Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Hey, maybe you could fly out next
week. I've got enough cash for a ticket,
and I'd love for you to see where I
come from. Even if it is covered in snow.”
He smiles wistfully.
Maybe one day.
But I have to work next week. Besides,
if I go back there, it won't be in winter.
I had the chance to relocate in the Midwest,
but this California boy hates deep-freeze
cold. Why do you think I moved to Vegas?
I shrug. “So you could find a cute
boy, fall in love, and settle down?”
You sound like Mom. Hey, better go.
Those cabbies are giving me dirty looks.
Long kiss goodbye, dirty looks
from cabbies be damned. One
more promise to see him in
a few days. One more plea for
him to consider sharing a place
when I get back. One very large
stab of pain when he drives off
without looking back, just a small
wave over his shoulder. I wander
over to curbside check-in, get in line,
and suddenly it hits me that I could
go home and never return to Vegas.
Would Micah even miss me?
Would he ask me to return?
Someone behind me taps my
shoulder.
Line's moving, dude.
“Sorry,” I mutter, shuffling
forward and digging in my pocket
for my wallet and ID. As I approach
the counter, I notice the sign:
TIPS APPRECIATED
. The baggage
guy is an older man, grizzled and slightly
bent, but he lifts my duffel easily,
assures me it will reach my flight in
plenty of time, and when I slip him
a ten, his eyes go wide. “Merry Christmas.”
Kind is as kind does, my mom used to say,
and that seems to be the case because
when I make a few missteps at security,
the TSA people calmly remind me
to remove
everything
from my pockets.
I reach the correct gate in plenty of
time, only to find my flight's delayed
due to the Midwest weather. While
I wait I should charge my phone,
and that reminds me I need to make
a couple of callsâone to YouCenter
to let them know I won't be in, and
the other to Pippa. “Hey. I'm heading
home for a couple of days. You okay?”
Never better,
she jokes.
But are you
really going back to Indiana?
“As long as the weather gods allow
it. My dad's in the hospital.” I omit
the deathbed part, but Pippa intuits
it anyway.
Oh, wow. Sorry. The Grim
Reaper does love the holidays. Seth?
I was thinking about community.
It's the next best thing to family,
isn't it? Will you help me find mine?
“I'll do the best I can. Meanwhile,
you heal up and get out of there.”
And find a cheap plastic surgeon.
Can't go around looking like this.
“You'll always be beautiful, Pippa.
Oh. Just called my flight. See you soon.”
Hey. One thing before you go. Try
to forgive your dad. Easy to say,
hard to do, I know. But if you don't,
you'll beat yourself up forever. Be safe.
“You, too. Have a happy Christmas.”
Who the hell made her so wise?
At the very back of the plane, not
much to do for three and a half hours,
I entertain myself with my laptop
for a while, but after the drink service
and two Jack Daniel's, I put it away
and sink into an alcohol-enhanced stupor.
I close my eyes, wishing back-row
seats reclined and wondering if
someone might be joining the Mile
High Club in the lavatory behind me,
or if people ever pay random strangers
for the experience. I will myself to nap.
Floating. Floating. Someone taps
my arm and I straighten, ready to let
my seatmate out to go to the bathroom.
Except he's sleeping, and the seat on
the aisle is empty. So why does it seem
occupied? I extend my hand into
the space, and for just a second, I feel
him there. “Dad?” The barest hint
of fingertips brush my cheek
before vanishing, and I know.
He didn't wait for me. Was that by
design, or did he try to hang on?
“No.” It's not even a whisper. “Why?”
Why did you leave without saying
goodbye? Except, you did, didn't you?
Does this mean you've forgiven me?
“I forgive you, too.” It's important
I say those words out loud, to steep
them in meaning. The man beside me
stirs, and I swallow the sound of my tears.
Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe it was only
a by-product of my buzz. Yeah, that's it.
So why do I shiver at the skin pluck
of goose bumps? I close my eyes again,
am vaguely aware when the aisle seat
refills with a flesh-and-blood human.
Window-seat man begins to snore.
I want another drink. But now the captain
informs us we're on our final descent
into Detroit, where the temperature
is five degrees Fahrenheit, under
a light snowfall. The flight attendant
adds an apology for our late start,
reminds us many connections have
also been delayed. Mine was hours
away and even if the Evansville
flight is on time, I'll have to wait
at least an hour to board it, which
proves to be the case. When we touch
down, out come the cell phones. That
includes mine. The expected message
from Aunt Kate has not yet appeared,
so I text her first.
DAD DIDN'T MAKE IT.
The forty-one rows in front of me
deplane first, and I am most of the way
to my connecting gate before the bell
on my phone sounds, signaling her
response:
I'M SO SORRY, SETH. HIS
PASSING WAS PEACEFUL. BUT HOW
DID YOU KNOW?
How did I know, indeed?
If I tell her, she'll think I'm crazy.
“Gay” is probably bad enough.
