Authors: Ellen Hopkins
Tags: #General, #Adolescence, #Family, #Social Science, #Human Sexuality, #Novels in verse, #Family problems, #Emotional Problems, #Psychology, #Social Issues, #Prostitution, #Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #Women's Studies, #Families, #Emotional Problems of Teenagers, #Dating & Sex, #juvenile
with an eye missing. Since
I'd really like to hang on to both of my eyes and all of my limbs, I figured I'd
better find my true self
*
somewhere other than Perry
County. Best way I could
think of was through the
"be anyone you choose to be"
possibilities of online dating.
32
Granted, One Possibility
Was hooking up with a creep-- a pervert, looking to spread
some incurable disease to some
poor, horny idiot. I met more than one pervert, but I never
*
let them do me. Nope, horny or not, I wasn't an idiot. No
homosexual yokel, anxious
enough to get laid to let any
guy who swung the correct
*
direction into my jeans.
I wanted my first real sex to be with the right guy. Someone
experienced enough to teach
me, but not humiliate me.
*
Someone good-looking.
Young. Educated. A good
talker, yes, but a good listener, too. Someone maybe even
hoping to fall in love.
33
Incredibly
Unimaginably, Loren turned
out to be all those things, and I found him in Louisville!
He opened my eyes to a wider
world, introduced me to the
*
avant-garde--performance art, nude theater, alternative lit.
He gave me a taste for caviar, pâté, excellent
California cabernet. After
*
years of fried chicken and
Pabst Blue Ribbon, such
adjustments could only be
born of love. Truthfully, love was unexpected. I've
*
said it before, and I'll repeat,
I didn't fall out of the tree
yesterday. But that first day, when Loren opened his door,
I took one look and fell
*
flat on my face. Figuratively, of course. I barely stumbled as I crossed the threshold-- into his apartment, and into the certainty of who I am.
34
A Poem by Whitney Lang
Stumbling
I only have one question, scraping the inside of me.
Answer it, and I will
stumble
back into her shadow.
Shut my mouth, never
ask again. I've tried to ignore it, but it won't go
away.
It haunts my dreams, chases me through every single day, and I
don't
have the strength to turn around. Face it down. So please tell me and I swear I'll never
ask
again. It's in your
power to make it go
away And all you have to do is tell me
why
you love her more.
35
Whitney Living in Someone's Shadow
Totally blows. Don't get
me wrong. I love my sister.
Just not as much as my mother
loves her. Doesn't matter how
*
hard I try, I can never quite
measure up to Kyra. I'm pretty.
She's beautiful. I'm smart.
She's a genius. I can sing
*
a tolerable alto. She'll solo, lead soprano, at the Met.
Mom's own failed dreams
resurrected in Kyra.
*
And speaking of dreams, mine are small.
Shortsighted,
Mom calls them. Interior
design, maybe. Or fashion.
*
Kyra, however, is majoring in International Relations.
I don't get it. What does she want to be? A spy?
36
I thought things would get
better when she went off to Vassar. Two thousand, three hundred and fifty-six
*
miles away from Santa Cruz, the pretentious California beach
town where we live. But no
amount of miles can make
*
her shadow disappear. It's
only longer, stretched across the continent. Her on one side.
Me stuck fast on the other.
37
It's Not So Bad
When my dad's home. He's an investment banker in the fine
old city of San Francisco.
Too far to commute every day,
*
so he keeps an apartment there
four nights a week, comes home for regular three-day weekends.
Used to be regular, anyway.
*
My dad's my hero, and when
he's home he makes Mom stay off my ass. I don't say words like "ass" when he's around.
*
Don't want him to think I'm a "foul-mouthed bitch," as my
mom enjoys calling me. Wonder
where I got the mouth from.
*
Anyway, Daddy loves me, and if he happens to play
favorites, the dice usually roll
my way. Probably just making
*
up for Mom. But hey, that's
okay. One out of two ain't bad.
I just hate when they argue.
Because it's usually about me.
38
More and More Lately
It seems like Mom makes a point of staying gone when
Daddy's home. She golfs. Plays
tennis. Spends hours at the gym.
*
Sometimes she visits a friend in Monterey. I assume a female
friend, but wouldn't put it past Mom to have a thing going on the side.
*
Pretty sure she doesn't have a bi
side, but whatever floats her lead-
bottomed boat, as long as it means
she's hanging out anywhere but here.
*
I love when it's just Daddy and me.
Usually it's here in SC, but once in a while, I'll go into the city, spend the weekend with him there.
*
San Francisco has to be the most
beautiful place in the world, with its stunning old homes, stacked like Legos on its incredibly steep
*
hills. There are museums. Galleries.
The symphony and the ballet.
Daddy has taught me to appreciate
all of these things, and not give
39
a sideways glance at SF's uglier
underbelly. Homeless people.
Panhandlers. Drug dealers, pimps, and Tenderloin freaks, often only
*
a street or two removed from the thriving business district and the vibrant waterfront tourist
traffic. A city of enigmas.
*
I like enigmas. I mean, face
it. Semi-absent father. Absent-
for-the-moment sister. Totally
absent mother, not a whole lot
*
of affection, but plenty of time
all on my own, I'm a walking, talking poster child for early
promiscuity. Aren't I?
