Chapter no 1

Yellowface

THE NIGHT I WATCH ATHENA LIU DIE, WEโ€™RE CELEBRATING HERย TV deal with

Netflix.

Off the bat, for this story to make sense, you should know two things about Athena:

First, she has everything: a multibook deal straight out of college at a major publishing house, an MFA from the one writing workshop everyoneโ€™s heard of, a rรฉsumรฉ of prestigious artist residencies, and a history of awards nominations longer than my grocery list. At twenty-seven, sheโ€™s published three novels, each one a successively bigger hit. For Athena, the Netflix deal was not a life-changing event, just another feather in her cap, one of the side perks of the road to literary stardom sheโ€™s been hurtling down since graduation.

Second, perhaps as a consequence of the first, she has almost no friends. Writers our ageโ€”young, ambitious up-and-comers just this side of thirtyโ€”tend to run in packs. Youโ€™ll find evidence of cliques all over social mediaโ€”writers gushing over excerpts of one anotherโ€™s unpublished manuscripts (LOSING MY HEAD OVER THIS WIP!), squealing over cover reveals (THIS IS SO GORGEOUS I WILL DIE!!!), and posting selfies of group hangs at literary meet-ups across the globe. But Athenaโ€™s Instagram photos feature no one else. She regularly tweets career updates and quirky jokes to her seventy thousand followers, but she rarely @s other people. She doesnโ€™t name-drop, doesnโ€™t blurb or recommend her colleaguesโ€™ books, and doesnโ€™t publicly rub shoulders in that ostentatious, desperate way early career writers do. In the entire time Iโ€™ve known her, Iโ€™ve never heard her reference any close friends but me.

I used to think that she was simply aloof. Athena is so stupidly, ridiculously successful that it makes sense she wouldnโ€™t want to mingle with mere mortals. Athena, presumably, chats exclusively with blue check holders and fellow bestselling authors who can entertain her with their rarefied observations on modern society. Athena doesnโ€™t have time to make friends with proletarians.

But in recent years, Iโ€™ve developed another theory, which is that everyone else finds her as unbearable as I do. Itโ€™s hard, after all, to be friends with someone who outshines you at every turn. Probably no one else can stand Athena because they canโ€™t stand constantly failing to measure up to her. Probably Iโ€™m here because Iโ€™m just that pathetic.

So that night itโ€™s only Athena and me at a loud, overpriced rooftop bar in Georgetown. Sheโ€™s flinging back cocktails like she has a duty to prove sheโ€™s having a good time, and Iโ€™m drinking to dull the bitch in me that wishes she were dead.

ATHENA AND I ONLY BECAME FRIENDS BY CIRCUMSTANCE. WE LIVEDย on the same

floor at Yale our freshman year, and because weโ€™ve both known we wanted to be writers since we were sentient, we ended up in all the same undergraduate writing seminars. We both published short stories in the same literary magazines early on in our careers and, a few years after graduation, moved to the same cityโ€”Athena for a prestigious fellowship at Georgetown, whose faculty, according to rumor, were so impressed by a guest lecture she gave at American University that its English department inaugurated a creative writing post just for her, and I because my motherโ€™s cousin owned a condo in Rosslyn that she would rent to me for the cost of utilities if I remembered to water her plants. Weโ€™d never experienced anything like kindred spirit recognition, or some deep, bonding traumaโ€”we were just always in the same place, doing the same things, so it was convenient to be friendly.

But although we started out in the same placeโ€”Professor Natalia Gainesโ€™s Introduction to Short Fictionโ€”our careers spiraled in wildly different directions after graduation.

I wrote my first novel in a fit of inspiration during a year spent bored out of my skull working for Teach for America. Iโ€™d come home after work every day to meticulously draft the story Iโ€™d wanted to tell since my childhood: a richly detailed and subtly magical coming-of-age story about

grief, loss, and sisterhood titledย Over the Sycamore. After Iโ€™d queried nearly fifty literary agents without luck, the book was picked up by a small press named Evermore during an open call for submissions. The advance seemed like an absurd amount of money to me at the timeโ€”ten thousand dollars up front, with royalties to come once Iโ€™d earned outโ€”but that was before I learned Athena had gotten six figures for her debut novel at Penguin Random House.

