Read Another Day as Emily Online
Authors: Eileen Spinelli
“Well,” she says, “Mrs. Bagwell was
so embarrassed about accusing Gilbert
that she drove right over
to his home and apologized.”
“Really?” I say.
“Really!
And she told Gilbert
to go to Ernie’s Bike Shop
and choose
any
bike he likes.”
I shake my head.
“Are we talking about
our
Mrs. Bagwell?”
“You bet,” says Alison. “And
my dad heard she is going to
put an ad in the
Ridgley Post
that her misplaced ring
has been found.”
“Sounds like Mrs. Bagwell
is a changed woman,” I say.
Alison snorts. “Not totally.
Earlier, I saw her chasing
the Kims’ cat with her fly swatter.”
When we get to the library,
Ms. Mott waves us through the door.
There’s no time to ask Alison
about what she’s planning for us
on Friday.
Just as well.
It’s probably something
I’m going to hate.
Like getting our nails done.
(Alison’s cousin Tara
likes to practice on us.)
Or making bracelets
with Alison’s bead kit.
Or Alison trying to teach me
her latest hip-hop routine.
Pictures are tacked up
all around the Bennett Room,
pictures of famous people
from the 1800s.
Ms. Mott points to each one:
Abraham Lincoln—president of the United States.
Florence Nightingale—nurse.
Sarah Bernhardt—actress.
Edgar Allan Poe—author.
Harriet Tubman—”conductor” of the Underground Railroad.
Emily Dickinson—poet.
Chief Joseph—chief of the Nez Perce Nation.
Annie Oakley—star of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show.
Frederick Douglass—leader in the abolitionist movement.
Ms. Mott instructs us to choose
the person we’d like to learn more about.
Alison elbows me. “Learn,” she growls.
“What is this? School?”
“Shhh,” I say.
Ms. Mott goes on. “Once you’ve decided,
you may choose a few books from the back table
about that person.”
Alison mock-cheers. “Yippee.”
“And next week,” says Ms. Mott, “we’ll each come
dressed as our favorite, ready to share
what we’ve learned.
Alison leans over and whispers: “Next week
I’m going to be sick with one of those 1800s diseases.
What were they—typhoid fever? Gout?”
But when Ms. Mott asks Alison about her choice,
Alison replies all nice and polite:
“Sarah Bernhardt, Ms. Mott. The actress.”
Ms. Mott pats Alison on the head.
“Why am I not surprised?”
I don’t know what draws me
to Emily Dickinson.
I’m more the Annie Oakley type.
But it’s something about
Emily’s face—
her eyes, I think.
She looks so content.
And her hands—
so graceful and relaxed.
“I’ll be Emily Dickinson,”
I tell Ms. Mott.
Ms. Mott sends me a smile.
“Good choice, Suzy.”
I take three books
about Emily Dickinson
from the table.
When Alison goes
to the ladies’ room,
I skim a few pages.
I read that Emily
had a talent
for the piano.
She called it “moosic.”
As she got older,
she stopped going places.
She even hid from guests
who came to the house.
She carried on her friendships
by letter.
She wore only white dresses.
Not exactly my kind of chick.
On the way home,
all Alison does is
complain.
“No way am I going to read
an entire book
on summer vacation.”
“Just skim it,” I tell her.
She ignores that. Keeps whining.
“And a report!
Is Ms. Mott joking?
That’s homework. Homework! In
July
!”
“You don’t have to give a long report,”
I say. “Just a little something about
your person.”
“Let’s just quit Tween Time.”
“No way,” I tell her. “I like Tween Time.”
Then, to change the subject, I ask:
“So—what’s this about Friday?
What are you and I going to do?”
Her sour face brightens. She claps her hands.
“We’re auditioning for a play!”
The next day,
Alison and I go to
the Ridgley Community Theater.
The sign on the door says:
WANTED:
ACTORS AGES
10
TO 1
3
TO PERFORM IN UPCOMING PLAY
THE FOGGY BOG MURDERS
.
AUDITIONS FRIDAY, JULY
9
I tell Alison: “I can’t audition
for a play.”
“Why not?”
“I wouldn’t know what to do.”
Alison drapes her arm around me.
“I’ll tell you what to do.”
“Besides,” I say, “I don’t want to
be an actress. You do.”
“Maybe you do too,” says Alison.
“You just don’t know it yet.”
We go to Alison’s.
Up in her room
she digs through some papers
and comes up with
the script from
last year’s school play,
Snow White in the Big City
.
Alison played the lead—
Snow White.
I was stage crew.
She plops on the bed
beside me.
“We’ll practice with this,” she says.
“I’ll be Snow White.”
“Of course.”
“You’ll be the witch.”
“Of course.”
So it’s set.
For the audition we will do
a scene from
Snow White in the Big City
.
Alison tucks her blond curls
under the old Snow White wig.
The witchiest thing she can find for me
is an old black T-shirt of her father’s.
There’s a hole under one arm.
We sit back on the bed.
We turn pages to the part where
the witch—posing as a waitress—
tries to get Snow White to order
the poison-apple Danish.
I read my line: “This Danish is delicious.
You must try it, my dear.”
Alison—as herself—screeches: “No! No! No!
You’re supposed to be a
witch
. You sound like
that nice waitress at Daisy Donuts.”
“Well, aren’t I a waitress
and
a witch?”
Alison looks at the ceiling, then back at me.
“You’re mainly a witch. You have to sound like a witch.”
Alison demonstrates. Her voice turns sinister:
“Zees Danish eez dee-lizzious. You muuuzzt try eet.”
She goes on: “Then you cackle. Like this—
HEE-HEE-HEE-HEE-HEE!”
“Do I
have
to cackle?” I ask.
Alison smacks her forehead.
“Yes, you have to cackle.
Witches cackle.
You’re a witch.
You
cackle
.“
Dad likes that I am learning
about Emily Dickinson.
At dinner, he tells a story
about Emily’s father,
Mr. Dickinson—
who left the house
in his underwear one night
and woke the entire
neighborhood
with church bells
so that the people could see
the northern lights.