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Authors: Jason Odell Williams

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“Oh-ho-ho, you are not going to be
lieve
the night I had. The
morn
ing I had. This place is crazier than an episode of
Gossip Girl
.” Out of the corner of my eye, I notice a tray of food. That seems unlike Rani, to wake up early and get breakfast? “Hey, where’d you get this stuff?” I ask grabbing some pineapple from the fruit salad.
The bed covers suddenly fly back. “
I
brought it.”
Startled, I spit the pineapple onto the floor. It’s that boy Rani’s been flirting with all weekend. The one she ditched me for last night.
“What the hell?” I manage to say.
“I figured Rani was famished. We sure worked up an appetite last night.” And he gives me the cheesiest wink and smile I’ve ever seen in my life. “How’d
you
do, Harvard? ‘Dja get lucky?”
Rani just stares at her recent hook-up, jaw slack. I’m equally speechless. So I turn to go. But as I open the front door and peek into the hall, I see the Amish Boy Wonder making
his
way up the stairs, so I quickly duck back inside and turn to Rani and her boy-toy.
“Seriously, Rani? This is the biggest day of our lives and you’re…” I gesture at the dude in bed with her. He smiles and winks at me—again! I feel like I might throw up. I shake my head in disgust and fling open the closet door. I grab my overnight bag off the floor and rip my ‘power outfit’ off the wooden hanger. “To be continued,” I add. Then I turn to go again, but stop first to take the bagel off Rani’s tray (as a sort of punishment and also because I’m starving). Then I slam the door and leave.
I storm down to the powder room on the first floor and look at myself in the small oval mirror.
Upon seeing what I look like for the first time all morning—mascara smeared down my right cheek, lipstick on my chin, dirt on my forehead, grass
in my hair!
—I open my mouth, take in a huge breath, and scream. As loud as I’ve ever screamed in my life.
RANI
I wake to soft hands caressing me. Fingertips gently tracing random patterns around my arms and legs. Goosebumps making my whole body tingle.
When I open my eyes, though, I’m alone in bed, exactly the way I started the night, the edges of my dream slowly slipping away for good. I rub a sleepy hand across my eyes and look at the sun streaking though the window. Last night seems so close and so far away at the same time.
Minutes after Emily and I arrived at the party, Tyler found me and basically never left my side (much to the chagrin of Emily). Tyler and I even won the “couples limbo contest.” But at the end of the night, after he walked me to my room, and we talked and talked by the door, he finally leaned in and kissed me goodnight, a soft perfect kiss. Then he looked at me with those puppy-dog eyes (so open and nonjudgmental that it was almost disarming), twisted a piece of my hair between his fingers and said, “Well…” But I totally chickened out and said, “Okay, see ya in the morning,” and closed the door on his face. I’m sure he hates me. But it’s fine. I need to focus on the presentations. Besides, girls like me never end up with the guy anyway.
There’s a soft knock on my door and I call out, “Come in,” assuming it’s Emily raring to go. But it’s Tyler. With a tray full of food!

Buon giorno, bella,”
he says, his voice hoarse and sexy.
“Hi,” I say, smiling dumbly from bed, wondering how awful I must look right now.
“You look even more amazing in the morning,” he says, as if he knows what I’m thinking. I blush, self-consciously touching my face and hair. While he sets down the tray he adds, “Hope this is okay. I broke into the kitchen early. Brought us up some fresh fruit and bagels. I wasn’t sure if you were an OJ or coffee girl, so I got both.”
Oh my God, is this guy
too
perfect? Maybe. But I also think I’m genuinely falling for him. I know he’s an actor and all, but no one is
this
good. He can’t be faking this. Not now. Not the next morning. Especially since I put the brakes on and all we did was kiss goodnight. He’s totally into me, too, I can feel it.
“Wow,” I manage to say. “You got breakfast? What time is it?”
