When Kate was in junior high, grades 7 to 10 in the Philippines, students were divided into sections based on their academic performance. First, the sections borrowed the names of the planets in the solar system, then flowers, then chemical elements (or at least the most precious metals) and finally scientists. Luckily, Kate and her friends always managed to land the top sections. And so, she was in 7-Mercury, 8-Sampaguita, 9-Platinum and 10-Einstein.
It was certainly debatable whether Mercury was better than Earth by being closer to the sun, or whether platinum was more precious than gold or palladium; to say nothing of there-is-no-disputing-tastes themes like flowers and Albert Einstein. But then again, the practice of dividing students based on anything would raise even more questions, so nobody asked how the school admin came up with the section names.
Josh and his gang, who called themselves The Retaliators (original Filipino: Resbakers), mostly belonged to the same sections back in junior high and suffice it to say that Kate rarely saw them.
Kate only barely tolerated Josh’s high school gang activities. She thought it smacked of immaturity. But then her heart would oddly speed up every time she saw Josh riding to school on his dark-blue-and-white Ducati and wearing the black helmet with a cute emo skull sticker. And when he offered to drive her home one day, her knees felt weak and threatened to buckle under her. All her friends advised against it and insisted they just wait for the public-transport jeepney or walk 3 miles to Bayan (literally “Town”), where most students lived. They usually did that to avoid the cramped jeepneys and save the nine-peso fare.
“It’s too hot to walk,” Josh said. “UV’s gonna damage your skin. I’d hate for that to happen.”
Against all logic and the alarm bells ringing inside her head (she had never ridden a motorcycle in her life, only a public-transport "tricyle" or auto rickshaw, which had a side car), Kate answered breathlessly: “All right.”
As he gave her his only helmet and fastened the strap delicately under her chin, she thought he was confidently intimate and got a blast of his designer cologne, which was perfect for the weather in the tropics. She also thought he could be gentle if he wanted to, contrary to what everybody expected of him.
He tilted the motorcycle so she could lift herself. At first, Kate was undecided between straddling the passenger seat and sitting with both her legs on one side. Josh helped make up her mind by saying she’d enjoy the ride more if she could feel the wind blowing in her face, which was not a terrible idea considering that the skirts of CITS-HS girls (and those in most Catholic schools) are one to two palm-widths below the knees. Heels no more than one inch tall and no knee-high socks, period.
Her heart was beating so hard she worried he might feel it through her middy blouse and the Adidas jacket on his back. As the wind whipped hard against them and her arms tightened around his abs, he didn’t shout back at her to try and make awkward conversation. Instead, he let her savor the moment; the thrill. But she also thought he drove slower and more carefully on her account.
All the while what occupied Kate’s mind was the fact that people were looking at them from the jeepneys they passed by. Some jeepneys were full of schoolmates from various grades. At one point as they rode parallel to a jeepney, several seniors who were inside, presumably friends of Josh’s, cheered and whistled at them through the windows. They acted rowdily and did whatever they pleased. Josh flashed a finger gun at them and did a silent “pow” before overtaking.
That evening, Kate’s friends couldn’t wait to bombard her with questions. Her Messenger and phone inbox blew up with teasing and congratulatory messages. The fact that the rumor mill revolved around her made her glow with pride and feel like the prettiest girl in school. She was on grade 11 after all and Josh was arguably the coolest 12th-grader.
It was a match of polar opposites. But Kate didn’t care because, the heart of the matter was, she saw the potential for Josh to change. She even thought she could be the catalyst for that change. She certainly felt it was her job.
The next day, Josh offered to drive her home again and, what touched Kate more than anything else, he also bought a bottle of sunscreen for her in case she said no. He needn’t have because she readily accepted his invitation. And then, the day after, he whipped out a purple helmet from behind him with a similar emo skull sticker, only girly. And for all the following days since, he became her personal chauffeur even though Kate always asked to be dropped off a couple of blocks away from her house. She felt she wasn’t ready to introduce him to her parents. She could never tell him but she was kind of embarrassed.
Josh sometimes waited for her to be finished with a special group work or with her duties as Student Council secretary. She would pack a fresh set of civvies so she could change and spray herself with the perfume that Josh gifted her on their first monthsary. They also sometimes took detours to drink soda and eat French fries at fast food chains (but not the diner where her ma worked) or hang out on breathtaking hill overlooks that were slowly being developed into resort-subdivisions.
