Read Another Day as Emily Online
Authors: Eileen Spinelli
I’m so excited
I keep Ottilie up
half the night
talking.
The phone rings.
Could it be Giselle?
Would she call this early?
Did I get the part?
Mom pokes her head
in my room.
“It’s for you, Suzy Q.”
My heart flaps.
I pick up the phone.
It’s Alison.
She has a question:
“Are we walking
to the library
as Sarah and Emily
or getting changed there?”
Alison and I carry
our outfits to the library.
We get dressed in
the ladies’ room
with the other Tween Time girls.
Besides Sarah
and Emily,
there’s a Florence Nightingale
and an Annie Oakley.
Ms. Mott greets us as
Harriet Tubman.
She carries an old railroad lantern.
The one boy is Chief Joseph.
Ms. Mott asks who wants to go first.
I raise my hand.
Ever since the audition
I’ve been feeling more
confident.
“I’m the poet Emily Dickinson,”
I tell the group.
“I was born on December tenth,
1830.
When I was a young girl,
I did regular stuff.
I went to school and to parties.
I liked to sing and draw
and play the piano.
I wore pretty dresses. All colors.
When I got older,
I stayed in my room more,
writing poems.
If I did go out,
it was only to my garden
or to visit my friend Susan
across the yard.
I helped in the kitchen.
I enjoyed baking.
Sometimes I lowered
gingerbread and other treats
from my window—in a basket—
to the neighborhood kids.
I had a dog, Carlo.
In my later years
I wore only white.
I died on May fifteenth, 1886.
Most of my poems
weren’t published until after
my death.
I’ll read one now.”
“Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul
.
And sings the tune without the words
.
And never stops at all
.
“That’s the first stanza
of the poem called Hope.
I chose this one
because I’ve been
feeling grumpy lately.
But now I’m not.
Now I’ve got hope
perching in my soul.”
Ms. Mott leads
the applause.
Annie Oakley tells
how she was the star
of Buffalo Bill’s
Wild West show.
She pulls out two
cap pistols.
She twirls them
round her fingers.
She points them
at the ceiling.
POP! POP! POP!
I expect
one of the grown-ups
in the library to hiss
SHHHHHHH!
But no one does.
The girl who is dressed as Florence
says she didn’t have much time
to prepare because
they had a house full of
out-of-town company
over the weekend.
She tells us that
Florence Nightingale’s parents
hated the idea
of her becoming a nurse.
And then the girl
opens up
a toy nurse kit
and gives each one of us
a Band-Aid.
Sarah, aka Alison,
glides to the front of the room
like she’s getting an Oscar.
She tells how Sarah Bernhardt bought
her own coffin
and sometimes slept in it
instead of her bed.
She says it helped her
to understand
her tragic roles better.
“Creepy,” says Annie Oakley.
Ms. Mott—as Harriet Tubman—
goes next.
She tells how she escaped
from slavery
and helped others escape
using the Underground Railroad.
She sings a song she loved:
“Swing Low, Sweet Chariot.”
People from other parts
of the library
come and stand in the doorway
listening.
We all get a little teary-eyed
when Chief Joseph says:
“Hear me, my chiefs; I am tired.
My heart is sick and sad.
From where the sun now stands,
I will fight no more forever.”
Ms. Mott passes around
a box of Kleenex.
Alison and I are too anxious
about Giselle’s phone call
to take time to change our clothes.
We wear our 1800s outfits
down the streets of Ridgley.
Some teenagers call out a car window:
“A little early for Halloween!”
After I leave Alison,
I start to run home.
It’s not easy running
in a long dress.
I nearly catch my foot
in the ruffled hem.
Whew! I would not
want to ruin
Mrs. Harden’s mother’s
graduation dress.
So I speed-walk instead.
When I go into the house,
I hear Mom on the phone
saying: “I’ll tell her.”
“Wait!” I yelp. “I’m here.”
But Mom has already
hung up.
The phone call
was
for me—
but it wasn’t Giselle.
It was Alison
asking if I’d gotten
the call yet.
I pull up a chair.
I sit by the phone.
Dad walks past,
pats me on the head,
says: “A watched phone
never rings.”
I stop watching the phone.
It rings before dinner.
It’s Giselle.
She is saying nice things
about the audition.
“You did really well, Suzy.
I especially enjoyed your cackle.
I hope you’ll try out for us again.”
“Again?” I say.
“For another play,” says Giselle.
“Gee, everyone was so good. But
we only needed four kids.
Hard choice. Really hard choice.
I’m sorry.”
My heart crumples.
I go up to the bathroom.
I turn on the tub water full blast
so no one will hear
my stupid sobs.
Mom taps on the bathroom door.
“You okay in there?”
“Uh-huh.”
Somehow she knows
not to ask about the phone call.
She says: “You’re taking a bath?”
“Yeah, I was hot and sweaty.”
“Five minutes till dinner, sweetie.”
“I’m not hungry.”
I’m in bed
reading about Emily Dickinson.
Mom brings me dinner on a tray.
I wave it away.
Mom takes my hand in hers.
“I’m sorry you didn’t get the part,”
she says.
I shrug. “I feel worse for Alison.”
“You do?”
“Yes. She’s the one who wants to be
an actress.”
Mom gives a sigh. “What makes you think
Alison didn’t get the part?”
“We auditioned together,” I said.
“Would Giselle really take one of us