With the Might of Angels (7 page)

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Authors: Andrea Davis Pinkney

BOOK: With the Might of Angels
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I’m mad as a hornet right now, and ready to attack Goober!!! That boy!! Somebody needs to leave
him
out in the rain so that
he
can rust. At least then, he’d be too stuck to mess with my stuff.

I wish I could send Goober back to the planet where boys like him come from!

Right now, if it were up to me, I’d put him on a rocket ship, set the destination dial to “Way Far Away,” and send Goober flying off for forever. I HATE when he does stuff like this. HATE IT!! If Mama and Daddy ever heard me say what
they call “the
H
word” — H-A-T-E — I’d be the one sent off on a rocket, and made to live on Jupiter.

Mama says that in God’s eyes there is no hate. But what about MY eyes? What about MY eyes that have to look at my rusted pogo stick and be hornet-mad every time I see the brown, crusted metal on the pogo’s spring?

What about MY eyes that have to see what happens when Goober acts up?

So yeah,
HATE
is a bad word. But when your brother leaves your favorite-est thing in the world out in the rain, you HATE him for it.

That’s why a diary book is good. I can write the
H
word as much as I want. I can feel H-A-T-E, but not ever say it.

I HATE having a little brother like Goober!!

I HATE putting up with his baby-brother dumbness.

I HATE being the one who has to stick up for Goober so much.

And I HATE that God made Goober the way he is.

HATE! HATE! HATE!

And, here are some more
H
words—HA! HA! HA!

Mama and Daddy can’t stop me from writing H-A-T-E!!

Saturday, August 21, 1954
Diary Book,

Instead of calling my pogo a pogo
stick,
I should call it a pogo
stuck.
More rust has set in. The spring is crusted and slow to give. Darn that Goober!

Sunday, August 22, 1954
Diary Book,

I think Reverend Collier is getting lazy. His sermons used to be about things like finding joy in the Lord’s surprises. Now all Reverend Collier talks about is integration and fairness in education.

Can’t he think of some new ideas?

Thursday, August 26, 1954
Diary Book,

Mama says grease heals. Today she slathered my pogo’s spring with bacon grease left over from frying, and it worked. That bacon grease made the spring like new. So, I’m back to jumping on my pogo stick. It now smells like pork strips, but at least I can say, “Bye-bye, pogo
stuck.

Monday, August 30, 1954
Diary Book,

Other than Daddy’s truck, our radio is the most expensive thing we own. The voices coming out of that brown box give us all kinds of news. Mama and Daddy listen close most every night. My parents are very strict about what we tune into with our radio. We’re only allowed to play Christian music. Comedy shows, or anything Daddy says is a time-waster, are not allowed.

Thank goodness Daddy listens to baseball games. Other than that, “The radio is for news,” Daddy says.

Who wants to hear some man talking about boring newsy stuff? I’d rather listen to quiz shows like
Break the Bank.
But Daddy’s not having it. So, unless there’s a baseball game on, I only half listen.

But tonight, I listened all the way when Daddy turned up the volume. The radio commentator said, “Virginia governor Thomas B. Stanley has appointed a thirty-two-member all-white Commission on Public Education to examine the effects of the recent
Brown v. Board of Education
school integration ruling. The governor has charged this commission with studying how the
Brown
decision impacts schools in the
state of Virginia. The findings of this study will help the governor plan a course of action. The commission is chaired by Senator Garland Gray of Sussex County. It has been named the Gray Commission.”

I didn’t fully understand all the talk about commissions and findings. But I did know that Daddy and Mama were pressed to our radio.

Friday, September 3, 1954
Diary Book,

Why does summer seem to disappear the minute we turn the page on our kitchen calendar from August to September? Just yesterday I was fanning the sheen from my face with a dish towel, and wetting the towel with cold water to press on my forehead.

This morning I was fishing in my dresser drawers for something with sleeves until morning’s chill gave way to warmth. I miss summer already. Even bee stings and sweat-weather.

Saturday, September 4, 1954
Diary Book,

School starts in four days. Alls I can think about is me at Prettyman Coburn.