“Um…”
As he strains to get a look at the clock on the nightstand, purposely leaning over me on the bed, pressing his chest into my face, I can’t help but giggle. It’s so forward and charming and cool and sexy and oh Jesus I’m falling for every move he throws at me. Dammit, Rani, pull it together. He’s just a
guy
! How did I fall for him so fast? But maybe it’s okay. I’ve read about love at first sight and people meeting their husbands and just
instantly
knowing they were their “one and only.” Maybe that’s happening to me. Right now. Maybe he’s my one and only. Maybe I met the man of my dreams because of a hurricane. No. How can that be? I’m only seventeen! I’ve never had a serious boyfriend. Less than twelve hours ago, my best friend thought I was a lesbian! I went to the ninth and tenth grade dances with the same dorky guy who I only kissed twice and it was terrible both times! (He led with his oversized teeth.) So, no, my first serious boyfriend can’t be “the one.” Besides, Tyler’s not even my
boy
friend. He probably doesn’t even like me that much!
This all passes through my mind in the two seconds that Tyler is leaning across me to see the clock. When he tells me what time it is, I snap back to reality.
“6:57?” I repeat. And I’m instantly in school mode: If I get up right this second, I can be showered and ready to go by 7:02. By then Emily should be back from wherever she ended up last night, and by 7:05 she and I can be out the door and on our way to the library for our final prep before the presentations at 8. We can do this. Wait.
Can
we do this? Oh, God, we are
so
not prepared.
“Hey,” Tyler says. “Don’t worry.”
“Worry about what?”
“About anything.”
Whoa. He
can
totally read my mind! Regroup, Ran. Say something casual. “Why would you think I’m worried?”
“Your face. Got all scrunched up and anxious. I could tell you were thinking about something that was worrisome.”
“I’m not worried,” I lie.
“Good,” he says. “Because this is a great moment. We should cherish it. And the best way to do that is…”
He leans in to kiss me. Just as I start to lean in, too, I hear footsteps in the hall and a tapping at the door.
“Did you hear that?” I whisper fiercely.
“Hear what?” Tyler asks, still ready to kiss.
“Shhhhh!” I say, violently pushing him under the covers to hide him as the latch clicks and the door opens. I close my eyes and duck under the blanket with Tyler, praying that whoever is coming in will realize they’re in the wrong room and go away. Stupid Richard Gains and his old house with no locks on the doors!
“Rani,” a voice whispers from the door.
Perfect.
Now
Emily shows up. She couldn’t have come two minutes ago,
before
Tyler? Forget it. Ignore her. Pretend to be asleep and she’ll go away.

Rani,
” she whispers louder. “Get your bony ass out of bed.”
I hate it when she calls my ass bony. I make a fierce
Shh
gesture to Tyler, and dart back the covers, revealing just my face. “What?!”
Oh my God. Emily looks
awful
. Make-up smeared all over her face, dirt on her knees. And is that
grass
in her hair?
“The twins?” she says, before I can remark about her appearance. “Those farmer twins? Their plan completely
crushes
our ‘Empty Rooms, Full Hearts’ plan. It’s, like, straight out of scripture. Like the hand of Yahweh writing the Ten Commandments.”
Yahweh? When did she become a rabbi?
“It can’t be
that
great,” I say, trying to remain motionless as Tyler tickles my feet under the covers.
“I’m not kidding.” Then she whispers, “I think they talk to God.”
This is the
last
thing in the world I need right now, but for some reason I engage her. “How do you know what their plan is?” I look around the room. Maybe there’s a way to distract Emily while Tyler makes a quick getaway. Instinctively, I tuck the blanket up around my neck even tighter.
“Oh-ho-ho, you are not going to be
lieve
the night I had. The
morn
ing I had. This place is crazier than an episode of
Gossip Girl
. Hey, where’d you get this stuff?” She grabs a piece of fruit salad and stuffs in in her mouth.
Before I know what’s happening, Tyler pulls down the blanket, pokes his head out and says, “
I
brought it.”
Emily spits out the fruit and stares at Tyler. “What the hell?” she says. I look at her pleadingly, but before I can speak Tyler takes over.
“I figured Rani might be famished. We sure worked up an appetite last night.” And he ever so slightly pinches my side under the covers. I try not to squirm, squeal, or smile. “How’d
you
do, Harvard? ‘Dja get lucky?”
