What About Will

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What About Will Page 13

by Ellen Hopkins


  too fast for this stretch

  of road, and kind of weaving

  back and forth.

  “Hey, man. Slow down.”

  You gonna make me?

  Not me, but turns out

  someone’s going to,

  because behind us

  a policeman turns on

  his red and blue lights.

  Oh, man. No way. Here . . .

  Will reaches into the center

  console, pulls out a bottle

  of pills of some kind.

  Put these in your backpack

  and don’t say a word.

  “I can’t—”

  You have to! Hurry up!

  Unbelievably, I do.

  Will turns on his signal.

  Pulls to the far side of the road.

  The cop follows, parks.

  Gets out of his car.

  I hold my breath.

  Start to shake.

  Chill out.

  As the officer approaches,

  Will rolls down his window.

  The policeman ducks his head.

  Looks inside the car.

  Studies Will’s face.

  You in a hurry?

  Yeah. Sorry. We’re supposed

  to meet our dad and we’re late.

  Better late than never.

  Did you realize you were

  fifteen miles over the limit?

  No, I didn’t. Guess I wasn’t

  paying attention. Sorry.

  That’s two sorrys.

  The cop isn’t impressed.

  License and registration.

  Good Thing

  We’re not really in a hurry.

  It takes at least twenty minutes

  for the policeman to write

  Will a speeding ticket.

  It’s also a good thing

  Will gave me the pills

  to hold for him, because

  his paperwork is in the console

  and would’ve been

  directly underneath them.

  What isn’t a good thing

  is that he had them at all.

  The officer brings the ticket

  back to the car, hands it to Will.

  But now he looks at me.

  Who are you, young man?

  “I’m Trace. Will’s brother.”

  You sure you're his brother?

  In Nevada a driver under the age

  of eighteen can only carry close

  family members as passengers.

  “I’m positive I’m his brother.”

  Why wouldn’t he think so?

  I sure hope he believes me.

  Your court date is June 15.

  You’ll have to bring a parent

  or guardian along and hope

  the judge feels like being lenient.

  He could suspend your license.

  Yikes! Dad’s going to be mad.

  I understand. Will kind

  of chokes on the words.

  And slow down. You don’t want

  to be responsible for hurting

  someone, do you? Especially

  not your little brother.

  That would stay with you forever.

  Yes, sir.

  Will death-grips the clipboard

  the officer hands him.

  His shoulders are stiff

  with buried rage.

  Please don’t let it erupt!

  But he stuffs it long enough

  to sign the ticket, and

  the cop says we can leave.

  Cautiously

  Will puts on his turn signal,

  waits for traffic to pass by,

  then pulls slowly out

  into the right lane.

  He checks to make sure

  the squad car isn’t behind

  us, then turns his radio

  all the way up and lets out

  an ear-blasting curse

  before launching a stream

  of one-sided “conversation.”

  I can’t believe I got a ticket!

  How am I going to pay it?

  Dad’s gonna be so upset!

  What if he takes my car?

  What if the judge takes my license?

  What am I supposed to do? Walk?

  Each question gets him

  more worked up.

  He talks faster and faster.

  And now he’s starting

  to drive faster.

  “Hey, Will. Maybe slow

  down a little? I mean—”

  Yeah, you’re right. Thanks.

  It’s just, why did this happen?

  I probably shouldn’t point

  out that he’s why it happened.

  I look out the back window,

  see we aren’t being followed,

  then remove the bottle from

  my backpack and give it a shake.

  Now I turn down the radio.

  “What are these?”

  Don’t worry about them.

  They’re my prescriptions.

  The label does look like

  an honest prescription,

  one with Will’s name on it, too.

  But, “There are two kinds

  of pills in here.”

  Right. Because I only want

  to carry one bottle with me.

  Sounds logical, except . . .

  “Then why were you worried

  about the cop seeing them?”

  Because I didn’t want him

  to think I was intoxicated.

  Oh, Man

  Intoxicated.

  I always thought

  that meant drunk,

  like on beer or whiskey

  or something.

  Can you get drunk

  on pills?

