Part 1 (1/2)
Perfect.
Ellen Hopkins.
This book is dedicated to every person who has ever looked into a mirror and thought, ”I'm not good enough.”
With special thanks to all the people who have convinced me I am good enough. To my mom and dad, who encouraged my talents; and to the teachers who honed those gifts. To my husband, who gathered me in, and to my children, who taught me patience. To my cadre of friends who prop me up when I need it. To Ash Canyon Poets, who helped grow my poetry, and SCBWI, which showed me the way.
To my agent, Laura Rennert, and the Andrea Brown Literary Agency. To my editor and friend, Emma Dryden. To the whole crew at Simon & Schuster who help my books be the best they can be. To teachers and librarians, who share my books with their kids. And, finally, to my readers, who keep faith in me.
Acknowledgments.
I must acknowledge the dozens of readers who shared personal stories about eating disorders, beauty pageant experiences, and steroid use. These stories informed the characters in this book, who wouldn't be as real as they are without them. Thank you, thank you, thank you!.
Cara Sierra Sykes.
Perfect?
How.
do you define a word without concrete meaning? To each his own, the saying goes, so why push to attain an ideal state of being that no two random people will agree is where you want to be? Faultless.
Finished. Incomparable. People can never be these, and anyway, when did creating a flawless facade become a more vital goal than learning to love the person who lives inside your skin?
The outside belongs to others.
Only you should decide for you- what is perfect.
Perfection I've lived with the pretense of perfection for seventeen years. Give my room a cursory inspection, you'd think I have OCD.
But it's only habit and not obsession that keeps it all orderly.
Of course, I don't want to give the impression that it's all up to me.
Most of the heavy labor is done by our housekeeper, Gwen. She's an imposing woman, not at all the type that most men would find attractive.
Not even Conner, which is the point.
My twin has a taste for older women. Before he got himself locked away, he chased after more than one. I should have told sooner about the one he caught, the one I happened to overhear him with, having a little afternoon fun.
Okay, I know a psychologist would say, strictly speaking, he was prey, not predator.
And in a way, I can't really blame him. Emily is simply stunning. Conner wasn't the only one who used to watch her go running by our house every morning. But, h.e.l.lo, she was his teacher. That fact alone should have been enough warning that things would not turn out well.
I never would have expected Conner to attempt the coward's way out, though. Some consider suicide an act of honor. I seriously don't agree.
But even if it were, you'd have to actually die. All Conner did was stain Mom's new white Berber carpet. They're replacing it now.
Mom Stands There Watching The men work, laying mint green carpeting over clean beige padding. Thick. Lush. Camouflage.
I sit on the top stair, unseen.
Invisible. Silent. I might as well not even be here at all. And that's all right. At least I don't have to worry that she will focus her anger on me. Instead she blasts it toward the carpet guys. Idiots!
You're scratching the patina!
Her hiss is like a cobra's spit.
I might want to expose that wood one day. I can't if it's marred.
But she never will. That oak has been irreparably scarred by gunpowder-tainted blood. And even more by the intent behind the bullet.
Sprawled on the floor, Conner wanted to die.
Mom and Dad don't think so. In fact, for once they agree on something besides how bad their stock portfolios looked last year. Both of them believe Conner only wanted attention.
But he was way past hoping for that, at least the positive kind. No, Conner was tired of the pressure. Sick of trying to find the equation that would lighten the weight of expectations not his own. Listening to Mom tell skilled laborers how to do their job is almost enough to make me empathize. The more she goes on, the more I'm sure the carpet guys understand. There is no possible way to satisfy our mother.
I Guess In A Way I have to give Conner a little credit. I mean, by putting the gun to his chest, he made an overt, if obscene, statement- I will no longer force myself inside your prefab boxes. I'd much rather check out of here than let you decide the rest of my life.
”You,” meaning Mom and Dad.
The pressure they exert individually is immense. As a team, it's almost impossible to measure up to their elevated criteria. I have done my best, pushed myself to the limit.
To get into Stanford, I have had to ace every test, stand out as a leader (junior cla.s.s pres, student council), excel in sports, serve as a mentor, take command of extracurricular pursuits-cheerleading, honor choir, theater. All around dating Sean.
Sometimes I just want a solo vacation.
Hanging out on a beach, submitting to the temptation of sand, sun, salt water, sans UV protection. Who cares what damage they might inflict on my skin? Nice dream.
But what would my mother say?
I can hear her now. Don't be ridiculous. Who in their right mind would invite melanoma and premature aging?
When I look at her, I have to admit her beauty regime is working. It's as if by sheer force of will she won't permit wrinkles to etch her suede complexion. But I know, deep down, she is afraid of time. Once in a while, I see fear in her eyes.
That Fear Isn't Something Most people notice. Not Dad, who's hardly ever home, and even when he is, doesn't really look at Mom. Or me. Not Conner, because if he had even once seen that c.h.i.n.k in her fourteen-carat armor, he'd have capitalized on it.
Not her friends. (I think the term misrepresents the relations.h.i.+p, at least if loyalty figures into what it means to be a friend.) Book club. Bridge club. Gym spinners. She maintains a flock of them. That's what they remind me of. Beautiful, pampered birds, plumage-proud, but blind to what they drop their s.h.i.+t on.
And the scary thing is, I'm on a fast track to that same aviary. Unless I find my wings.