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Glass - 02

Page 20

by Ellen Hopkins


  Turns Out

  More

  than I thought.

  possible. Turns out

  more

  than I wanted to.

  Turns out I’ve

  gone through a lot

  more

  of that quarter

  ounce than I

  realized. It’s

  almost

  gone and so is

  my car and most

  of my money,

  gone

  just like Christmas,

  spent mostly alone,

  like a downtown wino,

  nothing

  much to live for, no

  better place to go,

  too many hours

  left

  before tomorrow

  arrives, bringing with

  it,…what?

  Nothing.

  When They Finally

  Come through the door,

  one little girl fast asleep on

  the shoulder of each guy,

  I am very high. And also

  a little bit out of my mind.

  With the kids in bed, the guys

  want to party. I’ve partied

  solo for hours. Can I party

  more, just because I have

  company? [No-brainer. Ha!]

  Smoking ice is the weirdest

  thing. I mean, one minute

  you’re totally pissed at the world

  (not to mention the people

  who populate the place).

  The next, all is forgiven,

  everything right, and you

  can’t really remember why

  you were so mad in the first

  place. It’s irritating because one

  of life’s true joys is being

  righteously angry about

  something. But load the pipe

  and the “righteous” part

  vanishes in a puff of smoke.

  Smoke

  There’s been a lot of that,

  in and out of my lungs,

  in and out of my room,

  in and out of my life, for

  the past two-point-five weeks.

  It’s Friday, the eleventh

  of January. Trey and I have

  been together the entire

  time, a long, spectacular

  semester break, almost over.

  My car is out of impound,

  thanks to a generous loan

  from Brad. I asked Mom,

  but she was still pissed

  about Christmas and told

  me to come up with the two

  hundred sixty bucks on my

  own. I tried Leigh, too, but

  she’s tapped out from her

  trip. Airfare isn’t cheap.

  Brad’s tow buddy brought

  the LTD home. It’s in the garage,

  in need of a new radiator.

  The nose-down gig sent the fan

  smack through the old one.

  That will have to wait until

  I come up with a few hundred

  dollars. The car can use a little

  bodywork, too, but not much.

  Those classic Fords are tough.

  And anyway, Old Man Winter

  has seriously arrived. More than

  five feet of snow have fallen.

  Not enough plows to go around,

  even the streets are piled high.

  No way could I maneuver icy

  avenues. Trey’s Mustang isn’t

  exactly a snow-country car either.

  He finally broke down and bought

  tire chains so we could go somewhere.

  Mostly we’ve stayed inside,

  watching Pay Per View, pulling

  domestic duty, playing with the girls—

  and each other. Just like an old

  married couple, Brad observed.

  Trey begged to differ. Except

  we’re not old, and I don’t think

  too many married couples stay

  up half the night, smoking glass

  and playing kinky games.

  That piqued Brad’s interest.

  Oh, do tell me more. I’m living

  vicariously through the two

  of you, I hope you know.

  Please feed my imagination.

  Trey looked at me, and Kristina

  flinched but Bree knew just what

  to say. “Maybe someday we’ll let

  you watch. Until then, your

  imagination will have to go hungry.”

  Damn, she is brave! I still can’t

  believe she and Kristina share

  a brain—or a mouth. And now

  that Trey has to leave, I hope she

  can show me how to stay strong.

  Highlights of the Last Two Weeks

  One:

  Sledding with the girls on a long, wide

  track down a

  nearby hill. Towing them up, pushing

  them off, watching

  them laugh—really laugh—for

  the first time,

  according to Brad, since their

  mommy went away.

  Bonus:

  Hauling out-of-control

  down that hill, safe in Trey’s arms.

  Two:

  New Year’s Eve with Trey and Brad,

  after having made

  ourselves eat and sleep for a couple

  of days. Feeling

  hopeful, like the resolutions I made

  (less meth, more

  family, and all the Trey I can get)

  are within reach.

  Bonus:

  Staying up after

  midnight without feeling sleepy.

  Three:

  Introducing Trey to Leigh and Heather.

  Okay, Heather

  didn’t really much matter, but it meant

  everything for Leigh

  to have met the guy I’m in love with.

