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Love Times Infinity
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By Lane Clarke
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High school junior Michie is struggling to define who she is for her scholarship essays, her big shot at making it into Brown as a first-generation college student. The prompts would be hard for anyone, but Michie's been estranged from her mother since she was seven and her concept of family has long felt murky.
Enter new kid and basketball superstar Derek de la Rosa. He is very cute, very talented, and very much has his eye on Michie, no matter how invisible she believes herself to be.
Excerpt
CHAPTER ONE
THE ILLUSTRIOUS AALIYAH, MAY SHE REST IN PEACE, ONCE said, If at first you donât succeed, dust yourself off and try again, try again. Well, no offense to Aaliyah, but I say, if at first you donât succeed, save yourself the heartache and give up. And if my good sis had been writing a scholarship essay for her dream college, Iâm sure she would have agreed with me.
I glance at my blank computer screen. The cursor blinks steady and strong, like a healthy heart, knowing it can run in this race far longer than I can.
The mostly rotten wooden floors of our apartment creak under Grandmaâs feet. She tries to be quiet in the mornings, on account of the fact that I sleep like a wind chime, easily disturbed. But our apartment yawns loudly as it stretches beneath us.
She knocks twice on my bedroom door, entering before I respond. Typical. Iâm still in my pajamas (read: ratty old clothes too comfortable to donate but too effed up to wear out in public).
I sleep with my head at the foot of the bed because it feels safer farther from the wall. This is due to the roaches, and the water bugs, which I would happily trade for more roaches. It drives Grandma mad, but she says nothing as she finds me in that position now, my feet up against the headboard.
âWhat are you working on this early?â she asks. Sheâs already wearing her cerulean-blue scrubs and tie-dyed Crocs. Under-eye concealer that will smear off by midday hides the bags beneath her eyes. Grandma retired a long time ago but still works as a nurseâs aide to keep our heads above water. She invites herself the rest of the way into my room until sheâs standing over me. From this angle, I can see the extra skin folded beneath her chin.
âLoads. Answering the questions of the universe. Why the chicken crossed the road. Who shot the deputy after Bob Marley shot the sheriff.â
She stares at me with a blank expression that barely masks her exasperation. I read her thoughts between the lines in her face, typed out in bold by her frown: Say less.
âCollege essay about who I am and why they should give me a truckload of money to grace them with my genius, blah, blah, blah.â
âAnd whatâs hard about that? You know who you are?â She sits on the edge of the bed.
âIâm not sure Dear Admissions, I am the kid who definitely shouldnât exist, but the world sucks and people suck more, so please let me into your world-renowned institution is the wave.â
She winces at my words. âYou shouldnât be so hard on yourself. I thought group was helping.â
âIt is helping. It doesnât erase what I am, though.â
Grandma put me in group therapy for children of sexual-abuse victims last summer, after a frightening downward spiral during Depressed Girl Summer earned me a 5150. My best friend, JoJo, deemed it The Incident. Basically, the hospital held me hostage so I wouldnât play with matches or sharp objects. We affectionately call group R.P.E.âRaised as a Product of Evilâpronounced reap, like the Grim. You know, since most of us were pretty close to being on the other side before we ever took our first breath, if you catch my drift. That might seem crass, but we get to take some creative liberties, all things considered.
âYouâre more than just one thing, Michie.â Grandma taps a finger against my nose.
âYou have to say that. Or you go to grandma jail or something.â
She sucks her teeth before using both hands to push herself off the bed. Since her double-knee replacement, sheâs not as spry as she once was, though she is young for a grandma. My mother was only fifteen when I crash-landed, so itâs not surprising.
âItâll get better. I promise.â She begins to leave my room but then stops midway out the door. âAnd Michie, donât let me catch you with your feet up on the furniture again.â
I drop my feet down in a blink.
âLunch is in the fridge. Have a good day back,â she calls, before the front door opens and closes with a thud.
