Authors: Ellen Hopkins
to say where it should rightly go
when I die. She’s listed as beneficiary
on my pitiful life insurance, but that
wouldn’t take her very far. I got
the chance to make it right, and
by God, I’m gonna do exactly that,
just as soon as I get out of this place.
He goes quiet, except for pulling
breath, and I think he’s fallen
asleep. But when I start to get up,
he puts out a hand.
Something
else. I really thought I was checking
on out of this world. After regretting
came a big rush of fear. I was soul-
deep scared that the crazy pain
in my chest was all I was getting
before everything went black.
The end. Finis. Nothing more.
I yelled, “Help!” and I know
those people working on me thought
I was talking to them, but I wasn’t,
you know? I was calling out to
the universe and all of a sudden . . .
I don’t know how else to say it,
but I wasn’t scared anymore.
And I have no idea what that means,
only if there is something after this
lifetime, I want to learn what it is.
All That Talking
Combined with his morphine drip
has wiped him out. He slips down
into a sea of sleep, much too deep
for dreams to find him. I’ve never
considered what it’s like to come
face-to-face with death. Would I
be “soul-deep scared” of everything
going black? Does it happen all at
once, or does the light fade slowly—
gray, grayer, pewter, coal, obsidian?
If I had that time, would I recycle
regrets? I haven’t lived very long,
relatively speaking, but I’ve managed
to collect quite a few. Do small regrets
flicker, huge ones flash, or are they
more like weights, stacked one by one
until they crush you into oblivion?
Would my very last flashback
be Hayden and me getting hot on
a blanket, segue to a funeral
on a sweltering summer day?
It’s just not fucking fair that Uncle
Jessie has the chance to make good
his biggest regret, but I never can.
The Whisper of a Skirt
Tells me Quin has returned.
I stand to give her the chair
by the bed. Not a whole
lot for me to do here. I almost
wish I’d gone to school after all.
“Dad wants me to let Gram
and Gramps have my bedroom,
so if it’s okay, I’ll stay with you
over the weekend. That way
I can mind the range if you want.”
At least I’ll have something to do
besides sitting here thinking
about stuff I’d rather not consider.
Sounds good. I’ll probably
hang around here until
they kick me out. Take the keys.
And you’ll feed the dogs for me?
“It’s the least I can do in return
for the room and board. I’ll stop
by the house for some clean
clothes. Let me know if you need
anything while I’m still in town.”
I start to leave, but she stops me.
Hold on just a minute. I know
you’re pissed at your father
and his girlfriend, but I hope
you can find a way to reconcile
your relationship with them.
That old saying “life is too short”
has taken on new meaning.
I think we all need to allow
ourselves some healing now.
“I wish I could, Quin,
but I’m not really sure how.
I promise to work on it, though.”
I give her a hint of a hug.
“You’re okay driving
yourself home, right?”
Of course. I think the drama
has subsided, at least for now.
Leave the lights on, but
don’t wait up for me. Not sure
what time I’ll get there.
There’s Nobody Home
When I get there, and that’s all
good with me. I straighten my room,
strip the sheets from the bed, empty
my clothes hamper, and take the dirties
to the laundry room. No use grossing
out the grandparents with the smell
of used underwear and socks, and
anyway, I haven’t stroked my OCD
tendencies in a while. I prefer neat
to train wreck. I go ahead and clean
up, and, man, does it feel great to brush
my teeth, something I haven’t done since
yesterday. I’ll take my toothbrush with
me, along with two changes of clothes.
It strikes me that sometimes the little
things can mean a whole lot. Maybe if
I focus on those for a while the big stuff
will rectify itself. Okay, maybe not, but
it’s better than stressing over crap
beyond my ability to change. I grab
my cell phone charger and laptop, too.
I might need some entertainment
if things happen to be slow. On my way
out of town, I stop by the grocery store,
grab a frozen pizza, some lunch meat,
and bread. Self-sufficient, that’s what I am,
not to mention suddenly ravenous.
I happen to arrive at the range just
behind a UPS truck, which pulls right up
to the office door. The driver waits
for me to meet him and sign for the long
narrow package. There’s a rifle inside,
that much is obvious. Turns out it’s Gus’s
old gun—Fiona!—returned from the smith,
almost as good as new. He’ll be one happy
camper when he sees it again, that much
I know. I lock it in the rifle cabinet,
close up the office, and head to the house
to feed my aching belly. While the pizza
bakes, I call Alexa, who’s already home
from school. The sound of her voice stirs
something inside. I really want to see her.
