Chapter no 9

I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter

I decide to go to the school dance because the after-party is at Alex Tafoyaโ€™s house. His parents are in Mexico for a few weeks, and Lorena says his sister, Jessica, who went to school with Olga, will be there. It might be completely uselessโ€”Iโ€™m not sure how well they knew each otherโ€”but I donโ€™t know what else to do.

Amรก lets me go to the dance, which I think might qualify as a miracle, though she tells me I better not act volada, which means โ€œflirtatious.โ€ Every time she says stuff like this, I feel ashamed, and I donโ€™t know why because I havenโ€™t done anything.

I have to buy a new dress, and Amรก says sheโ€™ll take me to the mall. I hate shopping, but now I have no choice because I have absolutely nothing to wearโ€”the only three dresses I have are literally falling apart. One has a giant hole in the armpit. Amรก says it makes me look like an orphan, that I should throw it away, but I like the way it fits. She also says I canโ€™t wear jeans or any of my band T-shirts she hates so much. No Chuck Taylors, either. I have to look like a โ€œproper woman.โ€

Thanks to my upcoming quinceaรฑera, my budget is only forty- five dollars, practically nothing.

The Sunday before the dance, Amรก and I drive to the outlet mall in the suburbs. After driving west in snow flurries for about an hour, we finally arrive. I thought our neighborhood was bad, but if I had to live in the suburbs, I think Iโ€™d just lie down and die. I donโ€™t care that the houses are big and expensive; everything is exactly the same, and the only restaurants I see are Chiliโ€™s and Olive Garden.

The first store we go to is full of white women who look at us funny when we enter, which is already a bad sign. I glance at the

price tag on a ridiculous pink sweater and see that itโ€™s on sale for ninety-nine dollars. If thatโ€™s what they think a sale is, then we probably canโ€™t even afford their socks. No thanks. โ€œLetโ€™s go,โ€ I say.

We walk around for half an hour, looking for a store thatโ€™s affordable, and I just want to give up and bury my face in a Cinnabon, even though they always make me sick. I sit down on a bench and tell Amรก that Iโ€™m not going to find anything, that she can go on without me.

โ€œCome on,โ€ Amรก says, yanking me by the arm. โ€œWeโ€™re going to find you something. Donโ€™t be so dramatic. If not, weโ€™ll go somewhere else.โ€

โ€œIโ€™d rather buy the worst dress here than go to another mall. Letโ€™s get this over with,โ€ I say, getting up with a new sense of determination.

After trying on about twenty dresses at five different stores, I finally find one I want. It has a black-and-red-checked pattern and falls right above my knee, which is the perfect length for me, because anything longer makes me look stumpy. The dress is what I imagine a career woman wearing when she goes out for drinks after work. I bet no one at school will have a dress like this. Iโ€™m lucky, too, because itโ€™s a size 10 and itโ€™s on clearance. At seventy- five percent off, it costs $39.99.

When I come out of the dressing room, Amรก shakes her head. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s too tight.โ€

โ€œNo, itโ€™s not. It fits perfectly!โ€

โ€œIt shows your chest too much,โ€ Amรก says, scrunching her face as if sheโ€™s just smelled something gross.

Amรก hates it when women wear revealing clothing, but this dress is not sexy at all. Itโ€™s not even low cut, doesnโ€™t show any cleavage whatsoever. Every time my parents turn on the TV, there are women dressed like strippers, even the news anchors, yet Iโ€™m supposed to be embarrassed of my boobs? I donโ€™t get it. Even the time she found out I had shaved my legs, she was hysterical. Am I expected to cover myself with cloaks and let my body be covered in dark fur?

โ€œI think it looks good on me,โ€ I tell Amรก. โ€œI like it, and itโ€™s the perfect price.โ€

โ€œWhy do you always have to wear black? Why donโ€™t you try a different color, something nice, like yellow or green?โ€

A woman comes into the dressing room with an armful of black pants. She gives me an awkward smile, as if she somehow knows this is torture for me.

โ€œYellow or green? Are you serious? Amรก, thatโ€™s disgusting.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s not proper, Julia. Why canโ€™t you understand that? Iโ€™m not going to buy it.โ€

โ€œSo you will only buy me a dress that you like even if I hate it?โ€ I shouldโ€™ve known shopping with Amรก would be a mistake.