My hands type out another jumble of word soup before I give up. I slam my finger down on the delete button. That damn cursor stares back at me, flash, flash, flashing and never getting anywhere. It begs for raw honesty, the kind of trauma porn that colleges love. But Iâm not ready to be that vulnerable, because the irrevocable truth is that who I am is my motherâs colossal mistake, big and bright like a supernova. She hates me with every fiber of her being. And Iâm not just being extra. Sheâs told me so, which is pretty definitive proof. But also, she hasnât bothered to see me or even talk to me since my seventh birthday.
I pull up Brownâs home page and stare at the smiling students (mostly white, with a token brown face here and there). Itâs very âI read a lot of booksâ status quo of me to want to go there for college, like every other boy and girl on BookTube. Iâm not reinventing the obsessed-with-literature wheel here.
But Brown, with an English Lit program I would sell my soul for, would be scared away if they really knew me. Because I am for sure a walking liability in the whole is this one most likely to crash spectacularly analysis. And I canât scare away Brown. What began as a pit stop when visiting MIT with JoJo became the only thing I wanted. It was the first college campus I stepped foot on that felt like a fresh start. A place where I could reinvent myself. Iâm not sure I deserve to be great, but if I do, thereâs only one place for me to do it. Brown.
If I can get in, and even then, if I can afford to go. A lifetimeâs supply of ifs.
I dig for my phone in the blankets and connect to the knockoff Bose speakers Grandma got me for Christmas. The opening beats of the playlist I put together from last yearâs XXL Freshman Class bounce against the walls. I slam my laptop lid closed with a sharp snap, wincing at the sound. This MacBook cost two yearsâ worth of cafĂ© money, and that was the secondhand eBay price. Iâm dead if I break it.
I stumble to the bathroom in a rush, crashing into the old acoustic guitar I pilfered from my bossâs donation pile. The getting-dressed part of my morning routine is painless because I always wear the same thingâjeans, Converses, V-neck tee shirt. Sometimes ironic. Sometimes not. But my hair is its own beast, as I struggle to tame the curls into something manageable before I give up and pull it into a messy bun. I race down the hallway and glance at the microwave clock. Three minutes until the bus leaves me behind.
I grab my winter coat, throwing the hood over my head, no arms, and fly out of the door. My backpack is hanging from one shoulder, open like a wound as loose papers bleed out. I shove everything back in like a wartime trauma surgeon. Dr. Owen Huntâstyle. I cup my hands in front of my mouth, breathing into them for warmth. My Fitbit, a Christmas gift from JoJo, flashes the time. One minute to spare. Nailed it.
A large group stands by a stop sign on the opposite side of the street from my bus stop. In the not-so-distant past, I was friends with many of them, but not anymore. Most of them donât notice Iâm here.
One smiles. Morgan Williams, a year older and the only one who acknowledges me with The Nod. I nod and smile back. Sheâs cool people, even if she did kind of shun me along with the rest of the neighborhood kids. Around here, school is no escape, where youâre greeted with old books and ceiling leaks. But I go to school in the suburbs, with new books and filtered water fountains and well-funded after-school activities. So I understand why I get treated like an outsider. We donât have the same struggles anymore.
Soon an empty school bus stops in front of me. The doors pop open, rubbery edges squeaking. I smile up at the bus driver. Sheâs been picking me up since fourth grade, when I was first transferred out of district and enrolled in the gifted program.
âMorning, Ms. Turner,â I say, climbing up the steep steps.
âGood morning, dear,â she says, snapping the doors shut behind me.
I relax into the worn leather of my usual seat, starting my audiobook from where I paused it yesterday. Mr. Darcy is mid-first-proposal. I close my eyes as the bus jiggles beneath me, listening to the sounds of Pemberley for the next hour and a half until we pull into the empty bus bay.
The fluorescent lights in the junior hall buzz overhead as I rush to my locker. As is typical, the bus got in just late enough to require a light jog to first periodâAP US History, or APUSH. Everyone else moves in slow motion, sullen and zombielike. All courtesy of the March SAT in a couple of months. Thank God, I took it this past October for the first and last time.
