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  For my mother, for believing

  1

  Picture it: me in the middle of Making Proud Choices class—that’s SEX ED for anyone not born in this century. You know, when you have to get a parent or guardian to sign a yellow paper that says it’s okay for you to be learning about all this stuff—like we didn’t already know about sex, but whatever. The guest speaker, Miss Deborah, had JUST passed out condoms. No big deal. I mean, I hadn’t had sex yet. But still, condoms = ain’t no thing but a chicken wing. My best friend, Jade, had a bunch of them hidden in her room. But what Miss Deborah was showing us that day were female condoms.

  I know.

  Have you ever even seen a freakin’ female condom? Don’t lie. Did you even know they existed? Don’t lie!

  If my mom heard me talking about female condoms, she would say that’s some straight-up Americana gringa shit. For real.

  I joined the rest of my class, including Jade, and hollered “Whaaaaat?” and “Noooooo” and “Huh?” until our real teacher, Mrs. Marano, who was sitting in the corner and like twenty months pregnant herself, told us to calm down or else.

  Miss Deborah passed around a few of the (female) condoms. Jade got a pink one. I got one that was mint colored. It felt rubbery, kind of like the gloves Mom uses to wash dishes. It had zigzagged edges, like someone had actually gone to the trouble to make a nice design along the perimeter. I swear. So I was holding this rubbery thing in my hand when this cute boy, Alex, stopped in the hall and stared at me through the doorway. Of course. I froze. But then the Making Proud Choices lady, Miss Deborah, was packing up her things in a big black duffel bag and I had to, you know, return the female condom. Then Mrs. Marano waddled over to the front of the room. “All right, everyone. Take out your independent reading books.”

  The class groaned.

  “Yo, girl. Got anything to eat?” Jade whispered over to me.

  “Nah,” I said.

  Jade had grown up right next door to me. Our apartment bedroom windows faced one another, so we’d knock on our own window, real loud, three times when we needed to talk. Because one of us was always having our phone taken away, the knocking came in handy. Jade’s family was from Honduras (her favorite T-shirt had the word “Afro-Latina” printed across the front). She was a total sneakerhead—I swear she had about seventeen pairs, and she wore her hair different every day (a top bun, straightened, braided, or crazy curly). Jade and me, we were real cool, even though she was spending waaaay too much time with her boy, Ernesto, but whatever. She was family.

  “Any gum or anything?” Jade pleaded.

  “No, girl. I—”

  “Girls,” Mrs. Marano said.

  “Girls,” Jade mimicked under her breath. I couldn’t help it. I laughed.

  “Liliana,” Mrs. Marano said.

  I sat up straight and took out my independent reading book. “Sorry, Mrs. Marano.”

  “I expect better from you, Liliana.” She reached for an Expo marker and wrote my name on the whiteboard.

  I must have turned red, because Jade leaned in and said, “She’s whatever, Liliana. Don’t sweat it.” Then she pulled her backpack up onto her lap, where she texted without Mrs. Marano seeing.

  “Ernesto?” I don’t know why I bothered to ask.

  “Yeah. He wants to go to this thing at the Urbano Project on Saturday. You wanna come?” Ernesto liked attending rallies and marches and poetry slams. I think he just did it to get girls. I mean, it had worked with Jade. True, the Urbano Project led art workshops too, and Jade liked drawing, but still.

  “Nah. I’m straight,” I said.

  “Come on, Liliana. Why don’t you bring your poems or something to read?”

  “Like, in the microphone? In front of strangers? Yeah… no.”

  I could barely hear Jade’s answer even though she was seated right next to me. Mrs. Marano could not control the class. No one was reading. Jade did take out a book, but she just left it on her desk. Aaron was playing with the paper cups that were supposed to stay in a neat pile by the water bubbler. He had one in his mouth like a megaphone, and he didn’t take it out even when Mrs. Marano wrote his name on the board. Chris R. was making a pyramid out of cups on his desk. Marisa asked if she could draw designs for a new bathroom pass that her dad, a carpenter, was going to help her build for our room. Mrs. Marano said no and started writing more names on the board. Chris R., Aaron, Marisa… Marisa took out a piece of paper anyway.