โ€œYes, thatโ€™s right.โ€

โ€œI canโ€™t believe this. Why do you always do this? Why canโ€™t I wear what I want? Itโ€™s not like Iโ€™m wearing a pair of Daisy Dukes and a see-through tube top.โ€

โ€œRemember, youโ€™re not the boss here. Why are you always making everything so difficult? Why arenโ€™t you ever happy? I try to do something nice, and this is how you act? Dios mรญo, who would have guessed I would have such an ungrateful daughter?โ€ Amรก is highly skilled in the art of guilt trips. She could win a gold medal.

โ€œJesus Christ, donโ€™t buy me anything, then.โ€

I go back into the dressing room, my eyes already brimming. I try to wipe away the tears, but they keep coming and coming. I feel a sob traveling up my body and stop it before it gets past my throat. Iโ€™m so frustrated, I donโ€™t know what to do with myself. Sometimes, when I feel like this, I want to break things. I want to hear things shatter. My heart beats so fast and hard that I can hardly breathe, and I wonder if anything will ever get better. Is this really the way my life is going to be?

I look at myself in the mirror one last time. I canโ€™t help if my boobs are big. What am I supposed to do? Strap them down with bandages? Iโ€™m tired of people telling me how I should act and how I should look. Only a year and a half left until I leave home. Then no one will be allowed to tell me what to wear or what to do. Ever.

โ€”

I have to borrow one of Lorenaโ€™s dresses, which isnโ€™t easy because her closet is full of glittery clothes with wacky patterns. And most of them are way too small. Lorena and I are the same height, but sheโ€™s skinny enough to buy clothes from the kidsโ€™ section sometimes. The one I finally pick is black and stretchy. It barely fits, but it will have to work. It also has a slit up the side, which I think looks elegant. I have to borrow a pair of black flats, too, because heels are for suckers, Iโ€™ve decided.

Lorena and I go to the dance with a group of girlsโ€”no dates allowed. She tells Carlos he canโ€™t come, and Juanga has been MIA for a week, now that he ran off with some old dude from Indiana. I wonder if heโ€™ll get kicked out of school. I try to act disappointed when Lorena tells me he isnโ€™t going to join us, but she sees right through me.

We meet Fรกtima, Maggie, and Sandra from our gym class by the entrance. They all have horrifying grammar, but theyโ€™re really friendly. Besides, I shouldnโ€™t judge people for sayingย yousย instead ofย youย orย minesย instead of mine. A lot of people at school speak like that, so I should get over it already. Lorena tells me Iโ€™m too uptight, which is why I hardly have any friends.

The flashing lights and smoke machine make it hard to see. When my eyes finally adjust, I notice people dancing so close theyโ€™re practically dry-humping. Someoneโ€™s going to come out of here pregnant.

Lorena and the girls go nuts over a song I donโ€™t recognize and run to the dance floor. I decide to stay behind, and after a few minutes, I start worrying about where I should look and where to put my hands. What if I stare at someone too long? What if I look like Frankenstein with my arms hanging stiffly at my sides? What if people think Iโ€™m a loser for standing by myself? As all of these stupid thoughts run through my head, Chris comes toward me, wearing sunglasses and aย Scarfaceย T-shirt, completely oblivious to how idiotic he looks. Iโ€™ve known him since grade school, and heโ€™s always been an unbearable little numskull.

โ€œYou look nice, for once,โ€ he says, eying at my dress, but mostly my boobs.

โ€œIs that supposed to be a compliment?โ€

โ€œYeah.โ€

โ€œYou need to learn how to talk to women,โ€ I turn away from Chris, but he keeps talking.

โ€œYou, a woman? Ha.โ€ He gets closer and lifts his sunglasses, as if trying to get a better look, as if Iโ€™m some chunk of beef on clearance heโ€™s evaluating. โ€œWhy you gotta dress stupid all the time?โ€

โ€œAre you serious? Youโ€™re such an asshole, Chris. Donโ€™t ever, ever talk to me again. Donโ€™t even look in my direction, I swear to God.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re conceited. Thatโ€™s your problem. You think youโ€™re better than everybody. You think youโ€™re all smart, talking like a white girl and shit.โ€

โ€œWho do you think you are, talking to me like that?โ€ Iโ€™m so angry, my hands are shaking. I want to slap his sunglasses off his face, but itโ€™s not worth it. Heโ€™ll probably end up living in his momโ€™s basement until heโ€™s forty. That should be punishment enough.

