Authors: Ellen Hopkins
against the walls and
I
burrow my face into
the quilts to shut out
the demon dance.
This nightmare I
can't
escape walks and breathes
beyond the confines
of sleep, and with it
a monster impossible to
forget,
grinning. Leering.
Whispering lust-infused
ballads through serrated
teeth. He carries in
his
hand a perfect strawberry,
offers it like treasure,
and when I bend to taste
it, he smashes it into my
face.
Was a godsend to me, maybe
even literally. I'd been sleeping
on the streets, crashing behind
Dumpsters, offering myself up
to passersby for meager money,
barely enough to eat. I would
say “survive,” but that requires
being alive, and I was one of
the walking dead when I threw
a plea skyward, “Please, God,
please, if it's your will, show
me the way out.” It wasn't God
who actually answered, but
a priest in the Catholic church
I had sleepwalked into.
How can I help you?
he asked,
trying not to look disgusted by
the odor clinging to the awful
Salvation Army clothes I wore.
I didn't know how he could help,
but once he had no doubt about
my circumstances, Father Gregory
knew exactly how. He sent me here
to Walk Straight, a rescue for teen
prostitutes intent on a better life.
How can I ever reconcile that
title in front of my name? It's so
contrary to everything about meâ
the straitlaced daughter
of an evangelical preacher and his strict,
overbearing wife. Mama. At least
she was until she sent me to hell on earth,
a reform school of sorts called
Tears of Zion, where they isolated me
in a tiny room, only a Bible for company.
Barely fed me. Rarely bathed me.
Forced me to meditate on my sinsâ
chief among them falling in love
with Andrew, the Catholic boy with
attitude and spiritualistic belief beyond
the ken of my hellfire and brimstone
parents. With love as my sin, it was
only proper that my redemption
would come at the hands of a devil,
my savior Jerome, a Tears of Zion
apostle with a sick appetite for sex
with young girls like me, who he wanted
to own. I did what he required in trade
for an escape route across the desertâ
my path to prostitution when I fled from him.
Of that to the great people here
at Walk Straight, a place founded
by an ex-prostitute determined
to help reshape the tomorrows
of teens who want out of “the life.”
My caseworker, Sarah (who still thinks
I'm “Ruthie”) has been after me for
information. To live here, my legal
guardian has to sign off on it. I was
never arrested, so I'm not in the juvenile
justice system, therefore not a ward
of the state. When I first arrived
here, I told them my parents
were dead. That lie is catching up
to me. Walk Straight has been patientâ
their goal is to take kids off the streets
and give them a safe place to live.
But there are legalities involved.
I'm scared to return to Boise and live
under my parents' rule again. I'm also
terrified of seeing Andrew, who I love
more than anything in this world,
because he'll want to know whyâand
whereâI vanished last spring.
I just don't know how to tell him.
For weeks, and today is the day
I'll give Sarah the information
she needs to ruin my life the rest
of the way. But it's the only real
roadway into the future. I truly wish
Andrew could be there, too, but
he deserves someone better than me.
Someone clean. Unbroken. Worthy
of a love so intense it will leave her
breathless. Suddenly, my eyes sting.
You okay?
asks Shayleece, noting
the onslaught of tears. She's one
of thirty-two Walk Straight girlsâ
about my age, with dark-chocolate
skin and huge espresso eyes.
We haven't talked much, but then
neither of us is the talkative type.
“I'm all right. Just thinking
about someone back home.”
We are at lunch, which today
is a delicious (not) tuna salad
sandwich. I never cared for tuna,
anyway, but in this setting, with
everyone eating it at the same
time, the fish smell is nauseating.
Shayleece doesn't seem to notice.
Someone special, huh? Bet it's a guy.
She waits for my nod before
continuing.
Like a real boyfriend?
Ooh, girl! I want one of those someday.
Okay, maybe she
is
the talkative
type. I remain tight-lipped, except
to say, “He's the most amazing guy
in the world.” If I think one more
time about him kissing me beneath
the broad Idaho sky, I'll go completely
crazy. It's the best memory I own,
but when it rises, smoke, I choke
on the knot that forms in my throat.
I'm suffocating at this moment.
I don't want to talk about Andrew,
so I refocus the conversation,
which I guess is what we're having
between bites of yucky tuna sandwich.
“You never had a boyfriend?”
Oh, hell no. My mom, she would
have killed me. Sex for love, which
means for free? Nah, she wouldn't
have put up with that for one second,
and Daddy would've killed the guy.
It's going to be hard to slam it
shut again. Because when I ask,
“You mean your mother knew
you were turning tricks?” she has
no compunction about sharing
her entire life story with me.
Oh,
yeah. My mom's the one who put
me out on the track. Well, she did
it for Daddy. See, she was one of
his “wifeys,” too. And know what?
