Love Times Infinity
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2022 by Lane Clarke
Cover art copyright © 2022 by Erick Dávila.
Cover design by Karina Granda.
Cover copyright © 2022 by Hachette Book Group, Inc.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Clarke, Lane, author.
Title: Love times infinity / Lane Clarke.
Description: First edition. | New York : Little, Brown and Company, 2022. | Audience: Ages 12 & up. | Summary: As high school junior Michie plans for her future and explores a new relationship, she tries to reconcile with some uncomfortable truths about her life which becomes more complicated when she is contacted by her estranged mother.
Identifiers: LCCN 2021027526 | ISBN 9780759556706 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780759556713 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: African Americans—Juvenile fiction. | CYAC: African Americans—Fiction. | Mothers and daughters—Fiction. | Friendship—Fiction. | High schools—Fiction. | Schools—Fiction. | LCGFT: Novels.
Classification: LCC PZ7.1.C588 Lo 2022 | DDC [Fic]—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021027526
ISBNs: 978-0-7595-5670-6 (hardcover), 978-0-7595-5671-3 (ebook)
E3-20220608-JV-NF-ORI
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Acknowledgments
Discover More
About the Author
For Grandma, who saved me Que sera, sera
This book discusses the legacy of trauma, specifically sexual assault. While this trauma isn’t directly experienced by the protagonist, it impacts character and plot. Additionally, this book closely examines anxiety and depression. Please consider while reading.
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CHAPTER ONE
THE ILLUSTRIOUS AALIYAH, MAY SHE REST IN PEACE, ONCE said, If at first you don’t succeed, dust yourself off and try again, try again. Well, no offense to Aaliyah, but I say, if at first you don’t succeed, save yourself the heartache and give up. And if my good sis had been writing a scholarship essay for her dream college, I’m 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 Grandma’s 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. I’m 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.
“What are you working on this early?” she asks. She’s 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 nurse’s aide to keep our heads above water. She invites herself the rest of the way into my room until she’s standing over me. From this angle, I can see the extra skin folded beneath her chin.
“Loads. Answering the questions of the universe. Why the chicken crossed the road. Who shot the deputy after Bob Marley shot the sheriff.”
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.
“College essay about who I am and why they should give me a truckload of money to grace them with my genius, blah, blah, blah.”
“And what’s hard about that? You know who you are?” She sits on the edge of the bed.
“I’m not sure Dear Admissions, I am the kid who definitely shouldn’t exist, but the world sucks and people suck more, so please let me into your world-renowned institution is the wave.”
She winces at my words. “You shouldn’t be so hard on yourself. I thought group was helping.”
“It is helping. It doesn’t erase what I am, though.”
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 wouldn’t play with matches or sharp objects. We affectionately call group R.P.E.—Raised as a Product of Evil—pronounced 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.
“You’re more than just one thing, Michie.” Grandma taps a finger against my nose.
“You have to say that. Or you go to grandma jail or something.”
She sucks her teeth before using both hands to push herself off the bed. Since her double-knee replacement, she’s not as spry as she once was, though she is young for a grandma. My mother was only fifteen when I crash-landed, so it’s not surprising.
“It’ll get better. I promise.” She begins to leave my room but then stop
s midway out the door. “And Michie, don’t let me catch you with your feet up on the furniture again.”
I drop my feet down in a blink.
“Lunch is in the fridge. Have a good day back,” 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 I’m not ready to be that vulnerable, because the irrevocable truth is that who I am is my mother’s colossal mistake, big and bright like a supernova. She hates me with every fiber of her being. And I’m not just being extra. She’s told me so, which is pretty definitive proof. But also, she hasn’t bothered to see me or even talk to me since my seventh birthday.
I pull up Brown’s home page and stare at the smiling students (mostly white, with a token brown face here and there). It’s very “I read a lot of books” status quo of me to want to go there for college, like every other boy and girl on BookTube. I’m 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 can’t 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. I’m not sure I deserve to be great, but if I do, there’s only one place for me to do it. Brown.
If I can get in, and even then, if I can afford to go. A lifetime’s 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 year’s 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 years’ worth of café money, and that was the secondhand eBay price. I’m dead if I break it.
I stumble to the bathroom in a rush, crashing into the old acoustic guitar I pilfered from my boss’s donation pile. The getting-dressed part of my morning routine is painless because I always wear the same thing—jeans, 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 Hunt–style. 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 don’t notice I’m here.
One smiles. Morgan Williams, a year older and the only one who acknowledges me with The Nod. I nod and smile back. She’s 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 you’re 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 don’t 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. She’s been picking me up since fourth grade, when I was first transferred out of district and enrolled in the gifted program.
“Morning, Ms. Turner,” I say, climbing up the steep steps.
“Good morning, dear,” 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 period—AP 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.
“Boo,” 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 don’t want to die, both brilliant and beautiful, leans onto the wall of metal lockers. It’s like having a best friend who is equal parts Mila Kunis and Merriam-Webster.
“Jesus, Jo,” I wheeze, holding my hand to my chest. “You almost gave me a coronary.”
“You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means,” she deadpans, quoting one of our favorite films, The Princess Bride. “No one can give you a coronary. A coronary thrombosis, perhaps. Clogged arteries from too much red meat and few vegetables.” She raises an eyebrow brimming with accusation.
I roll my eyes. “I eat plenty healthy.”
“Candy corn is not a vegetable, Michie.”
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.
“Quiz me,” 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 Globes—curled 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 aren’t 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.
“I’ve studied so much with you, I could slay the test myself,” I tell her.
“Yes, you could.” She meets my eyes. “A 1300 is not getting you into Brown.”
She’s not wrong. It’s too low of a score for Brown but fine for most Virginia colleges, which is all that matters realistically, and financially. Especially if I can’t write a single scholarship essay without banging my head against a wall.
“That’s still the goal, right?” she asks.
I fiddle with the notebook in front of me, my notes from last night’s quiz prep handwritten like type font. “Brown isn’t even a real thing,” I mumble.
“Of course it’s real,” she says. “You, me, tearing up the East Coast fifty miles apart. Whatever we need to do to make it happen, remember? You’ve got the grades; you just need the grit.”
And the money. But I don’t expect her to appreciate the height of that hurdle. JoJo is toss out a full drink because it’s 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. She’s pretty much had a guaranteed full-ride spot at MIT since we were prepubescent. She, quite literally, cannot relate.
“All right, everyone. Let’s get started,” 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 isn’t until I return to my locker at lunchtime that I realize my lunch is still sitting in the fridge at home. I fo
rgot 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.
“Um, are you okay?”
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.
“Sorry.” I chuckle, the sound more of a breathless snort than a laugh. “Yeah. Forgot my lunch. Low, uh, blood sugar.”
“You can buy lunch,” she says, like it’s obvious.
“Forgot my wallet,” I reply, though I don’t bring it to school on purpose in case I’m 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.
“No, I don’t—” I sputter over my words.
“Please,” she responds, pulling her hand away like I’m a stray she wants to help but doesn’t want to touch. “You clearly need it more than me.” 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. I’m 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 don’t move.
“You gettin’ anythin’ else?” she drawls, whistling through spaces that once held teeth.
“Oh,” I mutter. “No. I didn’t pay yet.” I have never wanted anyone to take my money so badly.
“Free-lunch program,” 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.