Authors: Nikki Grimes
I give in. “Who's there?” “Your friend,
Joe, who's always here for you.”
“Dance with My Father”
spins on the CD player
on my dad's nightstand.
The words seep into me, then
leave my cheeks wet and salty.
Soccer games display
Angela's acrobatics
out on the field, but
there's another game she plays
that we both call Distraction,
and it goes like this:
Dad juggles his ball like a
hot potato, asks,
“Who's up for running passes?”
Angela always rises.
“I could probably
use some extra exercise.”
She winks at meâsign
of our conspiracy. Score!
I slip away, unnoticed.
Mom gets her chess set,
teaches me about
bishops, knights, pawns, then
says, “Football is fine, but this
is exercise for your brain!”
Joe and I stretch the
afternoon practicing chess
long enough to skip
potato-peeling duty.
We save our strength for eating
and being grateful
for roast chicken (at my house)
and glazed ham (at his)
plus mashed potatoes that make
our mouths two caverns of joy.
An extra helping
of Mom's famous peach cobbler
earns me a death glare
from guess who? “I've worked it out,”
says Dad. “Garvey stuffs himself
so he's too slow to
run passes with his old man.”
“Sure, Dad. Whatever.”
That's all kinds of crazy, right?
Maybe I just love cobbler.
I'm on school countdown.
Bring it on! More days with Joe
and fewer with Dad
who's still mad I didn't spend break
practicing serpentine runs.
Turns out, Mom was right.
My brain's beginning to bulge
with brand new muscles.
From now on, for Joe and me,
it's chessâand astronomy.
I lace up new kicks,
smile showing up like hope till
ugly whispers from
last year echo in memory,
scraping that smile from my lips.
I'm armed with earphonesâ
a perfect solution, till
Principal tells me
school rules won't allow them. So,
here I go, nervous, naked.
Too-skinny-for-words
bumps into me on purpose.
“Oops!” he says. “Sorry.
It's kinda hard to squeeze by
since you take up so much space.”
Under the stairwell,
I take a beat, close my eyes,
and hum loud enough
to drown the ordinary
sound of meanness flung my way.
My mirror throws back
reflections of a round boy
whose face looks like mine.
Who is he? And how have I
disappeared inside his skin?
I search through my shirts
for tan, brown, greyâcolors that
can help me sneak past
any rough wall of words I'm
at risk of slamming into.
I need a new plan.
Some dumb kid named Todd
tried to be hilarious.
“Hey, Garvey! See you A-Round.
Get it? A-Round!” Sheesh. Really?
I glare at the stairs,
bare my teeth, and start the climb.
Breathless in ten steps,
I'm late to science, again.
I've come to hate the change bell.
Labor Day saved me.
Seriously. If this week
were one day longer,
I'd find a patch of earth and
pull it up over my head.
My tongue does a dance
when Mom's spicy lasagna
is passed round to me.
“Leave us some, little piggy,”
says Angela with a grin.
Not every cut bleeds,
so maybe Sis doesn't know
how deep the wound goes.
A second heaping serving's
not enough to heal my hurt.
In between big bites,
I hum to the jazz playing
on the radio,
the melody soothing me,
wherever words left splinters.
Joe drops by for our
weekly game of chess, where we
babble on about
nothing in particular,
which can feel pretty perfect.
The family gathers
for the first weekly huddle,
minus me. So what?
By kickoff, I'm knee-deep in
learning how to wrinkle time.
My candy stash gone,
the refrigerator howls
to my hollow stomach, “Come!”
On my way to the kitchen,
I catch Dad, eyes closed, humming.
I can't remember
the last time I heard Dad hum.
His voice shakes the ground,
deep as thunder. Not like mine.
Just one more way we're different.
My mom, dad, and sis
could fit inside my shadow
andâpoofâdisappear.
Whenever I stand near, that's
how it feels. They're all so small.
I could be smaller,
I think,
if I wanted to,
if I really tried
.
I swallow those words with a
tall glass of water, and sleep.
Breakfast is easy:
a cereal bar with nuts.
I figure that should
patch up my hungry spaces
till it's time for the apple
I brought for lunch. Wrong.
My stomach's an angry bowl
of empty. Why'd I
turn down today's menu of
juicy cheeseburgers and fries?
After a quick lunch,
I hit the boy's locker room
five minutes early,
jam on my gym uniform
so no one sees me naked.
