Authors: Ellen Hopkins
how bad our families make us feel about
ourselves. Perhaps we're approaching the true
Age of Enlightenment. Maybe not everywhere,
but in more and more places, including
here. Excluding assholes like the ones last
night, people are starting to understand
that gender is something you're born with.
We can be who we are, follow our dreams,
succeed on our talents, celebrate falling
in love. But if we buy into the bullshit, believe
our only option is submission, we're doomed.”
Pippa has listened quietly, sponging
the words, but now she says,
I wish
I could believe that, but people are
basically mean. Survival of the fittest
or whatever. Hurting others gives
them a small sense of power, and
that includes verbal abuse. And
men like the ones who did this . . .
She lifts her hand, not quite touching
her pulped face.
Want people like you
and me to disappear completely. They
want us on the endangered species list.
“Yeah, but they'll be extinct someday.
Until then, we can't cave in to fear.”
The tears, expected, begin to fall.
How do I keep from being afraid?
“You have to stop living in isolation.
Find an accepting community. Jump in.”
She thinks it over.
And where is your
community, Seth?
Excellent question.
All the way to Micah's. Other than
the YouCenter kids, I belong to no real
community. I don't fraternize with other
escorts, and even if I did, I plan to quit
the business ASAP, because now I'm
free to move in with Micah and living
with someone you love negates having
for-pay sex with others, at least in my mind.
Who knew I had any moral sense left?
What little I have totally disintegrates
the minute Micah opens the door,
wearing nothing but a pair of blue
silk boxers. It's been a few days
since we've seen each other, and lust
attacks fiercely, at least for me. Micah,
however, jerks backward as if looking
at a monster.
Jesus. What happened
to you?
My face. Forgot about that.
I set down my luggage, close the door.
“Is that any way to talk to a superhero?”
I repeat the grisly details, hoping
my manliness will impress him.
Unfortunately, it seems to have
the opposite effect.
Seriously, Seth.
You should have called 911, then run.
Those guys might have killed you.
“You sound like David. I couldn't
let them annihilate Pippa, could I?”
His shoulders relax.
I guess not.
So, you really
are
a superhero.
“Nah. Just a regular hero. Now,
where's my reward?” I push him into
the bedroom, kiss him hard as I lay
him down, all the right muscles tensing
between us. He looks up at me with
those amber eyes, and a confession
spills from my lips. “I love you, and
I want you.” I show him how much,
and what we share isn't sex, it's making
love. Micah becomes my community.
My cell phone rings. I ignore it, though
the thought briefly crosses my mind
that it could be important. No way
as important as this, though, and
when we finish I'm in no hurry to get
up. We lie tangled together in mute
satisfaction. Finally, I ask, “What do
you think about me moving in here?”
It's the first time I mention leaving David.
Micah's muscles (all the wrong ones) tense.
You can stay for a while, of course.
My main concern is David. If he finds
out, what would that mean for me?
Sucker punch. I'd hike hot coals for Micah.
I roll out of bed, go to find my clothes
and check to see if that call was critical.
There's a voice mail from Aunt Kate.
Thank God I found you, Seth. You have
to come home right now. Your father's
in the hospital. He doesn't have much time.
To judgment is a concept
I'm familiar withâ
being that person
everyone's
analyzing, without
ever once asking straight
up where you've been
or why you were gone.
I understand self-medicating,
playing hide-and-seek with
a
personal monster. In my case
(not to mention my sister's),
our father, who returned
from the Middle East
conflicts tweaked. So, yeah,
I indulged in more than a
little
booze and pills and powders.
Anything to shut out
the noise of his waking
nightmares. Until I, too,
went most of the way
crazy.
It was a long, hard
journey back, but if I
could do it, Whitney can, too.
Flipping out at random
intervals, for reasons sometimes
obvious, and other times
anyone's guess. I knew
laser tag was a poor choice,
all that neon cutting through
the darkness too reminiscent
of my time with Bryn and the Lady.
If not for James, don't know
how deep into memory-
driven insanity I might've sunk,
clutching shallow breath
as I went under. He saved me
that night, and I still can't figure
out why, let alone the reason
he wants to see me again.
Today, I was scratching for a way
out of the house to escape
the dual energy of my mom
and Kyra, who's home on winter
break. So when James called
and asked if I wanted to see
a movie, I jumped at the chance.
He's picking me up at one.
As long as I can talk Mom into
letting me out of the house.
With Kyra, looking at plum
pudding recipes online.
They're planning to cook
Christmas dinner, too.
But seriously. Plum pudding?
Better play nice.
“What's wrong with gingerbread,
or maybe chocolate cream pie?”
Kyra cocks her head, points
her chin in my direction.
I happen to like plum pudding.
You got a problem with that?
