late,â I apologized, whisking into the room. âTime got away from me.â
Matanni didnât say a word. With pins between her lips, she continued to sew. Patanni moaned and opened one eye, then closed it again.
âI said Iâm sorry.â
âSometimes saying it isnât enough,â Patanni said, his eyes still shut.
Matanni took the pins out of her mouth, cocked her tiny head to one side, and said, âWe waited for you. Must have waited an hour. The fried chicken got cold.â
âYour grandma works hard,â said my grandfather wearily. âBy six oâclock, sheâd like to be finished with everything.â
âI know,â I muttered, my anxiety increasing. âIâm sorry, really sorry.â
âWe raised you to be considerate,â Patanni said. âTo think about other peopleâs feelings.â
âBut lately youâve been thinking only about yourself,â Matanni added, nodding in the kitchenâs direction. âYour supperâs in the warming oven,â she said. âI saved a drumstick for you.â
âI wanted two,â Patanni said, âbut some of us ainât as selfish as others.â
âThatâs right, Icy,â Matanni threw in. âSome folk put others before themselves.â
I turned my hand into a fist and popped it against my palm. âI said I was sorry,â I shot back. âWhat do you want me to do? Go to prison? Hang myself from the big oak out back? Scrub the floors with a toothbrush? Lordy sakes, it ainât like I killed somebody!â
Matanni readjusted her glasses. âItâs okay, Icy,â she said, returning to my dress. âNow go on. Eat your supper before it gets too late.â
Patanni stretched out his long legs. âAinât you got homework to do?â he asked as I walked by.
Immediately I came to a halt at the kitchen doorway.
âHomework?â he repeated, emphasizing both syllables.
I gritted my teeth, heard the sound of them grinding into calcium, digging deep, down toward the nerves. Groaning, I bit the inside of my cheek. âLordy mercy!â I exclaimed, tasting a drop of blood. âDag nab!â I said, at that moment remembering. âI left my assignment back at school.â
Patanni shifted in his chair, his boots scraping against the floor. âIcy,â he said, in a voice filled with judgment. âWhat will your teacher think?â
Quickly I turned around, and in a desperate effort to channel all of my anger into one movement, I extended my arms, pressing my hands on each side of the doorframe, and shouted, âI donât give a dang what she thinks!â Then, unable to tolerate the tension a moment longer, I pivoted back around, dashed through the kitchen, out the back door, and headed for the root cellar.
Inside its dank walls, I lit the candle that I kept on an empty shelf, hurled the door shut and latched it, and was about to inflict my fury against the block wall when my shadow suddenly caught my eye. Strangely, it had changed. I had grown taller, my body curving upward, the top of my head sliding down the ceiling. I touched my nose. The daintiness and smallness were gone. Like Pinocchioâs, it was longer. Its tip end pointed, almost sharp. When I opened my mouth, it seemed as though all the darkness of the root cellar was being drawn into it. I grimaced, and my lips knifed downward, like a scythe harvesting harsh words. Frantic, I felt my eyes. Once immense, they had shrunk to slits. Two tiny cuts in my face. No longer were they the windows to my soul; they were not wide enough for light to shine through, not generous enough to emit it. I shook my head. âOh, no!â I said, my curls, corkscrewing furiously. Moaning, I lifted my hands to cover my face and watched, horrified, as they expanded, inch by inch, turning into large, round shapesâdurable and thick as my grandmotherâs iron
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