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Authors: M. LaVora Perry

BOOK: Taneesha Never Disparaging
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The back door buzzed. I jumped up and ran into the kitchen. It was Carli! Her face was as red as hot salsa and if her eyes could talk, she could have been suspended for saying that at school.
But I didn't care. I was so happy to see her, I felt like doing Ronnie Lawson's twirling backdance—only I didn't because she looked too dangerous.
We had a totally silent snack and study period.
Finally, sitting with my legs crossed lotus-style on the living room carpet, I couldn't take the quiet anymore.
“Well, if you still want to help me, I'm going to write a speech and make a flyer. I'll say why everybody should vote for me.”
“And why
is
that anyway, Taneesha? You don't
want
to be president, remember?”
“Carli, I'm sorry.” It felt good to let that out.
“What am I supposed to say to that girl, Taneesha? Hunh? I should tell her to leave you alone—so she can wallop
me
? 'Cause that's what she'll do, you know. She looks like she's a real good fighter. She might even be a boxer for all we know. Like Laila Ali or something. She's big enough.”
What could I say? I knew she was right.
“We should
tell our parents.

I couldn't put up a fight anymore. Carli made sense. Plus I could tell how badly she didn't want me to get every bone in my body ground to bits. Still, I believed I had good reasons not to totally cave in and tell my parents.
“Okay, okay,” I said. “You can tell your father, but I'm not telling my parents. And I don't want you to either.”
“Why?!”
“Carli, I know them. They'll say I should chant. That's what they say about everything. I hear their lectures and dumb little quotes all the time. It's always the same thing no matter what I'm going through. They don't listen.
“Plus if I tell them about that girl, they might come up to school. What good would that do? Once they leave, she can still beat me up. They can't be at school every day. They have to work!”
“I don't know…”
“You know what I'm saying, right, Carli? You see what it's like. I come home by myself—I mean with you, but you know what I mean. I make my snack by myself. I do my homework—all without my parents' help. Well mostly anyway.”
“Your parents are nice, Taneesha. They do lots of stuff for you.”
“That's not what I'm saying—” Couldn't she see? I didn't want my parents to get involved and then not be around to follow up. They didn't live in the school world, but I did. I couldn't depend on them to fix things when that world fell apart.
Those girls Carli and I saw fighting on Bernard yesterday had parents just like me. So did that boy we saw two weeks ago—the one who might be dead now, for all we knew.
But where were those parents? Not one grown-up helped those kids. People drove by in cars with their windows rolled up. They slowed down like they were watching reality TV.
It could be
me
next time.
I
could be the one alone on the street. I could be getting beat up after school with nobody to help me.
“Carli, I'm just saying I think I should at least
try
to handle this myself. On my own. Nobody can make one hundred percent sure that girl won't kick my butt. Not you. Not my parents, not anyone.
I
have to do it. If I can't, I'll tell them. But not yet.”
“But you could get hurt.”
“If I need help, I'll tell them, all right?”
My words hung in the air. Carli still seemed unconvinced.
After a while, I said, “What I need to do right now is make that dumb speech and a flyer. You going to help me or not?”
“You are so darn stubborn, Taneesha Bey-Ross.”
 
By the time Carli and I shut down the computer we had a pretty decent speech and twenty-one flyer printouts (one for each kid and Mr. Alvarez):
VOTE 4 TANEESHA
She's friendly.
She's a good listener.
She's a hard worker.
She's all that and then some!
And she'll help you
with your schoolwork!
I practiced my speech with Carli playing audience and critic. We worked at it until Mr. Flanagan honked his car horn for Carli to come out.
 
“…One nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”
Wednesday, right after the Pledge of Allegiance, I took my seat and shot my hand into the air on one of the few occasions that I wore a skirt and tights to school—both navy blue. I had on a white blouse that I'd ironed myself—spray-starched and almost as crispy as Mr. Alvarez's shirt. That morning, I'd tried to dress like a candidate.
“Yes, Taneesha?” asked Mr. Alvarez, sounding totally annoyed. “We have a lot to do today and we need to get started. What is it?”
I didn't need the embarrassment of asking my
question in front of everyone.
Everybody's going to know that
you
know you blew it yesterday! Not that it's a
secret
or anything.
“Can I come to your desk? It's private.”
“Oh, all right. Hurry now.”
I popped out of my seat with my whole class staring at me. Mr. Alvarez didn't have to ask me twice to hurry. I didn't want to hear another “turtle” remark like yesterday.
“Can I give a new speech today?” I whispered when I got to his desk. “And pass out flyers?”
Everybody was so quiet it was spooky.
Trying to get all up in my conversation.
“Speeches were yesterday, Taneesha.”
Can't you talk a little lower?
“As I said—” continued Mr. Alvarez.
Squirming, I wished I had stayed in my seat and kept my mouth shut.
“—we've got a very full schedule today.”
Rayshaun and some other kids snickered. And suddenly, even though Mr. Alvarez was dogging me and I could hear them laughing behind me, I decided something: Mr. Alvarez
had
to let me give my speech again. I had to prove, to myself maybe, that I wasn't a flop, that I really
was
as big as the
universe.
I straightened my back and held my head higher. I wasn't leaving that desk until that man gave me my “Yes.”
“I know there's lots to do today but I didn't do my best yesterday. I wrote a better speech.”
I didn't even bother trying to whisper.
If they hear me, they hear me.
Mr. Alvarez stared me right in the eyes.
I gave him just as good a look back.
Say “okay.” Say “okay.” Say “okay.” Nam Myoho Renge Kyo!
I watched him begin to flip through his spiral planner notebook, taking
forever
to turn each page.
After a while, his eyes landed on mine again.
“Taneesha,” he said slowly, “we don't have much time. But you can speak right after recess.”
YES
!
“Thank you! I don't need lots of time—just another chance! Thank you!”
I felt so light I nearly
flew
back to my desk seat. When I got there, I found a piece of paper folded on my chair. I sat and opened it.
I didn't tell my father.
—Carli
I smiled and looked over at Carli. She gave me a tiny wave.
 