  Is that why he drives

  so crazy sometimes?

  “Are you intoxicated?”

  Nah. Straight as an arrow.

  “So, what do the pills do?”

  Will huffs, but he answers.

  One of them is for pain.

  The other is for depression.

  I know a little about

  depression because Mom

  took medicine for it.

  She told me sometimes

  the world looked colorless,

  and she felt like nothing mattered.

  “What color is my shirt?”

  He glances over.

  I don’t know. Purple?

  He’s messing with me.

  My shirt is dark green.

  The color of Mr. Cobb’s ivy.

  “Very funny.”

  I’m tired of rap, so I change

  the station to alternative rock.

  This song called “Pain”

  is playing. It’s by a band

  called Three Days Grace,

  and the main refrain says

  something like it’s better

  to feel pain than nothing at all.

  That’s garbage, says Will.

  “What do you mean?”

  I’m sick and tired of pain.

  Believe me, I’d much rather

  feel nothing at all.

  “You said nothing hurts.”

  No. I said my face doesn’t.

  “Yeah. And that you get bad

  headaches sometimes.”

  Horrible. Like someone’s

  hammering nails into my skull.

  “How often do you get them?”

  De
pends. Stress can cause them,

  but sometimes they happen

  for no reason I can figure out.

  “That’s why you take pain pills.”

  Darn straight. They drop

  me down into this nice quiet

  space where everything’s

  peaceful and pain-free.

  “But aren’t they dangerous?”

  They can be, I guess.

  But not if you’re careful.

  “I really hope you’re careful.

  And I really hope you’re all right.”

  He laughs. A short, loud

  bray, like a donkey.

  I’m fine. Don’t I look fine?

  Fact Check

  Sometimes he looks fine.

  More often, he doesn’t.

  Sometimes his eyes

  are clear, and his words

  make sense, and he acts

  interested in life—

  Dad’s life

  my life

  his own life.

  Other times his eyes

  don’t focus and his words

  come out jumbled,

  if he says anything at all,

  and he doesn’t even notice

  Dad or me. He just stumbles

  like a zombie through

  Dad’s life

  my life

  his own life.

  And now I wonder

  if the pills he’s taking

  make him be the okay Will

  or the one who doesn’t

  seem to care at all about

  Dad’s life

  my life

  his own life.

  I Really Want

  To talk to Dad, so I’m happy

  when he walks in, just as

  Will and I finish our tuna

  sandwiches and chips dinner.

  Will actually made them

  and hung out to eat with me.

  He used to do stuff like that

  all the time, but I’ve prepared

  my own food and eaten alone

  for a while now.

  Guess having an awful day

  made him want to feel

  close to his family again?

  It would work that way

  for me, not that I’ve ever

  been kicked out of school,

  and I won’t be driving

  too fast anytime soon.

  It’s also strange

  for Dad to come home

  this early. He must be

  worried about Will, too.

  He confirms that right away.

  You almost finished there?

  Because you and I need

  to talk, Will, and Trace

  doesn’t need to be involved.

  “I can finish my dinner

  outside,” I volunteer.

  Mostly because if I sit on

  the back porch, I’ll be able

  to hear what they say.

  I carry my plate out

  the back door, which

  I leave cracked just a little.

  I don’t catch every word,

  but it’s easy to get the idea.

  Dad:

    . . . so disappointed

    . . . rely on you

    . . . don’t understand

    . . . can’t trust you

  Will:

    . . . sorry, Dad

    . . . sorry, Dad

    . . . sorry, Dad

    . . . won’t happen again

  Is that it?

  Will got off pretty easy.

  Dad says he’s grounded,

  but how will he know

  what Will does when

  he’s at work or Lily’s?

  Later On

  Will sulks off into his room,

  after Dad takes his car keys

  away when he finds out

  about the ticket.

  That gives me the chance

  to talk to Dad, who just got

  off the phone with Lily.

  Trace, my man. What’s up?

  “I . . . I’ve been wanting

  to talk to you about Will.

  I’m worried about him.”

  I am, too, son. But you don’t

  need to. That’s my job.

