wear a baseball cap anymore. In situations like these, baseball caps come in really
handy. Sometimes I wish I could still get away with wearing that old astronaut helmet I
used to wear when I was little. Believe it or not, people would think seeing a kid in an
astronaut helmet was a lot less weird than seeing my face. Anyway, I
kept my head
down as I walked right behind Mom through the long bright hallways.
We followed the crowd to the auditorium, where students handed out programs at the
front entrance. We found seats in the fifth row, close to the middle. As
soon as we sat
down, Mom started looking inside her pocketbook.
"I can't believe I forgot my glasses!" she said.
Dad shook his head. Mom was always forgetting her glasses, or her keys, or something
or other. She is flaky that way.
"You want to move closer?" said Dad.
Mom squinted at the stage. "No, I can see okay."
"Speak now or
forever hold your peace," said Dad.
"I'm fine," answered Mom.
"Look, there's Justin," I said to Dad, pointing out Justin's picture in the program.
"That's a nice picture of him," he answered, nodding.
"How come there's no picture of Via?" I said.
"She's an understudy," said Mom. "But, look: here's her name."
"Why do they call her an understudy?" I asked.
"Wow, look at Miranda's picture," said Mom to Dad. "I don't think I would have
recognized her."
"Why do they call it understudy?" I repeated.
"It's what they call someone who replaces an actor if he can't perform for some
reason," answered Mom.
"Did you hear Martin's getting remarried?" Dad said to Mom.
"Are you kidding me?!" Mom answered, like she was surprised.
"Who's Martin?" I asked.
"Miranda's father," Mom answered, and then to Dad: "Who told you?"
"I ran into Miranda's mother in the subway. She's not happy about it. He has a new
baby on the way and everything."
"Wow," said Mom, shaking her head.
"What are you guys talking about?" I said.
"Nothing," answered Dad.
"But why do they call it understudy?" I said.
"I don't know, Auggie Doggie," Dad answered. "Maybe because the actors
kind of study
under the main actors or something? I really don't know."
I was going to say something else but then the lights went down. The audience got very
quiet very quickly.
"Daddy, can you please not call me Auggie Doggie anymore?" I whispered in Dad's
ear.
Dad smiled and nodded and gave me a thumbs-up.
The play started. The curtain opened. The stage was completely empty except for
Justin, who was sitting on an old rickety chair tuning his fiddle. He was wearing an
oldfashioned type of suit and a straw hat.
"This play is called 'Our Town,' " he said to the audience. "It
was written by Thornton
Wilder; produced and directed by Philip Davenport. . . . The name of the town is
Grover's Corners, New Hampshire
—just across the Massachusetts line: latitude 42
degrees 40 minutes; longitude 70 degrees 37 minutes. The First Act shows a day in our
town. The day is May 7, 1901. The time is just before dawn."
I knew right then and there that I was going to like the play. It wasn't like other
school
plays I've been to, like The Wizard of Oz or Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs. No, this
was grown-up seeming, and I felt smart sitting there watching it.
A little later in the play, a character named Mrs. Webb calls
out for her daughter, Emily.
I knew from the program that that was the part Miranda was playing, so I leaned
forward to get a better look at her.
"That's Miranda," Mom whispered to me, squinting at the stage when Emily walked out.
"She looks so different. . . ."
"It's not Miranda," I whispered.
"It's Via." "Oh my God!" said Mom, lurching forward in her seat.
"Shh!" said Dad.
"It's Via," Mom whispered to him.
"I know," whispered Dad, smiling.
"Shhh!"
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