My (Underground) American Dream - Intro

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My (Underground) American Dream

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MY (UNDERGROUND) AMERICAN DREAM My True Story as an Undocumented Immigrant Who Became a Wall Street Executive

JULISSA ARCE With MARK DAGOSTINO

New York Boston Nashville

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Copyright © 2016 by Julissa Arce A note: Some of the names in this book have been changed to respect the privacy of those in my stories. While I have kept very detailed journals most of my life, this book was written mostly from memory. To the best of my ability, and with all my passion, I am sharing my truth and story. Jacket design by JuLee Brand Jacket photography by Vincent Remini Cover copyright © 2016 by Hachette Book Group, Inc. Hachette Book Group supports the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture. The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like permission to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact permissions@hbgusa.com. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights. Center Street Hachette Book Group 1290 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10104 centerstreet.com twitter.com/centerstreet First Edition: September 2016 Center Street is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc. The Center Street name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc. The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher. Library of Congress Control Number: 2016944756 ISBNs: 978-1-4555-4024-2 (hardcover), 978-1-4555-4025-9 (ebook) Printed in the United States of America RRD-C 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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For my dad, Julio, and my mom, Luisa, who sacrificed everything for me.

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PROLOGUE

The Attack

I wasn’t making the big bucks. Not yet, I thought. Still, as I sat there surrounded by unpacked boxes, drinking my ice-cold beer and watching TV on a humid July night, I thought about just how lucky I truly was. In two weeks, I’ll be on my way. I was sitting with Robert, my on-again–off-again maybe boyfriend, in his new apartment at 45 Wall Street in the heart of a reborn lower Manhattan. It was a gorgeous night in that promising summer of 2005. We’d both landed big-city jobs and rented apartments in the same building on one of the most famous streets in the world. So what if we’d driven all the way from San Antonio in a Penske truck to save money on airfare? So what if Robert’s roommate wound up making that drive with us at the last minute, the three of us all squished together and sweaty on a black vinyl bench seat, erasing all of my romantic road-trip dreams? So what if I was slightly annoyed that Mr. Third Wheel was cramping our space in that apartment in that moment, too? We were there. We were on our way. I was just about to say something about how lucky we all were when I felt a sharp pain in my chest. I suddenly felt like I couldn’t breathe. A tingling feeling crept down my left arm.

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I tried to convince myself it was some sort of a head freeze. Maybe the beer was too cold or I’d pounded it too fast. After a few minutes of silent agony, though, my palms started sweating and the pain in my chest became searing. “Guys,” I said. It was difficult to speak. I could barely gather enough air to make words. “I think I might be having a heart attack.” “What?” Robert said with a little laugh. “Get outta here.” “No, really. My chest hurts, and my left arm’s all tingly.” I was twenty-two. I couldn’t possibly be having a heart attack. It’ll pass, they said, and I wanted to believe them. But I felt like I was dying. Actually dying. The room closed in on me. Sweat started pouring out of every pore. I tried to breathe slowly and control the pounding of my heart, but I couldn’t. “I really think I need to go to the hospital,” I said. I couldn’t call 911. I was too afraid to call any government numbers, and Robert was just about the only person who knew the reason why. He looked into my eyes and finally seemed to get it. “Okay,” he said. “Let’s go.” It was late. Wall Street was dead. Miraculously, a cab appeared. We told the driver to take us to the closest hospital, which was NYU Downtown, on William Street. It was less than a half mile away, but getting there felt like an eternity. I saw the buildings arcing in on top of us the entire drive, as if we were passing through a giant tunnel in slow motion. “Everything’s going to be okay,” Robert said, but I could see he was worried now, too. At the hospital I handed over my student ID and insurance card from the University of Texas. I’d graduated in May. I was pretty sure the insurance had expired, but that was all I had. I was sure I