Keeps surfacing on the ninety-
minute flight to Evansville: lost.
So many things lost to me, and
much too soon. My mother, claimed
by cancer before I could ever even
try to make her understand the “me”
of me. My identity, through the early
years of my childhood, not because
I couldn't see it, but because of what
was expected of me. My faith, stolen
by one who claimed to stand fast
representing it. One deviated priest,
and my God was taken from me.
And Dad, who deserted this world
in favor of the next where, he believed,
the love of his life awaits him in
eternity. But where lies the key
to heaven's gate? In dogma or ancient
scripture? Or might it be found within
the creeds of love and forgiveness?
Would be easy. The Lady
would make it a gentle ride.
So why has it taken me this
long to recognize that fact?
What's the point of
fighting
to hold on to solid
footing, when slipping
toward darkness
requires almost no
effort and the struggle
to live
a routine existence
is an uphill battle?
Anyway, how can “average”
be a goal for someone
like me, who is
tempted
by the extraordinary
and drawn toward
the unexpected?
It must be better
to die
a quick death
than to stare at the clock,
as the hours drag you toward
the very same inevitable
conclusion.
After everything I managed
to live throughâbarelyâbefore,
eking out a slender escape
from the hands of death, knotted
around my throat, how can
I invite the demon king
back into my life?
I. Am. An. Addict.
There is zero doubt of that,
and not only am I addicted to
the sensuous dance with the poppy,
but I am one hundred percent hooked
on the son of a bitch sleeping
beside me. Why did I call Bryn?
In less than five minutes,
he convinced me to leave
the relative safety of the mall
and take a drive to the beach,
despite the fact I understood
there was treachery in his motive.
I'd asked for the heroin,
that wasn't his fault, and he didn't
need to twist my arm to make me
take a whiff. Oh, I wanted to visit
the Lady, and she was everything
I remembered. One tiny taste,
every drop of fear melted like candle
wax tongued by flame.
Then Bryn kissed me. Things
are a little hazy this morning,
but I think I asked him to.
I haven't wanted a man near
me in a very long time,
but Bryn is the man who taught
me what it means to be a woman
(if not a lady), and his practiced
touch rekindled the passion
I'd truly believed died in Vegas.
He laid me back on a pillow
of sand, and though it was cool,
the billowing heat of my body
warmed it soon enough. I closed
my eyes, and didn't move,
just let him take me all the way
there, listening to the serenade
of surf beneath the steady,
building beat of my heart.
And when he said he loved me,
I stupidly confessed, “Oh God,
I love you, too.” And that was all
I needed for him to convince me
to leave Santa Cruz behind again.
He is a masterful player.
And I have been played.
And I know I've been played.
And I invited the game.
Do I really want to keep playing,
knowing this game allows no
winners? I slip out from under
the covers, tiptoe into the little
bathroom, sit on the cracked
toilet seat, pee into the rust-stained
porcelain bowl. The experience
carries me straight back to Vegas,
a place I vowed never to return to.
We're halfway there now, in
a seedy motel, all Bryn could find
off the freeway, two nights
before Christmas. Or maybe all
he could afford. I go to the sink
to wash my hands and can't avoid
looking at the girl in the mirror.
She stares back at me with mascara-
stained eyes, still holding vestiges
of the H inside them, and she insists,
You're better than this. He says
he won't lock you back in his stable,
that when you were taken from him
he realized that you were the only
girl he loved. But you know it's a lie.
She's right. He lies, and the Lady
is a liar, too, but last night, held
in her arms, I finally felt right.
To go back into the other
room for that little plastic
bag of powdered courage.
Snort myself brave.
Chase the dragon, and
smoke myself fearless.
Send Bryn into a drug-
store for clean needles.
Shoot myself heroic.
How many heroes require
such encouragement
to face their enemies,
conquer themâor not?
Dope or no, you'll never
be a hero,
says Girl-in-
the-Mirror,
and your past
is the enemy. Tomorrow
embraces hope. Yesterday
holds despair. It's not too
late to turn back around.
“Shut up,” I tell her, then
turn the shower faucet
as hot as I can get it, do
my best to steam away
the lingering tendrils of H,
and scrub the scent
of Bryn from my skin.
I put on yesterday's, then
reach into my purse, past
the plastic bag, to find my
hairbrush. On its way out,
it bumps my cell, which
I've tried to avoid, knowing
there'll be messages from Mom.
I go ahead and check them
as I wrangle the snarls from
my hair. As expected,
she's left quite a few.
I'M HERE TO PICK YOU UP.
WHERE ARE YOU?
WHITNEY? I'M HERE.
WHERE ARE YOU?
WHITNEY, ARE YOU OKAY?
WHERE ARE YOU?
WHITNEY?
WHERE ARE YOU?
There are voice mails, too,
including one from Dad:
Whitney, your mother called.
She's worried sick. Where are you?
There's even one from James.
Hey, Whitney. I was hoping
to see you today. Where are you?
Good question.