  Finally, hand resting on her gigantic stomach, Mrs. Marano gave the Done With This countdown. “Five… four… three…”

  I took out my journal. Started writing stuff down. Maybe I’d set a story in this crazy classroom. Maybe Mrs. Marano would go into labor right in front of the class, which was so loud that I didn’t notice that the vice principal, Mr. Seaver, was all of a sudden standing right by my desk.

  “Liliana,” he said.

  Oh snap. Was I in trouble? If anyone should be in trouble, it should be Yulian, who was crunching his water bottle over and over; or Johnnie, who was shooting an invisible basketball into an invisible net.

  “Miss Cruz?” Mr. Seaver said, louder. His voice was all deep, and somehow that made everyone quiet down.

  “Why she in trouble?” Jade asked, her eyes narrowing.

  “Get back to your reading, young lady,” Mr. Seaver said. “Miss Cruz, I need to talk to you for a moment. In the hall.”

  My face burned. I never got in trouble. I was an A… okay A-… okay B+… fine, sometimes B- student, so I didn’t know why I would be called out of class.

  I stood up and followed him. From the corner of my eye I could see Chris R. wagging his finger in the air. Oh, please. He was so aggy. And his hair looked like Justin Bieber’s.

  The hallway was much quieter. I was surprised Mr. Seaver hadn’t brought up the fifty-five rules being broken in the class, but that just made me sure that whatever he was about to tell me was important, or worse: really bad. At the end of the hall he opened the door to what we students called the bat cave—a small office that used to be a janitor closet—and asked me to step inside. It was where students went when they were really disruptive, like when Joshua called the substitute teacher an old-ass bitch.

  Look, I don’t want to give the wrong idea. Not every class was crazy, and not every day. Just down the hall was Mrs. Palmer, who ran her class like a corporation. Every kid knew what to do and when and how, and it was peaceful and smelled like a cinnamon apple air freshener. Or even my nasty-breath math teacher—in his class we sat in rows and the volunteers from Simmons College helped us when we had questions. So, Mrs. Marano’s wasn’t totally the norm, is what I’m saying.

  As Mr. Seaver and I sat down at two student desks because (a) his office was being treated for something called asbestos, and (b) a real desk couldn’t fit in the bat cave, he took out an envelope from the inside of his suit jacket with a flourish. “Well, Miss Cruz, you were accepted to the METCO program. A spot has opened up for you off the waiting list, and you start on Monday.” He raised his eyebrows and leaned back, clearly expecting me to leap into the air cheering.

  I opened my mouth but no sound came out.

  “Yes,” Mr. Seaver continued, “I realize it’s already a few weeks into the
school year, but nonetheless, it’s a great opportunity. And it’s in Westburg.” He adjusted his glasses, still looking for that cheer.

  I was still trying to understand You were accepted to the METCO program. Um… what?

  Inside my brain a dozen questions were zapping around, but the first that bubbled out was, “Where’s that at?”

  “About twenty miles west. Listen—”

  “Does this have to do with the essay thingy I just won? Because I told Mrs. Marano I wasn’t reading that at any assembly or whatever.”

  “Well, that certainly would have helped your application all the more. Liliana—”

  “Mr. Seaver, I don’t even know what METCO is.”

  “Here.” He handed me a glossy pamphlet. “It stands for ‘Metropolitan Council for Educational Opportunity.’ ”

  “Huh?”

  He began again. “It’s a desegregation program.”

  I ran my finger across the pamphlet. Oh wait! I had heard of this. A girl from the church we go to was in METCO. She talked like she was white. But she did get into college, so. Oh yeah, and another kid from down the street was in METCO too, I think. I saw him once, waiting for the bus when it was mad early and Mom was taking me to a doctor’s appointment before school. But me, really? I was accepted? I sat up straighter. Cool. But I had plenty of other stuff going on and didn’t need to add a new bougie school on top of it all. So yeah, no.

