in a soft blanket. Her squinty eyes and her tiny little lips all smooched up like sheâd been sucking a lemon. How she smelled like warm milk. Baby stuff â she was only a few days old, okay? But what I really remember is what happened when she saw me staring down at her. Her whole face smiled and her little hand came up and tried to grab my nose and that was it, I loved Bean right from that moment and it never changed. No matter what happened, all the bad things later, and me losing my family unit because of her, it never made me love Bean any less.
âSo you were a foundling,â Ryter says. âAnd Bean is your adoptive sister.â
âFoundling?â
âAn old word,â he says, âbut useful. Like you were found on the curb and taken in. Do you have any knowledge of your origins? Your birth mother? Father?â
I shrug like âWho cares?â because it doesnât matter. Nobody wants to claim a spaz boy, thatâs for sure.
âNever mind that part for now,â Ryter says. âTell me more about your sister. Tell me about Bean.â
The thing thatâs really important to understand about Bean is that she only sees the good in people, and never the bad. Because my foster dad, I suppose heâs basically okay, but heâs got this bad side, too, and Bean never saw it. Like sheâd erased the idea of âbadâ from her mind. So when everything blew up and Charly â thatâs his name, Charly â so when everything blew, and Charly got it fixed in his head that I was growing up dangerous and that somehow Bean might get infected with whatever it was that made me a spaz, Bean never saw it coming.
When Charly finally told me I had to leave, that he was banning me from the family unit, Bean tried to hug me and tell me it couldnât be true, he didnât mean it. Big mistake. Because Charly pulled her off me and smacked her right in the face and called her terrible names, names she didnât even understand, names no one should ever have to hear.
âWhat did Charly think?â Ryter wants to know. âDid he think you and Bean were luvmates?â
âI donât know what he thought,â I say. âIâd never touch Bean that way, not ever. Even if she isnât blood sheâs still my little sister.â
Ryter watches me for a while, like heâs waiting for something to happen, for me to react, maybe. And then when I donât say anything more, he goes, âI wish I could say Iâm surprised by your foster fatherâs reaction. But the prejudice against epileptics is as old as the human race. Do you know the story of Alexander the Great?â
I shake my head.
âRemarkable man,â Ryter says. âHe conquered the world, a long long time ago.â
âYeah,â I go. âSo?â
âHe had epilepsy, too. Many great humans have been epileptic. Itâs as if the brain compensates by increasing intelligence and ambition.â
âYeah, right.â
âThe epilepsy is part of what made you,â he says. âDonât hate it.â
Donât hate the spaz? Is he serious? The spaz is why I lost my family unit. Why I can never see Bean again. Why people run away when it happens. Spaz isnât just a name, itâs a warning. Look out for the spaz boy, he might have a fit and bite you! Heâll infect you! Heâll infect your unborn children! Cast him out. Banish him. Disfavor him.
Cancel him
, they sometimes whisper,
the boy is a monster, a mistake, he never should have been born
.
But Ryter, he doesnât get it. âYou think of it as a curse,â he says. âBut the âcurseâ is also a blessing. If you didnât have it youâd be sticking needles in your brain like all the others. Rotting your mind with probes. Living in a mindprobe instead of real life. Youâd have trouble remembering what happened last week, never mind when you were four