After recess, Mr. Alvarez sat at his desk while I stood in front the class and read my speech:
“At first I didn't want to be class president. When Carli nominated me, I felt like saying, ‘No way!' I thought being president would be too hard. I didn't think I was good enough to do the job. But I was wrong.
“Last week I had a great time on Take Your Child To Work Day. I went to the hospital where my mother works. I don't want to talk too much about it because I'm saving it for my report on Friday. But I will say I that had to work with children who have diabetes, a very serious illness.
“In our class, we've have been discussing leadership. We've learned that good leaders care about people, work hard, and try to make things better for everyone. We've learned that the best kind of leader helps people become strong and bring out their own power so the people can be strong enough to help themselves and others, too.
“At the hospital, I read to children that are younger than me. Maybe when I read to them I made their day a little happier. They helped me, too. They helped me see that anyone can be brave—even little girls like them.
“Now I am going to be able to read to children at the hospital every week and I asked my mother if Carli can do it, too. I think that maybe Take Your Child To Work Day helped me develop the leadership skills I needed to help Carli become a volunteer at the hospital.
“If you elect me as your president, I will use my leadership skills to serve you. I will be friendly. I will be a good listener. I will help you with your schoolwork. I promise to work hard to help you bring out your power. I will also help you develop your leadership skills, too.
“Thank you!”
Mr. Alvarez smiled so bright I had to squint.
“Class, let's give Taneesha a well-deserved round of applause.”
They did.
CHAPTER 16
SNAKE SNACK
C
arli and I walked up Bernard Avenue after school. I'd been flying all afternoon, soaking up the glow of my classmate's praise (“Man, your speech was
raw
, Taneesha.”) and the memory of all those claps that had seemed to go on and on for hours.
But the closer it got to the end of school, the less airborne I felt. By the time school let out, I'd crash-landed like a duck shot out of the sky.
Walking out of Hunter with Carli, all I could see was that older girl's fat, red jacket. And all I could feel was my chest caving in while her tank of a boot crushed it.
I started coughing.
“You all right?”
“Yeah. Well, no. But, yeah.”
Earlier, at lunch, Carli had said she'd decided to wait and see how things went the rest of this week before telling her father what was going on. Now she and I headed up Bernard on the way home.
I looked at the clouds. It seemed like it might snow.
“Thanks again for not telling,” I said, walking as fast as I could without pulling Carli behind me. She was holding on to my arm.
Even though I'd thanked her real naturally, inside, my feelings were as knotted as one of my locks. I was mad at her for having a limp and I felt selfish because of how I felt. I couldn't keep from thinking that if Carli's leg was normal we could have both run home before the older girl had a chance to sneak up on me.
“Well, like I said, I know you really don't want your parents to find out. As soon as I tell my father, he'll tell them for sure. I still think you're making a mistake, but—”
“Making
what
mistake? I told you you is
dumb, girl. Even your little cripple friend know it.” The older girl forced her way between Carli and me, splitting us apart. “What you mess up?”
“Excuse me?” I asked, irked.
“You heard me. I said, ‘What you mess up?'”
“I didn't mess up anything.”
I felt confused. I didn't have a clue what she was raging about this time. I wondered what excuse she would use now to smear misery all over an otherwise okay day.
“You lying. What I tell you about lying to me? Cripple Girl said you made a mistake and I know she right, 'cause all you is is one ugly mistake. I bet your mama think so, too.”
Suddenly, the girl's voice sounded familiar. Not because I'd been listening to her on the street for the past few weeks but because I'd heard her a lot of times before. From inside.
She sounded just like Evella.
Her words were sort of different, and so was her voice, but no doubt about it, she was feeding me the same junk Evella did. Only instead of being in my head, the girl—or was it Evella?—was live and in person, right on Bernard Avenue.
And I was
not
having it this time.
“No! My mama doesn't think I'm a mistake!
For your information, my mama says I'm big as the universe.
“And
she
is not a cripple!” I said, pointing to Carli.
The sound of my own voice was just the
oomph
I needed to do some raging myself. “You know what? You're nothing but a mean bully, picking on kids smaller than you! You're—you're just a coward!”
“Oh no you
didn't
just call me a coward! If I'm a coward, then I'm the coward that's going to beat
your
ugly little butt!”
Before I knew it, the older girl shoved me and I stumbled backwards, into the street. I hit the asphalt
hard
. Hard enough to rattle my bones. I lay still, too stunned to move. Cars rolled by and honked at me.
What she'd do
that
for?
I wasn't sure if something was broken on me or not.
Carli gasped and helped me up. We got back onto the sidewalk.
I guess nothing's broken.
All my bones moved okay. I shook my head back and forth, trying to get my senses together.
Next thing I knew, the older girl reached for me again.
No. Stop! Help! Heeeeeeeeeelp!
I looked left and right, trying to see how to get past the incredible hulk that was moving in on me fast—
“Surprise! Hey, hop in girls!”
Phew! Mama's dark blue minivan pulled up along the curb!
“I got off work a little early today!” she hollered from her rolled-down window. “I came by to pick you two up!”
THANK YOU, MAMA!
I would have shouted my gratitude but I didn't want to seem like a baby in front of the older girl, or in front of Carli, for that matter.

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