Read The Only Ones Online

Authors: Carola Dibbell

The Only Ones (25 page)

“Ma! A Project is How Was I Born?”

Well, I go, “Very good!” because you have to. But I am having another heart attack here, because I’m reading the Note, slow, while Ani is trying to climb the broken wall, and I will tell you, I don’t know how to work this. Ok, the Project is about Heritage. Whatever it is, they have to own it. They have to have Pride.

“Ma!”

Like you could have Donor product, gene splicing, ok. I notice they did not mention nuclear Transfer. They do not even call it clone.

“Was I born the same way Migan’s born?”

What are the chances?

I guess I could of said anything. Maybe I could even tell the truth. It’s just, I had to think fast. “How was Migan born?”

“The regular way. From a dish.”

So I said so was she. It is not a complete lie. They both started from a dish.

Well, it seems to work. “Migan and I was born the same way! We are Special!” She’s so pleased she almost skips while we head up the ramp, and I’m like, great, it is going to be ok, now let’s think about something else, but before the week is over, she climbs off the cuchifrito bus asking, “Were you the Host?”

Here we go again. What do I tell her? Ok. I told her no. I’m pretty sure we weren’t the only ones where the Parent is not the Host.

But she goes, “What was her name?”

Shit! I really boxed myself in here. What do I say? We’re not the only ones who had a different Host but this tank thing could be a problem if it got around.

I think about it now, sometimes I wonder, and maybe you wonder too, come on, the people at this school, they are so out to lunch, what difference would it make? Like if I said, “She is nuclear Transfer. You could call it SCNT.” Half the people won’t even know what it is. Maybe none of them will.

I wish I did tell her the whole truth right then.

If I even knew one situation like ours, maybe I would of. But we were still the only ones I ever heard of, except rumors.

I told her Rini Jaffur was the Host.

Well guess what? The very next day, she gets off the bus and says, “Itzhak was grown in a tank.” So then I’m like, I could of told the truth. She wouldn’t be the only one.

Maybe you are thinking, why not tell the truth now? Maybe I should of. At least part of the truth. Nuclear Transfer was too big a risk but I could tell her about the tank.

Then how do I explain who Rini Jaffur was?

The day before the winter break, Ani gets off the bus saying, “Migan is Chosen. Am I Chosen?”

Migan’s Parents made her from Donor product in a dish, then gestated her in a Host, then they died and Lore and Dana Chose her and are her Parents now, so Ani says, “Am I Chosen like Migan?”

The truth is, originally, Ani was. What Rini Jaffur did was pretty much Choose Ani, when Ani was a viable. Then she changed her mind and said I had to take her or we’re all going to jail. So I thought better just say I do not know. I think it’s better for the self-esteem.

Well, that is bad enough, but in March, she climbs off the bus, hands me Art and said, “You do not know what is a clone.” Then she goes, “Ma?”

Because I’m so surprised, I forgot to say I didn’t know.


Ma?

I’m not saying anything, I mean, all the way home, nada, while Ani’s going, “Ma?” and staring at me funny till we get inside.

Then I just went ballistic. “A clone is like anyone else.
Anyone else.”

She goes, “Ma.” She looks scared. “It is not real.”

I just don’t know what to do here. I don’t want her to feel ashamed. “ANYONE ELSE!” I know what is a clone.

“Ma! It is current Event. It is not real.”

“ANYONE ELSE!”

Now she starts to cry.

I feel terrible I made her cry. It’s just this Heritage thing, I don’t know what to do. I don’t want her to feel ashamed. I just don’t know what is safe. And like she said it is just current Event. It was in the News, I heard it too. Some Parents in Florida claimed they did nuclear Transfer. You can be sure they called it
clone.
The minute the story got out, the Florida Authority took their baby because they are bad Parents, they endangered their child by it being born.

Well when the kid gets tested, guess what? It is not a clone. Then the Parents could get their baby back.

Why does someone say it is when it isn’t? Were Ani and me the only ones who said it isn’t, when it is? There had to be others. I wish I knew what they told their kids. I didn’t want Ani to feel ashamed, but this Florida thing, the Parents was in custody for two weeks. The child too. I didn’t know what would happen to Ani in custody. She is so attached, she still was learning how to get through the day without me. Two weeks, I don’t know what she’d do. I was attached too, but I was adult so, whatever. And suppose some Fundy found out. Those God’s Will nuts, or the K of L, if they ever find horses again. I just thought, better keep her Heritage to myself.