I stare at Tyler. Mostly because I’m afraid to look at Emily. No one talks to her like that. Ever. She might go nuclear on him right here in this tiny room. But luckily, she says nothing. Just opens the door. Maybe she’ll leave without further incident. She peeks into the hall and I angrily mouth to Tyler,
What is wrong with you?
He just smiles, amused. Emily turns back toward us and I plaster on a fake smile.
“Seriously, Rani? This is the biggest day of our lives and you’re…” She points vaguely at Tyler, too disgusted to complete the gesture. And it’s worse than if she’d gone nuclear. My best friend is disappointed in me.
I feel like I might throw up. Emily opens the closet and grabs all her stuff. She points a long finger at me and ominously pronounces, “To be continued.”
She hesitates by the door, snags a bagel off the tray, and then she’s gone. I lay back and breathe for the first time since she walked in.
“Well.
That
got her to leave,” Tyler announces, triumphantly leaning back on one arm, slightly above me. The sunlight cascades through the open curtains, casting his hair and muscular arms in golden light. His carefree smile and total ease are so foreign to me, so unlike anyone I’ve ever known. It’s more than refreshing. It’s intoxicating.
“Who
are
you?” I say with awe and wonder.
“Oh. I’m Tyler Voss—we met at the train station the day before yesterday—”
I playfully hit him on the shoulder. “Stop. You know what I mean. You’re like… Okay: everyone here is
after
something. And you don’t seem to care about
any
of it: what you say or what other people think of you. You’re just digging the atmosphere and enjoying the ride and…”
“Living life?”
“Yes!”
“So… What’s your question exactly?”
“…Can you teach
me
how to do it?”
He smiles and leans in for that kiss.
This feels right. Scary and weird and right. Maybe I should just live life, like he said. Not worry so much. Enjoy the moment.
As I kiss him deeply, squeezing my arms around him, a horrifying scream reverberates throughout the entire B&B. Tyler jumps back, startled. I bet everyone in the hotel was startled. Everyone except me. Because I know that scream. I’ve heard it many times and I’d recognize the combination of frustration, resentment, fear and loathing anywhere.
“What was that?” asks Tyler breathlessly.
“That,” I say, “was Emily’s war cry.”
ROBERT
The sun peeks through my second-floor window and gently rouses me from my slumber. I open my eyes and see the sky is not as dark or ominous as I would have imagined it would be hours before a hurricane hits. But there’s still a feeling in the air—a “morning after” vibe. Things were done last night that cannot be undone.
And I feel a sense of relaxation I haven’t felt in years. I’m kind of grateful for it, actually. Before all the stress of senior year and grades and college and achievement, I’m simply here. Lying in this plush bed at The Tao of Peace. Not a care in the world. But then Mac’s arm stirs beneath my back and my heart starts beating faster and my palms begin to sweat. So: last night actually happened. Mac kissed me. We were sharing a bottle of wine and laughing about the most absurd hilarious thing I’ve ever seen.
“Oh. M’god,” I’d said dramatically, coming back from the bathroom.
Mac smiled without knowing what was funny. “What?”
“Emily Kim. Is totally macking on that farmer dude.”
“Nuh-unh!”
“I kid you not. Check it out.” I pointed across the lawn, near the pool, sort of directing Mac’s gaze with an arm from behind him, enjoying the close proximity.
“…Huh,” Mac said finally. “Good for them.”
“Seriously?” I said, disappointed by his lack of astonishment.
Shrugging, Mac poured me a glass of wine. “Yeah. I mean… supposed to be the time of our lives, right? Fifty years from now, I’m not gonna be thinking back with regret on all the people I made out with. I’m gonna be regretting the ones I didn’t. Enjoying life is never a regret.” He punctuated his statement with a long pull directly from the bottle.
“I don’t think you’ve been with enough losers to understand regretting it,” I told him. “All your hookups are super hot.”
“Maybe,” Mac smiled. “But humans are meant to enjoy each other’s company. The Romans had it right. No rules. Just unadulterated pleasure.”
