Authors: Ellen Hopkins
romantic. God, I’m so confused.
The Closest I’ve Come
To doing any of this was an “almost”
with Marlon Dufrena—a hulking dude
with hands the size of baseball mitts.
Hands that scared the crap out of me.
I was fourteen and he was twenty,
and I understood his interest had nothing
to do with romance. I also knew
there was something not quite right
about a guy that old wanting to get
off with me. But I was curious. Hungry
for knowledge and for identity.
He was mostly hungry for ejaculation.
There were no dinners. No concerts.
Definitely no kissing. Just those
awful hands, grasping. Pushing.
Pulling. Insisting, after I’d said no.
He was bigger. I was quicker.
One kick, well-placed, slowed him
down long enough for me to run.
After, I almost decided to try straight.
Of Course, Going Straight
When you’re totally, unabashedly
born perfectly gay isn’t possible.
As much as I wanted to hide in
my closet, uh . . . not going to happen.
Which explains my online outlet.
The only hands I had to contend
with were my own. I trusted them
completely. But, like any red-
blooded human being, I wanted to
fall in love. Finally, I figured out
that love and sex don’t have to be
intertwined. But maybe, just maybe,
they can be. I’m damn sure willing
to give it a try, so I’ll work on not
overthinking the details, give up
all thought of control, see where
love will carry me tonight. Alex.
Damn. Why you? Okay, I know
there’s no such thing as forever.
So what can we be, in the now?
While Waiting
For Alex to pick me up, I go see
what Mom’s up to. Pass Dad, snoring
on the couch. God, does being home
always have to equal being drunk
for him? His liver must be pickling.
I mean, it’s only seven, and as far as
I can tell, he’s been dead to the world
for about three hours. Okay, maybe
I shouldn’t talk about bad habits.
But at least mine don’t make me
emotionally sterile. Hmm. Interesting
thought. Wonder if his venom
is some feeble attempt to feel. I hear
Mom futzing around in the kitchen.
Dinner for one, with me going out
and Dad asleep and Shelby noshing
from tubes. I clomp past the almost
corpse of my father. No need to tiptoe.
“Hey, Mom,” I say, watching her slide
a Lean Pocket into the microwave.
“That doesn’t look too appetizing.”
She turns, offers a lukewarm smile.
You’re kidding, right? This is gourmet.
Said with a not-silent
t
at the end.
“You gonna watch the fireworks?”
Our deck overlooks downtown Reno,
where they lob them skyward from casino
rooftops. When I was little, we used
to have July Fourth parties here. Back
BS—Before Shelby, whose lungs can’t
handle the slightest whisper of pollen-
heavy evening breeze. “Not much wind
tonight. And it’s warm.” I leave the hint
hanging. Shelby should see fireworks
at least once before . . . “Oh. There’s Alex.”
I give her a quick hug, duck out the door.
It Is, in Fact
A perfect evening, the wind hushed as the sun sinks
low to the west. I suck in a deep breath of jasmine-
scented air to quiet the chatter of nerves. When I open
the passenger door, peek in to say, “Hey . . . ,” I am struck
for about the billionth time by Alex’s Irish beauty—
black coffee hair over unblemished white skin. And
when he smiles, his emerald eyes glow.
Hey back
at you. Get in.
Excitement shades his voice.
I’ve got
a surprise for you.
When I ask—ridiculously—what
it is, all he says is,
If you want to smoke, light up now.
Of course I want to smoke. Weed is the only thing
that will calm the churn in my gut. I share the blunt
without hesitation. Swapping spit doesn’t worry
me anymore. I researched again. Found out
what I needed to know. We end up downtown.
Alex stops in front of Harrah’s valet, pulls
a small suitcase from his trunk, hands the attendant
his keys and a five-dollar bill. He looks at me
expectantly.
Come on. Wait until you see this!
We take the elevator to the twelfth floor,
and he tugs me down the hall, into a room.
He stops long enough to kiss me sweetly, then
gushes,
Our first time should be memorable.
Look. We’ll be able to see the fireworks!
The big windows face toward the city’s heart.
“But how did you manage to get a room here
on the Fourth of July?” Not an easy thing. “And
how did you ever afford this?” I shake my head.
My aunt Katie has worked here forever.
She pulled some strings. And all those extra
hours I was working? For you. For us.
He kisses me again. This time, the sweet
segues quickly to thrilling. His hands
wind into my hair in a most primal way.
My heart beats crazy fast. Blood whooshes
in my ears and I cry out, “I love you.”
I regret the words for about two seconds.
But then he claims,
Oh, God, I love you, too.
And we’re kissing again. And we’re halfway
to naked as we fall, tangled, on the bed.
Any Small Sense of Fear
Vanishes as logic dissolves in desire
heightened by declarations of love.
I love him. And he says he loves me.
Alex slows forward movement.
I don’t want to hurry. I want to
commit every second to memory.
We lie on our sides, looking into
each other’s eyes as our hands
begin slow, mutual exploration.
There is no top, no bottom here.
There is only the web of us. Outside
the big window, the sky grows dark,
except for the far distant stars
I can see, fighting the garish
lit neon. I don’t have to think
about what to do. Mouth. Tongue.
Hands. Skin. All in perfect order.
And now, there are fireworks.
Alex
I have been in love before—
snared by emotion so intense,
deception by omission was easy.
But lies smother love. And in the wake
of my confession came a white-hot
sizzle
of anger. I deserved every hateful
word. Lying here, inhaling new love,
hope swells inside me. Skin against