âBoo,â a voice clamors over my shoulder as I yank my locker open.
I yelp, almost slamming the door shut on my fingers. Joanna Kaplan, JoJo if you donât want to die, both brilliant and beautiful, leans onto the wall of metal lockers. Itâs like having a best friend who is equal parts Mila Kunis and Merriam-Webster.
âJesus, Jo,â I wheeze, holding my hand to my chest. âYou almost gave me a coronary.â
âYou keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means,â she deadpans, quoting one of our favorite films, The Princess Bride. âNo one can give you a coronary. A coronary thrombosis, perhaps. Clogged arteries from too much red meat and few vegetables.â She raises an eyebrow brimming with accusation.
I roll my eyes. âI eat plenty healthy.â
âCandy corn is not a vegetable, Michie.â
I give her the closed-mouth smile older white women give me when my hair is especially big and I look more Black and less racially ambiguous.
She waits for me to close my locker before looping her arm through mine and pulling me toward class. The history department has its own wing in the back of the building.
âQuiz me,â she demands, squeezing my arm. JoJo is one of the juniors retaking the SAT in March. But while everyone else resembles The Walking Dead cast members, JoJo looks like one of those trophy girls at the Golden Globesâcurled jet-black hair, contoured cheekbones, and winged liner that makes her green eyes pop. Though genetics have also dealt her a pretty stacked hand. Her mom was Miss Virginia when Persian women were still spit at. Not that they arenât still.
I groan but acquiesce, calling out a list of words like a drill sergeant. I stop as we get to our desks, JoJo seated in front of me.
âIâve studied so much with you, I could slay the test myself,â I tell her.
âYes, you could.â She meets my eyes. âA 1300 is not getting you into Brown.â
Sheâs not wrong. Itâs too low of a score for Brown but fine for most Virginia colleges, which is all that matters realistically, and financially. Especially if I canât write a single scholarship essay without banging my head against a wall.
âThatâs still the goal, right?â she asks.
I fiddle with the notebook in front of me, my notes from last nightâs quiz prep handwritten like type font. âBrown isnât even a real thing,â I mumble.
âOf course itâs real,â she says. âYou, me, tearing up the East Coast fifty miles apart. Whatever we need to do to make it happen, remember? Youâve got the grades; you just need the grit.â
And the money. But I donât expect her to appreciate the height of that hurdle. JoJo is toss out a full drink because itâs too cold to carry to the car rich. Oh, and schools have been throwing cash at her since she won an international collegiate robotics competition. When we were fourteen. Sheâs pretty much had a guaranteed full-ride spot at MIT since we were prepubescent. She, quite literally, cannot relate.
âAll right, everyone. Letâs get started,â Ms. Yancey says from the front of the room, passing out quizzes for us to hand back.
JoJo spins to face forward, the topic dropped. I wish it were that easy to put behind me too.
It isnât until I return to my locker at lunchtime that I realize my lunch is still sitting in the fridge at home. I forgot it in my rush out the door this morning. Damn it. My stomach growls mockingly as I mutter every swear word in the English language under my breath.
âUm, are you okay?â
I twist my head to find a small pixie-like blonde standing beside me with a can of Cherry Coke and a five-dollar bill in her hand.
âSorry.â I chuckle, the sound more of a breathless snort than a laugh. âYeah. Forgot my lunch. Low, uh, blood sugar.â
âYou can buy lunch,â she says, like itâs obvious.
âForgot my wallet,â I reply, though I donât bring it to school on purpose in case Iâm tempted to buy anything stupid, like six honey buns from the vending machines. Again.
She hands me the five dollars. By reflex, my fingers close around it.
âNo, I donâtââ I sputter over my words.
âPlease,â she responds, pulling her hand away like Iâm a stray she wants to help but doesnât want to touch. âYou clearly need it more than me.â She glances down at my Converses, falling apart with frayed shoelaces.
She turns and I stare after her. I finally remember her name as she disappears out of sight. Brit. Short for Brita, like the water filter, she explained the first day of freshman year.
