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BOY S G O TO J U P ITER

DANIELLE EVANS

T he bikini isn’t even Claire’s thing. Before this winter, if you

had said Confederate flag, Claire would have thought of

high-school beach trips: rows and rows of tacky souvenir

shops along the Ocean City Boardwalk, her best friend

Angela muttering they know they lost, right? while Claire tried to

remember which side of the Mason-Dixon Line Maryland was on.

The flag stuff is Jackson’s, and she’s mostly seeing Jackson to piss off

Puppy. Puppy, Claire’s almost-stepmother, is legally named Poppy;

Puppy is supposedly a childhood nickname stemming from a baby

sister’s mispronunciation, but Claire suspects that Puppy has made

the whole thing up. Puppy deemed it wasteful to pay twice as much

for a direct flight in order for Claire to avoid a layover, and her father

listens to Puppy now, so for the first half of her trip, Claire had to

go the wrong direction — to Florida from Vermont via Detroit.

Jackson has a drawl and a pickup truck and, in spite of his lack

of farming experience, a farmer’s tan. Claire meets him at Burger

Boy, the restaurant a few miles from her father’s house. Its chipping

red-and-white tiles and musk of grease give it all the glamour of a

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truck-stop bathroom, but it’s a respite from the lemon-scented and

pristine house that brought her father to St. Petersburg for retirement.

At college, Claire mostly lives off of the salad bar, but here

she picks up a burger and fries to go every afternoon. It is the kind

of food Puppy says she can’t eat since she turned thirty, and Puppy,

having no job and, from what Claire gathers, limited ambitions

beyond strolling the house in expensive loungewear, is always home

to miserably watch her eat it. On her fourth Burger Boy visit, Claire

picks up Jackson too. They get high and make out in the pool house

that afternoon, and the next and the next and the next.

At nineteen, Jackson is six months older than Claire, but still a

senior in high school. They try hanging out at his house once, but

Claire feels shamed by his mother’s scrutiny, assumes she wants to

know what’s damaged or defective about Claire that has her screwing

a high-school boy. After that, when they cannot be alone at her

house because her father is home (rarely) or Puppy is unbearable

(frequently), they find places to park. He gives her the bikini at the

end of the first week, after she complains that her father’s move to

Florida caught her off guard — she is used to winters that at least

make an effort to be winter, but her father’s new life in St. Pete

is relentless sunshine, sunburn weather in December. Outside, by

the pool, she has resigned herself to wearing T-shirts over one of

Puppy’s old suits, which is spangled with faded glitter and sags over

Claire’s bee-sting breasts. Jackson presents the bathing suit wadded

up in a supermarket plastic bag, the sort of awkward non-gift you

give someone in an awkward non-relationship — he bought it for

five dollars on a spring break trip, he says, for a girlfriend he subsequently

found blowing one of his friends in their shared motel room

and broke up with.

It isn’t much — three triangles and some string — but the tag is

still attached and Jackson is beaming at her.

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“You’d look so hot in this,” he says.

She does look pretty hot: like someone she is not, what with

the stars and bars marking her tits and crotch, but a hot someone

she is not.

“You look like white trash,” Puppy says to her the first time she

sees the bikini.

“You would know,” Claire says back. The bathing suit becomes

a habit, even after the temperature dips. Two days before she leaves

town, she throws a pair of cutoffs and a T-shirt over it before she and

Jackson leave the house, but when they get to the parking space — a

clearing in a half-built, abandoned subdivision — she makes a show

of stripping off the shorts and shirt. In the few minutes before he

takes it off and fucks her in the truck’s cab, Jackson snaps a picture

of Claire, radiant and smiling and leaning against the crisp foil-flash

of the bumper, the bikini’s Xs making her body a tic-tac-toe board.

She’s already forgotten about the picture when Jackson posts it on

Facebook that night, tagged with her name and #mygirl. Claire

doesn’t have the heart to object. On her last night in town she

doesn’t even see Jackson — her father takes her out for a fancy dinner

along the waterfront, just her, and then it’s goodbye. At the gate

awaiting her connecting flight, Claire drapes herself over two airport

chairs and checks the messages on her phone. She has eighteen

new texts, most from casual acquaintances, the closest thing she

has to friends at Dennis College. The messages range from hostile

to bewildered, and it takes her a few minutes to decipher what has

prompted them: a tweet from the account of the black girl who

lives across the hall from her, which features the photo of Claire in

the bikini and the commentary My hallmate just posted this picture of

herself on vacation :/.