  “Mr. Seaver, thank you,” I said in my most polite talking-to-the-vice-principal voice. “But I’m not interested in that program. I’m good here.”

  Now he lowered his glasses. “Excuse me?”

  “I’m not interested in switching schools,” I said, opening the pamphlet up. Yep, total bougie vibe! “Besides, my parents would never let me go.”

  He adjusted his glasses once more, then said, “Your parents are the ones who signed you up, in fact.”

  “They did?” My parents?

  “Yes.”

  “When?”

  “Years ago, in fact.”

  Why did he keep saying “in fact”? We weren’t in court.

  And all of a sudden we heard shouting. And the sound of feet pounding. “Mr. Seaver! Mr. Seaver! Mrs. Marano’s having her baby!” It was Jade.

  Whoa! It was like my story idea had come to life! Mr. Seaver bolted out of the bat cave, and I bolted after him. When we reached the classroom, Mrs. Marano was gripping her stomach with both hands, and her jaw was mad tight. Jasmine was bringing her a paper cup of water while Aaron held a little battery-operated fan up to her face. The rest of the kids were going wild, standing on chairs to get a better look. Other teachers stormed in and instantly got on their cell phones. Somehow that gave kids permission to do the same, only they weren’t calling 911. They were taking pictures and going on Snapchat.

  I ran over to Jade. What. The. Hell. No way I was going to some other school in some other whack town called Westburg. I would miss this world way too much. Besides, I was the best writer in my class here. I had a winning essay to prove it.

  I stuffed the METCO pamphlet into my backpack and reached for my phone. What is METCO?? I texted Mom. She didn’t reply.

  Jade was hitting me with questions. “Liliana? Hello? Do you not see that our teacher is gonna have a baby? And what did Mr. Seaver want?”

  “Nothing.” I shooed her away.

  “Dang. What’s good with you?”

  “Nothing.”

  Mr. Seaver and another teacher helped Mrs. Marano out the door and down the hall toward the elevator. I could hear sirens outside. Then another teacher came in and took control of our class. She passed out worksheets, but I couldn’t concentrate. I couldn’t stop thinking about METCO and Mr. Seaver and how he’d said my parents had signed me up in the first place. Parents—as in Mom and Dad. Did my dad really know about it? Sometimes one of them signed me up for something without telling the other. Plus, right now things were… complicated with him, as in, he’d taken off—again. Truth, he had to know. He was the one who got me all into reading, which got me into writing, in the first place.

  And now I couldn’t even ask him. I had to find out more about this METCO program.

  2

  METCO was nagging my brain for the rest of the day. What if the kids were all whack? What if Jade and I stopped talking on the regular? What if the schoolwork was too hard? What if I threw up on the bus? So finally, during last period, I asked for a pass to see my guidance counselor. I was hoping Miss Jackson could give me some backup for NOT going to METCO. I sat on a metal folding chair in the main office while I waited to be called in. The place smelled like muffins. There was a box of them sitting on Miss Patricia’s desk—she was the school secretary. She gave out pencils and granola bars and sometimes, if you were lucky, muffins. I was lucky, muffin day. I took a blueberry one and mouthed Thank you, and she went back to reading the Boston Globe. I don’t get why old people love reading the paper so much. I started reading the METCO pamphlet, a whole lotta blah, blah, blah:

  The mission of METCO is twofold: (1) to give students from Boston’s underperforming school districts the opportunity to attend a high-performing school and increase their educational opportunities, and (2) to decrease racial isolation and increase diversity in the suburban schools.

  In order to qualify for the program, a student must be a resident of Boston and be nonwhite. Eligibility does not take into account a student’s record (including academics and behavior), English language proficiency, socioeconomic status, attendance record, or immigration status.

