Book Read Free

Serendipity and Me (9781101602805)

Page 1

by Roth, Judith




  Serendipity

  &

  Me

  BY

  Judith L. Roth

  Viking

  An Imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.

  Viking

  Published by the Penguin Group

  Penguin Young Readers Group, 345 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.

  Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4P 2Y3

  (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.)

  Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

  Penguin Ireland, 25 St Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd)

  Penguin Group (Australia), 250 Camberwell Road, Camberwell, Victoria 3124, Australia

  (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty Ltd)

  Penguin Books India Pvt Ltd, 11 Community Centre, Panchsheel Park, New Delhi—110 017, India

  Penguin Group (NZ), 67 Apollo Drive, Rosedale, Auckland 0632, New Zealand

  (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd.)

  Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank,

  Johannesburg 2196, South Africa

  Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

  First published in the United States of America by Viking, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 2013

  Copyright © Judith L. Roth, 2013

  All rights reserved

  The three poems quoted in Serendipity and Me, “The Look,” “I Shall Not Care,”

  and a section from “A November Night,” come from the collection Love Songs,

  by Sara Teasdale (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1917).

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Roth, Judith L.

  Serendipity and me / by Judith L. Roth.

  p. cm.

  Summary: “Sara and her father start to heal from her mother’s death when a white kitten lands on their doorstep”—Provided by publisher.

  [1. Novels in verse. 2. Grief—Fiction. 3. Loneliness—Fiction. 4. Cats—Fiction. 5. Animals—Infancy—Fiction. 6. Fathers and daughters—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.5.R74Se 2013 [Fic]—dc23 2012014395

  ISBN 978-1-101-60280-5

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

  FOR MARC, in gratitude and love—from that first

  dorm kitty to children, grown, our life together

  has been a blessing. . . .

  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  SERENDIPITY AND ME

  Acknowledgments

  I remember

  my mom quoting

  “The fog comes

  on little cat feet”

  And my dad replying

  “More like big elephant feet”

  because the fog here

  in Central California

  is a dense gray wall

  that bellows in its silence

  Tule

  sounds like toolie

  named for grass

  growing in wetlands

  where this fog forms

  Tule

  sounds like boonies

  like out in the boonies

  where this fog is thickest

  like out in the Tule boonies

  where my mom

  was lost to me

  forever

  It starts as a tickle

  in the back of my throat.

  But I can’t pay attention

  because Mrs. Detweiler

  (the other sixth-grade teacher, not mine)

  is going over prerehearsal notes,

  is saying, Channel your mother, Sara,

  thinking she’s being cute

  because you only channel someone

  who’s dead.

  She doesn’t know, I guess.

  My teacher shoots her a look

  and tells me, Just be gentle

  when you tuck in the Lost Boys. . . .

  Wendy is very nurturing.

  I look down at Miss Conglin from the stage

  and put my hand on my neck

  that feels wider than usual.

  Put my hand on my neck

  where my throat feels

  like it’s swallowing knives

  and wish someone

  was mothering me.

  Today is Monday of our

  last week of rehearsing

  before the performance

  Saturday night.

  Our first day for dress rehearsal. . . .

  I am in a nightgown

  in front of Garrett.

  It is long and thick and white

  and buttoned high on my neck.

  But still . . .

  it is a little embarrassing.

  He sees me blush and says,

  Are you kidding me?

  So you’re in a nightgown—

  I have to wear freaking tights!

  And just like that

  he gets me smiling again.

  He sees the smile and jumps into

  his Peter Pan pose,

  fists on hips

  and chest held high.

  How clever I am! he quotes from his lines.

  And I am about to give him

  a gentle Wendy-bashing

  but I am too tired

  and it’s not the nightgown

  that’s making me feel sleepy.

  My best friend Taylor is offstage

  in her huge sheepdog costume

  and I see Kelli lean over

  and say something to her.

  I can tell Taylor is annoyed

  when she makes

  an elbow-space between them.

  After the scene, I ask her

  What did Kelli say to you?

  She lifts the shaggy dog head

  so she can talk without shouting

  and shakes out her dark hair.

  She said you were dying out here

  that she should have been Wendy

  that you were typecast

  because you’re blonde.

  I sigh. All I can come up with is

  Wendy’s not always a blonde.

  Taylor says, She’s an idiot either way.

  You’re the best one on this stage.

  I wish.

  Right now I almost feel

  like I’m dying out here

  for real.

  By the time rehearsal is over

  my head is pounding

  and my eyes feel dry-as-the-desert

  even though my nose

  has sprung a leak.

  Miss Conglin starts to snap at me

  because I’m taking so long

  getting my stuff together

  then she takes a harder look

  and lays her cool hand

  against my forehead.

  Her mouth twists.
<
br />   Someone coming to pick you up?

  I nod.

  She fingers the studs high on her ear.

  Get some rest, Sara.

  And drink a lot.

  Does your dad keep juice in the house?

  I shrug.

  Miss Conglin pats me on the back.

  See you tomorrow.

  But she doesn’t sound

  like she believes it.

