Book Read Free

Macy McMillan and the Rainbow Goddess

Page 6

by Shari Green


  fingerspelling firecrackers.

  “My, but we had wonderful

  adventures.”

  Firecrackers?

  “We were bold

  cheerful

  adventurous.”

  She points

  at one of the women

  says, “That’s me.”

  A sadness comes over her then

  settling on her like heavy rain

  weighing down

  a fawn lily.

  Iris decides she’s not up to sorting

  so I slip away

  return to Anne

  and my window seat.

  The empty spot feels raw

  gnawing

  at my insides.

  After school the next day

  I return to Iris’s.

  She sets a handwritten page

  before me

  hands me lemonade

  offers cookies dusted

  in cinnamon-sugar.

  “Snickerdoodles,” she tells me.

  You baked again

  I write on the edge of the paper

  ignoring the story

  for a moment.

  I wasn’t sure…after last time.

  “I didn’t think I would,” she says

  “but with this—”

  she taps the oxygen tube

  turns over the story page

  scrawls a note.

  This made me think

  I’d best do what I love doing

  while I’ve got the days left

  to do it.

  Mind you, I don’t leave the kitchen now

  until I’ve triple-checked that the oven’s off.

  I help myself to a cookie

  take a bite

  then write

  below Iris’s note.

  I feel better already.

  “You were sad?”

  Iris asks.

  I nod

  take another bite.

  This helps

  I say

  wondering if snickerdoodles

  have magic cheering-up messages

  baked into them.

  Iris writes

  I’ve found it’s quite difficult to be sad

  while you’re eating a cookie.

  Then she adds

  What’s bothering you?

  I miss my best friend.

  “Ah,” she says

  turning the paper over again

  and tapping a finger

  on her story.

  “I understand.”

  When my sister died

  my friends became family—

  my true saving grace.

  We shared our joys and sorrows

  and loved extravagantly.

  But now, besides me

  only Marjorie is left.

  She lives in Rosewood

  and I visit each Thursday.

  She often doesn’t know me.

  One crisp day last fall

  I took my usual route

  but oh, coming home—

  coming home I lost my way.

  I walked and walked for so long.

  Wrong corners, wrong roads

  wrong shops all along the way.

  I was just like her—

  Marjorie would do the same

  before she moved into care.

  Such terrible fear—

  thought I’d never find my way

  until finally:

  Mr. Henderson’s market—

  something familiar to me.

  He directed me

  to Pemberton Street, and then

  the flaming red leaves

  of my dear old maple tree—

  a beacon to lead me home.

  Each week without fail

  I gather up my courage

  go to visit her—

  bosom friend, true family—

  but it scares me every time.

  I can’t imagine

  being afraid to go see Olivia

  —or worse

  not being able to see her

  because of moving

  sixteen stupid blocks away

  —or even worse than that

  not being friends at all

  because she never forgives me

  for being mean.

  I need

  my best friend.

  Everyone needs

  their best friend.

  Iris visits Marjorie on Thursdays

  —tomorrow.

  I snatch the paper

  flip it over

  write

  I’ll go with you

  and hope

  Mom will say okay.

  Chapter 20

  That night as I’m lying in bed

  I think of Iris

  how her friends

  were her family

  and I think of those flaming leaves

  calling her

  helping her find her way

  almost as if

  they were whispering her story to her

  reminding her

  where home was.

  Suddenly I know what to do

  for my project.

  Leaves

  telling my story

  —leaves for all the people

  who feel like home

  a family tree

  that’s about belonging and love

  and being part of one another’s stories

  a family tree

  that’s not limited

  to actual family.

  I sleep well

  so relieved

  to finally have a plan.

  I bound out of bed

  eager to tell Olivia

  —until I remember

  she’s not talking to me.

  My energy vanishes

  and I trudge to the kitchen

  settle for telling Mom

  instead.

  What kind of leaves?

  she asks

  as I dump cereal into a bowl.

  Paper ones.

  I’ll write on them

  list how each person fits

  on my family tree.

  That’s not quite what Mr. Tanaka

  will be expecting, is it?

  Grr.

  This is why I’d rather be telling Olivia.

  Olivia would love my idea

  and even if she didn’t

  she’d be happy

  I had one.

  I’m about to tell Mom

  I don’t care

  what Mr. Tanaka thinks of it

  when her face brightens

  abruptly.

  Oh!

  she says.

  You can paste them

  on a giant poster-board tree!

  She obviously thinks

  that’s a brilliant idea

  but I shake my head.

  The leaves

  will be pages

  of a book.

  Mom considers this

  nods appreciatively.

  Because they tell a story

  she says.

  Exactly.

  Chapter 21

  Mr. Tanaka needs two students

  to go to the library

  pick up the bin of books

  Ms. Cleary the librarian

  put together for our class study

  of France.

  He sends me

  and Olivia.

  We walk down the hall

  togethe
r but not

  Olivia and me

  until the doorway to the library

  forces us

  closer together

  almost touching.

  Olivia steps back

  lets me go in first

  alone.

  We each take hold

  of one side of the bin

  carry it between us

  down the hallway

  toward our class

  —books

  between us

  stories

  linking us

  like Iris and the bookshop man

  only I couldn’t stand it

  if Olivia and I ended

  the same way

  never seeing one another

  after this chapter

  is over.

