IโM DRAGGING BYย the time I arrive home from Briar.
I canโt decide what I hate moreโthe weekends, when Iโm at the club until two or three in the morning and then have to sort mail and packages from four until eleven. Or the weekdays, when I either have classes in the morning and the post office afterwardยธ or an ungodly early post office shift followed by classes. Today was the latter, so Iโm dead-ass tired as I drop my backpack on the hall floor.
Even if I wanted to be with Tucker again (and most of my body parts are in favor of a reunion) Iโm too exhausted to do anything but lie on my back.
Althoughโฆthat wouldnโt be half bad, either. He could rub me downยธ fuck me slow, and I could just lie back and enjoy it.
I give myself a mental head slap. Tucker and his big wang is the last thing that should be on my mind.
In the kitchen, Nana is stirring a pot at the stove, dressed in tight jeans, a lycra top thatโs losing its elasticity, and her ever-present fluffy pink slippers.
โThat smells great,โ I tell her.
The simmering red sauce is filling the kitchen with the most heavenly scent. My stomach gurgles and reminds me I havenโt had anything to eat since the bagel I grabbed for breakfast before work.
โGirl, you look like youโre about to fall over. Go and sit down. Dinner will be ready in a sec.โ
I donโt need to be told twice, but when I see the empty table, I make a detour to grab plates and silverware. Through the doorway, I spot the top of Rayโs head as he stares at the television. Heโs probably fondling himself. I shudder as I pull the plates out of the cabinet.
โYou want milk or water?โ I ask as I begin to set the table.
โWater, babe. Iโm feeling bloated. Did you know that Anne Hathaway is lactose intolerant? She doesnโt eat any dairy. Maybe you should think about cutting dairy out of your diet.โ
โNana, that means no cheese or ice cream. Unless a doctor tells me that dairy is going to kill me, Iโm all in on the cow.โ
โAll Iโm saying is, dairy could be why youโre tired all the time.โ She shakes her spoon at me.
โNo, Iโm pretty sure itโs because Iโm working two jobs and taking a full course load,โ I answer dryly.
โIf she stops eating dairy, will she be less of a baby bitch?โ Ray asks as he strolls into the kitchen. Heโs wearing the same sweatpants that he always does. The fabric is so worn around his crotch, I swear I can see a faint hint of pink skin.
I nearly gag, turning away before he ruins my appetite.
โRay, donโt you start,โ Nana complains. โBabe, will you get the strainer for me?โ
My stepfather nudges me as I walk by. โSheโs talking to you.โ
โNo shit. Because she knows talking to you is like talking to her couch.
She gets the same results.โ
I set the glass of water next to Nanaโs plate and then hurry over to the sink to get the strainer out. Nana dumps the sauce into a bowl while I take care of the noodles.
Ray, meanwhile, leans against the refrigerator like a lazy toad, watching us bustle around the kitchen.
I hate this man with all my heart. From the first moment my mom brought him home to meet me when I was eight, I knew he was trouble. I told Mom as much, but listening to her daughter was never something she was very good at. Neither is sticking around, apparently. Mom ran off with some other slimebag when I was sixteen, and we havenโt seen her since. She calls a few times a year to โcheck in,โ but as far as I can tell, she has no plans to ever come back to Boston.
I donโt even know where sheโs living these days. What I do know is that thereโs no reason for Ray to be livingย here. Heโs not my fatherโthat title is reserved for the piece of shit who abandoned Mom after knocking her upโ and heโs definitely not part of the family. I think the only reason Nana keeps
him around is because his work comp checks pay a third of our rent. I assume she fucks him for about the same reason. Because heโs convenient.
But, God, heโs so worthless I think even worms would turn up their noses at him. If worms had noses, that is.
Only when the table is completely set and the steaming pasta is ready for serving does Ray take a seat.
โWhereโs the bread?โ he demands.
Nana flies up from her chair. โOh damn. Itโs in the oven.โ
โIโve got it,โ I tell her. โYou sit still.โ As much as Nanaโs offhand comments might hurt, the woman still raised me, clothed me, and fed me while Ray sat on his fat ass, smoked weed and masturbated to sporting events.