I push into the swinging cafeteria doors with a huff, the cacophony of noise bubbling out as the doors part open. Iâm not sure how far five dollars goes, so I grab two bananas and a mini bottled water to be on the safe side. The woman standing behind the glass has an ice cream scooper in one hand, hovering over a platter of mashed potatoes. Each scoop makes a slurping sound, like water rushing down the pipes of an unclogged sink.
The cashier scans my school ID, waving me away with a flick of her hand. The money sits in my palm, limp. I donât move.
âYou gettinâ anythinâ else?â she drawls, whistling through spaces that once held teeth.
âOh,â I mutter. âNo. I didnât pay yet.â I have never wanted anyone to take my money so badly.
âFree-lunch program,â she responds, her tongue tripping over the r sounds. She taps the computer, where my student account is pulled up on the screen. Balance due: N/A flashes at me like a Times Square neon sign.
My cheeks grow warm at the blatant reminder of my financial inferiority here. I stare at the five dollars like itâs venomous. The girl behind me in line drops her head down to hide a smile, or even worse, a laugh. Great, now Iâve made it a whole scene.
I retreat, crushing the bill into my pocket as if it were ticking. Iâm itchy from embarrassment, ashamed that I feel ashamed. I have never considered myself free-lunch poor. And at Lee High, no one, and I mean no one, except I guess now me, gets free lunch. Itâs one of the most affluent public schools in the state.
I slump down into my empty seat at the end of our table. Across from me, Gwen is on a tirade about her latest save-the-world passion projectâbee endangerment. I peel a banana in silence and ignore its price tag. Zero dollars in cash, but breaking the bank in dignity.
âOkay, so I checked, and thereâs a robotics tournament tonight at U of R,â JoJo says as she bites into a mini carrot. âPick you up after work?â
âYou only want to go to check out the team,â I grumble.
âI am done dating high schoolers. Amy Ferrara was a total nightmare. And Ben Haley turned me off of boys for two years and counting.â She holds up two fingers for emphasis. âPlus, Iâm an old soul.â
âYou just binge-watched Doc McStuffins.â
Her hand slams over my mouth. âYou promised!â
Gwen stops midlecture, noticing us for the first time. âOh, hey, are yâall going to the assembly after school?â
âIs it about honey desserts or vegan Oreos?â I ask, licking the inside of JoJoâs hand until she rips it away with a grimace.
âOreos are already vegan,â Gwen answers.
âBarely,â JoJo says.
Gwenâs eyes narrow. She simply refuses to accept the fact that Oreos live a fraudulently vegan life since theyâre cross-contacted with milk. The Scarlett Johanssen of the vegan community.
âThatâs a technicality,â she responds. I donât point out the irony of her veganism relying more on her convenience than the cold hard facts. âAnyway, no, the college fair assembly. Leeâs hosting this year, and we all get to enter a Hunger Gamesâesque, dog-eat-dog death match to get host assignments for each school. You work as some alumâs personal attachĂ© for a few hours, and boom, youâve got yourself a straight-to-Go, collect $200 card to the school of your dreams. They pretty much have instant admissions power.â
âSounds awful. Pass.â I crack the top on my mini water bottle and gulp half of it down.
âNo pass,â JoJo says. âHosting is the Brown golden ticket. I canât believe I forgot about it. This is it, baby. The big leagues.â
JoJo turns to Gwen, leaning forward with her elbows on the table. âWeâre in. Save us two seats.â She glances at me with a raised eyebrow, challenging me.
âFine.â I roll my eyes, but caterpillars settle in my stomach and cocoon themselves. I hope they turn to butterflies and not moths. I hope they mean something promising. Something beautiful.
CHAPTER TWO
VOICES COME FROM EVERY DIRECTION AS JOJO AND I move through the students crowding the auditoriumâs middle aisle. Gwen waves with a large sweeping motion from the fourth row.
I apologize behind JoJo as we teeter-totter over everyoneâs laps to get to our seats, praying I donât pass gas in anyoneâs face. I think Iâve endured enough back-to-school embarrassment for one, or two, or even three lifetimes.