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was about to collapse in full cardiac arrest on the hard, industrialtile floor of that ER and suffer the embarrassment of making a scene in front of Robert. Somehow I was more worried about making a fool of myself in front of him than I was about possibly dying. The person at the desk took one look at me, wrote down the information, and didn’t ask any questions. The nurses hurried me in and hooked me up to a dozen monitors. One of them handed me an aspirin to dissolve under my tongue while another drew blood and began a long list of routine questions. “Are you on any medicine?” “No.” “Any chance of you being pregnant?” “No.” Robert looked at me. “You don’t want to take a pregnancy test to be sure?” he asked. I shook my head emphatically. “No!” When the nurses left I shot him the side-eye. “What the hell, Robert?” I said, my voice muffled by a plastic oxygen mask. “Why would you say that?” “Well, what if you are?” “How can I be pregnant, Robert? We aren’t even having sex!” If I wasn’t already aware of how complicated our relationship was, he made it painfully clear to me in that moment. I should dump him, I thought. But how could I dump him? He was there in the hospital with me, in the middle of the night. We didn’t talk much after that. I lay there for hours with doctors and nurses coming in and out until finally one doctor came in and told me that he had some good news. I wasn’t having a heart attack at all. “What you’ve experienced is a major panic or anxiety attack,” he said. I was confused. I wasn’t the type of person to panic. I wasn’t

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someone filled with anxiety. There were types of people I associated with panic attacks, and I was certainly not one of them. “What could cause that to happen?” I asked. “Because it doesn’t make any sense that I would have one.” “Sometimes they just happen,” the doctor told me. He said I would be discharged shortly and left the room. I hated that answer. I hated uncertainty. I’ve always hated uncertainty. I like facts, which is why I’ve always loved math. There is no ambiguity in math. If he’d told me I’d had a heart attack and needed surgery it would have been better than walking away without a concrete answer. “Sometimes they just happen” made absolutely no sense to me. It was early morning by the time they discharged me, and I didn’t express any of my worry and confusion to Robert as we walked out the front door. I was too embarrassed, and we were both too tired to speak. The old streets of downtown New York are particularly beautiful early in the morning, before the crowds and the cars take over. The edges of the cobblestones were just catching flickers of orange light from the rising sun as it poked its head up between the buildings, and I could hear birds chirping in that rare Manhattan quiet as we made the walk back to our shared building. There was plenty of noise in my head, though. Why on earth would I have a panic attack? We were almost back when it finally dawned on me. In less than two weeks there was more than a good chance my secret would finally be exposed—the secret that could ruin my life, that could send me to jail, that could end my career before it ever began. The secret I’d been forced to keep since I was fourteen years old. In less than two weeks I would report to work and be finger-

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printed for a building ID. I would have to show two forms of government-issued ID to start on payroll. I had already passed a background check, miraculously, but there would be more background checks, this time from government agencies to obtain my various financial licenses. It was all standard protocol. To anyone else, that stuff might have been no big deal. The big deal would have been that they were starting their dream job at Goldman Sachs. To me, it was a big deal in a different way. I was two weeks away from walking into Goldman Sachs’s New York headquarters to start my coveted career as a financial analyst, and I’d been so focused on the details of the move and trying to figure out this whole Robert situation that I hadn’t stopped to consider the possibility that I might never make it past day one. Since the age of fourteen, I had learned to live an alternate reality, an imagined reality in which my immigration status didn’t matter. Denial had become the only way I could move through life. But on that day, everything I had pushed down inside of me, the potential consequences of my secret, came rushing to the surface without warning. The reality of my situation was suddenly undeniable. Everything I’d done in my entire life, every accomplishment, every dream could disappear the moment I walked through those doors.

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PA R T I

“Undocumented”

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CHAPTER 1

Home Alone

What the hell are you doing?” my grandfather yelled, spanking me just before I managed to get completely undressed. “What did I do?” I cried, while everyone laughed and laughed. It was Christmas Eve and I was three. I don’t remember anything of my debut performance, but the story has been told to me many times. At some point during the festivities, I drank a little bit of someone’s champagne, which, of course, I wasn’t supposed to do. While it wasn’t enough to get me drunk, the alcohol made me feel hot. So I started taking off my clothes, right there in my grandmother’s living room—in front of my whole extended family. I suppose it’s fitting that I caused a scene that night my family would talk about for decades to come, because as a young girl I always wanted to be in the spotlight. I was sure that I would grow up to be a performer. I made myself the center of attention at every family gathering from that moment on by singing, dancing, or directing my cousins to act out plays in front of everyone. It’s even more fitting that it all started on Christmas Eve, because Christmas was my favorite holiday. I was pretty much convinced that the party was for me and not for baby Jesus, because every Christmas Eve my extended family, thirty to forty people, would gather at my grandparents’ house for an evening filled with

