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    Perfect - 02

    Page 3
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      Check messages. Find a voice

      mail from Cara, who wants

      to get together. For the first

      time today, everything’s bomb.

      Andre Marcus Kane III

      Bomb

      Give most girls a way

      to describe me, that’s what

      they’d say—that Andre

      Marcus Kane the third is

      bomb.

      I struggle daily to maintain

      the pretense. Why must it be

      expected—no, demanded—of

      me

      to surpass my ancestors’

      achievements? Why

      can’t I just be a regular

      seventeen-year-old, trying to

      make

      sense of life? But my path

      has been preordained,

      without anyone even asking

      me

      what I want. Nobody seems

      to care that with every push

      to live up to their expectations,

      my own dreams

      vaporize.

      Don’t Get Me Wrong

      I do understand my parents wanting only

      the best for me.

      Am one hundred percent tuned to the concept

      that life is a hell of a lot more enjoyable

      with a fast-flowing

      stream of money carrying you along.

      I like driving a pricey car, wearing

      clothes that feel

      like they want to be next to my skin.

      I love not having to be a living, breathing

      stereotype because

      of my color. Anytime I happen to think

      about it, I am grateful to my grandparents

      for their vision. Grateful

      to my mom for her smarts, to my dad

      for his bald ambition and, yes, greed.

      Not to mention

      his unreal intuition. But I’m sick of being

      pushed to follow in his footsteps. Real

      estate speculation?

      Investment banking? Neither interests me.

      Too much at risk, and when you lose,

      you lose major.

      I much prefer winning, even if it’s winning

      small. I think more like my grandfather.

      Andre Marcus Kane Sr.

      embraced the color of his skin, refused

      to let it straitjacket him. He grew up in

      the urban California

      nightmare called Oakland, with its rutted

      asphalt and crumbling cement and frozen

      dreams, all within

      sight of sprawling hillside mansions.

      I’d look up at those houses, he told

      me more than once,

      and think to myself, no reason why

      that can’t be me, living up there. No

      reason at all, except

      getting sucked down into the swamp.

      Meaning welfare or the drug trade

      or even the tired

      belief that sports were the only way out.

      I guessed I wanted a big ol’ house on

      the hill more than just

      about anything. And I knew my brain

      was the way to get it. Oh, what a brain!

      My gramps started inventing

      things in elementary school. Won awards

      for his off-the-wall inventions in high

      school, and a full

      scholarship to Cal-Poly. He could have

      gone on to postgrad anywhere, except

      just about then he fell

      hard for my grandmother, Grace, a Kriol

      beauty from Belize. Never saw any girl

      could match her, before

      or since, he claims. God sent her to me.

      Maybe. Who else would have encouraged

      Gramps’s crazy ideas?

      Telephones that didn’t need wires?

      Computers, in every American home?

      Ambitious goals,

      especially in the sixties, when color TV

      was about as technological as most people

      got. But if Andre Kane

      believed it would come to pass, then so did

      his new wife, Grace. Gramps led the charge

      into the Silicon Valley.

      He got his house on the hill. And then some.

      Gramps’s Obese Bank Account

      Came with taxes and bills. His kids—two

      boys and a girl—came

      with private school tuitions. Dad was oldest,

      and so came programmed with the Eldest Son

      Syndrome—a classic

      overachiever, hell-bent on making his own

      mark on the world, and a bigger one than

      his father’s. Andre

      Marcus Kane Jr. had more than drive going

      for him. He had luck, eerie foresight, and

      brilliant timing. Right

      out of college, Dad became an investment

      banker, banking heavily on his own

      investments. His stock

      portfolio thrived. And somehow, he knew

      to dump everything right before the last

      time the market crashed.

      So when things started to look iffy again,

      he went looking for other investments.

      Lending is too easy

      these days, I heard him tell Mom. You

      can’t keep giving those loans away.

      Adjustable rate mortgages

      are going to bring this country down.

      Which explains why we deserted the Golden

      State in favor of the Silver

      State some eighteen months ago. Dad keeps

      pouncing on the distressed properties that

      pop up regularly.

      Plus, cost of living is lower here, and that

      includes my tuition at Zephyr Academy,

      the finest college

      prep school in northern Nevada. I don’t

      miss California too much, except for seeing

      Gramps and Grandma

      Grace. That, and the street dance scene.

