My Summer of Love and Misfortune Read online




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  This book is dedicated to the very best and worst disaster that I know: myself!

  And also to anyone who has ever felt that they never belonged to any particular people, purpose, or place.

  I see you and I salute you and I promise that you will be 85 percent okay (one day) in this scary, tumultuous, and glittering world.

  xoxo.

  L.

  1

  Flower-Heart

  I, Iris Wang, was born to be unlucky.

  This is because I was born in the Year of the Tiger, and everyone in our Chinese family knows that girls born in Tiger Year are bad luck.

  A flower-hearted Tiger girl, such as yours truly, means that I’m destined to pick loser boys and never listen to my parents. A flower-heart is someone who shows up hungover to her SATs and half-asses her college admission essays. She’s also addicted to Starbucks lattes, expensive makeup, and super-fun parties.

  But a Tiger son born into the family is supposed to make a lot of money and bring honor to his family name. Total sexist bullshit, am I right? Maybe that superstition existed in China in the time of Confucius, but not in twenty-first-century America, where Siri and iPhones practically run our lives.

  Can I tell you an embarrassing and hideous secret?

  When I was born, I was covered with thick, abundant hair all over my entire body, like I was an actual tiger cub. According to my parents, I even had coarse hairs growing on my chin, forehead, and cheeks.

  My mom likes to joke that I looked exactly like a hair ball spat out by a designer cat.

  My dad says that two weeks before I was born, he dreamed that my mom had given birth to a tiger cub, but he’s deeply superstitious. He’s the kind of guy who checks with a feng shui master before buying a painting for the house or making a new friend. My dad was born in the Year of the Goat, so he believes that anyone who isn’t a farm animal, like his Tiger daughter—i.e., me—brings him bad luck. Before he could propose to my mom, who is a Zodiac Dog, he consulted the Chinese almanac. Then he hired a Chinese monk to work out the math and interview his future bride.

  When my mom told him she was going to give birth to a Tiger, he was extremely worried. “A Dog and Goat for parents are no match for a Tiger!” he exclaimed.

  When he found out that his tiger cub was going to be a girl, I think he actually cried from anxiety.

  Anyway, I was lucky that a lot of my facial hair fell off by kindergarten. But it doesn’t explain the gross, extremely long mustachelike hairs that sometimes appear when I’m super stressed. These hairs sprout above my upper lip and even grow out of my ears. I swear, those hairs are like, my whiskers. Thank god for the invention of hair wax and affordable laser treatment.

  Without deluxe Nair Wax Ready-Strips, I don’t think I could ever be seen in public during times of great personal duress.

  That, and I have to blame my bad luck on my sometimes too-loving, overprotective parents. As soon as I was born, they took me to a famous fortune-teller who was visiting from China to ask her how to fix my life trajectory.

  It all went wrong from the very beginning.

  You see, the fortune-teller, Madame Xing, found a funny-shaped mole under my right eye and said it looked like a teardrop. Like I was born to be permanently crying.

  “This flower-heart is no good,” she announced to my parents after a quick examination. My mom and dad were probably horrified and praying that they could send me back to the hospital and switch me for a Tiger boy.

  It also didn’t help that I was one of those babies who was always crying and puking everywhere. My mom said that I just barfed on Madame Xing’s mink fur and she got flustered and started cussing nonstop. My dad swears that this was bad luck, as it offended a powerful fortune-teller, who must have put a double curse on me.

  After our first and only fortune-telling session, Madame Xing cryptically said, “Keep both eyes on your Tiger daughter. If you take one eye off, she will bring shame on your family with her weak flower-heart.”

  Whatever she said was true. Since I was born, I guess I was destined to be a flower-heart. I have a weakness for terrible choices and terrible boys.

  This brings me to my current situation.

  2

  Earth to Iris

  Why am I panicking? Why is my throat constricting like I have a supersize packet of spicy ramen noodles stuck inside it?

