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Authors: Jason Odell Williams

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But I can’t muster the courage to say any of that. I just look dumbly at my feet while the governor circles the stage, thanking the rest of “the troops.” By the time he’s shaken a dozen hands, it looks like he’s forgotten I’m even here. A year from now, I doubt he’ll remember my name.
Teddy swings by and pats me on the back. “Coulda been, A.J. What coulda been.”
I nod and wonder if he has any idea about the governor’s strange sexual preferences or recent tryst with Prayer Jones, wonder if Teddy knew all along, wonder if that’s why he sent
me
out there looking for the governor: to open my eyes, so I could get out while the gettin’s good.
And though I could leave right now, say nothing more and just go, I feel like I have to say something,
must
say something, just to make sure I’m not crazy, not imaging things.
“I, uh… I saw the governor in the alley… with Prayer Jones.”
Teddy looks at me, his face slack. I have his full attention.
“Oh yeah?”
“He was, uh… sucking on the heel of her foot?”
Teddy hangs his head and closes his eyes. For about three seconds, he’s silent. Then he mutters, “Goddammit, not again.”
He exhales loudly, looks up at me with pathetic eyes, gives a slight shrug, and heads back to the stage. No goodbye, no apology, no thank you. Just shuffles over to trail the governor, shaking more hands. Just another day in the life. Politics as usual. Return to the status quo. Unbelievable.
I look out at the mostly empty seats, the auditorium almost restored to the neutral state in which we found it. A state that will remain undisturbed for less than three weeks before hundreds of five- to ten-year-olds clamor through these halls again, fighting for a seat next to their best friends during a Welcome Back assembly, climbing on the stage for a back-to-school presentation, unwittingly enjoying this time before the competition sets in.
A time when kids can be kids.
Suddenly the smell of the auditorium hits me (old wood and stale milk) and I’m back in fifth grade in my elementary school auditorium. We’re “graduating” to middle school and my parents are hugging me on the stage and telling my younger sisters to smile as they put their arms around me, posing for pictures, and my mom tells me how proud they all are and my dad jokes that I need to stop growing up so fast, because it’s making him feel old.
And I get the sudden urge to go home. Not back to my stupid apartment, but to my parent’s house. Just for the weekend. It’s been a while. And if I leave soon, I’ll be there in time for dinner. I missed Shabbat yesterday, but still. It’ll be nice to see my family.
While Teddy orders the crew around the stage, I trudge up the aisle and make an anonymous exit, contemplating my next career move. Maybe the state senator will bring me back as a policy advisor. Or I heard Congresswoman Clark is looking for a new deputy chief of staff… It’s not the White House, but maybe that’s okay.
I step into the quiet, empty hallway where several glass cases of crude clay sculptures and kids’ paintings line the walls. By a sad, mostly empty trophy case, I spot Prayer and Elijah Jones, their matching sturdy suitcases and gear by their feet. I still can’t get the image of Prayer and the governor out of my head and find myself staring at her, wondering what series of bad decisions took place that led to a middle-aged man sucking a teenage girl’s foot by a dumpster in the alley. Before the silence gets too awkward, I call out, “Nice work, you two. This is only the beginning.”
Not sure what I even mean by that but Elijah nods, seemingly bolstered by my platitudes. He grabs his suitcase, tucks the gear under his arm, and scuffles down the hall.
Prayer watches her brother walk out the front door, then turns to me and says, “I’m not what you think I am.”
“I don’t think you’re anything,” I say, actually meaning it.
“Well…” she sighs. “I’m not the bad guy.”
“I know.”
We shrug a goodbye and I watch her leave.
I feel sorry for her (and her
foot
, I can’t imagine that felt good). But I also wonder: even though she
isn’t
the bad guy, and even if she had no ulterior motive and just got carried away or manipulated or taken advantage of… how much longer before Prayer Jones realizes that letting the governor of Connecticut suck her foot didn’t get her what she wanted, didn’t get her
where
she wanted, so she decides to get back at him and tells someone about his indiscretion and his foot fetish and turns it into a book deal and appearances on Fox and CNN and all of the daytime talk shows and eventually a third-place finish on
Dancing With The Stars
?
I give her three months tops. Because that’s what this country has come to. Kids don’t want to be the next Steve Jobs or Condoleezza Rice. They want to be the next Bachelor or Kim Kardashian.
