Read A Girl Named Mister Online
Authors: Nikki Grimes
Two years of engagement
and preparation
are now rolled up
like a scroll.
A night of feasting
is finished, and finally
Joseph and I are led
to the nuptial chamber.
Alone, at last,
my new husband
lights the oil lamp,
then turns his back
while I free myself of my
wedding finery.
I shiver shyly, and hang my head.
None, save God and Gabriel,
have seen me thus.
It was not supposed to be like this,
my belly already swollen,
my body misshapen,
no longer the slender girl
I once was.
How can Joseph bear
to look at me?
Suddenly, all I want to do
is disappear.
“How beautiful you are,”
Joseph whispers,
wishing to ease me, no doubt.
Instead, his words
send more blood rushing
to my cheeks.
Gentle Joseph draws me
to the wedding bed,
but only to hold me.
We will not truly be man and wife
until the life inside of me sees the sun.
Like a wild desert wind,
some days
like this one
my feelings swirl
sudden and angry
for no reason
I can find.
Mother insists
this is normal for
a woman with child,
but I hate it.
I beat the floor
with my broom
and take my anger out
on dust and dirt,
trying to sweep my
momentary rage
out the door before
poor Joseph wanders into
the eye of the storm
that is me.
I have never been
one for tears.
Even as a little girl,
a fall or cut
might make me
bite my lip,
but nothing more.
Now, it seems
tears come easily
and often.
Just last night
I cried myself to sleep.
Joseph tried to comfort me,
but how could he understand
my desperate longing
for the old me,
the one whose belly
was flat enough
to nestle comfortably
on her side
any time she pleased?
I always thought
Mary had it easy,
her knowing all along
God was the one
who wrote her story.
Guess I was wrong.
Turns out
she needed God
as bad as me.
Tears spent,
Mom brings me a cool cloth
to wipe away the evidence.
Between dabs, I notice
her shoulders sagging
from something heavier
than fatigue.
Maybe I shouldn’t have told her,
I think.
Look how it’s weighing her down.
“This year, I’m really twenty-nine,” she says.
I nod, waiting
for the punch line,
wondering what her age
has to do with anything,
wondering what’s worthy
of all her hand-wringing.
“You’re a smart girl,” she says,
glancing up at me briefly,
then looking away.
“Once I told you my real age,
I knew you’d put two and two
together.”
My math skills
are failing me now.
I have no idea
what Mom’s getting at.
Then, without further ado,
she lets the truth fly.
“Mary Rudine,” she whispers,
“I’m twenty-nine now,
which means
I was fourteen
when I had you.”
One word.
That’s all I had breath for.
“What?”
After all these years
of Bible,
of “God said,”
of “wait.”
After coaxing me to do
the silver ring thing
she tells me this?
Not that she sinned,
but that she was
as young as me?
What exactly am I supposed to do
with this piece of information?
So many questions
pounding my mind to mush,
but only one word
makes it to my mouth:
“What?”
“I didn’t want
to give you permission
to be like me,” Mom says.
“To make the same mistake.
It’s a hard life, honey.”
This stranger’s words
build a wall between us.
I’m mad as hell
and I tell her.
Only, once I do
I realize it’s not true.
What I really feel
is robbed.
She stole
the straight-shooter I knew,
left behind this double-talker
who can teach me, what?
How to lie to my kid
when the time comes?
“You know why I told you
the truth now?
So you’d know
I understand what
you’re going through.”
I roll my eyes
and stomp out of the room
for emphasis.
I needed you to be my rock, Mom,
is what I’m thinking,
a hefty boulder that could
bear my weight,
not some small, smooth stone
washed up on
the same shore as me.
One week since Mom’s
big confession,
and I’m still asking
how did I miss the signs?
The way it seemed
she was in school forever,
first high school, then college,
Grandma filling in the blanks
of her absences.
There I was thinking
my mom’s just going back to school
as an adult,
me patting her on the back,
proud that she did it,
proud that she looked young as
all her classmates.
Talk about stupid!
Guess the last laugh’s
on me.
I can’t hate her now.
I need her too much,
especially since
she knows what it takes
to do this mom thing,
to have a kid
when you’re a kid.
It’s not like
they teach this stuff
in school.
She lied to me, yeah.
But it must have been hard,
homework at the table
squeezed in between feeding me,
and running off to work
at night.
I might have noticed, except
she more than made the grade
as mom.
Hardly ever complained,
now that I think about it.
How’d she do that?
Okay, so she lied to me.
So what?
She loved me up one side
and down the other.
Nothing hypocritical
about her hugs,
now was there?
Dead on my feet,
too many nights of no sleep,
and teachers wonder why
I nod off in class.
