skillets. Immediately I jumped back. âOh, Lord!â I cried, my arms zooming out, the movements, exaggerated yet quick. âGod, no!â I protested. Twirling like a funnel cloud, I longed to spin myself out. Eat my hate up. âHateful!â I screamed. âI am hateful!â I yelled. My fingers twitched; my left hand whipped forth like a Ping-Pong paddle and slammed against my cheek. Stinging, my face jerked to the right. Then my right hand whooshed forward and hit my other cheek; my face snapped to the left. Over and over, my hands inflicted pain, first one cheek, then the other, until my face burned from the blows. âOh, God!â I cried, whirling frenziedly. âSweet Jesus!â I moaned, feeling the weight of Godâs sky upon me, my body trembling under what I feared was His heavy, horrible sign.
Chapter 10
âI cy, youâre gonna get caught,â Emma Richards said one day during lunch. âEverybody sees you copying her, making fun of everything she does. One day sheâs gonna turn around from that blackboard and catch you.â
âI canât help it,â I said, chomping into an apple. âWhen Mrs. Stilton flicks out that tongue of hers, my tongue has a will of its own. Itâs gotta do the same. When she screws up her ugly lips, my lips just naturally screw up, too.â
âYouâre gonna get us all into trouble,â Emma said.
I chewed my apple and swallowed. âI canât help it,â I repeated. âWhen she whacks Peavy, my hand canât stop itself.â I spread my fingers apart and whacked at the air.
âYouâre scaring me,â she said. âIf you donât quit, something bad is going to happen. I can feel it.â
I put down my apple and looked straight into Emmaâs eyes. âI canât help it.â I heard the tremble in my voice. âI donât want to. It just happens.â
Emma Richards glared at me. âIf you donât quit,â she said, âyouâre gonna turn the whole class against you.â
âWhy?â I asked.
Her face turned white, and her jaw stiffened. âBecause when Mrs. Stiltonâs mad at you,â Emma snarled, âshe makes all of us pay.â
âBut Iâm the only one she hates,â I said.
âPeavy Lawson gets smacked âcause he likes you,â she said. âI already told you about Lane Carlson; his hands will be next.â
âLane ainât no friend of mine,â I said angrily.
âHe talks about you all the time,â she said. âHeâs always bragging on you. I promise, afore too long, sheâll whack him, too.â
âYouâre wrong!â I said. âLane Carlson ainât talking about me. I ainât heard a peep out of him!â
âSomething bad is going to happen,â she warned. âI can feel it.â
Mrs. Stilton walked by. I nudged Emma with my elbow. âShe worships idols,â I whispered.
Emma raised her eyebrows and shrugged her shoulders.
âShe thinks sheâs a great singer,â I said. âThis summer, sheâs going to the Vatican and audition for the Pope.â
âYouâre a troublemaker,â Emma sneered.
âSheâs selfish,â I said. âShe wouldnât give a hungry old man a piece of cake.â
âYouâre a liar,â Emma snapped.
âAt night, she turns into a redheaded woodpecker.â
âYouâre making that up,â Emma said.
âNo,â I said, âitâs the truth. She hops up and down the trunks of trees, always hungry, looking for something to eat, working hard for her food.â
âLiar!â Emma said.
âNo, really!â I protested. âI got this book at home, all about her. In it, thereâs this one story about a mean old woman who wears a little red cap and a long black dress. She drapes this white cape around her shoulders. And since sheâs
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