Help Wanted: Wednesdays Only. Peggy Dymond LeaveyЧитать онлайн книгу.
kid, eh? Where’d you come from, smart kid?” Randy came across the hall to where I was hastily shoving books onto the metal shelf over my head.
“Riverview,” I said. “And I’m no ‘A’ student.”
“Riverview. Where’s that?”
“About five miles. Other side of the city.”
“So why’d you come here? Old man take off?”
“We came here to live with my grandfather. He’s sick and needs us.”
“Anyone who’d need you would have to be sick. So where is your old man?”
“He doesn’t live with us. I live with my mother.” Not that it’s any of your business, I wanted to say.
“That’s not the question, dude. I said, where’s your old man.”
“Same place as yours, Randy,” crowed his pal. “He goes to see him twice a month on visiting day!” And he gave Randy a punch on the shoulder that he wasn’t expecting which sent him flying into me. Both of us slammed against the open door of my locker with a crash.
“Hey! Watch it, Joey!” Randy grabbed up his lunch bag off the floor and took off down the hall after his friend.
There was no place else to go and eat except the lunchroom. By the time I got there everyone was already inside. It was packed. I’d rather skip lunch than ask anyone to make room for me. I was just pushing against the door to leave again, as quietly as possible, when someone called, “Hey, Mark. Over here.”
Nicholas was at one of the tables. He swept the plastic wrap piled with sandwiches along the table with his arm and moved down the bench, so I could get my legs in. Saved again. Nicholas might never become my favorite person, but anyone who rescues me from an awkward moment is a friend of mine.
“So,” he said, breathing tuna fish, “How d’you like old St. Laurent Junior High?”
“Okay, I guess. School’s school.”
“You’re right there,” he said. “It sucks in any language. Randy giving you a hard time?”
“Naw. He tried to. I’m used to guys like him.”
“I bet,” said Nicholas, giving me a knowing elbow. “Big guy like you, eh?”
I hadn’t yet had what Mom referred to as my growth spurt yet. That would happen in high school, she predicted. But then, neither had Nicholas.
“Just don’t get in Randy’s way,” advised a girl with pink, spiked hair, who sat on the other side of the table.
My mother had written my name on the brown paper bag that held my lunch. “Mark Rogers,” read a kid on the other side of me. “That your name?”
The girl across the table got up to leave. “Unless he’s eating someone else’s lunch,” she said.
“This is Dennis,” said Nicholas, introducing us. “The one with the mouth is Rhonda. You want to shoot a few baskets? If we hurry, we can still get one of the balls.”
By the end of the first week, I knew plenty of kids. Nicholas was Nick to everyone and Rhonda was much better than her hair. Maybe it wasn’t going to be too bad. It turned out that Mom had gone to school with Mr. Hoskins. She met him when she took the papers back to the office at St. Laurent.
At home, things with Grandpa were about the same, although he seemed to have stopped his wandering away. The doctor had suggested that a short walk every day with Mrs. Fuller or one of us might prevent the wandering. The daily walk seemed to be working.
He didn’t sleep well at night though, and Mom and I often heard him up after we had gone to bed.
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