Read Serendipity and Me (9781101602805) Online
Authors: Judith Roth
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There are probably digital pictures
on Mom's old laptop
but I need pictures I can take in
and our printer's messed up.
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I think I remember a box full of picturesâ
I guess no one around here
was organized enough
for photo albums.
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The box was pretty
with roses on the sides
and it used to sit beside the rocker.
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It's not there now.
Missing, like the silver-framed
family picture.
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No family pictures
on the family room walls.
Unless you count Shakespeare as family.
The kitchen has pictures of strawberries
and blue dishes.
The hall has pictures of paths through woods.
The grown-ups in this family are missing.
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There are just those old pictures of me.
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And a space beside the rocker
and on the mantel
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where a family used to be.
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So now I have another question
to ask Dad
in the quiet of bedtime.
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Not just
Is that the same book
in Mom's fairy tale?
but
Where are the missing pictures?
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I have another question
that will only be asked
in the quiet of my mind:
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If there are no family pictures
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does that mean
there's no family?
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Dad comes out of his study again
this time carrying his laptop.
I found some templates you can use
for the free kitten posters.
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Why is he so eager
to make this house
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emptier?
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By bedtime
I'm so worked up
I almost don't even want
to ask him anything. . . .
Which question do I ask first?
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I cuddle Serendipity
and wait until he comes to say good night.
I wait until he straightens my covers.
I wait until he whisker-kisses my forehead . . .
until he stands at the door
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then I start with the easy one.
Dad, that book you were reading todayâ
what's it about?
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Dad looks at his watch.
It's a book of poems.
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He hesitates at my pointed
And?
That's a long story, Sara.
I'll tell you more about it later,
all right? It's late. . . .
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And now I can't ask
my question about family pictures
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because how could that answer
be a short story?
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Our cottage
is sweet in the daytime
almost like a gingerbread house.
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Blooming vines climb
the outside walls
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but they rustle against my window
in the dark
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and I am afraid
of their shadows
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until
Serendipity appears.
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It is hard
to be afraid of the dark
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when a cat
is standing on your face.
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Dad doesn't have time this morning
to make scrambled eggs.
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He tosses a Pop-Tart at me
clunks down a glass of orange juice
thwaps down a container of yogurt
slides a spoon across the table
before I have a chance to move.
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But what about Serendipity?
I ask.
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He throws his head back
shoots air out of his mouth
then shoves a tiny bowl at me.
Run next door and ask for some cat food
he says.
We'll buy our own this afternoon.
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I tuck my kitty into my sweater
race across wet grass in bare feet
and knock on Mrs. Whittier's door.
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I see our reflection in the window.
I haven't brushed my hair yet
and it's sticking up wildly
like Serendipity's head of fur.
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We are dandelions of the morning.
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Mrs. Whittier opens the door with a laugh
and clasps her hands together.
You have a kitty!
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For now,
I say.
For a little bit, anyway.
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She tilts her head
sets her silver earrings swinging.
She may know more
about my father and cats
than she's ever let on.
You can tell me about it laterâ
aren't you running late for school?
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Yeah,
I say,
but I need some breakfast
for Serendipity.
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Named her already?
She takes the bowl
and when she brings it back
Shojiâher tabbyâis following her
his eyes on the bowl.
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When she gives it to me
she reaches out the other hand
as if to smooth my hair
then draws it back
without touching me.
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May you find a way to keep her, Sara.
Her solid voice has become soft.
If there's anything I can do. . . .
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Miss Conglin looks up from her computer
when I put my papers on her desk.
Good to have you back, Sara
she says with a smile.
Did you understand all the makeup work?
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I nod.
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Did Garrett get the recording to you?
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Yes. Thanks.
I wonder if I should say something more
about the play
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and then three Lost Boys
and Tiger Lily
shove through the door
with their furs and feathers
all ready to be put away
in the costume closet
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and it seems like old news
that has nothing to do with
empty-handed
me.
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I feel the Pan's presence
when he enters the room.
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The performance has
left its mark on him.
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A sixth-grade celebrity.
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The air tingles around him
and when I look his way
he's almost shiny.
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I want to see the smile I saw
at my door.
I want him to smile at me
like when I was his Wendy.
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But I can't even
catch
his
eye.
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