Authors: Ellen Hopkins
too, where several women ignored
their excited children while vying
for the title, Crap Mother. “Why is
everyone so in love with their phones?”
Paige quickly stashes hers.
What
do you mean? Oh, look. There's
a MyBoardwalk kiosk. Let's get
some cards. They use those instead
of tokens here now, so you know.
I hand her some of the cash
Mom gave me, thinking about
people and their cell phones.
I guess maybe I used to text
a lot. But in Vegas I only used
my phone for business, and after
a while I hated when it rang.
Sometimes when it blares now,
it plops me right back in that
shit-hole apartment with Bryn.
We spend a couple of hours
on games. Bowl. Shoot pool.
I'm miserable at all of them,
but have fun, anyway. “Hey,
are you hungry? I'm starving.”
Get something. I already had
a candy cane, and if I eat I'll have
to go puke it up. I need to lose
five pounds before winter break.
We're going to Hawaii and I want
to look good in my new bikini.
“You're kidding, right? If you
lose any more weight you'll dry
up and blow away. What are
you now? Size three?”
Exactly. I don't think my bone
structure will let me get down
to size zero, but I'm trying.
“I think you're being ridiculous
but I can't force a cheeseburger
down your throat. I plan to eat one,
anyway. Fries, too. My modeling
career is on indefinite hold.”
And I take pleasure in eating
it slowly, watching Paige
salivate. She does swipe a few
of my fries. Hope she doesn't
feel the need to vomit them.
Fed, full, feeling pretty good,
I go throw my trash away and
when I get back, find Paige flirting
with a couple of guys who have
joined her at the table. Their faces
are vaguely familiar. I'd peg them
as seniors, and jocks. “That was quick.”
Paige laughs.
They're stalkers.
Actually, this is Gary and James.
You guys remember Whitney?
She just moved back from Vegas.
Gary seems to be connected
to Paige. So much so, in fact,
that I suspect she made sure to let
him know we'd be here tonight.
James, who's sandy-haired and
obviously built, turns assessing
dark eyes toward me and grunts
something resembling a hello.
Next thing I know, we've become
a foursome, which is irritating, but
at least it keeps Paige off her phone.
Gary, who is much better-looking
than the guys I've seen Paige with
before, keeps an arm wrapped
around her shoulders as we head
back toward the arcade. James
measures my stride and adjusts
his accordingly. “You a senior?”
I ask because one of us should
say something.
Yep. Five more
months and I'm out of here. Not
sure where I'm going yet, though.
Did you like Vegas? I hear it's ugly.
“Oh, baby, you have no idea.
I mean, if you like lots of neon
and phony facades, the strip is kind
of pretty. But underneath all that
it's filthy. And goddamn hot, too.”
So, are you in school or what?
“Right now, I'm homeschooled.”
I give him a very short version
of the modeling/rehab story.
He's surprised when I tell him
I'm only a junior. “Why? I look older?”
Yeah. Drugs can do that to you.
My sister got into that shit. Hope
you can stay clean. She couldn't.
Some people look at rehab
like it's for losers. Others,
like it's a badge of honor.
James sees it as a necessity
for someone who's chosen
to play with fire. His sister
got scorched. She OD'd.
“I'm really sorry to hear that.”
Thanks. It sucked. What a waste.
She was special, too. And it
was all because of some dude.
“Usually is.” I don't elaborate.
It's been a long time since I felt
this comfortable around a guy.
He's different somehow. Sweet.
That's the word. At least, on
the surface. Which makes me
wonder what, exactly, he's hiding.
Gary, however, is obnoxiously
obvious. The arm that was
around Paige's shoulders now
circles her waist, and once in
a while his hand falls to test
the muscle mass of her butt.
Doesn't bother her at all.
Not sure why it's bothering me.
Brake to a stop in front of
the laser tag entrance. Damn.
I was hoping to avoid it, but
Paige and Gary are hot to play.
I shake my head. “I'll wait for you.”
Come on. It'll be fun. We used
to do this all the time, remember?
I'm not brain-dead. Of course
I remember. She's right. We
did, and it was fun. Besides,
they're all looking at me like
I'm totally lame. “Okay,” I
agree reluctantly. “I've just
been a little claustrophobic
lately, so I might quit early.”
We pay, go inside. Strap on
vests, choose our weapons.
James and I play blue; Paige
and Gary go red. The game
begins and everything goes
dark and my stomach starts
to churn. Now neon streaks
the shadows and, as I feared,
I'm back in the black alleys
of Las Vegas, and there's
movement signifying faces
I can't see and don't want to.
And this is nothing like fun.
Behind you!
I spin, heart stammering,
and a laser beam lights my chest.
Inhale. Exhale. I breathe in stutters.
“You're fine, you're fine,” I chant.