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Claire squints at the thumbnail photo of the tweet’s author, the

only black girl on their dorm’s floor, and vaguely remembers her.

In the frenzied first weeks at Dennis, full of getting-to-know-you

games and welcomes, Claire accepted the girl’s friend request, but

she wasn’t really aware that hallmate was a thing, a relationship

carrying some expectation of trust or camaraderie. She is strangely

embarrassed by the picture, the way it turns her into someone else.

She wasn’t wearing the bikini to bother black people — for Christ’s

sake, there were none in her father’s new neighborhood to bother

even if she wanted to — but to bother Puppy, who is half racist

anyway, which makes her aggrieved reaction doubly hilarious. Claire

turns her phone off again, closes her eyes, and thinks to the mental

picture of the girl whose name she cannot remember, if she has ever

known it, well fuck you too.

In their old Virginia neighborhood, in the old house, the one

Claire’s father sold the second she graduated, they have black neighbors.

The Halls move into Claire’s subdivision the summer before

she starts first grade, back when the neighborhood is still brand

new: tech money is paving western Fairfax on its way out to Reston,

which will be malls and mini-mansions and glossy buildings soon.

Claire’s mother prefers the idea of a sprawling country house a little

further out, but her father likes the idea of something you can build

from the ground up, tinkering with room sizes and flooring types,

and so her father gets his house and her mother gets to choose from

seven different shades of granite for the counters and eight different

types of wood for the floors, and everything is so new and shiny

when they move in that Claire is afraid of her own house, afraid her

presence will somehow dent or tarnish it.

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Though Claire has always lived in Virginia, and Virginia, she

knows, is technically the South, Angela is the first person Claire

remembers meeting whose voice lilts: the Halls moved from South

Carolina, and the whole family talks with drowsy vowels and an

occasional drag that gives some words — her name, for example — a

comforting dip in the middle. In Mrs. Hall’s mouth, Claire’s name

is a tunnel from which a person can emerge on the other side. Claire

is fascinated by their accents, and, yes, by the dark tint of their skin,

but mostly she is anxious to be seen. In her own house, Claire is

alone: her only sibling is a half brother, Sean, ten years older, from

her father’s first marriage. Her father keeps long hours, and her

mother has a certain formality; Claire loves her, but feels, in her

presence, like a miniature adult, embarrassed by the silliness of her

six-year-old desires.

Mrs. Hall is an elementary school teacher and has a high tolerance

for the frenetic energy of children’s games. Angela’s house also

has Aaron, her brother, who is only a year older than the two of

them. Claire’s mother refers to Angela and Aaron as Irish twins,

which confuses Claire because they are neither twins nor Irish, so

she adopts Mrs. Hall’s term: stairstep siblings, one right behind the

other. At that age, they are the same size, Angela tall for her age

and Aaron short for his. Aaron is skinny and quiet and wears glasses

that dwarf his face; Angela is a whirlwind.

Since Claire has no brother at home to torment, she and Angela

torment Aaron together, chasing him around the front lawn, menacing

him with handfuls of glitter and other arts and crafts detritus,

taking his shoes from the row by the front door and hiding them

in cupboards, in the garage, in the laundry. Claire, not yet entirely

clear on the rules of family, thinks of herself as having not a half

brother, but half-a-brother, and shortly after meeting the Halls she

thinks of herself as having half of Angela’s too. The first summer,

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Angela teaches her that silly hand game, which starts my mother

your mother live across the street. Though this isn’t technically true of

them, it’s close enough, so they swear it is about them, and torment

Aaron with its refrain — girls are dandy just like candy, boys are rotten

just like cotton, girls go to college to get more knowledge, boys go to Jupiter

to get more stupider. In most aspects Aaron is indifferent to their

teasing, but the Jupiter taunt seems to bother him for its failures of

logic. Boys, he insists, would have to be smart to go to Jupiter, and

would probably go to college first. The argument has merits that

Claire and Angela ignore in favor of papering the door of his room

with pictures of Jupiter: crayon-drawn, ripped out of magazines,

snipped out of her parents’ dusty encyclopedia set and once out of

a children’s book about the solar system, stolen from her pediatrician’s

office. How is the weather on Jupiter, they ask him, though he

never answers. Even now Claire recognizes renderings of the planet

on sight, cloud-spotted, big and bright and banded, unspectacular

until you consider all it holds in orbit.