  It’s okay, don’t panic, Iris. Don’t panic. Everything will be totally fine. It usually is.

  Gasping, I take a swig of my extra-sugary latte and happen to glance down at my half-gnawed fingernails. I wince. The edges look super raggedy, like I’ve been clawing at the insides of my own personal coffin. I desperately need a manicure, even though I got one three days ago, and I also probably need another Venti-size Starbucks refill very soon.

  But my iPhone dings again like an annoying reminder, and I sneak a peek at the screen.

  It’s still there.

  The alert hasn’t changed; it’s still the same automated message that has been dinging me for the past few weeks, updating me on my spending habits. I was hoping it would just magically stop. It’s an ongoing automated text message from the credit card company. Last year, my parents gave me an American Express card so I could easily pay the fees for online college admissions applications. Since the beginning of junior year, I’ve been using my credit card all the time. It’s so easy to buy anything and everything when all you have to do is tap or swipe. It’s like playing a real-life game of Sims, except that you get to physically touch and wear all the new clothes in your wardrobe.

  Ding!

  AMERICAN EXPRESS

  Hello, this is a friendly alert to help you manage your spending. As you requested, your credit card statement is currently $6,512.96. Please call 1-800-746-3211 immediately if you suspect credit card fraud. Have a great day!

  I let out a tiny, panicked whimper. But how can I have spent $6,512.96? It makes absolutely no sense. I think back to my spending for the month, and that Venti-size cup of black coffee, mixed with panic, surges up my throat. When was the last time I used my credit card?

  This whole thing is a mistake. A scam for unsuspecting old people and desperate high school seniors.

  I have been a victim of criminal fraud. How do I report this to the police?

  How do I even tell my parents that I was scammed?

  Then I finally remember, the guilt crashing through me like ill-timed nausea. My surprise plane tickets to Paris for Peter. Those were expensive, $850 each. Peter couldn’t go on the tenth-grade Europe trip a few years ago, and he always talked about how much he wanted to go to Paris with me after graduation. And I was going to surprise him tonight. But how could two economy tickets cost $6,512.96?

  Did the online booking site steal my credit card number?

  Then I also remember.

  I bought flowers this morning, a pretty bouquet of soft purple irises for Peter. I was planning to give him my namesake flowers and present the plane tickets as his birthday/early graduation gift. It was going to be an incredibly romantic surprise.

  Oh yes, and then there was the sparkly Vera Wang prom dress from Nordstrom that I needed to buy. I had to have those matching silver heels from Saks; desperately needed tha
t glitter gel manicure from the new spa down the street, and basketfuls of makeup from Sephora.

  I mean, what was I supposed to do? Not buy a single product? The lady who gave me my free makeup trial for prom had been incredibly nice.

  Actually, come to think of it, I never wear eye shadow, so why did I buy six nude-colored eye shadows and three pairs of mink eyelashes? Who needs fake lashes that I can’t even glue on without poking myself in the eyeball? I can return the makeup, but where did I put the receipt?

  And then there were all those super-late-night dinners with Peter at the Cheesecake Factory. I had paid for them, since he said he was super broke.

  My right eye twitches. It has been doing that a lot lately.

  I must be talking out loud because my best friend, Samira Chadha-Fu, looks up. She’s sprawled, catlike, on my bed, unsuccessfully trying to apply a spiderly-looking false eyelash onto her eyelid.

  Oh right, I gave Samira my $35 real mink eyelashes to try out. I don’t think I can return them half-used, can I?

  “Dude, are you okay?” she asks.

  Samira has been trying to attach the eyelash for half an hour. She’s holding a little compact mirror with one hand and tweezers and another broken eyelash in the other. It looks like she’s trying to perform minor surgery. White glue oozes around her eyelid. Ew. She blinks, getting more goop on her brow area. The lady at Sephora had tried to teach both of us—small wingtips, followed by fluttery false lashes for old-school Hollywood prom glamour. Makeup tips to make our Asian eyes look bigger.

