BEYOND DREAMS
By Marilyn Reynolds
Also by Marilyn Reynolds
True-to-Life Series from Hamilton High
Telling
Detour For Emmy
Too Soon for Jeff
Beyond Dreams
But What About Me?
Baby Help
If You Loved Me
Love Rules
No More Sad Goodbyes
Shut Up
Eddie's Choice
Table of Contents
Title Page
Beyond Dreams (True-to-Life Series from Hamilton High)
Only If You Think So
Baby Help
What If?
For Ethan and Me
Beyond Dreams
Uncle Tweetie
Praise for the Hamilton High Series
The Complete True-to-Life Series from Hamilton High | BY MARILYN REYNOLDS
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About the Author
About the Publisher
New Wind Publishing
Copyright 1995, 2014 © Marilyn Reynolds
All Rights Reserved
No part of this publication may be adapted, reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise without permission from the publisher. Like Marilyn Reynolds’ other novels, Beyond Dreams is part of the True-to-Life Series from Hamilton High, a fictional, urban, ethnically mixed high school somewhere in Southern California. Characters in the stories are imaginary and do not represent actual people or places.
Originally published by Morning Glory Press, 1995.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Reynolds, Marilyn, 1935-
Beyond dreams: true-to-life series from Hamilton High / by Marilyn Reynolds
Summary: Includes six short stories that deal with crisis situations faced by teenagers, including racism, abuse, sense of failure, aging relatives, drunk driving, and abortion.
ISBN 978-1-929777-02-0
1. Short stories, American. 2. High Schools Fiction. 3. Short stories. I. Title. II. Series: Reynolds, Marilyn. 1935- True-to-life series from Hamilton High.
PZ7.R3373Be
[Fic]—dc20
New Wind Publishing
Sacramento, California, 95819
www.newwindpublishing.com
To Ashley Nicole DiFalco Foncannon
and Kerry Ryan Foncannon
For taking the time to read and hear these stories in progress, and for offering gently helpful comments, I want to thank:
My writing/critiquing colleagues, particularly Karen Kasaba and Anne Scott.
Barry Barmore and the students at Century High School, especially Alyssa Phu and Tina Ybarra.
Assorted San Gabriel High School students in Donna Potts’ Advanced Placement Biology classes, Michael Donnelly’s Peer Counseling classes, and Michael Reynolds’ chorus classes, especially Catherine Nguyen, Casey Huynh, and San San Ung. Also, from the San Gabriel High School staff, Hoi Vinh, Karen Carrillo, Carol Schneider, and Michelle Buchicchio have been particularly helpful with this project.
Marilyn Reynolds
Only If You Think So
***
Here I am at Sojourner High School. Except for the American flag and the California Bear hanging from the flagpole, this place doesn’t even look like a school. There are seven classrooms in those metal buildings schools use when they run out of real buildings. Except this school doesn’t have any regular buildings. It’s all made out of metal. A school for losers my dad calls it. Not that old Gilbert’s such a winner himself, sitting home watching TV while he collects his state disability checks. He’s the full-of-shit loser—he couldn’t even hold on to his wife.
I sit outside the counseling office, waiting to find out what my classes will be. I’m not feeling very good about things right now. Since the eighth grade my life’s been headed toward the garbage pit—my dad lost his job, my mom and sister left us, and my best friend moved away. Besides that, I was always in trouble at school, I got kicked off the baseball team, and just last week I was kicked out of Hamilton High School. Sometimes I wonder if life’s even worth the effort. Things keep getting worse and worse.
Finally, after about ten minutes of waiting, this old guy comes to the door. He’s got gray hair, but long, like down past his shoulders. He’s wearing hippie sandals that look like they walked the grounds of the original Woodstock. He motions me into his office. I sit on a hard, brown plastic chair. He sits in a comfortable-looking upholstered chair behind a desk piled with papers, books, dirty coffee cups, and a dying plant. There’s a big glass bowl filled with what at first I think is foil wrapped candy, but then I see that it’s a bunch of condoms.
“I’m Mr. Grant, the counselor here. Welcome to Sojourner High School,” he says. He nods toward the condom-filled bowl, which is still holding my attention. “We’re trying to do our bit to combat teen pregnancy—help yourself anytime you want. They’re free.”
That’s another thing that’s not great about my life right now. I’m not needing condoms. But if I did, I’d buy my own. Considering the quality of school lunches, I sure wouldn’t trust the quality of a school condom.
Mr. Grant hands me a packet of stuff about the school.
“Look this over,” he says. “Pay close attention to the rules. No gang attire, no fighting, no drugs or alcohol. Any of these things will get you kicked out of school. If you come to school possessing or under the influence of any controlled substance the police will be called and you will be arrested. The same thing is true if you’re caught carrying a weapon. Any questions?”
I don’t say anything.
“Remember, this is a last chance for you. You either get your act together here or the Hamilton Heights Unified School District washes its hands of you . . . I assume you want to graduate?”
I nod.
“Well, you can do that at Sojourner High. We’ll do everything we can to help you. Do your part by getting here every day and staying out of trouble.” Then, his voice going deep like he’s giving me some heavy wisdom, he says, “It’s up to you— basically, that’s it.”
