Tilt

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Tilt Page 9

by Ellen Hopkins


  No. Tears soften the fierce look she

  shoots Em’s way. Love isn’t invincible.

  Some people take advantage of that.

  I Despise Being in the Middle

  Of a battle between friends. I jump to

  my feet, leaving Audrey with a weak,

  “If you need to talk, call me, okay?”

  She nods. Buries her face in a magazine

  as Emily exits the smeared glass door.

  I follow, happy for fresh air, even if it

  is tainted by city smells—hot cement,

  exhaust, a hint of Dumpster. Em waits

  until we’re both in the car to query,

  So what’s up with her? She’s fishing,

  but I’m not taking the bait. I shrug.

  “We didn’t get to talk all that much.”

  A caustic smile contorts her face.

  I thought she might have mentioned

  the abortion. Don’t look so surprised.

  Of course I know. Clay told me everything.

  What else do I really not want to know?

  Maybe being grounded isn’t such a bad thing.

  Audrey

  A Bad Thing

  Happened this summer,

  and it began as something

  wonderful. Something shared

  between

  two people awash in forever

  love. Sex, not for carnal need

  alone, but as an outpouring of

  heaven-

  born connection. I believed that.

  Then, an inkling of conception,

  and

  in the first days, denial. Tick.

  Tock. Certainty dawning, the

  brimstone

  of anger and blame seethed,

  roiled by fear into a magma

  of doubt. And what emerged from

  the limbo

  was a decision that he has already

  forgotten because he doesn’t believe

  in ghosts. I do. And this one tiny

  glowing will haunt every hour

  of living

  until my own light snuffs out.

  Shane

  Glowing

  That’s how I feel most of the time

  since I’ve hooked up with Alex.

  It’s like he pours his fire inside

  of me and when he leaves an ember

  remains, smoldering. He thaws me.

  Feeds me. Affirms me. Builds me up.

  I accepted my sexual orientation

  years ago, but Alex has shown me

  how to embrace it. Celebrate it. Believe

  with all my heart that I deserve love,

  and know I am safe here, within

  the “what” of me. I have undergone

  some elemental transformation

  that will inform my future, and it’s

  all because of Alex. I am in love

  with him. Addicted, really, and I

  am very sure that he is totally in love

  with me. So why do I chase him away?

  When I Think Like That

  It makes me wonder if some random

  grown-up has infested me, Invasion

  of the Body Snatchers–style. Then again,

  when was the last time I considered

  myself a kid? Not since Shelby, for sure.

  But seems to me that even before she was

  born, the “child” had been excised from

  my childhood. Dad was perennially absent.

  Mom was always lonely, and mourning

  a daughter who was at the time nothing

  more than something yearned for. The only

  real fun we had was when Gram and Gramps

  stopped by, bringing with them their unique

  brand of entertainment—hippie elitism.

  That still holds true. I’m glad they’ve

  decided to hang around a little longer

  this year. It’s like they bring spring-soft

  sunshine into this house of shadows.

  Mom needs someone to talk to, and

  Gram is always ready to listen. Gramps

  is just funny, in a totally crazy way.

  I mean, he’s all into Burning Man—that

  insane Labor Day freak-out on the playa.

  On the surface, he’s a sixties throwback.

  But inside, he’s what I want to be—

  smart. Intuitive. And nonjudgmental.

  When I first came out and everyone else

  was freaking, he was the first to support

  me. I can tell him anything. So I’d really

  like to ask him what’s up with me.

  Last night, Alex and I had an amazing time.

  We went to an Aces game. Scarfed post-

  game pizza. Then we stretched out on

  a blanket under the black velour sky

  and had long, slow, love-soaked sex,

  whispering over and over again, “I love you.”

  It Was Like Chanting a Mantra

  “I love you,” into his open mouth

  as I looked down into his eyes.

  I love you, as his tongue traced

  the outline of my lips.

  “I love you,” and then we full-on

  kissed. Not gently. Not that time.

  I love you, and he circled me

  with his arms, drew me into

  the heat of his body and then

  the whispers built into cries of

  I love you. And we rocked

  against each other, into each

  other. “I love you.” Wet with

  sweat and spit and spilled tears.

  Because we were defining

  “making love,” and that’s all

  that it was. Making love with

  each other and to each other.

  And at the pinnacle, his final

  I love you was a scream into

  the face of the night. Afterward,

  we lay there, knotted together.

  Then he said, I wish we could

  stay exactly like this forever.

  Forever

  Three syllables. Piercing me.

  Daggers. And suddenly I was pissed.

  Okay, in retrospect, it makes no sense,

  but last night, anger surged, hot.

  I rolled away, slipped into my jeans.