  “Everything is perfect!” I say brightly. Samira shakes her head, her mouth twitching with amusement. She knows me too well. We’ve been BFFs, practically psychically linked, since the second grade when she moved to New Jersey from Singapore.

  “Ughhhh,” she finally groans. “These lash-things are impossible to put on.”

  With one last attempt, she ends up smearing more glue across her cheek, and then she drops the overpriced eyelash onto the floor. Rolling her goop-covered eyes, she ambles to my walk-in closet and begins trying on outfits. My parents are away this week in Honolulu, and we’re having a fun spring-fling party at my house tonight.

  Another terrifying ding lets me know that I have new email. So far, I have 52 unread texts and 361 unread emails. I’m too scared to check my inbox since colleges started sending out notifications three weeks ago.

  “So … party? What are we wearing tonight?” Samira announces with her usual cheerleader enthusiasm. She rummages through my walk-in closet until she comes across the Vera Wang Swarovski crystal-beaded dress from Nordstrom. “This is gorgeous, Iris!” she squeals, looking very impressed, and I can’t help but feel a little blush of pride at her approval.

  “How much did this cost you?!”

  “It was on sale,” I lie.

  But Samira is right. My designer prom dress with the extra-long detachable skirt is amazing in every way. I don’t even want to think about how much the dress cost, but luckily, I still have the tag on it. Honestly, I thought I was saving money because it’s technically two dresses in one. I can wear the short, sexier version tonight, sans gauzy red-carpet train, and then return it at the end of the weekend after prom. Nordstrom closes at seven p.m. on Sundays, which gives me plenty of time.

  “Oooooohhh, you left the price tag on,” Samira says. And then with her perfectly manicured hand, she yanks the tag off, crumples it, and tosses it casually to the floor.

  !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  I want to scream, but instead, I let out an involuntary squeak. My friend glances over again, and I force my lips into a frozen smile. I must look deranged. I can’t even think about the cost.

  As I’m feeling incredibly nauseous, my phone dings again. I decide to block the terrifying credit card number.

  Done.

  All better.

  Ding! Another email. Shit.

  I feel my smile vanish. I can’t think about college or my credit card bill, especially when my parents find out. My mom will freak; my dad will be devastated by my lack of control and what he calls my reckless “bad American behavior.” All of a sudden, my face feels rashy and hot, like I’m having a severe allergic reaction.

  Is it possible to combust from the inside over a nonreturnable, super-expensive prom dress?

  The answer is possibly-maybe-yes.

  The answer is most-probably-yes.

  Definitely yes.

  Samira is still gabbing away about possible themes for our upcoming graduation party next month. “How about K-pop?” she asks. “Or something Bollywood? Sexy Disney?”

  I force myself to pay attention, but I keep thinking about the dress. A spasm of worry churns through my stomach.

  “So like, I think tonight … hello, Iris? Earth to Iris?”

  Gulping at the sharp sound of my name, I nod with false enthusiasm and decide to toss my iPhone into the bottom of my underwear drawer. Who needs scary, real-world reminders when there is an amazing spring-fling Friday night party to host?

  3

  Crash Landing

  As we wait for guests to arrive, we sit at the kitchen counter and share a huge joint that I got from my super-fun, incredibly sweet boyfriend Peter. Slowly, I toke, while Samira mixes us gigantic rum and Cokes in beer mugs and we play our favorite game: If you had ten million dollars, where would you visit in the world?

  Anywhere But Here is our made-up fantasy exchange to help pass the time. Samira and I always play it before every party or school dance. There’s no clear winner: we just try to outdo each other by naming fabulous destinations. We imagine suntanning naked on a private beach in Belize or taking selfies with the Great Pyramids of Egypt. In the boring, sprawling suburbs of Bradley Gardens, New Jersey, there’s usually nowhere to go except for the mall and Chipotle.