Evermore folded three months before my book went to print. My rights reverted back to me. Miraculously, my literary agentโ€”who had signed me after Evermoreโ€™s initial offerโ€”resold the rights to one of the Big Five publishing houses for a twenty-thousand-dollar advanceโ€”a โ€œnice deal,โ€ read the Publishers Marketplace announcement. It seemed like I had finally Made It, that all my dreams of fame and success were about to come true, until my launch day drew closer, and my first print run was reduced from ten thousand to five thousand copies, my six-city book tour was reduced to three stops in the DMV area, and the promised quotes from famous writers failed to materialize. I never got a second printing. I sold two, maybe three thousand copies total. My editor was fired during one of those publishing squeezes that happen every time the economy dips, and I got passed along to some guy named Garrett who has so far shown so little interest in supporting the novel that I often wonder whether heโ€™s forgotten about me entirely.

But thatโ€™s par for the course, everyone told me. Everyone has a shitty debut experience. Publishers are Just Like That. Itโ€™s always chaos in New York, all the editors and publicists are overworked and underpaid, and balls get dropped all the time. The grass is never greener on the other side. Every author hates their imprint. There are no Cinderella storiesโ€”just hard work, tenacity, and repeat attempts at the golden ticket.

So why, then, do some people rocket to stardom on their first try? Six months before Athenaโ€™s debut novel came out, she got a big, sexy photo spread in a widely read publishing magazine under the title โ€œPublishingโ€™s Newest Prodigy Is Here to Tell the AAPI Stories We Need.โ€ She sold foreign rights in thirty different territories. Her debut launched amidst a fanfare of critical acclaim in venues like theย New Yorkerย and theย New York Times, and it occupied top spots on every bestseller list for weeks. The awards circuit the following year was a foregone conclusion. Athenaโ€™s debutโ€”Voice and Echo, about a Chinese American girl who can summon

the ghosts of all the deceased women in her familyโ€”was one of those rare novels that perfectly straddled the line between speculative and commercial fiction, so she accrued nominations for the Booker, Nebula, Hugo, and World Fantasy awards, two of which she won. And that was only three years ago. Sheโ€™s published two more books since, and the critical consensus is that sheโ€™s only gotten better and better.

Itโ€™s not that Athena isnโ€™t talented. Sheโ€™s a fuckingย goodย writerโ€”Iโ€™ve read all her work, and Iโ€™m not too jealous to acknowledge good writing when I see it. But Athenaโ€™s star power is so obviously not about the writing. Itโ€™s aboutย her. Athena Liu is, simply put, so fucking cool. Even her nameโ€” Athena Ling En Liuโ€”is cool; well done, Mr. and Mrs. Liu, to choose a perfect combination of the classical and exotic. Born in Hong Kong, raised between Sydney and New York, educated in British boarding schools that gave her a posh, unplaceable foreign accent; tall and razor-thin, graceful in the way all former ballet dancers are, porcelain pale and possessed of these massive, long-lashed brown eyes that make her look like a Chinese Anne Hathaway (thatโ€™s not racist for me to sayโ€”Athena once posted a selfie of her and โ€œAnnieโ€ from some red carpet event, their four enormous doe eyes squeezed side by side, captioned simply,ย Twins!).

Sheโ€™s unbelievable. Sheโ€™s literally unbelievable.

So of course Athena gets every good thing, because thatโ€™s how this industry works. Publishing picks a winnerโ€”someone attractive enough, someone cool and young and, oh, weโ€™re all thinking it, letโ€™s just say it, โ€œdiverseโ€ enoughโ€”and lavishes all its money and resources on them. Itโ€™s so fucking arbitrary. Or perhaps not arbitrary, but it hinges on factors that have nothing to do with the strength of oneโ€™s prose. Athenaโ€”a beautiful, Yale-educated, international, ambiguously queer woman of colorโ€”has been chosen by the Powers That Be. Meanwhile, Iโ€™m just brown-eyed, brown-haired June Hayward, from Phillyโ€”and no matter how hard I work, or how well I write, Iโ€™ll never be Athena Liu.

Iโ€™d expected her to skyrocket out of my orbit by now. But the friendly texts keep comingโ€”howโ€™s writing going today? hitting that word count target? good luck with your deadline!โ€”as do the invitations: happy hour margaritas at El Centro, brunch at Zaytinya, a poetry slam on U Street. We have one of those skin-deep friendships where you manage to spend a lot of time together without really getting to know the other person. I still donโ€™t know if she has any siblings. Sheโ€™s never asked me about my boyfriends. But we keep hanging

out, because itโ€™s so convenient that weโ€™re both in DC, and because itโ€™s hard to make new friends the older you get.