The girl across the hall doesn’t look like Angela at all. She is lighterskinned

and heavier-framed and her hair is wilder, deliberately

unkempt in a way that would have made Angela’s mother raise an

eyebrow. Her name, Claire eventually remembers, is Carmen. By

the time Claire arrives at her dorm room, on the second floor of

a row of flat brick buildings that house a third of the small college’s

freshmen, there are forty-seven responses to and twenty-three

retweets of Carmen’s post. Claire is surprised by the level of interest,

then annoyed by it. She distrusts collective anger; Claire’s anger has

always been her own. Claire prints a photo of the Confederate flag

and scrawls in loopy cursive on the back Welcome back! I hope you

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had a great vacation. When she slips the photo under her door, she

means to tell Carmen-the-hallmate to fuck off.

The next morning, the voicemail on her phone is full. She

has 354 new emails, most of them from strangers. Across the hall,

campus movers are noisily carting Carmen off to a new dorm. A

reporter from the student paper, unable to reach her by phone, has

slipped a note under Claire’s door asking for an interview. She gathers

from his note that several bloggers have now picked up both the

bikini photo and Carmen’s photo of last night’s postcard. She has a

text from Jackson. The hashtag #badbikiniideas turns up one hundred

thirty-seven results, including one with a picture of swastikas

photoshopped into palm trees. An email marked urgent informs her

that her academic counselor would like to speak to her. In a separate

urgent email, the Office of Diversity requests her presence. Someone

using the email fuckyoufuckyoufuckyou@gmail.com thinks she

is a cunt. Twenty-two different rednecks from around the country

have sent her supportive pictures of their penises.

It seems clear to Claire that most of the hall has taken Carmen’s

side. Claire forgoes both showering and breakfast, opting instead

to burrow in her room. Someone from the campus TV station has

interviewed Carmen and put the clip online. In the video, Carmen

stands in front of Bell Hall, one of the upperclassmen dorms, where

she has apparently been relocated. She wears a Dennis College

sweatshirt and wraps her arms around herself. “Up until this happened,

I thought she was nice,” Carmen says. “We always smiled at

each other in the hallway. But she put a hate symbol where I sleep,

and she thought it was funny.” There is genuine fear in her eyes,

which startles Claire.

Sean has left an angry voicemail asking her what she was thinking.

Claire does not call him back. Jackson texts again to tell her

he knows she’s busy but he thinks she’s awesome. Claire turns her

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phone off and shuts her inbox tab and spends the afternoon watching

online videos of singing goats. She is on her tenth goat video

when the president of the campus libertarians shows up at her door

and introduces himself. His name is Robert and he lives two floors

down, where he is the RA. He smiles like someone who has just

won second place.

“I’m here in support of your right to free expression,” he says.

“Don’t take this personally,” Claire says, “but unless you’re here

in support of my right to go to bed early, I don’t care. I don’t care

about any of this. It was just a stupid picture.”

“And you shouldn’t be punished for it, but you will be if you

don’t get ahead of this. My friend lives on your hall and hadn’t seen

you all day, so we figured you were hiding out. We made you a care

package.”

The care package consists of a foil-wrapped caramel apple from

the dining hall, which has declared it carnival week at the dessert

buffet, and a book on libertarian philosophy, in case she’s bored.

Claire considers the offering. She is unimpressed, but also hungry,

so she lets him in before his presence in her doorway becomes a

spectacle.

“For the record,” he says, “I’m not a big fan of the Confederate

flag myself. The Confederacy was an all-around failure of military

strategy. Lost the battle when they lost the ports, if you ask me. But

I’m no one to judge anyone for their support of lost causes. As far

as I’m concerned, you can wear anything you want.”

Claire gathers that she is supposed to find this endearing, that

she is supposed to bite the apple and lick the caramel off of her lips

and ask him to tell her more about military strategy and let him

plan her own response campaign, and that sometime several hours

into this discussion she is supposed to end up naked out of awe

or gratitude. Instead she sets the book and the apple on her desk,

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politely thanks him, tells him she is tired and, when he finally leaves,

locks the door behind him. She eats the apple alone in bed, figuring

it can cover her meals for today and maybe tomorrow — she’s still

got some Burger Boy calories stored up.