Maybe I’m just being cynical. Or maybe I’m pissed off (and I’m
really
pissed off) because Governor Watson wasn’t the great hope he promised to be. And how long will it be before we realize this isn’t the way forward? What the Democratic Party needs isn’t another JFK or Bill Clinton. What we need is another
Hillary
Clinton. A
woman
who has her head on straight and can resist the urge to use her power for sexual gain and knows what’s it’s like to be the underdog and…
Wait a minute. Screw being a policy advisor or a deputy chief of staff. I’m gonna hire my
own
staff. Because
I’m
gonna run for office.
Alexis J. Gould for… I don’t know yet. But I’m definitely dumping the A.J. and going back to Alexis. I could be a councilwoman. Or a state senator. Maybe a congresswoman? No, wait. I’ve got it…
Alexis J. Gould for governor.
Sounds good. Besides… I’ve got a feeling there’s going to be an opening for that position very soon.
EMILY
“Hey… Eli!”
Elijah and Prayer are leaving the elementary school. Most of the crowd has dispersed but a few lost souls remain, wandering out front, still in shock that nothing happened, that we didn’t have to rescue any flood victims or bring clean water and batteries to the elderly. Elijah gestures to his sister to give us a minute. She looks at me, wanting to be angry or cruel, but it’s as if she’s too tired or upset about something else to waste the energy. I give her an apologetic look and she gives a little nod and meanders toward the parking lot.
And then it’s just me and Eli.
“I liked your plan,” I say to him, the afternoon sun hiding behind the clouds over his shoulder.
“Thanks,” he says. He seems wounded, like a kid who just learned that Santa isn’t real, that the people he trusted most have been lying to him his whole life. He also looks especially cute, the patchy skies and soft light giving him a natural movie star sheen. What can I say? I’m a sucker for wounded, vulnerable hotties.
“Sorry I kind of freaked out on you,” I say. “Last night at the party. And this morning by the pool. Then later after the presentations. I just… I wanted it so badly, I didn’t know who I was any—”
“It’s okay,” he says, cutting me off. “I get it. I used to be the same way.”
“Really?”
“It’s why our parents pulled us out of school. My sister and I were
hyper
-competitive. And stressed like Japanese businessmen. They were afraid we were going to be the first teenage
karoshi
victims ever.”
“Excellent use of the word
karoshi
in a sentence,” I say, touching his shoe with mine affectionately.
“Thanks,” he says with a hint of sarcasm. “One of the many useless bits of information I know because I’m homeschooled.”
We laugh lightly, kick at some pebbles on the pavement. We’re kids again. Awkward, hormonal, shy, and anxious kids.
“Can I… call you sometime?” he says.

Call?
Not text or Skype or instant message?”
“We’re pretty old-school on the farm. Just got the one land line.”
“Ouch.”
“I know. Pretty sad.”
I giggle again and say, “Um. Yeah, sure. You can call me. Anytime.”
His hands are full so he leans his head toward me, offering the pen behind his ear. I take it and write my cell phone number on the inside of his left forearm, which is bulging with well-defined veins and ever-so-sexy.
“Cool,” he says when I finish. “And who knows? Maybe we’ll end up at the same college next year. Where are you applying?”
“Um. My parents want me to go to Harvard?”
“Oh,” he says disappointed. “Well, maybe the same city, then? I hear Boston has some other decent schools, right?”
“A few,” I deadpan.
He nods, offering a goofy, amazingly toothy grin. He looks like he wants to say more, but he simply hangs his head and shuffles off toward his sister.
“Wait!” I call out.
He stops. I walk to him slowly and tuck his pen back behind his right ear. Electricity. Chemistry. Thunderbolts. Wow.
“Thanks,” he says. He takes a few steps backwards, as if he doesn’t want to stop looking at me, but eventually he rights himself and walks off toward his sister. With a quick turn over his shoulder, he calls back to me, “Good luck.”
I’m not sure if he means about Harvard or high school next year or life in general. And though I’m usually of the Holden Caulfield school of thought (I hate it when people wish me luck for no reason!), I don’t let on. I just smile and say, “You too, Eli.”
He stops again. “Ya know… No one calls me Eli.”
“Oh. Really?”
“But I like it when you do.”
He smiles his rugged-farmer smile again, a matinee idol who doesn’t even know it. Then he puts his bag and all of his gear into the back of a station wagon. I look at him, surprised that he actually has a
car
. He sort of shrugs at me with his hands open wide and climbs behind the wheel. A small nod and a wave and he’s off.
I turn toward the main road, ready to walk the half-mile or so back to the B&B, happy not to have a ride, knowing I wouldn’t take one even if offered. I look up to the sky. Ominous grey clouds have given way to patches of sun; the afternoon is full of hope and fear, promise and heartbreak.