Iโ€™m honestly not sure why Athena likes me. She always hugs me when she sees me. She likes my social media posts at least twice a week. We get drinks at least every other month, and most of the time itโ€™s by her invitation. But Iโ€™ve no clue what I have to offer herโ€”I donโ€™t possess anywhere near the clout, the popularity, or the connections to make the time she spends with me worthwhile.

Deep down, Iโ€™ve always suspected Athena likes my company precisely because I canโ€™t rival her. I understand her world, but Iโ€™m not a threat, and her achievements are so far out of my reach that she doesnโ€™t feel bad squealing to my face about her wins. Donโ€™t we all want a friend who wonโ€™t ever challenge our superiority, because they already know itโ€™s a lost cause? Donโ€™t we all need someone we can treat as a punching bag?

โ€œIT CANโ€™T BE ALL THAT BAD,โ€ย SAYS ATHENA.ย โ€œIโ€™M SURE THEY JUSTย mean theyโ€™re

pushing the paperback off a few months.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s not delayed,โ€ I say. โ€œItโ€™s canceled. Brett told me they just . . . couldnโ€™t see a place for it in their printing schedule.โ€

She pats my shoulder. โ€œOh, donโ€™t worry. You get more royalties off hardcovers anyways! Silver linings, right?โ€

Bold of you to assume Iโ€™m getting royalties at all.ย I donโ€™t say that out loud. If you tell Athena off for being tactless, she gets overly, exaggeratedly apologetic, and thatโ€™s harder to put up with than just swallowing my irritation.

Weโ€™re at the Grahamโ€™s rooftop bar, sitting on a loveseat facing the sunset. Athena is guzzling her second whisky sour, and Iโ€™m on my third glass of pinot noir. Weโ€™ve wandered onto the tired subject of my troubles with my publisher, which I deeply regret, because everything Athena thinks is comfort or advice always only comes off as rubbing it in.

โ€œI donโ€™t want to piss Garrett off,โ€ I say. โ€œWell, honestly, I think heโ€™s just looking forward to rejecting the option so they can be done with me.โ€

โ€œOh, donโ€™t sell yourself short,โ€ says Athena. โ€œHe acquired your debut, didnโ€™t he?โ€

โ€œHe didnโ€™t, though,โ€ I say. I have to remind Athena this every single time. She has a goldfishโ€™s memory when it comes to my problemsโ€”it takes two or three repetitions for anything to stick. โ€œThe editor who did got fired,

and the buck passed to him, and every time we talk about it, it feels like heโ€™s just going through the motions.โ€

โ€œWell, then fuck him,โ€ Athena says cheerfully. โ€œAnother round?โ€

The drinks are stupidly expensive at this place, but itโ€™s okay because Athenaโ€™s buying. Athena always buys; at this point, Iโ€™ve stopped offering. I donโ€™t think Athenaโ€™s ever really grasped the concepts of โ€œexpensiveโ€ and โ€œinexpensive.โ€ She went from Yale to a fully funded masterโ€™s degree to hundreds of thousands of dollars in her bank account. Once, when I told her that entry-level publishing jobs in New York only make about thirty-five thousand dollars a year, she blinked at me and asked, โ€œIs that a lot?โ€

โ€œIโ€™d love a malbec,โ€ I say. Itโ€™s nineteen dollars a glass.

โ€œGot it, babe.โ€ Athena gets up and saunters toward the bar. The bartender smiles at her and she exclaims in surprise, hands flying to mouth like sheโ€™s Shirley Temple. It seems that one of the gentlemen at the counter has sent her a glass of champagne. โ€œYes, weย areย celebrating.โ€ Her dainty, delighted laughter floats over the music. โ€œBut can I get one for my friend as well? On me?โ€

No oneโ€™s out here sending me champagne. But this is typical. Athena gets showered by attention every time we go outโ€”if not by eager readers who want a selfie and an autograph, then by men and women alike who find her ravishing. Me, Iโ€™m invisible.

โ€œSo.โ€ Athena settles back down beside me and hands me my glass. โ€œDo you want to hear about the Netflix meeting? Oh my God, Junie, it was insane. I met the guy who producedย Tiger King.ย Tiger King!โ€

Be happy for her, I tell myself.ย Just be happy for her, and let her have this night.

