Tilt (74 page)

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Authors: Ellen Hopkins

BOOK: Tilt
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he was done. And still I couldn’t
move. Not even when he rolled
off me, skittered across the floor
and out the door. Leaving me there
like discarded trash. Something
used up and left behind to rot.
Your first time should be special.
Not something you can’t quite
scrub away, no matter how hard
you try. Something that sticks to you
like tree sap. Stubborn. Indelible.
Marring your finish until you rust.
I’m Not Even Sure
How I got home. Who drove,
or when I got in. Stumbled in
at my dad’s, made my way
to the couch and crashed there.
Good thing it was Dad’s. Mom
would have been up waiting,
knowing exactly what my messed-
up clothes and hair and alcohol
breath meant. I was so buzzed
I didn’t even wash until morning.
Waking up was the hardest thing
ever, sunlight assaulting my eyes
and something hammering on
my skull and a pool of acid swishing
around in my stomach. I barely
made the bathroom in time, though
it was mostly dry heaves.
Heaving what remained of me.
The Best Part of All?
He dumped me the same day.
Not only that, but he dumped me
secondhand, through Chloe.
I was waiting for Mom to pick me
up, still fighting the pounding
in my head, when she texted me.
THIS IS REALLY MESSED UP
SO I’M SORRY, ’K? LUCAS SAYS
TO TELL YOU HE DOESN’T THINK
YOU TWO ARE SIMPATICO. STUPID
WAY OF SAYING HE WANTS TO
BREAK UP WITH YOU. SORRY.
Two apologies, and both from
her. Just about then, Chad wandered
in and sat next to me on the sofa.
Heard you come in pretty late
last night and I noticed you slept
on the couch. Everything okay?
“Wonderful. Amazing. Really
great.” Then I showed him Chloe’s
text. But I didn’t tell him the rest.
I Mean, Who Could I Tell
Something like that to?
Dad?
Ha ha ha ha.
Cassie?
Too busy being positive about the wedding.
Chloe?
Already has a good idea, but I’m not about
to give her any details. Don’t really trust her.
Bri?
It’s just way too embarrassing. Maybe
one day, if I get drunk enough. Except
lately I’ve been thinking that getting
drunk—especially blackout drunk—stinks.
Which kind of leaves Mom.
Who is currently crazy about her doctor
boyfriend. Who happens to be what a boyfriend
should be. Handsome. Rich. Upwardly mobile.
And, most of all, respectful. Of her. And of me.
I wish I could tell her. But I don’t know
how. Where would I even begin?
So I’ve Kept It All In
And it’s eating me up.
One good thing. I started
my period today. I’ll be bloated
for the wedding. But I won’t be pregnant.
Speaking of that, seems
Aunt Marissa and Uncle Chris
might adopt Mikayla’s baby. I hope
that works out. They’re talking about it
now, I guess. Our families
connect in weird ways. Triangles,
kind of. I think it’s awesome, but Mom
is worried that Aunt Marissa might be acting
impulsively. Mom’s a fretter.
I really don’t want to be the cause
of her anxiety. So I’m just sitting here
next to her, watching TV, acting like nothing’s
bothering me. She’s doing
the same thing. But I know she’s
waiting to hear the latest from Aunt
Marissa. The phone is right next to her.
It’s So Close, in Fact
That when it rings, she jumps.
Guess she was caught up in the movie
after all. But if I thought she was worried
before, whatever she’s hearing is making
her pace. Did Mikayla decide to keep
the baby after all?
Thanks for letting
me know. We’ll be right there.
She keeps
her voice calm, but it trembles, and so do
her hands.
Get your coat. And hurry.
Okay, this is bad. But we’re both
bundled up and getting into the car
before I ask, “What’s wrong, Mom?”
She puts the car into reverse, backs
carefully onto the icy street.
It’s Shane.
Oh, Jesus, how could he. . . ?
“How could he what?” Now I’m
getting scared. And just as it seems
like we need to drive light speed,
it starts to snow. Blizzard. The first
major storm of the year, and it’s an early
arrival. “Where are we going, Mom?”
Saint Mary’s. Shane. . .  well, they’re
not sure if it was intentional, but he
may have attempted suicide.
He’s in critical condition.
She swerves
to avoid a coyote, and the Subaru fights
to stay on the highway.
Damn animals!
“Take it easy, Mom. Slow down.
Getting into an accident won’t help.”
She regains control, lightens her foot
on the accelerator.
I know. Sorry. I
just want to be there for Missy. How
could he be so selfish?
Good question,
if he did try to kill himself. He wouldn’t,
though, right? I just saw him at Thanksgiving.
I would have known something was wrong.
Right?
Snow Swirls
In the headlights are hypnotic.
It’s like I can’t look away, and
as I stare, questions materialize,
ghosts, dancing against the windshield.
Why did he do it, if he did?
Why didn’t anyone see it coming?
Why would he hurt his parents even
more than they were already hurting?
What, exactly, happened to make
him choose today? Was it because
of his mom wanting another baby?
Why wouldn’t he want her to have one?
Those are the easy ones. The next
ones are darker. Macabre, even.
How did he do it? Why didn’t it
work? Will it work in the end?
Who found him? How did he look?
Was he fighting for life? Or so close
to death that he looked like a corpse
already? And am I sick to wonder?
The Waiting Room
Is crowded with family. Gramps
meets us at the door, worry creasing
his eyes.
Missy’s in shock,

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