She seems to be ok without it. At the Conference, they said she is doing really good and will do even better soon. She ties her shoes and, well, she is a little Oppositional but they all are. It’s going to be ok.

I decide to buy a really special gift for her eighth birthday. I still felt bad I made her cry. She cannot own her Heritage but she could own a gift. I looked for extra coupons in empty units but it is not enough, and Rini’s credit stopped so long ago it’s like it never happened. I find a notice on the Little Neck Board, they need cleaners in public areas. One day I earned some coupons doing deCon by the City Line. I could of done some at Flushing Cemetery but it is all-day work and ran so late I would miss her bus.

Still, I have enough coupons from the City Line for a toy. I bought it from Norma Pellicano’s friend Darleen. It is a Treasure box and it is pink and has a dancer. Ani never had a toy like this. Well, neither did I. She is so pleased she wants to bring it to school to show it off. She comes home from school, it is gone. Where is the Treasure box?

She left it in Sharing. So I did all that work for something she is just going to share?

Ani says to share something, you have to own it. It has to be yours. You can’t share something that belongs to someone else.

I never heard of that.

“Oh Ma, you are silly. You do not know anything.”

Well maybe that is true. But I will tell you what I did know. I broke my butt for that toy.

She just goes hopping down the ramp and we went home.

How to sit in chairs. I knew that. How to find my own way home.

Melanie said a magnet belt could help. It’s fall Conference, Ani’s third year at Mill Rock. By now the dock guard lets me through without checking my swipe. It’s not worth the trouble—Ani and me crash the system all the time. Ok, I will find some way to buy a magnet belt. I had heard of a hole in the City Line fence you could squeeze through and do hardy work on the other side. The rates are good. Wait on a line, they will hire you for a day. With the personal Dome setup there, they like a hardy to get on a pulley to deCon the outside. They don’t even ask for Proof you’re hardy, they’re just like, if you die, that’s your problem.

So now I had regular cleaning work in Nassau County, over the City Line. The deCon work dried up. Still this is pretty good. I just have to run all the way to the bus Stop when my work is done, in case this is the one time she got there first.

I also spent a lot of time keeping the Health Profile up-to-date. Sometimes I had to go all the way to South Brother Island. They really want Ani there to be sure she’s who I say she is, but I can talk my way out of it. Sometimes I spend most of a day getting this done and must rush to get back to the Stop in time. Catch my breath. Remember to say very good and all that.

I found a bubble trike I could use to get back and forth in Queens. I never got two-wheelers to work. I cannot bring the trike through the hole to Nassau County but it definitely saved time. I hide it in garbage at the City Line wall and hope it is still there when I’m done with my work.

One day I blew a tire and have to leave the trike and run to the Stop by foot in case she gets there first. I look back and see someone stealing the trike. I start running back to the trike. Then I smell the bus and run back to the bus. It is not the bus. I run back to the trike. The trike is gone. It starts to rain. The bus is one hour late. She is never coming home! She’s lost! The bus is lost! When it chugs up, she climbs off in the rain, hands me a book—a, you know, regular book, but the Special kind they give kids who read backward, with words that go both ways. She is proud she could read it and wants me to say how Special she is, like that is something I could never do.

I just opened the book and read, “MOM POP WOW. Very good.” I don’t even know why I did. I guess it’s just what a hard day I had, and I was very sorry.

Because she got very mad. “You do not know how to read!” She says I got one word wrong. “You said COW.”

I told her and I’m telling you, I did not say COW.

We just go home in the rain. But when we are inside and got dried off she will not read. She lost the self-esteem. She will not read at all until I say, oh, I do not know how to read. Then she goes, I will show you how. MOM POP WOW. Well how Special is that. She can read three words. I can read three words. But I am adult. I do not need the self-esteem. So, whatever.

And I will tell you this. It works.

It is her fourth year at Mill Rock school. She is reading forward! She is walking forward, at least that I saw. They tell me if she catches a break, she could do anything. She could be anything.

My dream is she would be a Tech but it’s ok if she is anything. Except me.

How’s she going to feel if she finds out she is?

All the kids are doing great. Don Park got in to a private Dome school, as Diversity, whatever that even is. Others could mainstream soon. Ani could too. She will pass. She will have regular Needs, the whole shebang.