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music and laughter and booze and presents, and I turned each one of those gatherings into the Julissa Show. My aunts and uncles and cousins all gathered around the living room, clapping and cheering and snapping pictures. Then I’d go to my home just down the street and wake up to dozens of presents from Santa Claus. Santa Claus didn’t just come to my house, either. I collected presents on Christmas Day from every single one of my aunts’ and uncles’ houses, too. The thing I loved most about Christmas, though, had nothing to do with being the center of attention or even the lucky recipient of so many gifts. What I loved most about Christmas was that I would get to see my parents. It was the one time in the whole year when I was guaranteed that my parents would come home to me in Mexico. They never missed a Christmas. Not one. By the time I was born in 1983, my mother had started what would become a very successful business selling silver jewelry and merchandise from our hometown of Taxco (pronounced “Tas'-co”) to buyers at trade shows all over the United States. Within a few years my parents set up shop in San Antonio, Texas. From that moment on, the two of them stayed in the United States pretty much year-round, working as hard as they possibly could to provide for their family in the hopes of building a better life for us. While I grew up under the care of a nanny and my two older sisters in a house just five minutes from my grandmother’s house, my parents grew their business, traveling to faraway cities with exotic names like Chicago, New York, and New Orleans. I would later learn that my parents were importing $300,000 worth of sterling silver into the United States each year when their business was at its peak in the mid-1980s. I was told that my mother was responsible for putting Taxco silver on the map all over the United States.

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So, no, I was not the poor barefoot Mexican girl who sold gum on the side of the road or who didn’t go to elementary school because she had to work. In fact, I had the sweet life of a spoiled brat. My parents enrolled all three of their daughters in an all-girls Catholic school. I walked to school each day in a pristine, navy blue uniform with a white plastic collar, a big red bow tie, long white socks, and red bows in my very long, jet-black hair, which I would make my nanny braid again and again until it was perfect, with not one hair out of place. After school, I took piano, ballet, art, and karate lessons—anything that was offered in my small town of Taxco. I was privileged to receive wonderful gifts bought in America all the time, too, never mind that the labels said Made in China. I was the first kid I knew to have a Nintendo, and the only kid with a Barbie-pink lunchbox that had come all the way from a mall in San Antonio. None of the other kids believed it was from America, and none of the other kids liked me very much, either. “You’re an orphan,” they would sometimes taunt me. I did my best to ignore them. Taxco is a small city full of picturesque Colonial stucco buildings and narrow, winding, cobblestone streets all arranged on a beautiful hillside. It sits about a three-hour drive south of Mexico City, and its spot in those idyllic hills means it pretty much enjoys perfect weather year-round. While Taxco is big enough to serve as a tourist destination and has been known for its silverwork for more than a century, it’s still small enough to be marked by landmarks rather than addresses. If anyone asked where I lived I would say, “On la calle nueva”—that’s “the new street,” even though it’s a really, really old street—“by the central market, in front of the tortilla factory, on top of the second Metales Aviles.”

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The fact that Metales Aviles was a recognizable landmark in Taxco is a big point of pride, because that is the business my maternal grandparents founded. My grandmother and grandfather both came from nothing. They sold pots and pans on the streets and at the market to get by in the early days. They moved on to selling conchas, or seashells, for use in jewelry, and they soon saw the need local jewelers and craftsmen had for supplies and tools that were difficult to come by in Taxco at the time. So they opened up Metales Aviles, selling tools and supplies from sandpaper to special pliers to thousands of minuscule earring backings in the Mercado Tetitlán (the central market). They quickly grew Metales Aviles into a successful business, opening their own stand-alone shop in town and building their dream home within walking distance. It wasn’t long before they bought another building and opened a second shop, just off La Calle Nueva, the busy street where dozens of eighteen-wheelers would park and dozens of men would carry fruits, vegetables, and other goods to the Mercado each morning. The new building had small apartments on the second floor, and one of those apartments would later become home to my parents, my sisters, and me. After Papa Miguel, my grandfather, died, my maternal grandmother—or Mama Silvia, as all her grandkids called her— became the rock of the family. No one ever disagreed with her, no one fought in front of her, and no one so much as raised their voice around her. I wanted to grow up and command as much respect as she did. The words “I am going to tell Mama Silvia” made everyone in my family stop doing whatever it was they were doing. Even my tough-guy dad had the utmost respect for her. Stepping through Mama Silvia’s gate, past the huge bougainvillea tree bursting with color, up the steps made of tiny stones, I would run inside under the high ceilings as a child and feel like

