the house and blasts the stereo as loud as it can go. I stand outside for several minutes to see if heâll invite me in, but he doesnât. I ride back home and try to figure out how summer went from being the best season of the year to the absolute total worst.
Susanâs Site
My mom has a medical conference on Saturday, so I watch YouTube videos while Dad works. He points to the storyboard heâs illustrating and shows me how the director will use it to plan her camera angles and shots.
I know itâs a matter of time before he tries to tie the subject into my life, and after a few moments, he does. âJust like the illustrations you do. Have you found them helpful?â
âI do my drawings because theyâre fun.â
I head back to the couch and the laptop. Itâs Saturdayâcan I have one day off from learning stuff, please?
I email a quick note to my grandma in Boston, then head for the online Garfield archives. I swear, I donât know what Iâd do without him, Calvin, and the other guys. Garfield makes me think about Margot; itâs been a week since Carly and I visualized the story with her. Next time I readâwhenever that isâIâll definitely do that again. The beach scene we re-created from Margotâs book that day reminds me of Susan James, so I type her name into the search engine. After a million other sites come up, I find a Web page in Susanâs memory with photos and quotes from her family.
Staring up from the computer screen is a girl with long brown hair, a huge smile, and a Red Sox cap. In another photo, she holds a field hockey stick with four other athletic girls. I read about what a good student she was, how she helped her neighbors after school, how she loved her younger brother and playing piano. I guess when youâre dead no one talks about how you used to fart in bed or talk with your mouth full.
On the last page is a guestbook. I scroll through the entries and read what her high school classmates and teachers have to say about her. Sheâs been dead for almost a decade, yet the latest entry was written only a month ago. I guess some people still miss her.
When I look up, I realize Iâve just spent an hour reading. Part of me is proud of such an accomplishment, but another part wants to protest by jumping on my bike and racing to the pier to watch the guy spray-painted in silver stand like a mannequin for money. The whole time I was reading the entries, a thought kept nagging at me, and now it finally hits the surface. All these people who miss Susan, like her friends Lauren and Danny, miss her because of me.
Although no one on this Web site knows I exist, Iâm the missing link in their pain. I feel something dark in the center of my chest. I shouldâve figured this day would be a disasterâwhoever heard of thinking on a Saturday?
For several minutes, I face the blank screen, then gather my courage and begin typing my own entry.
Dear Susan,
What were you thinking? You obviously had friends and family who loved you, people more important than some two-year-old you just met. Iâve seen photos of me at that age; I was cute, but not THAT cute.
I guess what weighs on me most is this: Am I supposed to grow up to be some guy who stops wars or creates new energy sources just because you saved me? Can I still be a normal kid who makes a lot of mistakes, maybe even MORE mistakes than the average kid? I guess what I really want to say is: I didnât ask you to save me, but Iâm glad you did.
I hit âenterâ and watch my note disappear into time and space.
Movies Run in the Family
I make a deal with Margot: If I read the first chapter of one of my summer reading books, sheâll give all the Mustangs a break and get us out of Fraction Friday. As much as I donât want to read one of the books, I really donât want to have some fake contest with one of the other camp groups about
Tim Lahaye, Jerry B. Jenkins