefers me to her. From her perspective, she is so much hotter. And for all I know, she might be smarter. She keeps bragging that she has a perfect grade point average. And, of course, she's richer. Not that anyone besides me is aware of my situation. But I think Bristol's dad owns most of Stanfield. So really, in her opinion, she is quite the catch. And if Bristol were just a bit nicer and not so pushy and opinionated, maybe Jayden would like her better. In that case, I'm glad Bristol is just the way she is. Except I wish she'd quit looking over my shoulder while I'm working on this ridiculous self-portrait.

"Why aren't you working on your own drawing?" I ask her.

"Because I finished it." She nods to the front of the room. "I already turned it in."

"And you didn't even show it to me." I make a disappointed face, like I want to see it, but mostly I want to get rid of her.

"Oh?" She seems surprised that I'm interested. "Okay .. . I'll go get it."

As soon as Bristol's out of earshot, Lindsey turns to me. "Why do you put up with her like that?"

"Huh?"

"She's being so mean to you. And you just take it. How do you do that?"

I shrug. "Oh, well. Bristol seems to have it out for me."

BOOK: Forgotten: Seventeen and Homeless
6.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Double Whammy by Carl Hiaasen
Blood Ambush by Sheila Johnson
Body Line by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
A Taste of Heaven by Alexis Harrington
Lara's Gift by Annemarie O'Brien
The Shearing Gun by Renae Kaye
Medusa's Web by Tim Powers