Maybe Calliope wasn’t such a bust after all.
ROBERT
“See ya back at school,” he says.
“Yeah,” I say.
Mac and I are standing on the curb outside the B&B front gate. He’s ready to walk the nine or ten blocks to the train station, his backpack on, his duffle at his feet. I offered him a ride in my mother’s car (which is still parked on Church Street), but he politely declined. Normally I’d have tried to convince him to come with me or make up a pathetic excuse about why I should leave the car here and take the train with him. But it didn’t seem right. I can already feel that our relationship will never be the same. My infatuation sated, the allure no longer mystical, Mac is (I hope) just another cute boy on a long list of cute boys that I will fall in and out of love with, enjoying a luscious hook-up between the lust and the disappointment. Mac was never going to be “the one.” I see that now.
He
will most likely chalk this up as his “one gay experience.” A secret he’ll share with no one. Not his wife or three strapping kids. Not his work buddies, drinking buddies, fraternity buddies.
I’ll see him at the Choate reunion—the twentieth, most likely. We’ll all be nearing forty and will have settled into our future selves and future lives. He’ll introduce me to his wife, Melissa, an attractive but forgettable blonde with freckles on her nose and one of those figures that doesn’t look pregnant except for the volleyball-sized bump in her belly. He’ll be nervous and fumbling, unsure what to call me: his friend from high school? His roommate? His one and only homosexual fling? I’ll be cool and demure. Shaking Melissa’s hand as she’s being pulled on by little Hamish MacKenzie—a six-year-old with the devil in his eyes, a mini-Mac that will no doubt break many hearts when he grows up, both male
and
female, a chip off the old block. Melissa will excuse herself (“Hamish, get back here; don’t go under that nice lady’s dress!”) and Mac and I will be alone. We’ll talk about our jobs and families. I’ll point out my current boyfriend across the dance floor, a savagely tan Nuyorican who looks like a cross between Ricky Martin and Bobby Cannavale: buff, tough, and romantic. Mac will blush, paranoid that someone will make the connection between me being Mac’s former roommate and our having hooked up one drunken summer night during the false, furtive hurricane that was never meant to be. He’ll politely make chit-chat (where do you live, did you see so-and-so), desperately waiting for an escape which I’ll graciously provide, saying I need to say hello to some other friends by the dessert station. Relief will waft over him and he’ll become the charming and dashing Mac that I knew, one last time. He’ll offer a manly hand, and we’ll shake firmly. When he lets go, he’ll pat my upper arm and shoulder casually, but I’ll know he’s secretly feeling my toned muscles and fondly remembering that sweaty summer evening together, a memory he’ll never fully forget, one that will come to him at inopportune times, like when he’s making love to his wife after she’s had their third child, and he’ll question his sexuality for the briefest of moments and it will make me happy, in my loft in Tribeca, to know that I will never be forgotten by Mac, that I will always be a small part of his life.
“See ya in a couple weeks,” I tell Mac, standing on the sidewalk outside The Tao of Peace.
I wish I could say more. I wish I could tell him what he means to me, all these thoughts I have about us and what our future holds, that’s it’s okay, it’s going to be awkward for a little while, but it doesn’t have to be, and just acknowledging that it’s awkward will by definition alleviate the awkwardness.
But I don’t. We soldier on. Do what boys do. Say nothing. Refuse to discuss our feelings. Allow our friendship to be forever-strained and altered and damaged. And ruined. It was so much better before, when I coveted him secretly (or not-so-secretly, as it turned out, but at least I
thought
no one knew). I was ignorantly blissful and miserable at the same time. And we danced the dance and played the game and it was wonderful and awful. But now we’ve crossed the line, named the unnamable, and our friendship is over. I’m sure we’ll be cordial to each other in class and at the cafeteria and walking by one another on the quad. But the late nights studying and talking and flirting are gone. Swept away by Calliope and her fickle trade winds.
Mac slings his duffle over his shoulder and heads down the street. I watch after him, hoping he’ll turn around, say one last poetic thing, offer one last romantic gesture. The romantic-comedy version of my life would surely include a final ray of hope at this moment, when it seems like things are at their worst. But this isn’t a rom-com. This isn’t even a bad afterschool special. It’s life. My life. And nothing spectacular or romantic will happen to me. Not while I’m living in this God-awful state, surrounded by these God-awful people. My lot in life is to suffer through this torture. It will make my spring awakening in Europe so much more meaningful.
