Read Formerly Shark Girl Online
Authors: Kelly Bingham
“See you in there!” I call to Mom and Michael,
who both wave, Mom kind of frantically.
“Grandma and all the rest of us
are seated on the
left,
” she says. “Look for us!”
I give her a thumbs-up.
Inside we’ll gather
and form our lines.
Then we’ll march back outside,
to the stage,
in front of family and friends.
Then? Then it’s speeches
and diplomas
and parties
and forever.
“Jane!” Justin runs from the crowd.
He is carrying the biggest trumpet-ish thing
I’ve ever seen.
“We got a seat in the very back,”
he says. “But I’m going to blow this
when you get up there,
so you’ll know exactly where we are.”
“Is that a
vuvuzela
?” I ask.
He nods proudly. “Uh-huh.
I bet you’re the only person here today
who gets one of these going off for you.”
“I bet you’re right.”
Justin squirms, but I hug him, anyway.
“Thank you.”
He joins his mother,
and hand in hand, they disappear
into the crowd, Justin barely limping.
“Coming?” Rachel lags back a little.
I run to catch up, and together
we trot after Trina, Angie, and Elizabeth.
I see the school
as if seeing it for the first time.
The rafters, the bricks, the windows,
the spot where Angie and I came to terms
last year,
the spot where Max picked me up after school
last week,
the pathways I have walked
and where I have changed
and grown
over the last four years.
This school has seen me through
so much change.
And not just school, of course.
The people in it.
And today . . .
today it’s over.
For real.
I guess I should be sad,
and I am . . .
but mostly?
Mostly, I’m tingling all over,
heady, giddy.
And when a loud horn squawks
in the distance, Rachel and I nudge each other
and then burst out laughing.
“Jane Margaret Arrowood.”
Moving toward the stage,
my legs get real stiff,
and it’s like all of a sudden,
I’ve forgotten how to walk.
But I regain my stride
when a small roar erupts
from somewhere off to my left,
Michael’s yell standing out above the mix,
and somewhere out there
that
vuvuzela
honks again and again.
“Congratulations,” Principal Marks says.
He shakes my hand and holds out my diploma.
I take the scroll in hand.
Turning, I pause for the barest of seconds.
I see them — my family:
Mom, Michael, Grandma
and Uncle Ben and Aunt Karen,
and I look at the sea of faces
that makes up my classmates.
I see Rachel and Trina,
still waiting their turn.
Waving to my family,
I think,
This moment
is a moment I’ll always remember,
this instant of knowing
that I’m now
a soon-to-be college student,
a young adult,
a woman
with my whole life ahead of me,
and my hands — both of them, in my mind —
holding on firmly
to those I love.
No matter what the storms,
I will hold on.
Am I taking up my oar?
Oh, yes.
And I’m ready to paddle.
I can’t wait to see
where I go next.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or, if real, are used fictitiously.
Copyright © 2013 by Kelly Bingham
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, transmitted, or stored in an information retrieval system in any form or by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, taping, and recording, without prior written permission from the publisher.
First edition 2013
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 2012952049
ISBN 978-0-7636-5362-0 (hardcover)
ISBN 978-0-7636-6406-0 (electronic)
Candlewick Press
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Somerville, Massachusetts 02144
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