5207140
9780440420460
Saturday, March 15, 10:00 a.m. Finally, today I'm a teenager! I see the next year of my life waving me onward like Brad Pitt in a loincloth! Great things are about to happen. For example: a. I will say goodbye to tech ed with Mr. Byrd. (Yay!) b. I will say hello to eighth grade. (Hooray!) c. Wendel will at long last admit that he likes me.* d. Lillian will finally get a real job and move out of the house and I won't have to share a bedroom anymore.** *This morning I thought of a plan to help him over his shyness thing--sort of a birthday gift from my brain! If I ask Gary, I'm pretty sure he'll give me a part-time job working with him and Wendel at the studio. Spending more time together ought to help the boy along. Sure, I'll need to figure out what to say to Azra, but as long as it's Wen who makes the move and not me, I haven't broken our deal, right? (Note to self: Start working up an interest in photography.) **This, of course, may just be wishful thinking, but it's my birthday, so I can dream, can't I? (Note to self: Start leaving the Help Wanted section of the newspaper on Lillian's pillow.) On top of all the other excitement of the day, I would also finally find out what was inside the mystery package from Aunt Sarah. A week before my birthday, it had arrived in the mail. That was kind of strange because I barely knew Aunt Sarah. Sure, I was aware that she lived in Chicago and that she was a teacher like my mom, but I hadn't seen her since my dad died, and that was when I was two. My mom was almost as curious as I was. "So, are you going to open it now, Floey?" "I can't," I said. "It says, 'Do not unwrap until March fifteenth.' " So it sat on top of the television and I could only wonder what might be inside. It was kind of a fun mystery. When my birthday finally came, Aunt Sarah's package sat at my feet along with a handful of other gift-wrapped boxes, waiting for me to reach down and open them. Five eager pairs of eyes looked on. Next to Azra, my best friend, sat Wen. He looked especially lovable in his new rectangular black-framed glasses. He still looked geeky, but in an artsy, hip kind of way. It was easy to see why Azra and I both had crushes on him. Near my mother sat Gary, my mother's tennis partner, and Frank Sinatra, my sister's crotchety old ferret. The only person missing was my sister, Lillian, who was already an hour late, typical for her. In fact, we'd just decided to go on without her. But just as I was reaching for Aunt Sarah's package, Lillian showed up. Everyone turned to see her burst through the door with two complete strangers. "Everybody, I'd like to introduce you to my new friends, Frida and Digger!" she said in her big, loud voice. "They're from Sweden!" Frida and Digger were tall, smiling blond girls in giant parkas. They looked about the same age as Lillian, twenty-one. Lillian explained that she'd met them on the bus coming back from Providence, where she'd been walking some rich lady's dog. She spoke slowly to the blonder of the two. "It is Digger, right?" The other one, who must have been Frida, nodded. From the uncertain way the two girls looked at each other, I felt sure their English was shaky at best. Frida took out an unwrapped box of scented soaps. They'd obviously picked it out only moments earlier at the dollar store where the bus dropped them off. "Happy birthday, Floey," Frida said to Azra, enunciating every syllable carefully and handing the box to my friend instead of me. "Come on in," my mother saHughes, Mark Peter is the author of 'I Am the Wallpaper ', published 2007 under ISBN 9780440420460 and ISBN 0440420466.
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