People always describe jealousy as this sharp, green, venomous thing. Unfounded, vinegary, mean-spirited. But Iโ€™ve found that jealousy, to writers, feels more like fear. Jealousy is the spike in my heart rate when I glimpse news of Athenaโ€™s success on Twitterโ€”another book contract, awards nominations, special editions, foreign rights deals. Jealousy is constantly comparing myself to her and coming up short; is panicking that Iโ€™m not writing well enough or fast enough, thatย Iย am not, and never will be, enough. Jealousy means that even just learning that Athenaโ€™s signing a six-figure option deal with Netflix means that Iโ€™ll be derailed for days, unable to focus on my own work, mired by shame and self-disgust every time I see one of her books in a bookstore display.

Every writer I know feels this way about someone else. Writing is such a solitary activity. You have no assurance that what youโ€™re creating has any value, and any indication that youโ€™re behind in the rat race sends you spiraling into the pits of despair.ย Keep your eyes on your own paper, they say. But thatโ€™s hard to do when everyone elseโ€™s papers are flapping constantly in your face.

Though I feel the vicious kind of jealousy, too, watching Athena talk about how much she adoresย herย editor, a literary powerhouse named Marlena Ng who โ€œplucked me from obscurityโ€ and who โ€œjust really understands what Iโ€™m trying to do on a craft level, you know?โ€ I stare at Athenaโ€™s brown eyes, framed by those ridiculously large lashes that make her resemble a Disney forest animal, and I wonder,ย What is it like to be you?ย What is it like to be so impossibly perfect, to have every good thing in the world? And maybe itโ€™s the cocktails, or my overactive writerโ€™s imagination, but I feel this hot coiling in my stomach, a bizarre urge to stick my fingers in her berry-red-painted mouth and rip her face apart, to neatly peel her skin off her body like an orange and zip it up over myself.

โ€œAnd itโ€™s like, she justย getsย me, like sheโ€™s having sex with my words. Like, mind sex.โ€ Athena giggles, then scrunches her nose up adorably. I suppress the impulse to poke it. โ€œYou ever think of the revision process as like, having sex with your editor? Like youโ€™re making a great big literary baby?โ€

Sheโ€™s drunk, I realize. Two and a half drinks in, and sheโ€™s smashed; sheโ€™s already forgotten once again that I, in fact, hate my editor.

Athena doesnโ€™t know how to hold her alcohol. I learned this a week into freshman year, at some seniorโ€™s house party in East Rock, at which I held her hair as she vomited into the toilet bowl. She has fancy taste; she loves to show off everything she knows about scotch (she only calls it โ€œwhisky,โ€ and sometimes โ€œwhisky from the Highlandsโ€), but sheโ€™s barely had anything and her cheeks are already bright red, her sentences rambling. Athena loves to get drunk, and drunk Athena is always self-aggrandizing and dramatic.

I first noticed this behavior at San Diego Comic-Con. We were clustered around a big table in the hotel bar and she was laughing too loudly, cheeks bright red while the guys sitting beside her, one of whom would soon be outed on Twitter as a serial sex pest, stared eagerly at her chest. โ€œOh my God,โ€ she kept saying. โ€œIโ€™m not ready for this. Itโ€™s all going

to blow up in my face. Iโ€™m not ready. Do you think they hate me? Do you think everyone secretly hates me, and no one will tell me? Wouldย youย tell me if you hated me?โ€

โ€œNo, no,โ€ the men assured her, petting her hands. โ€œNo one could ever hate you.โ€

I used to think this act was a ploy for attention, but sheโ€™s also like this when itโ€™s only the two of us. She gets so vulnerable. She starts sounding like sheโ€™s going to burst into tears, or like sheโ€™s bravely revealing secrets sheโ€™s told no one else before. Itโ€™s hard to watch. Thereโ€™s something desperate about it, and I donโ€™t know what frightens me moreโ€”that sheโ€™s manipulative enough to pull off such an act, or that everything sheโ€™s saying might be true.

For all the blaring music and bass vibrations, the Graham feels deadโ€” unsurprising; itโ€™s a Wednesday night. Two men come up to try to give Athena their numbers, and she waves them off. Weโ€™re the only women in the place. The rooftop feels quiet and claustrophobic in a way thatโ€™s frightening, so we finish our drinks and leave. I think, with some relief, that this will be the end of itโ€”but then Athena invites me over to her apartment, a short Lyft ride away, near Dupont Circle.