It's a game.
No danger here.
Kids are playing.
Danger loves kids.
Danger seeks kids.
Danger leaves kids
to die in the desert.
Exit.
Where's the exit?
There. Over there.
I run for the door and feel
someone running behind me.
“No!” I scream. “Leave me alone!”
Whitney.
He's there. Right
there. Reaching for me. His
hand falls against my shoulder.
Whitney. It's James. It's okay.
James? James! I turn into him,
sobbing, and he takes me gently
into his arms, guides me to the exit,
my pendulum swinging toward crazy.
Finally, Eden's found
the courage to tell me
where she's been hiding
these long, lonely weeks,
and todayâtoday!âI'll see
her
again. The mirror
reveals a different man
than the one who last held
her. It's not just that my hair
is longer, or that my
face
has grown winter pale
beneath a full beard.
No. It's the deep
trepidation that
haunts
my eyes, despite the surfacing
joy. What if we've moved
too far beyond the halcyon
days we share in
my
recollection? What if
she isn't real at all, but only
something I imagined,
or the invention of overactive
dreams.
First, my mother informed me
that she has condemned my sister
to the dungeons at Tears of Zion.
She caught your disease,
that's
what Mama said, as if falling
in love is a contagionâa virus
of the heart. I vowed to find a way
to get Eve out, and know transparency
is the only way to make that happen.
I have to confess before I can accuse.
But before I could take my story
public, we got the news about
Shayleece. No one stepped forward
to claim her body, so the counselors
here pooled enough money to bury
her properly. All the girls went to
the funeral, so at least she had people
there to say goodbye, whether or not
they wanted to. Most of us did. Most
of us realized it could have been one
of us lying in that coffin, which
remained closed. The speculation about
why turned into some interesting,
if macabre, gossip. Hard to think
about what the buzzards managed.
To come out of all the bad
is I get to see Andrew today.
My decision to talk about Tears
of Zion freed me to let him know
where I am. He's catching the first
available flight. My stomach
is doing flip-flops. I'm scared
and happy and crazy excited,
all knotted up together. I wish
I had something nice to wear,
instead of the thrift-store clothes
in my drawers. When I told him
that, he said he couldn't care less,
he'd be looking at my face, not
my jeans. That's good, because
I've gained a few pounds since
the last time I saw him. Will
he look the same? It's been almost
eight months. Not a lot of time
in the scheme of things, but enough
to change our appearance. What
matters is what's left inside.
Right now, my heart is buoyant
with love. I just wish I knew for
sure that's how he feels, too.
Mine are in upheaval because
my parents cut me loose. That's
a relief because going home
is unthinkable. But what Mama
said is I'm no longer their daughter.
I've been orphaned, and that hurts
more than I could have guessed.
And what will I do about Boise?
Andrew still has solid ties there,
and it's not a very big city.
If I go back, I'm sure to run into
my ex-family, plus people from
church, where ugly rumors must be
circulating. Once I make a big stink
about Tears of Zion, that's bound
to get worse. Some pills are worth
swallowing, I guess. At least I'm
moving forward. I can't change
a single minute of yesterday.
But I can take charge of the future,
and at the top of my list is saving
my sister and hopefully playing
a role in the demise of Tears of Zion.
It's anyone's guess what will happen
once I report Father Samuel Ruenhaven.
Before I see Andrew, so
I can't change my mind.
Right now, I'm sitting
in the offices of the Nevada
Investigation Division.
Tears of Zion is in a different
county, and it will be up to
a detective here whether or
not to inform Elko County
that they might want to take
a look at this so-called religious
retreat center. Sarah is with
me, sensing I could still bolt
at any time. I'm relieved when
the detective who calls me in
turns out to be a woman.
It would be harder to look
a man in the eyes and relate
the horror stories I have to
tell.
Come in,
she says.
I'm
Detective Finnegan. But you
can call me Marlene.
She must
see the sudden rush of fear.
It's okay,
she soothes.
Don't
be afraid. I'm on your side.
I almost believe she might,
in fact, be on my side.
She listens intently to every
word, and I find no disbelief
in her body language.
First off, I want to thank
you for bringing this to our
attention. We take allegations
of child abuse quite seriously
in this office. I do have a couple
of questions for you, though,
as I'm sure the Elko County
DA will be asking them, too.
One: Why did you wait so long
before coming forward?
“Humiliation, for one thing.
Before all this happened I'd
had exactly one boyfriend,
and we never did anything
like . . . that. I had no idea
people
ever
acted like that.
And then, what I did here
on the streets, just to eat . . .”
Emotion wells up, uninvited.
“I'm sorry. I didn't mean to cry.”
Marlene leans forward,
hands me a box of tissues.
Please don't apologize.
Memories like that are hard
to relive. Any other reasons?