When she checks her mail again before bed, there are another

hundred emails. Her student account’s address has been posted on

several message boards and #clairewilliamsvacationideas is a locally

trending topic (Auschwitz, My Lai, Wounded Knee). She is losing

on Twitter, but a group called Heritage Defenders has picked up the

story and distributed it to their members, so at this point she has

more supporters than detractors in her inbox. Cliff from Tennessee

writes that when he was in college, his fraternity hosted an annual

plantation ball for their sister sorority and everyone dressed in their

frilly historical finest. One year he and his frat brother decided to

cover the house’s front lawn in thousands of cotton balls, so that

when they posed for pictures on its steps, the college’s mostly black

janitorial staff could be seen in the background of the shot, cleaning

up. PC police tried to shut down our chapter for it, but we stayed strong.

Hang in there! the email concludes. There is an attachment: a picture

of a boy, smiling wide in khaki pants with a button-down and vest,

his arm around a laughing redhead in a corset and frilly hoop skirt,

cotton balls blanketing the ground beneath them, a stooped black

man in a green uniform sweeping up cotton in the background. He

has a broom and a plastic trash can on wheels and his uniform is

crisp and synthetic-shiny — there’s nothing historically authentic

about his presence, other than his blackness. She cannot see the

man’s face, but she can imagine it, and the imagining comes with a

twinge of shame. But she is not Cliff, Claire reminds herself;

Cliff

thinking they are the same doesn’t make them the same. The next

email is angry and anonymous; its writer threatens to find out where

she lives and set her on fire. Claire decides she will tell anyone lookd

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ing where to find her. She prints out a copy of the flag and tapes it

to her dorm window. She calls the reporter from the student paper

back and tells him she is simply celebrating her heritage, like any

number of groups on campus encourage students to do. She affects

a lilt to say so, but as soon as the words are out of her mouth she

realizes that the affect is a mistake. She doesn’t sound like herself.

She sounds like Angela.

In the second grade, sometime after discovering that Angela is

black, Claire writes a poem about their friendship for Martin

Luther King Day. Most of the lines she has forgotten over time,

the exception being the dubious couplet I judge her for her character /

and so I’m never mad at her. Their teacher likes the poem so much

that she stages it for the school’s February assembly, assigning them

costumes: Claire a stiff black and white “patriot” uniform, complete

with tri-cornered hat, and Angela a kente cloth dress. For the next

three years of elementary school they are dragged out to recite the

poem every February, a performance that Angela’s mother permits

only after mandating a costume change.

Claire and Angela forever. By adolescence they have both lucked

into beauty, but neither has really noticed yet; there is so little room

for interlopers in the tight world of their friendship that they are

often each other’s only mirrors. When they are swarmed by boys at

the mall, Angela will name the game, Wiccans or airheads or runaways,

and they will play their roles until the boys catch on that they

are being teased. The last good summer, they go to camp together

at a college a few hours south of Fairfax. Other girls they know go

to horse camp or dance camp or Paris, but they go to what Angela

calls nerd camp. Technically they are not at camp together, because

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nerd camp is separated by discipline — Angela is there for poetry

and Claire is there for language immersion — and most of the time

all Claire can do is shout dirty words in French from across the

quad when she sees Angela’s group trouping to lunch like a line of

maudlin ducks. But in the evenings everyone socializes together,

and as the weeks accumulate the counselors, who are only college

age themselves, become lackadaisical about chaperoning and

enforcing rules.

The third week of camp, a group escapes the confines of the

awkward Saturday dance, flees the repurposed assembly room with

its drooping crepe paper, the flailing girls on the dance floor ringed

by a wall of scared boys who will not ask anyone to dance and are

not cool enough to pretend not to want to. One of the photography

campers has a water bottle full of vodka and someone else has a

tic-tac case full of pills and at some point on their way to the most

private patch of lawn they have taken pills and shots and then they

are running through lawn sprinklers. Everything sizzles. When they

kitten-pile into the grass, Claire turns to Angela. It is a love that

requires touch, and so Claire snuggles against her, nuzzles into her

neck to say it out loud against her. Love love love. Angela is her best

friend, her other self. Someday they will go to college together. The

world will unravel for them, fall at their feet.

