lucky to be here,â she always told me.
I knew we were, but sometimes I missed Sao Paolo. True we had lived in two small, dark rooms and the streets were always crowded with beggars and little kids without shoes. I hated the smell of rotting garbage. Sometimes it hung in the air for days and made me feel sick.
But there was also excitement on festival days. The city buzzed with people singing, dancing and laughing. People helped each other in Sao Paolo. After my father died in a car accident, people I hardly knew came over with food and comforting words.
I missed the sunshine. The sun shone all the time in Sao Paolo. So many days in this new country were dark, dreary and cold. But Mom said there were more opportunities here. We could get a better education here, so I decided to go to High Road High.
Iâd had a choice. I could have gone to another high school, the one that was like a little UN with kids from Portugal, Jamaica, Haiti, Pakistan, India andcountries Iâd never even heard of before. There were a few immigrant kids at High Road High, but they were sprinkled around like raisins in cereal.
I chose this high school because it was better, because there were no gangs roaming the halls. And it was true, there were no gangs of girls with âGo to Hellâ tattooed across their backs or snarling guys with knives. But there were gangs of girls with eyes that shut you out and voices that sneered and laughed at you. They didnât beat you up or steal your money, but their looks felt like hard punches to your stomach.
I couldnât tell Mom what Iâd overheard at the lockers today. She had enough to deal with. My little brother, Lucas, was a whiny pain. And Mom was always tired.
âIâm going to my room to do homework,â I told her.
âGood,â said Mom.
But I didnât start on my homework. I flopped down on my bed and stared ata picture of a butterfly I had snapped for photography class.
Iâd seen the butterfly perched on a rose last spring. After I snapped the picture, it flew away.
I wished I was that butterfly. I wished I could fly away.
chapter three
Even though itâs a crazy language with weird expressions and insane spellings, Iâd learned English quickly.
When I first heard the expression âshe laughed her head offâ in grade four, I looked around the classroom expecting some bloody head to bounce along the floor. Of course it didnât, and I soon learned to repeat English expressions as if Iâd grown up with them.
Iâd even lost most of my accent. Whatever I hear, I absorb as if I swallowed it.
Mom was proud of how Iâd learned English so quickly. She mentioned it often.
âSometimes you sound like you were never born in Sao Paolo,â she said the next morning at breakfast. âItâs because you have a musical ear. I wish you would sing again like you used to in Sao Paolo. I miss your singing.â
âMaybe one day I will,â I said. It had felt good to sing at Lizâs house. It especially felt good when Liz and her mom said they liked my voice.
Liz mentioned it again at lunch.
âYou really have a terrific voice,â she said. âMy mother couldnât stop talking about it last night. Which was great because she stopped talking about my room for an hour.â
âHey. I like your hair,â I said, changing the subject. Liz had cut her long curly hair and it circled her face like a frame.
âThanks,â she said. âI hated how short it was yesterday, but now I kind of like it too.â
âFries any good?â I asked.
âDisgusting but the ketchupâs good.â
Liz and I laughed.
âI keep promising myself to bring something edible from home, but Iâm always in such a rush in the morning. Not like you.â
âIâm not crazy about the caf food either,â I said. It was true, but the real reason I didnât buy my lunch was money. I
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Tony Dunbar
Bianca D'Arc
Patricia Hagan
Gregory Hoffman
Sydney Croft
Michele Jaffe
Joanne Pence
Cindy Procter-King
Cheyenne McCray