Authors: Ellen Hopkins
that is the biggest turn-on of all. He stops kissing me.
Take off your clothes.
He stands back away from the bed,
watching me shed my dress. When I am down to lingerie and stockings,
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he says,
Come over here.
He sits in the overstuffed chair.
I want a lap dance.
I have no idea how to do a lap dance, but what the hell? I stand in front of him, moving my body to imagined music.
Blues. Billie Holiday. He reaches for me, tugs me so I’m straddling his legs.
That’s it. Beautiful.
He gentles his hands behind my shoulder blades, coaxes me forward and unhooks my bra. Lets it fall. Slips a hand under each breast, lifting them gently and framing my nipples with the Vs
of his fingers, the motion unexpectedly ingenuous, as if he’s touching a woman for the first time. And now his tongue
teases into the folds, circling the marble tips. I bite my bottom lip against the moan trying to escape—too much a cliché for this moment. And the thing that shifted, whatever it was, slithers sideways again, reveals an emotion closer to love than lust.
His hands fall away, to my thighs. They 511/881
push me down, into his lap, only his jeans and my panties between the thing I want most right now, stiff and pulsing.
He kisses me again, and my body screams to have him inside me, but he says …
HAVE YOU EVER BEEN TIED UP?
It is the most intense experience of my life, and when I get home I’m glad the house is fast asleep, so it can go into my journal.
Oil of Cloves
To offer up every slender thread of control is frightening. Ex-hilarating. I am naked when he lays me, trembling, on the bed. “I won’t hurt you. Not if you’re very good.” He uses my stockings.
One for my hands, which he crosses at the wrists, stretching them over my head. The other he wraps around my eyes. I’m swimming in a dark sea, where something unseen waits for me. “Don’t move.”
It’s hard to comply when his teeth rake my neck in a vampire-style kiss, lower to my nipples. His bite is half brilliant hurt, half surreal pleasure. The scent, lifting from his hair, is spice. Cloves, I think. It’s sharp, sexy as hell.
“Open your legs.” His face dives between them, and his mouth claims what he finds there. And when he says, “You can come now,” I am beyond ready. “Now that you’re wet, I’m going to do something I’ve always wanted to.” He slips one finger inside me. Two. Three. At four, the pressure becomes terrific. But when I squirm, he gives my arms a warning tug. “No. Hold still.” I do and he works his entire hand into that narrow place.
And, over the flashing silver pain, I shudder orgasm. “That’s my girl.” I wish I could see his rigid cock, fevered and poised to push inside me. One wicked thrust and I come again. And again. And now, so does he.
ORGASM
Few things represent
so well the inequality
of the sexes. Picture
Adam,
running around the garden
with a nice breeze-induced
stiffy, meaningless until
that lecherous serpent
got
involved. Before it became
about intent, erection felt
good, and that was all. Then
his companion found some
off-
the-wall forbidden fruit.
One little nibble and
Eve
became the object of Adam’s
no-longer-innocent stiffy’s
desire. And here’s the rub
(so to speak). He—man—
got
off pretty much by whim.
She—woman—discovered
hunger, difficult to satiate.
And when she tried, she was
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censured.
Marissa
I’VE TRIED
To put the scene in the deli
out of my mind. Tried, with
no success. Hindsight sucks.
I should have marched over
to Christian’s table, stood
there until he had no choice
but to introduce his hotshot
lunch date to his tongue-tied
wife. Instead, I didn’t even look
his way, afraid her hand would
be back on his arm. I ate chicken
salad in the park, pretending to
listen to my friend Claire talk
about Braxton Hicks contractions.
When the music started, all I could think about was how Grit
sounded more like the Grateful
Dead. And when Drew called
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to let me know he was on his
way, I told him I felt sick.
“Think it was the chicken salad.”
SO INSTEAD OF DREW AND GRIT
I dropped Claire off. Took Shelby
home, which proved completely
embarrassing for her brother, who
was in the kitchen, totally naked,
when we came through the door.
Shelby probably didn’t care, if she noticed at all. I, however, freaked.
“Shane Michael Trask! What the hell?
Go put some clothes on, would you?” I’ve never seen a face quite so red, or a butt quite so pale as he made
a dash for his room, trailing a weak,
Sorry. Didn’t think you’d be back
so soon.
Neither did I. Still, propriety seems in short supply around here.
At least a birthday-suited Alex wasn’t standing there with him. And I’m even more grateful that I didn’t catch them in the act. Not sure if I caught them
post- or pre-, or that it really matters.
Obviously, they
do
. But it’s one thing to know your son is gay, and quite
another to be presented, up close, with 518/881
specifics. At least he can’t get pregnant.
Thank God for small favors and all.
NOT THAT I BELIEVE IN GOD
Growing up, Andrea and I were given no clear understanding of a possible Creator.
Dad was raised in a strong Jewish home.
But that teen questioning thing weakened Ira Snyder’s religious resolve. He never thought twice about marrying Mom,
a lukewarm Lutheran. Both went through a pagan phase, a Wiccan thing, and even had a Buddhism fling, searching for deeper meaning and ending up more confused than anything. And that’s the belief system Andrea and I inherited—confusion.
