Thanks for writing, Summer. We do have one more slot left for the event and we’d be happy to have Dangerheart. They will open for Freak Show. (Did you see them last night?? OMG!) Cheersies! –MR
“Cheersies,” I mutter. I wonder if Marni even saw Dangerheart. Maybe that was for the best. I write back and accept. And then it occurs to me: what if we can also show up there and reveal a lost Allegiance to North song to the world? Can’t jump that gun, though. But at least, in spite of last night, we have a next gig. That is, if the band is still together. I hope Caleb was able to get them to come over.
Mom is already out running errands when I get downstairs. Dad is watching a news talk show while reading from his tablet. On the weekends, he gives himself permission to dress down, but he’s still wearing khakis and shoes and a polo shirt tucked in.
“How was last night?” he asks as I get coffee and toast a bagel.
“Not bad. Kind of a dumb party. Then we went for food.”
“‘We’ being . . . this new band you like?”
“New band I manage,” I say.
“Ah. I thought you weren’t into that anymore?”
“These guys are good,” I say. Then, in case I sound like I’m taking it too seriously for Dad’s taste, I add, “I don’t know, it’s fun.” “Fun” makes it sound like a little hobby and keeps him from inquiring further.
I sit down to eat. Dad joins me. Uh-oh.
“I’ve been thinking. . . . ,” he says. He’s using “Dad-Friend” tone. “How about we go to see a couple schools the weekend after next? You guys have that professional development day, so it’s a long weekend.”
“Oh. Um.”
“I found a couple good law programs and we can make a loop. Stanford Friday and UC Berkeley on Saturday. They offer tours. I may have even scheduled a few, and mentioned your law interest.”
I feel a surge of frustration, wishing once again that Dad might somehow see who I really want to be on his own, but I reply, “Sure.” Except as I’m saying it I remember that the Harvest Slaughter is the same weekend. “Well, but, Stanford? Really? There’s no way I’m getting in there.”
“Cat, come on. You don’t know that. And there’s no harm in looking.”
“Well, okay.” Of course that wasn’t going to work. “But can we be back by Saturday night? There’s a dance.”
“Oh, didn’t realize that. You have a date?”
“Yeah.” Technically, not a lie. I have a date with a band. “I’d really like to go. This year is my last chance for this kind of thing.”
“Ah.” Dad taps on his tablet. “Well, I think we can make it back by the evening. . . .” He doesn’t sound thrilled.
“Are you sure that’s okay?” I ask.
“Yeah, that will be fine.” He sounds disappointed, but I know that he’s sensitive to the idea of me growing up and leaving, and he always wants me to embrace what he thinks of as the traditional high school things. A date to a dance fits his parameters. “That will be fine.” He taps on his tablet. “And is your new band playing the dance?”
He’s also smart enough to read between the lines. “Oh, yeah, I think they are.”
Dad’s brow furrows as he types. “Looks like there’s a different tour time we can get.” His gaze flashes to me. “I just . . . you were so upset a few weeks ago. I mean I know you love music. . . . These band types though . . .” I know what he’ll say next. “I know what they’re like.” He’s referring to how he used to play piano and was in a cover band for, like, three months in high school.
“Dad, it’s no big deal,” I say, a little frustration slipping into my voice. “They’re nice guys. One’s a girl.”
“Okay, but . . .” I can hear Dad shuffling through what to say. “I just picture you with, you know, other kids more like you.”
I shove bagel in and just sort of nod. Then I wait him out. It’s not until Mom is back and I have the car and am driving through the exclusionary gate of the Fronds, our sterile lab of a housing community, that I slam the steering wheel and start swearing at everything from the pedestrians to the clouds in the sky. But mostly at my dad. Kids more like you . . . I know he means well, but for who? For Catherine. He doesn’t even know Summer exists.
As I drive into town, I look around the sprawl of communities just like the Fronds, and more than ever, all I can think is I . . .
Don’t.
Want.
This.
I feel like being here, behind these walls, how could the magic or chance opportunity of life ever find you? This place feels like a choice for safety over possibility, money over art, conformity over individuality. What are these people living for? From here you can’t actually reach for your dreams. Instead, you just idolize those who do, but also celebrate when they fall, when they burn out and self-destruct from trying. That way we have our cautionary tales. They make us feel safe, remind us that we’re not missing anything while we sit inside these prisons.
Or then again maybe I’m wrong. So many people choose this. Choose the Fronds. Choose Catherine. So many people want that for me. Smart, caring people. If I reject it, will I realize some day that I was a fool? Would it be better to be safe and unhappy than in peril and alive?
Poor car steering wheel, but by the time I get to Caleb’s, I’ve cooled off. Their house is small but cute, a mission style with pretty flowers out front.
Caleb’s mom lets me in. “Hi, I’m Charity,” she says brightly.
“Hi,” I say, “I’m—” I pause for a second, stuck between saying Catherine or Summer. Charity is dressed for the office, a portfolio under her arm, and this trips my Carlson Squared circuits. But then I hate myself for even debating this, and now I’m standing there like an idiot—
“Summer,” says Charity. “It’s so nice to meet you.” She sticks out her hand and we shake. “Caleb mentioned you the other day, and when I asked him about you he got all grumpy and said you were ‘cool.’ That’s how I could tell he’s really into you.”
“Oh.” I try not to blush, but there’s no holding it back.
“I think it’s so great that you manage the band,” says Charity. She shifts the stack of papers to the other side, and I catch a faint smell of cigarettes. “I loved hanging out with bands when I was your age, but I never graduated from groupie status.” She glances to the sky, like her past life is up there somewhere. Then she shrugs. “Well, except for two weeks as the drummer in an all-girl Zeppelin cover band.”
“Wow,” I say. “That sounds pretty awesome.”
“Awesomely terrible.”
“Well, my mom can’t utter a single sentence that cool.” I feel guilty immediately after saying this, even if it’s true.
“Bah.” Charity waves her hand, then checks her watch. “Gotta run. People to save, insurance companies to swear at. Here, I’ll show you downstairs.”
I find Caleb, Jon, and Matt sitting on the carpet around a coffee table.
“I’ll see you around dinner, Caleb,” says Charity.
“Okay, good luck,” Caleb replies. There’s something in their back and forth, so easy and understanding, more like they are partners than parent-kid, at least the version I know. Two people whose identities are not secrets from each other. I realize that while it sucks to have my parents want a different version of me, it’s just as bad that I want a different version of them.
“It was nice to meet you,” Charity says to me.
“You, too.”
Caleb, Jon, and Matt are playing one of those games with a giant map and the little die-cast armies. There are soldiers and monsters. They’re playing as if nothing happened last night. I try to go with that. “Wow, that’s the least rock ’n’ roll thing I’ve ever seen.” I snap a picture though, and post it. People love when artists appear doing nerdy things.