Me on that pretty baseball field.

Me inside a school with working clocks and toilets that flush.

Me in a
homeroom.

Me with white kids.

Only
me.

With white kids.

Only, only.

Me.

(The Panic Monster has been whispering to me lately. His growl has been low, but there’s no mistaking
shaboodle-shake
!)

Monday, September 6, 1954
Diary Book,

Today, when I asked Mama why we celebrate Labor Day, she said, “To acknowledge those of us who work, to pause on behalf of laborers.” But there was no pausing in our house today. It was like we were getting ready to meet the queen. Some kind of scrub bug has bitten Mama. She spent the day sweeping and wiping all over our house.

“Is somebody special coming?” I asked.


You’re
special,” Mama said. “And you’re
going
to a new school.”

I started to ask what me going to Prettyman
has to do with furniture polish and a broom, but I held my tongue. Somehow, to Mama’s way of thinking, a clean house means a good first day of school.

Tuesday, September 7, 1954
Diary Book,

Mama’s gone cuckoo bird! Yesterday it was cupboards and carpets. Now it’s me. Tonight when I took a bath, Mama scrubbed me cleaner than clean. She washed from my eyebrows to my toe jam, then set my hair on hard plastic curlers. Those curlers have teeth on them, too. “For
gripping
your hair,” Mama explained.

Now she expects me to get a good night’s sleep on these teethy pink plastic things. Mama had given me a whole mess of curlers from her hair care kit, too many for my small head of hair. When I told her I didn’t need the extra curlers, and to please put them back in her hair-care kit, she insisted that I keep a pile of the curlers on my nightstand. “They come loose and can fall out while you sleep,” she told me. “Besides, curlers are like socks. They have a way of disappearing. Always good to have some handy.”

While I was in the bathroom messing with the
curlers in my hair, trying to tie up my hard plastic teethy head in a scarf, Mama laid out clothes for my first day at Prettyman Coburn.

When I got back to my bedroom, there it was on a new hanger, dangling from the doorknob — the Peach Melba dress! Before I could protest, Mama explained, “I sewed a panel into each side to open up the bodice. It’ll fit fine now.”

The patent leather shoes were on the floor, side by side, at the foot of the dress. I’d taken to calling those shoes “the Vaselines.” They had more grease on them than a petroleum factory.

The shoes fit, but even with ankle socks, they rub at the heel and on the tops of my feet, at the place where the buckle meets each of the straps. The worst part, though, is that Mama had made a hair bow to match the dress. That thing looked more like a
bone
than a bow. I would be going to Prettyman Coburn with Vaseline feet and a Peach Melba
bone
in my hair!

I didn’t say a word — I
couldn’t.
Partly because the only word flinging up inside my head was
ugly,
and partly because I didn’t want to hurt Mama’s feelings. She had worked hard on mending the dress, shining the shoes, and making the bow.

But what about my feelings? I don’t give a nose hair what people think about me, but I also don’t like to look stupid.

Later – the in-between

For the life of me, I can’t sleep.

I’ve counted sheep, chickens, baseballs, the stars out my window, and the moans made by our pipes. I’m more excited than on Christmas Eve.

What shiny surprises will be waiting for me tomorrow?

Even with all my excitement,
shaboodle-shake
is rocking my bed — and my head.

Wednesday, September 8, 1954
Diary Book,

Last night I dreamed about the Panic Monster.

I woke up with a bad headache, from the curlers. When I took them out, their teeth had left marks on my forehead and at my ears. And my curled hair made me look like a muffin-head.

Mama secured the
bone
with four big bobby pins.

Then she and Daddy started in with repeating their lists of “Always remember …” and “Don’t forget …” and “Make sure you …”

But before Mama or Daddy could get too deep into their rules, the phone rang. I answered it. I knew the voice right off. It was that white lady from the NAACP, asking to
tawlk
to Mama or Daddy.

I pushed the receiver at Mama. “Yes, hello, Cynthia,” she said, with a smile in her voice. But soon Mama was frowning, and shaking her head, and saying, “I see … I see …”

When she hung up, she told Daddy and me that I would not be going to school today, that the Hadley school officials had put a stop to me attending Prettyman.

