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The Everafter

Page 12

by Amy Huntley


  Seems like we should just get to be happy. I tell Mom this.

  "Ttmmm . . . " she says. "I can see why you might think

  that'd be nice. Maybe the word pay isn't quite the right

  description of it. I don't think it's an exchange like that. It's

  more that. .. well, the two emotions are connected. They

  are one thing. And in coming together they make each other

  what they are. Without pain, you wouldn't understand happiness.

  And without happiness, you wouldn't feel the pain."

  ""Let's just get rid of all happiness and feel nothing if it

  means we don't have to feel pain," I say.

  "You might find that boring," Mom says as she starts

  opening up all the pockets of my backpack. Then she's

  laughing again and pulling out my new planner. "Here it

  is."

  "You found it!" I shriek, reaching for it in excitement.

  "Just think . . . if you hadn't experienced all those bad

  feelings about losing this, you wouldn't get to feel this way

  right now," Mom says, handing me—

  i.a

  should want to feel that way."

  Right. It's official. My mother is crazy.

  "1 he way you're feeling right now makes you appreciate

  all the good times you have. All the pain of change

  and loss . . . those make you realize how much you love the

  things you have. Emily Dickinson wrote a poem about that,

  you know."

  Oh, please. Emily Dickinson? My mother and her poets

  drive me crazy. None of my friends have parents who run

  around pulling out poetry for every occasion. Shakespeare,

  Dickinson, Frost, E l i o t . . . sometimes I just want to scream

  when Mom starts reading me poetry. I mean, it was okay

  when it was about the cat, the fiddle, and a cow jumping

  over the moon, but now it's all this deep stuff she reads to

  me, and she expects me to connect it to my life.

  I scramble to think of something I can say to distract

  her, but I'm not fast enough. Mom's already saying, "I'll just

  go find that book. . . . " She's on her way out the door.

  Why did I ever ask her for help in the first place?

  I start looking for my planner again, but all too soon

  Mom is back. "Here it is," she says excitedly. "'For each

  ecstatic instant / We must an anguish pay / In keen and

  quivering ratio / To the ecstasy."'

  She looks at me as if I'm supposed to get this. Which I

  don't.

  "See what I mean?" Mom asks.

  •

  Yeah. I get Mom's point now. I think I have ever since I

  started going back to the Daddy-Daughter Dance. The loss

  of that ticket brought pain but also joy.

  The Universe wants me to understand that I do have

  some choices. One of the most important ones is whether

  I accept painful moments and move beyond them. Forcing

  pain out of life isn't always the right choice.

  How come my mother (not to mention Emily Dickinson)

  got to figure all this out while she was still alive?

  I had to be dead to get it.

  *i

  UNCORRECTED E-PROOf—NOT FOR SALE

  witch s nails

  age If

  "I wish I could gee these stupid nails to stay on my fingers,"

  I tell Sandra and her grandmother.

  "Yeah, well, at least you don't have to wear this idiotic

  wig. It feels like I've got a boat balancing up there."

  "And my hat's supposed to be any better?"

  We both break out in laughter. We might be complaining,

  but we can't wait to get out there and trick-or-treat.

  Years of Halloween have already provided us with standard

  procedures regarding candy trades. We both keep all the

  M&M's we get because we love them. But SweeTarts always

  lf.C

  around. She makes marvelous cookies, and she compliments

  Sandra and me at least twenty times a day. She just

  sort of makes me happy to be alive. She's always expected

  me to call her Grandma Belle, too, so I do.

  "I'd look better if these nails would stay on my fingers,"

  I complain.

  Grandma Belle picks one of the long green nails off

  mv linger and examines the cheap adhesive on its back.

  "Hfrmpf" she grunts. "I'M just find us some glue, Madison,

  tor those nails of yours. That'll take care of them. They'll

  stay on when Grandma Belle's finished with them." She

  temporarily sticks the nail back on my finger.

  We hear her rummaging around in the kitchen. I try to

  straighten Sandra's clown wig. It's sliding off to the left, 3nd

  strands of her curlv hair are starting to escape. "How about

  a bobby pin?" I ask. "Mavbe that'll keep it on."

  I'd volunteer to go up and get one out of the bathroom

  for her, but Airs. Simpson is upstairs lying down because—

  of course—she's just not feeling well. Another mystery

  ailment that the doctor can't identify. When I went up there

  to get something ten minutes ago, she emerged from the

  bedroom and said, "My, what a lot of noise you can manage

  to make, Madison." Then she looked me up and down and

  said with a Southern drawl, "What a great witch you are."

  And let me tell you, that wasn't intended as a Halloween

  compliment. Somewhere along the line, Mrs. Simpson

  16.'

  go to Sandra. I hate them so much, I never even ask for a

  trade. Now, Tootsie Rolls, though, I like enough to demand

  an exchange for. I get her Snickers bars for them since Sandra

  hates peanuts.

  We're in the living room showing our costumes to Sandra's

  grandmother before we take off for the evening. She

  hugs us both. "Y'all su re look terrific," she drawls.

