Robert E. Lee Is Dead
For making honor roll you got these stupid
Mylar balloons. They were silver on the back and red or blue or
pink on the front, with CONGRATULATIONS written in big clashing
letters. The balloons were supplied by the army recruiters who had
an office across the street from our football field, and they
always stuck a green and white U.S. Army sticker on the back. If
you lived in Lakewood, then when you got a balloon your parents
picked you up, or you drove yourself home with it in the backseat.
Either way, when you got it home, you waited for your balloon to
deflate slowly; and when it finally did, your mother smoothed out
the wrinkles and put it on a wall, or in an album, or in a storage
box somewhere, if you already had so many that another would be
redundant. If you lived in Eastdale, then the stupid balloon got in
your way the whole time you were walking home.
Geena Johnson and I lived in Eastdale. I knew her
name already—everybody did—but Geena was a girl like sunlight: if
you were a girl like I was back then, you didn’t look at her
directly. Usually there were girls following Geena’s lead, often
literally, wobbling behind her in platform boots they had just
barely learned to walk in, but she was alone the first day she
actually spoke to me. From the top of the hill where our high
school began, I had seen her walking ahead of me, briskly and by
herself. When she got to the chain-link fence encircling the water
dam at the bottom of the hill, Geena threw her backpack over the
top of the fence, balanced the heel of her boot against its wobbly
surface, and expertly hoisted herself over, barely breaking stride.
When I hopped the fence a few moments later, I took my time. Even
in sneakers I was not as slick as Geena, and plus, the balloon kept
hitting the side of my face and trying to pop itself on the top of
the fence. I was less awkward crossing the high, rickety bridge
that was probably the reason the water dam shortcut was closed off
to begin with. I took some perverse pleasure in knowing that a fall
at the right angle could have killed me, one slip, and no more
Crystal.
On the other side of the dam, home surprised me. I
always took a minute to recognize my own neighborhood. It seemed
like every day a new apartment building was being built or an older
store or house torn down. Things changed quickly in those years:
Eastdale pushed into the suburb of Lakewood from one side, while
white flight created suburbs of the suburbs on the other. This was
the new New South: same rules, new languages. The people who
could afford to leave Lakewood left; the ones who couldn’t put up
better fences. The rest of us were left in Eastdale: old houses,
garden apartments, signs in Spanish and Vietnamese. We adapted well
enough; we could all curse in Spanish and we’d skip school for
noodle soup as soon as we’d skip for McDonald’s. The handful of
white kids who still lived in Eastdale adopted linguistic
affectations with varying degrees of success and would have nothing
to do with the Lakewood kids. Eastdale kids and Lakewood kids
walked on opposite sides of the hallway and ate on opposite sides
of the cafeteria and probably would have worn opposite-colored
clothes if they could have coordinated it without communicating.
The neighborhood in the immediate vicinity of our high school was
called The Crossroads; don’t ever let anyone tell you that the
South is big on subtlety.
Geena and I weren’t big on subtlety, either—not
then, anyway. We were fourteen; she was flashy, I was brave the way
you are when you don’t know what you have to lose. When I emerged
on the other side of the dam and walked the wrong way down the side
of the park-way just because I could, I was not surprised to see
her ahead of me, doing the same. My balloon mirrored our walk in a
hazy silver film:
ELENA’SCHICKENARROZCONPOLLO29.99MANICUREANDPEDICUREPAWNSHOPKIM’SMARKETCALLHOMECHEAPPHONECARDS!
A block from my apartment building, I stopped at
the 7-Eleven to waste the few minutes my shortcut across the bridge
had saved. I spent five minutes debating the merits of blue
raspberry versus cherry limeade Slurpee, before blending them into
a disgusting purple slush. Geena was strolling around the store
like she owned it and was taking inventory, and when she finally
made it to the Slurpee machine, she picked grape and was quick
about it. We waited in line at the same time, but not together. The
man behind the counter grinned as I laid my change on the counter
with one hand and tried to balance my Slurpee and balloon in the
other. He pointed upward at the bobbing surface, and read:
Congratulations. He smiled and looked me over.
“You had a baby?”
I rolled my eyes and shook my head.
“Someone in your family had a baby?”
I stared at him stupidly. His face looked open,
like he was waiting for an answer so he knew the right expression
to make. I wanted to hit him or I wanted to say something clever or
I wanted to leave, with or without my stupid Slurpee. I was waiting
to be a different person when Geena stepped around from behind me.
I thought for a minute she was getting in my face to laugh at me,
but she grabbed my arm, hard, making little indentations for each
of her violet fingernails, and dragged me toward the door, calling
over her shoulder, “Nah, mister, she ain’t pregnant, at our school
they give you a balloon for giving all the teachers blow jobs. It
don’t really mean shit.”
Outside, I walked faster and hoped his English
wasn’t good enough that he knew what blow job meant. Geena
laughed.
“You didn’t pay for that,” I said, pointing at her
Slurpee.
“No,” she said. “Didn’t pay for the cigarettes,
either.”
I waited for shouts or sirens but none came, so I
followed her lead, matching her stride and imagining my steps
clicked like hers. Our bravado peeled a little as we crossed the
parking lot and avoided looking up at the men who hung out in front
of the store all day, looking for work, or drinking, or both. It
was after three, so the hope of day work had mostly faded and the
drinking was in full swing. They grunted appreciatively at the
bodies we hadn’t quite figured out what to do with yet, and we
shrank into ourselves at their cat-calls, as if blushing would make
our breasts and behinds less prominent. On the next block we were
cool again, walked tall and touched mailboxes and fence posts and
other things that weren’t ours. Geena lit a cigarette and I watched
her smoke.