I cast a glare at his back and notice, for the first time, a white envelope stuck down his pants. Itโs probably a bill. The last time he hid a bill from us (because heโd watched a dozen pay-per-view pornos) we had a three-month late fee to pay. Our budget works only if we donโt have unexpected surprises like that.
I grab the rolls from the oven, dump them into a basket and carry it over the table. As I bend over, I pluck the envelope out from the back of Rayโs sweatpants. โWhatโs this?โ I demand, waving it in the air. โSome bill?โ
โItโs not those dirty shows again, is it, Ray?โ The sides of Nanaโs thin lips pull down.
He flushes. โCourse not. Told you I donโt watch that shit anymore.โ He shifts in his chair to give me a smarmy smile. โItโs for you.โ He snatches the envelope out of my grip and drags it under his nose. โSmells like uptight bitch to me.โ
A flash of crimson at the edge makes my heart beat faster. I lunge toward the envelope, but Ray holds his arm out high and away from me, making me press against him. God, Iย hateย him.
โGive her the letter,โ Nana chastises. โThe food is getting cold.โ โI was just funninโ,โ he says, dropping the envelope by my plate. My eyes lock on the crimson shield in the upper left corner. โOpen it,โ Nana urges.
Thereโs a hint of eagerness in her tone. She may taunt me about my worthless education and ridiculous dreams, but I think that deep down sheโs damn excited. At least sheโll have this to lord over the other ladies at the
hair salon whose granddaughters are having babies instead of getting into Harvard.
Exceptโฆthe envelope is wafer thin. All of my college acceptance letters were in giant envelopes stuffed full of pretty brochures and catalogs.
โSheโs scared. She probably didnโt get in.โ Rayโs words are both lined with disdain and ringing with glee.
I snatch the letter and rip it open with Rayโs knife. A single piece of paper falls out. Itโs got several paragraphs, none of which I fully read as I scan for the important words.
Congratulations on your admission to Harvard Law School! I hope you will join us in Cambridge as part of the class ofโ
โWell?โ Nana prompts.
The biggest smile known to mankind spreads across my face. My hunger, my exhaustion, my irritation with Ray, is all wiped away.
โIโฆgot in.โ The words come out on a squeak of breath. I repeat myself, and this time Iโm screaming. โI got in! Oh my God! I got in!โ
I wave the letter in the air as I dance wildly around the kitchen. I donโt usually allow myself to drop my guard in front of Ray, but the bastard doesnโt even exist to me right now. Excitement pulses in my blood, along with a sense of relief so weighty that I canโt stay upright for much longer. I fall on Nanaโs shoulders and give her a huge hug.
โI suppose youโre going to be extra uppity now,โ she gripes, and I donโt even care.
โNaah, this doesnโt make her special or anything,โ Ray drawls. โSheโs got two holes like any other bitch. Three if you count her mouth.โ
I wait for Nana to defend me, but apparently jealousy is winning out over pride right now. She laughs at his disgusting comment, and just like that, Iโm done celebrating with these people. I cannotย waitย to get out of this house.
Still, I refuse to let anything affect my happiness right now. I spin on my heel and waltz down the hallway to call my girls.
โWhat about dinner?โ Nana yells after me.
I ignore her and keep walking. In my bedroom, I throw myself on the bed and text my friends.
I got in.
Hope beats Carin by a millisecond.
OMG! Congrats!!!!!!!!
Carin replies,ย PIC! PIC! PIC!
I snap a picture of the acceptance letter and send it off. While Iโm waiting for their responses, I run down the hall, fill my plate with pasta, stuff a roll in my mouth, and run back to my bedroom. Nana and Ray say something, but none of it processes. Only sheer joy fills my ears.
There are a dozen responses when I get back.
Hope:ย <3
Carin:ย LOVE! LOVE! LOVE! UR so awesome!
Hope:ย Iโm so proud of u. UR going to make the best lawyer EVER. Please say youโll represent me if I get sued for malpractice.
Carin:ย THIS IS THE MOST BEAUTIFUL THING!
