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
BUT WHAT ABOUT ME? | By Marilyn Reynolds
Chapter | 1
Chapter | 2
Chapter | 3
Chapter | 4
Chapter | 5
Chapter | 6
Chapter | 7
Chapter | 8
Chapter | 9
Chapter | 10
Chapter | 11
Chapter | 12
Chapter | 13
Chapter | 14
Chapter | 15
Chapter | 16
Chapter | 17
Chapter | 18
Chapter | 19
Chapter | 20
Chapter | 21
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About the Author
About the Publisher
BUT WHAT ABOUT ME?
By Marilyn Reynolds
New Wind Publishing
Copyright © 1996, 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, But What About Me? 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, 1996.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Reynolds, Marilyn, 1935-
But what about me? / Marilyn Reynolds.
Summary: Erica has always been a serious student but when her boyfriend’s life starts spinning out of control, she does not anticipate the tragic consequences his behavior could have on her future.
ISBN 978-1-929777-013
1. Rape—Fiction. 2. High schools—Fiction. 3. Teenagers—Fiction. 4. Conduct of life—Fiction. I. Title. II. Series: Reynolds, Marilyn, 1935- True-to-life stories from Hamilton High.
PZ7.R3373Bu
[Fic]—dc20
New Wind Publishing
Sacramento, California, 95819
www.newwindpublishing.com
To Mike
Acknowledgments
I wish to thank:
Sandy DeMarco and Michael Quinlan of the Pasadena Humane Society, and also Danielle Chapman, Windy Wilde and Kristy-Lynn Surbida who are volunteers with that most humane organization.
Busy people from the Pasadena YWCA Rape Crisis Center and the Los Angeles County Juvenile Justice Center who were willing to spend telephone time answering questions.
Century High School students who’ve offered their own particular insights along the way.
My writing/critiquing cohorts, David Doty, Toni Frank, Karen Kasaba, Deborah Lott, Danny Miller, Anne Scott, and Lynne Shook.
Mimi Avocada.
Marilyn Reynolds
Chapter
1
The first time I ever talked to Danny Lara was about a year ago, at the Humane Society where I work. He and his friend, Alex, were both seniors at Hamilton High School and they needed to complete the Community Service requirement for graduation, so they’d signed up as volunteers. It was a Wednesday afternoon near the end of October.
I was a junior at the time. I’d seen Alex and Danny around school, but I didn’t know them. The reason I can still remember it was late October is because we weren’t letting any black cats be adopted out. That’s one of the rules—no black cats go out the week before Halloween, and no rabbits go out the week before Easter. Animals are not meant to be used for decorative purposes is the way Sinclair Manchester, the director of the volunteer program, explains those rules.
On that particular day, Sinclair was busy getting volunteers set up to help with a mobile pet adoption trip to the mall, so he asked me to help Danny and Alex.
“Get them started socializing with the dogs,” he’d said.
I love Sinclair. He’s this energetic, wiry black guy, probably about thirty. He has his official Humane Society shirts custom tailored and sends them to a special hand laundry. According to Dr. Franz, the veterinarian, Sinclair is definitely the best dressed Humane Society employee in the nation.
“Do you think we could organize a national S.P.C.A. fashion show?” Sinclair asked one day, walking to the end of a row of cages, then turning a model style turn and striking a pose. Besides being a great boss, Sinclair keeps everyone laughing.
Anyway, that day last October, Alex and Danny came walking downstairs, wearing their volunteer name badges on red H.H.H.S. (Hamilton Heights Humane Society) smocks and carrying their kennel keys.
Alex was tall and very thin, with blond hair that looked like he never washed or combed it. He had a tiny silver ring in his right eyebrow. Danny was taller, nearly six feet, I guessed, and darker. But he wasn’t skinny like Alex. Definitely not fat, either, but muscular.
They stopped at the big cage where the caracara bird lives. According to the information card, he’s a cross between a rooster and a falcon wearing a toupee. “Toopee” is the staff’s nickname for him.
“Look at his colors,” Danny said.
“Cool,” Alex said. “He’s got a black flat top and his face is all orange, like he’s used some phony tanning lotion.”
“He was rescued from a house up in Sycamore Hills. They found him all cramped up in a cage not much bigger than a shoe box,” I told them.
“Rich people,” Alex says, spitting the hate-filled words out.
“Neighbors called about it. It’s totally illegal to have one of these birds. They’re endangered.”
Suddenly the bird threw its head back and made a warbling, piercing sound.
“Wow!” Alex said. “Did you see that?”
Danny’s eyes were wide with surprise. It is an amazing sight. When the bird calls out like that, its head reaches all the way down its back, like it’s folded with its throat totally exposed.
