Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #General, #Parents, #Social Issues, #Drugs; Alcohol; Substance Abuse, #Emotions & Feelings, #Stories in Verse
Climb the stairs past me,
try to keep all hint of drool
inside my mouth, where it belongs.
Guess whose door he knocks on.
“Robyn isn’t home yet.”
He turns, eyes narrowing
into discerning slits.
She’s always
late. I swear she gets lost,
driving ten blocks from school
to home. The name’s Trey.
“Hey, Trey. I’m Kri…
[Bree!] The voice inside
my brain practically shouts.
“Br…” No, I’m not her
anymore. “Kristina.”
Trey smiles.
Good to meet
you, Kri-Br-Kristina. You a friend
of Robyn’s?
He saunters over,
plops down next to me,
leg touching mine.
My heart picks up its pace.
Can he hear it? If he doesn’t,
he’s deaf! Around the pounding,
I manage, “I’m an old friend
of Robyn’s, just here for a visit.”
His grin says everything.
I see. Well, Robyn’s friends
generally only “visit” for one
of two reasons. Stash. Or money.
Wonder which one you’re after.
I’m not copping to anything.
“Do you include yourself
on that list? Or are you after
something else completely?”
I’m trolling, and he knows it.
Guess you’ll have to hang
around to find out. Oh, look.
Here she comes now. Time
for the party to start.
You up for it, little girl?
No one has called me that
in a very long time. I like
how it makes me feel.
“Oh, yeah. I’m up for it.”
And a whole lot more.
Suddenly I’m very glad
I wore butt-slimming jeans,
a baggy shirt that covers
my tummy, and for the first
time in months, a little makeup.
With a massive, soggy kiss,
one meant to impress.
(But impress him or me?)
All I get is a lukewarm,
Hey, Kristina. Long time
no see. You look good.
No hug? No warm, fuzzy
friendship to rekindle? Oh, well.
Not like we were ever the best
of friends. More like snorting
buddies. She used me. I used
her, and I’m using her now.
“You look great too, Robyn.”
Yeah. Great. Like bones,
in a bag of jaundiced skin.
Robyn opens the door.
Sorry about the mess.
I’ve been kind of busy.
Anyway, housework is
such a waste. It never
frigging ends, does it?
The smell—dirty ashtrays,
sweat, and a slight hint
of mildew—almost knocks
me over and I enter at my
own risk. “Mess” does not
describe the battlefield
I’ve just walked into.
The living room is strewn
with dirty clothes, designer
shoes, and smeared paper
plates. Attached is a small
dining nook. Books (text
and other) spatter the table,
along with beads, pastels,
and various art supplies.
I’ve always got two or three
projects going on at once,
explains Robyn.
Some for art
class, others just to stroke
my creative side. Unfortunately,
I don’t finish many.
Trey laughs.
Spoken like
a true tweaker. Oh, and
speaking of tweak…
He reaches down into his sock
and produces a plastic bag
with some serious-looking crystal.
So Robyn wasn’t scoring
for Trey. He was scoring for
her! Very interesting.
A sizeable buy. I sit, growing more anxious with every
passing second, watching her weigh a half ounce of meth
into eight balls. She’s into the deal, heavy. I mean, there
she is, holding enough crystal to send her away for a very,
very long time. My hands shimmy as I reach for the bindle
Robyn passes me. It’s different from the meth making the
rounds last year. This is hard little rocks and not much powder.
Robyn pulls out a glass pipe, but I ask, “Can we do some
lines?” I long for that punch to my sinuses. The one that
hard-core users can no longer handle because of the gaping
sinus-cavity holes. Trey gives me a strange look, and Robyn
says,
Jeez, it
has
been awhile since you’ve used, huh? You
can’t snort glass, Kristina. You have to smoke this…or
shoot it. You’re not into needles by any chance, are you?
Trey laughs at my over-the-top horror. Needles? No way.
And, apparently, no fine white lines to watch disappear
into my nose. “Is it all like this now?” I ask, ignorant.
Trey answers with a shake of his head.
You can still
find street-lab crank. This is Mexican meth, as
good as it comes, maybe 90 percent pure.
It’s pricey, of course. And worth every damn penny.
How much is that, I want to know, but before I can query,
Robyn drops a sparkling rock into her pipe. She lights
a Bic, holds it well under the glass, and a fine plume of
methamphetamine smoke lifts to greet her open mouth.