I find the girls dancing like itโ€™s their last day on earth, their hands flying in the air and their hips swinging back and forth. They form a circle and shake their butts against me, which makes me laugh.

โ€”

When they finally turn on the lights, Lorena tells me that we can walk to the after-party because itโ€™s only two blocks away.

โ€œAre you absolutely sure his sister is going to be there? Because you know Iโ€™m going to get in trouble, right? I didnโ€™t tell my mom because sheโ€™d never let me go.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s what Alex said. Sheโ€™s supposed to be here.โ€

I text Amรก that I wonโ€™t be home until later. Not even three seconds later, I feel the phone buzzing, but I donโ€™t pick up because I already know what sheโ€™s going to say.

โ€”

People think Alex is so cool because heโ€™s tall and good at basketball, and all the girls think heโ€™s hot, but I would give him a

C+ at most. He has nice teeth, but I donโ€™t really see what the big deal is.

Alexโ€™s house is already bursting with people, which makes me think Iโ€™ve made a mistake. I donโ€™t do well in crowds. Once, when I was little, I freaked the hell out during a parade, and my parents had to carry me home kicking and screaming. And sometimes I have trouble breathing in crammed elevators.

The windows are steamy from so much body heat, and everyone is clogging the doors and hallways, making it almost impossible to get through. For a second, I think I might have a panic attack, but I calm myself down. I breathe slowly and tell myself itโ€™s going to be okay. After getting past the crowd of people in the living room, we finally make our way to the drinks in the kitchen. The table is covered with all sorts of bottles, and thereโ€™s a keg next to the sink. Alex and the rest of the basketball team are smoking weed near the window. He asks us if we want to smoke or if he could make us a drink, which is nice of him because he probably has no idea who I am.

The girls all choose Malibu rum, but I go for the Hennessy and Coke. Iโ€™m not sure if youโ€™re supposed to mix the two, but the drink tastes okay. I finish it in three gulps. When I go for another cup, though, Lorena grabs my wrist and tells me to slow it down.

I cut to the chase. โ€œWhereโ€™s Alexโ€™s sister?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know. I havenโ€™t seen her yet. Try to have fun, at least. Sheโ€™ll be here.โ€ Lorena walks away and gets lost in the crowd before I can follow her.

I spend most of the night searching for Jessica. I donโ€™t really remember what she looks like. Iโ€™m guessing she resembles Alex in some way. Lorena says her hair is dyed dark red, but I donโ€™t see any girls with red hair.

After about three more drinks, I start feeling a little more relaxed. Even though sometimes I have a big mouth, I find it hard to strike up conversations with people I donโ€™t know. I guess thatโ€™s one thing Olga and I had in common. When I wait in line for the bathroom, I ask the cute guy in front of me who the funny-looking man on his shirt is, and he just mumbles something and walks away. Amรก always says that women should never approach men,

that we should be the ones pursued and courted, and maybe sheโ€™s right because this is totally embarrassing.

After I pee, I find Maggie in the living room by herself and ask her if she knows where Lorena is. She shrugs and says she hasnโ€™t seen her in a while. Maggie is sweet and cute, but thereโ€™s not much going on in her head. No matter what youโ€™re talking about, even if youโ€™re not asking her a question, she has a confused look on her face, and thereโ€™s a sort of blankness in her eyes I canโ€™t explain. Itโ€™s not like Lorena, who only pretends to be dumb. Maggieโ€™s stupidity is totally sincere.

โ€œAre you enjoying yourself?โ€

โ€œYeah, itโ€™s okay. I guess,โ€ Maggie says, fixing her ponytail. โ€œNo cute guys, though.โ€

โ€œNo. None. That dude over there looks like a scrotum,โ€ I say, pointing to a bald guy with big jowls slumped on the sofa.

Maggie laughs. โ€œYouโ€™re crazy.โ€ I nod. โ€œUnfortunately.โ€

As I look around the party, trying to spot Lorena, I see a couple making out in a bedroom through a cracked door. Not just kissing, though, I meanย reallyย going at it.

โ€œWhoa. Check that out,โ€ I whisper to Maggie, and tilt my head in their direction.

