Violetaâs daughter, maybe Will is stuck inside himself forever.
Those words of Tavoâs: YOUR MAMA AND PAPA, THEY HAVE A MORE BAD LIFE, NO? Those words were starting to sink in.
So I gathered my junk and stuffed everything in my backpack. Then I opened my wallet where Iâd kept my salary and dropped every penny of it, over a hundred bucks, on the table/bed where Iâd eaten and slept and drawn and written and talked and grown for the past two weeksâhad it only been two weeks? It felt more like a lifetime, and Iâd spent it in the company of the best man Iâd ever known.
âThe money is for your family,â I told Tavo, âand for Violetaâs daughter.â My voice echoed inside the small trailer, a quiet empty sound, and I knew I was strong because of him. Of course, Tavo said he could not take my money, but I was already outside and the bills remained on the table.
and when my feet hit the driveway
I wanted to fly
become a cloud picture
live in the sky
float around to choose my own shape
and never come back down
and never come back down
The sound of gravel and leaves crunching under my tennies reminded me of the day Iâd arrived on the ranch. Back when I was a runaway. Shit. It would be easy to bolt through the darkness, hide in the hills, and return before dawn to quietly saddle Shy, hop on, and blast out of there. Iâd find a new trail, ride through creeks and on pavement, so they couldnât track us. Iâd create a different life.
I glanced over my shoulder and spotted Tavo standing in front of the trailer. My guide.
âGo home, son,â he told me. âEverything is gonna be good.â
I didnât move and kept staring at Tavoâs image, the glow of moonlight surrounding his solemn form, the only time Iâd seen him look completely powerless.
âGo!â he said, his voice breaking.
And while my heart exploded into tiny, aching pieces, we crammed our bodies inside Momâs car. The tires spun on the gravel, and we zoomed down the driveway, and the Triple R became a void. Gone. Erased! Did it ever happen? Because at that point in time, I was just a passenger being delivered to Hell while All That Stuff That Changed Me in Palmdale banged against my chest.
But hey, Iâve got my journal. I have my REAL thoughts. There were nights on the Triple R when I dreamed about my brother, and I was in this place running and running without going anywhere, and Will was behind me holding a pair of silver scissors raised high, aimed at my back, his expression cold and vindictive. Iâd wake up breathing in short spurts, carrying an icy knowledge about the reality of my life. And now Iâm home. I have to get past my fear, deal with it, conquer it. I have to find a way to be strong. Itâs huge, this art of surviving.
Willâs here. Will is here!!! How am I going to endure my brotherâs shit after everything Iâve learned? Tavoâs race horse story jumps into my head, the one about his amigo, the dude who raises horses for the track. One horse was smart and quiet, and he learned real fast. He was a good boy. But the brother horse, the older one, wasnât so smart. He never listened. What a stubborn horse he was. He actually bit his owner on the arm.
So which horse is gonna win the survival race in our family? I guess weâll have to find out.
DAY ONEâ
Fridayâ2:14 p.m.âat school
IâM STARTING OVERâTHIS IS DAY ONE AGAIN inside the famous Adventure Journal.
Iâm sitting in my history class, and I donât have much to write about except that Iâve been looking everywhere for Christi and havenât seen her. I still have this sweet image of Grass and her hips and that belly button ring, too. She lusted after me. Is that not what happened? (Even though she treated me like some kind of worthless Latino loser.) But I guess that kiss made me âa hottieâ in her eyes, right?
Claire Contreras
Holly Martin
Camilla Chafer
Dan Wakefield
William Sheehan
Jacqueline Winspear
Sam Gayton
T. A. Barron
Kresley Cole
Deborah R. Brandon