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Chapter no 21

Yellowface

HEY, JUNE.โ€

Geoff slides into the seat across from me, and Iโ€™m so startled I nearly knock over my tea. I didnโ€™t think heโ€™d show. I straighten up. โ€œUh, hi.โ€

An embarrassed confession: I sent him a barrage of texts last night, hurling wild accusations about his motives and cruel jabs about getting dumped by Athena. He didnโ€™t respond. I assumed he would delete them all and then block me.

But here he is, with heavy shadows under swollen eyes. He looks like he hasnโ€™t slept all night. โ€œI donโ€™t suppose you still think I did it.โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ I sigh. Part of me was hoping that heโ€™d come off as somewhat guilty, but itโ€™s clear from glancing at him that he has nothing to do with this. โ€œIโ€™m sorry, I just . . .โ€ I give my phone a shake. โ€œIt rattled me. And I thought, of all people who might have had access to her account . . .โ€

He extends a hand. โ€œCan I see?โ€ โ€œYou didnโ€™t look?โ€

โ€œShe blocked me. Years ago.โ€

โ€œAh.โ€ I unlock my phone, navigate to Athenaโ€™s Instagram, and pass it over. Geoff scrolls up and down for a while, lingering on each photo, eyes scanning back and forth over the captions. I canโ€™t imagine whatโ€™s going through his mind. This is his ex-girlfriend. This is someone he loved.

He lowers the phone. โ€œNo, this isnโ€™t her.โ€ โ€œWhat do you mean?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s photoshopped from an old picture.โ€ He returns the phone. โ€œCanโ€™t you see it? The lighting and shadows are all off. Also, sheโ€™s blurred around the edges.โ€

โ€œWhich old picture?โ€ I ask. โ€œIโ€™ve been over all the photos I can find online. Thereโ€™s nothing in that exact pose.โ€

โ€œMaybe itโ€™s not public anymore? I donโ€™t know. I just know Iโ€™ve seen her looking like that before.โ€

โ€œThen whoโ€™s behind it?โ€ I press. โ€œWho would know her password?โ€ โ€œWho cares?โ€ Geoff shrugs. โ€œYouโ€™ve got plenty of haters, right? It

could be anyone. Maybe Athenaโ€™s passwords were easy to guess, or maybe someoneโ€™s a very talented hacker, I donโ€™t know. Itโ€™s just a joke.โ€

I canโ€™t believe that, though. Something else is going on here. A random troll doesnโ€™t explain Athena showing up to my reading, or the fact that her specter haunts every professional move I make. Someone is pulling the strings.

โ€œDoes Athena have a sister?โ€ I ask. โ€œAny cousins?โ€

Mrs. Liu had told me Athena was an only child. But cousins can resemble each other, canโ€™t they? Or maybe Mrs. Liu was lying. All kinds of crazy plot twists fly through my head. A sister thought dead. A hidden twin, raised in Communist China, escaped to the free world and determined to step into her dead twinโ€™s life. Maybe thatโ€™d be a good idea for a novel. Maybe I should write that down, file it away for once Iโ€™ve finished my pseudo-memoir.

โ€œI know what youโ€™re getting at.โ€ Geoff shakes his head. โ€œItโ€™s not that, I promise.โ€

โ€œAre you sure?โ€

โ€œAthenaโ€™s folks lost touch with most of their relatives when they emigrated. Iโ€™m sure youโ€™ve heard her talk about it. Seriously, there is some deeply fucked-up stuff in that family history. People were murdered, executed in firing squads, lost out at sea. And maybe itโ€™s all made-up, in which case that would beย supremelyย fucked up, but I donโ€™t think it is. Iโ€™ve talked to Mrs. Liu about it a bit. That pain is real.โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t think . . .โ€ I trail off.

โ€œWhat? That itโ€™sย her?โ€ Geoff pauses. Heโ€™s also had this suspicion, I can tell. Itโ€™s crazy, but I wouldnโ€™t put it past Athena to fake her own death, to put the manuscript right where she knew I would find it. The funeral could have been staged. Her mom could be in on it. Maybe sheโ€™s watching from the wings right now, laughing into her trench coat.

But Geoff shakes his head. โ€œNo. No, she was an odd one, but she wasnโ€™t, like, a crazy person. Sheโ€™sโ€”she was a writer. Not a performance

artist.โ€ He meets my gaze. โ€œAnd didnโ€™t youโ€”?โ€ Didnโ€™t I see her die?