The girl is sitting on the guyโ€™s lap with her legs wrapped around him. Maybe itโ€™s because sheโ€™s totally drunk, but I donโ€™t notice any shred of shame or embarrassment, which I admire in a strange way. Their kisses are wet and sloppy, and you can see their tongues going in and out of each otherโ€™s mouths. The girl rubs herself on the guy as he starts kissing her neck and chest. The girls next to us are now scandalized, call her a slut, skank, whore, and so many other synonyms in both English and Spanish that it seems like theyโ€™ve consulted a bilingual thesaurus. A group of guys gather and try to snap pictures with their phones. The couple either doesnโ€™t notice or doesnโ€™t care.

โ€œThatโ€™s disgusting,โ€ Maggie says. โ€œShe is so nasty.โ€

โ€œYeah, so gross,โ€ I say, but Iโ€™m wondering if anyone will ever touch me like that.

After I use the bathroom for the billionth time, I finally find Lorena in the back porch, surrounded by a circle of cretins who are way too old to be at a high school party. They probably went to school with my sister, too. It doesnโ€™t surprise me because Lorena loves attention from men, no matter how old or ugly. What kind of losers come to a party like this once theyโ€™ve already graduated (or dropped out)?

โ€œWhere is Jessica? Iโ€™ve been looking for her all night. Thatโ€™s the only reason I came.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know. Alex said sheโ€™d be here.โ€ Lorena shrugs. โ€œJust chill, okay?โ€

โ€œNo, I want to go home. Now.โ€

โ€œYeah, baby, relax,โ€ says a guy wearing a backward baseball cap. โ€œMind your business. And my name is not baby,โ€ I tell him, and turn to Lorena. โ€œLook, if I get in trouble, itโ€™s going to be your

fault.โ€

โ€œGive me five more minutes. Come on, donโ€™t be like that.โ€ Lorena is definitely drunk. I can tell by the way her mouth moves, as if itโ€™s suddenly too heavy for her face.

The house is beginning to clear out a little, so I give up and find a spot on the couch.

Next thing I know, Lorena is shaking me and telling me to wake up, that we have to leave because someone called the cops. When I ask her what time it is, she says itโ€™s 3 a.m., which means Iโ€™m screwed.

โ€”

Iโ€™ve done the calculations and have figured out that from the ages of thirteen to fifteen, Iโ€™ve spent about forty-five percent of my life grounded. Seriously, what kind of life is that? I know I mess up sometimes, I know I can be a sarcastic jerk, I know Iโ€™m not the daughter my parents wanted, but Amรก treats me like Iโ€™m a degenerate.

Sometimes, when Iโ€™m punished like this, Amรก doesnโ€™t even let me go to the library, which I think is the cruelest kind of torture. What am I supposed to do if I have to sit in my room for hours and

hours? I canโ€™t get pregnant at the library, I tell her, but it doesnโ€™t matter. Amรก says I can clean, do my homework, and if sheโ€™s feeling generous, she says sheโ€™ll let me watch telenovelas with them, but Iโ€™d rather poke my eyes out like Oedipus than sit through an episode of that garbage. The acting on those shows is forced and stiff, and the characters are always slapping each other dramatically. The plotlines are always the same, tooโ€”a poor woman overcomes adversity and marries a rich asshole and they live happily ever after. All the upper-class people are white, and the servants are dark like me.

Iโ€™ve always had trouble being happy, but now it feels impossible. Everyone in my family tells me what a difficult baby I was compared to Olga. When I was little, anything would set me offโ€”a dirty look, a dropped cookie, a canceled outing. I remember I once sobbed because I saw a three-legged dog. I donโ€™t know why Iโ€™ve always been like this, why the smallest things make me ache inside. Thereโ€™s a poem I read once, titled โ€œThe World Is Too Much with Us,โ€ and I guess that is the best way to describe the feelingโ€” the world is too much with me.

Itโ€™s not like my parents are happy, either. All they do is work. They never go out anywhere, and when theyโ€™re home, they hardly even talk to each other. I donโ€™t understand why everyone just complains about who I am. What am I supposed to do? Say Iโ€™m sorry? Iโ€™m sorry I canโ€™t be normal? Iโ€™m sorry Iโ€™m such a bad daughter? Iโ€™m sorry I hate the life that I have to live?

