Read Formerly Shark Girl Online
Authors: Kelly Bingham
Right now.
“Your painting is gorgeous,” I tell him.
He grins. “Thanks.” He points toward the display.
“So is yours. Wow. And that round of applause
for you?
Wow.
”
“Yeah, that was a . . . surprise.”
Mr. Musker joins us and puts an arm
around both of us. “There’s my two champs.
Congratulations, both of you. I’m so proud,
and you should be, too.”
“I am,” Josh says.
I agree. “Me, too.”
And now that I’ve had a moment to think it over?
I
am.
That blue ribbon? It means a lot.
The cheers and support of the entire crowd?
That means even more.
When I go to bed that night,
I take out my bucket list.
I won’t accomplish numbers
five, six, and seven.
But I did gain something.
Something more valuable
than first place.
Perspective.
You can’t put a price on that.
However.
Sliding into bed, I have to laugh at myself.
The reality? The
humble
reality?
I wouldn’t have minded gaining perspective
and
a blue ribbon
at the same time.
“I’m seeing someone.”
Mom blurts this out the instant
she walks into the kitchen.
I set down the tray of scones
I’ve pulled from the oven.
“And good morning to you, too, Mom.”
She laughs in a shaky way,
then sits down at the table.
“Sorry. I had to get it out
before I lost my nerve again.”
She sits back and folds her arms.
“You’re not surprised,” she declares.
“How long have you known?”
I turn back to the scones,
biting my lip. “Um. A while?”
“I guess all that working late stuff
gave it away, huh?” she continues,
and with a whoosh of gratitude, I nod.
Mom watches me sit down.
We bask in the scent of cinnamon before
Mom puts a scone on her plate.
“His name is Rich,” she says.
I select a scone, too.
“I like a man with an adjective for a name.”
She sips her coffee. “You’re taking this
better than I imagined.”
“What did you imagine?” I ask.
“Oh . . . panic.
Indignation. Twenty questions.”
If she only knew.
“What does he do?”
I hold out my cup as she pours us both juice.
“He’s a veterinarian, actually,” Mom says.
“From Pasadena. I want you to meet him.”
A veterinarian? A healer, then.
Maybe this guy is good enough for Mom.
I sure hope so.
“Tell me about him,” I say.
Mom beams like Cupid got her.
I have so many questions,
yet I ask none of them.
All these months of wondering,
and waiting, and worrying
about what Mom is doing
and if she’s going to get married
and if my world will turn upside down?
They boil down to this:
fresh scones,
the tick of the clock,
Mabel’s small sticky yawn,
and my mom across the table from me.
A moment of peace
before a hectic day at school.
All of this is going to change
in a few short months.
Not because of a boyfriend.
Not even because of a potential stepfather.
But because.
Because of time
and growing up and moving on
and going to college and building a life
and drawing and painting
and helping and healing
and friends who stay friends
even when time is scarce
and distance is great.
All this time
we’ve had our oars in the water,
all of us, and we’ve been busily paddling
on our own individual little paths.
I never really saw it till now.
And the thing that I suddenly see
that keeps me calm?
The realization that
as much as we’ve been paddling,
we’ve all managed
to hold on to each other.
No matter what the storms,
we’ve held on to each other.
Rachel and I will travel our separate paths.
But we’ll always be Jane and Rachel.
Justin will be Justin, and I will never let him go.
My home, my world, my
comfort zone,
as Rachel says? It’s not a place.
It’s not a frozen moment in time.
It’s inside,
in my heart,
full of the pieces of everyone
I love.
Things will change.
But love won’t.
“If you get married,”
I say to Mom
as we put away our dishes,
“I have one request.”
“What is it?” she asks warily.
“I want to bake the wedding cake.”
She pulls me into a hug.
“It’s a deal.”
Then she kisses me
on the top of the head,
like I’m a small toddler.
“I love you,” she says.
“I love you, too, Mom.”
Dear Jane,
I saw a follow-up story about you in a magazine. I’m so glad to hear that you are well and that you are back in school. I always wondered what happened to you.
Jane — you are a
huge
inspiration to me. I’m an artist, like you. And there was a time in my life when I really struggled with it, with finding my own style, with mastering some of the techniques I wanted to, and with finding acceptance from my family. They like my art. They just don’t like the idea of me doing it for a living.
When I read your follow-up story and found out you were back in school and getting ready to graduate, I said to myself, “If that girl can lose her entire drawing arm and
still
keep working at the things she cares about and
still
keep going with her life without giving up or breaking down, then who am I to complain about anything?”
You’ve given me a fresh perspective, and for that, I thank you. I also wish you the best, as one girl to another, one artist to another, one person to another. Best wishes for a long and happy future.
Your friend,
Quinn
“See you Sunday,” Rachel says
as we walk to our separate buses.
“See you then.”
She pauses.
“Have any plans for tomorrow?”
I think of my date with Max.
At the pool. Which could very well
turn into an even bigger disaster
than last time.
I don’t want to talk about it.
Yet. So I only say,
“Yeah, I do, actually.
I’ll tell you about it later.”
She cocks her head, eyes burning with curiosity.
Anyone else would give me the third degree right now.
But Rachel is not anyone else.
She is Rachel.
And she only says,
“You better.”
Saturday morning.
The whole world is dark
and still.
I tiptoe from the house and
ride my bike to the school.
Lights are on in the pool house.
My flip-flops slap
across the pavement.
Not even the birds are cheeping this early.
Easing open the giant door,
I see Max, already in the water.
He’s swimming.
Cleanly, quietly, cutting through the water
with strong, smooth strokes.
Water slips around him, over him,
like liquid air.
He reaches the end of the lane,
pops up, and removes his goggles,
breathing heavily.
Then he turns and sees me.
A smile lights his face,
and in response,
as if my feet no
longer belong to my body,
I find myself
walking
toward the pool,
toward the water,
toward him.
I stop a few feet away.
Max glides closer.
When he reaches the edge,
we stare at each other, our smiles gone.
I take off my wrap and let it fall.
I have never felt so naked,
standing there in my bathing suit,
with my half-arm,