  “We should go before we get busted.”

  What’s wrong? What did I say?

  His voice was small. Hurt. He watched

  me slide my T-shirt over my head.

  “Nothing. It’s just me. I’m weird,

  you know.” As he started to dress,

  I added, “I think maybe I’m bipolar.”

  I tried to keep it light as he drove me

  home. But when he asked if I wanted

  to go to Tahoe today, I found an excuse

  to say no. Which doesn’t exactly explain

  why I’m in the backseat of Lucas’s stinking

  car toking with his brother Clay, Kurt

  the turd, and Tobias, the odd. Dopers

  are strange, which says something about

  me. Lucas turns up Caughlin Parkway. “Dude.

  This is kinda close to home. Don’t speed,

  okay?” He slows, but not much. We’re

  cruising maybe ten over the limit, skunk

  smoke streaming. Look at that, says

  Clay, who’s riding shotgun. Now Lucas

  slows a whole lot more. What’s

  the big deal? I lift up in my seat to

  see. Oh my God. It’s Mom, pushing

  Shelby in her stander. Clay sticks

  his head out the window. Holy shit.

  Check out the retard. Or maybe it’s

  an alien from the planet Ugly-As-Uranus.

  Hey, do aliens dig weed? He exhales

  a big drag out the window. Lucas punches

  it and I duck down, but not before I see

 
; Mom’s certain recognition. I think

  I hear her yell my name, but we’re gone.

  Everyone’s Laughing

  Everyone except me. “What the hell

  is so damn funny?” My right hand lashes

  out, almost involuntarily, pops the back

  of that fucktard Clay’s head. Probably not

  a great idea. I’m not small, but he’s got

  fifteen pounds of pure muscle on me.

  He whips around. What’s your mother-

  fucking problem? You looking to die?

  “You could try. But I swear it won’t be

  easy.” I push really hard not to sound

  gay. Don’t think it worked, though.

  Listen here, you queerbait. I’ll kick

  your ass and not feel a thing. Pull over,

  he commands, and Lucas does as he’s told.

  Suddenly, everyone is out of the car.

  Kurt and Tobias stand back, but Lucas

  holds on to his front-row seat. I take my

  best defensive stance. “You think talking

  crap about some poor crippled kid

  makes you tough? Dude, you’re nothing

  but a shit-leaking asshole.” Bam!

  His fist connects with my left eye.

  Ooh. That’s gonna be ugly. I reply, but

  he ducks and I barely graze his cheek.

  Nice. Just like a girl. But before

  he can gloat too much, I send another

  one, a roundhouse to the gut. Omph!

  goes his air. Which only pisses him off.

  He comes up swinging and I do my

  best, but he’s good with his hands

  and now my nose is dripping thick, red

  snot and my upper lip splits wide when

  my teeth drill through. Then, strangely,

  he draws back. Asks, What was it to you?

  Blood gushing, I admit, “That alien was

  my little sister. She’s not ugly, jerkwad.”

  Believe It or Not

  That ends it. Let’s go, says Clay, and

  his parting look is nothing but sympathetic.

  Something there, but I’m not sure what.

  They jump in the car, leave me geysering

  crimson on the sidewalk. Home is only

  a few blocks away, though. I feel beaten.

  Bloodied. Uglified. But vindicated.

  I limp home, wishing I would have said

  yes to Tahoe. I need an Alex fix.

  I take four or five heavy steps beyond

  the front door and Mom comes rushing

  down the hallway. Shane! What in the hell—

  Now she sees me, in all my dignified

  glory. I tell her I’m fine. Swear I stuck

  up for my sister, not an alien but an angel.

  By the time I get to, “I think I might need stitches,”

  Mom is my mommy. She may have forgotten

  my birthday. But today she remembers me.

  Clay

  Wish I Could Forget

  My mother. Our mother—

  mine and Lucas’s and our

  little sister, Jenny Leigh’s.

  How Mom looked just fine

  some

  mornings before she died.

  Like the cancer had up

  and skittered off in the night.

  If that had been fact,

  things

  would be different now.

  Dad wouldn’t be a pitiful

  drunk. Jenny Leigh would

  still be someone

  you

  want to know, not an eighth-

  grade slut. Lucas would have

  a heart, and I’d be college-bound,

  like Mom wanted. But you

  can’t

  gamble on college when you

  know construction pays.

  Pipe dreams of law school

  are something I’ll just have to

  forget.

  Harley

  It Pays

  To be patient. That’s what Mom

  always says when I ask her why

  she doesn’t have a boyfriend.

  I’m waiting for the right guy,

  she says. Someone really special.

  But for now, you’re all I need.