A large projection screen hangs in the center of the stage. 2022 RICHMOND COLLEGE FAIR sits in large letters in front of geometric shapes. Robert E. Lee High School (yeah, I know⊠welcome to Richmond, folks) is in script at the bottom. For such an allegedly fancy affair, the presentation is giving me clip art.
Principal Hamil approaches the podium, and the room falls into instant silence. A prim woman in a knee-length pencil skirt and a bun so tight she looks inquisitive sits in a plastic chair behind him. Her legs cross at the ankle just like GrandmĂšre taught Mia Thermopolis.
Principal Hamil clears his throat. His black hair, combed to the side to cover his receding hairline, glows beneath the lights. Iâm not sure if his hair or his forehead is shinier.
âThank you all for coming to todayâs assembly detailing the process for hosting this yearâs citywide college fair.â He scans the room for the impact of his words and receives nothing in return. Hamilâs like a Will Ferrell movieâit would be a more enjoyable experience if the effort wasnât so strained. He clears his throat again.
âItâs a great and unexpected honor for Lee to be chosen as this yearâs host.â
Itâs actually not unexpected. Despite the fair being a citywide event, the only schools ever chosen to host are in the suburbs, of which there are seven, even though the fair is held in the heart of the city. So the chances of Lee being chosen are pretty high because 1) money, money, money; and 2) there arenât enough brown kids here to make the Ivy League school representatives âuncomfortable.â Which also means that the inner-city kids never get to host, and thus never get the instant in to their dream schools. A self-fulfilling shit prophecy. Iâm not even sure I want any part of it. Or if I deserve to skip the line when my next-door neighbors donât get the same shot just because they go to school on the wrong side of the river.
But⊠Brown. JoJo is right. It feels selfish and dirty, but I want it. How broken must I be to want to take part in such a broken system?
âAs Iâm sure you are all aware,â he explains, âthe process is simple. The online application will open at the close of this assembly. You will have one week to submit your applications by answering a series of short-answer questions and ranking your top three choices.â
I roll my eyes. Great, more essays when Iâm doing so well on the ones I already have.
âAfter online submissions are evaluated, those selected will interview before a panel. Each panel will then write a report that the College Fair Board will use to make final decisions.â
Hamil clicks through the presentation as he explains. The participating schools are on the last slide. MIT (for JoJo), Sarah Lawrence (for Gwen), and Brown (for me, hopefully).
âAs you leave, please take a brochure of the application requirements, as I will not be repeating myself. Now a few words from a representative of the board.â He nods in the womanâs direction, and she stands, joining him at the podium.
âGood afternoon,â she says, her voice quiet. âIâm Debbie Matthews, and Iâll be your main liaison to the board. I know there are always rumors that hosting guarantees a spot at your school of choice. This is false.â She gives us a tight smile. âWe cannot make such guarantees, and the coincidence of hostsâ admission into their host schools is beyond our control. But we on the board are thrilled for this journey with you all and wish you the best of luck.â
She steps away and reclaims her seat.
âAnd with that,â Principal Hamil says, âdismissed.â
Sound erupts across the room. He looks pained at how excited we are to get out of there.
âYou will definitely get MIT,â I tell JoJo, passing her a brochure from the table by the auditorium doors.
âI donât know.â She shrugs, flipping through the pages as we make our way to the parking lot.
âWhat do you mean you donât know? You and MIT are like a dream match. And they already want you.â
âExactly,â she says. âThey already want me. But hosting is your Hail Mary pass. I should pick a school I have to work for.â
I stop in the middle of the lot, earning a honk from a Bronco attempting to pull out of its spot.
âYou donât have to work for any school. You could get in anywhere comatose.â
âMaybe.â
Sheâs being weird. We both know sheâs being weird. Tim Burtonâmovie weird.