Someone's at the door,
Dad's old friend, guitar in hand.
He mentions “the band.”
“No time,” says Dad. “Have fun, though.”
Me, I whisper, “Band? What band?”
I ask him later,
learn the meaning of regret.
Dad's head snaps around.
“Since when do you listen in
on private conversations?”
I thought I'd ask Mom,
but what if she went to Dad?
He'd only get mad.
So I drop it. In minutes,
the memory slips away.
That's what Joe called it,
a sprint down the block and back.
I near cracked a sweat
just contemplating the run.
I huffed, puffed, and crashed halfway.
“You okay, buddy?”
Joe bends over me, all love.
I tuck in my shame
with my shirt, cough up a joke.
“Dang! This was easy on Mars!”
“Well,” I tell myself,
“I've got some homework to do.”
I stagger upstairs,
flip on something with a groove,
and sing my way into math.
Skipped another lunch,
then piled my plate at dinner.
Might as well give up.
Lose one pound, then put on three.
Diets are not helping me.
I flip through pictures
of Dad when he was my age,
laughing while Grandpa
held him in a loose headlock,
close as I wish we could be.
“What was Grandpa like?”
I ask Dad after dinner.
He shrugs. “Strong. Silent.”
“Like you, then. Never talking.”
“He talked some,” says Dad. “Football.
Pigskin, the grid iron,
throws, passes, tackles, touchdownsâ
I guess you could say
football's the way Dad and me
knew how to be together.”
Here, I've been thinking
Dad pushed me to play football
'cause he thought I was
weird, or some kind of weakling.
I had it wrong, all along.
“Dance with My Father”
plays in the kitchen while I
choke on eggs, missing
my right-here dad like Luther
missed his own gone-so-long dad.
Blue notes, sad as me,
wail their way from a classroom
I've never been in.
“Chorus,” says Joe when I ask.
“It's a new club. You should join.
You're always singing,
or at least humming out loud.”
“Yeah, but I don't know.”
“Look,” says Joe, “your voice is choice.
You should let others hear it.”
I know some kids think
chorus is full of sissies.
“Ignore them,” Joe says.
I nod my head but wonder
whether Dad will think that, too.
Chorus. The word sings.
It may not bring me closer
to my dad, but still,
chorus might be a way to
fill in the puzzle of me.
Fear is that flip-flop
in my belly, like when I
tried out for baseball.
All I got for my trouble
was being laughed off the field.
Will this be the same?
What if I open my mouth
and out comesânothing?
Will kids laugh me out the door?
I can't take that anymore.
In a week, Joe asks,
“So, have you joined chorus yet?”
I sigh, turtle in.
“May not be for me,” I say.
“In other words, you're afraid.”
Best thing about friends:
they know you inside and out.
Worst thing about friends:
they know you inside and out.
My turtle shell is useless.
Joe's head hangs heavy,
warning me he's got bad news.
“I switched math class, then
the school switched my lunchtime, too.”
For once, I don't feel hungry.
I groove on Luther,
whose music lives at my house.
“Love Won't Let Me Wait,”
“Endless Love,” “Your Secret Love”â
How many love songs are there?
No thank you. I'll pass.
But somewhere Luther V. said
being true matters.
The words weren't in a song, but
they sound like music to me.
Ignoring my nerves,
I march into the classroom,
squeak out why I've come.
Feeling numb, I take a breath,
tickle that first note, then soar.
My voice skips octaves
like a smooth stone on a lake.
That's what they tell me.
“Well, class,” says the director.
“Guess we found our new tenor.”
I would have skipped home,
but I told myself, “Act cool.”
Couldn't help the grin.
Try wiping it off my face.
Go on! I double dare you!
I float up our stairs,
breeze into Angela's room,
forgetting to knock.
My goofy grin short-circuits
her lecture on privacy.
“Okay. What is it?”
“You'll never guess,” I whisper.
“I just joined chorus!”
Sis bubbles up like soda.
“Great! So why the whispering?”
“You're the only one
I can tell. Except for Joe.
Don't want Dad to know.
Or Mom, because she'd tell him.”
Sis bites her locked lips and nods.
Ask me what scales are.
Yesterday, I'd say, “fish skin.”
Now, I push my voice
to climb a new kind of stair:
do
,
re
,
mi
in F and G.
Paler than skim milk,
a strange boy sits next to me.
I can't help but stare.
“It's called albinism,” he