Read Serendipity and Me (9781101602805) Online
Authors: Judith Roth
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Serendipity has scrambled eggs
for breakfast
this first morning.
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She is a miracle cure.
I feel well enough for eggs myself.
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Well enough to eat
at the kitchen table with Dad
while we watch Serendipity
nibble near the fridge.
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She pats her eggs like they're
dead mice,
like she wishes
they'd get up and run.
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Then she chomps them down
and licks her bowl.
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Just like you used to. . . .
Remember?
Dad says
his voice holding memories
of high chairs and laughter.
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His hand opens soft
like he's letting
something
go.
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As soon as she's finished eating
Serendipity comes close
and looks skyward at me.
She gazes with such innocenceâ
a baby with one blue
and one green eye.
My brain tells me to leave her there
out of Dad's view.
My heart tells me to pick her up.
I follow my heart.
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Dad stares at the fluffy kitten
washing herself on my lap
and his eyes close.
He crumples his napkin
before he's finished eating
and stands.
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I can tell he's ready
to be tough.
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I can tell he's ready
to break my heart
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by taking her away.
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I start talking
as quick
as I can.
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I called Taylor last night,
I begin
and I tell him how she might
be able to take Serendipity in a week.
That's okay, isn't it?
I ask
We can keep her that long, right?
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Dad's face closes up.
Sara, we talked about this.
The cat goes today.
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But she could have a home.
My voice is squeaking.
I grab at a statistic I read once.
Seventy percent of cats
in shelters
die
, Dad.
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Dad clears his throat.
And what happens if Taylor
can't take her?
It'll be even harder for you
to let her go after a week.
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IâI'll put up posters, too.
The first person who wants her
can have her.
I'll find someoneâshe's so sweet
someone will want her.
Dad,
I croak out the plea,
she needs a family.
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Dad looks like I gutted him
with the word
family.
Or maybe with the word
die.
Now I know what writers mean
when they say
hollow eyes.
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His eyes are like the deep craggy holes
in broken trees
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and they're pointed
right at me.
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I feel my lip start to tremble       again.
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I think he's going to say No.
I think he's going to break my heart
with his own crushed one
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but he puts his hand on his mouth.
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He stands up       I think
so he won't have to look at me.
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Then he kisses the top of my head
like a surrender.
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You're not playing fair, Sara.
He tries for a laugh.
I'll bet you got the flu on purpose.
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He doesn't wait to see if I smile.
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Dad can't say Yes to a cat
but he also didn't say No.
That's as good as a Yes for now.
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My heart starts to lift
until I remember
the dark in his eyes.
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And when Dad leaves the room
it feels like
something left the very air
of the kitchen.
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The smell of eggs
still lingers
but it's an empty smell.
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On the sun-spattered floor
where Serendipity has jumped down
to chase shadows
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there is depth
and texture
and warmth.
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But here in this breathing space
where Dad left
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there is nothing.
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I peek around the corner
and find him at his sad place
staring at the bookshelves
poets ordered by alphabet.
Are we going to church this morning?
I ask softly
just to say something.
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He doesn't turn around.
One more day to recover.
You can go to school tomorrow.
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Then he reaches out his finger
and taps the binding of a slender book
hooks the book and levers it down
like a drawbridge
returning
to its resting place.
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I feel fine now,
I say
wanting to move him
in a different direction
like he's moved the book.
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He takes the book
without looking at me
goes alone into his room
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and shuts the door.
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At first the morning feels as thick
as the terrible Tule fog.
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I can't stand it when Dad is like this.
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He can suck the joy out of a room
in seconds
just by looking mournful.
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Sometimes I want to say
She's dead, Dad.
Get over it.
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But then I remember
I want something soft, too.
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Serendipity changes the air.
She trips and leaps and dodges and twirls
and then falls in my lap to sleep
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her face so sweet and fluffy
her breath a gentle stir.
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She is good for me.
I know that.
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She'd be good for him, too.
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Already this morning
she's made herself at home.
She likes to see where she fits in.
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I follow her as she
squeezes into small boxes
dallies in open drawers
slithers into sacks
cozies herself in closets.
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We play hide-and-seek and I find her
in my boot      in my basket
in my backpack        in my bowl.
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I can pour her like pudding
into any shape of container.
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She spreads out soft like Jell-O.
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She fills up any mold.
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