Read A Girl Named Mister Online
Authors: Nikki Grimes
“Are you deaf?”
My mother’s voice penetrates,
unwelcome,
reaching me easily from downstairs.
“What?”
“Is your homework done?”
she asks.
I trade
Mary, Mary
for my notebook,
and yell down “Soon!”
That’s as close to the truth
as I can manage.
Lucky for me, I’m a good student.
By the time she calls “Lights out,”
I’m done.
I flip the switch.
“Goodnight,” says Mom.
“Goodnight,” I answer.
I place
Mary, Mary
beneath my pillow
and feel a little closer
to God.
Where have I been?
I wake and look around
as if the world is new,
or old.
I can’t tell which,
only that
the fog inside my head
is lifted
and I can think again.
I can see.
Trey was bad for me.
Time to move on.
Off to school.
English lit to study.
Friends to concentrate on.
Volleyball to play.
Pray coach and teachers
don’t call on you.
Got lots of catching up to do.
Long as I can remember,
Seth and me,
we were two peas
in a pod,
exactly alike
in every way.
That’s no longer true
and there’s nothing I can do
to change things back.
We’re in different places now,
like I entered a room
Seth doesn’t have a key to
and the best we can do
is wave through the window.
I just hope one day soon
I’ll figure out how
to crack that window open
an inch or two,
without, you know,
smashing it to bits.
Somewhere between
bites of pepperoni
and a swig of milk,
Seth asks,
“So, what’s with you and Trey?
Are you, you know,
hooking up now?”
I almost choke,
no joke.
Milk sputters
down my chin.
I grab a napkin,
start dabbing away,
my brain on fire
from the fuse
she just lit.
“It was one time, Seth!”
I say, teeth tight.
“One time!
And I’m already sorry.”
“Okay, okay!” says Seth.
“I was—you know—
just wondering.”
I cut my eyes at her.
“Okay!” she says.
“I’ll shut up.”
That is
the smartest thing
she’s said
all day.
All through practice,
Seth snatches looks at me,
as if she’s wondering
what I’m doing here.
I want to yell,
“Virgins aren’t the only ones
who can sing!”
But who am I kidding?
I
do
feel weird being here,
singing about a God
I broke my promise to.
If everybody knew,
maybe they’d ask me to leave,
and maybe I would.
And maybe I should.
“Haven’t seen Sethany
around here much lately,”
says my mom.
“You two get in a fight?”
“No,” I say. “We’re both busy, is all.”
I study the wall
just right of her head,
hoping she doesn’t notice
how adept I’m getting
at avoiding eye contact,
wishing she wasn’t
so dang nosey.
“We broke up, by the way,”
I told Seth over lunch.
She quit munching her sandwich
long enough to look up
to see if I was okay.
I didn’t say anything,
just shrugged my shoulders
in a way that said
Don’t ask.
Not now.
She took the cue,
smiled to let me know
she was relieved,
and finished eating
in silence.
I miss the old days
before I pulled away from church,
when I trusted Seth
with all my secrets,
even face-to-face.
Funny how my fears
weighed half as much back then,
as if telling my best friend
split them in two.
I used to say or do whatever
and never worry
that she’d judge me
or love me less.
If only we could be
that close again.
What if I took a chance
and let her in?
“Here’s the ugly truth,”
I tell Seth after school.
“Trey never really
cared for me.
He just wanted
to add me to his list.”
I ball my fist,
fighting back the tears.
Seth slips an arm around me.
“It’ll be alright,” she chokes out.
“Besides,” she adds,
“he’s not worth the dirt
under your fingernails.
He’s a supercilious, joyless jerk.”
Clearly, Seth’s been
hitting the dictionary again,
which makes me smile
in the middle of my cry,
which is exactly why
I love her.
Later that week,
I finish up an essay for English
as my cell phone rings,
putting a period on my homework
for the night.
It’s Seth, of course,
calling to remind me
about Youth Group Video Night.
“It’ll probably be lame,” she says.
“Ya think? Bet you anything
it’ll be
The Princess Bride
.”
“Again!” we say in unison.
“Come hang with me anyway,”
pleads Sethany.
“We always have a blast.”
“
Escuchame, pero
yo no hablo Ingles
,” I say.
“Girl! Quit it!”
We ping-pong words
back and forth awhile
before I finally say yes.
I can’t help but smile
at the ease of it,
feeling like we’re almost
back to normal.
His heart must be
a light switch,
something he turns on and off
whenever the mood hits,
‘cause here he is,
weeks later,
pressing another girl
up against the hall lockers.
I can’t fly by
fast enough.
What was that line again?
“You’re killing me, girl.
You know I’m falling
in love with you.”
Yeah.
Right.
Color me stupid.
The school library
is suddenly my best friend.
I sneak there
for a quick rendezvous
with
Mary
.
Joseph joins my family
for the evening meal,
the first we have shared
since it happened.