Soon after Mac disappears around the corner, my phone rings (“Parents Just Don’t Understand”) and I answer with a ready apology.
“I’m fine, Dad. Everything is fine. The storm missed us and I’m coming home now.”
“…Good,” my father says. “Your mother and I were worried about you.”

You
were worried?”
He clears his throat. “What time do you think you’ll get home?” he asks, ignoring my little dig.
“Uh. I don’t know. Couple hours?”
“Okay. We’ll be here.”
“You mean you’re there? In Westport?”
“Mm. Got in this morning.”
“So you
did
evacuate the Vineyard?”
“Yeah… you know how your mother worries.”
“Uh-hunh.”
“Summer was almost over anyway. Time to get back home.”
There’s a silence that he doesn’t seem eager to fill, so I finally say, “Okay. See you soon then. Love you guys.”
“Right… We love you, too.” And he hangs up very quickly.
I stare at the phone, stunned. He said it. He actually said it. For the first time in my adult life, the first time I can
remember
, my father said he loved me. Technically he said ‘we,’ lumping him and my mom together, but it still counts. On a technicality, my father told me he loved me. It may be the last time I ever hear him say it until he’s on his deathbed or something, so I look around, trying to make sure I remember this exact moment, standing on the sidewalk outside The Tao of Peace in Cawdor, Connecticut, a few hours after Hurricane Calliope passed everyone by.
I soak it in. Every detail. The paint chipping off the white picket fence. The American flag lying limp against the porch post. A few seagulls overhead, breaking an otherwise pin-drop quiet afternoon.
And I realize that as I was saying goodbye to my dad, saying goodbye to Mac, the B&B, and the town of Cawdor, I’m also saying goodbye to Connecticut, to my life here, my life as a teenager. Twelve months from now, I tell myself, I will be in Paris—on the road I’m supposed to be on. This day, this trip, this year, is but a blip, a tiny blip on the journey that is my life.
I pop in my earbuds, find the song on my iPhone that I want (“Stronger” by Kelly Clarkson), and walk off toward my mom’s car.
Au revoir
, Connecticut.
Bonjour
, my new life.
RANI
“Huh,” Tyler says nonchalantly, studying the skies. “I thought it was supposed to rain or something today.”
I nod and sort of laugh. He shuffles from foot to foot. I can’t tell if he’s anxious to leave or nervous about saying goodbye. My overnight bag rests on the rocking chair on The Tao of Peace’s front porch. The streets are quiet. The misty, almost fall-like morning has slowly given way to a classic hazy, hot and humid August afternoon. The sun is struggling, but finding more and more moments to peek out from behind Calliope’s ever-shifting cloud formation, any hint of the threatened hurricane fading with each minute.
At the end of the road, Robert is just leaving. He passes Rory and the three remaining Grateful Ten members, who are packing up their van. Robert stops, taking out one of his earbuds to say a few words. There are some hugs, handshakes, and even an insanely awkward “bro hug” from Josh. Then Robert is on his way again. The Grateful
Four
pile into their van, trying to stuff a final bag into the back that clearly isn’t going to fit. Tyler and I watch with detached curiosity.
These strangers were a big part of our lives the last thirty-six hours. Now they’re about to drive off, and most likely we’ll never see them again. (Unless they track me down on Facebook—I don’t have the guts to “ignore” a friend request from someone I actually know, even if I don’t know them well or don’t particularly “like” them. So I usually accept the friend request and then choose to hide them from my newsfeed. Passive-aggressive Facebooking!) But for all intents and purposes, when Rory and company drive off down Birnam Road, they will no longer exist. At least not in my life. Almost like they were part of a dream.
Rory finally gives up trying to make the last bag fit (a black garbage bag that appears to be full of clothes) and shoves it into Josh’s hands, telling him to “just hold it on your lap, for Christ’s sake!” The two friends climb into the van and slowly drive out of sight.
I absently watch the spot where their van used to be, the streets quiet save for a lone lost seagull circling above.
Tyler squints up toward the hazy sun, admiring the wayward bird, and says, “You know, it’s funny. Even after the most catastrophic, life-altering events, we don’t really change that much. The needle only moves so far. Look at Rory. Kind of a dick when we met him. Still kind of a dick now. Despite the enormity of everything that happened—to him, to his friends—he’s still the same guy he was three days ago, the same guy he’ll basically be for the rest of his life. Our DNA is carved out and determined long before we take our first breath. And two days protecting a town from a Category 3 Hurricane that ultimately amounted to nothing doesn’t change you. It doesn’t make you a better person… or even a different person. We are who we are.”
