Authors: Ellen Hopkins
you have to do it a few times to
catch a buzz.
Chad the psychic
takes another drag.
But once you
do, you’ll never go back to straight.
“You mean, you’ll just stay high?”
His frosty-eyed glare informs me
that was an idiotic thing to ask.
Disgust weighs his sigh.
No. What
I mean is that you’ll
want
to just
stay high. Wish I always could.
To make the bad crap disappear.
He has experienced more than I.
So why do I take another puff?
Five Puffs Later
The cigarette is a tiny stump Chad
calls a roach. Each inhale got easier,
as if my throat and lungs decided
resistance was futile. I’m not sure,
but I might even feel a little fuzzy
around the edges. At the very least,
I feel a little braver. Brave enough
to walk arm-touching-arm with Chad
as we head back toward camp, soaking
up the warm August night. He doesn’t
seem to mind, so I grow even bolder.
“Do you think I’m ugly or something?”
That seems to amuse him. He snorts.
No. Why?
He keeps walking, so I put
a hand on his arm to stop him. “Why
haven’t you ever tried to kiss me?”
It just wouldn’t be the right thing
to do. You’re like my little sister.
Chad
Has never exactly been
my thing. But once in a while
something like moral fiber
threads through me, weaves
a web
around my heart. She would
be so easy. Look at the way
she tried to please me, back
there in the woods. But a rush
of affection
overtook me suddenly. I care
about her. Not that I’d confess
it. I even feel a little guilty
about the weed. How
can
I reconcile this feeling with
what I’ve always thought about
love—that it’s really either bullshit
or lust in disguise? You can’t
fix
a shattered glass with superglue.
I’d say the odds are slim that
a makeshift family can repair
a broken
childhood.
Mikayla
I think childhood is something
you really don’t appreciate until
it’s been taken from you. When
you’re really little, it’s all you know.
There is good and bad, and hopefully
the former outweighs the latter.
But since adulthood looks so very
far away, there’s no reason to worry
about it. As you get older, you start
to think about certain freedoms
attached to growing up. Riding
your bike solo to the store. Going
skating or to the movies with just
your friends, no parents allowed.
Sleepovers first without, then with
Truth or Dare. Still, for most, there
is an innocence in that, reflective
of lingering childhood. Then, new goal:
that magic number sixteen. Driving
can take you many places—both toward
and away from the heart of family.
Mostly, you want to come home. But
then you start considering eighteen.
No more parental intrusion. You can
be on your own. Except, I’m pretty
sure, it isn’t as great as it seems.
I haven’t celebrated that birthday.
Have a whole year left in high school.
But one little mistake (no, a major mistake)
has stolen my childhood from me.
You can’t be a parent and still be
a child, except if you limit that term
strictly to age. Childhood is supposed
to be about fun. Pretty sure I’m not
going to have a whole lot of that
for quite some time to come.
I’ve Researched
Until my eyes blurred and my head
ached. Everything. Abortion. Adoption.
Teenage motherhood. I’ve read case
studies. Statistics. Personal stories.
I really don’t think I could be more
informed. Yet I still can’t seem to make
a decision. The fetus is now an embryo,
which doesn’t deny a surgical solution.
But psychologically, it makes that idea
so much harder. I can’t sleep. Still can’t
eat much without losing it all first thing
in the morning. They say eating crackers
in bed before you move your head from
the pillow is supposed to help. But all
that does is make me puke Saltines.
Morning sickness is supposed to go
away by the start of the second trimester.
So, one way or the other, I’ll get over it.
Meanwhile, I’ll Keep Puking
That’s how my mom found me
last week. When she knocked on
the bathroom door, I tried to flush
the evidence, wash the stench
from my mouth. She already
knew. I looked like crap, that’s
for sure, but I didn’t think
she’d say,
So, it’s true.
I started to deny it. “What’s
true?” If she knew, I thought,
she’d be angry. But her eyes held
only certainty. “Who . . . who told you?”
My legs got all shaky. When I
started to fall, she caught me,
tried to still my quaking body.
Doesn’t matter. What’s important
is that you don’t make any hasty
decisions. How far along are you?
Do you have any idea?
I nodded
against her elevated heartbeat.
“I’ve missed two periods. At first
I thought no way. . . .” I told her about
the two two-blue-line tests. Halfway
through my confession, I started
to cry. Stupid. Tears. I hate being
weak. “Dylan says he’ll pay for an
abortion. But I don’t know if I can do
that. But I don’t know what else to do. . . .”
What she said was not what I wanted
to hear.
I know the idea of an abortion
is distasteful. But you’re only seventeen.
Having a baby would . . . impact your life.
Distasteful! Impact my life? I gave
her a hard shove. “No shit! Jesus,
Mom. I’m pregnant, not stupid.
I’ve thought and thought about this.
Abortion is more than distasteful.
It’s kind of murder. This is up to me,
not you. And anyway, when did you
decide to play mother again?”
Totally Overboard
But, you know, I have a good excuse.
And the fact is, she has been absent
lately. Writers’ groups and extremely
late nights out with friends. Sounds
like a regular midlife crisis to me. But
what do I know about turning forty?
Clicking the dial to eighteen is way
too much for me. Especially pregnant.
Argh! Today, for a change, I’m hungry.
Maybe close to starving. Not sure if
that shift is good or bad. Next thing
you know I’ll weigh two hundred pounds.