A year later both of their mothers are sick. It starts slow, with both

of them, and then quick quick quick. With Angela’s mother it is

a lump, with Claire’s a vague malaise. We should have caught it

sooner, Angela and Claire say to each other, over and over again,

as though their mothers’ bodies are their own. At first it seems

as if, even in its cruelty, the universe is being kind, giving Claire

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a person to suffer through this with. Who else knows the smells

of hospitals, the best way to sleep in a hospital chair, the flushed

shame of disgust at cleaning up your mother’s vomit, the palpitating

anxiety of waking each morning thinking that this is the day

something will go terribly wrong, the wince every time the phone

rings while your mother is out of sight? Claire doesn’t even have to

give Angela words.

Aaron knows too. He is two grades ahead of them and supposed

to be gone by now, but when his mother gets sick he defers

his college acceptance. “Guess you were right,” he says to Claire

one afternoon, all of them in the basement watching daytime TV.

“It’s Jupiter for me after all.” On-screen, two men on a court show

are declared not the father, but one of them throws a chair at the

other anyway.

“Jupiter would be better than this,” says Claire.

One afternoon when their mothers are miserable and weary

from chemo, Aaron finds Claire jogging in the rain, and pulls over

for her. She cannot explain why, in spite of the storm, she hasn’t

turned around and gone back to the house — why she is, in fact,

running in the wrong direction. When she gets into his car she

sobs and then dry heaves and then follows Aaron into his house,

where she strips and wraps herself in a throw blanket on the basement

sofa and he makes her what his mother always made when

they were kids, peppermint hot chocolate. It is out of season but

still the best thing that has happened to her recently, though when

she reaches for his body, feels the first thing she has felt in months

that isn’t slow death, that isn’t bad either. He is still skinny, his hips

slimmer than hers, so she slides underneath him; the weight of her,

it seems, might smother him, but the weight of him tethers her to

something. He is too gentle with her even after she tells him not to

be; after he is finished she has to fake an orgasm to get him to stop

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insisting he’ll make her come too. They don’t love each other that

way, or pretend to, so it isn’t weird afterward, just a thing that happened

because everyone is closer now. Claire and Angela can complete

each other’s thoughts. Claire and Aaron can be naked. Their

mothers, who have only ever been casually friendly, now speak an

intimate language of supplements and painkillers and hospitals and

wig shops. Even their fathers have taken to neighborly gestures

of solidarity.

Mrs. Hall has been Claire’s second mother most of her life,

and Claire fears that she will lose both her mother and her other

mother, but it turns out that it is worse to lose only one, when it’s

the one that counts. Claire knows as soon as she feels it the first

time that there is cruelty in this sentiment, so much cruelty that it

surprises her, but that doesn’t change the feeling. Mrs. Hall walks

out of the hospital in full remission. Not a trace of the cancer left.

Her hair grows back, soft and downy. She takes up running to drop

the steroid weight. She is working up to marathons. Angela trains

with her.

Claire’s mother dies in July. They bury her on a damp Tuesday

when the ground is slimy from an afternoon thunderstorm. She

does not hear a word the priest says, thinking of her mother down

there, rotting. For weeks before the funeral she has nightmares in

which she is the one being buried, alive, the sickening smell of

earth always waking her. At the funeral, Angela holds her hand and

Aaron puts an arm around her shoulder. He is a perfect gentleman,

but one with a mother, and Angela is a friend with a mother, and

already they are galaxies away from Claire, alone in her grief.

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Robert is not easily dissuaded. He returns the next morning with

a sandwich, a task list, and backup in the form of a short, freckled

sophomore named Alan. By noon, Robert and Alan have sold

Claire on their strategy. They tell her putting the flag up was brilliant,

and that three other students have taped Confederate flags to

their doors in solidarity. One of them, Robert confesses, is Alan.

They have drafted a statement for her and agreed to a town hall

meeting on her behalf.

“You’re not breaking any rules,” says Robert.

“You have a right to celebrate where you came from,” Alan says.

“Just stick to that and you’ll be good. Don’t let them make you sound

like a racist. Don’t let them turn you into your own worst enemy.”

Claire’s mother came from Connecticut. She found even the

northernmost reaches of the South vaguely suspect. She missed

New England seafood and would occasionally, when feeling extravagant,

pay an exorbitant amount to express mail herself a live lobster.

Claire’s father was originally from Minnesota. Before he retired

to Florida, Northern Virginia was the furthest south any relative of

hers had ever lived. For the moment, it feels like a miracle to her

that no one has to know any of that.