  Sandra's grandmother is fantastic. I'm glad, too. With

  the mother Sandra has, she deserves to have—and does

  have—the best grandmother in the world. I just don't get

  it, though. How could this wonderful woman have been

  the parent of Sandra's mother? It's like trying to get your

  min-d around the possibility that Mary Poppina could be the

  mother of Cruella De Vil.

  Grandma Belle, as Sandra calls her (that's short for

  Bellerue, her grandmother's last name), is a true Southern

  lady. The most important thing in her life is her family, and

  she'll do anything to make them happy. [ get to see quite a

  bit of her because Mrs. Simpson is always sick (or at least

  she thinks she is), so Grandma Belle will fly up to Michigan

  and take care of Sandra and Mrs. Simpson whenever her

  daughter complains that she has the littlest headache. Mr.

  Simpson is polite to her, although Sandra thinks her dad

  doesn't actually like having Grandma Belle around quite so

  much.

  I can't see how anyone could not want Grandma Belle

  161

  learned the art ofusinga compliment to deliver underhanded

  insults. She's the queen of it. And she manages to use a tone

  of voice that really lets you know that you're being insulted

  behind words that otherwise seem harmless, even friendly.

  I can still hear Grandma Belle out in the kitchen rummaging

  around for the glue. Then the intercom on the

  phone
buzzes. Grandma Belle drops everything and runs

  upstairs. Her daughter needs her.

  "Forget the nails," Sandra tells me. "Let's just go."

  She hands me a pillowcase for what I hope is going to be

  the mother lode of candy. That's when I notice that another

  one of my green nails has fallen off. "Oh, skunk!" I say.

  "Another one's gone."

  Sandra and I get down on the floor to look for the nail,

  but we can't find it. After a few minutes, I say, "Oh, just

  forget it. Let's go."

  I rip off all the other witch's nails, too, and leave them

  sitting on the coffee table in the living room.

  Maybe Mrs. Simpson will want them for the tinishing

  touches on the costume she should be wearing ever)' day.

  '61

  UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

  Hanw.tCa!|it>A.^SJM!??iA __

  pass to class

  ooe 17

  My arm gets tangled up in the phone cord as I'm trying to

  hang it up.

  Stupid t h i n g . ..

  Stupid school policy, too. Why can't we just use our

  cell phones? It would be so much easier for me to call my

  mother on that than to have to get a pass from a teacher to

  use the office phone....

  Stupid . . . oh, all right. . . stupid me. I wouldn't even

  be making a phone call if I had remembered to bring my

  homework to school. I've just had to listen to Mom drone

  l;i

  on and on about how she was not happy to discover she'd

  have lo leave work, drive home to pick up my homework,

  and bring it back to me . . . all by sixth hour. I'm certain to

  have to listen to more of the same over dinner tonight, too.

  I grunt out my frustration as I pull my arm out of the

  super-long, must-be-ab!e-to-go-anywhere-in-the-office

  phone cord. Vice Principal Patterson's office door opens,

  and the air current whisks my pass right off the counter and

  onto the floor of the forbidden territory lying beyond the

  Great Counter Divide.

  Must have pass to go back to class.

  Must not cross the border into the sovereign territory of

  principals and secretaries.

  Now what?

  Wait.. .why are the cops coming out of Mr. Patterson's

  office? This does not look good.

  Tammy follows the police, and Mr. Patterson brings up

  the rear.

  This looks even worse. Somehow, Tammy's gotten

  caught. The question is, at what? She's done enough illegal

  stuff that it's anyone's guess. But mine is the whole drug

  thing.

  My great deductive skills are confirmed when she catches

  my eye as she walks through the gate separating the Land of

  Office Staff and the Land of Students. Her eyes flash at me

  with something so . . . feral . . . I'm terrified. Maybe she's

  W

  smarter than to threaten my life verbally in front of the

  police, but she communicates effectively with her eyes. The

  message You're dead stabs me with knifelike force.

  I swallow.

  I look away.

  Tammy follows the policeman out of the office, but even

  as the door closes behind them, I can still feel Tammy's eyes

  on me through the glass window between the office and the

  hall. She thinks I've told someone about what I saw in the

  bathroom a few weeks ago.

  "Can I help you?" one of the secretaries asks me.

  Probably not. Unless you're good in hand-to-hand combat.

  Or have a weapon I can use to protect myself. "Ummm,"

  I say, "my pass? It fell onto the floor on that side. I need it

  to get back to class."

  She glances around at the floor. "I don't see it here. Are

  you sure it fell on this side?"

  "Yeah."

  She looks around for a few more seconds and then gives

  up and writes me a new one.

  All in all, I'm glad it's taken a little extra time to clear up

  the pass issue. It's pretty certain that the police have gotten

  Tammy out of the building by now.

  I'd rather not see her at the moment.

  lift

  UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE

  !&HBgSMiMftfefebgg&

  baby doll

  age I

  "Mommy, play now."

  "It's time to go to sleep now, Madison. Lie down. I'll

  cover you up. See the Pooh Bear blanket? He's waiting to

  cover you up."