“Thank you,” I said to Geena, once we’d reached my
building. I hoped she wouldn’t make me explain what I was thanking
her for.
“Don’t be embarrassed ’cause other people are
dumb,” said Geena.
Geena Johnson was my friend. Maybe not
right away, but things could happen quick like that back then.
Geena came by the day after the Slurpee incident. Geena taught me
how to dance and how to steal. Geena dragged me to cheerleading
tryouts and threw her arms around me when we both made the JV
squad. Geena also told me I’d have to do her homework sometimes so
she wouldn’t get put on academic probation. Old Crystal would have
had something to say about this, but I was suddenly a girl with lip
liner and red and blue pom-poms. I’d just nodded.
Out of respect for Geena, or maybe it was fear,
nobody from Eastdale really messed with me, but nobody talked to
me, either. They looked at me curiously, the way they might have
looked at a one-eyed kitten or baby bird Geena had picked up one
day and begun to carry everywhere. I carried books everywhere and,
without really meaning to, ignored everyone but Geena. On the bus
to away games I sat in the back reading while the rest of the squad
acted like girls were supposed to: Geena traded raunchy insults
with the football players, Violeta and April gave each other
makeovers, Tien stared into space, and Jesse perched seductively on
somebody’s lap until one of the coaches made her get up and saunter
poutily to her own seat.
Football season was almost over by the first time I
made myself noticed. Things had been louder than usual, and I
stopped reading The Souls of Black Folk for long enough to
hear what everyone was complaining about. We were on our way to our
second-to-last game of the season—one we were probably going to
lose—but all anyone could talk about was next week’s rivalry game.
The county had structured the football league so that every school
had a major rival and the season ended with games between rivals,
which were played for a prize. Our rival school was Stonewall
Jackson, a new school in the middle of the new gated community of
Hillcrest, the place where people in Lakewood kept threatening to
move. Its newness made the whole concept of Rivalry Week stupid.
There hadn’t been time for any history of rivalry between Lee and
Jackson High Schools, and there wouldn’t have been any rivalry in
the present if the school board hadn’t set it up that way. Next
week’s varsity game was known as the Rebel Yell. The winner got to
display an old sword that was said to be a Confederate relic,
though its exact circumstances were unknown and any history we were
given for it usually turned out to be invented.
“I can’t believe that lady,” Jason Simmons
called from a few seats ahead of us. “Like she don’t know that ’s
the whole fucking point of Rivalry Week.”
“Whatever,” Eric Manns called back. “I don’t give a
fuck what Mrs. Peterson says, eggs and toilet paper is some
bitch-ass white-boy shit, anyway. You would not catch me up in
Hillcrest trying to outrun the popo over a damn football
game.”
Jason shook his head. Mrs. Peterson, Lee’s head
guidance counselor, had made an announcement about Rivalry Week
during morning assembly. Traditionally, the week before the
end-of-season games was marked by a chain of vandalisms, but
apparently the school board was exasperated by the annual cleanup
efforts. If any act of vandalism is traced to a high school in
this county, Mrs. Peterson had declared, the cost of cleanup
will be taken out of that school’s activity budget.
I hadn’t been paying attention at the time and
assumed that the chorus of boos was just a general reaction to Mrs.
Peterson’s voice. The woman was thoroughly disliked; hatred of her
was one of the few things upon which everyone at Robert E. Lee High
School agreed. The Eastdale kids hated her because she had a habit
of hanging up on people’s parents when they didn’t speak English
instead of getting a translator, as was county policy, and she was
known for suspending people based on their zip codes rather than
their behavior. At a school assembly last year, she’d blamed the
dropping standardized test scores on immigrant kids who, before
arriving in Eastdale, had been “living in jungles.”
I hated her because she’d tried to talk me out of
honors classes and only signed off on my schedule because I’d
threatened to go to the principal. I was an accident; I’d slipped
through our school’s de facto segregation and she wasn’t happy
about it. I had been dealing with people like her since the third
grade, when I’d been shipped off to a “gifted” school as a reward
for outsmarting standardized tests. The magnet elementary and
middle schools were the Lake County School District’s last line of
defense against the evaporation of its upwardly mobile white
people. The Lakewood PTA had tried to get a new magnet high school
built, smack in the middle of Lakewood, and, when that failed,
tried to have Eastdale students rezoned to a high school five miles
farther away, but the county comptroller wasn’t having it. They
settled for an honors wing, which housed everyone whose
standardized test scores placed them into honors classes, or
everyone whose parents knew that you could pay a private
psychologist to declare your child a genius even if the school’s
official test thought otherwise. Essentially, the honors wing
housed all of Lakewood, and me.
I wasn’t sure why my Lakewood classmates hated Mrs.
Peterson. She seemed to view herself as their principal guardian
and defender, but they called her “the evil chipmunk” and did
bucktoothed impersonations of her behind her back. She did have
buckteeth, along with a dumpy figure and a wardrobe of seasonally
themed sweatshirts. Sometimes I almost felt sorry for her, the way
kids laughed.
