Read Another Day as Emily Online
Authors: Eileen Spinelli
It’s almost dark.
Mom comes upstairs.
She tells me that she and Dad
are going over to Mrs. Harden’s
to fix a leak in her kitchen.
I’m in charge of Parker.
I make sure he gets into his pj’s
and brushes his teeth.
I ask if he’d like me to
read him a story.
“No,” he says. “I want Tickle Monster.”
“Then good night,” I say.
Parker wails. “I want Tickle Monster!”
“Good night,” I say again.
“It’s not
good
,“ he sniffles.
“It’s a
poopy
night and it’s all
your
fault!”
I wake up thinking about
Tween Time
and wonder if Alison
will go without me.
She only joined
in the first place
because I coaxed her.
Whatever.
Who cares.
Dad is acting
mostly normal.
Not mad like yesterday.
I ask him if he’ll deliver
a letter to Ms. Mott
on his way to work.
He says yes.
But he doesn’t tweak my cheek
or try to tell me some
post-office trivia
from back in the day.
Who cares.
I check the porch basket.
No letters for me.
I hear Gilbert whistling
as he passes my house.
Parker is going
with Franky and
his family
to the pretzel factory.
Who cares.
I feed Carlo.
I make my bed.
I sit by the window
and look out.
Then back to Emily’s list:
Care for sick mother
.
Mom is sitting
at the kitchen table
with her coffee
and her nose in a book.
“How are you feeling today?”
I ask.
She looks up. “I’m fine. But
thanks for asking.”
“You look a little pale,” I tell her.
She smiles. “No makeup yet.”
“How about a nice cup of tea
to perk you up?” I say.
Mom lifts her coffee mug. “I’ve got this.”
“Are your shoulders stiff?” I ask.
“Would you like a shoulder massage?”
“Can I take a rain check on that?” Mom asks.
“As soon as I finish this page
I have to call Dr. Ellis.”
“Sure,” I say.
“Great,” says Mom.
I pat her on the back.
“Feel better soon.”
And I head to my room.
Emily Dickinson seemed to enjoy
playing with her dog, Carlo.
Not surprising—since you can
actually do stuff with a dog:
Teach it tricks.
Take it for a walk.
Play fetch
or tug-of-war.
Groom it.
Pet it.
Enter it in shows.
Even volunteer it
for work in schools
or nursing homes.
Try doing any of that
with a goldfish.
Listen to the crickets
.
Well, I can’t do that now.
It’s only 9:30 a.m.
I go back to
Read
.
I pick up
Emma
by Jane Austen.
I remember how much
I liked the miniseries.
No TV for me anymore,
though.
Ah well—don’t grown-ups
always say
the book is better?
I read.
All.
Morning.
Long.
I decide
not to wait
until noon
for lunch.
At 11:49
I hear something.
Visitors?
I peek downstairs.
It’s just Mom
dusting the living room.
“Emily Dickinson
hated to dust,” I tell her.
“Hmmmm,” says Mom.
“I think I’ll get some lunch,”
I say.
Silence—except for
the swish of the dust cloth.
“Anything good
in the fridge?” I ask.
“Pasta salad.”
“You think Emily Dickinson
ate pasta salad?”
Mom stops dusting.
She gives me a look.
I know that look.
“Pasta salad it is,” I say.
I eat by myself.
Then it’s back to my room.
I tell Carlo about Dad and how
he hardly spoke to me at breakfast.
And now Mom—all grumpy.
And Alison—some friend she turned out to be.
“What is wrong with people?” I say.
Carlo swims into her underwater castle.
No comment.
Emily wrote a lot about
the stuff around her.
The garden.
A bird outside her window.
A clock.
A fly.
She also wrote a lot about
death.
I guess I’ll stick to
the stuff around me.
Here goes …
Here’s to my goldfish,
my desk, and my chair.
Here’s to the sneakers
I no longer wear.
Here’s to a hair clip,
a comb, and a mug.
Here’s to the fly
that is dead
on the rug.
I guess it’s all part of being
a poet—
this death stuff.
Even without meaning to
I got it into my poem.
I have a title for another
death poem.
How about
“Bored to Death”?
Except
I’m too bored
to write it.
Time is a worm.
It crawls.
How did Emily
stand it?
I’m ready to
wimp out,
crack up,
give in,
and go back to being
plain old Suzy.
Then Mom comes up
to my room.
Mom tells me that
the Capras
have invited
all the neighbors over
for lasagna
and homemade
ice cream.
“And live music,”
she says.
Mr. Capra’s nephew
is bringing his guitar.
I shrug.
“Sounds like fun,”
says Mom.
“I can’t go,” I tell her.
Mom throws her hands up
into the air.
“Of course you can go.”
“I’m Emily,” I remind her.
“I stay home.”
Mom takes a deep breath.
I wait for her to coax
just a little.
But she doesn’t.
She simply says,
“Suit yourself.”
And goes out the door.
Mrs. Capra sends Dad home
with a plate for me:
lasagna, salad, and bread.
Also a small container of
strawberry ice cream.
I wait for Dad to coax me
to come over.
One teeny-tiny coax
and I might topple.
But Parker is with him,
yanking at his shirt.
“Let’s go, Daddy.
We’re missing all the fun!”
I take a couple bites
of lasagna.
And a spoonful of ice cream.
But I’m not hungry.
Music and laughter
spill across the air
into my window.
I slip into my nightie,
into my bed.
I pull the sheet
over my head.
Still the happy sounds.
But do you think
anyone,
anyone at all,
is asking,
“Where’s Suzy?—
I mean, where’s Emily?”
Ha!
Fat chance of that.
My heart feels like an egg
that has cracked—
sad is seeping out of me.
A tear is rolling down my cheek.
But who cares?