During those intimate moments, Kate learned a great deal about Josh. She realized it hadn’t been easy being lumped in the lower sections. There were a lot of negative influences and, worse, a great deal of peer pressure. Even if a student wanted to study, he would be dissuaded by his classmates. And the effects stuck till senior high as evidenced by the fact that most of The Retaliators had selected the Technical Vocational Livelihood (TVL) track.
Josh thought that by being the leader of his gang, he was actually saving everyone from bigger trouble. At least he was able to keep the less predictable members in check. Josh confessed he was sometimes scared of the members and it gave him enormous pressure to maintain his leadership. His being in a relationship with Kate, for instance, raised concerns about his becoming soft and unfit to lead. She made him look weak.
“I guess you’re sort of my Kryptonite,” Josh told her.
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For Ecto, New Year’s is more or less the same as Christmas. The same warm, gooey feeling. The same close-knit spirit. Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte has banned the manufacture and sale of firecrackers, the shooting of which has been a well-loved tradition for centuries and can be traced all the way back to the Spanish colonial era. The exact inventors and originators were the Chinese, who believed that noise would drive away bad luck and bad spirits. According to Mr. and Mrs. Lapuz, the Filipinos seem sadder now, having been robbed of the most thrilling and spectacular means of making noise. But according to health and safety records, hospital personnel can rest easier because the ERs wouldn’t be packed with casualties this time around. Just the New Year’s before last, it was like a war zone on the streets what of households competing for the biggest bang to welcome the new year. Many men got drunk out of their minds and then tried to light a firecracker with the non-PC name
After Mass, Kate and Nate buy rice cakes at the town square. One is the awesomely purple puto bumbong and another the yellow bibingka. They also buy roasted chestnuts and bring all the treats home to Mr. and Mrs. Lapuz. On one trip to a very crowded shopping mall, Ecto sees a Santa Claus impersonator. Curiously, the Santa is Caucasian and not brown-skinned like most of the Filipinos. Of course Ecto has already figured out by himself that Santa isn’t real. To his surprise, after they get back home, Kate insists on teaching him the hooman custom of hanging a stocking. On the desktop of her computer, Kate shows him a folder that she has named “Ecto’s Stocking”. She then goes through all the trouble of changing her wallpaper to a fireplace and dragging the folder onto the 2D mantelpiece. “What for?” he asks her through her smartphone’s loudspeaker. Her smartphone is open and showing the My Dream Boyfriend app, right into the inside of Ecto’s bedroom. Ecto’s wearing a knit sweater
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It’s already 6 pm when Nate finishes his social host obligations and comes looking for Kate. He doesn’t need to look hard though because earlier, Kate sent him a text saying she’s waiting for him in the Council office. Nate has a spring in his step and is smiling ear to ear. The scratches on his face are still stinging but, before the closing ceremony, Nurse Judy cleaned and applied Band-Aid on them. Nate can’t hide his excitement in seeing his GF again after they’ve taken care of all their responsibilities. {That kiss on the track was supernova-hot. I hope we make out too.} When he finds the office door locked, oddly enough, he knocks and calls out uncertainly: “Kate?” He hears her move inside the room and then the door swings open. The sight of her face wipes his smile off. She’s been crying in the dim. She has the look of someone who has just had herself a good cry. Her eyes look cleansed and exposed, indeed like pure windows into her soul. Her lips are tightly set in a line, as
Kate is alone in the Student Council office tidying up. Nate’s off wrapping things up with his manager and the film crew and saying goodbye to everybody, including his bandmates. The trophy that STEM 12 won is now in the 12-Everest homeroom, because the bulk of tournament champions is there. Kate’s classmates are all posing with it and gushing at how shiny it is. This year’s Intrams was perfect. Kate couldn’t ask for anything more. She has once again been reminded of the importance of having balance in life; of, as cheesy as it sounds, having both a sound mind and a sound body. It felt good to do something physical, to be away from the rigors of school work and the false urgency of the Internet. But the heart of the matter is, she’s blissfully content because she has a boyfriend and she didn’t make a mistake in choosing him. In fact, she made a brilliant choice. An undertow to her joy is a silent prayer that she has finally broken the curse that she felt had hung over her ever since
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