“What the fuck are they going to take out of our
budget, anyway?” Jason went on. “We ain’t got shit to begin
with.”
That was true: much to the chagrin of our Lakewood
classmates, we’d had the lowest budget in the county for years.
Jason’s real problem was that Rivalry Week was usually a rite of
passage from JV to varsity. By the look on his face I could tell
Jason was comparing the Hillcrest Police Department to whatever
alternative initiation scheme the varsity players would come up
with, and thinking he’d rather take his chances with the
cops.
“Look, I ain’t even worried about the game,” Eric
announced. “Fuck the game, fuck Rivalry Week, I ain’t worried about
anything but the fine-ass girl I’m taking to the party
afterward.”
“Nigga, who the fuck wants to go with you?”
Eric surveyed the back of the bus as if looking for
a comeback.
“Antisocial back there might be all right if she’d
put that book down for a second.”
I looked up. It was the first time all season I’d
been addressed directly and I wasn’t prepared with a clever
retort.
“Aww, leave her alone. She probably got homework,”
Jason called.
“That book ain’t homework.”
“How the fuck you know what homework they got in
honors English? You barely know what homework you got in plain old
regular English.”
“Negro, I go to Robert E. Lee High School, I
know damn well ain’t no Souls of Black Folk required
reading. Maybe Black Folk Ain’t Got No Souls, Who the Hell Told
’Em to Stop Picking Cotton, Anyway?”
The people around us laughed; hearing that he had
an audience, Eric lifted himself onto his knees and kept
going.
“Don’t know why the fuck you laughing, Garcia. The
next book they read is Mexicans Ain’t Got No Souls, Either, and
Them Mothafuckas Don’t Even Speak English.”
He turned back to me. “Or do I got it all wrong,
Antisocial? Go ’head, drop some knowledge on me.”
I stared back and started to open my mouth, but
Geena was quicker.
“Look, she’s reading ’cause you idiots ain’t worth
her time. Now sit the fuck down before I beat your black ass and
then call your mama so she can do it again.”
“Ooh,” said Eric, throwing up his hands in an
exaggerated gesture of defeat. “I don’t want Geena to beat my ass
and call my mama.”
He sat down, though, and I had a sudden sense of
the next four years passing something like this.
“I know what to do about the new vandalism
policy.”
Even Geena whirled her head around in shock. The
whole back of the bus looked at me expectantly. I could feel my
heart racing and wondered when it had started mattering what they
thought of me.
“Later,” I said, nodding toward the coaches. “After
the varsity game, so the varsity team can hear too.”
Geena hardly spoke to me all afternoon. If I fucked
this up I was on my own, that much was clear. Geena had helped me
out, but she wasn’t about to go down with me.
We met outside school after the varsity game. The
varsity players had in fact waited around to see what I had to say.
I took deep breaths and played with the zipper on my cheerleading
jacket, feeling something like the leader of an underground crime
syndicate. My jacket said ROBERT E. LEE CHEERLEADING on the back,
but it was the front that I stared down at: Crystal 2000.
Crystal, 2000. Crystal 2000! I liked to think of it
that way, like a brand-new kind of Crystal: Crystal 2000!
Cheerleading Goddess, Criminal Extraordinaire. While I was
mentally branding myself, Tyrone Holmes, the senior quarterback,
interrupted and prompted me to speak.
“So, umm, I was thinking, like . . .”
I could hear the varsity cheerleaders giggling at
my speech and began again, flexing my newly credible Eastdale
voice.
“I mean, I’m saying, though, we fuck with
Stonewall, we get in trouble. First there’s the cops, and then
there’s the school board, and we don’t need all that. But if they
fuck with us, it’s them that gets in trouble.”
“You think they’re dumb enough to do that?”
“They don’t have to be.” I shook my head. “If we do
the school but we use their colors and make it look like it was
them, they get fined and we get the money.”
“You think we should fuck up our own school?” Jason
asked.
“Why not?” I asked. “Anybody care about this
place?”
Tyrone nodded and grinned at me. “You know,
Antisocial, you might be all right.”
“Told you,” said Geena.
A week later, we met in the parking lot of
Walgreens, supplies in hand. A few seniors with old, beat-up cars
carted about twenty of us to the parking lot in the middle of the
night, where we split up to carry out our duties. Tyrone and Eric
spray-painted the main entrance blue and silver—Stonewall Jackson’s
colors—while their teammates Rafael and Delos broke a few of the
back windows. (“Don’t do the downstairs classrooms: the heat
doesn’t work right and it will get too cold,” Geena reminded them.)
Some of the JV players TP’d the fence, while most of the
cheerleaders chalked the track and the main sidewalk. We were not
especially creative. Fuck was the worst word most of us
could think of: Fuck Robert E. Lee, Fuck you broke
Gooks, Spics and Niggers, Fuck this Ghetto Ass
School, Stonewall Rules, Go Generals! Geena and I
had the honor of vandalizing the school statue. We dumped a bucket
of blue paint over Robert E. Lee’s head and painted long, thick
stripes of silver paint over the plaque at the bottom. A final
Go Stonewall! spray-painted on the outside fence, while Tien
stood sentry and watched for passing cars, would be enough to get
us off the hook completely.
