Read Serendipity and Me (9781101602805) Online
Authors: Judith Roth
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Miss Conglin announces a special treat.
We will watch a DVD this afternoonâ
our production of
Peter Pan
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She's brought popcorn
and pillows for us to sit upon
on the floor.
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This day just keeps getting worse.
Serendipity is in peril
and now I'll have to sit through
that whole painful performance.
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I'm moaning to Taylor at recess
and Kelli hears me.
She swishes by and says
Too bad you missed it, Sara.
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Not too bad for you
I throw back at her.
It's supposed to sound like a joke
but I get my voice wrong.
It sounds like an accusation
like my words are pointing fingers.
I can feel the just-kidding look
fall off my face.
So I say it instead:
I'm just kidding.
Really.
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But I sound like a mean girl.
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Kelli flips back
What's wrong with you?
You won anyway.
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I have no idea what she's talking about.
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I turn to Taylor and she looks
as confused as I do.
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Taylor gets her Harriet-the-Spy look
and says,
I'm on it.
She casually walks over to
a group of Kelli's friends.
She's back in no time.
Remember that note you told me
Garrett gave to Kelli?
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I nod.
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He was answering her do-you-like-me note.
He checked “I like someone else.”
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Hope flares.
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He didn't say,
but they think it's you.
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Maybe this day isn't so bad
after all.
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Garrett sits in the second row of pillows
and there is an empty pillow
in front of him.
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I don't wait for someone else to sit there.
I remember how my mom
made things happen
and I think maybe
I can do that too.
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I try to be casual.
I sit in front of Garrett
like I don't notice he's there.
I can see his straggling foot
out of the corner of my eye.
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I put my hands behind me
like I'm going to lean back
and my fingers brush his shoe.
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He jerks it back.
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I look behind me       grin.
Foot still ticklish?
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And then I see that slow smile come
like a sunrise on a lake.
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Beautiful.
Too bad I have to face forward.
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I decide the best way
to get through this performance
is to imagine myself
in the role.
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I manage it all the way to the end
when Wendy is grown up
and her daughter says of Peter
He does so need a mother.
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And Wendy says,
Yes, I know.
No one knows it so well as I.
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Just then a piece of popcorn
sails over my head
and lands in my lap.
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I look behind me at Garrett
mock-studying the ceiling
with a smile twitching
at the edges of his lips.
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He's underlining the end.
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Because there on the screen
is the whole cast
taking in applause and
holding up a big sign that says
For Sara!
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That image warms me
as I'm walking home from school.
It overlays a cold feeling.
How can I get Dad
to fall in love with Serendipity?
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Maybe I could soften him up.
I try to remember what kinds of things
used to make Dad happy.
I flash on pictures from the box
where we're hiking in Yosemite.
He loved walking through the trees.
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We haven't done any hiking
since Mom died.
We don't even have a car to get us there.
But he does love trees. . . .
I could make him a tree picture.
I could get him a tree seedling.
I could . . . none of this has anything
to do with Serendipity.
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I'm feeling hopeless       until I slip my hands
into my jacket pockets.
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I remember Garrett's quick hands
when my fingers close
around a familiar object.
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A thimble.
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Warm again.
I remember Mom's inscription
about Dadâ
“who makes the world a poem”â
and I think Yes.
I am holding a kiss in my hand.
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I keep the thimble tucked in my palm
to give me strength
when I face Dad inside.
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Dad's bedroom door is open.
His leather bag is gone.
A short note on the kitchen table.
Mrs. Whittier is home
if you need her.
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What I need is Dad here and a miracle.
Serendipity comes running
stretches her paws out toward me
her back end high in the air.
Then she drops loudly on her side
and rolls over to show me her tummy.
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So cute. Â Â Â Â Â Â Dad needs to see this.
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I rub her tummy, then go to my room
to find a nest for the thimble.
I'm trying to think of some special way
to show Garrett how I feel
when I seeâ
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there on my pillow
a stack of papers
in Mom's handwriting.
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More of Mom's poems.
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As I page through them
it strikes me
they're all about cats.
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I pick up the first one to read.
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SONNET FOR A CAT AND HER KITTENS
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The musty-sweet smell of hay is in your
fur, kitty. A hint of where you've hidden
your babes. I know strangers are forbidden
to linger near the sun-dappled nest or
stroke the tiny tender noses before
you allow it, but I've watched your children
tussle in the night. Am I forgiven
if I explain that your son has a roar
like a dragonfly, and your daughters grow
more like you every day? Their faces draw
me; I can't help but climb up to the loft
while you're away and watch them swaying low
in their walk, or curling up on the straw
to sleep. They are my joy; so clean and soft.
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I pick up another one. . . .
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