  Tuesday morning. . . .

  In four days I’m supposed to be

  asking Peter Pan

  Boy, why are you crying?

  but my throat is so raw

  I can barely whisper.

  Dad has fixed up the couch in the family room

  with extra pillows

  and the daisy quilt Mom made me

  when I was four.

  I have the remote control

  a glass of juice

  a box of tissues

  and a phone to call Mrs. Whittier

  from next door if I need something.

  I am wishing I could just sleep and not feel

  the head pounding

  heat flashing

  throat stabbing.

  But I hurt too much to sleep.

  And my mind is replaying

  the way Garrett squirms and laughs

  when I sew the shadow

  back on Peter Pan’s foot.

  Who will do that now?

  What if his tickled smile

  is for someone other

  than me?

  I keep seeing that smile.

  Maybe if Mom was here

  I wouldn’t ask her.

  But since she’s not

  I wish I could ask

  Why do I feel this way?

  I can’t talk to Taylor

  because she still

  punches boys in the arms

  like that’s what they’re made for.

  And I can’t talk to Dad

  because he’s Dad.

  Already bad enough Mom can’t

  see me in my first ever play. . . .

  If Mom were here she would

  tuck my stuffed kitty next to me

  watch a movie with me

  keep my juice refilled

  check my temperature

  with her lips

  on my forehead . . .

  explain to me about boys.

  Wednesday—two days into this illness.

  I am still not feeling better.

  Dad had to go to college chapel—

  he was presenting something about

  poetry and spirituality—

  so Mrs. Whittier stayed back.

  She has just come to check on me

  when Dad gets home.

  She leans over to take

  the thermometer from my mouth

  her long silver hair swinging forward.

  She reads the numbers

  and hands Dad the thermometer.

  You might want to call the doctor

  she says quietly.

  She is trying her best not to interfere

  so she can stay in our lives.

  I know this because it’s

  exactly what she told me

  when I asked where she’d been

  lately.

  Dad looks at the thermometer,

  mutters, Still 102,

  and reaches for the phone.

  He pushes my bangs off my forehead

  while he waits for an answer.

  He looks surprised

  by how wet it is.

  My freshmen were supposed to come over

  tomorrow night, he says.

  Looks like I’ll have to reschedule.

  I look out the window

  and across the street

  at the small college campus.

  Some crazy kids are braving the March chill

  and having an early water fight

  between classes.

  I watch a biker duck under

  a stream from a water blaster

  and land in the bushes

  under a girls’ dorm window.

  I should be sad we’ll be missing

  the freshman meeting

  the only time our house

  has life in it.

  But right now I

  just don’t care.

  The quick strep test—

  the one where you

  sit outside the doctor’s lab

  and feel like a germ factory

  and gag on the swab

  the nurse sticks down your throat—

  comes back negative

  which means it’s a virus

  and there’s nothing they can do for me

  and I have to just get through it.

  Miss Conglin calls

  to ask how I’m doing.

  Dad tells her I won’t be in school

  for at least another day

  that I’m really not doing well

  and I’m motioning for him to

  stop talking

  stop making her think

  I won’t be ready for the play

  and he doesn’t get it

  thinks I want to talk to her

  hands me the phone.

  Sara?

  I can hear music in the background

  something with a heavy beat.

  Sara? How are you?

  I want to say, Horrible.

  I want to say, Ready to perform.

  I want to say, Please don’t replace me.

  I can still be Wendy.

  I can still fly

  second to the right

  and straight on till morning.

  What I say is Fine.

  It comes out a whisper.

  It comes out a scratch.

  Oh, sweetie, Miss Conglin says.

  Get better.

  I’ll send Taylor over

  with your makeup work.

  But we both know

  schoolwork

  is not the real issue

  here.

  If I get well in time

  I will be the perfect Wendy.

  I will be so nurturing

  the Lost Boys will miss their mothers.

  John and Michael

  will forget I’m only their sister.

  I will even help Peter Pan

  grow up gracefully.

  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.

  If I get well in time

  I will be the best mother.

  Even though

  I don’t have anyone

  anymore

  to show me

  how.

  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.

  I look up at her through puffy eyes.

  What’s happening at rehearsal?

  Taylor softens her

  force-field-against-germs attitude.

  Miss Conglin put in Kelli for now.

  Is she
any good?

  Taylor shrugs.

  She knows the part.

  I decide to ask Taylor something

  I’m not sure she’d even notice.

  Is, um . . . does Garrett

  still act goofy?

  Taylor rolls her eyes.

  He’s always a goof.

  Kelli laughs her head off at him.

  Just what I was afraid of.

  It is time for drastic measures.

  I need to get well now

  so I can make it

  to the last practice tomorrow.

  It used to be our nightly ritual.

  Mom and Dad would come to my room

  at bedtime

  and we’d pray together.

  After Mom died

  things were so confused for a while

  and then one night

  I asked Dad to come pray again.

  He stood in the doorway for a minute

  then sat on the edge of my bed.

  You start, he said.

  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.

 

‹ Prev