Yes, I did. I saw the panic in her eyes, saw her thrashing and convulsing, trying to free her throat, saw her at last go still and blue in front of me. She couldnโ€™t have faked that. The best actress in the world couldnโ€™t have faked that.

โ€œThen whoโ€™s doing this to me?โ€ I demand. โ€œWhat do theyย want?โ€ โ€œDoes it matter?โ€ Geoff shrugs. โ€œJust ignore them. Youโ€™ve brushed it

off every time before, havenโ€™t you? Whereโ€™s your thick skin? Why start getting bothered now?โ€

โ€œBecause . . .โ€ I swallow. โ€œIt hurts. I justโ€”it hurts.โ€

โ€œAh.โ€ He leans forward. โ€œSo are you going to tell me the truth now?โ€

I open my mouth, but nothing comes out. I canโ€™t do it. Iโ€™ve held the line for this long; I canโ€™t break it, even if, in some wretched way, it might set me free.

โ€œI get it,โ€ says Geoff. โ€œYou say it once, you can never take it back.โ€

He knows. I can tell from his face that he knows. I donโ€™t bother trying to convince him otherwise, or to explain the complexities involvedโ€”that I did put in the work, thatย The Last Frontย is just as much my accomplishment as it is Athenaโ€™s, that it could not possibly exist in its current form without me. It doesnโ€™t matter. Geoffโ€™s made up his mind, and thatโ€™s fineโ€”thereโ€™s nothing more he can do to me than what the internet already has.

I blink angrily down at the table, trying to collect my thoughts. I canโ€™t convince him that Iโ€™m innocent, but I need to make him understand.

โ€œI just donโ€™t get why everyoneโ€™s so obsessed with Athenaโ€™s legacy,โ€ I say at last. โ€œThey all talk about her like she was this saint.โ€

Geoff cocks his head, then settles into his chair, hands clasped in his lap like heโ€™s prepared to stay awhile. โ€œSo weโ€™re doing this.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve seen her writing process,โ€ I blurt out. I donโ€™t know why Iโ€™m saying this, especially to Geoff, of all people. I just canโ€™t keep it on my chest any longer, canโ€™t keep swallowing my resentment. โ€œShe was a thief. She took peopleโ€™s pain and made it her own to describe however she liked. She stole as much as I didโ€”she stole fromย me. Back in college, sheโ€”โ€ I choke. My nose stings, and I clamp my mouth shut. Iโ€™ve never told this story to anyone else before. If I keep talking, Iโ€™ll burst into sobs.

โ€œShe stole from me, too,โ€ Geoff says. โ€œConstantly.โ€ Iโ€™m stunned. โ€œYouโ€™re saying that your storiesโ€”โ€

โ€œNo, I meanโ€”look, itโ€™s complicated.โ€ His eyes dart around, like heโ€™s afraid that someone will overhear. He takes a deep breath. โ€œIt was more like

โ€”okay, look, hereโ€™s an example. So weโ€™d get into fights, right? Stupid stuff, like her dog allergy, or having joint financesโ€”anyways, it felt so important at the time. And Iโ€™d yell something desperate, something vulnerable, only to find those same words published in a short story the very next month. Sometimes, when we fought, she would give me this very cool, narrow-eyed look. I knew that look, because it was the same look she got when she was drafting a scene. And I never knew if she was reallyย thereย during our relationship, or if the whole thing for her was some kind of ongoing story, if she did what she did just to document my reaction. I felt like I was losing my mind.โ€ He presses his fingers against the bridge of his nose. โ€œSometimes she would say things that made me upset, or ask about things Iโ€™d been throughโ€”and as time went on all I could think was that she wasย miningย me, using me as fodder.โ€

Itโ€™s hard for me to really feel sorry for Geoff. This is, after all, the same man who once threatened to leak nudes of Athena on Reddit if she didnโ€™t back him up against aย Locusย reviewer. But I can see the truth in his eyes, the pain. Athena always thought that what she did was a gift. A distillation of trauma into something eternal.ย Give me your bruises and hurts, she told us,ย and I will return to you a diamond.ย Only she never cared that once the art was made, once the personal became spectacle, the pain was still there.

Suddenly my eyes flash up to the window. My breath halts and my hands clench before my brain catches up to what Iโ€™m seeing: Athena, dark curls loose over her shoulders, draped in that same emerald-green shawl sheโ€™d worn to my book launch. Her eyes glimmer with amusement. Her berry-red mouth forms a jagged hole in her face. Sheโ€™s laughing,ย jeering, at the sight of me with Geoff.

