โHey, is this seat taken?โ
I looked up, and a girl I never saw before was standing across from my table with a lunch tray full of food. She had long wavy brown hair, and wore a brown T-shirt with a purple peace sign on it.
โUh, no,โ I said.
She put her lunch tray on the table, plopped her backpack on the floor, and sat down across from me. She started to eat the mac and cheese on her plate.
โUgh,โ she said after the swallowing the first bite. โI should have brought a sandwich like you did.โ
โYeah,โ I said, nodding.
โMy name is Summer, by the way. Whatโs yours?โ โAugust.โ
โCool,โ she said.
โSummer!โ Another girl came over to the table carrying a tray. โWhy are you sitting here? Come back to the table.โ
โIt was too crowded,โ Summer answered her. โCome sit here.
Thereโs more room.โ
The other girl looked confused for a second. I realized she had been one of the girls I had caught looking at me just a few minutes earlier: hand cupped over her mouth, whispering. I guess Summer had been one of the girls at that table, too.
โNever mind,โ said the girl, leaving.
Summer looked at me, shrugged-smiled, and took another bite of her mac and cheese.
โHey, our names kind of match,โ she said as she chewed. I guess she could tell I didnโt know what she meant.
โSummer? August?โ she said, smiling, her eyes open wide, as she waited for me to get it.
โOh, yeah,โ I said after a second.
โWe can make this the โsummer onlyโ lunch table,โ she said. โOnly kids with summer names can sit here. Letโs see, is there anyone here
named June or July?โ โThereโs a Maya,โ I said.
โTechnically, May is spring,โ Summer answered, โbut if she wanted to sit here, we could make an exception.โ She said it as if sheโd actually thought the whole thing through. โThereโs Julian. Thatโs like the name Julia, which comes from July.โ
I didnโt say anything.
โThereโs a kid named Reid in my English class,โ I said.
โYeah, I know Reid, but how is Reid a summer name?โ she asked.
โI donโt know.โ I shrugged. โI just picture, like, a reed of grass being a summer thing.โ
โYeah, okay.โ She nodded, pulling out her notebook. โAnd Ms. Petosa could sit here, too. That kind of sounds like the word โpetal,โ which I think of as a summer thing, too.โ
โI have her for homeroom,โ I said.
โI have her for math,โ she answered, making a face.
She started writing the list of names on the second-to-last page of her notebook.
โSo, who else?โ she said.
By the end of lunch, we had come up with a whole list of names of kids and teachers who could sit at our table if they wanted. Most of the names werenโt actually summer names, but they were names that had some kind of connection to summer. I even found a way of making Jack Willโs name work by pointing out that you could turn his name into a sentence about summer, like โJack will go to the beach,โ which Summer agreed worked fine.
โBut if someone doesnโt have a summer name and wants to sit with us,โ she said very seriously, โweโll still let them if theyโre nice, okay?โ
โOkay.โ I nodded. โEven if itโs a winter name.โ โCool beans,โ she answered, giving me a thumbs-up.
Summer looked like her name. She had a tan, and her eyes were green like a leaf.