  My feet stop moving

  just before we arrive

  at our classroom.

  Olivia has to stop too

  looks at me

  questioning.

  I hold my bin handle with one hand

  sign with the other:

  I’m sorry

  for what I did

  sorry

  for what I said.

  I don’t hate you

  could never hate you.

  I’m sorry.

  Olivia drops her gaze

  stares at the floor tiles

  not answering

  refusing

  to look at me.

  Then her head jerks up

  and she makes a face that says

  yikes!

  tells me Mr. Tanaka just called out

  asked if we were planning to stay out here

  all day

  said they were all waiting

  and I think he means

  they’re waiting

  for us to be friends again

  but really

  they just need the books

  about France.

  Olivia steps toward the door

  tugs the bin along

  tugging me

  but I stand firm.

  Remember going to the library together

  at the beginning

  of second grade?

  Mr. Tanaka came in

  with his sixth-graders

  so big

  so old

  and we pretended

  we weren’t even scared of them

  but we were?

  Olivia laughs

  maybe forgetting for a moment

  that she’s mad.

  I was scared

  she says.

  You were all We’re just as cool

  as they are.

  And now we’re the sixth-graders

  I say.

  I wonder if the little kids

  are afraid of us.

  She glances toward the class

  smile fading.

  We should go in.

  I try once more:

  I miss you.

  You’re supposed to be

  part of my story.

  Olivia’s brow scrunches.

  I circle my fist on my chest

  once more.

  I’m sorry.

  Slowly—so slowly

  it feels like waiting for a sunflower

  to turn toward light

  —she turns her head

  toward me.

  Okay

  she says.

  I’m sorry too

  for saying that thing

  about your dad.

  She pauses.

  Grimaces.

  And for ignoring you

  in Art.

  The book bin suddenly seems lighter

  the hallway brighter.

  Want to come over after school

  to work on our projects?

  she asks

  and I know

  she’s missed me too.

  I want to go—really want to—

  but I think of Iris

  waiting to visit Marjorie.

  Or

  I say

  we could go

  on a field trip.

  Chapter 22

  It’s only a couple of blocks

  —four stops

  along the bus route—

  but these days it’s too far

  for Iris to walk.

  Iris and Olivia and I climb off the bus

  in front of a low building

  with a long row

  of windows.

  We file along a petunia-lined walkway

  pull open the double doors

  step inside

  where an odd mix of smells

  greets us:

  the sharp scent of cleanser

  layered with a softer

  rich

  homey smell

  …banana bread?

  I look across the lounge area on my left

  where a few people relax on couches

  two men in wheelchairs

  work a puzzle at the table

  and I spy the source

  of the good part of the smell.

  A kitchen area

  where two women who must be near Iris’s age

  are clapping

  while a younger man

  lifts a loaf pan above his head

  like an athlete

  hoisting a trophy.

  A nurse stands behind the reception desk.

  When she spots Iris

  she lights up

  bright as the Tweety Birds

  flitting across her scrub top.

  She comes around the desk

  hugs Iris

  shakes hands

  with Olivia and me

  then disappears down a long hallway.

  A couple minutes later

  she’s back

  pushing an old woman

  in a wheelchair.

  Iris grins

  like a kid at the entrance

  to Disneyland

  and I know

  this must be Marjorie.

  The nurse—Natalee—

  parks Marjorie in her wheelchair

  next to a table.

  “Girls,” says Iris

  “this is Marjorie.”

  Marjorie frowns

  —almost a scowl.

  She looks us over

  speaks to Iris.

  Olivia interprets

  as much as she can.

  I don’t know you.

  I’m Iris. We’ve been friends

  a long time.

  Who are these kids?

  New friends of mine—they came

  to meet you.

  Why?

  To hear your stories.

  As it turns out

  Marjorie doesn’t seem to have the words

  to tell her stories.

  Not today.

  Iris fills in the blanks.

  “She was a pilot, you know”

  Iris says

  face turned to me

  so I can see her words.

  A pilot?

  At the moment

  I can’t imagine Marjorie

  steering her wheelchair

  never mind sitting at the controls

  flying a plane.

  I must’ve misunderstood.

  A what?

  I ask.

  Iris carefully forms the letters

  p-i-l-o-t

  and my mouth drops open

  in surprise.

  Reall
y?

  I say.

  Iris nods

  begins telling us more.

  I look to Olivia

  for help

  hope she won’t mind

  interpreting.

  She flew a courier plane

  did some charter work

  for a few years

  at a time when there weren’t many women

  in the job.

  How did you two meet?

  I ask.

  You weren’t…

  I imagine a rainbow goddess

  orange flight uniform

  zipping around real rainbows

  in a jet.

  But no.

  Iris says they met

  at the airport

  but she never wanted to fly planes

  herself.

  Movement catches my eye.

  One of the older women

  in the kitchen

  is doing some kind of dance

  gesturing

  with oven mitts on her hands.

  I turn my gaze back

  to scowling Marjorie

  wonder how she and Iris

  ever became friends

  so different, it seems.

  But maybe they weren’t always

  so different.

  What other stories are hiding

  behind that scowl?

  Later

  as we wait for the bus

  that will carry us home

  Iris starts talking.

  Olivia interprets again.

  That’s where I’m going.

  Rosewood Manor—or as I like to call it

  The Home for People Whose Stories

 

‹ Prev