Monday, February 23, 2009

Ethnic Fusion

Grace halted there, blinking, taking in her newest marketing creation. The sign read, “Don’t stop now, we’re on our way!” and featured two toddlers with building blocks and wide smiles on their slightly olive skinned faces. She admired the interchangeable facial features, the soft roundness of both noses; only the little girl’s eyes slanted slightly more than the boy’s. Grace regained her momentum and noticed her own tan skin and similar features for a brief second in a slanted shop window and slowed her step for another glance. As she reached her front steps she stooped for the plastic wrapped Laudermiami Free Press. She was proud to live in the city named to commemorate the start of her movement even though Fort Lauderdale and Miami no longer existed as habitable places. Since the climate had fluctuated, she no longer minded the East Michigan weather and how appropriate to live in her great-great-great-grandmother, Edi’s city since she was the first pioneer of Ethnic Fusion. Grace kept a framed copy of the famed Detroit Free Press article on her bedside table, Edi’s extremely pale face smiling back at her under the caption, “No Race is a Good Race.”
Grace had studied the 1980s, she knew how radical Edi’s ideas had seemed, how extremist, contrived. Little did Edi know that one day Southern Florida would naturally meld and that the rest of the country would slowly follow with or without her plight or the persecution that followed. Grace had reached her apartment while she was reminiscing.










Year 2136