Authors: Rita Williams-Garcia
Vonetta ran to her room, got the mummy jar, and pushed the five-dollar bill down the slot. “You just want to see Jackie Jackson at Madison Square Garden.”
“And Tito,” Fern said.
Uncle Darnell leaned over and said, “Is that who you're digging on? Jackie Jackson and Tito?”
I knew my uncle was back to being himself. Dimples and jokey. I felt warm but I refused to sink my face down, embarrassed like I would have been back when I was eleven.
I said, “Yeah. I like Jackie and Tito.”
“Only one you should like is your pa,” Big Ma said. “And your uncle.”
“Band of singing hoodlum boys,” Papa joked. I knew my father. He'd only half joked about the Jackson Five. I'm sure he didn't appreciate Vonetta, Fern, and me screaming over a group of boys, no matter who they were. Miss
Marva Hendrix must have known Pa almost as well as I did. She felt sorry for him and took his hand.
That night Fern got out of her bed after she'd been tucked in. She came into my room while I was in the middle of reading
Johnny Tremaine
. “You weren't supposed to tell your wish, Delphine.” She stood there with her tiny fists balled and banging at her sides. To her, I had broken the rules on wishing. To her it was serious. Fern still believed in all those things.
I told her to go to bed. I sounded grown.
Ellis Carter slid into his chair. He turned toward me, about to speak, but then his face went dopey and reddish. Then he turned away, hunched himself over, and dropped his head on his desk. That didn't last very long.
“Head up, Mr. Carter.”
He reluctantly rolled his chest and head to sit up straight, face forward.
“Much better,” Mr. Mwila said as if Ellis had done something stupendous. “Now you look alert and ready.”
Danny the K said, “He's ready, Mr. Mwila. Right, Elly May?”
Ellis turned even redder and I felt a little bad for him.
Even though the K was Ellis's best friend, the K was
the first one from the boys' side of the room to call him Elly May Clampett after the big blond girl on
The Beverly Hillbillies
.
“Mr. McClaren, would you like to return to your corner?”
Since September, the K had made a few visits to the corner next to Mr. Mwila's desk. “No, sir,” he answered. The K spoke politely, like he had a Big Ma of his own who had taught him to say “yes, sir” and “no, ma'am.” And I'll bet she and Danny's mama were tired of Mr. Mwila calling their house to report on his fooling around. Mr. Mwila believed in dialing up parents. He called that an “opportunity to involve the home community with the school community.”
Mr. Mwila announced, “Today we shall continue our studies on the upcoming presidential election by forming discussion groups.”
Rukia raised her hand but spoke before she was recognized. “We're going to be talking for the entire period?”
“Organized discussion,” Mr. Mwila said.
“So that meansâ”
He stopped her this time. “We're in grade six and not in kindergarten, Rukia. We raise our hands and wait to be recognized.”
The boys loved seeing a girl get reprimanded and couldn't hold it in. “Oh, snaps,” came flying from their side of the room. Mr. Mwila seemed eager to get on with
our new project. He let the boys' outcries pass.
“We shall break into groups of four,” he said. “Since we're equally matched, we'll have two boys and two girls in each group. You'll have one minuteâsixty secondsâto find your group members or I'll pick your group.” He pushed back his jacket sleeve to see his watch. Startingâ”
Lucy Raleigh grabbed Friedaâwho I wanted as my second girlâand headed straight to Michael Sandler. Frieda gave me a “sorry” glance from across the room. Michael S. had James T., and their group was set. Evelyn, who was Michael S.'s sort-of girlfriend, made a rhinoceros sound and took Theresa over to Anthony and Ant's group. Evelyn made Anthony get rid of Antnee and take Upton instead. It was like square-dancing on
Hee Haw
, except with mostly girls running around from group to group calling out the allemande lefts and dos-si-dos. The girls had the right idea. Pick the boy who caused the least amount of trouble. Who did all his schoolwork and didn't spend the period with his nose in the corner.
I sat at my desk watching the class move and swirl. I finally lifted myself up to see where I would go and decided on Enrique and James W.'s group. Carmen and Monique were already on their way over to their desks.
