Kids took their time in the halls. Even the big round clocks on the walls seemed to be ticking off lazy seconds. Through my first two classes, math and Spanish, my legs jiggled under my desk, which happens when Iâm nervous or bored. I was both. How can you be both? Math was easy, and Spanish sounded like a baby talking French, the language I was taking back home.
I was uncomfortable in the clothes that Grandpa had laid out for me. Sand-colored desert boots, brown corduroy pants, and a yellow and black shirt. Everything itched, especially the pants. I hadnât worn corduroy since I was a little kid. It gets damp between your thighs and makes your underwear crawl up into your crack. In science, I was squirming around in my seat trying to rub the underwear out.
âEdward, did you want to answer this question?â
I hadnât been paying attention, and I didnât react to the name until Ronnie kicked me. I looked up. The teacher was standing in front of a big roll-down chart of the solar system. No PowerPoint here.
I said, âIâm sorry. I forgot the question.â
âWhat are the planets of our solar system?â
That was easy. âMercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.â
âYou forgot one, Edward.â
âThatâs it,â I said.
The teacher shook her head. âMerlyn?â
It was her! The same long black hair covering her face. What was she doing here? She said, âPluto.â
âVery good,â said the teacher.
âPlutoâs not a planet,â I said. âItâs a star.â
âWhere did you hear that?â said the teacher.
A little warning bell rang in my head, but I couldnât stop myself. âPlutoâs too small to be a planet. Itâs a dwarf planet, all ice and rock.â
âPluto is a planet on this planet,â said Merlyn, smiling at me. âMaybe not on whatever planet you come from.â
The class grumbled at her. I guess it didnât like anyone making fun of its hero, Eddie.
âAmnesia,â said Ronnie. âAnything can happen after a knock on the head. And Eddieâs had two, one in football and one at Scout camp.â
âThatâs true,â said the teacher. She frowned. âHow do you feel, Edward?â
âIâm fine,â I said.
The teacher came over and put her hand on my forehead. She smelled of talcum powder. âNo fever.â
The bell rang.
âHave you been to your doctor?â asked the teacher.
I nodded.
âNo need,â said Merlyn. âI have a new trick to examine his brain at the lunchtime talent show.â
Outside in the hallway, I said to Ronnie, âWhatâs with that Merlyn?â
âSearch me. Sheâs new.â
THIRTY-NINE
NEARMONT, N.J.
1957
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T HE cafeteria was a crummy hole. The floor was yellow linoleum with black scabs. Kids sat on gray metal benches at long gray metal picnic tables, like in the old black-and-white prison movies I watched on Turner Classic. I wasnât hungry anyway.
Grandpa had made me a great breakfast. Scrambled eggs, bacon, hot buttered toast, cold orange juice, and milk. It was delicious. I wasnât used to eating so much for breakfast.
âYou sit over there,â said Ronnie, pointing to a table in the center of the cafeteria.
You could tell it was a hotshot table: student government types in chinos and blue button-down shirts, jocks in team jerseys, and girls wearing skirts and two matching sweaters. Around us were thug tables and freak tables and rebel tables. Not much had changed over the years. Except the shoes. Kids were wearing dorky-looking shoes, a lot of brown leather and desert boots. I guess Nike and Skechers hadnât been invented yet.
Ronnie started to slink away.
âWhere you going?â
He pointed his chin toward a table in the corner packed with fat kids, goofy-looking kids, boys with pens, pencils, and little rulers in
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