  I’m glad she agreed

  to hook up with us, even though

  Mom was livid.

  Bonus:

  She brought Hunter

  along. And yes, he remembered me.

  Every High

  Has an equal, measurable low:

  One:

  Baking cookies with the girls. Slice-

  and-bake dough,

  a brand-new oven, and spotless

  Teflon cookie sheets,

  and no matter how hard I tried, how diligently

  I watched them, I burned every

  single batch.

  Bonus:

  LaTreya’s observation:

  Mommy never burned the cookies.

  Two:

  My first real argument with Trey,

  after a three-day

  bender, both of us booming toward

  a major crash.

  He had the nerve to mention this

  girl in Stockton

  who has a thing for him, and tell me she’s cute.

  Bonus:

  This fabulous information:

  If I wasn’t with you, I’d be with her.

  Three:

  That schizoid, blank-brain state

  that accompanies

  every total crash. Forcing yourself

  into that state

  because you know you have to

  crash or die.

  Sweating. Shaking. Running

  to the bathroom.

  Bonus:

  Remembering Leigh’s words:

  Throwing up? Kristina, you’re not…

  I Haven’t Mentioned the Possibility

  To Trey, because I don’t really believe

  it’s possible. I mean, I haven’t even

  had a period yet, not since giving birth.

  Think, Kristina, back to eighth-grade sex ed.

  How long after having a baby until you’re

  fertile? Doesn’t breast-feeding delay that?

  [Yeah, like yo
u breast-fed so long!]

  Maybe it is possible. But not probable.

  I guess I should go on the pill. But those

  ob-gyn visits…I haven’t even gone in

  for my postpartum checkup, and I wasn’t

  supposed to have sex again until after

  some icky doctor with plastered-on

  concern put his gooey latex gloves

  in unmentionable places; pushed

  here, poked there, manipulated

  internal organs, assessing any damage;

  and finally, like the act could be a gift,

  checking mammary glands for signs

  of blockage. [Whose gift—his or mine?]

  Nope, I didn’t exactly hurry in for that.

  Too late now. [Hopefully not too, too late.]

  Shut up. I can’t be pregnant because I won’t

  be pregnant. There, I’ve made up my mind.

  But Lying Here

  Next to Trey, who has somehow

  managed to attain sleep on our

  last night together, possibility

  piles on possibility.

  Possibly,

  I’m pregnant.

  Possibly,

  I’ve damaged the baby.

  Possibly,

  I will choose to abort.

  Possibly,

  Trey won’t support me,

  won’t even come back to me.

  Possibly,

  he’ll settle down with the pretty

  girl in Stockton.

  Possibly,

  he’ll settle down with some

  other pretty girl in Stockton.

  Probably,

  he’ll break my heart because

  definitely,

  I am totally in love with him.

  I listen to the shallow in-and-out

  of his breathing, reach

  for the warmth of him,

  draw it into the bitter cold

  well in the pit of my stomach.

  I will not sleep tonight.

  I will cry.

  In the White Shadow of Morning

  He reaches for

  me. Rains down

  on me, showers

  me with ecstasy.

  My tears fall

  upon the pillow,

  fall upon his skin.

  It drinks them in.

  Don’t cry, he

  soothes. You know

  I love you, will

  never hurt you.

  But hurt pounds

  against me now,

  a hammer of pain

  beating my heart.

  I crawl into his

  arms, lay my head

  against his shoulder,

  a fearful child.

  “I know you have

  to go. But I don’t

  know how to let

  you. So just go.”

  The Door Closes

  behind him.

  I pretend he’s

  just gone to

  the kitchen.

  I worried all

  last night. I’m

  all worried out.

  All smoked out.

  All talked out.

  Sleep hovers,

  just there, and

  I reach for it so

  I won’t hear the

  girls’ good-byes,

  the Mustang’s rev,

  the tink-tink of its

  chains against

  the pavement.

  Chains against

  the icy pavement.

  Chains against

  the snow. It’s

  snowing, I think.

  Snowing in my

  brain. I close my

  eyes, give myself

  up to the blizzard.