  METCO host families are designed to bring the communities together and provide support for students within the program in the town in which they attend school. Students are also assigned “METCO buddies.”

  “Liliana?” Miss Jackson asked from the doorway. She sounded surprised to see me.

  Most of the counselors here were old and white, except for mine. Miss Jackson was young and Black. So young actually that she kind of looked like she could be a student herself. She had dozens of long thin braids, and she liked to wear skirts with cool patterns like zebra prints.

  “Oh, hi, miss. I had a question. It’s about this program.” I waved the pamphlet at her.

  She led me to her office in Guidance Row. Her phone rang, and she held a finger in the air. “Excuse me, baby.” So I looked at the pictures pinned on the corkboard beside her desk. They were new since the last time I’d been in there. In one she wore a cap and gown. In another she was screaming, wind in her face, as she jumped out of a plane. I had no idea Miss Jackson liked to do stuff like that, skydiving or whatever. I would NEVER do that; you’d have to kill me first. I don’t even like roller coasters. Miss Jackson finished her phone call and hung up. She was like one of three adults in the whole school who could get away with calling students “baby.”

  “Now, what can I help you with, Liliana?”

  “Well, I got into this thing called METCO. It’s a program that buses kids from the city to the suburbs.”

  Miss Jackson leaned forward, her eyes all kinds of bright. “I’m real familiar with the METCO program, Liliana.” She smiled big. “I did METCO.”

  Whaaaat? “For real?”

  Miss Jackson put her hands together so that they formed a little tent. “For real.”

  “Well… what I was hoping was, maybe you could help convince my mom that I shouldn’t do it. It’s too far away, and um, I need to help out more at home.”

  “Help out more at home? Why? Is something going on?”

  “No…” No way was I getting into the whole Dad-stepping-out-again thing.

  “Liliana. Change can be tough. I get it. But this program—it’s worth it. These opportunities don’t come up very often. What’s the worst that can happen? You absolutely hate it, and then you transfer back to a Boston school.”

  Huh. Okay. Good point. But, uh-uh. “No, Miss Jackson. Sorry, but I really don’t feel like switching schools. Sophomore year already started. Plus, I don’t know anyone over ther
e.”

  “Listen, baby. Try to hear me. I know it might seem like high school is forever, and your friends are your life. I get that. But what you do now—or don’t do now—can really affect your future, and the choices you have in the future.”

  “But what’s wrong with this school? You work here.” I added a smile so she wouldn’t think I was throwing attitude or anything.

  “That’s true. And I love my job.”

  “But…?”

  “But, nothing.”

  “Okay. Fine. I kinda get what you’re saying. Why not at least try it?”

  She grinned.

  I spent the rest of the period listening to her explain more about the program, about the opportunities I would have access to, about the honors classes and the cultural capital, and other terms I didn’t totally get, like “stereotype threat.” She even told me she believed she got into a great college because of METCO. “And—this could be great for your writing,” she added. I still wasn’t 100 percent convinced, but I did feel a little better about it.

  Maybe it was the muffin.

  * * *

  After school I picked up Christopher and Benjamin from the bus stop.

  “Liliana?” Christopher asked in his trying-to-be-so-innocent voice as the school bus wheezed away. I could tell my brothers were still heated. Last night they had been wrestling in the living room and had knocked over a lamp, so Mom had forbidden them to play video games until further notice. Benjamin had wailed like he was on fire, and Christopher had stopped breathing for like, a whole minute. Video games were their LIFE. Anyway, Mom had told them, No más, and she’d had that nostril flare that meant business. Don’t let her sparkly headbands fool you; Mom can be fierce.

  I knew exactly where Christopher was going with this sweetie-sweet voice. “Don’t even ask,” I said, shutting him down.

  “Come on!” he cried out.

  “Please, Liliana!” Benjamin joined in. He’s the twin with a freckle on his chin just like Dad. When they were babies, it had helped me tell them apart.