“I’m thinking the Romans are not really a high bar in terms of how to model a society.”
“No?” Mac laughed.
“Slaves and gladiators and murdering emperors? Not my kinda thing.” Then we both started laughing.
“What about this?” Mac asked. “Is this your kinda thing?”
And he kissed me. Just leaned right in and planted one on me. I was so stunned—here it was, the sudden realization of my three-year fantasy—that it was almost too much to process. I broke away and gave a hysterical laugh.
“Wh—why. What… Why did you… do that?” I stammered.
“Wanted to see what it was like,” Mac said matter-of-factly. “Thought it might be fun. And nice.”
I touched my face and mouth self-consciously. “Oh… Um. Was it?”
“Was it what?” Mac asked mischievously.
“…Nice?”
Mac nodded and we moved slowly toward each other.
“When in Rome…” I said.
We kissed for a while and then he looked around (a bit sheepishly) and asked if maybe we should go upstairs. I thought we’d maybe do more inside, but we just made out some more and fell asleep in each other’s arms. It was kind of wonderful.
But now, in the light of day, with Mac snoring softly under my left arm, the doubts creep in. What if it was a mistake; what if he was just drunk and confused; maybe he’s
after
something—my money or connections? Not that I’d mind. I’d totally let him hook up with me the rest of the year in exchange for helping him get into a good school or land a great job or help pay for his living expenses at college or whatever. It’s just. Well. I want him to like me for
me
. But I guess that was always a long shot. I mean, look at him there. His long eyelashes practically sweeping his cheeks while he sleeps. The faintest bit of stubble on his rugged chin. No way a guy like him would ever fall for someone like me.
His shoulders, strong and supple, flex and stretch as he begins to wake. He opens his eyes and looks at me sleepily.
I don’t know what comes over me, but before I can stop myself, I tell Mac everything I’ve been feeling since we met—a speech I’ve rehearsed many times in my head, praying, like a young actor who dreams of an Oscar, that one day I’ll actually be called on stage to deliver it. Now I’m here. And it all tumbles out in rapid succession.
“I’ve had a crush on you for three years. Ever since I came into our room that first day freshman year and saw you hanging a poster of The Who sleeping under the British flag—
The Kids Are Alright
—and I used to dream about
us
sleeping under that British flag, leaning on each other like Roger Daltry and Pete Townsend, wondering, hoping, praying you felt the same way, thinking you
must
see through my lame attempts to spend time together, looking at the tags on your shirts—
while
you were wearing them—using it as another pathetic excuse to be close to you—and then watching sadly as you started going out on Friday and Saturday nights, your countless dates with countless girls, telling myself you weren’t interested in me, would never
be
interested, trying to get over you, resigning myself to four years of torture because
not
living with you would be an even
worse
kind of torture, and, and, and, and—I don’t know why I’m telling you this now. I just… I wanted you to know.”
Silence. My words lay there like a fresh turd. I wish I could take them back. Take them all back. Rewind the last minute and start over.
Mac blinks and says, “I knew that.”
“…Which part?”
“All of it.”
“Right—of course you did.” I turn away, smiling nervously, holding back tears. “I’m an idiot. Forget I said anything.”
“You’re not an idiot.” He rolls on his back, stretching his arms over his head, turning out his ankles and curving at his hips. “It was fun. Ya know. We got… caught up in the moment. But now we have work to do… Right?” And he looks at me with total sincerity. Without an ounce of regret or embarrassment. Maybe he
does
like me. Sure, it’s back to business now, as it should be. But the door seems open with endless possibilities.
“Right,” I say, hardly able to contain my smile. “Absolutely. Back to work.”
“Great. Maybe you can… draft a little speech. For the presentation to the governor?”
“Sure,” I say. “We can work on it together.”
“Actually,” he says, grabbing some socks and running shorts from his duffle, “I’m gonna go for a run. Sweat out some of this booze, ya know?”
“Okay…?”
“And, uh… best to keep
this
,” he gestures to us both with a nervous puff of laughter, “on the DL. No need for people to be whispering about us today, right?”
