Read Serendipity and Me (9781101602805) Online
Authors: Judith Roth
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If I get well in time
I will be the perfect Wendy.
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I will be so nurturing
the Lost Boys will miss their mothers.
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John and Michael
will forget I'm only their sister.
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I will even help Peter Pan
grow up gracefully.
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This is what I think
when my daisy quilt becomes
too hot to lie under
and then not warm enough
when I'm shaking from chills.
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If I get well in time
I will be the best mother.
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Even though
I don't have anyone
anymore
to show me
how.
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Taylor comes over after school Thursday
her arms full of books.
She dumps them on the floor
beside the couch
and backs away.
All the work,
Tuesday through Thursday.
If we get more tomorrow,
I'll bring it.
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I look up at her through puffy eyes.
What's happening at rehearsal?
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Taylor softens her
force-field-against-germs attitude.
Miss Conglin put in Kelli for now.
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Is she any good?
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Taylor shrugs.
She knows the part.
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I decide to ask Taylor something
I'm not sure she'd even notice.
Is, um . . . does Garrett
still act goofy?
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Taylor rolls her eyes.
He's always a goof.
Kelli laughs her head off at him.
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Just what I was afraid of.
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It is time for drastic measures.
I need to get well now
so I can make it
to the last practice tomorrow.
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It used to be our nightly ritual.
Mom and Dad would come to my room
at bedtime
and we'd pray together.
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After Mom died
things were so confused for a while
and then one night
I asked Dad to come pray again.
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He stood in the doorway for a minute
then sat on the edge of my bed.
You start,
he said.
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But when I prayed
Bless Mommy and Daddy
a sob burst out of him
then he laid his hand on my head
and lurched out of the room.
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I didn't ask again.
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So I ask alone tonight
Please, God.
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I wake up on the couch
to sounds in the kitchen.
Dad?
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Just me,
Mrs. Whittier calls.
Then she steamrollers in
with a steaming bowl.
Hungry?
Here's some chicken bone soup.
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My mind is cloudy with sleep and sickness.
What day is it?
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Friday. Â Â Â Â Â Â I've got ceramics lab at noon
so one of the college girls
will be coming later
to check on you.
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I force my zombie brain to think.
The play's tomorrow.
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Yes.
Her drab pottery work shirt
suits the mood
because
by the sympathy dripping off her face
I can tell I won't be in the play.
It is too late
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and Neverland
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has a whole different meaning
for me now.
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I'm pretty sure Jocelyn
was one of Dad's freshmen
when Mom died.
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Now she's a serious senior.
Majoring in psychology,
she tells me
dark eyes wide with compassion.
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She wants to know how I feel
about everything.
Either I'm too sick to guard my mouth
or she's going to be
really good at this.
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Because I tell her everything
I've been keeping quiet inside me.
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I tell her how much I love
Peter Pan
the play
and how much I like Peter Pan the boy.
I tell her how much I miss my mother
and how my dad's a mess of sadness.
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I tell her how lonely I am
in my own house.
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I lumber off the couch
to show her my room.
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She asks about the cats.
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There are pictures of cats
on every wall
of my pale-pink room.
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Besides my cuddly stuffed kitty,
lions and tigers and cougars
lie helter-skelter on my covers.
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Cat-head slippers peek out
from under the bed.
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Where's your real cat?
Jocelyn asks.
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I don't have one.
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She raises her eyebrows in a question.
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Mom always said, Ask your father
and Dad always said, No.
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She purses her lips and then her look rests
on my book of Mom Tales.
What's this?
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Mom used to make up fairy tales
and write them down for me.
I show her the first page.
This one's about Mom and Dad.
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Beginnings
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Once upon a time there was a magical professor who spun poems around his students. The poems gave his students wings. Sometimes they found themselves hovering in the air as if in a dream. One of his students was a girl named for dreams.
Aislinn was born with a hunger for words. She took to the winged poems like she was created to fly. She drank the words in. She swallowed them whole. And she soared.
Each time Aislinn heard the professor speak, her wings grew stronger and she flew toward paradise. But the spell never lasted. When she left the professor, her wings drooped and she drifted to the ground.
She knew she must keep the professor and his magical words with her forever. So Aislinn decided to cast a spell on him.
Her plan was a web of beauty. She reversed the spell he placed on his class and spun her own poems around him. Aislinn's poems captured his heart and sent his soul soaring with dreams of her. And when he was completely under her spell, Aislinn showed him her own dreams of flying with him forever. She offered him the wings of her soul with a book of Love Songs.
The magical professor took the book. He took the book and read her heart and fell into her soul.
The sweetest spell of all.