      Dad Might Be Sympathetic

      To my missing my grandparents, but

      dance is not even

      a small blip on his radar. I mean, it would

      not jibe with his plans for my future.

      It’s an ongoing rant.

      Mom, who’s generally more focused on

      where to nip and how to tuck her patients,

      only brings it up once

      in a while. Dad is more pragmatic, and

      broaches the subject regularly, especially

      with graduation in

      plain sight. Did you decide about school?

      I’ve had positive responses from two

      California colleges.

      Either would be okay, I guess. “Not yet.”

      Stop procrastinating. Where do you see

      yourself next year? Because

      it won’t be here. Time for a viable plan.

      Dorm or a homeless shelter? Nice choice.

      Thanks, Dad. My plan

      is art school, a frivolous career in graphic

      design. I’m still waiting to hear back from

      my top choice—the San

      Francisco Art Institute. But when I told

      Dad that, he freaked. Apparently, “art”

      plus “San Francisco” can

      only mean one thing. You’re not serious!

      He actually yelled, all his well-cultivated

      self-control out the

      window. What are you? A homosexual?

      It might have been funny, except for

      the way he looked at me—

      like hinging on my answer was worthiness

      of the Kane surname. I shook my head,

      agreed to rethink my future,

      wishing I could confess that my real dream

      isn’t art. It’s dance. My parents have no idea.

      No one does, except

      my instru
    ctor, who gives me private lessons.

      Ballet. Modern. Some ballroom. But I love jazz

      most of all, and Liana

      says I’ve got real talent. I don’t know about

      that, but I do know that dance lifts me

      above the mundane.

      Grounds me with the certainty that I am

      good at something. Connects me to the place

      inside where I find passion.

      Meaning beyond possessions. Pride, divorced

      from my last name. But how can I confess

      that to my father?

      He thinks a career in art will make me a gay

      loser. If I told him I wanted to be a dancer,

      it would erase any

      doubt in his mind that’s exactly what I am.

      As For My Mom

      She mostly cares about wasted tuition. Art?

      You might as well go to

      public school. What’s the point of spending

      all this money to insure you have a quality

      education only to have you

      squander it on an indulgent flight of fancy?

      Funny, considering indulgent flights of fancy

      bring in a good portion

      of her income as a plastic surgeon. Today,

      snow plummeting from the silver sky,

      Dr. Kane is working in

      her home office. I can hear her, purring

      to a patient on the phone. I understand and

      your concerns are justified.

      Like all cosmetic surgery, liposuction can

      have side effects. But you are a perfect

      candidate.… Mom will

      talk that lady into letting her suck the fat

      from the woman’s gut, butt, or thighs, a shortcut

      to perfection. Damn

      the bills. You’ll be the finest woman standing

      in the bankruptcy line. Your plastic surgeon

      doesn’t care, either.

      She gets payment in full up front. Which helps

      pay for her ambitionless kid’s unappreciated

      tuition. No classes today,

      though. Today, even the snowplow drivers

      are staying inside; at least I haven’t heard one

      go by. It’s a good day

      to hang out at home. But I’ve got other plans

      and a stellar all-wheel-drive Audi Quattro.

      Mom’s still on the phone,

      convincing. I call out anyway, “See you later.”

      Her voice falls quiet, so I know she must

      have heard me. But

      she doesn’t bother to say good-bye.

      Cara

      Don’t Bother

      Me with promises. Vows

      are cheaply manufactured,

      come with no guarantees.

      Don’t bother to say you

      love

      me. The word is indefinable.

      Joy to some, heartbreak

      to others, depending on

      circumstance. There

      is

      evidence that the emotion

      can make a person live longer,

      evidence it can kill you early.

      I think it’s akin to

      a deadly

      disease. Or at least some

      exotic fever. Catch it, and

      you’d better, quick, swallow

      some medication to use as a

      weapon

      against the fire ravaging

      body and soul.

      New Running Shoes

      Are the best thing in the world,

      at least once you get them broken

      in. The Nikes are good to go, if

      only we could get a few days

      of decent weather. I can run in

      the gym, but inhaling sweat

      fumes is so not my thing.

      I can swim indoors—don’t mind

      that a bit. But I’m craving a long

      run outside in the diamond air,

      in a downpour of brittle morning

      sun. Breathe in. Breathe out.

      Feet drumming pavement. Leg

      muscles flex, long then short.

      Slip into the zone where time

      disappears and no one expects

      pace or performance. No one can

      catch me. No one to stop me. No score

      to keep. No measure but my own.