I nod like I understand, but I don’t really see the connection. (I’m not even sure what he said makes
sense
.) And why is he saying all of this stuff
now
? Telling me about how people don’t really change just as he and I are about to say goodbye?
And then I get it.
“Is that an eloquent way of saying you’re not going to call me?”
Tyler shrugs, kisses his hand in the most douchebag manner possible and slinks off, down the porch steps and out the front gate.
O. M. F’ing. G. I was just used. Tyler Voss just used me as a “girlfriend” for two days. What a complete and total jerk! Thank God all we did was kiss! Seriously dodged a bullet. But I’m still floored by his cavalier “break up.” All that crap about how people don’t change? What horseshit! He seemed genuinely into me! God, was
any
of it real? Was I just his little experiment with “diversity?” Make out with an Indian girl…? Check.
It was definitely fun,
he’ll tell his buddies back home,
exotic and all that, but not really for me. I need a girl I can bring home to mom!
Damn. I guess he
is
a good actor.
Before I can dwell on it more, I hear a car door slam and turn to see the governor’s chief of staff, Teddy Hutchins, standing next to a town car down the road. He’s about to get into the back seat when an odd, panicked confidence comes over me and I hear myself call out, “Mr. Hutchins!”
He looks up, squinting across the road at me on the porch. “Yes?”
Before I can think too much, I grab my bag and walk/jog down the path and across the tiny street to the black town car. He bends down and says into the car, “Gimme a minute,” and closes the door.
“Sorry to bother you,” I say, dropping my bag at my feet, “I just. Um. I’m not sure if you remember me from one of the photos with the governor the other day? But my name is Rani. Rani Caldwell, and… my father is
Doug
Caldwell…?”
“Okay…” he says blankly.
Wow. I thought he’d respond more to that. All right, pressing on. “And anyway—he wanted me to say hi. Since you two went to school together…?”
“Oh, right! Dougie Caldwell. Of course. Yeah… great. Um, say hello to him for me, would ya? Thanks. I gotta go.” As he ducks into the back right seat, I can see Governor Watson leaning against the rear left window with his eyes closed. The car pulls out before the door even shuts all the way.
I watch the tinted back window as the car drives away and stare at the few leaves tumbling across the road, early signs of fall. So much for using your connections, Dad.
“Rani?” a voice says from behind me.
I turn to see Morgan’s RA wheeling her overnight bag out of a small B&B across from The Tao of Peace.
“Yeah,” I say. “A.J., right?”
“Actually, it’s Alexis now. I’m going old school.”
“Right,” I say, not really understanding.
Before we can say anything more, Emily rounds the corner where the governor’s car just disappeared. She’s walking toward The Tao of Peace, hands in her pockets, a peculiar smile on her face, a little bounce in her step. I wave to her over Alexis’s shoulder and she waves back, surprised but happy to see me. Then her face turns curious with a little “what have we here” look.
Alexis sees me waving and turns around. “Hey—Emily,” she says with a winning smile, almost like a politician but more sincere. “Alexis Gould. We met at the photo op the other day.”
“Right. Good to see you again,” Emily says rather demurely—for her.
“You guys were partners, right?” Alexis says and we nod. Then she turns to me and asks, “So… how come you weren’t at the presentations?”
“Oh,” I say, embarrassed. “I kind of… overslept?”
“Is that code for hooked up or hung over?” she asks. Emily and I share a knowing smile, but Alexis doesn’t seem to be joking. “I, uh, I actually swung by the party last night and saw you both. Oversleeping.”
“Oh my god,” I say. And then like a reflex, I add, “Don’t tell my sister.”
Alexis laughs. “Don’t worry, I won’t. But come on! You’re smart girls. You don’t need to be like the rest of these jokers. Drinking and hooking up and being obnoxious assholes. It’s cool
now
. But you know what’s
really
cool? Being a huge success in ten years.”
Emily and I hang our heads. I feel ashamed and inspired at the same time.
“But it’s totally fine!” Alexis says. “I was the same way in high school. I just wish someone had told me early on that I didn’t need to waste my time trying to be like everyone else… Anyway. Lecture over. What I really wanted to talk to you about is that social media idea of yours.”
“Empty Rooms, Full Hearts?” Emily offers.
“Yeah. Great name, by the way.”
“That was all Rani,” Emily adds, nudging me with her elbow, making me blush.
“Well, I love it. It’s an excellent idea.”