  "I standing up!"

  "I know you're standing up. Lie down now and go to

  sleep."

  "Play. I play now."

  "No, it's sleepy time now. We'll plav tomorrow. There's

  a good girl. Lie down now. See how nice it is when Pooh

  •i}

  Bear covers you up? I love you, sweetie. I'll see you in the

  morning."

  "Need Baby Sarah Give me Baby."

  "She's right there at the foot of the bed."

  "Give Baby Sarah. I want Baby Sarah. Please give Baby

  me."

  "Here you go. Here's Baby Sarah."

  "Baby Sarah bad. She not eat all dinner."

  "She didn't? You didn't eat all your dinner, either, did

  you? Maybe Baby will be good tonight, though, and go

  right to sleep."

  "Baby no sleep. Baby play. Maddy playing, too."

  "Night-night, Maddy."

  "All gone Mommv. Baby, Mommy all gone. We play

  'gether now. I standing up. Baby. When we ate dinner. Baby

  Sarah cry and said I don't want eat dinner. I don't like carrots.

  Then Daddy ma:l at Maddy and Baby Sarah. Daddy

  said eat. Daddy said ;at carrots 'cause they're good and

  make grow. Like milk. Milk make my grow, too, Baby. But

  my and Baby said no. And Mommy said. Mommy said when

  no cake. Baby make Maddy bad girl.

  "I laying down Baby. We sleep. But Baby Sarah isn't

  sleeping now. Bad Baby. Bad Baby didn't no carrots. Bad

  Babv, time to go sleep, but play instead. Time out, Baby

  Sarah. Time out. Sit :here, Baby. Still playing. Baby. But

  time out. Bad Baby go under bed. Time out.

  "Now, Baby, be good baby. Sleep. Baby sleep . . . 'cause

  my a good g i r l . . ."

  • • •

  ". . . Today I go :o babysitter house . . . Mommy take

  me. But I not cry 'cause. 'Cause—I not cry 'cause Mommy

  come back . . ."

  "How's my sweetie this morning? Time to get up and

  go. We'll have a good breakfast this morning. How about

  some pancakes?"

  "Pancakes yes. My love pancakes. Baby. Where Baby

  Sarah? Baby breakfast too."

  "7 don't knot? where your baby is, Maddy. She was in bed

  with yon last night. I dm't see her. Lei's look under the covers...

  No. She's not there. Behind your pillow? Not there, either. We

  can find her later, swettie. We have to get ready to leave now or

  Mommy will be late fo>' work. Come on. . . . Oh, you're getting

  heavy to carry."

  "Want Baby now . . . want Baby now. Baby can't

  find—"

  Not so freaky as going all the way back to being a baby.

  But still.

  Definitely freakyenough. I mean, it's like I know what's

  happening but also like I don't know what's happening.

  Worth a second try . . .

  ••:'»


  . .. And a third try .. .

  • • •

  . . . I'm not sure what fascinates me about being two

  again. The fee! of that wet diaper in the morning? So not

  that. It's almost enough to keep me from going back there.

  But not quite.

  It must be the way it feels to have Mom pick me up and

  carry me away from my bed. Or the feel of falling, falling,

  falling asleep.

  Traveling back to two is way less disconcerting than

  going back to infancy. I can at least name things while I'm

  two. I think that's why the baby experience disturbed me so

  much. No language there.

  This realization helps me understand how being dead

  now is different than, well, the last time I wasn't alive.

  There had to be such a time, right? I mean, there was a

  time before I was born, and my body wasn't alive then, but

  I must have had a soul, an energy, a something in existence. I

  couldn't have come from, well, nowhere, could 1? According

  to physics, energy is never created or destroyed. I'm a form

  of energy, so I must have existed in some form before life.

  Only, back then I don't think I knew that I existed.

  Because I didn't have language. I guess the reward for having

  gone through a whole lifetime is gaining language.

  Here in //1 still get to use words. Silently only, maybe. But

  I still have them.

  I guess I'm an old soul now.

  Or maybe just not a new one.

  Makes me realize how powerful words are. They have

  some kind of miraculous ability to make me who I am.

  Or was.

  No, am. Because I still have them.

  UNCORRECTED E-PflOOF—NOT IOR SALE

  H^tper Collins Puf>iis_ht.n

  photo in the wind

  age 17

  The scrapbook and folder of pictures is slipping around in

  my arms. Too much stuff. I'm bound to drop it and lose half

  my pictures in this ridiculous wind. I shouEd have accepted

  Gabe's help carrying this stuff into the house.

  Too late now. He's pulling out of the driveway.

  What's that on the front porch? It's right in my way.

  I'm not sure I can manage to step over it while juggling all

  this—

  "Ohmygod!" I scream, dropping everything, I don't

  care what happens co it.

  trickled from her mouth at the end. That same mouth with

  the scratchy sandpaper tongue she used so many times to

  lick ice cream off my lingers.

  "Who'd do this?" I choke out around sobs, pulling away

  from Gabe.

  "No one," Gabe says. "At least not on purpose. It was an

 

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