โ€œCome on,โ€ she insists. โ€œI have some amazing whisky saved, precisely for this momentโ€”you have to come try it.โ€

Iโ€™m tired, and Iโ€™m not having that much funโ€”jealousy feels worse when youโ€™re drunkโ€”but Iโ€™m curious to see her apartment, so I say yes.

Itโ€™s really fucking nice. I knew Athena was richโ€”bestseller royalties do count for somethingโ€”but I hadnโ€™t processedย howย rich until we step into the ninth-floor, two-bedroom unit where she lives aloneโ€”one room for sleeping, one room for writingโ€”with tall ceilings, gleaming hardwood floors, floor-to-ceiling windows, and a balcony that wraps around the corner. Sheโ€™s decorated it in that ubiquitous, Instagram-famous style that screams minimalist but bougie: sleek wooden furniture, sparely designed bookshelves, and clean, monochrome carpets. Even the plants look expensive. A humidifier hisses beneath her calatheas.

โ€œSo then, whisky? Or something lighter?โ€ Athena points to the wine fridge. She has a fucking wine fridge. โ€œRiesling? Or I have thisย lovelyย sauvignon blanc, unless you want to stick to redโ€”โ€

โ€œWhisky,โ€ I say, because the only way to get through the rest of this night is to get as drunk as possible.

โ€œNeat, on the rocks, or old-fashioned?โ€

I have no clue how to drink whisky. โ€œUm, whatever youโ€™re having.โ€ โ€œOld-fashioned, then.โ€ She darts into her kitchen. Moments later, I

hear cupboards opening, dishes clanging. Who knew old-fashioneds were such a hassle?

โ€œI have this beautiful eighteen-year WhistlePig,โ€ she calls out. โ€œItโ€™s so smooth, like toffee and black pepper mixed togetherโ€”just wait, youโ€™ll see.โ€

โ€œSure,โ€ I call back. โ€œSounds great.โ€

Sheโ€™s taking a while, and I really have to pee, so I wander around the living room searching for the bathroom. I wonder what Iโ€™ll find in there. Maybe a fancy aromatherapy diffuser. Maybe a basket of jade vagina rocks. I notice then that the door to her writing office is wide open. Itโ€™s a gorgeous space; I canโ€™t help but take a peek. I recognize it from her Instagram postsโ€”her โ€œcreativity palace,โ€ she calls it. She has a huge mahogany desk with curved legs beneath a window framed by Victorian-

style lacy curtains, atop which sits her prized black typewriter.

Right. Athena uses a typewriter. No Word backups, no Google Docs, no Scrivener: just scribbles in Moleskine notebooks that become outlines on sticky notes that become fully formed drafts on her Remington. It forces her to focus on the sentence level, or so she claims. (Sheโ€™s given this interview response so many times Iโ€™ve nearly memorized it.) Otherwise, she digests entire paragraphs at a time, and she loses the trees for the forest.

Honestly. Who talks like that? Whoย thinksย like that?

They make these ugly and overpriced electronic typewriters, for authors who canโ€™t string together more than a paragraph without losing focus and hopping over to Twitter. But Athena hates those; she uses aย vintageย typewriter, a clunky thing that requires her to buy special ink ribbons and thick, sturdy pages for her manuscripts. โ€œI just canโ€™t write on a screen,โ€ sheโ€™s told me. โ€œI have to see it printed. Something about the reassuring solidity of the word. It feels permanent, like everything I compose has weight. It ties me down; it clarifies my thoughts and forces me to be specific.โ€

I wander farther into the office, because Iโ€™m exactly drunk enough to forget that this is bad manners. Thereโ€™s a sheet of paper still in the carriage, upon which are written just two words:ย THE END.ย Sitting next to the typewriter is a stack of pages nearly a foot tall.

Athena materializes by my side, a glass in either hand. โ€œOh, thatโ€™s the World War One project. Itโ€™s finally done.โ€

Athena is famously cagey about her projects until theyโ€™re finished. No beta readers. No interviews, no sharing snippets on social media. Even her agents and editors donโ€™t get to see so much as an outline until sheโ€™s finished the whole thing. โ€œIt has to gestate inside me until itโ€™s viable,โ€ she told me once. โ€œIf I expose it to the world before itโ€™s fully formed, it dies.โ€ (Iโ€™m shocked no one has called her out for this grotesque metaphor, but I guess anythingโ€™s okay if Athena says it.) The only things sheโ€™s revealed over the past two years are that this novel has something to do with twentieth-century military history, and that itโ€™s a โ€œbig artistic challengeโ€ for her.

