well. This is the last week of Bible Camp and then the torture is over. And then, in one more week, Janey and Louise will be back. They are my absolute best friends. They just about died when Aunty Eve said I couldnât go with them. They were going to go on strike and stay home too, but their parents had already paid for it and everything, so they had to go.â
I feel a sharp pang of envy. I canât imagine having two absolute best friends who would go on strike and give up camp just for me. To be honest, I canât imagine having any best friends at all. I never have. Itâs one more thing besides loving books thatâs different between Grace and me. This is stupid and makes no sense at all but Iâve decided not to like Janey and Louise. Iâm glad theyâre away.
Graceâs legs were curled underneath her, but now she stretches them out. âGod, my legs are hairy,â she moans.
I stare at Graceâs legs, which actually are quite hairy. A hot flush spreads across my cheeks.
Graceâs right leg is way skinnier than her left leg, and it kind of curves towards her foot. Itâs the first time Iâve noticed it.
It must be the polio . It hits me full blast then, that this whole thing is not just some made-up story in a book. I really do have a twin sister and sheâs sitting beside me, right beside me , and my mother gave her away because she had polio.
Donât stare, a voice whispers in my head.
And then, Tell her, you have to tell her .
âAre you allowed to shave?â
âWhat?â I struggle to pull my thoughts together. Graceâs skinny leg has totally flustered me.
âDoes your mom let you shave your legs?â
âI donât know. Iâve never asked.â
The truth is, Iâve never worried about hair on my legs. I inspect them now. Theyâre not nearly as bad as Graceâs (one more thing thatâs different about us), but theyâre definitely hairy. How did I miss that before? I have so many things to worry about and now I have to add hairy legs to my list.
âIâm not allowed,â Grace says. âAunty Evil has a fit if I even mention it. She says itâs vain to worry about hairy legs when youâre eleven years old.â
She jumps up. âCan you keep a secret?â
âYeah.â
I mean, arenât I keeping the biggest secret of all? I get this crazy urge to burst into hysterical laughter, even though itâs not one bit funny.
âCome on.â
Grace pushes open the screen door and I follow her inside her house. After being out in the bright sun, itâs dark inside. We walk down a long narrow hallway, past a kitchen and a living room, and then up a flight of stairs.
As I walk behind her, I try to decide if sheâs walking normally. She doesnât really look like sheâs limping, but itâs hard to tell. She certainly has no trouble climbing up the stairs.
âThis is my room,â Grace says.
The room is tiny. Thereâs a bed with a yellow bedspread and with a mound of stuffed animals on the pillow, and a blue dresser and a desk by the window. The window is open and a lace curtain is blowing in the breeze. I can smell something sweet like flowers. The floor is buried under heaps of clothes.
âItâs a mess,â Grace says cheerfully. âIâm not allowed to go anywhere until I clean it up or else Iâll be grounded.â
Iâm only half-listening to Grace. My eyes are riveted on the stuffed animals. Thereâs a monkey, a dog, a teddy bear, a rabbit, and a hippo. My heart skips a beat. Itâs my hippo, Harry. The same pinkish fur and black button eyes.
Itâs Harry all right, but it canât be.
Chapter Twenty-Five
I pick up the hippo. âWhere did you get this?â
âThat old hippo?â Grace shrugs. âI donât know. Iâve always had it.â
âDid someone give it to you?â
âI told
Leah Giarratano
MC Beaton
Dominic Luke
Joseph K. Richard
Gun Brooke
Savannah Grace
Ernest Becker
Patricia Rice
Angel’s End
Eva Madden