Read Another Day as Emily Online
Authors: Eileen Spinelli
in order.
Next,
Play the piano
.
We don’t have a piano.
I go to Parker’s room.
“Lend me your xylophone.”
He digs it out from his toy box.
I take it back to my room.
I play “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star.”
Over and over.
Dad pokes his head in the doorway.
“Know any other songs, Suzy?
I mean, Emily.
I think we’re just about
twinkled out.”
I roll my eyes, give a loud sigh-groan.
“'Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star’ it is, then,”
says Dad, backing away.
Next it’s Mom who stops by my room.
“I have to drop something off at Dr. Ellis’s.
Want to come with me?”
“I don’t go visiting,” I tell her.
“But I’d appreciate your mailing these
while you’re out.”
I give her the letters I wrote
to Alison and Gilbert.
A few minutes later,
Parker pops by.
It sure isn’t easy
to be a recluse
in this house.
“What do you want?”
I ask.
“I want to visit Ottilie.”
“Who’s Ottilie?”
Parker folds his arms
across his chest.
“Your goldfish, dummy.”
“My goldfish is named Carlo,”
I tell him.
Parker stomps out. “You’re
getting me all mixed up,
Suzy.”
I scream after him:
“I’m Emily!”
He screams back:
“Soooooooozie!”
Mom tells us all to stay out of
the kitchen.
“I’m going to clean and
organize the cupboards.”
“But I was hoping to bake,” I tell her.
“You?” she says. “Or Emily?”
“Mom,” I groan. “I
am
Emily.”
Mom closes her eyes, blows a strand of hair
from her face.
Then she takes her apron off the hook
and drapes it over my head.
“Make way for Emily,” she says,
and leaves the kitchen
to me.
I send Parker
over to Mrs. Harden’s
for her gingerbread recipe.
“And don’t you dare
go anywhere else,” I say.
“I’ll be watching you
from the window.”
Parker comes back
with the recipe
and a letter
from Mrs. Harden.
I tuck the letter
in my pocket.
I’ll read it
after I bake.
But I can’t bake
in this apron.
It was a Christmas gift
from Grandma Fludd.
It’s got a huge cactus
with Christmas lights
all over it.
Emily would never
wear such a
monstrosity.
Her apron would be white.
I dump the cactus.
When the gingerbread is done,
I wrap squares of it
and take them to my room.
“Can I have a piece?” Parker asks.
“Not now,” I tell him.
I close the door.
I read Mrs. Harden’s letter.
Thank you for the lovely rose.
It’s in a vase on the kitchen table,
reminding me of you.
Remember, my dear,
Emily Dickinson did leave her house
on occasion
and walk across the way
to visit her sister-in-law
and dear friend, Susan.
Perhaps I can be
that kind of friend to you.
Come visit.
Anytime.
Fondly,
Mrs. Harden
I do remember.
Emily’s brother, Austin,
married a woman named Susan
(which used to be my name).
Emily could easily slip over
on moonless nights
and not be seen
by anyone.
Maybe on some dark,
moonless night
I will slip over
to Mrs. Harden’s.
But not now—
the sun is still out.
On Sunday morning, Mom asks
if I’m ready for church.
I reply, quoting the first two lines
of an Emily Dickinson poem:
“Some keep the Sabbath going to Church—
I keep it staying at Home.”
Mom looks at her watch.
“You’ve got thirteen minutes.”
I come downstairs
in my long white dress.
Dad gawks at me,
then at Mom.
“She’s wearing
that
?
To church?”
Mom shrugs.
“I’ve seen worse.”
It’s as hard being a recluse
at church
as it is at home.
Everyone in church
is friendly.
A couple people
ask about the dress.
“From the thrift shop,”
I tell them.
They are polite.
They don’t ask
any more questions.
The pastor’s wife says that
I look “quite pretty.”
The custodian asks
if there’s a wedding
he doesn’t know about
on today’s schedule.
He chuckles at
his own humor.
Mom says I can skip
Sunday school
and stay for the sermon,
which I do.
Afterward, I sit in the car
while the rest of the family
heads for the coffee hour.
I see Gilbert and his mom
walking across
the parking lot.
I crouch down so
they won’t notice me.
Finally we go home.
I race to my room,
shut the door,
and flop on the bed.
Who would have thought
being a recluse
could be so
exhausting!
Franky comes over to play
with Parker.
Parker knocks on my door.
I open it a crack.
“What?”
“Can me and Franky have
some gingerbread, Suzy?”
I shut the door.
Parker knocks again.
“I mean some gingerbread,
Emily
?”
“Go stand under my window,” I tell him.
“And wait there.”
I look out
to where Parker
and Franky
are standing—
like I told them—
right below
my window.
I put two
wrapped squares
of gingerbread
in the lidded basket
I found in the attic
and lower it
with a rope.
Parker opens the lid.
Franky grabs
the first piece.
He unwraps it.
He takes a bite.
He spits it out.
“This stinks!”
he calls up to me.
I slam the window shut.
What does a little kid
know about gingerbread,
anyway?
I unwrap a piece
to taste for myself.
It stinks.
I think I forgot
the sugar.
Next on Emily’s list:
Read
.
Easy.
I take down
Jane Eyre
,
a popular novel in the 1800s.
I decide to read aloud
to Ottil—oops—I mean, Carlo.
I haven’t been paying
enough attention to her
lately.
Later in the day,
I realize
I never pulled my basket
back up.
So I do.
It feels a little heavier
than when I lowered it.
I open the lid.
Out pops
a chipmunk!
I’m not usually afraid
of chipmunks.
I think they’re cute.
But when one pops
out at you—
in your bedroom—
it can be terrifying.
I let out a scream.
Dad comes running.
I stand on a chair
and point toward
my desk,
where the thing
darted.
“Chipmunk!” I screech.
Dad gets down on
his hands and knees,