Read The Latte Rebellion Online
Authors: Sarah Jamila Stevenson
Tags: #young adult, #teen fiction, #fiction, #teen, #teenager, #multicultural, #diversity, #ethnic, #drama, #coming-of-age novel
Woodbury, Minnesota
The Latte Rebellion
© 2011 by Sarah Jamila Stevenson.
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First e-book edition © 2010
E-book ISBN: 9780738729879
Cover design by Lisa Novak
Cover images: napkin © iStockphoto.com/Maureen Perez
coffee cup © Jonathan Kantor/Digital Vision/PunchStock
Interior illustrations on pages 117, 154, and 199 by Sarah Jamila Stevenson
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The jeering male voice came from somewhere behind me, waking me up from a heatstroke-induced doze.
“Hey, check it out—Asha’s a towel-head.”
I’m a WHAT?
My neck got even warmer, and not just because it was sweltering at Ashmont Community Park.
Whoever it was, was he kidding me? Nobody used that phrase anymore unless they were hopelessly ignorant about headwear, or still carrying around a post-9/11 grudge. I knew I really should be offended.
Mostly, though, I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. Even if I did have a towel on my head.
From the gasps and nervous whispers around me, I wasn’t the only one in shock. I lifted a corner of terrycloth off my sweaty face—I was tanning my legs—just in time to see a furious Carey dump her cup of iced coffee all over Roger Yee’s smirking face. Light-brown latte dripped in rivulets from his now lank and soaking black hair, down his pretentious A&F T-shirt, and onto his swim trunks. The smirk dripped away with it.
One of Roger’s lackeys from the Asian American Club, looking up from a nearby umbrella table, saw Roger’s sorry, bedraggled self and snorted cola out of his nose, starting a ripple of laughter that drifted around the pool area and then died as people noticed the confrontation.
Roger had probably just been trying to make a stupid joke, but I didn’t like his tone. It rubbed me the wrong way. And, knowing him, he’d probably said something obscene to Carey while I was snoozing away obliviously.
Now, he stood stock-still and dripping as Carey hissed, “Don’t you
ever
use that word, buttmunch. I don’t call
you
Fu Manchu.”
“Well, you’re half-Chinese,” he retorted. “Anyway, I wasn’t talking to you,
Wong
. I was talking to Miss Barely Asian over there.” He used a corner of his shirt to wipe the coffee off his face and neck.
I sat up with a martyred sigh. I didn’t want to be part of this conversation, but I was involved whether I liked it or not. “Look,
Yee
, last I checked, South Asia was definitely part of Asia. It’s in the
name
. South
Asia
.” I pointed to my head. “And it’s not a towel
.
Learn some useful vocabulary words, like turban. Which nobody in my family wears, incidentally.”
“Whatever,” Roger said, waving a hand at me dismissively. “You’re only a quarter or a half or something, anyway. And you had a
towel
on your
head,
okay?”
“What does it matter? It’s still racist. And it’s not like Asha insulted you,” Carey pointed out. “What’s your problem?”
They locked eyes for a moment, glaring at each other. Roger Yee had been our nemesis ever since he’d perpetrated the Backpack-Snatching-and-Dumping Incident of ’06, which we followed rather unwisely with the Toilet Paper Revenge Caper of ’07. He wasn’t my favorite person, but racial epithets were stooping a bit low even for him. I mean, this was Northern California. We were supposed to be past all that.
A handful of other seniors started to drift over from around the patio like melodrama-sniffing dogs, eager for a scene. And Roger was no stranger to a good argument. He’d verbally clobbered three hapless rivals to become our student-body secretary, which made him responsible for this stupid Inter-Club Council pool party in the first place. But if it came down to it, my money was on Carey. She had that look in her eye, the ice-cold, do-not-screw-around-with-me look that she only got when she was really angry—or about to nail someone on the opposing soccer team with her cleats.
After a minute, Roger dropped his gaze and stalked off. As he brushed past Carey’s lounge chair, I heard him mutter, “It was just a joke, you snooty bitch.”
I bolted to my feet, the controversy-inspiring towel falling to the ground, innocuous and stripey. “You do
not
talk to my friends like that,” I shouted after him, but it was too late. He was gone, slamming the iron gate to the pool area with a loud clang as he left, leaving Carey glowering and redder than I’d ever seen her, and me torn between wanting to scream and wishing I’d decided to stay home.
And that’s how it all started.
The Inter-Club Council annual pool party.
Unfortunately, that’s not how it ended. Not by a long shot.
The following April:
Ashmont Unified School District Board Room
“Ladies and gentlemen.” The disciplinary hearing officer cleared his throat wetly, the sound reverberating into the microphone and around the room. I didn’t want to look at him, with his graying comb-over and his accusatory unibrow, so I looked down at my lap, shifting in the hard wooden chair. The murmur of voices temporarily rose, then fell. I heard a few clicks of the camera shutter from the newspaper reporter in the back row.
I’d been the one to request an open hearing—I had a right to, according to California Education Code—but I still couldn’t believe how many people showed up. The room, which normally seated about fifty people, was full. Standing room only.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” the presiding officer continued stiffly, “representatives of the Ashmont Board of Education, and”—I could feel him glaring in my direction—“members of the
public
, this open disciplinary hearing to consider the expulsion of Ms. Asha Jamison from University Park High School is now in session.”