
I was throwing popcorn to some ducks.
Suddenly a pair of legs - human legs - went
flying in front of my face.
"Hey," I said.
"Hey, yourself," said the owner of
the legs. She was a skinny white girl with blonde hair and freckles
- thousands of freckles. Big ears. She was my age. She went to
my school. She hung out with two other girls who always turned
their backs and giggled whenever anybody walked by - or at least,
whenever I walked by.
I don't like to be giggled at.
She stood up straight as if she was trying
to stretch that skinny body until it was thin as a noodle, and
then she turned a handspring - and again, her legs flew in front
of my face.
I said, "Could you do that somewhere else?"
She stood facing me. Then, instead of answering
me, she giggled - and did another handspring.
I said, "I was here first."
"You don't own this pond," she said.
"Although I do see you here practically every day. What are
you doing, anyway?"
"Never mind." I wasn't going to try
to explain to some giggler about how I spent my life. I did spend
a part of most days at the lake: feeding ducks, watching frogs,
talking to dragonflies. I like animals.
She tossed her blonde hair out of her face
and said, "Would you move somewhere else?" Though it
was a request, she spoke with the assurance of someone who was
used to getting her way - because she was a girl. Because she
was blonde. Because some people would think she was cute. "The
moss grows here," she said. "And the ground is so soft."
She bounced up and down on her toes. "It's springy - like
a big mat. So would you please move?"
I felt a twitching on my upper lip. When I
feel that twitching, I smile. People who know me - who've seen
my regular smile - know to watch out for this one. Boone told
me once that it makes me look dead, like a smile that an undertaker
put on my face. It's a warning - if you recognize it.
"No," I said. Of course, I could
have moved. I could throw popcorn to ducks anywhere around the
pond. But I don't like to be pushed. Not by bullies. And not by
skinny girls who giggle at me in school. And now my upper lip
was twitching, and I was showing the undertaker smile, but she
didn't know what it meant.
"Well," she said, "I guess there's
room enough for both of us here."
"No."
She looked at me with surprise. She frowned.
But instead of arguing, she turned three cartwheels in a triangular
pattern that brought her right back in front of me.
She brushed some hair out of her face. "See?
We can share."
"No."
She stared at me, looking partly puzzled and
partly hurt, as if she was wondering, Why are you acting so nasty
to me when I'm so cute? She held her hands up near her head in
preparation for turning another cartwheel or handspring or doubleflip
gymnastics razzledazzle whatever when suddenly an orange dragonfly
- who should have known better - zipped out of nowhere, hovered
for just a moment in front of her face, and landed on her shoulder.
For a split second she looked down at that
dragonfly. And in that split second I was thinking, Maybe she's
all right, after all. Maybe the dragonflies know something I don't
know about her.
"Yech!" she shouted, and she slapped
her shoulder. The dragonfly cracked into slime and fell dead at
her feet. "Ugh," she said, curling her lip. "Ee-uw.
Gross. Now I've got insect guts on my hand." She shook it
in the air.
That's when it happened. I didn't mean to trip
her. I didn't mean to do anything except flip the dead dragonfly
away with the toe of my shoe while ducking my head so she couldn't
see the wetness brimming in my eyes, but all of a sudden she shifted
her feet thisaway just as my leg went thataway, and we both lost
our balance and fell to the ground, and some things are just instinct
- because I was angry, you know, and I've fought with boys plenty
of times who thought they could bully me, and it always came out
the same, with me on top, and here I'd fallen accidentally and
it just . . . well . . . I was sitting on
her.
She flailed her legs. She screamed: "Let
me up, you big fat slob!"
"Promise you'll go away," I said.
"You're just jealous because you can't
do a cartwheel," she shouted. "Because you're too fat."
She was punching me .
"At least I'm not skinny," I said.
"You're flat as a board."
"Don't call me flat!"
"Don't call me fat."
"You are fat. Fat! Fat! Fat!"
"You aren't even blonde," I said.
"You're a fake."
"I am not a fake."
"Your eyebrows are dark. You dyed your
hair."
"I did not. They're just different colors."
She stopped flailing her legs and punching my side. In a hurt
voice, she said, "Don't make fun of the way I look."
"You started it."
"I started it? You tripped me. You're
sitting on me."
"You called me fat."
"Well. You are fat."
I was starting to feel uncomfortable. What
was I doing? How would it look to somebody passing by? I was too
old to be fighting with a girl.
"This is unbearable," she said. "Would
you please let me up?"
"Will you go away?"
"No."
The anger had gone out of me. The dragonfly
was dead. That was that. And as for what she'd said about me -
I wasn't thinking about what she'd said. Instead, I was noticing
what she hadn't said. She'd been angry; she'd said the most awful
thing she could think of to try to hurt me; she was white; I was
black, and she'd called me fat. That's all. Just fat.
I stood up, reached out a hand, and helped
pull her to her feet.
"I'm sorry," I said.
She didn't say anything. She was standing with
her head bowed and her hands on her hips.
"I shouldn't have done that," I said.
She didn't say anything.
"Are you all right?"
She didn't answer.
"Would you please say something?"
