Read A Girl Named Mister Online
Authors: Nikki Grimes
I wish they would widen
the spaces between market stalls.
All I seem to do anymore
is squeeze between small spaces.
I suppose I am just too—
Oh!
Leah and I bump bellies.
She is the first to laugh
and soon, I join her.
“Shalom, Mary,” she says.
“Shalom, Leah.”
She is a neighbor
I have scarce shared
ten words with before.
I suppose it is because
she is a few years older,
though that hardly matters,
now that we are both
mothers-to-be.
We have much in common.
We interrupt our shopping
to trade notes on midwives,
and whose expected one has
the strongest kick.
I love Hadassah,
but I long to have a friend
who truly understands
what I am going through.
And now, thank God,
I do!
Three days running,
Joseph has missed
the evening meal.
I ask why,
but all I get for an answer
is “busy.”
Enough!
Even a strong man
grows weak without food.
I waddle about the house
throwing together a basket
of bread and cheese,
figs and grapes,
and a skin of wine.
I make my way
to his carpentry shop
out back.
Heavy as I am,
I manage to slip in
without drawing his attention.
Yet I am the one in for
a surprise.
Joseph, brows knit
in concentration,
bends over a handcrafted
baby bed.
I gasp at its beauty,
and Joseph, startled, looks up.
“Well, now you see,” he says.
“The sanding is almost done.
All that remains
is a bit of carving.”
I find it impossible to speak.
“Now that you have taken a peek,
what do you think?” asks Joseph.
I lay a hand over my heart
and let the love in my eyes
say all.
a♦dopt,
v.t.
1.
to choose for or take to oneself; make one’s own by selection or assent:
to adopt a name or idea.
2.
to take as one’s own child, specif. by a formal legal act.
—
The American College Dictionary
Mom mentions the
A
word
and I shiver from heart
to heel,
asking why my own mother
would advise me
to throw Junior away.
“It’s not like that,” she says.
“It’s love giving life a chance.
It’s giving the gift of joy,
girl or boy,
to an anxious couple
waiting for a child
to pour their love into
like a holy, healing potion.
So trash the notion
of throwing your baby away.”
My pulse pares down
to a steady rhythm.
“Did you ever consider
giving me away?”
“Things were different then,”
says Mom.
“I never would have seen
your sweet face again.
Nowadays, with open adoptions,
that’s all changed.”
I nod, understanding
at least a little.
“No promises,” I tell her,
giving Junior
a reassuring rub.
“I’ll think about it.”
At least,
I can chew on it now
seeing as how
the word
adoption
no longer leaves
a bad taste
in my mind.
These days
when I pass Trey
in the hall
smooth-talking
his latest,
all I feel for him
is sorry
‘cause underneath those
lovely lashes,
his eyes are dead.
Funny how
I finally
notice that now.
Damn.
Sorry Lord, but
some gremlin must’ve
snuck into my room
in the middle of the night
and jammed syringes full of water
into my ankles. Again.
Tell me they don’t look
like blowfish
attached to the anchors
of my feet!
LaVonne squeezes up
to the lunch table
at eight months,
her belly nearly big enough
to rest her tray on.
She’s an island in a sea
of cool kids
and I can’t stand to see her
all alone, again.
That will be me real soon.
I pay for my sloppy joe
and OJ, and make my way
across the cafeteria.
“Mind if I join you?” I ask LaVonne.
“You sure you want to?
Might give you a bad name,” she says.
“The way I figure,” I tell her,
“we’re two of a kind.”
LaVonne snorts,
eyeing my middle.
“Not yet.
You’re hardly showing.
Just wait.”
Why do the last two words
weigh heavy on the air?
I don’t care to examine that question,
so I distract myself with another.
“Are you going to keep it,
or give it up for adoption?” I ask,
settling on the bench.
“Keep what?”
“The
baby.
”
“You crazy?”
LaVonne explodes.
“You see the way it’s already
messed up my life,
like the fact
I ain’t got one?
Keep it? Hell no!
The second this thing
is outta me, it’s history.”
I shudder, afraid to fathom
exactly what she means.
“If you feel that way, then why—”
I catch myself
sticking my nose in.
“Never mind.”
LaVonne’s cheeks balloon
then, ever so slowly,
her anger fizzes out, like air.
“I waited too long,” she mutters.
“So sue me.”
I hunch over
my mediocre lunch,
wolf it faster than I should,
and jet at the jangle
of the change bell.
As I hurry through the halls,
I touch my stomach, thinking,
Don’t worry, Junior.
It’s not like that
with you and me.
Lonely, my disappointment
pricks like a needle
burning through my skin.
“It’s all right,”
God whispers in my ear.
I hardly hear him, though.
I’m just glad it didn’t take long
to find out how wrong I was,
thinking LaVonne and me
shared more than
a superficial similarity.
Last night,
I caught a news byte
while I set the dinner table,
something about
another baby being found dead.
“A needless tragedy,”
said the news woman.
Apparently, there’s this law:
If the mom was afraid
to keep her kid,
all she had to do
was to leave him
at the nearest hospital.
No questions asked.
The newswoman moved on
to the weather,
and I went back to
arranging utensils.