Daddy was maybe my real daddy,
ain't that a hoot? Mom was fourteen
when she started tricking, and he was
her man, so she didn't use no protection
with him. She was fifteen when she had me.
“Wait. Your mom
wanted
you
to prostitute? How old were you?”
My own mother insisted I had to
get married before I even allowed
a boy to kiss me, let alone . . .
We needed the money for rent and
stuff. I was thirteen, but no big deal.
One of Daddy's friends broke me in
when I was nine. As Daddy says,
tight pussy costs a pretty penny.
Crush what's left of a little girl's
childhood into dust. I know
it happens, but it's hard to picture,
and she doesn't even seem that upset
about it. How can that be possible?
Shayleece finishes her sandwich,
chases the last swallow with a big
gulp of chocolate milk, starts on
her giant oatmeal raisin cookie.
Who broke you in?
she asks bluntly.
“You mean who did I give
my virginity to?” I realize few
enough girls here actually gifted
it to someone. Maybe only me.
“My first time was with Andrew.”
He your boyfriend?
Her voice
drips incredulity, but when she
assesses my body language and
finds only truth reflected there,
she asks,
So how you end up here?
“Want my cookie?” I shuttle
my tray across the table so she can
enjoy the second dessert. “This will
probably sound stupid, but I think God
sent me here. See, this priestâ”
No. I don't mean here at this table.
I mean in Vegas, in the life. I never
saw you out on the track. Daddy
woulda loved getting hold of you.
He's always scouting for white girls.
I don't really want to talk about
Tears of Zion with Shayleece,
so I tell her, “It's a long story. Let's
just say I had no choice but to run
away, and the trucker who picked
me up hitchhiking was headed
in this direction. I've got a question
for you, though. How did
you
wind
up at Walk Straight? Does your mom
know you're here?” I watch her stuff
the last bite of cookie into her mouth.
My mom's dead.
A few crumbs fall
from her lips.
Daddy makes his girls give
him five hundred every day. Mom was
short too many times. He got mad, beat
her down. I got home right as he put
the gun to her head. I ran 'cause Daddy
saw me, but didn't know where to go.
A girl out on the track told me 'bout this
place. She said they'd keep me safe.
Is a violent business. Pimps
competing. Pimps keeping their
girls in line. Big city, small town,
makes no difference. “Did the cops
ever find out who killed her?”
Oh, hell yeah. Word got around
on the street, and you know, one
person said something to someone,
probably someone who runs other
girls, and eventually it reached
the police. Plenty of Daddy's DNA in
that place. Then my counselor here
made me fess up about my pimp, so
now they've got him for murder and
for trafficking children. I still qualify.
That busts her up, and the way
she laughs, head thrown back
as she squeals and snorts, makes
me grin, despite the fact that it
isn't funny. Am I still a child?
Okay, well, it looks like lunch
is over. Thanks for the cookie.
She pushes back from the table,
stands.
If your boyfriend really
loves you, he'll forgive you.
We're required to attend classes
both a.m. and p.m., the goal
being to earn our high school
equivalency certificates so we can
move on to productive jobs and
become solid members of society.
That's assuming we stay long
enough to make all that happen,
and I don't think I will once Sarah
contacts my parents. Then again,
I can't imagine returning to Boise
High, pretending to be an ordinary
junior, a little behind on credits
because . . . Exactly why? Beyond
school, what about church? Papa's
church, where he preaches everlasting
hellfire for infractions as insignificant
as divorce or using birth control. How
can I sit there and listen, all the while
remembering the things I've done?
How can I bask in the glory of God
when I've trolled the streets on Satan's
arm? Shayleece claims Andrew will
forgive me. But how can I forgive myself,
or expect the Lord to offer redemption?
Intrude on my concentration
this afternoon. I'm happy when
I can leave US Government behind
in favor of library hour. I requested
computer time yesterday. I don't know
if they bother to monitor what
we view online. Probably. Doesn't
matter to me. My tastes are benign.
I check e-mail first, always hoping
for some little word from Andrew.
I'm not disappointed.
Hello, my heart,
he writes.
Hope you are well and
that you're coming home soon. Wherever
you are is too far away. God, I miss
you. I dream about you every night.
Sometimes those are good dreams.
You and me, here on the ranch,
playing with Sheila (who's not
a puppy anymore . . . funny how
fast they grow into dogs!), or just
sitting on the porch, watching
the cottonwoods flicker in the breeze.
But then come the nightmares
where I see you in the distance, faint,
but no matter how hard I try or how
fast I run, I can't catch up to you,
and when I reach the place where
you were standing, you're gone.
Vanished, just like you disappeared
from my life. Please come back to me,