  A Kiss Falls Softly

  On my forehead, coaxes

  me awake. A kiss? Trey?

  Did Trey come back already?

  How long have I slept?

  Wake up, Kristina. No, not

  Trey. I open my eyes.

  Brad smiles. I was starting

  to worry. You’ve been asleep

  since yesterday. Trey called

  to let you know he made

  it back okay. I asked if I should

  wake you, but he said no.

  The blizzard has cleared,

  but I’m still pretty fuzzy.

  The light is soft, secretive.

  “What time is it, anyway?”

  After three. You’ve been

  out for almost thirty hours.

  Even the girls were starting

  to ask where you were.

  I’m making a pot roast

  for dinner. You could probably

  use some food too. Do you

  think you can eat?

  “I’m starving!” I look into

  his eyes, find a stew of concern

  and humor, which I tap into. “In

  fact, I could probably eat you.”

  He laughs. I’ll keep that

  in mind. Maybe for dessert?

  Anyway, we’re watching

  Harry Potter. Come on down

  and join us, if you want.

  Meanwhile, I’ll let the girls

  know you haven’t left like

  their mother, after all.

  I Still Haven’t Left

  Five weeks since Trey went

  back to school, and life as a nanny

  has become the status quo.

  It isn’t really hard most

  of the time. LaTreya leaves

  for school at eight A.M.

  Devon is in P.M. kindergarten.

  She catches the bus at eleven.

  The two ride home together.

  So I have several hours each day

  to myself. Funny thing is, except

  for the easy supply of meth,

  life isn’t much different here

  than it was at home. I still get up,

  have breakfast [or not], study

  for my GED, which I plan to take

  next month. Only now I care for

  for a stranger’s children instead

  of my own baby. Okay, that’s not

  fair. Brad hardly qualifies as

  a stranger. He’s become a real

  friend, not to mention an ear for

  my semi-demented ramblings,

  mostly about Trey, who still

  hasn’t learned to call. When he

  first left, it was easy to believe

  he was just too busy with settling

  into the new semester. But now

  I’m starting to think he has settled

  into his pretty new girlfriend.

  Don’t worry is Brad’s learned

  council. Trey has never been

  a master communicator.

  But the fact is, I’m lonely, way

  out here in Red Rock, still no

  transportation, and no company

  during the day but a couple of kids.

  They’ve warmed up to me some,

  but I will never be Mommy.

  Trey manages to touch base

  maybe once or twice a week.

  Not enough. Not enough.

  And there’s not enough crystal

  between here and Mexico to combat

  my growing sense of isolation.

  Alone

  Everything changes.

  You might call it

  distorted

  reality

  and as much as I once

  might have disagreed,

  now the silence

  closes in,

  like in those B

  scary movies where

  a crypt forms around you,

  walls you in,

  brick by invisible

  brick, regret the mortar

  sealing the chinks,

  until

  there’s only a tiny hole

  left, one pinhole

  between you and

  suffocatio
n.

  One Good Thing

  I finally started my period,

  the bad part of that being that it

  was a doozy. I bled like a butchered

  pig for over a week. Don’t

  know if that means I miscarried

  or my body just jumped back

  in, balls out. Either way, I’m not

  pregnant. And that is a very good

  thing, especially now that it’s over.

  I’m marking the date on my

  calendar so I have some idea

  when to start being careful.

  Oops. Don’t have to be careful.

  Trey won’t be home until spring

  break, and that’s still weeks away.

  [Remember that ob-gyn thing?]

  Yeah, yeah. I’ll get around to it,

  maybe even before spring break.

  Jeez, maybe I can’t get pregnant.

  Maybe having a baby at seventeen

  screwed up my uterus, confused

  my hormones. [Wishful thinker,

  aren’t you?] Anyway, I’m safe

  for now. A couple fewer possibilities.

  Brad Is a Little Late Tonight

  Stopped to see my Mexican amigo,

  he explains. Es muy bueno!

  The new batch is really good.

  Why is it I don’t doubt that?

  As we eat dinner, my stomach

  churns in anticipation. I can’t

  afford to buy much, but I hope—

 

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