Afterward we were not so careful. A bunch of us
piled into Rafael’s van and drove screaming and swerving up and
down Lees-burg Pike. We smelled strongly of paint fumes and opened
all the windows in order to stick our heads out and gulp down fresh
air. It was November, but there were too many of us in the van to
be cold, we were packed in tight and squeezed against each other. I
could vaguely feel Tyrone’s hand creeping up my thigh, but the
dizzying combination of paint fumes and the wine cooler Geena had
given me earlier kept me from being sure I should do something
about it. Rafael swerved into Lakewood and we drove up their hills,
tearing past their mammoth brick houses, circling the private
beaches built around their man-made lake, where small groups of our
classmates gathered for parties on weekends. Eric rode shotgun and
blasted the radio while Geena and I screamed out the windows, and
the cold air and the hot van and the beat—because there was always
a beat—became their own universe. It was shattered by the screech
of sirens in the distance, and it was over that quickly. Rafael
made a sharp left and took the back roads into Eastdale, but not
before Geena stuck her head out of the window a final time and
screamed to the empty echo behind us, “Fuck you, too, fucking
cops!” and then collapsed giggling in my lap. We had driven all
through Lakewood, but when I got back to my apartment and sleepily
collapsed on the living room sofa that doubled as my bed, I was not
a bit jealous, not at all. They had houses, they had money, they
damn near ran the school, but they still had nothing that was half
as exciting as Geena.
We lost the football game. A couple of the Lakewood
kids seemed sad about this: they’d genuinely wanted that sword.
“Probably to cut our heads off with,” Jason said. On our part, the
loss was overshadowed by the enthusiastic response to the news that
Stonewall Jackson was going to have to reschedule their prom. We
knew they’d get the money back, but it was a victory nonetheless.
The school held an assembly to address the vandalism. The senior
class adviser chided Jackson for “not only committing such a
childish act but refusing to take responsibility for it even after
the fact.” The Jackson football team had claimed over and over
again that they’d had nothing to do with it, that we’d probably
done it ourselves to get them in trouble. Apparently it didn’t
occur to anyone to believe them. In the school board’s mind, we
still had loyalties. Mrs. Peterson gave a long speech about
embracing diversity—rather like a wolf giving a speech on embracing
sheep—and said it was mystifying that anyone would even make such a
charge against us. Geena and I sat straight-faced and said nothing.
It had been our experience that white people were very easily
mystified.
After that, my nickname went from
Antisocial to CeeCee, and Geena and I got permanent seats at the
Eastdale senior lunch table. My classmates in honors weren’t sure
what to make of my sudden transformation. After being harassed for
most of elementary school, I’d realized that the more invisible I
was, the more likely it was they’d reserve their cruelty for each
other. In middle school, I’d been the girl sitting quietly in the
back of the class, taking copious notes and wearing shapeless
sweaters. It worked. They’d all started hating each other instead
of me. For the first time in my life, I was the only person who
never cried in the bathroom during lunchtime. My new high
visibility violated the unspoken terms of our détente. I was
suddenly a girl who wore stilettos and hip-huggers, who ran into
class just before the bell rang, shouting good-byes all the way
down to the end of the hallway. I was still a girl who knew
more right answers than they did, which was the real source of the
trouble—I’d gone from being an anomaly to being an
impossibility.
Walking out of World History one afternoon, I heard
Caitlyn Murphy say loudly, “How in the hell can she walk in those
jeans?”
“How in the hell can she walk with that ass, more
like,” Libby Carlisle joined in.
“Well,” said Anna James, “I’m glad she’s turning
into a crack whore. Now I don’t have to worry about her messing up
my class rank.”
I told Geena about this conversation after lunch,
then thought no more of it until I went looking for her after
school. Vi finally told me she was cornering Libby and Anna in the
parking lot. To this day, I don’t know the exact terms of that
confrontation: Geena wasn’t talking and it was a full year before
Libby and Anna got up the nerve to even look at me again, let alone
speak to me. Whatever the case, Geena got suspended for two days
and no one fucked with me after that. I perfected the art of
smiling cruelly, then ran out of school to Geena, and the football
field, and the city late at night, to everything that was bright
and noisy and newly beautiful.
We were not always laughing. When Geena’s mom was
hospitalized with a tumor that turned out to be benign, I cut
school for three days to hold Geena’s hand in the hospital waiting
room. Later, when the attendance woman said the unexcused absences
meant we would both automatically fail for the semester, I got a
sympathetic young ER resident to write doctor’s notes for both of
us. When my dad lost his job and I couldn’t stand to be in the
house and hear my parents budgeting money in terse voices, Geena
invented reasons why I had to sleep over at her place every night.
When Geena had her abortion, I went with her and covered for her
with everyone who wanted to know why she wasn’t laughing like
usual. When I swallowed a bottle of Tylenol for no real reason I
could think of, Geena stuck her fingers down my throat until I
vomited, and through my vomit and her tears screamed until I
promised never to do it again. These were the things we never
talked about, but they were our things nonetheless.
In the spring of my junior year, Mrs.
Peterson sent an office aid to pull me out of class right before
lunch. A chorus of oohs greeted the announcement that Mrs.
Peterson wanted to see me. In the waiting area, I smiled weakly at
Mrs. Sanchez, the receptionist, hoping she might give me a heads-up
on what I was here for. She only smiled back at me. Inside her
office, Mrs. Peterson grinned at me with her big chipmunk teeth. I
had never been so scared to be smiled at.
“Crystal,” she started, and I fought the urge to
tell her that was not my name anymore and hadn’t been for quite
some time.
