Authors: Marilyn Hilton
All I saw when we came into this garage
was the telescope.
But now that the moon show is over,
I smell sawdustâ
and turn around
to see a workbench
and power tools.
Could they be the other way to solve my problem?
“Does your uncle let you use those tools?” I ask Timothy.
“Yeah, but mostly to fix things.”
“Do you think I could I use them?” I ask,
and tell him about my science project.
He doesn't say
girls aren't allowed,
tools are dangerous,
you don't have any training,
it's impossible.
What he says is, “I'll show you how.
But only when he goes out.”
There's a dark, enormous silence
between us. Finally I ask,
“Why doesn't your uncle like me? Why doesn't he
like my family? It's because
we're not like him, right?”
Then I wish I hadn't said that to Timothy,
my only friend besides Stacey,
in case he hadn't noticed we look different
and now he will see
and change his mind about me.
But I should have known better. I can trust Timothy,
because he shakes his head and says,
“He doesn't like anybody.
I don't know why, but
most of all, he doesn't like
himself.”
I don't want to keep secrets
from my parents, but since Mama hasn't asked
where I go with Timothy every morning
and why,
I'm not keeping a secret,
not really.
Every morning of vacation,
Timothy has knocked at the back door
after his uncle has left.
We go to the garage, and he shows me
how to use the tools for the next step
of my moon box.
Then I do each next step.
He's teaching me how to saw wood
and hammer and sand,
and reminds me, “Put on your goggles.”
It's not cheating because I am doing all the work.
When we hear Mr. Dell's truck chugging up the driveway,
we hide my project
behind a stack of tires in the garage,
and I sneak out the back door.
Each day when I go home,
Mama asks, “Did you have a nice time with Timothy?”
And I say yes, because it's the truth.
But I still feel like I'm
keeping secrets.
Today in the garage,
Timothy asks, “Remember when your father was baking bread?”
I'm measuring a board and nod
instead of saying yes,
so I won't have to start over.
Then I mark the length with a pencil and ask, “Why?”
“Well . . . do you think he would teach me?”
“You want to make bread?”
Timothy looks down
and brushes the board. “I want to learn to cook.
Do you think that's . . . weird?”
“I like to hammer and saw. Do you think that's weird?”
“No,” he says, looking at me. “It's cool.”
“Well, I think my dad would like to teach you. And
that would make us even.”
“But I like showing you how to do this. I like
being around you. I mean,
I like you.”
I'm glad the pencil rolls off the board just now,
so I have another reason to look down.
It's Thursday night, and Timothy and I
are more than halfway through April vacation
in different schools.
The moon box is almost doneâ
today we sanded it
then hid it, like always, behind the tires.
Tomorrow I'll bring it home and paint it black.
Tonight, Papa is showing Timothy
how to make a basic loaf of bread.
It's going to be round
because Papa says that's easiest,
and this is Timothy's first loaf.
While Timothy is learning how to bake,
I'm making a papier-mâché moon
by gluing newspaper strips to a ball
that Papa found in the cellar.
The hardest part will be shaping the craters and seas
so they're accurate.
But that part will also be the most fun
because I like their names,
which sound like poetry:
Sea of Tranquility
Kepler Crater
Sea of Vapors
Grimaldi Crater
Ocean of Storms, and
Lake of Dreams
are my favorites.
When the moon dries
I'll paint it white and different shades of gray
and hang it in the moon box.
My project will be like science meets art,
and it will win first prize.
Timothy slides the bread pan into the oven
and shuts the door.
His cheeks are flushed, like when he's cold or embarrassed,
but tonight I think it's how his happiness is showing.
“Thanks, Mr. Oliver,” he tells Papa.
“Can we make something else . . .
tomorrow? I have to go back to New York on Saturday.”
Papa smiles. “I'll show you how to make an omelet.
It will come in handy when you go to college.”
“Okay, but that's a long time away,” Timothy says,
and Papa says, “Not really.”
The bread will take an hour to bake. I hope
Timothy will want to stay until it's done,
instead of going out and coming back.
When he sits at the table and asks
how my moon is coming along,
I feel my cheeks flush.
I call it fireworks exploding yellow.
Papa calls it forsythia.
Mama just says “
Achoo!
”
Timothy and I are at the workbench
in Mr. Dell's garage.
A thread of spring weaves through the air.
Even though it's still April,
I get a whiff of May in Vermontâ
light, sweet, and happy.
“Wesley's thinking of joining up,”
he says as we rub the moon box,
feeling for rough patches that need more sanding.
“He got a low draft number
and figures he's better off enlisting.
Then he'll be able to choose the branch.”
I guess “Marines?” and he nods.
“My dad was a Marine.
He met my mom when he was stationed in Tokyo.”
I can tell by the way Timothy concentrates on the box
that he doesn't want to hear how my parents met.
He says, “I don't want him to go to Vietnam.”
I feel sandwiched by wars
and don't know what to say to Timothy, except,
“Are you coming back here this summer?”
“Probably. Hope so,” he says.
I hope so, too,
and tell him that.
“This looks good,” he says
about my moon box. “You did a good job.”