âWhat school are you applying to, then?â
âI donât know yet. I have to read the brochure. Yale is still a reach. And University of Chicago.â
UChicago. The school where her mom has been an assistant professor for three years and desperately wants to be tenured. The school that has kept JoJoâs mom halfway across the country for ten months every year since eighth grade. If she gets in, JoJo will finally get the mother-daughter time she pretends she doesnât care about. But I donât mention any of this, because while our mom situations are different, they both suck big-time. So I pretend I donât know why her plans have suddenly changed.
âYou want a ride to work?â she asks, holding up her keys.
âIs Cherry Garcia the superior Ben and Jerryâs flavor?â I ask, opening the passenger door.
âNo,â she says. âItâs Phish Food, but Iâll allow you into my car anyway.â
She laughs, and I laugh, and the tension releases like a popped balloon.
People think being best friends means being open and exposed all the time. I think it means being able to hide in a safe place.
Javier Navarreteâs Panâs Labyrinth score floats over the room as I run a rag doused in Windex over the stained-glass window at the front of the cafĂ©. The inset letters spelling SIP AND SERENDIPITY glisten in the dim lighting.
Then I straighten the pillows piled high in the reading nook and reorganize the bookshelves that Taran, the cafĂ© owner, built herself. My fingers drag over the tapestries brought back from Taranâs adventures abroad. I have traveled the world in this small corner.
I circle the room again and again, clearing tables of empty mugs. When the large coffee machine beeps twice, I pour its contents into a wide-lipped carafe marked At Your Own Risk.
The bell above the front door tinkles. The boyâs hair glides against the top of the doorframe, spiraled curls falling in every direction. He looks like heâs been drinking the sun from a firehose, heâs so golden. He takes in the world that Taran has crafted. His eyes shift from overwhelmed to awed in the space of a breath as he approaches the counter. Someone so long shouldnât move with so much grace.
âHi,â he says, reaching up a hand to scratch an earlobe. Up close, he has dark freckles across the bridge of his nose. Theyâre spread haphazardly, as if an artist flicked them over his face with a paintbrush.
âHi,â I say, my voice pitched too high. I clear my throat. âWelcome to Sip and Serendipity.â
Genre:
- "[An] emotionally layered debut....Clarke artfully explores weighty topics such as trauma, grief, and abandonment using pensive narration, and mirthful dialogue provides levity. Michie’s encouraging support systems, healthy relationship with therapy, and heart-wrenching journey toward self-acceptance depicts a story overflowing with kindness and healing."âPublishers Weekly
- "A moving reminder to love—and allow ourselves to be loved—without measure."âDaniel Aleman, author of Indivisible
- "Lane Clarke's one-of-a-kind voice had me hooked from the very first page....This book is truly something special."âElise Bryant, author of Happily Ever After
- "Heartfelt and relatable, Love Times Infinity is a beautiful story about finding the courage to love ourselves and to let others do so as well. Readers will find a new favorite main character to root for in Michie."âKristina Forest, author of Now That I've Found You
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"One of the most compassionate first love stories I’ve ever read."
—Christina Hammonds Reed, New York Times bestselling author of The Black Kids
âChristina Hammonds Reed, New York Times bestselling author of The Black Kids - "Executed with wit, empathy and humor, Love Times Infinity holds your heart in its palm and gently squeezes it—ultimately reminding us about all the intersections and complexities of love. This sincere story about guilt, pain and identity does not steer away from the difficult making it an absolutely breathtaking debut. Love Times Infinity is a must read!"âAmber McBride, National Book Award finalist and author of Me (Moth)
- "Clarke's effervescent debut has heart and she navigates Michie's story with grace, humor, and love. A fresh contemporary with a protagonist everyone can cheer for."âLouisa Onomé, author of Like Home
- "Come for the sweet-as-sugar romance; stay for the gorgeous prose, nuanced characters, and a deeply satisfying read. Believe me: you want this charming, beautiful story to warm and fill your heart."âAshley Woodfolk, author of Nothing Burns as Bright as You
- On Sale
- Jul 26, 2022
- Page Count
- 368 pages
- Publisher
- Poppy
- ISBN-13
- 9780759556706
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