The Padawan Bites the Dust
I'm not sure at what point that night Auggie had cut off his Padawan braid, or
why that made me really mad. I had always found his obsession with everything
Star Wars kind of geeky, and that braid in the back of his hair, with its little
beads, was just awful. But he had always been so proud of it, of how long it took
him to grow it, of how he had chosen the beads himself in a crafts store in Soho.
He and Christopher, his best friend, used to play with lightsabers and Star Wars
stuff whenever they got together, and they had both started growing their braids
at the same time. When August cut his braid off that night, without an
explanation, without telling me beforehand (which was surprising)
—or even
calling Christopher
—I was just so upset I can't even explain why.
I've seen Auggie brushing his hair in the bathroom mirror. He meticulously tries
to get every hair in place. He tilts his head to look at himself from different
angles, like there's some magic perspective inside the mirror that could change
the dimensions of his face.
Mom knocked on my door after dinner. She looked drained, and I realized that
between me and Auggie, today had been a tough day for her, too.
"So you want to tell me what's up?" she asked nicely, softly.
"Not now, okay?" I answered. I was reading. I was tired. Maybe later I'd be up to
telling her about Miranda, but not now.
"I'll check in before you go to bed," she said, and then she came over and kissed
me on the top of my head.
"Can Daisy sleep with me tonight?"
"Sure, I'll bring her in later."
"Don't forget to come back," I said as she left.
"I promise."
But she didn't come back that night. Dad did. He told me Auggie had had a bad
first day and Mom was helping him through it. He asked me how my day had
gone and I told him fine. He said he didn't believe me for a second, and I told
him Miranda and Ella were acting like jerks. (I didn't mention how I took the
subway home by myself, though.) He said nothing tests friendships like high
school, and then proceeded to poke fun at the fact that I was reading
War and
Peace
. Not real fun, of course, since I'd heard him brag to people that he had a
"fifteen-year-old who is reading Tolstoy." But he liked to rib me about where I
was in the book, in a war part or in a peace part, and if there was anything in
there about Napoleon's days as a hip-hop dancer. It was silly stuff, but Dad
always managed to make everyone laugh. And sometimes that's all you need to
feel better.
"Don't be mad at Mom," he said as he bent down to give me a good-night kiss.
"You know how much she worries about Auggie."
"I know," I acknowledged.
"Want the light on or off? It's getting kind of late," he said, pausing by the light
switch at the door.
"Can you bring Daisy in first?"
Two seconds later he came back with Daisy dangling in his arms, and he laid
her down next to me on the bed.
"Good night, sweetheart," he said, kissing my forehead. He kissed Daisy on her
forehead, too. "Good night, girlie. Sweet dreams."
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