Speaking to the ground, she said, "It's
not fair, you know. I can't help it if I'm skinny. I can't help
it if my eyebrows are the wrong color. I can't help it if my ears
are too big and I have too many freckles. You shouldn't say that."
"I didn't say anything about ears and
freckles."
She looked up at me. "You were going to."
"No. I wasn't." What amazed me was,
she didn't think she was cute. I was all wrong about her. I felt
confused. I was looking into her eyes: blue, flashing, like sun
on water. What had we been fighting about, anyway? I felt dizzy.
I said, "I happen to like big ears. And freckles."
She narrowed her eyes. But then she set her
jaw with determination and said, "You lost, you know. You
beat me up, but you lost."
"I didn't beat you up."
"You tripped me. You sat on me."
"I didn't beat you up. I didn't hit you.
Not once. You were hitting me. I bet I didn't even hurt you."
"You hurt my feelings."
"I said I was sorry."
"You fought. And you lost."
She was standing in front of me. She knew she
had just as much right to stand there as I did. Oh yeah - that's
what we'd been fighting about. And she'd proved that I couldn't
intimidate her. I'd lost my temper, and then she'd lost hers,
and we'd shouted some things that now we wished we hadn't said,
and we both were still here. Now I felt bad. I felt guilty. I
felt big and awkward and stupid. I felt like a bully. She was
right. I'd lost.
"Truce?" I said.
She looked me right in the eye. "My name's
Kirsten."
"I know," I said. "My name's
Babcock."
"I know," she said.
It's funny how you can go to the same school,
and some people you get to know and maybe you like them and maybe
you don't, and other people you just know by name, and it can
stay that way for years until suddenly something happens. And
it just happened.
"What made you so mad?" she asked.
"You killed a dragonfly."
"You like bugs?"
"Yes."
She stared at me. She looked me up and down,
from black eyeglasses to red hightop sneakers, as if she'd never
seen me before, as if knowing that I liked "bugs" made
me an entirely different creature.
"Wow," she said.
The way she said that "wow" made
me think that something had just happened, something important.
But I didn't know what.
She took the ends of some of her hairs between
her fingers, rolled them between thumb and index finger, and then
absentmindedly placed the hairs into her mouth and started biting
them.
I'd never seen someone chew on her hair before.
Then she spat it out. "You know,"
she said, and she looked out over the pond, "some people
- and I'm not saying this because I want to call you a name, but
I think you ought to know - some people call you a geek."
Her friends, I thought. Her giggly friends
call me a geek. I gazed at the water, like her. I think at this
point we felt it was easier to talk if we didn't actually look
at each other. Some mallard ducks came swimming toward us from
the middle of the pond.
"But they're wrong," she said. "You're
not a geek. Although you are. . ."
"What?"
"Different. I mean . . . you're
the only kid in school who -you're the only kid I've ever heard
of - maybe you're the only kid in the world - who has only one
name. How come you don't have a first name?"
So I explained, as I always have to. My parents
left the first name blank on my birth certificate because they
had this idea - a goofy idea, they now admit - that I should choose
my own name. Meanwhile, they called me Baby. And then Baba, because
that's what I started saying. And when I finally got old enough
to choose, they found out it was too late to change the birth
certificate.
"But," Kirsten said, "people
could call you a different name even if it isn't on your birth
certificate."
"Yes. But I don't want them to."
"Because you want to be different."
"Because I want to be . . .
who I am."
She furrowed her dark eyebrows. "You are
definitely Babcock," she said. "Babcock and his briefcase."
"It comes in handy."
"Did you bring it here?"
I pointed to it leaning against the trunk of
a willow tree.
"What's in that briefcase, anyway?"
I didn't answer. What I did do, though, was
move my lips and hold out my hand. Dragonfly, dragonfly, come
to me before I die.
Soon, one came. Kirsten didn't move. She watched
in silence as it perched on my fingertip and then flew away. With
her eyes still focused on the disappearing dragonfly, she said
something that caught me by surprise. She asked, "Are you
gifted?"
I shrugged.
She was looking at me now. She said, "I
know your grades are better than mine."
"How do you know?"
"Come on. Everybody knows."
Nothing is secret in this town.
"And," she said, "I see you
reading books all the time."
"So?"
"That's what gifted people do." She
cleared her throat. I think she realized that what she'd said
sounded a little strange. "Actually," she continued,
"my mother says that everyone is gifted in their own way."
She cleared her throat again. "And whatever my special gift
is, it isn't getting A's."
"Maybe it's gymnastics," I said.
"No. It isn't." She threw a pebble
in the water. "I'm sorry I killed your bug. I'm sorry I called
you fat."
"I am fat."
She stood up. "And I am flat,"
she said. "But I'm still hoping something will happen."
"It probably will," I said. "Maybe
in a big way. Maybe it will be your special gift."
She looked startled.
I can't quite believe I said that. I felt myself
blushing, though I don't think she saw it. Of course, it's hard
to tell when I blush.
She stared at me for a moment. And then . . .
I saw it.
She smiled.
A smile that was all freckles and ears. She turned one last handspring. And she ran away. She ran with grace. She ran like a breeze slipping over the grass.
© Copyright 1996 by Joe Cottonwood