We Talk
Until the pizza browns, while
it cools, while I wolf it down.
I tell her Uncle Jessie should
pull through fine, about
the likely upcoming wedding.
“You’re invited, of course.”
You’d better be careful. Weddings
tend to bring out the romance
in people. Then again, I’d kind
of like to see you romantic.
Good thing she can’t see me
blushing. “What do you mean?
I am the most romantic guy
I know. You just wait.
I’ll show you romantic.”
She laughs that deep, husky
laugh of hers.
Awesome. It’s a date.
Hey. I’ve got some news for you.
The school board voted to retain
Perks.
Mr. DeLucca is livid and
vowed to reopen the challenge
when he’s elected. Dictator.
We extend the conversation
for almost an hour, talking about
everything from books to our families
to guns to politics—most of which
we happen to agree on, thankfully.
I really don’t want to argue with her,
or anyone, and she makes that easy.
The few things we don’t see eye
to eye on matter hardly at all.
Eventually, she gets called
to dinner, and I’m sorry we have
to sign off. “Unless Uncle Jessie
happens to take a turn for the worse,
I’ll be out here all day tomorrow.
Come out, I’ll let you touch my weapon.”
More lovely laughter.
Excellent.
Practice makes perfect, I hear.
Hey, Matt? I love you.
As soon as I hear the click,
I say, “Hey, Alexa? I love you, too.”
Because I realize I do.
In True OCD Fashion
I clean up the kitchen.
Quin should be very pleased.
Then I fill the dog bowls.
Where are those mutts, anyway?
They’re usually waiting
on the step come dinnertime.
But when I open the door
to call them, I hear furious
barking in the distance.
I step out into the yard to try
and tune in to their location.
I think they’re down by the office.
There’s a thin, sharp
crack
.
Gunshot? No doubt. I start
toward the truck. Change my mind,
go inside, grab my phone, dial 9-1-1.
Then I head downhill on foot.
When the parking area comes
into view, I recognize the car.
It belongs to Gus. Neither he
nor the dogs are anywhere in sight,
but when I circle to the front
of the building, I can see
he’s broken his way inside.
An Intelligent Person
Would stay put.
Wait for the cops.
But like an idiot,
I push through the door.
The lights are on—did he stop
to turn them on or did I leave
them on before? “Gus?
That you? What are you
doing here? We’re closed.”
Don’t want to startle the fool,
who’s rummaging around
in the gun locker room.
’Course it’s me, asshole.
But don’t you fucking
come back here! I mean
it! I’m gonna do this.
But first I want Fiona.
She’s mine, goddamn it.
Come ’ere, you bitch!
He’s totally out of his mind
wasted. Uncle Jessie could talk
him down. Not sure I can.
But for some odd reason,
I think I should try.
“Hey, Gus. If you chill,
I’ll open the rifle cabinet for you.
I’ve got the key right here.”
He stops his thrashing,
and the sudden silence is eerie.
All right then. ’S only fair.
’S my grandpa’s gun an’ I want
her. That damn Jessie thinks
he can keep Fiona, I’ll kill him.
Where is that fucker, anyway?
I make my way cautiously
to the locker room door.
“I’m coming in, okay?
Uncle Jessie’s in the hospital.
He had a heart attack.”
Gus, whose attention
has been directed toward
the rifle cabinet, turns
to face me. They say certain
sights make your blood run
cold. Mine freezes solid.
I force my voice steady.
“What are you doing, Gus?”
He’s Wearing a Vest
And strapped to it are what
appear to be explosives. On his hip
is a holstered gun. He smiles,
his eyes fill with crazy, and
suddenly I can’t breathe.
Hey, Junior. Didn’ you know
I’m a dee-mo-lition expert?
Goddamn army taught me a thing
or two. Goin’ blow this place
to kingdom come, and I’m goin’
along for the ride. Ain’t nothing
left to hang on for anymore.
Think, think, think. Where are
those damn cops? “Take it easy,
okay? Why this place, Gus?
I thought you liked it out here.”
I thought I did, too. Thought I liked
that sonofabitch Jessie. Then he went
and sold me out to that lawyer.
Bastard took all my money. Every
red cent. Then he tells me he don’
think he can help me. That whore’s
gonna take away my kids forever.
Just talking about it starts him
twitching. He lifts up and down
on his toes, his hand moves
toward his pocket, and one word
comes to mind. Trigger.
Inhale. Exhale. Palms up, palms
down won’t help me now.
“Come on, Gus. There are other
lawyers. If it’s money, maybe