ADDIE
AS TODAYโS meeting ofย Reflectionsย is coming to a close, Mr. Bennett crooks a finger at me. โAddie, can I talk to you for a minute?โ
Iโve been going to meetings of the poetry magazine for a few weeks now, and Iโm finally starting to feel like Iโm part of something. Lotus sometimes waits for me after the meeting is over, and we walk to our bikes together, although I still am not sure if she likes me or not. Sometimes I think she despises me and would murder me in my sleep if she had the option, but other times she seems to be happily tolerating me. In any case, I wave to her to go on without me, although I can see in her eyes sheโs curious about what he wants to discuss with me. Lotus absolutely idolizes Mr. Bennett.
I hang back in the classroom while Mr. Bennett shuffles through some papers on his desk. He waits until everyone is gone before he lowers the papers and smiles up at me. โAddie,โ he says. โGuess what?โ
I love the way Mr. Bennettโs eyes crinkle when he smiles. In the month I have been in his class, I have noticed he has two kinds of smiles. Thereโs one he uses in class when heโs trying to encourage students, but itโs not as genuine. When his eyes crinkle, thatโs when I can tell heโs actually happy.
โGood news?โ I ask.
โSo thereโs a statewide poetry competition.โ He rubs his palms together. โAnd every year, I have the opportunity to submit one poem from all my classes. And this year, I want to submit your poem.โ
My mouth falls open. Mr. Bennett teaches multiple English classes, and on top of that, heโs got all the kids from the magazine to choose from. Lotus, for example, is an incredibly talented poet. All her poems are better than any one of mine. Has heย lost his mind? Does he think that Iโm Lotus somehow? โMine?โ I finally squeak.
He beams at me. โYes! I want to submit โHe Was There.โ I think itโs brilliant. One of the most moving things Iโve ever read.โ
Thatโs the piece about my father. Iโm having a serious choked-up moment. Iโve learned to get used to his praise, but not this much praise. It might beย tooย much, like I might explode from the amount of approval Iโm
receiving right now. Like when a starving person suddenly gets a bunch of food and then they die from it.
โAre you sure?โ I say.
โAddie.โ He folds his arms across his chest. At some point after the last bell rang, he undid the cuffs of his sleeves and rolled the sleeves of his dress shirt up to his forearmsโnow I can see the dark hairs on his arm. None of the boys in my class have that much hair on their arms. Hudson just had a little, and itโs pale blond like the hair on his head. โAddie, you have to believe in yourself a little bit. Because I sure do.โ
โYeah,โ I mumble.
โYour poem is amazing.โ His brown eyes hold my gaze. โYouย are amazing, okay? You are a master of this craft, even at sixteen.โ
If anyone else said it to me, I would think they were being patronizing. But somehow, when Mr. Bennett tells me Iโm amazing, I actually feel that way. Like maybe there is something out there that Iโm good at, even though being a poet would be a stupid and ridiculous career for me and I really should become a nurse like my mother says I should.
โIโm not amazing at math,โ I blurt out.
I feel dumb for having said that, but for some reason, it makes Mr. Bennett laugh. He throws his head back and gives a great big belly laugh. I can make out a tiny silver filling in one of his back teeth. โIs my wife giving you a hard time?โ
I lift one shoulder. โItโs not her fault. I suck at math.โ โI know how she is. Sheโs strict, isnโt she?โ
I press my lips together, reluctant to say anything negative about his wife. But the truth is, while Mr. Bennett is one of the most popular teachers in the school, only the best math students are fans of Mrs. Bennett. She is really strict, and she doesnโt have much patience for kids who donโt get the material right away.
But the worst thing people say about her is they donโt get why Mr. Bennett married her. Heโs the hottest and most beloved teacher in the school. Mrs. Bennett is pretty, I guess, although not on the same level as her husband. And sheโs definitelyย notย beloved. In fact, sheโs actually kind of aโฆ
Well, sheโs a bitch. There, I said it.
โMy wife is very concrete,โ he says. โSheโs only interested in logic and reasoning. She isnโt a dreamer, like we are. For her, words only serve a
utilitarian purpose.โ
โItโs fine,โ I reassure him. โI just need to study.โ And also pray for a miracle.
โIf sheโs ever too hard on you,โ he says, โlet me know. Seriously.โ I will seriously never let him know.