Claire has skipped her Monday and Tuesday classes, but the next

morning is the occasion of her mandated appointment with the

Dean of Student Affairs, the University ombudswoman, her adviser,

and the Vice Dean of Diversity. She showers for the first time this

week, blow-dries and teases her hair. She wears a horrible mint

green dress Puppy bought her for an engagement event that Claire

refused to attend. She puts on her mother’s pearls, takes them off,

puts them on again.

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It is a short walk to the ombudswoman’s office, but by the time

she gets there Claire is freezing, despite her coat, and wishes she

had stopped for hot coffee in the student center. The office is wood

paneled, newly renovated in a bright but bland way that invites you

to imagine it decades later and dingy. Behind its windows, Claire

knows, is the grace of woods in winter, but this morning the blinds

are drawn. Claire’s adviser, a twenty-something brunette whom

Claire has met twice so far, gives her a tentative smile. At their first

advising meeting, Claire noted that some of her student files were

tagged with Post-it tabs. Claire’s was tagged with red. The adviser

was sheepish about it when Claire asked her what the color system

was about, and Claire realized later that red must mean exactly what

it looked like, though which disaster the adviser intended to mark,

Claire still isn’t sure. She doesn’t trust a woman who puts literal red

flags on things and expects people not to catch on. The ombudswoman

is a middle-aged Puerto-Rican woman in a drab pantsuit

and the Dean of Student Affairs is a middle-aged white man wearing

what Claire can only presume is one in an ongoing series of

wacky ties, this one featuring cartoon insects. Together the two of

them look like someone’s embarrassing parents. The Vice Dean of

Diversity, a thirty-something black man with dreadlocks and skinny

jeans, has taken his own couch. He has his notepad out and does

not meet Claire’s eye.

“We can’t force you to take down the flag,” says the ombudswoman,

once Claire is seated. “I want to be clear that that’s not

what we’re here to do. Your decor is not in violation of any official

university policy. But we can ask you, in the interest of the

campus community and the well-being of your peers, to remove

the flag from your window, and apologize to Miss Wilson. You

will face a peer disciplinary hearing on the subject of your harassment

of Miss Wilson, and I can only imagine that having made

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some attempt to rectify things will make a good impression on the

disciplinary board.”

“What harassment?”

“The threat you slipped under Miss Wilson’s door,” says the

Vice Dean of Diversity.

“I threatened her to enjoy her vacation and feel welcomed back?”

“You left a Confederate flag postcard under her door,” says the

ombudswoman. “Aside from the fact that the image itself, sent to

a black student in the place where she lives, could be construed

as a threat on its own, you knew already that Miss Wilson felt

distressed by the image and was wary of your affinity for it. She

reasonably construed it as a threat and requested that the university

relocate her.”

“A threat of what? That I was going to legally enslave her?

Secede from the hallway, declare war on her, and then lose?”

“Please take this seriously,” says her adviser.

“I only knew that she was distressed by the flag because she put

a picture of me on the internet to harass me. When is her disciplinary

hearing?”

“You, or your friend, put your picture on the internet,” says her

adviser, exasperation creeping into her voice. “We stress during orientation

that nothing on the internet is private, and we wish more

of you took that seriously. So far as we can tell, no one from campus

had anything to do with publicizing your contact information.”

“So a hundred people can send me death threats, but I can’t put

a flag in my window.”

“No one can send you death threats,” says the ombudswoman.

“If any of them are traced to this community, those students will be

dealt with. And I would advise you to speak to both campus safety

officers and the local police about any and all threats you receive.

You’re not on trial here. No one is out to get you, and none of us are

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the disciplinary board. It is our job to ask you nicely to make this

easier on everyone. What you do with that is up to you.”

“The first thing I would do, if I were you, is take advantage of

our excellent history department and talk to a professor about why

the image you’ve chosen to go to bat for is so hostile,” says the Vice

Dean of Diversity.

Claire focuses on the window blinds and takes a breath.

“I am familiar with the Civil War and the student code of conduct,”

she says finally. “But bless your hearts for being so helpful.”

Claire leaves for lunch feeling in control of the situation for the

first time, and feeling in control of the situation is luxurious enough

that she grabs lunch in the student center, not minding the stares.

In an otherwise uneventful lit class, the professor seems confused by

her accent, but Claire doesn’t talk enough for anyone to be certain

she didn’t sound like that before. She heads back to her dorm giddy

with relief.

