Read Another Day as Emily Online
Authors: Eileen Spinelli
“Whew!” I say.
“With a dad like that,
no wonder Emily
didn’t want to
leave the house.”
After dinner,
I practice my cackling
on Ottilie.
She hides behind
her sunken treasure chest.
Mom calls upstairs:
“Suzy Q, what’s going on?
Are you laughing or crying?”
“Neither,” I call down.
“I’m cackling.”
There was a time—
not so long ago—
when Mom was actually
interested in me
and would have walked upstairs,
poked her head in my door,
and asked me
why
I was cackling.
Now
she stays downstairs,
all busy baking more Smileys
for Hero Boy.
Before bed,
I choose an Emily Dickinson poem
to read to Ottilie.
It’s the one that begins:
“Ah, Moon—and Star!
You are very far—”
Those are the only two lines
of the poem I understand.
Ottilie swims to the other side
of her tank.
I think she agrees with me.
I tell her to do
what my English teacher,
Mr. Ranft, told us:
“When you don’t understand
the words of a poem,
just let the sounds wash over you.”
Easier for Ottilie since she lives
underwater.
That night I dream
I am Emily Dickinson.
The moon is far.
The stars are twinkling.
I peek at them
through my curtain.
I am wearing a white gown.
I sit at the piano that
is in my room.
I play beautiful
“moosic.”
People from all over Ridgley
gather in the front yard.
Dad goes out on the porch
in his underwear
and thanks them for coming—
“But my daughter
doesn’t receive visitors,”
he says.
Gilbert is in Mrs. Harden’s driveway
on his new bike—
a silver Schwinn Corvette
with black trim.
I go over to admire it.
“Cool,” I say.
Gilbert grins, then says:
“Want to ride bikes over to
Ridgley Park?”
“Darn,” I say. “I can’t.
Alison and I are going to
practice our parts.”
“Parts?”
“We’re auditioning for a play
together.
On Friday.”
Gilbert gives me a thumbs-up.
“Good luck.”
He starts to pedal away,
leaving me alone with the day,
one of those perfect July days:
breeze,
smell of fresh-cut grass,
sky blue as poster paint.
I pull out my own bike,
hop on,
pedal hard.
I catch up with Gilbert in the park.
He and his new bike are leaning against a tree.
“Hey,” I say.
Gilbert looks up. “Hey, Suzy. I thought you
were going to Alison’s.”
“I’ll go later,” I tell him.
I get off my bike and sit on the grass.
Gilbert sits next to me.
“My birthday’s coming up,” I say.
“July fifteenth.”
Gilbert grins. “Thanks for the heads-up.”
I laugh. “I’m not fishing for a card or present.
I’m just saying that my dad’s taking me
to a Phillies game.”
As soon as the words are out of my mouth,
I regret them.
I’m pretty sure Gilbert’s dad
would never take him to a game.
So I’m shocked when Gilbert tells me
his dad took him last fall—
to see the Phillies play the Atlanta Braves.
What pops in my head next is:
I thought your dad had a drinking problem.
Of course I know better than to say
everything
that pops into my head.
Instead I ask: “So—did you get any autographs?”
Gilbert and I sit for a while
pulling blades of grass.
Then I tell him
how annoying it is
when your little brother
is a hero.
And Gilbert tells me
how much he misses
his best friend, Luis,
who is spending the summer
with cousins in New York.
And I tell Gilbert
how nervous I am about
trying out for the play.
And he tells me
how worried he was
that Mrs. Bagwell’s ring
would never turn up.
And I tell him
how much I missed
his whistling.
And he tells me
how much he appreciated
that I never treated him
like a thief.
And we both laugh about
Mrs. Bagwell’s
dreaded green flyswatter.
And then we just sit there
on the grass
not saying much of anything.
When I finally get to Alison’s,
she is hopping mad.
“Where the heck were you?” she growls.
“Riding my bike,” I tell her. “Talking
to Gilbert.”
Alison shoots me a glare.
“I knew it!”
“Big deal,” I say. “I’m only ten minutes late.”
“Ha!” Alison snorts. “Tell that to
the director on Friday.”
“I won’t be late on Friday.”
“Well, if you are,” she says, “you can
kiss this friendship goodbye.”
I give one of Alison’s curls a tug.
“I said I won’t be late.”
“Fine,” she says.
“Fine,” I say.
Alison and I practice our lines.
I try two kinds of cackling.
“Go with the first cackle,”
Alison tells me.
Then she takes a fake bite
of the fake Danish
and fake faints
while I cackle—
over and over
and over again.
Finally
she pronounces us
ready for the audition.
She tells me to go home,
eat protein for dinner,
and get a good night’s sleep.
“Rest my cackle,” I say.
She almost grins.
Mom is in one of her fogs
this afternoon.
She started looking up a recipe
for spinach ravioli
and ended up reading
half the cookbook.
So it’s plain cheese omelets
for supper.
Protein.
Alison will be pleased.
I make my announcement
over dessert.
“I’m going to audition tomorrow.”
Mom’s spooned rice pudding
stops midair.
“Audition?”
“Me and Alison,” I tell her.
“At the Ridgley Community Theater.”
“You never said a word,” says Mom.
“Remember all the cackling?”
Dad’s eyes boggle. “You’re auditioning
to play a chicken?”
Later, Mom asks me what I’m going to wear
for the audition.
I show her Mr. Wilmire’s old black T-shirt.
She wrinkles her nose. “I can do better.”
She pulls a dress from the back of her closet.
It’s satiny black.
Mom sighs. “It’ll never fit again.
You may as well get some use out of it.”
I try it on.
I look more like a witch.
I start to feel more in character.
I start to believe the audition will go well.
I start to imagine what people will say about me
when they hear I’m in a real play.
I go to my room, stand in front of the mirror.
I practice a pose for when
the
Ridgley Post
photographer comes
to take
my
picture.
Alison and I walk into the theater.
She says her stomach is all butterflies.
She says that’s a good thing.
My stomach is more like
crows in a tornado.
Not good.
I quickly run to
the ladies’ room.
A guy in jeans and a tie-dyed shirt
writes down our names and ages.
He tells us where to sit—
row 10 with eight other kids,