Hope:ย When do we get to take u out? And no, never, not happening R unacceptable responses.
I chew on my roll as I text them back.
Me:ย A) U both get free legal services 4 life.
B) Letโs celebrate tomorrow. I promise to order enough to make your credit card weep.
Hope:ย Not possible! Iโm making reservations for Santinoโs.
Carin:ย That place needs reservations?!
Hope:ย I dunno! Figure of speech. But we could go to Maloneโs again if u want celebratory sex.
Me:ย I still have the number from the guy from last Saturday. What about u? Your lady garden get a private tour last night?
The two of them had gone out without me to a party at Beau Maxwellโs house. I wonder if Tucker was there. And if so, I wonder who he took to his truck this time. The thought of him running his big, callused hands over some other girlโs breasts makes me grit my teeth in envy, but I donโt have the right to be jealous. I blocked his number, after all. I told him in no uncertain terms that I wasnโt interested in going out with him.
So why did you unblock him, hmmm?
The taunting voice in my head has me biting my lip. Fine, so I unblocked his number. But that wasnโt because I want to go out with him or anything. I just figured it might be handy to have in case ofโฆan emergency.
God, Iโm so pathetic.
My phone dings, pulling me out of my thoughts.
Carin:ย No. I was an angel.
Hope:ย Liar! OMG, what a liar. She came downstairs with sex hair bigger than Cher. Text her a picture of ur chest. Right now or Iโll do it.
Carin:ย Fine. I hate u.
Sometimes I do wish I lived with them. I gobble up more pasta as I wait for the picture from Carin. When the image comes through, I nearly choke on a noodle.
Me:ย Did u make out with teen wolf last night?
Carin:ย No. Brad Allen.
I search my memory banks and come up with a six-foot, four-inch guy with a round, sweet face.
Me:ย Defensive lineman? He looks like a cherub!
Carin:ย Yup. Turns out he has a sucking fetish. Good thing itโs cold out because tank tops would be out of the question.
Me:ย Other than him trying to actually suck the blood through ur chesticles, did u enjoy him?
Carin:ย It wasnโt bad. He knew how to use his equipment.
Me:ย Ha! My athlete theory is holding strong!
Hope:ย Between Tucker and Brad Allen, it appears Bโs hypothesis is accurate.
Carin:ย U both know thatโs not how the scientific method works, right?
Me:ย Yup, but we donโt care.
Hope:ย Does that mean Tucker is getting a repeat?
Me:ย Doubtful. Heโs good, but when do I have the time?
We text for a few more minutes, but my spike of adrenaline is wearing off. I set my partially finished plate on my nightstand and hug the Harvard letter to my chest. Itโs all happening. All the good things Iโve worked so hard for are coming to fruition. Nothing can stop me now.
I fall asleep with a big, happy smile on my face.
*
Raincheck, chickadees,ย I text my girls the following day, after Hope messages to ask if I want to have lunch with them.
Hope:ย Aw, why??
Me:ย Professor Fromm invited me for a campus visit. Iโm back in Boston, skipping out on my last class. FYI, Iโm officially 2 good for u.
Hope:ย Kisses! Text back on how it goes. Canโt wait until next year and weโre all in Boston as grad students!!!
Carinโs in class, but I know Iโll get a text from her as soon as sheโs out.
I take the Red Line to Harvard Square. I swear the subway station even smells good here, unlike any other stop on the line, which reeks of garbage, stale urine, and bad BO. And the campus is gorgeous. I want to swing my arms out wide and spin in a ridiculously happy circle.
According to my map, the eighteen or so buildings that make up the law school are on the other side of campus. Thereโs no hurry, though, so I take the time to walk through slowly, admiring all the massive brick buildings, the dozens and dozens of trees that are still holding on to the very last of
their leaves, and the acres of grassโsome of which is still green in places. Itโs Briar on steroids. Even the students look smarter, richer, more important.
Most of them are wearing what I like to call the rich girl uniform: Sperry topsiders, Rag & Bone jeans, and a Joie sweatshirtโthe kind that looks like it came from the bottom of a trash can but actually costs a couple hundred bucks. I know this only because of Hopeโs closet.
