Authors: Ellen Hopkins
a quick picture that I hope will do.
While I wait for his response, I leave
my hand where it is, just above a soft
pulsing between my legs. I have never
touched myself there before, not the way
he wants me to. But now I do. Just to see.
Just to know. I move my middle finger
slowly along the slick strip, discover
the nub hiding beneath my pubic bone—
the source of the building throb.
My Cell Buzzes
But I ignore it for the moment.
This is something I need to know
more about. Something I must learn.
Unbidden, my finger starts to move
faster and, unbidden, my body rocks
against it. It’s like I’ve been possessed
by something—someone—I have no
control over. I can’t stop. Wouldn’t
even if I thought I could. So I give
myself up to the woman inside me.
Let her move my hand. Teach
me what to do. She is instinct, pure
or filthy, and I listen to her, follow
her direction. Some urgency begins,
grows like surf moving toward high
tide. Breaks that can’t be harnessed
or slowed or stopped. That swell
into a tidal wave, and with it a crash—
and a bolt of understanding.
If There Ever Was an Eve
This must be how she felt
right after she first figured
out what orgasm meant.
Enlightened.
Embarrassed.
Excited to try it again.
I will. But not now. Why
don’t they teach you
this
in school? That you really
don’t need someone else
to make you feel this good?
Satisfied.
Contented.
I mean, they sort of mention
it, but not as a means to an end.
And some people even call it a sin.
No making that element happy,
I guess. Ask me, self-pleasure
could be the key to abstinence.
Listen to Me
Like I’ve suddenly become
an expert on self-pleasure.
I put on my clothes. Go wash
my hands. And when I get back
to my room, I finally check
my cell for Lucas’s text message.
AWESOME. BUT NEXT TIME I WANT
TO SEE EVERYTHING. GOT IT?
I’m not quite that brave.
I’LL
THINK ABOUT IT. WILL I SEE
YOU THIS WEEKEND?
It’s only
Wednesday. Friday seems like
such a long way away.
His return text takes a while.
Tit for tat, right? I made him
wait while I . . . My face sizzles,
white hot. Finally, the buzz.
ARE YOU OVER YOUR PERIOD?
Guess I’ll Have to Be
Sooner or later. Problem is, it’s going
to start for real at some point soon.
What can I use for an excuse then?
Or should I just come clean, admit
I wasn’t ready and couldn’t think
of another way out? The problem
with lies is they start to pile up, one
on top of another, until it’s hard to find
your way out from under the heap.
I wish I could talk to Bri about it.
But she’d just lecture me. Mom? Yeah,
right. She still thinks I’m her little angel.
Can’t believe she hasn’t noticed my
wings are long gone. Chloe? Maybe, but
I know what she’ll say—
No excuses.
No apologies. Just live in the moment.
One other person comes to mind.
I dial her number. Hope she’s home.
She is. “Hey, Cassie. I, uh, wanted
to talk to you. I’m kind of seeing this guy. . . .”
Boy problems? Already? School
has barely started. Okay, what’s up?
“Well, um . . . See, he’s sort of pushing
me to have . . . you know. And I’m not . . .”
Ready? I would think not, especially
if you just started dating. You remember . . .
Someone—Dad? Chad?—interrupts,
says something I can’t quite make out.
Okay,
Cassie says to him. Now, to me,
Your
dad says to tell any guy who bothers you
he’ll have to answer to your father. Listen.
I have to run. We’ll talk Saturday, okay?
It’s Not
But I say, “Okay.” We’re going
shopping for my bridesmaid’s dress.
Guess it will wait till then. Meanwhile,
maybe biology homework (regeneration)
will take my mind off Lucas
A door slams and Mom calls
out that she needs help unloading
the groceries. I close my notebook,
stash every deviant thought and try to
regenerate some hint of angel wings.
Chloe
Some people seem to think
“deviant” is my middle name.
Okay, I may be the kind of girl
who truly believes
life
is totally much more amazing
when you straddle its edges.
First, always, is self-preservation,
but once you get a handle
on the challenges that
presents,
you can take control. And
isn’t that really the point?
To choose your path, veering
around anyone who insists
you’re wrong, from the
endless
shortcuts and switchbacks
along the straight and narrow
way. To avoid the tried-and-true
in favor of imagine-this
possibilities.
Mikayla
I’ve gone completely straight
for my baby, and that makes
being pregnant even harder.
No booze, no weed, no pills
except for prenatal vitamins.
Nothing to take my mind off
my slowly expanding belly
or how lonely I am without Dylan.
Wednesday is Halloween, and as
October fades into November,
the ever-shortening days seem
to grow longer. And the snap-cool
nights are longer yet. You’d think
I’d be really tired, but apparently
that isn’t so until the last trimester.
At twenty weeks, I’m halfway
there and at my next doctor’s
appointment, I’ll have the ultrasound
that will show if the baby is a boy
or a girl. Halfway there, and so far
I haven’t told anyone. Not Emily.
Not Audrey. None of my teachers,
though I’m pretty sure a couple
of them know, which means
apparently there is no counselor-
student privilege. Before long, though,