There are times I feel completely alone, like no one in the world can possibly understand me. Sometimes Amรก stares at me like Iโ€™m some sort of mutant that slithered out of her body. Lorena listens, which I appreciate, but she doesnโ€™t really get it. Sheโ€™s practically a science genius, but she doesnโ€™t care about literature or art. I donโ€™t think anyone likes what I like. Sometimes I feel so lonely and hopeless that I donโ€™t know what to do. Usually, I just bottle up all of my feelings and wait until my parents go to sleep so I can cry, which I know is totally pathetic. If I canโ€™t wait, I do it in the shower. It builds and builds all day, tightening my throat and chest, and sometimes I feel it in my face. When I finally let it out, it cascades out of me.

On top of everything, I havenโ€™t been able to sleep. Even if Iโ€™m completely exhausted, even if my body is screaming and begging that it needs to rest, some nights I just stare at my ceiling for hours and hours. I look at the clock, and itโ€™s almost time for me to get ready for school. I hear the world go to sleep and wake up: the slowing of traffic, birds chirping, cars starting, my parents making coffee. Iโ€™ve tried everything, tooโ€”counting sheep, counting kittens, drinking hot milk, listening to relaxing musicโ€”but nothing helps. The times I do sleep, I have nightmares about people trying to murder me in an upside-down house or something equally weird. At least I havenโ€™t had any more dreams about Olga.

In the mornings, Iโ€™m a shred of a person. There are days I feel like Iโ€™m being held together by string. Other times I feel entirely unstitched or unhinged. I can barely keep my head up, let alone get good grades so I can get the hell out of here and go to college. I have only a year and a half left, but it feels eternal. It feelsย infernal.

Today my Honors English class, the only class I enjoy, feels like a never-ending burden. Mr. Ingman is going overย Huckleberry Finn,ย which Iโ€™ve already read three times, but I canโ€™t pay attention. I look out the window, at two squirrels chasing each other in a tree, and think about our upcoming field trip to Warren Dunes. Sometimes nature makes me feel better, more human, like Iโ€™m connected to everything and everyone. Other times I want to lie under a tree and dissolve into the earth forever.

Mr. Ingman asks the class about the symbolism of the Mississippi River, and though I know it inside and out, and no one else wants to answer, I donโ€™t even bother raising my hand because Iโ€™m afraid that if I open my mouth, Iโ€™ll start crying like a loser and wonโ€™t be able to stop.

After class, Mr. Ingman calls me over to his desk. โ€œIs everything okay, Julia?โ€

I nod.

โ€œAre you sure?โ€ He crosses his arms. Ever since I told him my sister died, he looks as if heโ€™s trying to stare into my soul or something.

โ€œIโ€™m fine,โ€ I mumble.ย Please donโ€™t cry. Please donโ€™t cry. Please donโ€™t cry.

โ€œYou donโ€™t seem fine. You look really upset. I know you loveย Huck Finnย because weโ€™ve talked about it many times,โ€ he says. Sometimes I stay after school to talk to Mr. Ingman about books and college. He even lets me borrow some from his personal collection and gives me a list of schools he thinks I should apply to, which is why heโ€™s my favorite teacher. โ€œYou havenโ€™t said anything sarcastic in a few weeks now, which is whatโ€™s worried me the most, to be perfectly honest.โ€ Mr. Ingmanโ€™s smile is nice. I bet he was hot twenty years ago. I just wish he wouldnโ€™t wear so many dad sweaters.

โ€œI guess youโ€™re right.โ€ I try to laugh politely, but the laugh doesnโ€™t come out. โ€œItโ€™s just that Iโ€™m on my period, and it feels like someone is stabbing me in the uterus.โ€ I grimace and make a stabbing motion with my hand. A few years ago, I learned you can get away with nearly anything if you mention menstruation to your male teachers.

Mr. Ingman looks uncomfortable, but itโ€™s clear heโ€™s not going to let me go. โ€œIs something happening at home? Howโ€™s your family doing sinceโ€ฆyou know, your sister and everything?โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re okay, I guess. It comes in waves for me. Lots of waves. Big, big waves. And I guess I have this feeling, you know? That Iโ€™m missing something, that thereโ€™s something I should know, but I canโ€™t figure it out.โ€ My voice cracks.

โ€œLike what?โ€

Iโ€™m not about to tell Mr. Ingman about the underwear and hotel key, so I just shrug and say, โ€œI donโ€™t really know. Somethingโ€™s just off.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m sorry. It must be so hard.โ€ He crosses his arms and looks down.