But just because my black skirt and white top came from a discount store doesnโt mean I donโt belong. I might not have as much money as anyone here, but Iโd stack my brain up against any of these students.
I pull open the doors to Everett, the building where Professor Frommโs office is. At the receptionistโs desk, I introduce myself. She has me write my name in an entry book and then gestures for me to take a seat.
Iโm not there for more than a minute when a young man wearing a blue- and-white checked shirt and a dark blue tie strolls out from a side hall that I didnโt notice when I first arrived.
โHello. Iโm Kale Delacroix.โ He offers his hand.
I shake it automatically, unsure of why heโs here while at the same time wondering why anyone would ever name their kidย Kale. โIโm Sabrina James.โ
โGreat. Welcome to Harvard Legal Aid. Hereโs our intake form. If you need any help, give me a holler.โ
He shoves a clipboard toward me. I scan the document, not quite understanding why I need to fill out a form to see Professor Fromm. I tug the pen out from under the clip and start to print my name. Then I stop. While Iโm not a fan of looking stupid, I figure itโs better to ask what the hell is going on. โIs this Legal Aid? Because Iโm notโโ
He cuts me off. โDonโt worry about it. Thatโs what legal aid is for. For the indigent.โ The last word drips with condescension.
My neck hairs bristle. โI know whatโโ
โDo you not read English?ย Hablo espaรฑol?โ He jerks the clipboard out of my hands, flips the paper over, and then shoves it back toward me. The form is now in Spanish.
โI speak English,โ I growl between clenched teeth.
โOh, okay. I can fill out your form if you canโt read or write. There are many people with your kind of problem here. Is it a domestic issue?
Landlord/tenant? We donโt handle torts here.โ Again, he gives me a patronizing smile.
โIโm a student,โ I tell him. โI mean, I will be a student.โ
We stare at each other for a moment as I wait for my words to register. I see the moment that they do, because the pale white guy grows even whiter. โYou are? Christ, I thoughtโฆโ
I know what he thought. He took one look at my frayed coat and pegged me as a poor person in need of free legal services. And the most humiliating part of this is that he isnโt wrong. If I needed a lawyer, I wouldnโt be able to pay for one.
โIs there a problem here?โ a new voice interrupts. A giraffe of a woman appears behind Kale, her hands clasped behind her back.
โNo, thereโs no problem, Professor Stein.โ Kale gives me a tight smile, but his eyes flash a warning, as if to say to not fuck this up for him.
The smile I give him in return is full of teeth. โDale here thought I was a client, but Iโm actually here to see Professor Fromm.โ
The professor studies me, quickly assessing the situation. As she relieves me of the clipboard, she tilts her head toward the stairs. โSecond floor, first door on the left.โ She hands the clipboard back to the Kale.
โItโsย Kale,โ he hisses as he stiffly marches away.
The professor shakes her head. โNew students,โ she says in a flimsy apology before walking off in the opposite direction.
As Kale disappears down the hall, I hear a high-pitched voice greet him. โOh my God, that was too funny. Did you actually mistake that girl for a Spanish-speaking immigrant?โ
I should move on, but my feet are rooted to the spot. The receptionist gives me a pained look.
โDid you see what she was wearing?โ Kale protests from the corridor. โLooked like a reject from the domestic violence clothing drive we have each year.โ
A new voice chimes in. โWhat are you guys laughing about?โ
โKale mistook a student visiting Prof Fromm for a homeless person.โ
With burning cheeks, I meet the eyes of the receptionist. โYou gotta do something about those acoustics.โ
She shrugs. โIf you think thatโs the worst thing I hear every day, youโre in for a sore surprise.โ
What a cheerful thought. The idea of lingering here isnโt so appealing anymore, so I take the steps two at a time. Professor Frommโs door is at the top of the stairs. Sheโs talking on the phone but notices me right away.
