Read Another Day as Emily Online
Authors: Eileen Spinelli
Mom nods. “If you want blue stars.”
“When?” he asks.
“In a couple days.”
“Okay,” he says. “But I’m wearing
this one till then.”
Later, Mom sneaks it off him
when he’s sleeping.
She throws it in the trash can.
Mom gets Mrs. Capra—
a master quilter—
to make the new cape.
“Lots of stars!” says Parker.
“You got it,” says Mrs. Capra.
Next Parker decides he wants
a haircut.
Dad takes him to the barbershop.
Then Mayor Paloma’s assistant calls
with instructions:
“Bring the boy to the mayor’s office
at nine a.m. sharp on the day
of the parade.”
The parade doesn’t start till ten,
but there’s going to be
a brief ceremony first.
Parker will get a medal.
There will be photos with the mayor.
It seems as though
the whole parade
is about Parker.
Oh well—my birthday
is coming up,
and Dad is going to take me
to a Phillies game.
Good seats … hot dogs …
root beer … rally towel …
maybe even an autograph
or two.
On July 15.
At least I’ll be a star
that day.
I’m walking home from Alison’s.
She wanted us to make fancy headbands
to wear in the parade tomorrow.
Suddenly the sky goes dark.
Lightning flashes.
Fat drops of rain fall.
I start to run.
Old newspapers fly past.
A trash-can lid clatters by.
Now it’s pouring, and I’m soaked.
I can’t see ahead.
Through the howling wind, I hear my name.
I move toward the voice—
It’s Mrs. Bagwell standing at her door.
“Hurry, Suzy! Come inside!”
I make it to her doorway.
Then the whole earth shakes.
My ears pop, and it feels like
the end of the world
as Mrs. Bagwell and I leap
into her hall closet
together.
It was not the end of the world.
It was the sixty-five-foot evergreen
in Mrs. Bagwell’s backyard
uprooting and crashing down
just inches from the house.
It was not the end of the world,
but it could have been
for me and Mrs. Bagwell
if the angle of the tree-fall
had been the least bit different.
It could have been
the end.
“I heard about the tree,” he says.
“Are you okay?”
I give him a thumbs-up.
“Thanks to your friend Mrs. Bagwell.”
“So I guess it’s true.” He smiles. “There’s
good in everyone.”
“Where were
you
in the storm?” I ask.
“At home,” he says. “Eating ice cream.”
We both laugh.
We sit there on the porch
just talking,
being.
The trees glisten green.
I’ve never seen
trees so green.
Parker is so wound up
before the parade
that he throws up
his cornflakes.
Twice.
Mom is so excited
about meeting the mayor
that she heads out the door
with two different shoes on.
Alison does my hair
with the fancy hairband.
She keeps saying:
“I can’t believe it! You were
almost crushed to death!
By a Christmas tree!”
A zillion people
drive past Mrs. Bagwell’s
famous fallen evergreen.
Some try to take photos.
Some succeed.
Some she chases off
with her flyswatter.
The parade goes fine
except when
Uncle Sam on stilts
topples over into the crowd
and sprains his ankle.
Oh, and when Paco the Parrot
squawks a stream of
bad words.
It’s an odd sort of day.
Alison blames it on the storm.
“Something’s in the air,” she says.
“I can smell it.”
I give her a look. “I can smell it too.
You’re wearing too much perfume.”
Parker wears his cape
and his medal from the mayor
to church.
Pastor McCleary actually mentions
Parker in his sermon.
All day Parker flashes the medal
in our faces.
He even goes into my room
to show off
to Ottilie.
At the fireworks
Parker struts around our blanket
flashing his medal,
flapping his cape.
Twice Mom tells him
to “please sit down.”
But there’s such a smile
in her voice
he totally ignores her.
I really don’t know
how much more
of this little hero stuff
I can take.
On Tuesday
on the way to Tween Time
Alison is all bubbly with
guess-whos
and guess-whats.
“Guess who
really
stole
Mrs. Bagwell’s ring?”
“Guess what Mrs. Bagwell
is doing
now
?”
“Guess what you and I
are going to do this Friday?”
I hold my hand up. “Whoa!
One guess at a time, please.”
“A crow!” Alison tells me.
She jabs her finger at me and repeats:
“A crow!”
I think Alison is getting goofy.
“Crows steal jewelry?”
“Yes!” she says. “The tree guy
found the ring in a crow’s nest
when he was sawing off the branches
of Mrs. Bagwell’s tree.
There it was all shiny—
couldn’t miss it.”
“And he gave it to Mrs. Bagwell?” I ask.
Alison grins. “Honesty is alive and well
in good old Ridgley.”
“But how—?”
“Seems Mrs. Bagwell was wearing
the ring last spring.
She took it off to pick up a clump
of muddy leaves.
She set it on her patio table.
A crow must have spied it.”
Of course at the bottom
of it all,
I couldn’t care less about
crow, nest, or ring.
“What about poor Gilbert?” I ask.
Alison grins again.
“I’m coming to that.”