“We’re very proud of the work you’ve done since
coming to Robert E. Lee. Your record here has been truly
impressive.”
I was afraid she was going to expel me. I thought
of the worst things I’d done in recent history and prepared myself
to explain to her why going to Taco Bell during lunch, hooking up
with Jason in his basement, and loaning my fake ID to a freshman
cheerleader were not offenses for which she could legitimately kick
me out of school.
“Every year,” she continued, “we send one student
to the state summer academy. I am pleased to tell you that this
year you are our nominee.”
I was so shocked that my reflexive thank-you got
caught in my throat. She babbled on about the state summer academy
and how good it would look on my college applications. I sat back
catching bits and pieces. The seminar was on government and
philosophy, which meant I’d get to read more of the stuff everyone
thought I was a freak for actually enjoying, but if it had been a
seminar on decorating kitchens, I still would have said yes. Being
nominated by the school meant that I’d get free room and board at
the university where the program was held. I was thinking it was
amazing that anyone would pay for me to get away from my life for a
few weeks. I was thinking also that I was not stupid. I read the
papers: I knew the governor had just started a state commission on
the achievement gap between white and minority students. I could
picture Mrs. Peterson pouring the state investigator a cup of tea
and shrugging and saying, “Crystal has done beautifully, and
has been rewarded for it. If her friends showed the same motivation
. . .”
Mrs. Peterson was still talking in the present. I
snapped back into the conversation when I heard Geena’s name,
followed by:
“—nearly on academic probation again. I hope you
take note of this. Be careful about the company you keep.”
I wondered what kind of company she kept. I opened
my mouth to defend Geena, but knew that right then I couldn’t
afford to make Mrs. Peterson angry. Besides, what was keeping Geena
off academic probation was me doing her homework, and Mrs. Peterson
didn’t need to know that. I shut my mouth and left her
office.
I knew Geena would be mad; I just didn’t know how
mad, or how soon. After school she asked me why I had missed lunch,
and I told her I’d been in Mrs. Peterson’s office for our lunch
period and she’d given me a pass to eat during B lunch
instead.
“What the fuck did she want?” Geena asked.
I swallowed. Geena and I were supposed to work at
the Baskin-Robbins again this summer in order to save money for a
week of cheerleading camp and an end-of-the-summer beach trip that
we planned to take together. I told her all at once, letting the
words tumble together and repeating over and over again that the
program was free.
She was quiet for a minute after I finished.
“So, Mrs. Peterson is, like, your friend
now?”
“Not my friend. I mean, I’m sure she’s just doing
it because it looks good, and besides, I have the best grades. If
she didn’t pick me, she’d have had to explain why. But whatever,
you know? It’s not like she really likes me.”
“Yeah, OK.”
Geena started walking down the hallway and I
followed her.
“Geena, what do you want me to do?” I called. I
didn’t mean for it to come out like a question, but it did,
anyway.
She kept walking. I walked home alone, and I took
the long way.
I let the promise of summer comfort me while Geena
avoided me. Violeta and April became Geena’s new best girlfriends.
I was somewhat consoled by the fact that it took two people to
replace me. Vi made a point of telling everyone that she’d gone to
middle school with me and I’d been a bougie bitch then too. I
started to eat lunch in the library again. If Geena thought she
could make me lonely enough to change my mind about summer school,
she’d vastly underestimated my capacity for loneliness. I’d
perfected lonely in the third grade.
The summer passed quickly. I spent most of
my time in my dorm room reading. It was quieter than my life had
ever been and I didn’t mind it. Geena and her anger were a million
miles away from the college campus. I thought occasionally of the
parties I was missing, of varsity practice and what I’d do with all
my free time when I wasn’t on the squad next fall. Geena wouldn’t
be on the squad, either: without me to do her homework, she’d
failed two classes and wasn’t eligible to cheer. Mostly I didn’t
think of high school at all. I read Plato and Aristotle and the
Constitution, and in those moments I felt tremendously
insignificant.
I walked around alone often, but my roommate for
the summer didn’t find my quietness strange at all. Occasionally
we’d look up from reading and smile shyly. I’d always thought the
whole world was just a bigger version of Lee High School—a line
running down the middle of it and people on either side telling me
that I didn’t really belong there. There were still people like
that at the summer academy, but I also met a handful of people who
seemed to understand me on my own terms. A girl with a long black
ponytail offered to be my roommate if we both got into the
university. I thanked her, but in my mind I thought I’d like to go
much, much farther away.
By the time school started again, I had
almost forgotten what I was missing. I wasn’t lonely anymore; I was
just alone. That was the luxury I had then: Geena had already made
me possible. Her boldness, which I’d always thought I’d been
borrowing from her, had become mine in ways I didn’t realize until
she was gone. I didn’t flinch around people who didn’t like me; I
didn’t feel anymore like being myself was something for which I
owed the world an apology. Then again, if you believed the rumors,
everyone was past the point of apology: they were busy trying to
find a way to impose themselves on the world. I heard that Eric had
replaced the engine in his car and gotten it to go 140 down the
Pike, but it sounded like empty boasting; and as much as Vi was
enjoying her rise in status, I had trouble believing that she’d
actually make the freshmen cheerleaders carve player’s names into
their thighs with a penknife. It was senior year, and the world as
I knew it was undoing itself. The more adult everyone got on paper,
the dumber they got in real life. Libby Carlisle celebrated her
early admission to Stanford by nearly OD’ing on coke; the senior
class president got drunk one night and crashed his car into the
side of a church.