When I met Christian, I attended
his church, mostly because he wanted me to. But I also had an itching curiosity.
Was there anything to the hype?
I have to admit, I felt
something
there, beneath the crucifix, in the midst
of believers. Maybe it was universal love.
Maybe a sliver of hope, a hint of reason beyond the chaos. Then Christian’s mom died.
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Then Shelby came along. And in Christian’s own crisis of faith, any small sense of God I had dissolved. Dissipated. Disappeared.
A RATHER AMAZING THING
Is that somehow, Shane held on to
whatever faith he found in Sunday
school. He clings to it, and to the idea of an omnipotent Creator who cares
for the earth and its inhabitants—two-legged or four-; winged, finned, or furred.
This, despite his father’s insistence that Shane’s sexuality denies him access.
This, despite my agnostic outlook. This, despite the hurt he will probably always experience because of being “the way God made him.” It’s fascinating, really.
And to be honest, I’m more than a little envious. I could use a major infusion of comfort on pretty much any given day.
Unfortunately, I don’t think I’ll find it hovering in the clouds, or rising, orange, at the break of morning. But if Shane can, 522/881
more power to him. And if that power does, in fact, come from God, hallelujah!
I PONDER SUCH THINGS
When silence bloats the empty
rooms of this behemoth house.
Today, as most days, I have only
Shelby for company, and right
now, she’s napping. Her door
opens like a whisper, and I
peek around it to check
on her. Small whimpers
escape her mouth, and her
legs move as if they know
things when she sleeps
that they cannot remember
when she’s awake, and I
wonder for the thousandth
time where she wanders
when she dreams. What
does she see? Who does
she meet? Is she perfect?
And for the millionth
time, a tsunami of sadness
crashes into me, drags me
down into an undertow
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of what will never be,
strands me, floundering.
RATHER THAN DROWN
I back out of her room,
close the door, leave Shelby
to whatever dreams she is allowed.
I need to do something mindless.
Routine. Laundry. I’ll do laundry.
Sort.
Wash.
Dry.
Fold.
Put away,
leaving detergent scent to
perfume the stale summer air.
The first door I come to is Shane’s.
I knock, though I know he’s out.
Habit. His room is cluttered.
Books.
Plates.
Wrappers.
Dirty socks.
Ditto underwear.
Does the boy never throw away
anything? Does he never pick
up his clothes? I toss carelessly
discarded clothing into a laundry
basket. Wander over to his desk.
Lighters.
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Rolling papers.
Marijuana crumbs.
Good china saucer.
Prescription bottle.
WHICH IS ODD
Because, at least as far as I know, Shane isn’t taking any prescribed
medications. What’s even odder
is the bottle has no label. Inside
are blue tablets, stamped with
the brand name
Gilead.
I take one, put the bottle back, and leaving
the basket of dirty clothes right
where it is, go to my computer.
Ten seconds’ worth of research
tells me something I do not want
to be informed of. Cannot possibly
face. Gilead is a pharmaceutical
company that specializes in
HIV treatments. No! It’s not
possible. Is it? I’m pretty sure
Alex is the first guy Shane has
actually slept with. I mean,
I could be wrong. But even if
I am, he’s only sixteen.
No way can he be infected.
Right? He would tell me, yes?
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Oh my God. I think I’m going
to be sick. My hands start to shake and sweat erupts on my forehead.
Stop. Think. Okay, call him. I have to know for sure. But, of course,
his cell goes straight to voicemail.
I leave a message there, and just
to be sure, I text the same request: CALL ME RIGHT AWAY. VERY IMPORTANT!
Now what? First, calm down.
Second, there’s nothing to do.
I can’t call anyone. There’s no one to call. Not even Christian. Especially not Christian. Not till I have some definite information. I start to pace.
Highly ineffective. All it does is make me more nervous. So I go into Shane’s room, put the blue tablet stamped
Gilead
back into the bottle. Gather up the rest of his dirty clothes.
Take them to the laundry room.
Sort them. Put light-colored tee shirts, underwear, and socks into the washer.
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Set it to cottons. Measure laundry soap.
Hit the start button, inhaling the only semi-comforting scent of detergent.
IT’S A VERY LONG TWO HOURS
Until I hear his key turn
in the door. It’s barely open,
his foot hardly through, when
I demand, “Why didn’t you call?”
I’m halfway to hysterical, and
sound it. His jaw drops, his
expression goes from blank
to concerned.
What’s wrong?
I grab his hand, pull him
down the hall, into his room
and over to his desk. I pick
up the bottle. “Do you have
something to tell me? About
these, maybe? God, Shane …”
My eyes sting, but I blink away
the tears. “Tell me you’re not HIV
positive!” He draws back
his shoulders. Toughens.
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No, Mom. I’m not. Alex is. But
don’t worry. It’s under control.
IT’S UNDER CONTROL
Now there’s a phrase
that should inject fear
into even the stoutest heart.
Not a lot of things in
life
are certain, except death.
Taxes. The need for
sustenance and the
inevitable results that
presents,
with luck, daily. But when
it comes to promises
spurring hope, it’s wise
to remember there are
too
few reasons to follow
through, when hope is,
truthfully, the most tangible
goal. Far too
many
people believe in the intrinsic
commonality of their brethren,