And there it is. The shame. The embarrassment. I knew it was there. But it hits me like a punch to the heart anyway.
“Right,” I say, trying to hide my disappointment. “Don’t want that.”
“No, just. It’s better if people aren’t talking about us in that way. Better they talk about our
idea
, our
presentation
. ‘Don’t let your personal life distract from your professional one.’ Bill Clinton.”
“I don’t think Clinton ever said that.”
“Well, he should have. I’ll be back in thirty and we can walk over together?”
A glimmer of hope, perhaps, offering to walk over together? But no. He’s not even looking at me. He’s stretching his quads and tossing a T-shirt over his shoulder. Not even taking the time to put on his
shirt
. God, he really can’t get out of here fast enough.
“In a hurry?” I say, full of hurt.
He sort of laughs and bounces on his toes. “Early bird gets the worm.”
And he’s gone. Out the door. Out of my life. Well, not really. I’ll see him in like thirty minutes, but still. It feels pretty final. He doesn’t like me at all, I know it. He was using me. Or he’s confused and curious. Sowing his oats. Scratching two things off his list at once: black
and
gay. Now he can say he tried that. I can see it now: Mac laughing about me at some fraternity party next year, using me as an anecdote in a twisted drinking game:
“I once hooked up with a black GUY

top that, bitches!

Screw him. And his easy charm and perfect body. I don’t need Mac. I’m gonna tank this stupid presentation. That’ll show him.
I hear the floorboards creak outside my door. He’s coming back! He feels bad about what he said! Why did I ever doubt him?
I wrap the blanket around myself, shuffle to the door, and open it to welcome him inside. But it’s not Mac.
It’s Emily Kim.
Standing in the middle of the hall, staring at me, is Emily freakin’ Kim. She’s wearing her little cocktail dress from the party last night; she’s barefoot, hair a mess, eye makeup smeared, lipstick nonexistent. And is that
grass
in her hair? Well, well. Looks like someone
else
got lucky last night.
She half-nods at me. I return the casual greeting, and then step back into my room, clicking the door gently behind me.
What the what!? There must be something in the water here. Or in the air. Could it be the low barometric pressure from the impending hurricane? More like the hurricane
punch
. Whatever it is, this B&B is like a “love shack, baby, a little old place where we can get together.” And she got together with that sexy farmer kid! Jedediah or Ebenezer…? Elijah! That’s it. Elijah the farmer and Little Miss Perfect. Oh, this is priceless!
I almost forget about Mac completely, my mind is racing so fast, swirling with ideas for our presentation. I can’t tank it now. Emily was my biggest competition and there’s no
way
she’s going to be prepared. She still looked
wasted.
I’ve got to get ready. I toss off the blanket and head for the shower.
In the bathroom, I look at my reflection with a renewed sense of purpose. So what if Mac doesn’t like me or was using me or was—what did he say?—
“Caught up in the moment?”
(Translation: regrettable hook-up, let’s pretend it never happened.)
I’m over it. Over him. Maybe forever. And I think it was a good thing, us hooking up. Got him out of my system. Saw who he really is,
what
he really is. He’s not made of gold, not some perfect specimen (although his body
is
amazing—that’s gotta be genetics; working out alone can’t give you that body). But it doesn’t matter. Because I realize that Mac is just a guy. Another person. Lost and confused. And, deep down, kind of a dick. I don’t need him. I’m gonna make the presentation by myself. I’ll leave
before
Mac comes back from his stupid jog to “head over together.” He’s nothing without me. Look out, Cawdor, there’s a new sheriff in town. (Okay, that was a bit much.)
As I turn to hop in the shower, a god-awful scream comes wailing from the first floor. I clutch the doorframe and stare at the bathroom vent. After the initial shock wears off, it dawns on me exactly who is screaming. I lean my hands on the sink and sigh.
Because I know: Emily Kim is not going down without a fight.
A.J.
