Authors: Ellen Hopkins
We’ll be collecting pillowcases
from, um, some volunteers,
says Kurt.
I have no idea what he means
until we get out of the car. Chloe
and I follow the guys, who scope
out the action on the street. They
wait for the kids with parents along
to go by. But when they spot a group
of older kids walking unaccompanied,
they motion for us to hide behind
a tall, unlit hedge. As the kids
pass by, the guys jump and yell,
Boo!
It scares the bejesus out of them.
Then the boys swipe their candy and run.
Nothing else to do but run, too.
It was mean, but it isn’t the worst
trick Lucas and Kurt play tonight.
Chloe
The guys play tonight
isn’t stealing candy from
middle schoolers. That’s
funny,
really, especially the way
those kids yell to come back,
like we would. What’s sort of
unfunny
is smashing jack-o’-lanterns
on pretty front porches and
squishing chocolate bars into
Depends,
and leaving them on the front
seats of unlocked cars. Still,
we laugh and go along. But
on
the far side of funny is when
Harley says she’s going to be
sick, and Lucas asks Kurt,
Is
your
phone handy?
And when
she falls on her knees and
pukes up her guts, it’s in full
view
of an active camera.
Mikayla
How fast word spreads
when the word that’s spreading
is “pregnant.” I told one friend
and by the next day pretty much
the whole school knew. Okay,
maybe that’s a slight exaggeration.
Let’s just say by the next day,
people who used to admire me
seemed to be looking down on me
or avoiding eye contact completely.
There were some notable exceptions.
Audrey marched straight up, gave
me a big ol’ hug.
I know it’s hard.
But you’re doing the right thing. I wish
I would have been as strong as you.
She’s the only person who has told
me I’m doing the right thing. It’s good
to know someone is in my corner.
Still, I wasn’t happy about Emily
opening her mouth. I caught
her at lunch. “Why did you tell?”
You didn’t say it was a secret,
and I only told Margot. She’s got
a big mouth. I’m sorry, I guess.
“A huge mouth, apparently. But
whatevs.” It was going to happen
eventually. I’ve got to get used to it.
And it might not have been so bad
except I had to bump into Kristy.
I expected smugness. I got sympathy.
Hey. I heard about the baby,
she said, examining me for signs.
I’m sorry about Dylan. He’s a pussy.
Don’t know if that means they’re
together or not. And, really, what does
it matter? But I had to say something.
And What Slipped Out
Of my mouth was, “Yeah, he
totally is.” And in that moment,
it hit me. Yeah, he totally is.
Weeks of hurt exploded in a flash
of nuclear anger—a mushroom
cloud stamped with the word “pussy.”
He’s nothing more than a fucking
pussy, and who needs one of those
for a father? Not my baby, for sure.
Except, it’s still
our
baby. And why
should he be able to deny that? No
freaking way. He can’t. He won’t.
Goddamn it, what happened to my
clear-cut life? Goals. Forward
movement. Being in love. Swamped
with love. Six months ago I would
have laughed in the face of anyone
who claimed my love for Dylan—and
his reciprocal devotion—was all
in my mind. It
was
real. It
is
real.
I love him now more than ever.
Even if he is a pussy. Even if
he is screwing Kristy. He can’t love
her. And how can he possibly not
love me? Just because there’s
a baby—half him, half me?
How do I convince him to come
back? How can I make him see
that the two of us can only be
better when we become three?
I tried seducing him. It worked—
for fifteen or twenty minutes. I tried
cajoling him, which only got his back up.
I go for my ultrasound this afternoon.
Will seeing a picture of our—his—
baby make him understand the stakes?
I Sit Alone
In the waiting room. Other women
are also here solo, reading magazines
or checking their phones. The lucky
ones wait with their men, most
of whom look excited to be included.
They hold their partners’ hands,
bounce them on their knees, as if
those hands are promises of what
will be in the aftermath of what has
already been. Some of the ladies
look ready to pop. Will I really get
that big? Have a giant balloon belly?
Right now, it’s just a little pooch,
but it is noticeable and it’s growing.
A nurse comes to the door.
Mikayla?
I get up and follow her, excitement
building. I’m going to see my baby.
We go into a small room and the nurse
says,
There’s a hospital gown.
Put it on, open in the front. You
can keep your undergarments
on. I’ll be back in a few minutes.
She closes the door and I do as
instructed, really wishing I could
go pee. They made me drink four
glasses of water. A full bladder
is supposed to make baby viewing
easier. I get back up on the padded
table, just as a knock comes on the door.
The tech pokes his head in.
All ready?
“Sure.” The guy is kind of cute, and
I’m most of the way naked, which
makes me a little uncomfortable,
even if he
has
seen it lots of times
before. The nurse returns and watches
as the tech rubs a cold gel substance
on my belly.
Okay,
he says.
This device
is called a transducer. It sends sound
waves into your body, where they reflect
off internal structures, including your baby.
He moves the transducer around
my tummy, tells me to hold my breath
several times.
Now the sound waves
reflect back to the transducer, which
creates an on-screen image of your baby.
Look at all those fingers and toes. Ten
of each, I’d say. And . . . do you want
to know if it’s a boy or a girl?
“Yes. Please.” It comes out a whisper
and when he says it’s a girl, I start to cry.
Something About Knowing
She’s a girl—that I can use the word