“Can you help me carry it back?” I ask.
He opens the garage doorâ
and Mr. Dell walks in, blocking our way out.
“What you got there, Tim,
and who's that with you?” he asks.
I look at Timothy, who's flushed
now with embarrassment
or fear. He's not talking, so I answer.
“It's my science project,
and Timothy showed me how to put it together.”
“He did,
did he?” Mr. Dell says.
“Yeah, Uncle Raymond.”
“Well, now, you didn't happen to use my tools to put it together,
did you? Because wouldn't that be cheating?”
“I don't think so,” Timothy says.
“Oh, I think so. Especially when you're not supposed to see this girl.
And now she's in my garage.”
Mr. Dell looks at me with eyes colder than February.
I decide
I'm not as much afraid of him
as I don't like him.
“I'm sorry, Mr. Dell,” I say,
so respectfully that Papa might be proud.
“I can carry it by myself, Timothy.”
“I think you should,” Mr. Dell says,
and steps away from the door.
I squeeze myself and the moon box through.
It's too bad we haven't painted it yet
because my tears are soaking into the lid
as I walk home through the mud.
I keep hearing Mr. Dell's words
and stop to catch my breath
when I realize
Timothy won't be coming over tonight
to make omelets.
Why do all my friends hereâ
Stacey and Timothyâ
come to my house
but never invite me to theirs?
Mama met someone named Dr. Haseda
at the wives' tea.
(I wondered if she was the someone Papa talked about.)
This afternoon Dr. Haseda came to our house
and brought lemon cookies as an
omiyage
.
Mama set them out in a pretty dish
and made a pot of tea.
Dr. Haseda was born in Los Angeles
and went to college in New York,
where she met her husband.
She teaches Japanese at the college.
Today she brought her daughter, Kate,
who is one year old.
At first, Mama called her Baby Cake
and soon we were all calling her thatâ
even Baby Cake, who can already say ten words.
Even though Mama said she only needs Papa and me
and the turkeys,
I'm glad she has a new friend,
because maybe then she will start to feel at home.
After we walked them to their car
and waited until they drove away, out of sight,
I said, “It was nice of her to visit you.”
Mama smoothed her hair and said, “Papa asked her.”
“Are you mad at him for that?” I asked, confused.
“No, Mimi-chan. That is love.”
“This is a mistake,”
says Mrs. Golden, my guidance counselor.
She slides her glasses onto her nose
without taking her eyes from the test results in her lap.
“This is your score on spatial reasoning.”
Her fingernail points to
95 out of 100.
A mistake?
“Girls never score high on this test.”
She takes off her glasses,
looks,
says nothing,
and waits for me to explain why
a girl
like me
would score as high as a boy
like, say, Andrew Dutton.
Does she think I cheated?
They showed you the pieces of something
taken apart
and you had to choose the way it would look
all put back together.
“I liked that test,
and it was easy.”
“Something went wrong,
and you'll have to take it again.”
Mrs. Golden shakes her head
and puts her glasses back on,
and I know the subject is closed.
“While you're here,” says Mrs. Golden,
“let's talk about your schedule for next year.
You'll be in eighth grade,
your last year before high school.”
She pulls my schedule from the same manila folder
and puts it in my lap.
I skim the list while she reads:
English
Math
(Not algebra)
US HistoryâCivil War to Present
Art
Music
Physical ScienceâIntro
Home Economics
Gym
Clubs (optional)
“Do you have any questions?” she asks.
“Can I change my schedule?”
Her eyes narrow. “What do you want to change?”
“I want to swap home ec for shop.”
Mrs. Golden sits back in her chair.
It squeaks.
She frowns.
“Why would you want to do that?”
“I want to learn how to make things in shop.”
“But you learn how to make things in home ec.”
“I already know how to cook and sew.”
We look at each other. I breathe
and remember
drip, drip, drip,
respectfully. “So, may I?”
“I don't know
what you did in California
or what they taught you there
or what your family believes,
but that's impossible here, Mimi.
Girls don't take shop.
Reallyâdo you see any boys
wanting to take home ec?”
I know this subject is also closed
for now.
The bell rings after English
and Stacey says, “Daddy finally let me get the Cream album.
You want to come over today and listen?”
“I can't. Remember?”
“No, it's different. Mother did an about-face
about . . . all that. She asked me to invite you.”
“What made it different?”
Stacey shrugs. “I think when she met your mother
at the wives' tea.”
I don't know what Mama did or said
to change Stacey's mom's mind.
I want to say yesâbut
I want to go
when I want to go,
not when Stacey's mom
says I can.
“Today's not a good day,” I tell Stacey,
which is the truth.
“I have a lot of homework,”
which is kind of a lie.
“Sure?” she asks.
I nod. “Yeah.”
I know she knows what I'm thinking
because she's my best friend
and can read my mind.
“Maybe tomorrow?” she asks.
“Maybe.”
“Mimi, please don't be mad at me.”
“I'm not.”
Which is also kind of a lie.
“Okay, call me tonight,” she says,
and looks kind of sad. I would be lying
if I said that didn't make me
kind of happy.