Mr. Mwila clapped his hands together once and said, “Time.” Without skipping a beat he pointed to Rukia, then Danny the K, and said, “You're in this group,” meaning with Ellis and me, although we weren't together.
“Quickly. Quickly,” he said.
I raised my hand but Mr. Mwila wagged his finger and shook his head to stop me. “The election is next week and we have much to accomplish.” Then he wrote subjects on the board and began to talk about the “objectives for our group discussions and presentations.”
I was stuck. No surprise fire drill alarm would sound in time to rescue me from having to look at, let alone talk to, Ellis and the K. Rukia wasn't so bad, just annoying. I glanced at Lucy and Frieda smiling on the other side of the room. It wasn't fair. I was supposed to be with Frieda.
Once Mr. Mwila outlined our aim for this period, he sat at his desk and opened his little red book.
Things Fall Apart
.
I glanced at my Timex. Thirty-two more minutes until our group broke up and Rukia and the K moved back to their own desks. Thirty-two more minutes until Ellis and I could look away from each other.
I felt myself all wound up inside like the innards of a clock. Instead of teaching us about the election, Mr. Mwila expected us to teach ourselves. Occasionally he cleared his throat and said “Decorum” to a group that was getting out of hand. At least they were excited about their discussion and had chosen their subjects. What I wouldn't have given to be anywhere but with my group. All around the room, groups were talking about voters' rights, the electoral college, the two-party system, and Richard Nixon versus
Hubert Humphrey. We weren't talking about anything.
Danny the K snapped a rubber band at Ellis. Ellis, whose head went back down on his desk, said, “Quit it,” and closed his eyes. Rukia said for the sixth time, “Can I switch groups?” Danny answered, “Can you?” Or he'd say to her because she was a Muslim, “
Asalamu alaykum
. Pass the pigs' feet and the bacon.” Then she'd raise her hand and ask again, “Can I switch groups?”
“We need a subject,” I said.
Ellis shrugged. Danny the K aimed another rubber band, but Mr. Mwila cleared his throat again and the rubber band disappeared.
If I were at home with my sisters, I would pick our subject and tell Vonetta and Fern which subtopics they would discuss, case closed. But I wasn't at home.
Danny the K finally said, “We already have a subject. The presidential election. Let's talk about that.”
“That's the overall subject,” I said. “We need a specific subject and then subtopics.” I pointed to the list of subjects on the blackboard.
“Ooh. Specific,” the K said.
Rukia said, “We should open the textbook and look up what's on the board. Then we'll pick something.”
I whirled my hand around helicopter style at all the groups talking and said, “They didn't look up anything. They're having discussions.”
But as usual, we had nothing to say to one another.
Then Rukia said, “I know what our specific subject can be. We can talk about what would happen if a woman ran for president of the United States.”
“What?”
That was all I could say. I had never heard of anything so far-out. And nowhere on the board did it say
“women running for president.”
Danny the K laughed. Ellis sat up. Sort of.
“Yeah. That would be funny,” Danny the K began. “We could say, âMrs. President. How will you win the war in Vietnam?'” With his eyelashes fluttering, the K said in a high-pitched warble, “âI'll bake the Vietcong a nice apple pie.'” He and Ellis laughed it up.
I said, “The subject is âWhat if a woman ran for president?' Not âWhat if your pie-baking mama ran for president.'” And before I knew it I had thrown down the glove like they did in
The Three Musketeers
. Instead of fencing, there was a war of the Dozens between Danny the K and me.
So he said, “At least my mama can shake and bake. Your mama can't bake a pie because your mama don't exist. Your mama's the invisible mom.”
He couldn't shut me up like he did last year. I said, “My mother don't bake no pies. My mother writes poems about the revolution. My mama exists. Your mama's invisible.”
And while all of that was going on and the room was getting quiet, Mr. Mwila appeared at our group, looking down mostly at me.
Rukia saved the day by saying, “We have our subject, Mr. Mwila. Women running for president.”
But it was Ellis who shocked me. Shocked us all. He pointed to the blackboard and said, “Under eligibility.”
