Little Little

Free Little Little by M. E. Kerr

Book: Little Little by M. E. Kerr Read Free Book Online
Authors: M. E. Kerr
know I’m not the greatest poet in the world, but it’s a nice little poem, do you really think so, Little Little?”
    “I like it, Mommy.”
    She wiped a tear away. “Oh, why am I bawling like a baby, hmmm? I guess I’m just so happy!” That sounded so insincere, even to her, that she rushed on to babble something truer. “I’m tired, too, I guess. All these plans for your big birthday! I can’t believe you’ll be eighteen, honey. I was married the year after I was eighteen. I was a young bride. And we waited. Purposely. We waited to have you because we were so young and we wanted some years together, just your daddy and me. And what years they were! All the midnight sails from the yacht club ended right at our dock! Everyone came here, everyone!”
    She hugged me hard.
    Over her shoulder, I saw Eloise Ficklin dance across the television screen dressed as a lettuce leaf. Even with the sound turned down, I knew what she was singing: “I’m dancing to the melody, Oh happy happy days, When I lie down I’ll have a coat of golden mayonnaise.”

9: Sydney Cinnamon
    A SISTER OF ONE of the Bombers’ cheerleaders babysat for Digger and Laura Gwen while they went to the game.
    About an hour before game time, they picked me up in front of The Stardust Inn, in a taxi I’d offered to pay for.
    “Your shell needs dusting, Sydney,” Laura Gwen said, pushing it in front with the driver.
    I sat between them and Digger said, “Did you know the man who owns the La Belle Boot and Shoe factory has a midget daughter?”
    “I know,” I said.
    “Which is the reason Little Lion is coming here on Sunday,” said Laura Gwen. “There’s going to be a whole convention of people like you, Sydney, coming in from all over. The driver just told us.”
    “It’s a birthday party for Little Little La Belle,” I said.
    “Are you going?”
    “I’m the entertainment.”
    “Are they paying you?” Digger asked.
    “I’ll get something for it.”
    “Well, that shell needs dusting, Sydney.”
    “So dust it!” Digger said. “While I’m suiting up, you get a rag and dust it for him!”
    “I can dust it myself,” I said.
    “I’ll dust it for you, Sydney,” she said.
    “Roach,” Digger said, “me and Laura Gwen was remembering the first time we ever seen you, that Halloween at the game. You’d just started going to Wilton High, and you came to the game with some of them from Twin Oaks, remember?”
    “I remember,” I said. I wasn’t likely to forget it. A group of us from Mistakes had gone to the high school stadium in costume. It was my first try at getting myself up as The Roach. Bighead Langhorn had put a white sheet over his body and gone as the explosion of the atom bomb, and Cloud had gone as God, his body wrapped in cellophane. Wheels had rigged himself up as a Volkswagen convertible, and Wires Kaplan went as Reddy Kilowatt.
    “I remember I said you’d be a helluva mascot that day,” said Digger. “You remember my saying that to you?” He reached for the can of beer between his legs and took a swallow.
    “I remember,” I said.
    “Sydney, why don’t you stand on the seat, to see,” Laura Gwen said.
    “Stand up here on the seat,” Digger said, patting the seat.
    “I can see enough.”
    “You can see the rate card is all you can see. Stand up here.”
    He gave the seat another pat and I stood up on it.
    “That’s better,” said Digger. “I remember it was the first season The Bombers played after that year of austerity. That year was what ruined me.”
    “That year wasn’t what ruined you,” Laura Gwen said. “What you’re swallowing down right now was what ruined you.”
    “Oh yeah? How’s a scout going to recruit you if he can’t see you in action?”
    “No scout was recruiting you,” Laura Gwen said.
    “What about that day?” I said, trying to steer them away from another argument.
    “I remember I told you you’d be a helluva mascot, and the school needed something like that to put it

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