Mom always had this habit of asking me how something felt on a scale of one to ten. It started after I had my jaw surgery, when I couldnโt talk because my mouth was wired shut. They had taken a piece of bone from my hip bone to insert into my chin to make it look more normal, so I was hurting in a lot of different places. Mom would point to one of my bandages, and I would hold up my fingers to show her how much it was hurting. One meant a little bit. Ten meant so, so, so much. Then she would tell the doctor when he made his rounds what needed adjusting or things like that. Mom got very good at reading my mind sometimes.
After that, we got into the habit of doing the one-to-ten scale for anything that hurt, like if I just had a plain old sore throat, sheโd ask: โOne to ten?โ And Iโd say: โThree,โ or whatever it was.
When school was over, I went outside to meet Mom, who was waiting for me at the front entrance like all the other parents or babysitters. The first thing she said after hugging me was: โSo, how was it? One to ten?โ
โFive,โ I said, shrugging, which I could tell totally surprised her. โWow,โ she said quietly, โthatโs even better than I hoped for.โ โAre we picking Via up?โ
โMirandaโs mother is picking her up today. Do you want me to carry your backpack, sweetness?โ We had started walking through the crowd of kids and parents, most of whom were noticing me, โsecretlyโ pointing me out to each other.
โIโm fine,โ I said.
โIt looks too heavy, Auggie.โ She started to take it from me.
โMom!โ I said, pulling my backpack away from her. I walked in front of her through the crowd.
โSee you tomorrow, August!โ It was Summer. She was walking in the opposite direction.
โBye, Summer,โ I said, waving at her.
As soon as we crossed the street and were away from the crowd,
Mom said: โWho was that, Auggie?โ โSummer.โ
โIs she in your class?โ โI have lots of classes.โ
โIs she inย anyย of your classes?โ Mom said. โNope.โ
Mom waited for me to say something else, but I just didnโt feel like talking.
โSo it went okay?โ said Mom. I could tell she had a million questions she wanted to ask me. โEveryone was nice? Did you like your teachers?โ
โYeah.โ
โHow about those kids you met last week? Were they nice?โ โFine, fine. Jack hung out with me a lot.โ
โThatโs so great, sweetie. What about that boy Julian?โ
I thought about that Darth Sidious comment. By now it felt like that had happened a hundred years ago.
โHe was okay,โ I said.
โAnd the blond girl, what was her name?โ โCharlotte. Mom, I said everyone was nice already.โ โOkay,โ Mom answered.
I honestly donโt know why I was kind of mad at Mom, but I was. We crossed Amesfort Avenue, and she didnโt say anything else until we turned onto our block.
โSo,โ Mom said. โHow did you meet Summer if she wasnโt in any of your classes?โ
โWe sat together at lunch,โ I said.
I had started kicking a rock between my feet like it was a soccer ball, chasing it back and forth across the sidewalk.
โShe seems very nice.โ โYeah, she is.โ
โSheโs very pretty,โ Mom said.
โYeah, I know,โ I answered. โWeโre kind of like Beauty and the Beast.โ
I didnโt wait to see Momโs reaction. I just started running down the sidewalk after the rock, which I had kicked as hard as I could in front of me.