him. I was going to have to take charge.â
Gad!
âSo I said to Oscar, âOscar, youâre going to have to tell me the secret. I canât help you, if you donât.â â
Donât do it, Oscar, my thoughts screamed.
But this wasnât going to happen. Greta had him and she wasnât letting go.
âIt took me a few minutes to get it out of him,â Greta continued. âBut when he finally told me his secret, I thought to myself, Oscarâs in trouble. Real trouble.â
Greta went silent, shaking her head.
But how could the story end there? Greta had to tell us Oscarâs secret. But even Greta, I was sure, wouldnât reveal Oscarâs secret to a random crowd of girls.
Greta had already started up again.
â âGreta,â Oscar whispered to me, âthe problem is . . . â â
Greta raised her eyebrows, and then pointed to her stomach.
â Diarrhea ?â Maria cried out.
Greta shook her head.
More confusion.
What?
Greta shoved her stomach outward.
Mother of Jesus. Oscar got someone pregnant!
None of us had heard anything like this. We shivered.
But Greta wasnât done, for she quickly made it clear that she knew the pregnant woman. We shouted out guesses.
A teacher?
A friend of Oscarâs family?
Who could it be?
With each guess, Greta shook her head.
Tell us, Greta, tell us.
âNicki, Iâm sorry.â
Did I just hear my name?
Everyone was staring at me.
The bell for first period rang. The girls raced to class.
I caught up with Greta.
âGreta, you just told them Iâm pregnant!!â
âI said it was a â dream, â Nic. Didnât you hear that part?â
No one had heard âthat partâ because that was the part when sheâd dropped her voice. Nothing I said in the following weeks could convince anyone that I, an eleven-year-old girl, wasnât carrying Oscarâs child. Even Oscar, never too smart, seemed confused.
So while my fellow middle schoolers counted their school year in semesters, I counted mine in trimesters, for it wasnât until the third that anyone would believe that I hadnât done whatever a girl must do to get pregnant with someone like Oscar.
My fresh start had gone rotten.
MOVING ON
BY THE TIME I was in sixth grade, my parents had lived in the Chelsea for more than sixteen years. As an infant I hadnât taken up much space, but my presence in the apartment had grown. With each passing year, our home fit us a little more tightly, like a pair of my dadâs college trousers. For this reason, my mom began to think about other places to live.
Every time she tried to introduce the subject, my dad would grumble. If we left the hotel, heâd argue, he would have to find new coffee shops, and that was quite a bit more disruption to his life than he was prepared to take on. We had plenty of space, heâd insist, failing to notice that it was impossible to move around without smacking into his bric-a-brac.
As much as I loved the Chelsea, the idea of moving was seductive. I was sick of people confusing my bedroom for a closet. This was an easy mistake given its small size. During my parentsâ many dinner parties people would inadvertently toss their coats on top of me while I slept. I could nevermanage more than one person in my room at a time without people sitting on my bed, which made playdates impossible. Fatigued by my constant pestering and my motherâs unspoken but obvious irritation with the shared bathroom situation, my father gave in and announced one day that he had arranged for us to see a couple of apartments.
On Saturday afternoon, we put on our coats and headed out the door, down the elevator, and into the lobby. The Crafties were sitting in their usual spot and they applauded us as we walked by.
Mr. Crafty shouted after my dad, âFinally growing some cojones.â
Smiley wheeled into the lobby and grabbed my
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