Read Another Day as Emily Online
Authors: Eileen Spinelli
peers behind my desk.
“Chipmunk—” he says.
“Here, Chippy … Chippy …”
Chippy doesn’t show.
Dad tells me to go get a bucket.
“Don’t drown the little thing,”
I plead.
“Drown what?” says Mom,
coming into my room.
Parker and Franky follow.
Dad yells: “Close the door!”
I say: “There’s a chipmunk
behind my desk.”
“I want to see!” says Parker.
“Somebody get me a bucket,”
Dad says.
“And a towel too.”
“Chipmunks bite,” says Franky.
“I’ll get the bucket,” I say.
“I’ll get the towel,” says Mom.
“Take the boys with you,” says Dad.
“Don’t get rabies, Mr. Quinn,”
says Franky.
“Out!” says Dad.
I come back to my room
with the bucket,
Mom with the towel.
Dad tells Mom and me
to move the desk
from the wall.
We do.
Dad corners the chipmunk,
which scoots right into
the bucket.
Dad flips the bucket up
and slaps the towel on top.
He goes to stand up
and hits his head on the desk.
He says a bad word.
“I heard that, Daddy,” says Parker,
who is in the hall with Franky.
“Be quiet,” Mom tells him.
Dad takes the bucket
out to the backyard
and sets the chipmunk free.
Dad’s head is bleeding.
Mom pulls him
into the bathroom.
She cleans the wound
with a washcloth.
I hear Dad say,
“I’m running out of
patience with
this Emily thing.”
Mom tells him
to hang on a little longer.
I figure I’d better
smooth things over.
I check my Emily list.
Next is
Make breakfast
.
I can’t wait till morning.
“How about I make supper
tonight,” I say to Mom.
I make ham steaks
with pineapple,
one of Dad’s favorites.
Also green beans.
And for dessert
chocolate-mint ice cream.
Dad has a lump on his head,
but he’s cheery during the meal.
After supper, he gets up. “I’ll
do the dishes.”
I give him a hug. “I’ll do it.
Wash dishes
is next on my list.”
Dad looks at Mom. “List?”
“Don’t ask,” she says, pulling him
into the living room.
On Monday morning,
I
dust
,
then
water plants
.
Mom tweaks my cheek.
“I’m beginning to like
this Emily.”
Parker tugs Mom’s skirt.
“Hey,” he says, “what about me?”
EMILY’S WAY
The phone rings.
Mom hands it to me.
“It’s for you.”
I back away.
“Who is it?”
“Alison.”
“Tell her to write.”
The phone rings again.
Dad tells me, “It’s Alison,
and it’s an emergency.”
This time I take the call.
“What’s the big emergency?”
Alison giggles. “I miss you.”
“Put it in writing,” I say.
“That’s goofy, Sooze. You are
not
Emily Dickinson.”
“I never said I was Emily
Dickinson
.“
“You’re not Emily
anybody
.“
“People change their names all the time.”
“Whatever,” says Alison. “So—want to
go to the dollar store?
They’re having a half-price sale.”
“I don’t go places,” I tell her.
“You went to church.”
“Mom made me.”
“You’re just being goofy.”
“Then don’t call anymore.”
“Maybe I won’t.”
“Fine.”
“Fine.”
Of course she’ll call.
Alison wouldn’t know
what to do
without me.
I’m her best friend
in all the world.
I bet she stops by
to try to trick me
into seeing her.
Any day
now.
No call.
No letter.
No tricky visit.
“Alison must be
sick in bed,”
I tell my goldfish, Carlo.
“With a really,
really bad
summer cold.”
I go into the kitchen.
Mom looks up from
her iced tea.
“Aren’t you hot in that
long dress?” she asks.
“Not at all,” I say,
peeking into the freezer.
“Looking for a Popsicle?”
“No,” I tell her.
“I’m looking for chicken
to make broth
to send to Alison.
She must have a terrible cold.”
“I don’t think so,” Mom says.
“I saw her this morning
at the dollar store.
She looked fine to me.”
I decide to go for a bike ride.
But nowhere does it say
Emily Dickinson ever rode a bike.
I don’t even know if they
were invented back then.
Dad’s in the driveway,
tinkering with a lawn mower.
“Hey, Dad,” I say. “When
were bikes invented?”
Dad loves answering questions
about history.
He sets down his wrench.
“Da Vinci sketched a bike
in 1490,” he tells me.
I brighten. “Ah, so there
were
bikes in Emily Dickinson’s time.”
“Well,” Dad says, “the da Vinci sketch
stayed in his notebook. But there were
bikes in Emily’s day.”
“Yippee!”
Dad goes on. “They were called
boneshakers.
They had huge front wheels.
A person mounted the bike like a horse.”
“Wow!”
“One thing, though.”
“What?”
“Only men rode boneshakers.”
“Oh.”
Mr. Kim comes
up our driveway.
He must be having
lawn-mower problems again.
Before I can scoot away,
he says,
“Hi, Suzy. Nice dress.”
I keep walking.
“Are you in
some kind of show?”
he calls.
I go into the house.
I shut the back door.
Hard.
When Mr. Kim leaves,
Dad comes up to my room.
“You were rude to Mr. Kim,
Suzy.”
“I’m not that name,” I say.
“Mr. Kim doesn’t know a thing about
this phase of yours,” Dad says.
“It’s not a phase. I’m being Emily.”
“Well, your Emily may have been eccentric,
but she wasn’t rude.”
I want to say: How would you know?
You weren’t there.
But I don’t.
Dad leaves.
He closes the door,
not so gently.
I throw my pillow
against the wall.
I mope in my room
for an hour.
No calls.
No notes.
No visitors.
Not even Parker.
I give a sigh.
I check Emily’s list:
Sew
.
Yikes!
I haven’t sewn
since I was six
when Grandma Quinn
from Oregon
helped me make
a pot holder
for Mom.
Then I remember—
my favorite
Phillies shirt
has a rip in the seam.
I was going to ask Mom
to fix it for me
before I turned myself
into Emily,
who only wears
white dresses.
Still—it’s something to sew.
I dig it out of the dresser:
my Phillies shirt.
I almost get weepy—
a relic from
my other life.
I rub it against my cheek.