"Oh good," he said. "I never liked that thing."
Via couldn't believe I had cut it off. "That took you years to grow!" she said,
almost like she was angry. "Why did you cut it off?"
"I don't know," I answered.
"Did someone make fun of it?"
"No."
"Did you tell Christopher you were cutting it off?"
"We're not even friends anymore!"
"That's not true," she said. "I can't believe you would just cut it off like that," she
added snottily, and then practically slammed my bedroom door
shut as she left
the room.
I was snuggling with Daisy on my bed when Dad came to tuck me in later. He
scooched Daisy over gently and lay down next to me on the blanket.
"So, Auggie Doggie," he said, "it was really an okay day?" He got that from an
old cartoon about a dachshund named Auggie Doggie, by the way. He had
bought it for me on
eBay when I was about four, and we watched it a lot for a
while
—especially in the hospital. He would call me Auggie Doggie and I would
call him "dear ol' Dad," like the puppy called the dachshund dad on the show.
"Yeah, it was
totally okay," I said, nodding.
"You've been so quiet all night long."
"I guess I'm tired."
"It was a long day, huh?"
I nodded.
"But it really was okay?"
I nodded again. He didn't say anything, so after
a few seconds, I said: "It was
better than okay, actually."
"That's great to hear, Auggie," he said quietly, kissing my forehead. "So it looks
like it was
a good call Mom made, your going to school."
"Yeah. But I could stop going if I wanted to, right?"
"That was the deal, yes," he answered. "Though I guess it would depend on why
you wanted to stop going, too, you know. You'd have to let us know. You'd have
to talk to us and tell us how you're feeling, and if anything bad was happening.
Okay? You promise you'd tell us?"
"Yeah."
"So can I ask you something? Are you mad at Mom or something? You've been
kind of huffy with her all night long. You know, Auggie, I'm as much to blame for
sending you to school as she is."
"No, she's more to blame. It was her idea."
Mom knocked on the door just then and peeked her head inside my room.
"Just wanted to say good night," she said. She looked kind of shy for a second.
"Hi, Momma," Dad said, picking up my hand and waving it at her.
"I heard
you cut off your braid," Mom said to me, sitting down at the edge of the
bed next to Daisy.
"It's
not a big deal," I answered quickly.
"I didn't say it was," said Mom.
"Why don't you put Auggie to bed tonight?" Dad said to Mom, getting up. "I've
got some work to do anyway. Good night, my son, my son." That was another
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