We were not so much tempting fate as bargaining
with it. With the sincere fatalism only teenagers can manage, we
assumed that what happened before the year was out would determine
what our lives would be forever after, and no one seemed thrilled
about their prospects. Life became an insistent preoccupation with
what happened next. The military recruitment office was full of
people I’d known since elementary school and never pegged as
particularly violent or patriotic. They weren’t, most of them, but
the general attitude was that the military beat working at
McDonald’s—at least you got to go somewhere. I started noticing how
very few people actually went anywhere; the parties I used to go to
with Geena had always been frequented by people who had graduated
years earlier but were still around, working, or at Bailey, the
local community college. Seniors started to amuse themselves by
noting how fat people had gotten or how many kids they had or what
kind of piece of junk they were driving; they knew it was their
last chance to feel superior to anybody.
The New Year came and went; I drank sparkling apple
cider with my parents and watched the ball drop on television. It
was the end of January before Geena spoke to me again. She appeared
at my locker after school, shifting nervously, which was strange,
because I hardly ever saw Geena look nervous.
“Look,” she said, “this is bullshit. You wanna go
to the mall after school?”
I neglected to point out that the bullshit was
mostly her doing. I nodded, grabbed my purse out of my locker, and
followed her to the beat-up old blue Tercel she’d bought with the
money she’d saved that summer, the money we hadn’t used for our
beach trip. It was as if the light came on and I suddenly noticed
it had been dark for months.
As quickly as they’d forgotten me, the crowd took
me back. Geena let me know who’d been talking the most shit about
me and we made a point of ostracizing them. We made up for lost
time with a few long talks and a lot of off-campus lunches. We
never exactly talked about the fight, and if anyone was rude enough
to bring it up, they met both of our icy stares and shut up
quickly.
By the end of March, I was on edge, waiting to find
out where I’d gotten into college and whether I’d have the money to
go. Geena was in danger of not graduating, but didn’t seem
particularly concerned about it. AP exams were over and the final
grades that would be used for class ranking were out. The teachers
knew they couldn’t really keep us in school. I spent a lot of time
driving around with Geena in the middle of the day. Some sophomore
girls claimed a section of our lunch table and we didn’t even
bother putting them in their place. We could already feel our world
slipping away from us.
I think it was them that finally got to Geena, them
and the four fat college acceptance letters I got in April. Walking
past the senior lockers one day, we saw one of the new girls making
out with her senior boyfriend. Geena shook her head and rolled her
eyes in my direction, like At least we don’t have to fuck people
to be popular. I nodded back, and mouthed,
Amateurs.
Geena came up with the prank idea after that. She
showed up at my locker after school with a sour apple lollipop in
her mouth.
“Hey,” she started, “we should do something. Like a
senior prank.”
“Geena. White kids do senior pranks. When we try
it, they’re called felonies.”
“I thought you were practically one of them,
anyway.”
I shot Geena a warning look and she dropped the
subject. Still, I could see her getting more and more upset by the
little things. She made a point of making Sophomore Slut Girl
change lunch tables one day, coming this close to physically
removing her. She talked with increasing frequency about the fact
that she wasn’t getting a diploma. She was of two minds on the
matter. One moment she’d shrug and say, “What the fuck do I want a
stupid piece of paper for anyway?” The next, she’d shake her head
and say, “They ought to at least give me something. Much time as I
spent in this dumb-ass school.”
I got used to her mood swings and went along with
them. It was easier than arguing, and I didn’t object much anyway.
When Libby Carlisle got named prom queen, Geena launched into a
ten-minute tirade on how she was the ugliest, bitchiest,
dishwater-blondest excuse for a prom queen she’d ever heard
of.
“Don’t worry about Libby Carlisle,” I said. “Libby
Carlisle is about to encounter the unpleasant reality that the
world does not revolve around her ass, and when she finally accepts
that reality she’ll need Valium and an exotic lover to get through
her boring and frustrated life.”
Geena laughed. “That’s why I love you, CeeCee.
You’re so full of shit.”
Geena stopped coming to school altogether.
She wasn’t going to graduate anyway, so there wasn’t much point. I
went to the obligatory senior class events and showed up for the
final exams that teachers administered halfheartedly. The rest of
my time was spent camped out on Geena’s living room floor, watching
bad talk shows and soap operas. Geena was getting animated again by
the prospect of end-of-year parties. Prom was too expensive, but
April was having a semiformal in her backyard the same night, and
we were excited enough about it. Geena and I went dress shopping at
what everyone called the Ghetto Mall, though you knew by who was
talking whether or not they meant it affectionately. I liked the
dress shop, its awning unpretentiously proclaiming DRESSES, its
owner a chatty Vietnamese woman who was good at eyeballing women
and knowing what size they needed, even if they argued with her
about it. I spent an hour eyeing the intricate beadwork of the
Quinceañera dresses, lined up in the window like cakes with
brightly colored icing, before settling on something slinky and
black. The day of the party, Geena curled my hair and put red
lipstick on me, sashaying around the room in her own deep-purple
strapless sheath.
“Damn, CeeCee. Remember what a geek you were when I
found you?”
“I’m not a puppy.” I pouted. “You didn’t find me.
