The Passed Note Issue 7 June 2018 | Page 26

real. I know, no matter how hard I wish on any star to

be rescued, a silly boy will not show up at my window

and ask me to tell him stories. No boy has ever asked

me to tell him stories. Or girl, for that matter.

I write them all the time, though, in my bright Lisa

Frank notebook. Years later, my pencil scribbles with

misspelled words will all be there. Stories smudged

into the pages with titles like, “Lost in Blarney

Castle,” “Tom the Turkey Hates Thanksgiving,” or

“When I am a Mom” (“I will get my friends and we

will leave the kids with all the men and have a

hayday”) or “How the Leaves Change Color.” I write

poems, too, lots of poems. Poems with dark edges and

shadows. With sadness and water and tears and the

sea. No one reads those either.

So we play, in that cluster of pine trees, the cheering

sounds a distant rumble. An occasional crack of the bat

against the leather of the ball. I play Tink, unable to talk,

so I gesture with my hands for her to follow me and we

race around the trees, pine needles crunching beneath

our feet. We climb the low-hanging branches and jump

off, take those few stolen seconds of groundlessness to

pretend to fly. And in the sweet moments we are on the

grass, limbs hanging over one another, laughing. For a

moment, being a kid is not so bad.

That same year, our class is assigned Peter Pan for the

annual Spring Sing. My brother's class gets Aladdin.