Symptoms of Being Human

DEDICATION

To my parents,

who told me I could be whatever I wanted when I grew up.

Sorry I kept you waiting.

CHAPTER 1

NEW POST: ONE OR THE OTHER

OCTOBER 1, 6:55 AM

The first thing you're going to want to know about me is: Am I a boy, or am I a girl?

I STOP TYPING AND STARE
at the cursor, which flashes at me incessantly, as if mocking my inability to write one stupid post.

“Riley!” It's my mom, calling me from downstairs in her singsongy voice. “If you still want to be early, you'd better come down for breakfast!”

I glance at the clock. I'm not really running
that
late—but I want to get the lay of the land while the campus is still mostly empty. “I'll be down in a minute!” I say, then click Delete, slam my laptop shut, and slide off my bed.

At least I can tell Doctor Ann I tried.

I stop in front of the mirror to examine myself. I don't know if this look will help me blend in at my new school, but it definitely exudes a sort of existential punk vibe, like, “I care so much, I don't care,” that feels distinctly
me
. As a last touch, I mash down my bangs so they hide as much of my face as possible. It'll have to do.

Downstairs, my mother gives me a wide smile. “First day!” she says.

I manage to smile in return, and then I grab a box of cereal from the pantry and sit down at the table across from my dad.

“Ready to conquer Park Hills High?” he says. Then he looks up from his tablet, and his smile wilts as he notices my outfit.

I'm wearing a pair of jeans and my dad's old Ramones T-shirt, which I've modified to fit my smaller frame. Black Doc Martens—synthetic ones, no cows were harmed in the making of my shoes—round out the ensemble. I'm grateful that I don't have to wear a uniform anymore—I remember how suffocating it was to be confined to the same identity day after day, regardless of how I felt inside.

But the truth is, it still doesn't matter how I feel—because however I show up today, people will expect me to look the same tomorrow. Including my parents.

So my only choice is to go neutral.

“Is that my Ramones shirt?” Dad says.

“Once upon a time,” I say.

He clears his throat. “Riley, are you sure that's how you want to present yourself on your first day?”

I open my mouth, then close it without saying anything.

Dad gestures at me with his grapefruit spoon. “You only
get one chance at a first impression.”

I want to scream:
Like I don't know that!
But instead, I say, “I guess I'm hedging my bets. I want to see how the kids dress at public school. Don't want to overdo it and end up looking stupid.” Dad seems to consider, then nods his head approvingly. By appealing to his sense of strategy, I've averted the Inquisition.

For now.

Ten minutes later, the three of us pile into Mom's minivan. I've agreed to let both parents escort me on my first day, but only on the condition that we
not
take the black Lincoln. I don't want anyone to see Dad's government license plates and connect Riley Cavanaugh with
Congressman
Cavanaugh. Maybe I'm being paranoid, but that kind of notoriety is the last thing I need on top of . . . well, on top of everything else.

We turn out of our gated community and onto Imperial Highway. The closer we get to the school, the more butterflies flap around in my stomach; I don't know what to expect. At Immaculate Heart, it was impossible for someone like me to avoid being singled out; the school was just too small and too conservative. Maybe the people here will be more open-minded. Or, at the very least, maybe I'll be able to blend in.

Finally, we reach the top of Lions Ridge, and Park Hills High School comes into view. It's a massive, U-shaped, concrete abomination, surrounded by wrought-iron gates encrusted with ten years of accumulated green paint.

“Hey,” I say. “You can just pull over and drop me off here.”

“It's a steep walk, honey,” Mom says. “We'll drop you at the front.”

“Mom, we talked about the ‘honey' thing.”

“Right,” she says. “Sorry.”

“Please, you guys, I just want to walk in.”

“You mean you want to make an entrance,” Dad says, a smile turning up one corner of his mouth.

I blink at him. He couldn't misunderstand me more if he actively tried. But if believing that will keep him from making a scene out of my arrival, I'll fake it.

“Yeah,” I say. “I guess I do.”

Mom glances at me in the rearview, her eyes narrowed, and I get the feeling she sees through my lie. She starts to say something, then seems to change her mind and just presses her lips together instead. Dad pulls to the curb and turns to face me.

“You're smart and resourceful, Riley,” he says. “Put yourself out there, and you'll be an asset to this campus.”

But I don't want to be an asset; I want to be invisible.

As they pull away, Mom gives me an ironic princess wave, and Dad makes devil horns with one hand. I roll my eyes, wait impatiently for the van to turn the corner, and then look around to get my bearings.

I'm about fifty yards from the school entrance, where a few clusters of students are beginning to form. I let out a long, slow breath and start toward the gates.

A green SUV pulls into the circular drive, and a blond girl in a short skirt climbs out. As she approaches her friends, she walks past a circle of guys passing around a basketball. One of them wolf-whistles at her, and she gives him the finger.

Then it's my turn to walk past them. My heart beats faster as I get close; I keep my head down and try to blend in with the
concrete. To my relief, no one says anything to me; I've dodged the first bullet.

I'm only a few yards away from the big green gates now. All I have to do is make it past the group of girls, and then I'll be on campus, where I can disappear into a crowd.

But as I draw closer, two of the girls look up and notice me. I glance away, but I feel their eyes on me, scrutinizing, categorizing. I've been through this before, and it shouldn't get to me—but today, it does. My skin breaks out in goose bumps, and I wrap my arms around myself and walk faster.

“Oh my God,” one of the girls says, and my head involuntarily turns to look at her. She's got long brunette hair and a small, perfect nose. “Holy shit, you guys.” She lowers her voice to a stage whisper, but I can still hear what she says:

“Is that a girl, or a guy?”

A fit of giggles erupts from the group around her. My face goes hot. I walk faster, trying to escape the whispers.

“No,” another girl says. “That has to be a . . .”

“Yeah, but look what it's wearing.”

It
.
She called me
it.

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