The pipe travels next to Trey, who indulges, then passes
it on to me. My hand trembles, anticipating treasure.
Long-lost treasure. One slow, easy inhale sparks little
explosions inside my brain, firing directly into the pleasure
center, igniting ecstatic bursts from eyebrows to toenails.
Trey was right. Whatever it costs, it’s worth it. I want
to feel this great all the time. With one hit, the life I have
worked so hard to make normal perverts itself again.
I came here, meaning to go home reenergized. But now
I don’t want to return to the artificial “home” created by
my parents, my child. All of a sudden I feel more at home
with a forgotten friend and a complete, very cute stranger.
Vanishes
instantly,
with the
mere mention of money.
Trey said the glass was pricey.
Now he clarifies,
So the eight
ball is three hundred.
I suck in breath like
it hurts to find it,
confess, “I only have
two hundred with me.”
Trey tsks.
Can’t do a
ball for a deuce. More
like a couple of g’s.
Two grams is plenty.
But the monster is a
greedy prick. “Can’t
we work something
out? I’m good for the
rest, I swear.” Trey
gives an
uh-huh
look.
But he says,
Well, I do
get to Reno sometimes.
Why not?
Why not?
Why not!
Can I really have established
a new connection so easily?
Nothing in life is that simple.
So I ask, just to make sure,
“Are you sure? Because I can
bring the money to you.”
Not that I can really tell him
when, or how. But still…
But he says,
I really do get to Reno,
more often than I’d like, in fact.
I’ll have to come over in the next
week or two. We can hook up then.
But you’d better be good for the rest,
or else…He pounds one fist against
the opposite palm, but his smile
lets me know he’s only joking.
His smile. His incredible smile.
Stop it, Kristina! [No, don’t.]
Is just
why
he’s being
so accommodating.
Just what, exactly, is his
game?
Can he possibly be
interested in me, baby
blubber and all? I want
to be back in the
game.
Lately, I think about it
more and more. Like
a sick little kid, I want
to go outside and
play.
But I’ve never been
especially good at
choosing play
partners. Is Trey
the game
I’m after, and is he
after me? If so, I need
to learn the rules of his
game so I can
play it well.
Make a quick about-face,
head back to Reno. Like
I couldn’t have guessed it
might not turn out that way.
But I haven’t talked to anyone
my age in months. Between
that and the toot, my mouth
won’t stop working.
One bowl. Robyn and I talk
about Reno, how life used
to be. Two bowls. We talk
about how life is now—
too many classes for her,
too much home for me.
Still another bowl. We
talk about our gay siblings.
Trey perks up at that.
Apparently he wasn’t
privy to Robyn’s more
personal information,
and gay relatives are
always interesting to
those who don’t happen
to have any of them.
Another toke. Trey sits
between Robyn and me. His
knee rests against mine.
The warmth of it fights
the crystal’s chills, and
turns me on completely.
My face flares a deep,
noticeable crimson.
Robyn flashes a tweaker’s
smile, one that says,
Don’t
fuck with me, or I’ll pay
you back good. In fact,
I’ll pay you back first.
But what comes out of
her mouth is,
So, tell
me all about your baby.
Haven’t mentioned Hunter.
I mean, it’s not like the first
thing you do when you meet
an incredible guy is tell
him you’ve got a baby.
But Trey seems more
interested than offended.
Baby, huh? You’re not
married, are you?
His curiosity, and Robyn’s
evil glare, make me smile.
“Nope, not married…”
Even spun, the thought
brings me up short.
So, where’s Daddy? You
living with him or what?
Is he watching Baby tonight?
The meth monster threatens
to pounce, but I rein it in.
Not a single vicious comment
about Daddy the rapist.
“I live with my parents.
My mom babysits Hunter
when I’m not around.”
You still live with your
parents? Mine would have
kicked me out. But hey,
they kicked me out, anyway.
Bree laughs, loving
how it makes Robyn squirm.
Kristina knows it isn’t very
nice, so she blames it
on the crank, which fuels
a very long ramble, Trey’s
knee still sizzling against mine.
“I’d like to move out
but I need a job, and to get one
I need my GED, which I’m
still working on. And even if
if I get a job, I need someone
I trust to take care of Hunter.”
Trey gives me an odd
look, one I cannot
decipher. But all he says
is,
Makes sense to me.
Very little makes sense
to me at this moment.
All I can think about
is how great it is to feel
so alive, so in lust again.