“When will I go?” I asked.

“The NAACP is working toward lifting the hold by noon today,” Mama said.

But noon came and went. We waited for further news and instruction on what to do. The phone didn’t ring once.

Finally, by three o’clock, Mama said, “Take off the dress and put it back on its hanger. Set the shoes in their box, and be careful with the bow.”

I am the only kid in Lee County who got to skip the first day of school.

I now know what it’s like to feel two ways at once — disappointed that I would not be admitted
to school today, and relieved that I would not be admitted to school today.

As much as I didn’t want to show up with muffin hair and a Peach Melba bow, I didn’t want to
not
go to school at all.

Thursday, September 9, 1954
Diary Book,

Today was the same as yesterday. Waiting and wondering, and listening for the phone to ring. Goober has started school at Bethune. I don’t like the ripped-up schoolbooks and raggedy pencils at Bethune, but I’m sure sick of sitting around while Mama scurries from the kitchen to the living room, wiping her hands on her apron, and telling me to keep clean.

Friday, September 10, 1954
Diary Book,

I’ve done the same routine several days this week — scrubbed in the tub, set my hair in curlers, woken up, put on the Peach Melba dress, and waited to hear if I’d be attending school or not.

Daddy says people who make the state laws are working to slow down integration. NAACP officials are meeting every day to determine if
it’s safe for me to go to Prettyman Coburn.

Today Daddy brought home three different newspapers and read, read, read. After supper, before Daddy left for work, he was pinned to the radio, listening close. I listened, too, hoping for some news. “Governor Stanley has called again for cool heads, calm, steady, and sound judgment,” the man on the radio said. “Stanley started out in favor of integration, but has been swayed by the majority, and has, in recent weeks, been in support of segregationists.

“School board officials have threatened to close all Hadley public schools rather than integrate them.”

I’m a trapped rabbit, eager to jump — right out of my skin!

Sunday, September 12, 1954
Diary Book,

Church was packed today.

Reverend Collier started his sermon by asking, “Who among us steps back in the face of a threat?”

He talked about what the school board was trying to do to keep schools separate.

The reverend ended his sermon by telling us, “Those who have faith always step forward.”

Monday, September 13, 1954
Diary Book,

Back-to-school once meant back-to-boredom.

Back-to-books.

Back-to-Bethune.

Back-to-broken.

But today when I watched everybody except me go
back
to school for the second week, I wished I was also going
back
— to anything.

But I have been
held back
from school for dumb reasons.

Butterflies in a net have more freedom than me. At least they can breathe. I’ve been holding my breath for near to a week.

Thursday, September 16, 1954
Diary Book,

Sitting home. Waiting. Hair curled. Vaselines strapped on tight. Help!

Friday, September 17, 1954
Diary Book,

I am dying of Peach Melba
bone
disease. Could I at least wait in dungarees?

Sunday, September 19, 1954
Diary Book,

Well, I got my
back
-to-school wish after all. Turns out, I’m going
back
to Bethune tomorrow.

Back to bitten-up pencils and broken books. Mama and Daddy are sending me to Bethune for now, until people make up their minds about which school I’m going to for good.

Monday, September 20, 1954
Diary Book,

I don’t know what’s worse — no school, or old school. At least I can go
back
to wearing clothes that fit and hair that’s nothing like a muffin.

By the way, in this year’s classroom it’s 11:20 all day long at Mary McLeod Bethune School. The books have yellow pages and are dog-eared. Today I stared and stared at my classroom’s broken clock, and as yucky as chewed gum feels, I pressed both thumbs hard under my desk.

More than ever, I knew that Bethune doesn’t have whatever it is I need to learn to go to college and doctor school.

It’s like I wrote before. I have no idea
what
I need, but I know Bethune doesn’t have it. That’s why I want to go to Prettyman so badly. Even though
I have never set foot in that building, I have a hunch the kids inside are getting everything a girl needs to go to doctor school.

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