“Really?” Emily and I say at the same time.
“Absolutely. There’s something there. You shouldn’t throw it away completely.”
“Well,” Emily says, “not sure what we’d
do
with it exactly…”
“You’re smart girls. You’ll figure it out,” Alexis says. “And if either of you want an internship or something next summer…”
“Oh,” Emily says, perking up. “In Governor Watson’s office?”
“Well…” Alexis sort of laughs. “Not sure
anyone’s
going to be working for Governor Watson in the near future. But you should look me up. Both of you.” She reaches into her bag and hands us each a business card. It’s off-white with raised navy lettering that simply reads:
“What’s the 59 for?” Emily asks.
“Ugh, my golf days,” she says dismissively. “I need to change it. But seriously, next summer, or definitely once you graduate in four years, drop me a line. Happy to help out however I can.”
“Oh, thanks,” I say, “but we don’t want to impose or…”
“Please,” Alexis says. “It’s not imposing. It’s using who you know. Plus, us smart chicks need to stick together, right?”
“Amen to that,” Emily says, looking longingly at Alexis’s card.
“You two especially,” Alexis tells us. “You make a good team. I could see you running a company together some day, or a nonprofit, or even… finding your way to The White House.” Emily and I sort of laugh and shuffle our feet. “It’s true,” Alexis insists. “Nine times out of ten the chief of staff or communications director isn’t some smarty-pants politico… just one of the president’s most trusted friends.”
“Seriously?” Emily asks.
“I’ve worked in enough offices to see that no matter how smart someone is or how experienced or qualified, at the end of the day, you’re spending seventy, eighty, ninety hours a
week
with this person. They don’t care how much you
know.
They need to
like
you. And, more importantly, they need to
trust
you. As my dad would say, that beats experience seven days a week and twice on Sundays. You may not see it now, but a good friend and partner is the hardest thing to find. And when you do… the world is your oyster.”
A black town car pulls up, clearly for her, and Alexis gives us a smile and a nod as she opens the car door. “Give my best to Morgan.”
“I will. And thank you!” I say, holding up her business card.
With a final wave, Alexis closes the door and the car pulls away.
“Wow,” Emily says. “
She’s
awesome.”
“I know.”
We watch the town car disappear around the corner, and then we sort of stare at the empty road ahead of us, silent save the calls of the lonely seagull still circling overhead. After a few moments, Emily says, without turning to me, “Ready to get outta here?”
I take one last look at The Tao of Peace, and realize that I feel at peace myself. I’m not bitter about Tyler or losing the contest. I’m grateful for everything I learned here. It was better than any high school lecture, college course, or self-help book. And I know it’s a cliché, but it was forty-eight hours in the School of Life. And I think I came out on top. I grab my bag, look at the road ahead, and say, “Yeah, let’s go.”
The two of us walk toward Emily’s car, parked a few blocks away, not speaking, but not needing to, our minds filled with possibility and hope. Then, at exactly the same time, we turn to each other and say, “I get to be president!”
Emily laughs her throaty laugh. I just smile and shake my head.
“Why do
you
get to be president?” she says.
“Because I’m nicer than you.”
“Nicer?” she says, still laughing. “Who wants a nice president? I want someone that can kick some ass.”
“Also,” I add, “no one would ever vote for a Korean president.”
She laughs even harder and counters with, “Korean-
American
. And you think they’d vote for
your
brown ass?”
“Hell-ooo? They just re-elected the first brown president. Who happens to be half-white. Like yours truly.”
“Oh you’re gonna play the half-white card, now?”
“Listen, the country can only handle one thing at a time. First it was a half-white man. Obama. Next will be a white
woman
.”
“Hillary,” Emily says.
“Right. Then a
Jewish
woman. Alexis Gould.”
“And clearly we’ll be working in her administration,” Emily says, holding up Alexis’ business card.
“Clearly,” I say. “Then the next step will be a
half
-white woman…
me
. And then
you
can be the first completely non-white woman. Baby steps.”
“I’m glad you’ve given this so much thought.”
“Hey, 2032 will be here sooner than you think.”
“Is that when you’re gonna run?”

We’re
gonna run. You’ll be my chief of staff. It’s better than VP. And yes. It’ll be the first election year we’re eligible. Have to be at least thirty-five years old.”
“Nice math skills.”
“See? Nicer
and
smarter.”
Emily pushes me affectionately. We walk a little ways, still giggling to ourselves but not saying anything more. After a while I say, “Thanks for dragging my bony ass up here for this.”

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