And anyway, I’m still a geek. So there.”
I stuck my tongue out and fell back on her
bed.
“Well, you’re a hundred percent better than you
were,” she snapped back, curling her eyelashes in the cracked
full-length mirror on her wall. “And sit the hell up before you
smash the curls I just put in your head.”
I don’t know what we were expecting the
party to be like, but it was just like every other party we’d been
to since freshman year, except nobody was wearing jeans. The music
echoed all the way down the block and the lawn smelled like a weak
mixture of beer, weed, and vomit. The smell and the heat clung to
everyone there, but all we could hear was laughter. On the back
porch lay a pile of abandoned heels, shawls, jackets and ties:
girls had realized how uncomfortable it was to be beautiful, and
the few boys who’d bothered to take the semiformal status of the
party seriously had found themselves outnumbered and done a quick
ruffling of their appearances.
On the front lawn, Vi was trying to teach two
freshmen how to dance cumbia, the beat from Jay-Z blaring inside
the house throwing off the rhythm she was counting out. Inside,
people danced on beat, some pressed so close together it was hard
to tell one body from another. Others skipped the dancing all
together; all of the bedroom doors were locked and April was more
than happy to tell us who was in each of them. She was also
slightly tipsy, and melodramatically complained about the red stain
spreading across her living room carpet: someone had spilled a
punch bowl full of Alizé. It smelled sickly-sweet and looked like
blood.
Geena and I ended up in the garage. We could only
stand around and look superior for so long before we just looked
stupid.
“So,” said Geena, taking a sip of her wine cooler,
“you going to graduation tomorrow?”
“I have to go,” I said, taking a bigger swallow of
mine than I intended. Stray drops of pink liquid trickled down the
front of my dress.
“Right.” Geena nodded. “I ain’t going. They’re just
gonna gimme a fake piece of paper that says I didn’t graduate and
would I like information about some damn GED programs.”
I swallowed again. “I have to go,” I repeated. “I’m
the valedictorian.”
Geena laughed. “Like you haven’t been waiting your
whole life for this shit.”
“I’ve been killing myself my whole life for this
shit. They don’t have to expect me to be all happy about it.”
“Oh, right,” said Geena, smirking. “Poor
you.”
“I didn’t mean it like that.”
“You always mean it like that.”
“Look,” I said. “I don’t even wanna go tomorrow. I
have to. That’s all. No one will listen anyway. Half the parents
don’t care at all about any part of graduation except when their
kid’s name gets called. And the half of the ones that do care are
going to be so pissed it’s me speaking and not their gifted
child that they’ll spend the whole speech bitching. The only two
people listening will be my parents, which means I can’t say
anything I actually want to say, which is fuck you all very much
for making me miserable since the third grade, I’m out.”
“If it were me, I’d say that.”
“Yeah, well. I can’t. Anyway, Mrs. Peterson already
approved my real speech. It’s about success and obstacles and
respect and bullshit.”
“Well,” said Geena, “I guess Mrs. Peterson’s
opinion counts more than anyone else’s.”
I started to laugh, but she wasn’t kidding.
“You really don’t want to do this, I can get you
out of it,” Geena said. “We can tell every-damn-body how you really
feel. You and me.”
It was enough that I didn’t say no. Geena picked
her shoes up off the garage floor where she’d kicked them aside and
was already on her way out the door.
“You coming?” she called, dangling her car
keys.
With a halfhearted last look at Tien throwing up on
April’s front lawn, I followed Geena to her car. A few minutes
later we were parked in front of her cousin Ray’s house a few
blocks away. He ran a kind of automotive/construction business, in
that there were usually broken-down cars parked on the front lawn,
and occasionally he fixed something, and occasionally someone
actually paid him for it. I didn’t ask what we were doing there.
The lights were off, but Geena had a house key, and for a few
minutes she walked back and forth between the car and the garage,
putting things in the trunk: paint, a toolbox, a six-pack she’d
stolen from the garage refrigerator.
“You aiight, CeeCee?” she asked when she got back
in the car.
“Yeah, I’m good.” I stared out of the window and
tried to look disinterested.
“You want to go home, I’ll take you home.”
“I’m not going home,” I said.
Geena didn’t respond, and I stayed quiet. The roads
were all familiar. Within minutes I was looking at my high school
in the dark. Geena pulled over in the back parking lot, right
beside the football field. The field had been done over for
graduation. A wooden stage had been erected in the middle of it,
red, white, and blue circular banners were draped across the
bottoms of the stage and the bleachers. A gold banner, stretched
between two posts beside the stage, read: CONGRATULATIONS, ROBERT
E. LEE CLASS OF 2000. In front of the stage, rows and rows of white
plastic chairs had been set up for the senior class.
Geena got the six-pack out of the trunk and we sat
in the car for a while, drinking and talking. I didn’t even like
beer, but it gave me something to do besides look at Geena, who
seemed sadder than I’d ever seen her, or the football field, all
done up and ready for me to be a person I had never wanted to
be.
“Remember freshman year?” Geena asked.
“Yeah.”
“It was like we ran things.”
“We didn’t, though. It just felt that way because
we were kids.”
She made circles on the dashboard with her pointer
finger. “I’m going to miss you.”
“I’m not going that far. It’s a three-hour train
ride,” I answered, deliberately avoiding the reality that our lives
were to be measured in a different kind of distance.