โ€œShit,โ€ I say. โ€œCongrats.โ€

โ€œTyped up the last page this morning,โ€ she chirps. โ€œNo oneโ€™s read it

yet.โ€

โ€œNot even your agent?โ€

She snorts. โ€œJared pushes paper and signs checks.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s so long.โ€ I wander closer to the desk, reach for the first page, then

immediately withdraw my hand. Stupid, drunkโ€”I canโ€™t just go around touching things.

But instead of snapping at me, Athena nods her permission. โ€œWhat do you think?โ€

โ€œYou want me to read it?โ€

โ€œWell, I guess, not all of it, right now.โ€ She laughs. โ€œItโ€™sย veryย long. Iโ€™m justโ€”Iโ€™m just so glad itโ€™s finished. Doesnโ€™t this stack look pretty? Itโ€™s hefty. It . . . carries significance.โ€

Sheโ€™s rambling; sheโ€™s as drunk as I am, but I know exactly what she means. This book is huge, in more ways than one. Itโ€™s the sort of book that leaves a mark.

My fingers hover over the stack. โ€œCan I . . . ?โ€

โ€œSure, sure . . .โ€ She nods enthusiastically. โ€œI have to get used to it being out there. I have to give birth.โ€

What a bizarre, persistent metaphor. I know reading the pages will only fuel my jealousy, but I canโ€™t help myself. I pick a stack of ten or fifteen pages off the top and skim through them.

Holy God, theyโ€™re good.

Iโ€™m not great at reading when Iโ€™m tipsy, and my eyes keep sliding to the end of every paragraph, but even from a sloppy once-over, I can tell this

book is going to dazzle. The writing is tight, assured. There are none of the juvenile slipups of her debut work. Her voice has matured and sharpened. Every description, every turn of phraseโ€”it all sings.

Itโ€™s better than anything I could write, perhaps in this lifetime. โ€œYou like it?โ€ she asks.

Sheโ€™s nervous. Her eyes are wide, almost scared; sheโ€™s fiddling with her necklace as she watches me. How often does she put on this act? How forcefully do people shower her with praise when she does?

Itโ€™s petty, but I donโ€™t want to give that validation to her. Her game works with adoring reviewers and fans; it wonโ€™t with me.

โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ I say flatly. โ€œI canโ€™t really read drunk.โ€

She looks crestfallen, but only for a moment. I watch her hastily plaster on a smile. โ€œRight, duh, that was stupid, of course you donโ€™t want to . . .โ€ She blinks at her glass, then at me, and then at her living room. โ€œWell, then do you want to just . . . hang?โ€

So hereโ€™s me, just hanging with Athena Liu.

When sheโ€™s hammered, it turns out, sheโ€™s shockingly banal. She doesnโ€™t quiz me about Heidegger, or Arendt, or the half-dozen philosophers she loves to name-drop in interviews. She doesnโ€™t go off about what a good time she had guest modeling for Prada this one time in Paris (which was completely by accident; the director just saw her sitting outside a cafรฉ and asked her to step in). We cackle about celebrities. We both profess that the latest twink with puppy-dog eyes in fact does nothing for us, but that Cate Blanchett can step on us, always. She compliments my style. She asks where I got my shoes, my brooch, my earrings. She marvels at my skill at thriftingโ€”โ€œI still get half my stuff from Talbots, Iโ€™m such an old lady.โ€ I make her laugh with stories about my students, a procession of pimply, dull-eyed kids who could waltz into a lower tier Ivy on their parentsโ€™ legacy connections if they could only score two hundred points higher on the SAT, and how their ghostwritten college essays are all an exercise in inventing some personal hardship when itโ€™s clear theyโ€™ve never experienced any. We trade stories about bad dates, about people we knew from undergrad, about how weโ€™ve somehow hooked up with the same two guys from Princeton.

We end up sprawled on her couch, laughing so hard our ribs ache. I didnโ€™t realize it was possible to have so much fun with Athena. Iโ€™ve never been soย myselfย with her. Weโ€™ve known each other for over nine years now, but Iโ€™ve always been so guarded in her presenceโ€”in part because Iโ€™m

nervous sheโ€™ll realize Iโ€™m not half as brilliant or interesting as she thinks, and in part because of what happened freshman year.