There’s something about being alone in a library that’s equally calming and sad. I’ve been in this reference room since 7 a.m., trying to show initiative, and hoping to get a chance to talk to Governor Watson alone. To tell him about the party and about some of my concerns from the email I never sent. (Since I woke up, I’ve been going over what I want to say, hoping to come off less preachy in person.) While I was waiting, I slid three massive tables together and dragged in chairs and benches from all over to make the room more presentable.
When Governor Watson arrives at 7:45 wearing a rumpled polo shirt and jeans, I beeline to him, ignoring Teddy’s attempt to intercept me.
“Governor Watson. Good morning.”
“Alexis,” he says without looking at me, his eyes on a series of index cards he keeps flipping through.
“I was going to send you an email last night, sir, but thought it was better to speak in person.”
“About?”
His unusually curt demeanor throws me and makes me completely forget my “prepared remarks.” I decide to wing it.
“Well, sir, for starters. The party at Richard Gains’ hotel got a little out of hand last night.”
“I don’t care about the party. We’ve got bigger fish to fry. What else?”
“Okay. Well, um…”
Is it getting warmer in here? Why are the lights so bright?
“I was also a little… concerned. About how we left things last night. I thought we were all going to sit down and figure out the best plan of attack for today. If we want to make a strong impression on the young voters, it would behoove us to be tweeting about the contest, the storm’s path and progress, information about how to help and donate money. There’s a lot I could be doing on that front.”
“Thanks, sweetie, but again… bigger fish.”
He pats me on the shoulder and moves away. Teddy gives me a sheepish look and follows the governor to the head of the table.
I try not to read too much into it, try to act like a team player. It’s his job to be tough, to not play favorites, to treat everyone equally. But it’s hard to believe that when the governor and his staff commandeer one end of the room and leave me in the cheap seats, stuck between a fire exit and a shelf of large books about ocean life.
What’s happening here? Wasn’t I the girl he started the slow clap for after I essentially
created
this entire contest? Has the governor become a manifestation of the Janet Jackson song “What Have You Done For Me Lately?” I get a knot in my stomach and feel light-headed. This was not how I expected the morning to go.
At exactly 8:00 a.m., Governor Watson pours himself a tall glass of water, looks out at the hundred of us crammed into this makeshift conference room, and says, “Okay. Let’s get right to it. Who’s up first?”
As the governor sips his water, he sits and looks to Teddy to take over. Teddy smiles winningly and stands to make a few opening remarks. He informs the twenty-three teams that they’ll have two minutes each for their presentations, and that Governor Watson will be making an immediate decision about the winner since we all need to be finished by 9 a.m. Those evacuating must be on the buses and trains departing Cawdor by 9:30. Those staying are required to ride out the storm in the elementary school auditorium. Apparently it’s the largest windowless room in town and the building is, according to Teddy, “more solid than an Egyptian pyramid!”
“First up,” Teddy says proudly, “the girl who’s kind of responsible for
all
of this—Miss Emily Kim. And partner.”
I click my pen and jot Emily’s name and the number “1” on my legal. I want to be ready to talk intelligently about the presentations should Governor Watson ask for my input. Though after our awkward tête-à-tête and my current seating assignment, I’m not so sure he’ll ask. But I want to be ready anyway,
need
to be ready. This is the job I want, the new career path I’ve chosen. If I need to put up with a little taste of the boy’s club mentality to get a seat at the adult table, so be it. Better women before me have had to suffer much worse. I shouldn’t complain, right?
There’s a smattering of tepid applause as a surprisingly un-sharp-looking Emily Kim moves to the front of the room. Her partner, Morgan’s sister, doesn’t seem to be here. Perhaps she bailed early, fearing the impending destruction from Calliope.
“Good morning,” Emily begins. “My partner Rani Caldwell was unavoidably detained, so I’ll be proceeding without her. Our idea is simple. As recent storms like Katrina, Irene, and Sandy have devastated towns along the Gulf Coast and closer to home in New York and New Jersey, we’ve learned all too well how heartbreaking the destruction can be. Those of us here today, for the most part, are among the privileged class. And as these hurricanes wreak havoc, we sit back in our homes, with electricity and heat and water, watching the coverage on TV, saying to ourselves, ‘What can
we
do to help?’ Maybe we volunteer our time. Maybe we give money. But do we really know that money is getting into the hands of those who need it most? And what do these people really need? They don’t want a handout. They don’t want to feel ‘less than’ us. They want to get back on their feet. They want to be able to take care of themselves. To feel
normal
again. They just need a little help.
