tired of the boys. Some of them are getting awfully big and mean.â
âWell,â she said, âI was talking with Milly Smithersâ¦you know, the wife of that new rcmp corporal. They have three girls who all played girlsâ hockey back in Newfoundland.â Iâd seen the girls at school. One of them, the middle girl, Daisy, was in my class. Our school is smallâa total of about two hundred students from grade one to twelveâso new faces really stand out. Daisy and her sisters were the topic of many conversations. They seemed friendly, but they kept to themselves. Having an rcmp dad probably meant they had more rules to follow than most of the kids in Fort Desperation.
âJust because it happens in Newfoundland doesnât automatically mean that it will happen here, Mom,â I pointed out. âThis is the Northwest Territories. Weâre, like, thirty-five years behind the rest of the country in everything, including girlsâ hockey.â
âNow you know thatâs not true. We do have the Internet now.â She did have a point. The Internet had arrived in Fort Desperation two years ago. It was slow, but it was here.
âAnyway,â she continued, âif youâd like, I could do a little research online. I think Yellowknife has girlsâ hockey now.â
âMom, Yellowknife is big. They even have a Wal-Mart. We have Georgeâs Trading Post and Video Rentals. Itâs just not the same. You canât compare us to Yellowknife.â
âHoney, couldnât you try to keep an open mind for a few days? Ask around. You never know. There might be some other girls whoâd be interested. Playing withgirls might actually be fun, and besides, youâre less likely to get hurt.â
Ahaaaaâ¦there it wasâ¦the real reason for this sudden interest in girlsâ hockey. Last year Iâd broken my collarbone in a boyâs game against Hay River. That Melvin Laroque plays so dirty. I never even saw him coming. He flattened me into the boards and skated away with a big grin on his face. They took me off on a stretcher. It was so embarrassing. It made me feel a little better to hear that my teammate Michael Greyeyes beat him up after the game. But stillâ¦I was out for the rest of the season, and that sucked.
Boysâ hockey was rough, but I was used to it. The boys in town try not to kill me and the other girls, but in the last year or so some of them have grown so much that it even hurts when they lean on me in the corners. I sometimes feel like Iâm surrounded by giant aliens. Boys from other communities arenât always so nice. In fact, it sometimes feels like theyâre out to get the girls, just to let us know that they think we shouldnât be playing hockey.
âMom, girlsâ hockey might be totally wimpy. They donât even allow bodychecking. It would beâ¦â I tried to think of the right word. âDainty!â I said finally.
She laughed. âI canât imagine you or Sam or Geraldine ever being dainty, dear. Sorry. Anyway, think about it a bit and talk to the others. You never know, it might work.â
Chapter Two
As I walked down the main road after school the next day, trying hard not to break my ankles in the frozen ruts, I did think about girlsâ hockey. In some ways, it seemed like a good ideaâ¦to have other girls to change with would certainly be more fun. Right now, we had to change in the bathroom off the lobby, one at a time, while the boys got to monopolize the two changing rooms. And I had to admit that even though I had been playing with these boys since I was seven and knew them inside out, I really didnât feel like I belonged with them anymore. Some of them would be quite happy if girls never played.
This year I was supposed to play Bantam. I have one of those end-of-the-year birthdays that alwaysleaves me younger than everyone else on the team. My parents let me stay
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