When she first sees the photograph, it takes her a full minute to

connect it to herself. One of the blogs that has taken to relentlessly

covering the story and recommends she be expelled has posted a

photo from the police file. There is her smashed-up car. There is a

senior yearbook photo of Aaron. The article only has pieces of the

story. Claire reads it to see if the Halls — any of them, all of them,

Angela — have made any comment. The article says they cannot

be reached.

It is November of senior year and Claire is hanging out with a girl

named Seraphin, as in, that is her actual given name, which never

stops being hilarious. Or, Claire was hanging out with Seraphin,

but who knows where Seraphin is now — her ex-boyfriend is back

in town for Thanksgiving weekend and invited them to this party.

d a n i e l l e e va n s 6 5 5

Fiction

Claire is three? Four? Four drinks in to something bright pink that

the host calls panty-dropper punch, one drink for every month her

mother has been dead so far. She still thinks of it that way, as in:

so far, her mother is still dead, but that could change any day now,

any moment her mother could walk in and demand to know what

she is doing, and what she has been doing, tonight, is drinking.

Grief has a palpable quality, and it is all she can feel unless she’s

making an active effort to feel something else. Tonight she is feeling

drunk — pink and punchy and panty-dropping, because all of

those things mean she is not at home, where Puppy has already

strutted into the space her mother left behind with such velocity

that it’s clear to Claire that her father checked out well before her

mother did.

Claire is still wearing panties, so far; she has that going for her,

though she has held on to them only barely after an aborted tryst

with a boy she met in the laundry room. She is barefoot, which

she realizes only when something sharp startles her, which she

has already forgotten by the time she gets to the other side of the

kitchen and braces herself against the counter, but remembers again

when she lifts her head and sees a streak of blood on the kitchen

floor. Shoes, she is thinking, when she hears her name.

It shouldn’t surprise her that Aaron is there. He has finally

gone to college, but it is Thanksgiving, and there is so much to be

thankful for in that house, so of course Aaron is back. He looks well.

The freshman fifteen suit him. There is a girl on his arm Claire has

never seen before — she is curly haired and caramel colored, and he

whispers something into her ear that causes her to reluctantly leave

them alone in the kitchen. So now Claire doesn’t know two things,

where her shoes are or who this Aaron is who has a life she knows

nothing about. It has been months since she has spoken to either

sibling. There is so much she wouldn’t know about Aaron now,

and yet standing in front of her he is a flip book of all the other

6 5 6 b o y s g o t o j u p i t e r

Aarons

she has known, from rotten rotten rotten Jupiter Jupiter Jupiter

through last year in the basement, the grip of his palm on her hip.

“Claire?” he says. “You okay?”

“I’m fucking amazing,” says Claire.

“You don’t look good. Do you need me to call Angela?”

“For what? We don’t talk.”

“She’s upset about that, you know. She has no idea why you

won’t talk to her.”

“Because every time I see her I want to tell her I’m sorry your

mother is alive, because it reminds me that mine is dead.”

Aaron winces. He takes a nervous sip from his red cup before

looking at her again.

“That’s fucked up, Claire. My mom misses you too. You’re

messed up right now, I get that, but at some point you’re going to

have to stop making it worse.”

“I’m not making it worse. I’m looking for my shoes.”

“Where did you leave them?”

“Maybe with Brendan. He’s in the laundry room. Probably still

putting his pants on.”

“Who’s Brendan?”

“Who is anybody, anyway? Who are you?”

“Claire, enough. I’m taking you home, okay?”

There is something firm and brotherly in his tone and it infuriates

her. She shakes her head, but he ignores her and comes close

enough that he could touch her if he stretched out his arm. Claire

lets out a scream that startles him into momentary retreat, a bestial

noise she has been holding in for months. While Aaron is deciding

what to do next, she is around him and out the door, the grass

cold and wet on her feet. By the time he catches up with her, she

is climbing into the driver’s seat of her car. Claire leans her head

against the steering wheel, suddenly exhausted. Aaron sighs from

d a n i e l l e e va n s 6 5 7

Fiction

outside her open door. He hesitates for a minute, then hoists her

over his shoulde and carries her around to the passenger side.

“Let’s go home,” he says.

