"This is Mrs. Garcia," said Mr. Tushman, and the lady smiled at Mom and took off her
glasses and got up out of her chair.
My mother shook her hand and said: "Isabel Pullman, nice to meet you."
"And this
is August," Mr. Tushman said. Mom kind of stepped to the side a bit, so I
would move forward. Then that thing happened that I've seen happen a million times
before. When I looked up at her, Mrs. Garcia's eyes dropped for a second. It was so
fast no one else would have noticed, since the rest of her face stayed exactly the same.
She was smiling a really shiny smile.
"Such a pleasure
to meet you, August," she said, holding out her hand for me to shake.
"Hi," I said quietly, giving her my hand, but I didn't want to look at her face, so I kept
staring at her glasses, which hung from a chain around her neck.
"Wow, what a firm grip!" said Mrs. Garcia. Her hand was really warm.
"The kid's got a killer handshake," Mr. Tushman agreed, and
everyone laughed above
my head.
"You can call me Mrs. G," Mrs. Garcia said. I think she was talking to me, but I was
looking at all the stuff on her desk now. "That's what everyone calls me. Mrs. G, I forgot
my combination. Mrs. G, I need a late pass. Mrs. G, I want to change my elective."
"Mrs. G's actually the one who runs the place," said Mr. Tushman, which again made
all the grown-ups laugh.
"I'm here every morning by seven-thirty," Mrs. Garcia
continued, still looking at me
while I stared at her brown sandals with small purple flowers on the buckles. "So if you
ever need anything, August, I'm the one to ask. And you can ask me anything."
"Okay," I mumbled.
"Oh, look at that cute baby," Mom said, pointing to one of the photographs on Mrs.
Garcia's bulletin board. "Is he yours?"
"No, my goodness!" said Mrs. Garcia, smiling a big smile now that was totally different
from her shiny smile. "You've just made my day. He's my grandson."
"What a cutie!" said Mom, shaking her head. "How old?"
"In that picture he was
five months, I think. But he's big now. Almost eight years old!"
"Wow," said Mom, nodding and smiling. "Well, he is absolutely beautiful."
"Thank you!" said Mrs. Garcia, nodding like she was about to say something else about
her grandson. But then all of a sudden her smile got a little smaller. "We're all going to
take very good care of August," she said to Mom, and I saw her give Mom's
hand a
little squeeze. I looked at Mom's face, and that's when I realized she was just as
nervous as I was. I guess I liked Mrs. Garcia
—when she wasn't wearing her shiny
smile.
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