  I kind of like that she thinks so,

  but I’m afraid she’s missing out

  on something everyone needs—

  someone to gather you in, hold

  you close. Someone to make

  every day a little brighter.

  On Fourth of July, when Chad

  took off with his friend and left

  me alone, I asked Mom how

  to make him like me. She told

  me to be patient, too. You can’t

  make someone like you. It has

  to happen organically. Maybe

  Chad isn’t the right guy for you.

  She doesn’t understand how

  much I like him. I might even

  love him. I can barely breathe

  when I’m close to him, and when

  he smiles, my stomach does flips

  until it starts to ache. Sometimes

  he touches me—our legs brush

  or our fingers collide. Once in

  a while, he’ll rest his arm on my

  shoulder, and then I totally die.

  He doesn’t ignore me. But he

  doesn’t give me what I’m craving.

  I Want Him

  To call me “sweetheart” and mean it.

  I want him to glance at me and not

  be able to tear his gaze away.

  I want him to be helpless when I part

  my lips, touch them lightly with

  my tongue, like in movies.

  It may never happen organically.

  There must be a way to force

  it. To make a power play.

  I’ve lost ten pounds. Dieted my butt off,

  literally. Plus, I’ve still got boobs.

  If it’s not my body, it must be

  my face. Tonight, Cassie is showing

  Bri and me how to do makeup.

  Dad’s working. Chad’s out.

  Hopefully, by the time he gets home

  I’ll be transformed. Not good with

  “skank.” Vamp will have to do.

  Speaking of Vamps

  Now that we’re done with the eyeliner,

  mascara and blush session, we’re having

  a girls’ movie night, and we’re making

  it a Twilight saga marathon. Bri and I

  have seen them all, numerous times,

  but Cassie has, so far, resisted. “Wait

  until you see Robert Pattinson. You’ll

  love him. He’s, like, totally dreamy.”

  Cassie pops the first movie into

  the player. I’ve never been much

  of a vampire fan. Bloodsucking

  kind of reminds me of leeches.

  Bri snorts. Don’t worry. There isn’t

  a lot of bloodsucking. It’s mostly

  a romance. Like, the best romance

  ever. We watch Bella arrive in Forks

  and start her new school, complete

  with these perfectly beautiful

  brother-(pretend) sister vampires.

  And I fall in love—again—with Edward.

  If He Can Love Bella

  Chad can love me. I want him

  to be my Edward—taking

  care of me, always. Watching

  over me, day or night, unsleeping.

  Keeping me safe, by his side.

  Caring for me with a passion

  so pure it can’t be corrupted

  by time or distance or seduction.

  I know Edward is only fiction.

  But that doesn’t have to mean

  love like his can only be found

  in books and movies or rooted

  in the mis
ty world of dreams.

  The Movie Ends

  And Bri and I sigh at exactly

  the same time, which makes

  Cassie giggle. Robert Pattinson

  is pretty cute. But I expected

  a little more action or gore

  or something. It wasn’t even scary.

  “Now you sound like Gram.

  I loaned her my book last summer.

  She said it was boring. That

  nothing happened, and that boy

  vampires shouldn’t sparkle

  because it makes them girly.”

  That makes Cassie spit her beer.

  She kind of has a point. But hey,

  I’ve heard the werewolf is pretty

  hot. Popcorn and New Moon?

  It’s After One A.M.

  By the time we finish Eclipse.

  Dad came in from work half-

  way through, but that didn’t

  make Cassie quit watching, so

  I guess werewolves are definitely

  more her style. Looking at Dad,

  sitting in the kitchen, hair too

  long and stringy and disheveled,

  I guess I shouldn’t be surprised.

  Bri and I are putting our sticky,

  Coke-smeared glasses into

  the dishwasher when Chad semi-

  stumbles through the door.

  He’s wasted. But still adorable.

  Hey! Am I missing a party or

  what? Kinda late for . . .

  His eyes crawl up and down

  Bri, then turn toward me. Do

  the same. Wow. What happened

  to you? It takes a few seconds

  for me to figure out he’s talking

  about the makeup. Awesome.

  But I have to play dumb. “What

  do you mean?” I smile through the lip

  gloss. It’s just, you look great.

  And you, too, he says to Bri.

  Whoever you are. Kind of snotty

  and totally Chad. Then again,

  I didn’t introduce them. “This

  is my friend Brianna.” Who

  is staring at him with smoky eyes.

  I give her a nudge. “I’m tired.”

  Don’t forget to wash your faces,

  says Cassie. Nothing worse for

  your skin than sleeping in makeup.

  She gestures toward the bathroom.

  I go, and Bri follows me. Once

  the door shuts behind us, I turn on

  the water and whisper, “He’s cute, huh?”

 

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