      When I run, I am almost free.

      But Today The Roads Are Icy

      So I won’t run, and I’ll try not

      to think about freedom. It only

      frustrates me because I sincerely

      doubt I’ll ever know what it means

      to live autonomously. I will

      forever walk beneath an umbrella

      of expectation. Mom and Dad

      have a plan for me and won’t talk

      about alternatives. My teachers

      have faith in me and know I’ll go far.

      My so-called friends mostly hang

      out to see if my status will rub off

      on them. Only Sean doesn’t really

      ask anything special of me, except

      to decorate his arm like a favorite

      piece of jewelry. Oh, he claims

      that he’s in love with me. If I knew

      what love was, I might be able to

      judge the depth of his feelings. But

      for now, it’s enough to have a stable

      relationship with one of the most

      popular guys at school. No matter

      that he doesn’t make my heart pitter-

      patter faster. Maybe I’m a ventricle

      short. Despite that, he’s the closest

      thing to a best friend I have.

      Marriages have survived long

      term on less. Not that I’m planning

      to get married any time soon. Who

      needs that kind of misery? All I have

      to do is look around to know it’s not

      for me. Still, it’s nice having a steady

      someone to hang out with. Sean

      is adventurous. Fun. Good-looking

      in a jock kind of way. And you know,

      everyone expects the perfect girl

      to go out with the perfect guy.

      If there’s one thing I’ve learned

      from Mom, it’s that appearances are

      everything. Sean and I look great together.

      You Might Even Say

      We look normal. Looks can deceive.

      We’ve both had our share of emotional

      trauma, though mine stems from

      parents who really don’t care about

      me, while Sean doesn’t have parents

      at all. His mom died giving birth to

      his little brother, Wade. His dad followed

      her four years ago, fried in a fiery bus

      crash. Half of his football team died

      with him. He would have been forty-five

      today. Sean’s making his annual

      pilgrimage to the cemetery, and I’m

      going along. Here comes his jock-

      worthy GMC pickup. It was a gift from

      his uncle Jeff, who will never quite

      measure up, no matter how hard he tries.

      Sean idolized his father. He pulls into

      the driveway, and even from here I can

      see sadness in the forward tilt of his

      shoulders. It’s a memory-shadowed day.

      The Sean Who Stops

      And gets out to open the passenger

      door for me is subdued. Hey, you.

      It comes out a throaty whisper.

      He kisses me, and the kiss is quiet too.

      Sean helps me up into the cab. It over-

      flows flowers. I haven’t seen so much

      color in months. “Where did you find

      such a big variety this time of year?”

      He gives me a tepid smile. I had to

      go to five grocery stores and Wal-Mart.


      Stupid, I know. They’ll freeze first

      thing. It’s supposed to snow tonight.

      “Well, at least it’s nice right now.”

      Nice, meaning thirty degrees, partly

      cloudy, not much wind. Some would

      call that inclement. But Sean agrees

      with my assessment. Yes, it is. Let’s

      go before something nasty blows in.

      As we drive toward the city, I notice

      there isn’t one rose in these dozens

      of flowers. Lilies and asters, tulips,

      carnations, sunflowers and mums,

      but… “You couldn’t find roses in all

      those stores?” Sean drums the steering

      wheel with one hand, musing.

      Finally he says, My mom loved

      roses. She grew them everywhere

      in our yard, and when she died,

      Dad went kind of crazy and

      tore them all out. I can’t even

      look at a rose without thinking

      about that day. I was so afraid

      he’d flipped out for good and

      I would lose him, too. He kept

      saying he’d replant them in

      her memory. Never happened.

      February Doesn’t Seem

      To be a big month for mourning.

      Maybe it’s too cold to die?

      Wow. Too cold to die. Wonder

      if that’s why Conner’s still alive.

      Okay. That’s dumb. I know people

      die in February. But obviously,

      their loved ones don’t come to say

      hi in dead of winter. The cemetery

      is—uh—dead. No one here but

      Sean and me. Which makes it

      exponentially creepy, even in

      daylight. The only time I’ve been

      to a graveyard was for my grand-

      father’s burial. Dad said the old

      jerk deserved to go early. Who

      knows? I had one bad experience

      with him. Of course, it was the only

      time I actually met him. So, yeah.

      Anyway, I’ve never shared any

      of that with Sean yet. And this

      is probably not the right time

     


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