Basically, I think, it’s the same old school shit I’ve been hearing all my life. Follow the rules, do what we tell you, be a little school-boy robot. Boring.
The truth is, I don’t much care if I graduate or not. I’m so far behind in credits right now, I don’t think I’ll ever catch up. What’s the big deal about a high school diploma, anyway? All I ever wanted to do in high school was play baseball, get noticed by a scout, make my way to the Dodgers’ dugout. But after the tenth grade my grade point average was so low I was disqualified from the team. Coach Hernandez used to lecture me all the time about keeping my grades up.
“I know you’re not stupid,” he’d say. “And you’re one of the best ball players I’ve ever had. So how about getting it together? Put your heart in it.”
Finally he stopped lecturing. I guess he gave up on me. Last week I stopped by baseball practice to tell him I’d been transferred to Sojourner. He just gave me a long, sad look and shook his head. Then he patted me on the shoulder, wished me luck, and ran back out to the pitcher’s mound.
“C’mon guys, this is a tough game we’ve got coming up. Give it some heart, will you?”
I thought about all the times the coach had told me to give it some heart, or to put my heart in it, meaning to get serious about school and baseball. But I don’t know. Sometimes I think I don’t have any heart. As much as I wanted to play baseball, I couldn’t hang with all those full-of-shit classes.
The guy who’s the main pitcher for Hamilto
n High isn’t as good as I am. He’s okay in the field but he can’t hit anything smaller than a basketball. Me, I’ve got a great arm. That’s not being conceited, either. Anyone who’s ever seen me play will say I can really pitch. And I can hit better than almost anyone else on the team. But they’re playing and I’m not. Oh, well.
I walk into room three—English, my program card says. There are no desks, just big tables like they had in the art room back at Hamilton High. There are only about twelve students sitting at the tables, reading, writing, flipping through magazines. Two kids are on beanbag chairs, reading. I recognize one of them. It’s Mark Carlson. I remember him from woodshop. He was always stoned. One day Henry, one of the school narcs, came and got Mark from class and that’s the last I saw of him until today.
I think Mark was dusted when they took him away that day because he had that Frankenstein kind of walk thing, like there was no gravity under his feet. Man, I don’t mess with that shit. I may smoke a little weed now and then, but I don’t ever want to do the moonwalk.
A gray-haired lady gets up from one of the tables and walks over to me. I hand her my program card and tell her, “I’m new here.”
“I’m old here,” she says.
That’s kind of obvious to me, but I don’t say that. Honestly, so far every adult I’ve seen around here has gray hair. At least at Hamilton High there were some teachers who might live to see the turn of the century.
“I’m Claudia Merton,” she says. “Sit wherever you’d like. I’ll be over in a minute to get you started on something.”
I sit at the end of the first table, kind of away from everyone else.
“Hey, Merton. I need homework,” this kid at another table says. He doesn’t look like a kiss ass. In fact, for all of Mr. Grant’s talk about no gang attire, this guy looks like he just got in from a drive-by shooting—he’s wearing pants that are about a size sixty and his jacket’s big enough to hold a whole arsenal of automatic weapons.
“Okay, Sam. I’ll be with you as soon as I can.”
“You forgot yesterday,” he says.
“I know. I’m sorry, I just got busy.”
“Well, I need it,” he whines.
Is this Sam guy gonna cry if he doesn’t get homework? What is this, anyway? It’d be a cold day in hell before you’d hear me begging for homework.
“I need homework, too, Merton,” a girl says.
It’s funny. I’ve heard there are fights here every day, and drug deals and drive-bys. I heard a guy was killed here last year. I wouldn’t admit it to anyone, but I was kind of scared to come to this school. Sojourner’s rep does not include kids sitting around begging for homework.
Finally the teacher comes over. She sits down beside me. Weird. She asks me what I like to read. Really weird.
“I don’t read,” I tell her.
“Don’t, or can’t?” she asks.
“Don’t.”
“Well, that’s how you get credit in this class—reading and writing.”
She explains a system where I can get as much or as little credit as I work for. “You get credit or you don’t. It’s up to you how much.”
More of that it’s up to you shit. They make the rules. They hand out the grades, and then they tell you it’s up to you. If it was up to me, I’d be out of here.
“Write at least a page a day in your journal,” she says, handing me a little notebook like the kind you can buy at Thrifty’s. “Write from the heart, about anything you choose. Then find something that interests you to read. I’ll show you some things you might like to try,” she says.
I sit staring at the notebook. I’m supposed to write a whole page? She’s got to be kidding. I write my name on the front of the notebook, open it to the first page, and then sit watching the lines on the paper.
I don’t know what to write. How am I supposed to know what to write? I may leave after this period—come back tomorrow. It’s not really like school, anyway.
When the teacher finishes arranging homework for Sam and the other student, who I guess, don’t have anything else to do after school but homework, she comes over and sits down beside me again. She makes me nervous.
“Can’t think of anything to write?”
I nod my head.
“Here’s a folder to keep your work in,” she says. “Be sure to put your name on it.”
