Read The Language Inside Online
Authors: Holly Thompson
I sleep late the next day
and Mom drives me to school in YiaYia’s car
I don’t say anything and neither does she
until we’re nearly at the school driveway
I think you should start running
she says
hmm
I say
I hate running
I like sports
I play sports
I’m good at sports
and dance
but I hate
just
running
if I were in Japan
I’d be playing volleyball
maybe on varsity
practicing for the tournament
and taking Saturday classes
at the dance studio . . .
here Toby has middle school soccer
but for me there’s just dance club
I swallow my thoughts
hold my tongue
maybe
I say to my mother
just before I get out of the car
but it doesn’t end there
when I get home from school
she insists on taking me for a run
she plays the guilt card
so I can’t refuse:
I’ll show you a loop
you can do on your own
even when I can’t
Mom’s fast
she does 5 to 10 kilometers
most every day
and runs in charity races
several times a year
she’s a dedicated runner
with a lean runner’s body
I’m out of shape now
not sinewy like her
but my legs are longer
so after a while
we find a pace
that suits us both
it’s a thirty-minute run
that seems to go on and on
down long streets
into a neighborhood
of houses with lawns
big as family farms in Japan
and on those lawns more play equipment
than any playground in the city of Kamakura
and next to the houses
garages for two or three cars
and porches and gardens
and huge shade trees
dropping their leaves
as we run past
I’m short of breath at first
but get into the rhythm
and the autumn air
and our breathing at last
until we come to a road
where three leaf blowers
blare at once
I sprint
to get by them
sprint
the final leg
but Mom pumps
past
in a blur
and beats me
to YiaYia’s stairs
on Wednesday
I have two tests, one in Chinese
easy ’cause of Japanese
another in biology
on prokaryotic reproduction
and a Model UN meeting at lunch
so it’s not until I’ve closed my locker
at the end of the day that I realize
I forgot to prepare poems for Zena
in the library
I pull up a website and quick
print out a poem
I found last week
I arrive at the Newall Center late
having missed the bus I normally ride
and Zena is sitting up
in her repaired wheelchair
arms folded tight like birds’ wings
legs hidden under a blanket
and her eyes are fierce
darting from me
to the letter board
back and forth
I pick it up
u r l-a—
she spells
late, I know, I’m sorry
and I apologize for missing
the workshop on Saturday
but no one told me