Instead of saying that was good, Danny the K said, “Yeah, Elly May. Under eligibility.”
Mr. Mwila congratulated us on our topic. He said we had a lot of catching up to do because the other groups were already writing out presentation drafts. Then he wrote a slip for Danny the K and me to spend the rest of the period in detention.
I was onto Mr. Mwila. He thought because Danny the K and I sat in detention, that we'd talk to each other like the grade-six upperclassmen he told us we were.
Danny's “you make me sick” faces met my “too cool to care” blank stares. The only thing I cared about at the moment was if Mr. Mwila saw this as an “opportunity” to call my house. The more I thought about Big Ma getting that phone call, the more I regretted being in detention with Danny the K. I missed being in class where everything was happening. Plus I had to save our group from Rukia Marshall and women running for president. If New York City had never had a woman as our mayor, how would the country elect a woman to be president?
The detention aide got up from her desk and sternly warned us, “Mr. McClaren and Miss Gaither,” to be on our best behavior while she left the room for a few minutes.
I glanced up at the big clock, whose minute hand never seemed to move in spite of the second hand winding around and around. I looked down at my Timex. Four more minutes before I could join my class. And what if Pa decided I couldn't go to the Jackson Five concert because I was shouting “Your pie-baking mama!” in social studies, like a dice-throwing hoodlum?
I thought of how I wanted the one thing that seemed hardest to get. I wanted Mr. Mwila to think better of me.
Danny the K pursed his lips. I thought to make kissy smacks, but he would be the last person on this earth to blow kisses at me. At first I only heard pitchy whispers stabbing the air around me. Then I saw Danny's spit shooting through his puckered lips. The whispers grew louder. Clearer. Until there was a tune. A tune I knew.
With his eyes sparkling like beady marble shooters, Danny the K whistled that stupid TV dolphin song, and he dared me to do something about it.
I crossed my arms and looked away.
Danny whistled louder.
I stared up at the big clock. My “too cool to care” face wasn't holding up. I pinched a chunk of my arm and
gritted my teeth. My ears were getting hot as he leaned forward.
The detention aide had not yet returned. Danny the K got up from the bench and danced to the tune of the
Flipper
song. Danced and whistled. He came closer, probably hoping I'd push him away so he could push back. He wanted me to start it.
I kept looking up at the clock, praying the minute hand would strike 1:40 and the bell would ring. I let out a sigh to pretend I didn't care, but he whistled even louder. Until he got me with his stupid spit, right below my eye.
I wiped my face and turned away. Turned away when my fists were ready. So ready.
Danny knew it. His whistling got louder and he leapt like a ballerina.
Then Principal Myers walked in.
Mr. Mwila had not called our house yet. Big Ma would have given me an earful the second I came into the living room, where she sat in her chair, resewing Pa's shirt buttons. I didn't want to stew over the detention note that she or Pa had to sign. I got it over with and took the mimeographed letter out of my book bag. The smell of purple ink swirled up my nose when I unfolded the bright white paper. The writing on the paper was blurry after too much recopying but Big Ma would be able to read it. This was
the second detention letter I had brought home. The first was from punching Ellis in the jaw last year.
I braced myself for either the scolding or the sting of Big Ma's right hand. I expected to get one thing or the other. Or both.
“What did you do now, Delphine?” At least this time she asked what it was all about first. My sisters and I weren't supposed to bring trouble in the front door. Especially not from school.
I spoke plain and clear. “I got into an argument in class with Danny McClaren.”
“You're in class to learn from the teacher,” Big Ma said. “Not to be arguing with some know-nothing boy.”
I heard myself while I retold the whole thing. It sounded silly.
Big Ma never looked up once from her sewing. When I finished telling, she said, “Women are too busy to be running for president of the United States. What are they teaching at that school? Woman president. Hmp.”
“My teacher might call.” Might as well let the other shoe drop.
“Let him call. I'll straighten him out.”
Big Ma was funny, as in hard to figure out. She had loved President John F. Kennedy but hadn't wanted a Catholic president. She loved keeping up with the Kennedys in the supermarket gossip papers but also loved wagging her finger at them.