Does it show?
Does my face glow
like the skin of Moses
on Mt. Sinai?
“Shalom, Joseph,” I greet him,
quickly dropping my gaze,
afraid my secret is sealed
in the glint of my eye.
“How was your day?”
“The trek to Sepphoris was grueling
in this midsummer heat,
especially the climb
up that last, steep hill.
But you know, Sepphoris is
our nearest metropolis,
and that is where the work is.
So, I go.” I nod to show
that I am listening,
all the while wondering
why Mother didn’t hear us,
why a man,
righteous as my father,
couldn’t sense
the presence of God
in his own house.
Unless God did not want him to
.
“I worked on cabinets today,”
says Joseph.
“Or should I say
they worked on me.
My muscles scream.
Surely, you must hear them.”
“Poor Joseph,” I tease.
“Maybe I can help.”
Rising from the table,
I plant my strong young hands
onto his stiff old shoulders
and knead the pain away.
“You are an angel,” says Joseph.
I smile to myself, thinking
No. But last night
,
I met one
.
When Mother greeted me
this morning,
my only answer was a nod.
I refuse to speak until sundown,
this one-day vow of silence
the least I can do
to help me focus,
sort truth from wild imagination.
After all, where is the evidence
that my visit from
Gabriel and God
was more than a dream?
The very idea seems
impossible to me now,
that somehow Jehovah
would place
his son in
me
.
Three days have passed,
and life remains common
as birdsong and morning
as I move swiftly through
the market at Sepphoris,
careful to guard my purse
from the sly fingers
of small thieves.
I am here to purchase
fresh coriander and thyme,
but a tumbling mound of
luscious pomegranates
tipping the scales
of a nearby merchant
tempts me to add a few
to my basket.
I reach for one,
only to drop it when I hear
“Gabriel?”
My heart races at the sound.
“Gabriel?”
I spin round to discover
the source of my distraction.
It is a young woman,
not much older than me.
Could it really be?
Does she see the angel too?
I rush toward her,
my mind fumbling for
words to ask that
impossible question.
Two steps away,
my lips part just as
a little boy darts
from behind a market stall.
“Gabriel,” she scolds, “how often
must I tell you not to run from me
in the marketplace?”
I lower my head and turn away,
feeling foolish.
And yet, I cannot shake the feeling
of that holy presence
in my bedchamber,
nor any longer deny
that the archangel’s voice
still rings in my ear.
Did he not say
he knew of my cousin, Elizabeth?
That Jehovah had visited her too?
Once and for all,
I must learn if it is true.
I head home to pack.
My puny purchases
can wait.
I must journey to Judah.
I must speak with Elizabeth.
Lamech, a servant of Joseph,
joins me, huddling beneath
an acacia tree.
The sun threatens to peel me
like a grape,
and I am grateful for
this circle of shade,
though I would hate
for these deadly thorns
to pierce my skin.
I slide to the ground,
and lean against the trunk,
tensing at the sound
of a lion’s roar
in the distance.
Thankfully,
judging from the direction
of the sound, we are downwind
of his scent.
“Here,” says Lamech,
offering his waterskin
before slaking his own thirst.
I smile at his kindness,
remembering the Bedouin proverb
my father never tired of repeating:
Always take care
of the stranger,
for one day,
you
may be the stranger.
“Learn this wisdom,”
my father said,
“for no one survives alone
in the wilderness.”
“Drink deep,” says Lamech.
“Only a camel travels miles
on a single sip.”
I reach for the waterskin,
and drink my fill.
“Come, Lamech,” I say,
springing to my feet.
“We must not allow this heat
to slacken our pace.
The hills of Judah call to me,
and I wish to see my cousin’s face
by nightfall.”
Zechariah meets us at the gate,
smiling wordlessly.
I assume, as priest,
he has taken a vow of silence,
and think no more of it.
He leads us to the inner court.
Elizabeth welcomes us
with cups of pomegranate juice,
as Lamech and I having been
spotted some distance away.
“Shalom!” Elizabeth calls to us.
As I draw near,
I rehearse what I will say,
what I will ask:
Cousin, what do you know
of angels? Of Gabriel himself?
I have to know!
But, before teeth touch tongue
and my words begin to flow,
Elizabeth declares,
“Blessed are you among women,
and blessed is the fruit of your womb!”
God’s spirit descends on me
like mist, and through my tears
I notice the swell
of Elizabeth’s belly.
Six months with child,
Gabriel had said,
and so it seems.
I drop my cup
and lift my hands to heaven.
“My soul does magnify
the Lord!”
Elizabeth has a word for this
disease churning my stomach
like rancid butter,
for the way my nostrils swell
at the very smell
of warm goat’s milk,
for this faint feeling of floating
miles from lake or ocean swell.
It is a feeling Cousin
has come to know well,
and she calls it
Proof.