After they watched the caracara for awhile I led them to the section where the dogs needed socialization. That’s the first job volunteers get—socialization—which just means spending some time with a particular dog, petting it, playing with it, sometimes taking it out to the dirt yard so it can run around.
“You can pick any dog with a green dot on its identification
card,” I said.
I took the disinfectant spray bottle and sprayed the soles of my shoes, then passed it to Alex.
Everybody has to have three Saturday training sessions before they can actually work with the animals, so I expected those guys to know the routine. I was surprised when Alex pushed the bottle back at me.
“I don’t need that,” he said. He unlocked the gate of a pen that held a big, brown mutt who was frantically wagging her tail and whining for attention.
Alex opened the gate. I slammed it shut.
“Whoa,” Danny said with a laugh. “Don’t mess with her.”
“You do need it,” I said, shoving the bottle back at Alex.
“What’re you? Queen of the kennels?”
“What’re you? An imbecile?”
Alex put the key into the lock.
“Spray first,” I told him.
&nb
sp; “I’m not afraid of a few germs.”
Again he opened the gate.
Again, I slammed it shut. The poor dog was going nuts, getting her hopes up with each turn of the key and having them dashed with each slamming of the gate.
“You don’t spray your shoes to keep you germ free,” I said. “It’s for the animals, so you don’t spread any diseases from one to the other.”
“Just spray your shoes, man,” Danny said, taking the bottle from Alex and spraying the soles of his own shoes.
“Here,” Danny said. “That guy, Sinclair, already told us all about this. Just do it.”
“I don’t have to do what some black girly-man says.”
I stiffened. I hate when people put other people down just because they’re different.
“Sinclair’s one of the nicest people in the world,” I said, feeling my face go hot.
“Yeah, for a faggot,” Alex said, laughing.
“That’s cold,” I said.
“You’re out of line, Homes,” Danny said. “Just spray your shoes.”
Alex gave a little laugh and sprayed his shoes.
“Don’t mind him,” Danny said. “He’s only messing around.”
I watched outside the pen while Danny and Alex knelt down next to the brown dog. I didn’t really trust them. Alex started rubbing the dog behind the ears, talking to her in a gentle voice I’d not heard earlier. The brown dog obviously liked him. Maybe he wasn’t all bad.
Later that evening when I was talking on the phone to my friend, April, I asked if she knew Danny Lara and Alex Kendall.
“Yeah, they’re cool,” she’d said.
“Alex is an idiot.”
“His family’s all messed up.”
“How?”
“I hear his mom’s kind of an alcoholic. And his older brother’s in some Youth Authority camp for assault, or robbery, or something.”
“Nice people,” I said, sarcastically.
“Alex is okay,” April said. “He’s practically grown up at Danny’s house.”
“Where do you come up with all this information?”
“I just pay attention,” she’d said. “Besides, I’ve lived in this place lots longer than you have.”
“Also, you’re a big gossip,” I reminded her.
“It’s career training,” she said.
April wants to be one of those talk show people, like Courtney Case or Ricki Lake. She thought she had a natural talent for gossip. Our career ed teacher told her to be a natural gossip was a curse, not a talent, but April didn’t see it that way.
As I told April how Danny had managed to smooth things over, and how he’d later calmed a dog that had been all scared and shivery, I realized I was sort of going on and on about Danny Lara.
“Sounds like love to me,” she’d said, jumping to one of her famous unfounded conclusions.
“You’re an idiot, too,” I told her, laughing. It turns out the laugh was on me, which April reminds me of every chance she gets.
When Danny showed up in the dog kennel the following week, he went straight for the spray bottles. Then he came down to the puppy section, where I’d just cleaned a pen and was playing with five black puppies who had white feet and white muzzles. He walked into the pen where I was working, then leaned down and scratched the back of one of the pups.
“I’m sorry about the other day,” Danny said with a smile. It was the first time I’d noticed the dimple in his right cheek, or that his eyes were sort of a light hazel color. “Alex really doesn’t mean any harm.”
“I don’t like hearing people make fun of Sinclair,” I said, getting mad again just thinking about Alex’s attitude.
“Hey,” Danny said, holding his hands up in a gesture of surrender, “I didn’t say anything bad about Sinclair. Don’t get mad at me.”
We both laughed.
“They had to put down some dogs about a year ago, because of a disease that spread through the kennels. It was really sad,” I told him.
“And cats, too, I heard.”
“Yeah, that happened back before I worked here, before the new addition. Now there’s enough distance between the cages that the cats can’t sneeze on each other anymore.”
“Cool,” Danny said.
I looked at him carefully, to see if he was making fun of me.
“No, really. That’s cool. I like how careful they are with all the animals in this place.”
“The hardest thing about working here is knowing that sometimes animals are put to death, just because nobody wants them, and they’ve got to make room for more animals coming in,” I said.
