Read Another Day as Emily Online
Authors: Eileen Spinelli
I head over to Alison’s.
I pass Mrs. Bagwell’s.
Mrs. Bagwell is chasing after something
with her big green flyswatter.
Mrs. Bagwell is always after something—
kids trying to retrieve balls from her yard,
beetles nibbling her roses,
the Kims’ gray cat, Shady.
This time it’s a crow.
I wave. “Good morning, Mrs. Bagwell.”
“Dang crow,” she growls.
When I get to Alison’s,
she is still getting dressed.
She dangles two bracelets under my nose.
“Which one, Sooze—garnet or charm?”
I groan. “Who cares? We’re just going
to the library.”
She rolls her eyes at me. “I repeat—garnet or charm?”
I point to the garnet bracelet.
She scowls. “You’re only saying that because it’s red.
Like the Phillies.”
She flips both bracelets into her jewelry box.
She pulls out a purple beaded one
that matches her nails.
I coaxed Alison into
signing up with me for
Tween Time at the Ridgley Library.
Every Tuesday morning at eleven.
She fought it.
She said she reads enough
during the school year.
I told her: “Tween Time isn’t
just about reading.
It’s crafts too. And games. And field trips.”
Anyway—what’s wrong with reading?
I happen to love it.
It’s in my DNA.
I get it from my mom,
who is totally addicted to books.
Nobody—
I mean
nobody—
loves books
more than Mom.
She breathes books—literally.
She holds them up to her nose,
takes deep whiffs.
“Each book has a scent
all its own,” she says.
“Ink, tree bark, a hint of thyme,
summer-dust.”
Dad pipes up: “Mold!”
He’s remembering when Mom
bought six cartons of books
from someone’s half-flooded basement.
Mom sleeps books.
She keeps one under her pillow.
I’m not kidding.
She got into the habit
when she was a kid.
She used to wake up at night
and read by moonlight.
I won’t be shocked
if one morning
I come down to breakfast
and find Mom
in one of her fogs,
eating a page of a book
with a dollop of strawberry jam.
We tweens, ages ten to twelve,
meet in the Bennett Room
of the Ridgley Library.
One of the librarians—Ms. Mott—
stands in the doorway.
She’s wearing a black bonnet
and a fringed blue shawl.
She’s twirling a parasol
(which is an umbrella for sun).
“Welcome, tweens,” she says,
chirpy as a bird.
Alison gives me a dark look.
“Give it a chance,” I whisper.
There are three other
kids in the room.
Two girls and a boy.
Alison and I don’t know them.
Ms. Mott sighs.
She looks at her watch.
Sighs again.
I think she was hoping for
a bigger crowd.
Finally she closes her parasol.
She smiles
and makes an announcement:
“The theme for Tween Time
this summer is
everyday life in the 1800s.”
Alison slumps in her seat,
hisses at me:
“I hate history!”
“Any questions?” asks Ms. Mott.
No one raises a hand.
I feel bad for her.
So I raise my hand.
“Yes, Suzy?”
“Was there baseball back then?”
Ms. Mott brightens. “Indeed there was.
But the field was smaller.
And players didn’t wear gloves.
And batters were called strikers.
And runs were called aces.”
The boy raises his hand.
“Were there cars?”
“Yes,” says Ms. Mott.
“As a matter of fact, in 1895
there was a total of four cars
in the entire country.”
“Holy cow!” says the boy.
The girl in green asks,
“What did kids do for fun?”
“Simple things,” says Ms. Mott.
“Roller-skating, kite flying,
sledding, checkers, kickball,
hoop rolling.”
“What’s hoop rolling?” asks
the girl with the pigtails.
“You’ll see,” says Ms. Mott.
“We’ll be trying some of these things
in the weeks to come.”
Alison mutters under her breath:
“Whoop-dee-doo.”
By the time we are dismissed,
we’ve learned quite a bit
about the 1800s.
We know that—according to
stagecoach etiquette—
it was considered bad manners
to point out where horrible murders
had been committed.
We know that
some people in the 1800s
made toothpaste out of
honey and pulverized charcoal.
And that tomatoes were
thought to be poisonous.
And that “some pumpkins”
meant “impressive”
or “very good at.”
As we left, Ms. Mott chirped:
“When it comes to paying attention,
you kids are some pumpkins.”
Alison grabs my arm.
“Let’s skedaddle,” she says—
which in 1800s talk means
“Let’s get the heck out of here!”
Dad makes grilled cheese for lunch.
I tell him about the Tween Time theme.
Of course he’s pleased.
He waves his sandwich at me.
He says what I’ve heard
a hundred times before:
“History is life. Its purpose is a better world.”
“I
know
, Dad,” I say.
Parker pipes up: “I know something too!”
“What?”
“Mrs. Bagwell got robbed!”
“You missed it, Suzy,” says Parker.
“Cops came and everything.”