“Now, FEMA and the Red Cross and organizations such as these do fine work, but they can take days or even
weeks
to mobilize and actually get the much-needed supplies and funds into the hands of those affected by the disaster. Our plan takes away the middleman. If you’re sitting at home and have a spare room, an open guesthouse, blankets, clothes, food, you name it… you can download our free app, enter your information, and within
seconds
find a needy family in your area and connect with them directly. It’s called ‘Empty Rooms, Full Hearts.’ And we think…
I
think… it’s going to change the way communities connect. And get those affected by this storm, and those affected by
future
natural disasters, back on their feet faster, more efficiently, and with more dignity. Thank you.”
Jesus! That was incredible! But the other teams don’t seem to care, silently agreeing not to clap after any of the presentations, I guess. Maybe they don’t want to sway the governor’s decision. Either that or they’re more competitive than
I
was in high school.
Emily sits as Teddy calls the next set of names on his list. Standing and moving to the front is a group of six boys who are very overweight or very skinny (nothing in between), and they’re all wearing different
Star Wars
-themed shirts. (My favorite is the one of Luke Skywalker made to look like the Obama “Hope” poster.) The tallest boy, who appears to be the leader, is the exception. His shirt has the Milky Way Galaxy on it with a small arrow pointing to a dot that says: “You Are Here.” I like these guys already.
But as I try to focus on their presentation—a promising idea about solar-powered water pumps—my mind keeps going back to what the governor said not ten minutes ago:
“Thanks, sweetie, but again… bigger fish.”
Governor Watson’s kind of an asshole, isn’t he? And I threw away a good job, a nice boyfriend, and a solid life in government for the chance to work for this guy. And then he treats me like
that
? I haphazardly tossed away everything I had to be on his team, to score a chance at a front row seat on the road to the White House. All so he can call me “sweetie” and dismiss me like some third-rate intern.
Okay, maybe I’m overreacting. Congresswoman Clark warned me about responding emotionally on the job. I’m tired. A little hungry. And perhaps a little scared that I might actually be close to getting what I want—the old cliché of being afraid of success. Plus, doesn’t everyone have to take a little abuse on the way up the ladder?
Forcing myself to refocus on the presentations, I suddenly feel guilty. Other than Emily Kim, I’ve barely heard a word anyone has said. I look up at the front of the room and see two boys mid-presentation: a puppy-dog-looking white kid and his black friend, who’s clearly in love with him. The black kid is doing all the talking. The white one seems embarrassed or apologetic somehow. Like he doesn’t want to be standing up there. Or like he and his partner had a fight earlier. I don’t know. They seem like good kids, so I listen as intently as I can.
“Our idea is not revolutionary,” the black kid says. “But sometimes the best ideas are ones that have worked in the past. So we’ve designed a line of low-income sustainable green housing. Sort of piggy backing on what Brad Pitt did in NOLA. Made entirely from recycled wood and metals recovered from the devastated neighborhoods, with added rooftop solar panels and energy efficient appliances, these are not only stronger, longer-lasting structures that can weather the next hurricane, but homes that will have a smaller impact on the environment and give their owners a sense of pride. With heating and cooling costs up to forty percent less than that of traditional structures, and by not requiring as many repairs, the homes will pay for themselves over the next two decades. Our goal was to make something that is not only practical, but also an architectural breakthrough. And I think we’ve achieved that here. Of the many nicknames for our state, like ‘The Constitution State’ or ‘The Nutmeg State,’ my favorite is ‘The Land of Steady Habits.’ Which is why our green-housing design is called ‘Steady
Habitats.
’ Homes for now, homes for the future. Thank you.”