“They should just let them loose when that happens. Give them a chance.”
“No. You should see what happens to strays. That’s no life— half-starving, mangy, maybe getting hit by a car, no one to protect them or love them.”
Danny followed me out of the black puppies’ pen. We re-sprayed our shoes and washed our hands, and then went into the next pen, which had a mix of eight pups, some black, some brown. I started the cleaning routine while the pups clamored over my feet and rubbed at my legs.
“Don’t you mind cleaning puppy poop all the time?” Danny asked.
“No—I’ve been doing it so long, it’s no worse than any other dirt to me now.”
Danny made a face, then filled the bowl with fresh water.
“Where is your friend today, anyway?”
“Alex doesn’t want to come back. You scared him.”
“No.”
“Well, not really. He had to take his mom somewhere today.”
“Have you been friends a long time?”
“Since kindergarten.”
“I wonder what it would be like, to have a friend since kindergarten.”
“Don’t you?”
“No. My dad’s in the army and we moved around a lot. My friend April . . .”
“April Williams?”
“Yeah, she’s the first friend I’ve ever had for more than two years. I met her in the eighth grade, when we first moved to Hamilton Heights.”
“Have you stopped moving around now?” Danny asked.
“My parents bought a house here. My dad’s retiring in a few years.”
We went on like that, talking and cleaning the pens and playing with the dogs until it was time to leave.
“Which days do you come in?” Danny asked me.
“It varies. Right now I’m here on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Saturday afternoons.”
“Well, me too, then,” he said. “Do you usually work with the pups?”
“I start with them, but sometimes I’m in the infirmary, assisting with inoculations, or with spaying and neutering.”
“You assist?”
“Well, I prep the animals—shave them and disinfect the area, that kind of thing . . .I want to be a vet, so this is great experience for me—also it will look good on my college applications.” Danny groaned.
“What?”
“College applications. I’ve got to start thinking about that stuff.”
“Where do you want to go?”
“Maybe Cal Poly. I don’t have a clue about what I want to be, though. My mom thinks I should do something in environmental studies because I’m constantly nagging them about recycling.”
“Environmental studies might be good,” I said. “You’d be doing something important.”
“I don’t know. All I know for sure is I don’t want to end up in construction like my dad. He works his butt off and now he’s all worried about getting old and not being able to keep up.”
We walked out by the horned owl’s cage. He looked at us like he knew something we didn’t.
“He’s amazing,” Danny said. “Too bad he’s caged in.”
“He was rescued last summer. One of his wings was all messed up. They always try to return wild animals to their natural habitat, but this one will never be able to survive on his own again. He can’t fly well enough to get his own food.”
We went
to another puppy pen—a litter of seven little mongrels. “I like helping with the spaying and neutering,” I told Danny. “Every animal neutered means fewer unwanted animals to be euthanized.”
“Euthanized?”
“You know. Put to sleep.”
We left the pen, sprayed our shoes again, washed our hands, then went to a pen with a funny looking little dog in it—a kind of shepherd/dachshund mix.
“Wow. Look at you,” Danny said, laughing at the dog.
She rolled over on her back and looked up at him with pleading eyes. Danny rubbed her chest.
“Look,” I pointed to the card on the pen. “She’s been adopted.”
“Lucky doggie,” Danny said, “Lucky, lucky dog.”
Before Danny left that day he told me, “See you Wednesday.” I’d always been happy on Humane Society days, partly because I felt like I was doing something important, and partly because I always had a favorite animal to look forward to seeing. Then, after Danny started showing up the same days I was there, I was doubly, or maybe triply, happy on Humane Society days.
By the time he’d completed his Community Service requirement, some time before Christmas last year, Danny and I were seeing each other every day at school, and hanging around together on weekends, and April’s unfounded conclusion of “sounds like love to me” had come true.
I don’t want to get all sentimental here, but that was a very happy time for me, back when Danny and I first got together, when things were still going well for him. I hope things start going well for him again, like they did before his mom died. She was all happy one minute, making plans for a big family reunion-type eighteenth birthday party for Danny. The next minute she was hit by a car as she crossed the street to a nursery and garden supply place.
Danny’s changed a lot since the accident. I know a person doesn’t get over something like that overnight, though. Sometimes he looks so sad—more than anything I want to be there for him, love him through the sad times—just like I know he would love me through the sad times if things were the other way around.
Chapter
2
“Erica! Telephone!” Mom yells from the kitchen.
I set the biology study guide on top of my open textbook and walk quickly out of my bedroom. Finally! Danny said he’d call at six, and it’s already after eight. It gets me annoyed when he does that. I try to concentrate on studying, but mainly what I end up doing is wondering why Danny hasn’t called. And worrying.
But What About Me? Page 1