She doesn’t know whether he means her home, or his home,

but she is too tired to protest. Let him deliver her to her father’s

doorstep or the Halls’ guest room, let someone who is still alive yell

at her the way her mother is yelling in her head all the time. She

presses her temple to the window and starts to fade out, only barely

aware of Aaron digging through her purse for her keys and settling

in behind the wheel, only barely hearing the yelling coming from

somewhere nearby.

The person yelling is Seraphin’s current boyfriend, who is pissed

that Seraphin went to her ex’s party and invited him as an afterthought.

Claire knows him, but not well. He’s a little buzzed from

pregaming but mostly he’s angry, so when he sees, as he tells the

police later, a huge black guy pulling Claire out of her car and rummaging

through her purse and driving her away, he is alarmed

enough that he and his friends get back in their car and follow

Claire’s, alarmed enough to call the cops while they’re driving.

Claire sleeps through it at the time: Aaron, unnerved by the car

behind him, flooring the accelerator; Seraphin’s boyfriend tailgating,

flashing his brights, then the car full of boys pulling alongside them,

his friends throwing a soda bottle and yelling at Aaron to stop.

Aaron only goes faster, losing them for a moment, then, less than a

mile from their houses, turning onto Cleveland Street at such speed

that he spins out and the car flips into the trees. Claire wakes up,

vaguely, to sirens, and then for real, in the hospital, where she has

a concussion and a hangover and a starring role in someone else’s

rescue story.

Aaron is dead. By the time Claire is awake enough to be aware

of this, it has already been determined that he was not a stranger,

6 5 8 b o y s g o t o j u p i t e r

that he was just above the legal limit, that people saw him chase her

out of the party after she screamed, that she was passed out in her

own car. The people who give him the benefit of the doubt mostly

feel themselves to be magnanimous.

“He should have just pulled over and explained,” Seraphin will

say sadly a few weeks later, and Claire will nod, and Seraphin will be

quoted saying that in the paper when the Post runs an article about

the accident’s aftermath. Mrs. Hall will tell the reporter that a black

boy doesn’t get out of the car at night in the woods for a car full of

angry white boys in Virginia. Claire’s father will read the paper and

say it’s not the 1950s.

It isn’t, it’s the first decade of the new millennium, but Claire’s

father is a lawyer, and Seraphin’s boyfriend’s father is Claire’s father’s

golf partner. No one is assigned any legal responsibility for the

accident. The Halls’ lawsuit is dismissed before Claire has to say

anything in public. It’s Angela who won’t talk to her now, and

the tenth time Mrs. Hall knocks on their front door and no one

answers, Claire’s father gets a restraining order. Claire tells the

reporter Aaron was a friend, that she was drunk and he was taking

her home, but the bones of that story don’t convince anyone it

wasn’t all, at best, a tragic misunderstanding; at worst, a danger she

didn’t see coming. Claire tells the reporter some innocuous nice

thing about Seraphin’s boyfriend, and the paper calls him one of her

best friends, after which she stops trying to explain.

The Halls rent out their house for the spring and Angela finishes

her senior year at a private school closer to DC. When Claire

sees them rolling their suitcases out to the car, preparing to follow

their moving van, she feels shame and relief, in which order she

cannot say. Claire rides to prom in a limo with Seraphin and her

boyfriend and a date whose name she forgets soon after. A month

later the house Claire grew up in is on the market and her father

d a n i e l l e e va n s 6 5 9

Fiction

and Puppy are formally engaged. Three months after that she is

gone, tucked away at a small liberal arts college where no one has

ever met her and anything is possible.

Robert is at her dorm door again. She sees herself as he sees her, a

problem to be solved. He is logic; she is x. The internet’s discovery

of the accident has driven the attention to a pitched furor. He wants

to prepare her for the town hall that has been called regarding her

continued presence on campus. Claire is not even sure she likes

Robert, let alone trusts him, but she tells him everything. Someone

has found a photograph of Aaron, the one that ran with his obituary.

His smile melts into the part of Claire that still remembers

when he was missing his two front teeth.

Aarons’s favorite joke:

Knock Knock

Who’s there?

Anticipation

Anticipation who?

. . .

Who?

. . . . . .

It takes Claire and Angela more than a year to stop falling for it,

to realize that the joke is their own impatience, not a punchline he’s

been holding out on them. Even as teenagers, they sometimes take

the bait; they don’t put it past him to have been waiting years for the

right moment of revelation, for the payoff they’ve been promised.

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