โ€œItโ€™s impossibleโ€ฆand sometimes I think itโ€™s my fault. Like, what if I would have done something differently that day? Would she still be alive?โ€

โ€œYou canโ€™t think of it that way.โ€ โ€œWhy not?โ€

โ€œBecause itโ€™s not your fault. You didnโ€™t want your sister to die. Things like this just happen in life. Shitโ€™s fucked up sometimes.โ€ Mr. Ingman looks embarrassed for swearing, but doesnโ€™t apologize. โ€œMy mother died when I was ten. Heart attack. Just collapsed at work one day. I had been awful to her that morning. I threw a tantrum about my lunch and told her I hated her, and then she died. Just like that.โ€

โ€œWhoa. Iโ€™m sorry.โ€ Iโ€™m stunned. I donโ€™t know why, but I always assumed that Mr. Ingman had an easy life. I imagined him growing up with a tree house or some shit. โ€œDoes it go away, that feeling?โ€

โ€œIt gets easier, but I still think about her every day.โ€ Mr. Ingman sighs and looks out the window. I get a whiff of his aftershave. Something about that smellโ€”the smell of manโ€”is comforting.

โ€”

When I get home, Apรก is on the couch, soaking his feet in his tub. Because he works all day packaging candy, he always has problems with his bodyโ€”cuts, back pains, glue burns, and swollen legs, just to name a few. Some days he works twelve hours and comes back home looking like someone beat him with a bat. A few times a week, they force him to work the night shift, too. Apรก doesnโ€™t say much, but he always tells me, โ€œDonโ€™t work like a donkey like me. Be a secretary and work in a nice office with air- conditioning.โ€ I never tell him Iโ€™d rather clean toilets than be some manโ€™s assistant. Fetching coffee and being bossed around by a jerk in a suit? No thanks. Once, I told Apรก that I wanted to be a writer, but all he said was that I had to make enough money so I didnโ€™t have to live in an apartment full of roaches. I never brought it up again.

I plop down on the couch before I go to my room and start my homework. Apรก is watchingย Primer Impacto,ย that horrible tabloid news show that covers the most bizarre storiesโ€”Siamese twins, exorcisms, child abuse, hauntings, disfigured people. I donโ€™t know why people watch that stuff. When the segment on the cockroach- eating baby begins, I go into the kitchen for a glass of water. Amรก is hunched over the sink, scrubbing pans. I wonder what itโ€™s like to

clean houses all day and then come home and keep cleaning. I hate seeing her this way because it makes me feel so guiltyโ€”guilty for existing, guilty that she has to work like that for us.

โ€œHow was school?โ€ Amรก asks, and kisses me on the cheek. Even when Iโ€™m punished and Iโ€™m convinced she doesnโ€™t love me anymore, she still kisses me on the cheek.

โ€œIt was okay.โ€

โ€œYou look sick. Have you been eating junk at school?โ€ โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œAre you lying to me?โ€ Amรก always asks so many questions. I feel perpetually interrogated.

โ€œI swear to God, I just ate a sandwich.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t like the color on your face.โ€ Amรก gets closer. She smells like dish soap.

โ€œWhat color?โ€ โ€œYou look yellow.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m brown, definitely not yellow,โ€ I say, staring at my arm. โ€œWell, you donโ€™t look right. I might have to take you to the

doctor. You canโ€™t have a quinceaรฑera looking like that, you know?

You have to be pretty for your family. What will your sister think when she looks down on you from heaven?โ€ The thought of Olga sitting in a cloud in the sky watching me is so stupid it almost makes me laugh. Does Amรก actually believe she can see us?

โ€œIs there something youโ€™re not telling me?โ€ she says, feeling my forehead.

โ€œI said no! Jesus Christ, leave me alone,โ€ I snap, which surprises both of us.

โ€œYouโ€™re going to be sorry when Iโ€™m not around, youโ€™ll see.โ€ Amรก turns back to the sink. She is always going on and on about how sheโ€™ll be dead one day. Do all mothers do that? It used to make me feel bad, but now it just gets on my nerves.

Suddenly, I feel something gurgle inside meโ€”a warm, stretching painโ€”but itโ€™s not my stomach. When I go to the bathroom, I see a smear of reddish brown on my underwear. My period is a week early, but thatโ€™s what I get for lying.

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