“Nope. Whatever you want
is fine by me. But can we please
have gingerbread, too? Maybe
Dad can pick it up from the bakery
if you don't want to make it.”
Why should I make it? You can
follow a recipe, can't you?
Why is she always such a bitch?
Back away, Whitney, back
away. “I'm happy to give it a try,
but it probably won't turn out
very well. Baking is not my thing.”
Change the subject . . . now.
“Hey, Mom. Can I go to the movies?”
Well, we're kind of busy here,
and I thought we might go out
to dinner later.
Finally, she pulls
her eyes away from the computer
long enough to notice I'm dressed
to go somewhere.
Oh. Did you
already make plans with someone?
“Well, yeah. See, I met this kind
of amazing guy at the arcade
the other night.” I never told her
about the incident. No need to
mention it now. “You'll like him.
He'll be here any second.”
You told him you'd go without
asking Mom first?
blasts Kyra.
“I know I shouldn't have,
but I really like him a lot,
and when he called I was so
surprised, I just blurted out okay.”
Okay, Whitney, make it good,
or Mom will never say you can go.
“Is it okay, Mom? He'll come
in and you can meet him.
You don't have to worry,
by the way. He's straight edge.”
I won't mention it's because his
sister OD'd. Mom might worry
about the genetic factor.
Mom's still considering. I let
James in. “Come meet my mother.
She's all worried about me going
out with you, so put on your best
perfect gentleman disguise.”
He grins.
What disguise? Mom
says I was the perfect gentleman
at conception. No morning sickness,
short labor. And I've only gotten
better with practice.
Sweet. Yep.
Sweet enough, that in less
than five minutes, he's got Mom
wrapped around his little finger.
Kyra is tougher, but even she mellows
and I'm allowed freedom.
James drives a new-model
Camaro, burnt orange and spotless.
He opens the passenger door
for me, and as I slide into the seat,
I wonder again what he's hiding.
No guy is quite this perfect.
He's probably a serial killer
or something. Wonder if he's ever
raped someone. Wonder if
he's ever hired a whore.
Wonder if I'll ever quit
thinking like a whore.
To the Del Mar, an amazing
old Art Decoâstyle theater
downtown that plays a lot of
off-the-wall indie films.
The one today isn't new,
but it is really good. It follows
a boy from kindergarten
through high school, and is
really about relationshipsâ
how they change with time.
I don't freak out when the lights
go down, so that's good.
I like sitting next to sweet James,
who totally acts the gentleman
role quite naturally. I'm surprised
he doesn't come on to meâdon't
all guys use a dark theater as
an excuse to run a hand along
your thigh? James doesn't,
sensing, I guess, my need
for trust. Is it that obvious?
After the credits, there's still
light left outside. “Want to take
a walk? I'm not ready to go home
yet. My sister's making me crazy.”
The words are barely out of my
mouth.
Wish my sister was still
around making me crazy.
“Jeez, man, I'm sorry. I'm an
idiot.” Without even thinking,
I reach for his hand and our
fingers lace. It's the first skin-
on-skin contact I've had with
a man in months, and my initial
instinct is to pull away. Instead,
I force myself to hold on, even
when he takes my other hand,
too, and coaxes me nearer.
It's
okay. No need to apologize.
It was an observation, nothing
more. Besides . . .
He smiles.
It brought us closer together.
I didn't want to rush you.
I study his eyes, seeking hints
of serial killer, but find none.
“Why did you call me? I mean,
after what happened the other
night, most guys would run
screaming in the other direction.”
Let's take that walk.
He lets go
of one hand, keeps hold of the other.
After a few steps, he says,
This will
sound weird, but from the moment
we started talking, I wanted to reach
inside you, grab hold of whatever
is haunting you and smash it to pieces.
Funny verb to use in that
sentence, but accurate enough.
“Is it because of your sister?
Do I remind you of her?”
To a point. You're tough like
her, on the outside. But she turned
tough inside, too. There's more
vulnerability in you, despite
what you show the world. Besides . . .
He stops, turns to face me again.
I never wanted to do this to my sister.
He leans toward me, but stops,
and his eyes ask permission,
which my eyes grant. His lips
are soft for a guy, and this kiss
is gentle, as if he's afraid to chase
me away. His instinct is good.
As nice as the kiss is, it's all
I can do not to yank back and run.
This he senses, too.
It isn't me,
though, is it? What happened
to you in Vegas, Whitney?
Before I can manufacture a word,
at the end of the block, a pickup
screeches around the corner. I cower
at the noise, and that's when the man
riding shotgun sticks his head
out the window.
Hey, lovebirds.
Want a beer?
A bottle comes flying,
smashes into the building beside me,
as the truck vanishes down the street.
It all happens so fast, I don't feel