Another solid idea. I have no idea how Governor Watson will decide. By the look of it, neither does he. He keeps running his hands through his hair and scratching the back of his head like a twitch. I can’t tell if he’s nervous or bored.
The two-minute time limit is being adhered to vehemently, and toward the end, the proposals fly by in a blur.
“We’ll use hot air balloons for post-flood evacuations.”
“Replace the levees completely with a wall… like The Great Wall? Of China?”
“Rain coats and waders for everyone in the flood zones.”
“A really, really… really big sponge. To, you know… soak up the water?”
“It’s called Relief Jam. And it’ll make the 12.12.12 concert look Lame. Lame. Lame.”
At five minutes to nine, Teddy stands, looking a little worse for wear. He glances over his list, ticks off a box, and then smiles. “And… last but not least,” he announces, “Prayer and Elijah Jones.”
The brother-sister duo make their way to the front of the room to a round of uniformly hostile looks. I guess “plays well with others” isn’t on their homeschool report cards.
“Hello,” the boy says timidly. “Our plan is actually quite simple. One of the, uh, major threats of course with a storm like Calliope is flooding, something we’ve unfortunately become all too familiar with on our farm in the last decade. In fact, after Hurricane Irene in 2011, we decided to prepare ourselves better by constructing a device that would protect us from future floods. Last year during Sandy, our idea was put to the ultimate test and it passed with, uh, flying colors. So what we’ve done for the past thirty-six hours—with some amazing help from dozens and dozens of our church members, and of course through the steady, guiding hand of Our Lord Almighty—is we have taken apart, transported, and reassembled that same device—a, uh, massive wooden lever, if you will, that acts like a dam. There’s a valve we can crank open or shut that essentially diverts the rising river water—in this case, to the west into smaller estuaries, away from town. What’s more,” Elijah continues, clearing his throat; he’s a decidedly nervous public speaker, “the re-routed waters can also be directed to the Angus reservoir. That water can be siphoned off to local farms north and west of town that, as we
also
know all too well from personal experience, have suffered greatly during this summer’s drought. The entire thing is controlled via computer and, uh, as the storm rolls in, we can monitor the water levels, opening and closing the valve. As needed.”
Holy shit! And I mean “holy” literally. That is the most mindboggling, biblically epic thing I’ve heard since Noah and the goddamn ark! If their idea even
half
works, that has to be the winning proposal.
For a few seconds, there’s complete silence. No one moves, coughs, breathes… nothing.
Then, as if on cue, all eyes (including mine) instantly, anxiously move to the governor.
“Well,” he says, after a beat. “One thing’s for sure. Our nation’s in good hands for the next few decades with
this
generation waiting to take the helm.”
There are some laughs and nods. I see the governor is hesitant, but like all great leaders, in an instant his face fills with resolve and it’s clear he’s made his decision. It’s time to rip off the Band-Aid. (Guess he won’t be needing
my
input.)
“But,” he continues, “there’s no use beating around the bush. I know it’s fast. I know there’s a lot on the line. But I gotta go with my gut. And that’s with the, uh… The Jones twins.”
The twins instantly join hands and shut their eyes in prayer. The rest of the room sits in shock. Including Teddy. But he regroups quickly, clapping his hands.
“Okay! Let’s all congratulate Prayer and Elijah Jones for their winning proposal!” Again some tepid applause, but mostly anger, jealously, and hurt. Upset teenagers sulking like six year olds who wanted the last cookie, even though they knew they didn’t deserve it.
“And I want to thank you
all
,” Teddy continues, trying to keep things light, “not only for your time and brilliant ideas, but for your hard work and generosity over the last two days. Connecticut will forever be in your debt. Now let’s get you to some safer quarters!”
Everyone slowly rises. There is very little conversation, just the harsh sound of wooden chair legs scraping against linoleum. Only Emily Kim remains seated. Refusing to believe it’s over. Maybe thinking it’s all a bad dream and surely she’ll wake up any second. I press my lips into a thin apologetic smile and give her as appreciative a nod as a lame nod from thirty feet away can be. She just stares at me, incredulous.

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