She rides a bus four hours a day. She sits in a chair. She ties her shoe. She reads forward. I mean she is so proud.

Nine years, ten months old. Still alive. So was I.

Sometimes I was a little nervous though.

In two months, Ani will be ten years old. I’m pretty sure she has a different life than I did when Cissy Fardo died in the fire, when I was ten. We been through this before, right? Ani’s not me. Nobody’s Cissy Fardo.

Still, even Rauden was never totally sure how this is going to work.

ii

Ten candles. One extra for luck. Janet Delize made the cake.

The party is in her kitchen, with those green covers over everything. It’s one month after Ani’s real birthday so she could finish the school year, and it’s a very big deal. There are marsh-mallows and hats and as a special treat here comes Mariah Delize who put on a lot of weight. She gave Ani a Purse. Henry couldn’t come. He sent regular money. Man! Where did he find that?

Ok. We’re all around the table. Everyone sings Happy Birthday. Then Ani makes a wish and blows the candles out. I don’t know what she wished. But I know what I wished.

She will stay alive, be regular, and graduate. And one more thing.

I don’t die in a fire.

Everybody cheers.

“Well!” Janet says. “Our little girl is growing up.”

You can see how I was thinking on her tenth birthday. Will I die in a fire like Cissy Fardo? I was so busy thinking about that, it took a while for me to notice everyone else seems to be thinking something too. Janet Delize is giving Ani a look. That is never good.

It’s totally quiet. You could hear the generator hum. The windows are open—you could hear an Endangered somewhere in the sky.

Now Mariah Delize is doing it. She and Janet look at me, then Ani, then me. Then everyone’s doing it.

Except us. Except Ani and me. Sitting at Janet’s table side by side.

Ani is looking at me like, what is this? I shake my head like, whatever. It doesn’t mean anything!

But personally, I was pretty sure it does.

It’s like the looks they used to give when Ani and the others were viables in the tank. Ani/me. Ani/me. In the same room, side by side. And then it hits me what they’re thinking.

Ani is growing up. She’s ten years old. I’m thirty. She’s going to change a lot. Me not so much.

I think they could be thinking, how long could we pass?

After a while, Janet says, “Well! Who’s ready for cake?” Everyone says they are. Pretty soon everyone’s talking again.

Except me. Ani and me.

We generally don’t say much anyhow at the Farm. Ani even less than me. She just jiggles her feet. I mean the whole table jiggles.

Janet goes, “You may be excused, Ani.” Ani is looking at me like, for what? I’m just moving my eyes, go to the TV.

Ani leaves the kitchen and turns on the TV in the Den. The rest of us clean up.

I still can’t leave Ani alone so much at the Farm, Mill Rock is pretty much the only place she doesn’t get nervous if I am out of sight, so while we are cleaning up in Janet’s kitchen, I have to check is Ani ok watching TV in the Den. She is ok but got frosting on her birthday dress so I took her to the toilet to clean the dress and while we’re in there I check how we look in the mirror, could we still pass? We definitely could. She is much smaller and smoother. Even the hair is different.

So, I’m like it’s going to be ok, but this birthday, man! Things just keep happening. A little later I am on the way down Janet’s hall to check again is Ani still ok with the TV when Mariah Delize comes behind me in the hall and whispers, when did I start to ministrate.

So I’m like, oh, I don’t know. Could you excuse me a minute? I want to see is Ani still ok. She is.

But on my way back down the hall, Mariah Delize stops me and whispers, the age you start to ministrate, Ani could start to ministrate.

I’m like, well, ok, but she’s just ten years old. Could you excuse me? I just want to get out of there. But Mariah Delize blocks my way, in the hall. You really cannot get around Mariah Delize in a hall.

Ani has to know what is going to happen, so she is not afraid. It could happen any time, she goes. Ten, eleven, twelve. She has to know it’s part of nature. It’s part of nature girls must ministrate, or no one will be born.

Other books

Honor Among Thieves by Elaine Cunningham
The Tin Drum by Gunter Grass, Breon Mitchell
Always and Forever by Beverly Jenkins
Dead Heat by Caroline Carver
Blackbird by Tom Wright
Heaven Should Fall by Rebecca Coleman
Are You Sitting Down? by Yarbrough, Shannon
Blood of the Lamb by Michael Lister