In between the clink
of knife, fork, and glass,
it hit me.
I maybe had heard something
about this law before.
I couldn’t exactly remember when.
Besides, I wasn’t paying
attention then.
Banana pancakes
are Mom’s favorite
Mother’s Day meal,
and I don’t disappoint.
I’m less messy than
when I was a kid,
but I still hold my breath until
she takes that first bite
and smiles.
She doesn’t know it yet,
but I’m treating her to a movie,
after church.
When we get there,
the pews are filled with moms
all dressed to kill.
Evangelist Pauline Devereax
gives the message.
It’s all about the mother
God handpicked
for his own son,
how she’s the one
we should look up to.
Don’t ask how many points
Sister Pauline ticked off
to prove her argument.
My human computer
only clicked Save on one:
She trusted God.
Who made her son on purpose,
who had a purpose for his life.
She trusted God
to see her child through.
“And so should you,” said Sister Pauline.
And all the church said,
“Amen!”
This evening on Joseph’s return
from the day’s labor,
his face is long, his jaw
unusually firm, as though
he has news I will not wish
to hear.
“I must go to Bethlehem,”
he says.
“Our family must be registered
for the Census.”
This makes no sense to me.
Yes, I understand that
the emperor’s decree is law,
but leave me?
Now?
I breathe deep,
forcing my heart to slow.
“Husband,” I say,
“the child will be here any day.”
Joseph sighs and wraps me
in his arms.
“Forgive me, Mary,” he whispers.
“But I have no choice.”
I purse my lips and nod, thinking,
Then neither do I.
I nod, preparing
to bid my midwife farewell.
I nod, planning
what I will pack
for the journey.
“It is settled, then,”
I tell Joseph.
“We will both leave
in the morning.”
What was I thinking?
The long, dry road to Bethlehem
is littered with rough rock
and regret.
Mother, I miss you!
Maybe Joseph was right.
Maybe I should have clung
to the comfort of home,
or else remained behind
with my parents until
Joseph’s return.
What kept me from it?
Only that this baby feels
ready to come into the world,
and when he does,
I want both his fathers near.
And what is there to fear,
midwife or no?
Women have born children
since time began, yes?
Besides, I will not be alone.
The Lord of Heaven is at my side.
The donkey ride is slow and bumpy,
but eventually, we are there.
“Look!” says Joseph, excited.
“The foothills of Shephelah!
Bethlehem is just beyond.”
The baby begins kicking me fiercely,
ready to see Bethlehem
for himself.
What if
I keep my baby?
Mom lays it on me straight.
“I won’t lie to you,” she says.
“I’m here to help you,
no matter what.
But you need to understand
your life will be harder
than you can imagine.”
I try to. I do.
What would it be like,
daily diaper duty
and me still in school?
Would I nestle Junior
in a sling
across my chest?
Slot hot bottles of formula
in my backpack between
history books
and my English journal?
Get serious,
I tell myself.
High school has no
show and tell,
and Junior isn’t It.
Idiot.
I curse myself
for thinking crazy.
“I’ll have to get a babysitter,”
I think aloud.
“Yes,” says Mom.
“And they’re expensive.”
And so are diapers,
bottles, vitamins, and
what about home?
My room’s already
an obstacle course
of daybed, desk, and dresser.
What am I going to do,
stick her in the top drawer,
laid out on a soft bundle
of clean socks and T-shirts?
Look at this place!
Lord knows,
there’s no space here
for a crib.
Besides,
my dreams for Junior
reach higher than
this ceiling.
God, I want the stars
for this kid.
At least, I want to want that,
you know?
Can you take care of him, Lord?
Take care of me?
I still want to see
whatever dreams
you always had in store
for my future.
I worry that I’m selfish,
but Mom says
I need to be true
to me,
to you.
Junior is especially
restless this morning.
He/she is somersaulting, I swear.
Is that possible?
“Calm down, in there,” I whisper.
“Everything’s okay.
School’s over on Friday.
Then you’ll have me
all to yourself.
And, in ten more weeks,
you’ll get to see your mom.
You’ll find out who she’ll be.
I’ll get to say hello,
and maybe say good—”
No.
Don’t go there, Mister. Not now.
“Where was I? Oh!
You’ll get to play outside.
Till then, enjoy the ride.”
In a way,
it feels like any other
summer Saturday afternoon,
the usual New York swelter
chasing a gang of us kids
out to the edge of the ocean.
But this trip to Coney Island
with Seth and friends
is blah.
Sure, I can block out the stares
of nosey passengers
on the long subway ride to Brooklyn,
and there’s still the flutter
in the pit of my belly
as the park rushes into view
through the train window.
But that’s all the excitement
I’m gonna get for the day
‘cause once I get there,
strolling the boardwalk broadway,
munching a cheesy slice of pizza
or one of Nathan’s juicy hot dogs,
and digging my toes in the sand
is all I’m good for.
There’s no strapping myself in
for a slow round ride
skimming the sky on
the Wonder Wheel,
or enjoying the screaming drop
of Astroland
or the Cyclone rollercoaster.
No sir.
No female whales allowed.
Maybe next summer.
If I can find a cheap
babysitter, that is.