โI completely understand,โ he adds. โI was also terrible in math when I was in high school. And biology.โ
โReally?โ He has zeroed in on my two least favorite subjects.
He grins at me and his eyes crinkle in that way I have come to love. โOh yes. I refused to dissect a frog because I thought it was wrong. The teacher was going to fail me, so I had to do an extra credit project just to scrape by!โ
I didnโt think it was possible to like Mr. Bennett any more than I already do, but there it is.
โAnywayโฆโ He looks down at his watch and seems surprised by the time. โI apologizeโI didnโt realize it was so late. Sorry to keep you. Do you need a ride home?โ
Iโm so shocked by his offer, I almost drop my backpack. Is he for real offering me a ride home? Doesnโt he know what happened to Mr. Tuttle? There is no way Iโm taking a ride from another teacher who actually makes an effort to care about me. Iโm not letting anything like that ever happen again.
โThatโs okay,โ I say quickly. โI have my bike.โ โAre you sure? Itโs no trouble.โ
โPositive.โ
He shrugs. โOkay. Well, Iโll see you tomorrow then.โ
He seems so unconcerned, it almost makes me wonder if I overreacted somehow. After all, a ride is just a ride. Other kidsย doย occasionally get rides from teachers, and the teachers donโt end up fired and disgraced. Maybe I made too much of the whole thing.
It seems too late to change my mind though, so I grab my backpack and head out of the roomโand almost run smack into Lotus. Sheโs leaning against the wall, her bag propped up against her Doc Martens, a slightly manic expression on her face.
โHey,โ I say. โI told you not to wait for me.โ
She rubs her nose with the back of her hand. โBro, what wasย that
about?โ
โOh.โ I have to suppress a smile. โThereโs some statewide contest he wants to enter one of my poems into. So, you know.โ
โWait.โ She sucks in a breath. โThe Massachusetts Poetry Contest?โ โMaybe?โ
Lotus swears under her breath. โThatโs bullshit, you know?โ Iย donโtย know. โWhat do you mean?โ
โI meanโฆโ She grits her teeth. Lotus has a lot of small, sharp-looking teeth. โThat poetry contest is a big deal, and he only gets to submit one poem from the whole school.โ
โYesโฆโ
โAnd, like, youโre just a beginner.โ Her heavily mascaraed eyelashes flutter. โI mean, youโre good for a beginner, but there are at least three other kids at the magazine who are better than you. And I am a senior, and he hasย neverย picked one of my poems.โ
I donโt know what to say. โIt wasnโt like it was my decision.โ
โYes, but it was aย badย decision.โ Her eyes narrow at me. โYou should tell him itโs a bad decision. He shouldnโt pick you just because youโre the teacherโs pet.โ
I already suggested to Mr. Bennett that there might be better poems out there but he insisted. โWhat do you want me to do, Lotus?โ
โI want you to go back in that room and tell him that he should pick somebody elseโs poem to submit.โ
I donโt know what is more shocking: the fact that Mr. Bennett told me he was choosing my poem in the first place or what Lotus has just asked me to do.
โIโm not doing that,โ I say.
She folds her arms across her flat chest. โSo you want our school to lose?โ
โI donโt want us to lose, but Mr. Bennett picked my poem for a reason.
He must think itโs capable of winning.โ
She sneers at me. โOh, you really think thatโs why he picked your poem?โ
My mouth falls open. โYesโฆโ
โI mean, itโs not enough you got Mr. Tuttle fired, now you have to go after Mr. Bennett?โ
My face burns. I had thought maybe Lotus and I were friends, but I was sorely mistaken. โI have to go home,โ I mumble. โIโll see you next week.
Mary.โ
As I walk away from Lotus, clutching the straps of my backpack, my thoughts wonโt stop racing. I hate that she called me out on all my darkest fears. Mr. Bennett had a lot of poems to choose from. Why did he choose mine? Objectively, I donโt think my poem was the best one. There were so many other amazing choicesโincluding the ones Lotus wrote.
So why me?
Is it possible she could be right? Is it possible that Mr. Bennett had some sort of ulterior motive in picking an inferior poem to enter in the contest? Was this nothing more than favoritism on his part? Or something even more than favoritism?
The worst part of all though is the shiver of excitement that goes through me at the possibility that Lotus could be right.