“Hey, she’s singing!” A voice broke harshly into her memories. “I wouldn’t believe it if I didn’t hear it.”
Rose clamped her lips over the third “good morning” and finished the song inside her head. She told herself she didn’t care what the people here said. The song filled her with a kind of joy, as if all the happy times at school were locked up in those few short lines. Gradually, because Miss Williams had insisted, her classmates had stopped teasing her about her dainty, always-perfect clothes. During story time she drifted with the magic of Miss Williams’ voice into a land where she had a father as well as a mama. She was a princess in that land, and she had fourteen brothers and sisters, and they played together all day every day. They wore what they wanted and they never worried about being sick and they all went to the summer camp where Miss Williams was a counselor, and they went swimming and climbed trees and never had to ask permission because they were all princes and princesses and could do as they pleased.
Once she told her Mama about that magic land, but it had been a mistake. She remembered a stinging slap that spun her across the room, then the comforting mother-arms around her soothing away the shock and pain.
“It’s only that I hate to see you drawing away from me,” her mama had said. “My darling, perfect little girl. Don’t ever stop being my sweet baby, will you?”
Rose had promised. She tried very hard to drop a curtain over the magic land and all the happiness there. It was enough to be in school — to stand in a corner of the playground watching the squealing shouting others and know she might someday be part of them and they a part of her. If she did think about the magic land, she was careful not to talk about it at home. She never mentioned Miss Williams either, after the first bad time when she said, “I really love Miss Williams,” and her mama’s face had turned pale and cold like the face of an angel in a painting. It was two days before her mother would talk to her again, and even though things were as they had been after that, Rose never forgot those terrible two days.
“I just don’t want outsiders coming between us, dear,” her mother had said, finally. “I love you so much. You and I don’t need anyone else.”
Rose thought about that now, until footsteps in the hallway told her the man was coming to see her again.
He was a nice man, and he came to see Rose at this place quite often. She never looked at him, just hugged her doll and said nothing, but she knew he was a nice man. The only trouble was that he was full of questions.
“You look different today, Rose. How do you feel?”
Don’t look up. Don’t talk. Nothing to say.
“I have a feeling you’re remembering today, Rose. Am I right? What are you remembering?”
She touched her doll’s painted-on fingernails and waited. He never stayed very long. When he was gone she would think about Miss Williams for a while and the day she had said there was someone who could help Rose stop being afraid.
“Are you thinking about school today, Rose? Are you remembering things that happened at school?”
“That’s a good girl, Rose. You
She dropped her head and began to rock her doll.
“She was singing this morning,” a voice said. “I heard her.”
The man sighed. He reached out and took Rose’s hand. “We’ll talk again tomorrow,” he said. “Maybe tomorrow you’ll tell me about school.”