  “But you don’t, um . . .

  see everything.”

  Like what?

  Will’s already in trouble

  for school and speeding.

  He doesn’t need more,

  and maybe this will be

  his . . . what is it again?

  Wake-up call?

  Still, I need to know more

  about his prescriptions.

  “Will takes pills.”

  Yes. For his depression.

  You know what that is?

  “Like Mom has.”

  Right. Their brain chemistry

  is a little off. The pills regulate

  it, make it work more like it should.

  “What about the other—”

  Are you talking about me

  behind my back?

  Will materializes across

  the room like a ghost.

  A very upset ghost.

  Your brother is concerned

  about you, Will. That’s all.

  Will reaches me in three

  long strides, gets right up

  in my face.

  I told you I’m fine!

  I Can Play This

  A couple of ways.

  I’ll try joking first.

  “You are so not fine.

  Dude, your breath smells

  like a dirty aquarium.”

  His eyes go wide, and he rocks

  up on his toes, but then

  he gets the tuna reference.

  Yours smells the same,

  with old milk mixed in.

  “Yeah, well yours smells

  like far—”

  That’s enough, both of you.

  Trace, I’ll drive you to and

  from school for the rest

  of the week, since your brother

  is absent a car for a while.

  I took a few days off.

  Not too many, because Lily

  and I are planning a really

  special summer vacation.

  “Like what?”

  You’ll find out on Friday.

  By Friday

  I’m about ready to pop

  at the seams, my curiosity

  has swollen so much.

  Dad wouldn’t even give us

  a little hint about his big

  plans for our summer surprise.

  It’s been a weird couple

  of days, with him home most

  of the time. Like, he’s fixing

  leaky faucets and patching

  holes in the walls.

  Mostly, he’s babysitting Will,

  which sounds wrong,

  considering how old Will is.

  But if any seventeen-year-old

  in the universe needs watching,

  it’s definitely my brother.

  I’ve been kind of distracted

  at school. Good thing Cat’s been

  there to help me focus on

  our robotics project and Bram

  has been his usual entertaining

  self, cracking stupid jokes

  whenever I get too serious

  or antsy about tonight.

  The big reveal is almost here.
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  Dad Picks Me Up

  After school, but instead

  of taking me home,

  he gets on the freeway.

  “Where are we going?”

  To pick up your grandpa Russ.

  “Really?” Even though

  he lives pretty close,

  we don’t see him very often.

  Yeah. He’s coming to dinner,

  and his car’s in the shop.

  I thought it was about time

  we spent an evening together.

  “Why has it been so long?”

  Good question. I guess because

  I’ve been so focused on work.

  He doesn’t say, “and Lily,”

  but the thought hangs in

  the air between us.

  It feels like I haven’t made

  enough time for you and Will,

  let alone my father. But we can

  change that. I want to.

  “Sounds good, Dad.”

  It does.

  I hope he means it.

  I hope he follows through.

  I hope he finds a way

  to make more time

  for Will and me.

  But I worry

  our family’s too broken.

  I worry

  that even if we change

  for the better,

  it won’t mean

  everything will be solid.

  I worry

  that the more we try

  to put ourselves back

  together, the farther

  apart we’ll end up.

  I worry

  if Dad gives too much

  of his love to Lily,

  it will mean he has less

  love for Will and me.

  Desert Sky Retirement Village

  Is a pretty big place—

  blocks and blocks

  of plain little homes

  with yards that aren’t

  too much work for older people,

  all behind a big fence

  to keep everyone safe.

  Most of them probably

  own cars, but they drive

  around their neighborhoods,

  to the pool or tennis or

  shuffleboard courts, in golf carts.

  Speaking of shuffleboard.

  “Lily’s coming tonight, right?”

  Yes, of course.

  “Couldn’t she have driven

  Grandpa instead of us

  picking him up?”

  She was off today. Spent

  most of it at the house.

  “Our house?”

  Yes, our house. Working

  on a fabulous dinner.

  Cooking in her kitchen

  is one thing. Cooking

  in ours is another.

  Even if her food is good.

 

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