This forced exile
on my back
is too tough to take.
I daydream about detaching
this protrusion,
setting it on a table
at bedtime.
Jesus, I’m begging you.
Please let me sleep on my side
just one night, Lord.
Just one!
I swear,
I’d do anything you ask.
Try me.
I feel funny
sitting in youth group,
the half moon of my belly
putting space between me
and everybody else.
But that’s okay.
I’d rather sit with Mom anyway,
feeling the cozy blanket
of her love
warming me up
in the pew.
Folks at church
treat me better
than I imagined.
Sure, I get a couple of looks,
but mostly it’s ladies saying,
“We’re praying for you, honey,”
or “Let me know
if there’s something I can do.”
You’d think I grew
a few extra mothers.
Some days,
it’s enough
to make me cry.
I don’t think
it’s their words, exactly.
I don’t know.
Maybe it’s God
reminding me
I’m not as alone
as I thought.
Last night’s news
was a shocker.
A fifteen-year-old girl I know
was killed by a drunk driver.
A drunk driver!
It’s not like I knew her well,
but still.
Our volleyball team
played against her’s
last season.
I can see her now,
standing at the serving line,
alive as
anything.
It’s crazy.
You could be scoring points
for your team one minute,
and the next,
suddenly not
be.
That’s when it hit me:
There are worse things
than being fifteen
and pregnant.
Mom makes sure
I see the doctor
once a month.
“Are you taking your vitamins?”
“Yes.”
“Any spotting?” she asks.
“No.”
“Good! Let’s hear that heartbeat.”
It all gets to be routine,
until she suggests
a sonogram.
No biggie, I tell myself.
She spreads some jelly
on my belly,
hooks me up
to a monitor,
and—voila!
Something moves
on the screen.
Little elbows,
little hands,
little feet,
little toes,
doll-sized head,
perfect mouth,
perfect nose.
It’s a baby!
A real, live baby in there!
A baby!
And it’s mine.
Early Saturday morning,
I speedwalk to the park
bouncing the ball of my belly.
I head straight for the VB court,
then sit on the sidelines
like some old fogey,
and stare at a stranger
serving up what used to be
my game.
I raise my arms
like memory,
imagine I am helping that ball
clear the net.
I never met a volleyball
I didn’t like,
only now, it doesn’t like me.
That’s silly, I know,
but try telling that
to my heart.
At the Saturday matinee,
Sethany and I surrender our tickets
and make a beeline
for the popcorn concession.
With prying eyes sizing up
my supersized belly,
I’d just as soon skip it.
But Sethany says,
“What’s a movie
without popcorn?”
So, I stuff my shame
and feign nonchalance better
than any Oscar-winning actress.
Thankfully, we get in a line
that moves in record time,
and we’re soon enshrined
in the blessed twilight
of the theater, where
for 141 minutes,
plus previews—
I get to be
just another kid
in the dark.
I lay on the dressing table,
wrapped in a thin gown,
and yards of awe.
Obviously,
I’m no stranger
to basic biology,
or human anatomy.
I understand the work
of lung and aorta.
So explain to me
why the sound
of a simple heartbeat
suddenly seems more
like magic.
From now on,
boy or girl,
my baby’s name
is Junior.
After seeing her
busy little fingers,
his sturdy little thighs,
the word “it”
no longer applies.
Maybe it’s
something I ate,
something I drank,
something I should have.
Whatever the reason,
Junior’s got me
against the ropes,
kicking like crazy,
sparring in the dark.
My days are quiet
without Mother near
to chide me
or join me round
the grindstone,
or tempt me with a spoonful
of some savory new stew
from her cooking pot.
A lover of silence,
even I have had enough.
Come quickly, little one!
Fill this home with the music
of voices.
The life of a new wife
is too lonely.
No matter what Joseph says
there are still lentils to be found
in the marketplace,
though I have purchased
more than my share.
And who could blame me?
Is there anything better than
chopped leeks and garlic
simmering in a lentil stew?
Joseph wrinkles his nose
as he crosses our threshold,
day after day, after day.
I smile a weak apology,
wanting nothing more
than another bowl
of that delicious stew.
I trudge to the village well
in the heat of the day,
anything to avoid
those nasty gossips.
My secret joy
is cleverly hidden beneath
two layers of clothing
falling in folds, and folds,
and folds of softest wool.
Even so, at six months,
neighbors begin
to count the full moons
since my marriage.
I hear them wonder aloud
how Joseph’s seed
could so quickly
take root in me.
No one dares charge me
to my face, of course.
They simply lace their speech
with gossip about
the girl who is, perhaps,
too soon with child,
all the while
pretending piety.
God!
Please deliver me
from this vicious venom!