โSabrina, come in.โ Placing a hand over the receiver, she gestures for me to enter. โIโll just be a minute.โ To the person on the phone she says, โI have to go. A student walked in. Donโt forget to pick up the dry cleaning.โ
The office is lined with books, most of them legal publications marked by the olive hardcovers with the North Eastern Reporter words in gold lettering on the spine.
I take a seat in the black leather chair in front of the desk and wonder what itโd be like to sit on the other side. It would mean Iโd arrived, and no one would mistake me for a legal aid recipient ever again.
โSoโฆ Congratulations!โ She beams at me. โI wanted to tell you the other night, but I didnโt want to ruin the surprise.โ
โThank you. I canโt tell you how thrilled I am.โ
โYour credentials are impeccable, butโฆโ She pauses and my heart starts beating wildly.
She canโt take away my acceptance, can she? Once itโs mine, it canโt be revoked, right?
โKelly mentioned that you work two jobs?โ she finishes.
โYes, I wait tables and sort mail.โ Professor Gibson knows exactly where I wait tables, but she told me it wasnโt necessary for Harvard to know, so I keep that under wraps. โBut I plan to quit both jobs before classes start this fall.โ
This makes Fromm happy. โGood. I was hoping youโd say that. While the oldย Paper Chaseย saying that if you look to your left and right and one of you wonโt be here next year is no longer the case, we do have a few students that drop out after the first year. I donโt want you to be one of them. Your focus this coming fall needs to be on your studies. Youโll be expected to absorb more information in one night than most undergrads do in a semester.โ
She plucks two books off a stack on the floor and pushes them across the desk. According to the titles, one is on administrative law and the other is on the art of writing.
โWhen you have time, and I suggest you make it, practice your writing. The pen is your strongest weapon here. If you can write well, youโll go
places. The other is on ad law. A lot of people get stumped on regulatory practice versus corporate and tort law. Itโs good to be a step ahead.โ She gives the books another nudge toward me.
โThank you,โ I say gratefully, gathering the books and placing them in my lap.
โYouโre welcome. Tell Kelly I said hello when you get back to Briar.โ Okay then. Iโm clearly dismissed.
โThank you,โ I repeat awkwardly, and then I take the books and rise to my feet.
I skipped class, rode the subway, and endured a humiliating encounter with a jerk named Kale, and for what? A five-minute conversation and two book recommendations?
When I reach the door, Professor Fromm calls my name again. โAnd Sabrina, allow me to give you a tip. Spend a little of your loan money on a new wardrobe. It will help you feel at home here, and the playing field wonโt seem so uneven. You dress for the job you want, not the one you have.โ
I nod, hoping that my cheeks arenโt completely red. And here I thought theย Humiliate Sabrinaย hour was over.
On the walk across the campus, everything looks a little duller. This time I notice that the large patches of lawn are really mostly brown and that the trees are naked without the leaves. The students have an unrelentingly sameness to themโrich and privileged.
When I get home, I toss the books on my dresser and lie down on the bed. Thereโs a corner near my window where the plaster is cracked and yellowing. Water has been seeping in for as long as I can remember, but after bringing it up to Nana once and getting a blank stare in return, I havenโt mentioned it again.
I roll onto my back and stare up at the ceiling. There are cracks in the plaster up there too, along with brownish stains that Iโve always wondered about. Maybe thereโs a leak in the roof?
A rush of shame washes over me, but Iโm not sure what Iโm feeling ashamed about. My ugly, rundown home? My cheap clothes? Myself in general?
Pity yourself later. Itโs time to pay the bills.
God. The last thing I want to do right now is leave one place of shame and go to another one, but I donโt have much of a choice. My shift at Boots & Chutes starts in an hour.
I force myself to my feet and grab the booty shorts and bra that serve as my uniform. Iโm only going to have to do this for ten more months, I remind myself as I shimmy into my outfit and then apply my makeup. I slip on my six-inch platform stripper shoes, throw on my tattered wool coat and head for the strip club. Which, sadly, is the one place where I really do fit in.
Iโm trashy. I live with trashy people. I belong in a trashy place.
The question is, will I ever be able to rub off the stench of my past to belong at Harvard? I thought I could.
But tonight, I honestly donโt know.