“So, you really don’t want to do this tomorrow?”
Geena asked.
“No,” I said quickly.
“Bet you they won’t have a ceremony if the stage is
all fucked up,” said Geena.
We got out of the car and I followed Geena to the
stage, carrying the things she’d gotten from Ray’s. When we got to
the field, Geena put down what she was carrying and walked the rest
of the way to the stage. She climbed the stairs and walked around
for a minute, pausing for a moment behind the podium. She spoke as
if speaking into a microphone, but there was no mic, and from the
other end of the field, I couldn’t hear a word she said. When she
was done, she hopped off the stage, forgoing the stairs, and handed
me a can of spray paint.
“You serious about this?” she asked.
By way of answering, I uncapped the can and pointed
it at her for a second, grinning. Then I walked to the far end of
the football field, by the opposing team’s goalposts. I wanted to
say the one thing that would make everybody see themselves for what
they really were, but I had no special insight into the human
condition. I had only one thing to say, the thing I’d been
swallowing every day since I had first been confronted with the
entitled faces of my “gifted” Lakewood classmates, since I’d first
heard the taunts of the Eastdale neighborhood kids, who would have
ignored me my whole life if it hadn’t been for Geena, who would
have never understood that I was angry on their behalf as much as
on mine. YOU ARE NOT AS SPECIAL AS YOU THINK YOU ARE, I sprayed in
huge letters on the grass. I shook the paint can when I’d finished,
but it was empty.
“Geena,” I called, “I’m not done. Bring me another
paint can.”
But she didn’t answer me, and when I turned around,
she wasn’t doing anything herself, just leaning against the stage,
smoking a Newport and looking at me with some mix of concern and
confusion. She walked over to where I was standing.
“Come on,” she said, dropping her cigarette and
taking my hand. “Let’s go. I shouldn’t have talked you into
this.”
“No,” I said, “I’m not finished. And you didn’t
talk me into it.”
I wanted to sign my name—my real one. I wanted, for
the first time in my life, the world to see my real self, my whole
one. I walked over to where Geena had left the paint cans and went
back to my work of art. FUCK YOU, I wrote. LOVE, CRYSTAL.
“Crystal,” Geena yelled when I was halfway done,
“are you drunk or are you stupid? You can’t put your real goddamn
name! Put mine!”
But I wasn’t drunk or stupid, just tipsy and angry,
and it wasn’t about Geena anymore, or even about tomorrow. I saw
Geena coming over with a small brush and paint can in her hand,
watched her dump it over the C in my name. I expected it to
be swallowed up in fresh paint, but it remained clear, like Geena
had just splashed it with water, and something sharp hit my
nostrils.
“Shit!” Geena shrieked. “That was paint thinner.
Fucking Ray.”
For a second we started to laugh together at Ray’s
ineptitude, but then I saw the faintest shimmer of orange a few
feet from where she’d spilled it, remembered the cigarette she’d
dropped earlier. I grabbed her hand and we raced breathlessly down
to the other end of the field. I was still thinking it wasn’t a big
deal, that we could grab the water hose attached to the back of the
school and put it out before it got any bigger, but by the time we
turned around, the fire had scorched the whole spot where the
letter C had been, and was starting to spread from there. It was
almost summer, and the grass on the football field was dry and
brown. I had heard once that our football field was a Civil War
graveyard; watching the fire slither outward from one blade of
glass to the next, I believed it. The fire was still small in area
and low to the ground, but if nothing stopped it, it would reach
the wooden stage, and then perhaps the wooden bleachers, and
eventually the trees behind them, then finally the houses behind
it. I looked at the fifty-yard line, where the grass no longer said
CRYSTAL, and above it, where it still said YOU ARE NOT AS SPECIAL
AS YOU THINK YOU ARE but wouldn’t for long. I ran for the pay phone
in the school’s front parking lot, Geena behind me. I had just
picked up the phone when Geena reached past me and pressed down the
receiver, her nails glittering purple against the metal.
“Go,” she said, her face so close to mine I could
see my eyes reflected in hers. Her mascara had pooled into black
smudges under her eyes; I knew I couldn’t look much better. “This
isn’t little-kid shit anymore. They’re gonna find out who called.
They’re gonna look.”
I understood her but I didn’t move at first, not
until I imagined myself answering questions at a police station,
the look on my parents’ faces when they got the phone call, the
look on Libby Carlisle’s face when she got to give my speech
tomorrow, when she got to tell everyone she’d been right about me
all along. I started to back away slowly.
“You wanna let the fucking school burn down, stay,”
said Geena. She wouldn’t take her hand off of the receiver.
I stared at Geena for a long second. Then I took
off running, stopping in the middle of the parking lot to take off
my heels. I kept running, the asphalt stinging my feet through my
panty hose. Halfway up the hill behind the school, I stopped to
look back, vaguely recalling Sunday school and Lot’s wife turning
into a pillar of salt. Already I could hear sirens in the distance.
I watched Geena sitting on the curb beside the pay phone, fists
curled backward into cushions for her chin. She looked small and
still and ready. I turned then, shut my eyes, and ran breathlessly
toward the dam. I didn’t stop again until I had crossed the bridge
and hopped the fence that took me back to Eastdale. On the other
side, I stopped to catch my breath, and then kept running, knowing
even then that a better person would have turned around.
a cognizant original v5 release november 24
2010