“Hey, Merton,” Mark yells from his beanbag chair against the opposite wall, “when’re you going to the bookstore again?”
“Tomorrow afternoon.”
“Don’t forget my book,” he says.
I glance over at Mark to see if he’s for real. I didn’t even know he could read.
The teacher gets up and checks a clipboard on the wall. “The new Stephen King book is what you want. Right?”
“Right.”
“Only if it’s in paperback,” she says.
“Well if it’s not, get The Shining. I haven’t read that one yet.”
“Okay,” she says, then walks back to where I’m sitting. At least this time she doesn’t sit down. She hands me a list of possible writing topics.
“Keep this in your folder. It may give you some ideas. For now, choose something from the first five possibilities, unless you’ve suddenly come up with something. Or better still, just tell me a little bit about yourself on this first page. Is there anything I should know about you? Write whatever comes into your head. Don’t worry about spelling.” She smiles, then walks over to check on this other guy who probably also has blank pages in his journal.
She wants me to write from my heart? Whatever comes into my head? She wonders if there’s anything she should know about me? I start.
One thing you should know about me is that I think school is a bunch of horse shit. School is boring. Reading is boring. I don’t like when teachers sit next to me because it makes me nervous. I wouldn’t even be here today except my dad says he’ll take my car away if I don’t come to school every day. He’s full of shit, too, but the car’s in his name, so what can I do? Even though I paid for it with my own money, from working, it’s in his name because I’m a minor. That sucks!
In fact, it’s all fucked up.
I wonder what old Merton will do when she reads this. Well, I wrote a page. That’s what she wanted, isn’t it? Probably she’ll freak out when she gets to the last line. I don’t give a rat’s ass. I’ve been kicked out of better schools than this one.
Second period is science, room six. One thing I’ll say for Sojourner, you don’t get tired walking from one class to the next.
“Hey, Dude. Didn’t you used to go to Hamilton?”
It’s Mark, the moonwalker guy.
“Yeah . . . How long you been here?” I ask.
“I got here first period, just before you,” he says.
“No. I mean, how long have you been coming to school here?” I explain. I think maybe he’s lost a bunch of brain cells. It seems like it.
“Oh. I been here since before Christmas,” he says.
“You going back to Hamilton?”
“Nah. I like it here. It’s sad in the girl department, but otherwise it’s cool.”
I look around. I think he’s right about the girls. I don’t care. Girls are just trouble, anyway.
For science I was expecting microscopes and lab tables. Instead it’s this rank-smelling room with hamsters, rats, fish, snakes, turtles, all kinds of stuff in cages, aquariums, whatever. This is science?
The teacher, Mr. Fowler, looks kind of familiar to me. Maybe he eats at McDonald’s or something. He hands me a packet of stuff to do for physical science and tells me there are lots of ways I can earn extra credit if I want to work with the animals, or on special projects they do around the school or in the community. I don’t really care about extra credit. I guess I could use some, if I cared about graduating—which I don’t.
“You can clean out under the rabbit cages,” he says, pointing out the window to this giant pile of crap. “There’s the tool,”
he says, nodding toward a broad, short handled shovel in the comer of the room.
“No, thanks,” I say.
“Extra credit and all you can eat,” he says, laughing.
“Nope,” I say, looking down at the packet on my desk. I start writing the answers to some of the questions, trying to be invisible because I don’t know anyone in here, when I get a glimpse of movement out of the comer of my eye. I can’t believe it! This girl is sitting at the next table with a big boa constrictor draped over her shoulders, like it’s one of those shawl things. I’m not even that crazy about little garden snakes and this thing is huge. I quick look back down at my paper.
I hope no one’s seen me staring because if they have, if they know I’m scared, they’ll probably wrap that thing around my neck. I keep looking at my paper, but I can’t concentrate on anything except that there’s a killer snake about ten feet away from me. The teacher is talking to some guys over by the computer. He doesn’t seem to care that there’s a killer snake on the loose. God!
The girl with the snake is getting up now and walking around the room. Everybody else looks real casual. I hope I do, too. I can feel my heart pounding in my chest. She walks over to a big glass cage, unwraps the snake and puts him in it. I begin to breathe again.
My last class is computers. Another gray-haired teacher— Miss Keyes. Unbelievable—she teaches typing and computers and her name is Keyes? But it’s a cool class. I like fooling around with computers and I never got to at Hamilton. Only the little school-boys and school-girls got to use them there.
***
When I get home my dad’s in front of the TV watching some talk show about women who leave their husbands for other women. My dad used to be a cop, but then something happened—he got rough with a guy he was arresting—broke his arm. So now he’s out on a stress leave, watching TV for life— talk shows, soap operas, cooking shows, ancient reruns—anything but the cop shows he always used to watch.
Things were different when my mom was still here. We always had milk and cereal and fruit, and plenty of other stuff I took for granted then, but I miss now—including my mom. She took my little sister, Katie, with her when she went to stay with my grandma. She’d had it with old Gilbert. I don’t blame her— he’s the number one butthole of the universe. I wish she’d taken me with her, though. We talk on the phone every week, but it’s not enough. Why does the boy always get stuck staying with the dad?
Beyond Dreams Page 1