Read Serendipity and Me (9781101602805) Online
Authors: Judith Roth
Â
I put the book down
lift Serendipity off my legs
and go to my closet.
Â
I want to see more family pictures
so I can follow where this story went.
How the two of them
became the three of us.
Â
This time I upend the box
and spread the pictures out
like I'm playing with money.
Â
And a patch of orange
catches my eye.
Â
A cat sitting like a little person
on Mom's lap.
Â
Â
Â
I never knew she had a cat.
Â
I look through other pictures in that area
and find a bunch more
of an orange cat
with a tail like a flame.
Â
And pictures of the cat and me
from baby to toddler.
Â
Orange cat touching its nose to mine.
Orange cat leaping into my lap
on the rocking chair.
Orange cat cuddled against my stomach
as we nap on the floor of the den.
Â
No wonder I love cats.
Â
In the last one I find, I'm a tiny baby.
Â
I'm lying on our blue couch
with the cat on the back of it
looking down at me.
Â
I wish I could remember looking up
and seeing that furry face.
Â
I wish I knew why
a cat was okay before
and it's not okay now.
Â
Â
Â
I think Serendipity
slept on my head last night.
I can feel puncture marks
in my scalp
where she kneaded herself
to sleep.
Â
Stayed up way too late
for a Wednesday night
reading most of
Love Songs
and looking at pictures.
Â
Half-asleep
I step on a piece of paper
and almost fall over
trying to unstick it from my foot.
Â
Oh.
Â
It's the paper Dad gave me last night.
I fell asleep and forgot about this.
Â
I should be getting ready for school
Â
but I have to stop and read it.
Â
Â
Â
Â
SMALL DEMANDS
Â
For two days now
the child has appeared
when I've reached the best part of a novel.
She places herself between me and the words
her chubby hand planted on the page
like a bagel with fingers. . . .
The bagel will not be removed.
I try lifting it gently, at first,
then I grasp her wrist
then I pry at her palm
but she quickly frees herself
and slaps her heavy hand back on the resolution.
Â
It will have to wait.
Â
She senses I have given in
and settles sweetly into my lap
pointing to numbers on the page
and reciting them.
She turns pages and asks for words
eyes bright with my attention
fingers light with learning.
Â
Every cat I've owned has refused to budge
from a newspaper spread out on the floor
in front of an anxious reader.
But cats can be shut behind doors.
Â
I have a child.
The story will wait.
Â
She loved me.
Â
I mean, I knew that
and I felt that
and I remembered that.
Â
But here is more evidence
Â
and at the same time
I'm teary with love
I'm angry with Dad.
Â
Why didn't he give this to me sooner?
Â
Why is he so wrapped up
in his stupid grief
Â
that he won't let me
have my own?
Â
Â
Â
I am storming out of my room
with cat pictures
and the poem
when my foot kicks
the
Love Songs
book.
Â
I honestly need to stop
dropping things on the floor.
Â
I pick up the book
and like black-light lit fingerprints
I can see Dad's tenderness
all over it.
Â
The book
melts me
toward Dad.
Â
Less stormy now
I take the pile of artifacts
to the kitchen.
Â
Dad has toasted me a waffle
and cut me a grapefruit
and is heading out the door
with his leather schoolbag
and a backward wave.
Â
Wind out of my sails.
Â
Â
Â
Before I leave for school
I go into Dad's room
with evidence.
I want it to stand out
so I make his bed.
Â
I wonder if I should put the lone pillow
in the middle at the top
even though he still sleeps
only on his own side.
Maybe this is why
he never makes his bed.
Â
I place his pillow on his side
and center a picture
on the pillow.
Â
The picture is of meâ
baby on a blue couch
with a furry guardian angel.
Â
He'll wonder how I got the picture.
Â
I wonder if he'll be mad.
Â
But he'll know
that I know
Â
cats were not always
forbidden.
Â
Â
Â
It seems pointless
to hide the pictures now.
I leave the pile in the middle of my floor
and close my door
against Serendipity
so she can't ruin them.
Â
I have one picture
in my sweatshirt pocket
to have it near me.
Â
It's of me and the orange cat
looking out the front window
along with a reflection of my mom
taking the picture.
Â
I wave good-bye to Serendipity
looking out the same window.
Â
Mrs. Whittier is in her front yard
doing something with flowers.
I jog over to her.
Â
Good morning, Sara!
Â
I know something     Â
I tell her.
I pull out the picture
and show it to her.
But Dad's still not talking.
Â
Mrs. Whittier nods gently.
Â
I turn and head for school.
Â
Â