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I was home. That house has always been a retreat for me. I felt at peace there, even when I found myself arguing with Mama Silvia’s cook or getting scolded by one of my older sisters for something I’d done. No matter what the temperature was outside, it always seemed to be the ideal temperature inside that house. And from the big windows on the first floor, up the spiral staircase to the second-floor bedrooms, to the giant terrace on the third floor, which was filled with big earthen pots of flowers and herbs, the house was flooded with beautiful sunlight all day long. Mama Silvia kept a parrot for a pet. She really loved that big green bird, even though it would sometimes bite her when she fed it. “Stupid parrot who can’t even speak!” she would curse. Yet she cared for it devotedly. I also watched closely as she cared for her business. Metales Aviles carried a little bit of something for everyone, in addition to the craftsmen’s tools and supplies. They kept a seasonal section in the store, and at Christmastime they would sell toys brought in from Mexico City. Once I was old enough to walk the streets of Taxco myself, Mama Silvia used to send me to do market research. I would go around to all of the big toy stores in town and see what was popular so we could buy and then sell those things, too. Then I would get to travel with her to Mexico City to buy the toys. It was one of my favorite things to do all year. They sold incense at the store, too, and for fun I used to take a tray full of tiny bags of copal (a kind of tree resin) incense and sell them at the Mercado. I wore a jean apron that had a zippered pocket for money, and as a little girl I used to walk around that bustling market yelling, Copal! Copal! Cinco pesos el copal! I loved selling. Some people might have thought, Poor thing. Her parents are making her work. But that wasn’t it at all. I wanted to work. I wanted to contribute. Whatever my mom and my grandmother

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were doing, I wanted to do it, too. So I was always coming up with new business ideas. For instance, from the balcony of my home I could see men unloading all of the trucks at the Mercado in the early morning, and I started noticing that they didn’t have any food, coffee, or water. There was no one there in the early morning to serve them. So I said, “We should sell them tortas!” I didn’t even make sandwiches for myself at that age. I had a nanny to do that when I was hungry in the morning, and I figured all those men must get hungry in the morning, too. So I made my nanny get up extra early and make tortas at five o’clock in the morning, and I turned that into one of my first entrepreneurial endeavors: selling food and lemonade to the dozens of men who unloaded the eighteen-wheelers. But I hadn’t yet learned the importance of recognizing and celebrating teamwork. I was too proud of myself to share the credit or profits with my nanny, who did all the work. Instead, I spent all the profits on candy. Over time there would be women selling breakfast food and coffee to the drivers and deliverymen in the early morning. But growing up, I had a monopoly on the fast-food breakfast business. Everyone in my family was entrepreneurial, and even though I didn’t get to see my mother nearly as often as I wanted, I knew how far she had come in life. I knew she was a force to be reckoned with in the business world, and I wanted to be just like her. My mom, Luisa, was stunningly beautiful. She had long legs, shiny long hair, and delicate features. My grandparents didn’t have money when she was growing up, so she really was one of those poor Mexican children who had to work in order to help support her family. She was the second oldest of six, and when her older sister married in her teens and moved out of the house, my mother was forced to drop out of school to become the primary care-