But tonight, for the first time in a long time, I donโ€™t feel like I have to filter every word I say. Iโ€™m not struggling to impress Athena Fucking Liu. Iโ€™m just hanging with Athena.

โ€œWe should do this more,โ€ she keeps saying. โ€œJunie, honestly, how have we never done this before?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ I say, and then, in an attempt to be deep, โ€œMaybe we were afraid of how much weโ€™d like each other.โ€

Itโ€™s a stupid thing to say, and not remotely true, but this apparently delights her.

โ€œMaybe,โ€ she said. โ€œMaybe. Oh, Junie. Life is so short. Why do we build up these walls?โ€

Her eyes are shining. Her mouth is wet. Weโ€™re sitting side by side on her futon, knees so close theyโ€™re almost touching. For a moment I think sheโ€™s going to lean over and kiss meโ€”and what a storyย thatย would be, I think; what a plot twistโ€”but then she jumps back and yelps, and I realize my whisky glass has tilted so much Iโ€™ve spilled on the floor; thank God itโ€™s all hardwood, because if Iโ€™d ruined one of Athenaโ€™s expensive rugs I would have just flung myself off the balcony. She laughs and runs to the kitchen for a napkin, and I take another sip to calm myself, wondering at my racing heart.

Then suddenly itโ€™s midnight and weโ€™re making pancakesโ€”from scratch, no box mix, and embellished with several dollops of pandan extract in the now-neon-green batter because Athena Liu doesnโ€™t doย normalย pancakes. โ€œLike vanilla, but better,โ€ she explains. โ€œItโ€™s fragrant and herbal, like youโ€™re taking a big breath of the forest. I canโ€™tย believeย white people havenโ€™t learned about pandan yet.โ€ She flips them off the pan and onto my plate. The pancakes are burnt and uneven, but they smell incredible, and I realize then that Iโ€™m starving. I wolf one down with my hands, then look up to see Athena staring at me. I wipe my fingers, terrified Iโ€™ve disgusted her, but then she laughs and challenges me to an eating contest. And then thereโ€™s a timer going and weโ€™re shoveling down the gloppy, half-cooked pancakes as quickly as we can, swigging milk in between to help the bulging lumps down our throats.

โ€œSeven,โ€ I gasp, coming up for air. โ€œSeven, what didโ€”โ€

But Athenaโ€™s not looking at me. Sheโ€™s blinking very hard, brows furrowed. One hand goes to her throat. The other frantically taps my arm. Her lips part, and out comes this muted, sickening rasp.

Sheโ€™s choking.

Heimlich, I know the Heimlichโ€”at least, I think I do? I havenโ€™t thought about it since grade school. But I get behind her and wrap my arms around her waist and jerk my hands against her stomach, which should dislodge the pancakeโ€”holyย shit, sheโ€™s skinnyโ€”but sheโ€™s still shaking her head, tapping my arm. Itโ€™s not coming out. I jerk in again. And again. This isnโ€™t working. It crosses my mind to pull out my phone to Google โ€œHeimlich,โ€ maybe watch a YouTube tutorial. But thereโ€™s no time, thatโ€™ll take forever.

Athenaโ€™s banging against the counters. Her face has turned purple.

I remember reading a news article a few years ago about a sorority girl who choked to death at a pancake-eating contest. I remember sitting on my toilet, scrolling through the details in prurient fascination, because it seemed like such a sudden, ridiculous, and devastating way to die.ย The pancakes were like a lump of cement in her throat, said the EMT. A lump of cement.

Athena yanks at my arm; points at my phone.ย Help, she mouths.ย Help, helpโ€”

My fingers keep shaking; it takes me three tries to unlock my phone to call 911. They ask me what my emergency is.

โ€œIโ€™m with a friend,โ€ I gasp. โ€œSheโ€™s choking. Iโ€™ve tried the Heimlich; itโ€™s not coming outโ€”โ€

Beside me, Athena is folded over a chair, jamming her sternum against the back, trying to perform the Heimlich on herself. Her movements get more and more franticโ€”She looks like sheโ€™s humping the chair, I think stupidlyโ€”but it doesnโ€™t seem to work; nothing comes flying out of her mouth.