She lifts a hand to wave.

I blink, and then sheโ€™s gone.

โ€œYou all right?โ€ Geoff half turns toward what he thinks Iโ€™m looking at. โ€œWhat wereโ€”?โ€

โ€œNothing,โ€ I say, rattled. โ€œI justโ€”sorry.โ€

I take a deep breath. The windowโ€™s empty. Thereโ€™s nothing I can point to, nothing that proves Iโ€™m not going mad. I have the fleeting urge to get up

and sprint to the door, to chase this apparition around the blockโ€”but what if no oneโ€™s there? What if Iโ€™m simply losing my mind?

Geoff gives me a sympathetic look. A silence passes, and then he says, leaning forward, โ€œLook, June. You probably donโ€™t want to hear advice from me, but someoneโ€™s got to say it. Go work on something else. Donโ€™tโ€”I mean, just get out of her shadow. Leave this all behind.โ€

Itโ€™s decent advice. I imagine thatโ€™s what heโ€™s been trying to do for the last two years. Heโ€™s not on Twitter anymore, so I havenโ€™t heard much about what heโ€™s up to, but from what I gather from others heโ€™s making some decent money for himself writing for TV. He doesnโ€™t go to literary conventions anymore. His name isnโ€™t a punch line anymore, just a tired reference. Heโ€™s freed himself from Athenaโ€™s web.

But Athena is the reason for any modicum of success Iโ€™ve ever had.

My career as an author does not exist without her.

Without Athena, who am I?

โ€œIโ€™m trying,โ€ I say in a very small voice. โ€œI justโ€”I donโ€™t think sheโ€™ll let me go. Or these trolls, whoever they areโ€”โ€

โ€œIgnore them, June.โ€ Geoff looks so tired. โ€œJust block them out.โ€ โ€œDo youโ€”do you think I should respond? Try to get in touch?โ€ โ€œWhat?โ€ He sits up straight. โ€œNo, of course not, why would youโ€”โ€ โ€œJust to see what they want. To see if they want to talk, I meanโ€”โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s nothing to say.โ€ Geoff seems inordinately angry; far angrier than this response justifies. It scares me a bit. I wonder whatโ€™s going on in his mind, what ghosts of Athenaโ€™s heโ€™s been struggling with himself. โ€œAll right, Junie? This road leads to nothing good. Just leave it alone, I swear to God. Donโ€™t encourage the crazies.โ€

โ€œAll right.โ€ I exhale slowly. โ€œYouโ€™re right.โ€

For lack of anything better to do, I finish my tea in silence. Geoff never orders a drink. He pays my bill without asking, then walks me out to the street. He gives me this long look as we stand waiting for my Uber, and I almost think heโ€™s going to ask me to come home with him. I imagine, for a fleeting moment, the act of sleeping with Geoffrey Carlino, the messy industry of clothing removal and frantic stimulation of parts. Shared trauma brings people together, doesnโ€™t it? Are we not both victims of the same narcissistic bitch? Heโ€™s attractive, of course, but I feel no real twinge of desire. If I fucked Geoff, Iโ€™d only be doing it for the shock value, for the narrative wrench it would throw in this whole mess. And, though I canโ€™t

quite articulate why, I know the only winner to come out of this would be Athena.

โ€œI guess Iโ€™ll see you, then,โ€ I say. โ€œAround. Maybe.โ€ โ€œMaybe.โ€ Geoff glances down at me. โ€œAnd June?โ€ โ€œYeah?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s going to be fine,โ€ he says. โ€œThese things always feel like the end of the world when theyโ€™re happening. But theyโ€™re not. Social media is such a tiny, insular space. Once you close your screen, no one gives a fuck. And you shouldnโ€™t, either, all right?โ€

โ€œIโ€”all right, Geoff. Thanks.โ€

He gives me a nod and walks off in the direction of the bus stop.

Maybe Iโ€™ve been too harsh. Maybe Geoffrey Carlino isnโ€™t such an asshole. Maybe he was just young, and insecure, and caught up in a relationship he wasnโ€™t ready for. Maybe Athena really did hurt him quite badly, and maybe we all judged him too quickly because he was a wealthy, cishet white guy and Athena was Athena.

Whatโ€™s more, Geoff is one of the few people on earth who also understands the unique pain of trying to love Athena Liu. The futility of it all. Like Echo looking at Narcissus. Like Icarus, hurtling straight at the sun, just to feel its warmth on his skin.

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