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taker of her four younger siblings. She never graduated from high school. My grandparents were busy building their business, and she had no choice but to give up her childhood. Her days included taking care of her siblings, working long hours, and being beaten by my grandparents for any offense. There were no time-outs, no “You are grounded.” There were only beatings. My grandparents weren’t bad people, she later told me. They loved their kids. “In those days beating your kids was common,” she would say. One night, after my grandfather beat her so badly she could barely walk, my mother made up her mind to leave home. She would later tell me with regret in her eyes, “In those days, a single woman living alone was unheard of, unless you were a woman of the street.” So the only way for her to get out of her situation was to get married. Enter Julio Arce Casimiro. With her looks and the growing prominence of her Aviles family name, my mother had many suitors in her late teens. Yet none of them caught her attention the way Julio did. My dad was shorter than my mom and darker skinned, with big, thick eyebrows, and bigger lips. He was the opposite of my mother in so many ways. He’d had his nose broken several times from street fights, but nevertheless, he looked so strong and handsome, with his head of jet-black hair. He had a tattoo on his bicep that read “Carmella,” for some girl he’d met before he met my mom. The tattoo bothered me more than it ever bothered her. After his father died in a mining accident and his mom remarried, my father left home to make a life of his own. He was twelve at the time. So, like my mom, he was one of those Mexican children. Yet even under those circumstances he still managed to finish high school by attending night school. As a young man, he once ran away from a gang by climbing

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on top of the eighteen-wheelers that were lined up in front of the Mercado and leaping from one to the other. The stunt earned him the nickname El Aguila (the Eagle). He certainly didn’t run out of fear. He was tough. He looked like a street fighter, and he intimidated just about anyone he met (except for Mama Silvia). I swear everyone in Taxco knew the story of how he taught himself to box: he filled a big bag with dirt and stones and punched it until his knuckles bled. One day, my mom’s youngest sister introduced Luisa to Julio and, as the story goes, my mom was instantly smitten. My dad “couldn’t sleep, couldn’t eat, couldn’t look at any other ladies” after he met my mom. It wasn’t long before my mom confessed her situation at home, and my dad, the fighter, wanted to rescue her. I don’t entirely believe the story of the night they ran away together, but this is how it was told to me at least three dozen times when I was a kid. My dad would start: “Your mom and I went to a tardeada [a kind of high school dance], and we were having so much fun.” “Your dad actually danced,” my mom would say with a smile, “and we lost track of time, and it got really late.” My mom knew that if she went back home to her parents after curfew, she was sure to get a beating—so my dad said she didn’t have to go home at all. She could just run away with him. And she did. She was seventeen. They got married shortly after, and my grandparents didn’t speak to or forgive my mom until after my sister, Aris, was born, almost two years later. At that point, in order to receive my grandparents’ forgiveness, my parents were finally married in the Catholic Church, and all was right with the world. My dad worked as a truck driver and a handyman when they first met, but shortly after Aris was born, in 1972, he landed a job as a deliveryman for Coca-Cola. That job provided a steady in-

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come. My mom picked up my dad’s check every Friday, and she ran the house from the very beginning. Being a truck driver’s wife was not enough for my mother, though. She had her eyes set higher, and she was relentless in the pursuit of her dream. She wanted to build a house. She wanted her daughters to attend Catholic school. She wanted to see the world. Taxco was far too small for her. Once her silver business took root and the two of them set off to make their fortunes in America, my parents started construction on a six-story house in Taxco. As my nanny braided my hair, I could see that big, empty building going up from the windows of our tiny second-story apartment. I wanted to live in that house so badly that one day I defiantly made my nanny move all my clothes into its unfinished shell. I knew my parents were sacrificing for me, and that the biggest sacrifice they made was leaving their three daughters behind while they built a business in the United States. I heard it again and again. But more than anything, I just wanted them home. Don’t get me wrong. I was grateful for all that I had. I was thrilled whenever we got the chance to visit them. America was a place of wonder for me. I saw the riches portrayed in Dennis the Menace cartoons dubbed in Spanish, including one particular episode when Dennis put the mean neighbor’s house on wheels, which I thought was the coolest thing ever. There was another episode that featured an RV road trip, and I briefly believed that everyone in America had houses on wheels that could go anywhere they wanted. When I was a little older, I sneaked into my grandmother’s living room late at night to watch how Americans, who were all beautiful, rich, and white, lived on Beverly Hills 90210. My sisters and I visited my parents in America often, too. One summer, my parents took my cousins and sisters and me on a road