โ€œMaโ€™am, what is your location?โ€

Oh, fucking hell, I donโ€™t know Athenaโ€™s address. โ€œI donโ€™t know, itโ€™s my friendโ€™s place.โ€ I try to think. โ€œUm, across the taco place, and the bookstore, I donโ€™t know exactly . . .โ€

โ€œCan you be more specific?โ€

โ€œDupont! Dupont Circle. Umโ€”itโ€™s a block from the metro station, thereโ€™s this nice revolving doorโ€”โ€

โ€œIs it an apartment building?โ€ โ€œYesโ€”โ€

โ€œThe Independent? The Madison?โ€ โ€œYes! The Madison. That one.โ€ โ€œWhich unit?โ€

I donโ€™t know. I turn to Athena, but sheโ€™s curled on the ground, jerking back and forth in a way thatโ€™s awful to watch. I hesitate, torn between helping her and checking the door numberโ€”but then I remember, the ninth floor, so far up you can see all of Dupont Circle from the balcony. โ€œNine-oh-seven,โ€ I gasp. โ€œPlease, come quick, oh my Godโ€”โ€

โ€œAn ambulance is on its way to you now, maโ€™am. Is the patient conscious?โ€

I glance over my shoulder. Athena has stopped kicking. The only thing moving now is her shoulders, heaving in wild jerks like sheโ€™s been possessed.

Then those stop, too. โ€œMaโ€™am?โ€

I lower the phone. My vision swims. I reach out and shake her shoulder: nothing. Athenaโ€™s eyes are wide, bulging open; I canโ€™t bear to look at them. I touch my fingers to her neck for her pulse. Nothing. The dispatcher says something else, but I canโ€™t understand her; I canโ€™t understand my own thoughts, and everything that happens next, between the banging at the door and the rush of EMTs into the apartment, is a dark, bewildering blur.

I DONโ€™T GET HOME UNTIL EARLY THE NEXT MORNING.

Documenting death, apparently, takes a very long time. The EMTs have to check every fucking detail before they can officially write on their clipboards:ย Athena Liu, twenty-seven, female, is dead because she choked, to death, on a fucking pancake.

I give a statement. I stare very hard into the eyes of the EMT in front of meโ€”theyโ€™re a very pale blue, and big black globs of mascara are stuck to her outer lashesโ€”to distract from the stretcher in the kitchen behind me, the uniformed people pulling a plastic sheet over Athenaโ€™s body.ย Oh my God. Oh my God, thatโ€™s a body bag. This is real. Athena is dead.

โ€œName?โ€

โ€œJuneโ€”sorry, Juniper Hayward.โ€

โ€œAge?โ€

โ€œTwenty-seven.โ€

โ€œHow do you know the deceased?โ€

โ€œSheโ€™sโ€”she wasโ€”my friend. Weโ€™ve been friends since college.โ€ โ€œAnd what were you doing here tonight?โ€

โ€œWe were celebrating.โ€ Tears prickle behind my nose. โ€œWe were celebrating, because sheโ€™d just signed a Netflix deal, and she was so fucking happy.โ€

Iโ€™m weirdly terrified that theyโ€™re about to arrest me for murder. But thatโ€™s stupidโ€”Athena choked, and the globule (they kept calling it a globuleโ€”what kind of word is โ€œglobuleโ€?) is right there in her throat. There are no signs of struggle. She let me in, people saw us being friendly at the barโ€”Call the guy at the Graham, I want to say,ย heโ€™ll back me up.

But why am I even trying to come up with a defense? These details shouldnโ€™t matter. I didnโ€™t do it. I didnโ€™t kill her. Thatโ€™s ridiculous; itโ€™s ridiculous Iโ€™m even worried about it. No jury would convict.

At last, they let me go. Itโ€™s four in the morning. An officerโ€”at some point the police arrived, which I guess happens when thereโ€™s a dead bodyโ€” offers me a ride home to Rosslyn. We spend most of it in silence, and as we pull up to my building, he offers some condolences that I hear but donโ€™t process. I stagger into my apartment, rip off my shoes and bra, gargle some mouthwash, and collapse onto my bed. I cry for a while, great howling sobs to vent out this awful clawing energy in my body, and then one melatonin and two Lunestas later, I manage to fall asleep.

Meanwhile, in my bag, tossed at the floor of my bed, Athenaโ€™s manuscript sits like a hot sack of coals.

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