  “I want to go to Bali,” Samira says, taking her fourth long toke.

  “Hmmmm-hmm,” I say. “You always say you want to go to Bali.”

  “I don’t care as long as it’s hot!” she says. “Where do you want to go?”

  “Europe,” I say without hesitation. “I loved our trip in tenth grade! Remember the Eiffel Tower and how we insisted on climbing all the way to the top even though it was super windy and rainy and everyone in our history class was afraid?”

  “YES!”

  She giggles, as if suddenly remembering the fun.

  That’s when I decide to tell her my plans for surprising Peter tonight. I think she’ll find them exciting and deeply romantic.

  But instead of sounding even a little bit happy for me, my best friend is weirdly quiet. Like she doesn’t know what to say, which is super odd for Samira, since she’s always so extroverted and chatty. Everyone is always saying that Samira would make a popular talk show host, which is why she is applying to college for journalistic broadcasting. I’m the total opposite: no one has ever told me what I’d be good at. Instead, they compliment my Miss Congeniality personality and tell me that I’ll find my life purpose one day.

  “I’m taking Peter to Paris for his birthday,” I say again, in case she didn’t hear me.

  “Wasn’t his birthday six months ago?” Samira asks, sounding surprised.

  I shake my head. “Nope, it’s June.”

  “It was in January,” Samira insists.

  “Dude, I’m pretty sure I know my own boyfriend’s birthday.”

  Samira shrugs and doesn’t say anything. She takes a long swig of her rum and Coke. She wipes her mouth with the back of her hand and belches. I’m in the sweet happy space between high and content, the credit card bill nearly forgotten.

  From my closet, Samira has finally decided to borrow my favorite black first-date dress and strappy black heels.

  “It looks way better on you,” I say genuinely, changing the subject. Samira looks really pretty in lace cap-sleeves and her party makeup is flawless, without being too fake. “You should keep it!” I say.

  Samira looks oddly touched. Another strange, half-sad, ha
lf-meditative expression crosses her face. I can’t explain it, but I chalk it up to senior-year sadness. We might not see each other that much after high school is over.

  “No, Iris, I really can’t accept this—”

  “Yes!” I insist, hugging her tightly. “I want you to have it. Dude, you’re my best friend in the whole world.”

  Samira says nothing, and I take it that my gift has been accepted.

  Peter hasn’t shown up yet. When he gets here, I’ll surprise him with the bouquet of purple irises and international plane tickets. He’ll be so excited. He’ll be so grateful. I’ll win a trophy for best girlfriend in the world.

  It will be the most wild, amazing, completely unsupervised vacation ever. The beginning of great romance into our real adult lives.

  “Let me know when Peter’s here,” I say to Samira as I get up to fix myself another drink and say hi to some kids at school who have just arrived. “Be right back!”

  “Is that dress from Teen Vogue?!” a girl I vaguely know from algebra class calls at me in the kitchen. I flash a grateful smile at her, thrilled that she noticed.

  “You’re the coolest, Iris Wang!” someone else shouts, high-fiving me.

  I smile enthusiastically, wave like a nonplussed pageant queen, and make the social rounds. I’m not extremely popular at Bradley Gardens Public High School, but a lot of juniors and seniors know me enough to come to my parties. Freshmen and sophomores definitely come with the contents of their parents’ liquor cabinets, and I don’t mind. Freshman boys usually try extra hard to be nice, though, and sometimes I’ll even accept a beer or two from one of them.

  There’s extra-loud rap music and some good-looking people and dancing.

  I down another rum and Coke. Then another, and then another. Is it my fifth? I’ve completely lost count. It’s all going so well. Credit card bill forgotten. SUCCESS. I get caught up in some pleasant chatting with some kids from study hall that I sort of know. We cheers loudly, clack our plastic cups, and then as if it’s all predestined, a very drunk sophomore spills beer on my gorgeous Vera Wang dress.