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trip around the United States in an RV, and it felt like my houseon-wheels, rich-American dreams had all come true. I loved going to shopping malls. I marveled at the wonders of Sea World and Six Flags. But we were just tourists. I always came home to Taxco. And my mother and father would always go back to the United States. Since Aris was ten years older than I was, she wasn’t around that much during my formative years. I mostly saw her from afar, as this beautiful Barbie doll who seemed to have everything, including lots of friends and suitors, and in whose footsteps I hoped to follow. She was the girl who celebrated her quinceañera, that allimportant Mexican rite of passage on a girl’s fifteenth birthday, at a grand hotel with a party that seemed fit for royalty. Our middle sister, Nay, was the one with whom I spent more time, and even though she was just five years older, Nay took on more of the day-to-day parenting duties in my life. She was the sister who made sure I did my homework and ate my vegetables, even if that meant smacking me to get me to shape up. We ate our dinners at Mama Silvia’s house, where she had a woman who cooked for us. I hated this woman. She was my nemesis. I am certain that she figured out what I didn’t like and cooked that just to torture me. One of the dishes I hated the most was a mushroom cream soup that she made all the time. One day, I finally put my little eightyear-old foot down. “I’m not gonna eat this. I can’t eat this!” I yelled. Nay, who was all of thirteen at the time, gave me her best stern parent voice: “You’re gonna eat that soup, or I’m gonna smack you!” Nay was a bit of a round-faced, chubby kid, and when she got mad, she looked like an angry Hello Kitty. It was really hard for

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me not to laugh. That particular time, I could hear in her voice that she really meant business, but I refused to budge. “I will not eat this soup!” I repeated at the top of my lungs, trying not to laugh at her funny, fuming face. Finally, she stood up. “If you don’t eat this soup, I will smack you for every mushroom you don’t eat.” There were nineteen mushrooms in my soup bowl, and I got a spanking for every single one of them—laughing the entire time, which only made her angrier. “Why are you laughing?” she yelled in exasperation. My stubborn streak bore itself out in other places, too, particularly the classroom, where I always got in trouble for talking too much. I simply didn’t like to keep quiet, and I didn’t understand why my talking was a problem. My teachers said I asked too many questions. How can it be bad to ask questions? I wondered. I got good grades. So what if I caused a little commotion? Why can’t we talk and have fun in the classroom, too? My mother called us on the phone every single night. She told me over and over how important it was for me to do well in school, and to be a good girl, and to be a good Catholic, because that way I would have the opportunity to do whatever I wanted when I was older—opportunities she did not have as a girl whose only way out was to find a husband and have a baby at the age of nineteen. I would listen, and I would try to be good. But as the years went by, I saw less and less of her. The trips home became less frequent, and our trips to America became less frequent, too. Every year my school held a big festival for Mother’s Day, where we would all present our mothers with handmade gifts. My parents vowed to be around for my birthdays and holidays, and they really tried to be there. But one year, when I was eight, my mom couldn’t come for Mother’s Day, and my grandmother was work-

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“Undocumented”

ing, so I wound up being the only kid in class holding a handmade placemat for no one. At the end of the day, as I put the placemat into my backpack, one of my classmates asked me—again—if I was an orphan. “No. My mom lives in the United States,” I said. “And when she comes back, she’s bringing me a lot of presents.” I wasn’t trying to brag, more like justifying why my parents were not around. I was trying to make sense of my own existence—as if maybe it was worth it that my parents weren’t in Mexico because they bought me nice things. I was sure none of these other girls had ever been on a Disney cruise. My mother had enrolled me in etiquette classes so I would know how to behave on the ship, choosing the right forks for dinner, and basically learning not to be rude or offensive in a world outside my own. On the way home from school that day, I asked Nay if we were, in fact, orphans, and I’ll never forget what she told me: “Of course not. We have parents, and we have aunts and uncles who love us. We have Mama Silvia, and we have each other.” Nay didn’t seem to be bothered by the absence of our parents. I wished I could be tough like her. She was the closest thing I had to a parent, and besides a couple of girls at school, and my cousins, she was one of my only true friends. I appreciated her trying to prop me up, but those kids at school punched a hole in me, and the sadness of my parents’ absence flooded in. I tried to console myself with Nay’s words. At the very least, I have Nay, and we have each other, I repeated over and over in my mind. Plus, my parents wouldn’t be in America forever. Construction on our six-story house was nearly completed. I kept telling myself that someday soon all of us would be living together.

My (Underground) American Dream HC F2

Chapter 1

2016-06-20 13:21:44

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