40
Well, Not Exactly
See, between the longtime local
hype about AIDS and a real-time
example of how rotten young
mothering can make a person
*
(Mom was only nineteen when she had Kyra; I followed a little over three
years later), not to mention how truly
disgusting venereal diseases
*
look in those movies they show
you in school, I have not been in a hurry to let just any guy
pluck the rosebud. True love first,
*
I've always said, and that has been enough to keep me a virgin.
Up until now. I mean, technically
I'm still a virgin at fifteen.
*
But I'm also in love, and I'm pretty
sure Lucas loves me, too. We've been skin-on-skin. I just haven't let him
talk me into "all the way in."
41
That's Liable to Change
Any time. I've been holding out, wanting to be certain that he loves me for more than my body. But how
can you really know that?
*
We've been together almost a year. He's a senior at Kirby, the same private college prep school
that prepped Kyra for Vassar.
*
She was valedictorian, of course.
I take AP classes at Empire. Less
Pressure. Less having to live up to valedictorian expectations.
*
Lucas and I met at a Kirby honor
choir performance last spring. Kyra
sang two solos. Lucas stood in the back
row, mostly faking the words. Once
*
in a while he actually belted out a few in a deep, mellow bass. I couldn't
help but stare. And not at Kyra.
Lucas stole my attention completely.
*
I mean, he's freaking beautiful.
His hair falls, a lush gold cascade, well past his shoulders. It frames the steep angles of his face perfectly.
42
His eyes are green, but almost
clear, like cool emerald pools.
You want to dive deep down into them and swim awhile.
*
That first night, after the sheet
music was all stored away,
I went looking for Kyra and cookies, not necessarily in that order.
*
I found her, talking with Lucas.
And for not even close to the first
time in my life, the little green
monster sank its fangs into me.
*
Kyra wasn't interested in Lucas.
Her taste in men runs toward PhD
candidates (total geeks). But I
wasn't sure Lucas knew that.
*
So I took dead aim at making
darn sure he did, pushing straight in between them. "Hey, sis," I said,
"Mom is looking for you."
43
That Was Mostly a Lie
But it worked. Kyra kisses
Mom's butt almost as much as Mom kisses hers. She took off with a simple,
Excuse me.
*
I turned to Lucas. "Good
performance. You've got a great voice...." Better
eyes, but I didn't go there.
*
His smile revealed major bucks in dental work.
Yeah. At least
when I can remember the words.
So... you're Kyra's little sister?
*
The "little" made me wince.
Of course, I was only fourteen at the time. Kyra's eighteenth
birthday was sneaking up.
*
Whatever. I had to play nice,
"That's me. Kyra's little sister.
But you can call me Whitney
if you want. It's shorter."
44
Something about the tone of my voice tipped him off.
Ooh. Struck a nerve, huh?
Well, little sis, no worries.
*
He gave a long, assessing look.
You measure up okay. Besides...
He lowered his voice.
Just between you and me, your sister's a bitch.
*
O-M-G! No one, and I mean
no
one,
had ever told me that before.
I studied his face, trying to find a hint of insincerity. Couldn't.
*
Something sparked between us.
Maybe it was as simple as him
thinking my sister was a bitch.
Sharing my opinion. Something
*
others rarely do. And not only
sharing it, but not being afraid to voice such an unpopular sentiment.
"Just between you and me, I agree."
45
Okay, Very Likely
He saw how much I needed to hear that, and maybe he figured it might be a way into my panties, and maybe it will lead to that eventually.
*
Maybe even soon. I'm not really sure
how or why I've held out this long, except that protecting my virginity is one thing I can accomplish
*
all on my own. Won't give it away
too cheaply. Not even to Lucas, whose touch simply electrifies me.
That night, as the reception broke up
*
and we started toward our families, our hands touched. The energy was pure magic. He felt it too, turned back to me immediately.
*
His smile was lupine. Ravenous.
I needed to get to know this guy, and so when he said,
Uh... don't
suppose you'd give me your number?
*
I recited it once. Repeated it.
Asked him to repeat it to me, a feat that he managed easily.
He remembered it too.
46
It Kind of Surprised Me
When he called a couple of days
later. Not sure why. I guess it's because I always set myself up for disappointment. Not that time.
*
Hey,
he said,
it's Lucas, from
Kirby....
Like I wouldn't have
remembered!
I was thinking about a day trip to Big Sur Interested?
*
Like I wouldn't have been!
But I didn't want him to know
my temp had just flared well over one-oh-one. "Uh, maybe. When?"
*
I don't suppose you could, like, ditch school tomorrow? At
my long pause, he laughed.
Okay.
How about Saturday, then?
*
That gave me two whole days to make up a believable excuse.
No way would Mom let me go to Big Sur with a guy I just met.
*
Okay, she wouldn't have let me
go with any guy. Not that I cared.
Getting away with stuff was a well-
loved hobby. And even if it wasn't,
47
I would have done just about anything to spend the day with someone who made me feel
important. Pretty, maybe. Alive.
*
Believe it or not, my mom made it easy.
I'm playing golf with Cyn
tomorrow,
she told me on Friday.
And we're doing dinner afterward.
*
You'll be okay here alone, right?
She barely even heard my ramble about going over to Irish's for the day.
Great. I'll be home late.
*
Just like that, my Saturday had
opened up. And, very much like my wandering mother, I was oh-