"I can imagine." "No! You can't! You've never seen him. I have."
"It might not even be who you're thinking it is."
"Trust me, it is. And I'm telling you, it's really, really bad. He's deformed, Mom. His eyes
are like down here." I pointed to my cheeks. "And he has no ears. And his
mouth is like
. . ."
Jamie had walked into the kitchen to get a juice box from the fridge.
"Ask Jamie," I said. "Right, Jamie? Remember that kid we saw in the park after school
last year? The kid named August? The one with the face?"
"Oh, that kid?" said Jamie, his eyes opening wide. "He gave me a nightmare!!
Remember, Mommy? That nightmare about the zombies from last year?"
"I thought that was from watching a scary movie!" answered Mom.
"No!" said Jamie, "it was from seeing that kid! When I saw him, I was like, 'Ahhh!' and I
ran away. . . ."
"Wait a minute," said Mom, getting serious. "Did you do that in front of him?"
"I couldn't help it!" said Jamie, kind of whining.
"Of course you could help it!" Mom scolded.
"Guys, I have to tell you, I'm really disappointed by what I'm hearing here." And she
looked like how she sounded. "I mean, honestly, he's
just a little boy
—just like you! Can
you imagine how he felt to see you running away from him, Jamie, screaming?"
"It wasn't a scream," argued Jamie. "It was like an 'Ahhh!' " He put his hands on his
cheeks and started running around the kitchen.
"Come on, Jamie!" said Mom angrily. "I honestly thought
both my boys were more
sympathetic than that."
"What's sympathetic?" said Jamie, who was only going into the second grade.
"You know exactly what I mean by sympathetic, Jamie," said Mom.
"It's just he's so ugly, Mommy," said Jamie.
"Hey!" Mom yelled, "I don't like that word! Jamie, just get your juice box. I want to talk to
Jack alone for a second."
"Look, Jack," said Mom as soon as he left, and I knew she
was about to give me a
whole speech.
"Okay, I'll do it," I said, which completely shocked her.
"You will?"
"Yes!"
"So I can call Mr. Tushman?"
"Yes! Mom, yes, I said yes!"
Mom smiled. "I knew you'd rise to the occasion, kiddo. Good for you. I'm proud of you,
Jackie." She messed up my hair.
So here's why I changed my mind. It wasn't so I wouldn't have to hear Mom give me a
whole lecture. And it wasn't to protect this
August kid from Julian, who I knew would be
a jerk about the whole thing. It was because when I heard Jamie talking about how he
had run away from August going 'Ahhh,' I suddenly felt really bad. The thing is, there
are always going to be kids like Julian who are jerks.
But if a little kid like Jamie, who's
usually a nice enough kid, can be that mean, then a kid like August doesn't stand a
chance in middle school.
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