to keep it entertaining for my reader. I wouldnât want to bore him.â
âI want you to take this seriously.â
âI did! I mean, for the most part. Come on! Itâs a perfectly fine essay and you know it.â
âItâs not bad,â he said begrudgingly. âWhatâs thisbook you reference here? The Smith Saga ? Iâve never heard of it.â
âThatâs because I made it up.â I grinned. âSmith is Heatherâs last name. A little homage to my best friend.â
He groaned. âI should have guessed. That quotation is too perfect. You canât do that on the actual test. Itâs dishonest.â
âThe teacher who ran the SAT workshop at school said we could. She said that the readers donât have time to check all the references so we should just make some up if we canât think of anything.â
âThatâs a really bad idea,â he said. âIf sheâs wrong and someone does look it up, youâre going to be docked a ton.â
âSays you.â
He shoved the laptop away. âIf youâre not even going to listen to anything I sayââ
âRelax.â I touched his arm. âIâm sorry. Youâre right. I promise I wonât do that on the real test.â
âGood.â He moved his arm away. âI want to help you do well on this. But you have to actually work with me a little bit.â
âI will. Iâm going to be a good student for the rest of the evening, okay? We can even do the most miserable math problems and I wonât complain.â
âThank you.â He held his hand out, palm up. âMayI put your cell phone away again?â
âOnly if youâll put yours away, too. I want your undivided attention.â
âDeal.â He took the two phones and left them on the counter side by side.
It was easier to dodge work and get us off track when Heather was around, which she was for our Sunday session. Heather was always willing to talk about somethingâanythingâother than what we were supposed to be doing, and while George had no problem telling me to shut up and get back to work, he wasnât so blunt with her. In fact, he was nicer to her than he was to me in generalâgentle when she got frustrated, patient when she was slow, quick to reassure her and build up her confidence. When she got an answer wrong, he always found something encouraging to say about itâlike that she was on the right path or had âsome good ideas.â When I got something wrong, he just told me to be more careful and to try harder.
After he snapped at me for not paying attention, I called him on it. âWhy are you so much nicer to her than to me?â
âIâm not.â
I appealed to Heather. âIsnât he?â
âHeâs nice to both of us,â she said. âJust in differentways. He knows youâre smarter than me so he expects more from you.â
âEllieâs not smarter than you,â George said. âSheâs just more confident than you. We need to build up your confidence.â
âAnd tear mine down?â I asked.
âSomeoneâs got to.â
âSee?â I said. âThat was mean.â
He ignored that and pointed to the multiple-choice answers on the screen in front of us. âA, B, C, or D, Ellie? And tell me why.â
âB.â
âYes, but why?â
âBecause itâs right .â
He let out an aggrieved sigh. âFine. How about the next one? Try to be systematic: eliminate the obviously wrong ones and narrow your choices down before jumping to aââ
âItâs C.â
âYou need to slow down or youâre going to get tricked into picking the wrong answer.â
âBut it is C,â I said.
âYeah,â he said wearily. âItâs C.â
âWait, why isnât it B?â asked Heather.
fourteen
T he Friday before the
Stephan Talty
Robert Appleton
Leonardo Padura
Lorhainne Eckhart
Jan Gurley
Mark Lawrence
Andrea Camilleri
Colette Heimowitz
Alice Walker
Janet Evanovich