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r。 She'd bring in some note and be sure to swoon a little for the teacher
the first few days of the year; after which she'd be
excused from anything that required muscles。 She never even put up her own chair at the
end of the day。 The only muscles she exercised regularly
were the ones around her mouth; and those she worked out nonstop。 If there was an
Olympic contest for talking; Shelly Stalls would sweep the
event。 Well; she'd at least win the gold and silver— one medal for each side of her mouth。
What bugged me about it was not the fact that she got out of P。E。—who'd want her on their
team; anyway? What bugged me about it was that
anyone who bothered to look would know that it wasn't asthma or weak ankles or her being
“delicate” that was stopping her。 It was her hair。 She
had mountains of it; twisted this way or that; clipped or beaded; braided or swirled。 Her
ponytails rivaled the ones on carousel horses。 And on the
days she let it all hang down; she'd sort of shimmy and cuddle inside it like it was a blanket;
so that practically all you saw of her face was her nose。
Good luck playing four…square with a blanket over your head。
My solution to Shelly Stalls was to ignore her; which worked just dandy until about halfway
through the fifth grade when I saw her holding hands
with Bryce。
My Bryce。 The one who was still embarrassed over holding my hand two days before the
second grade。 The one who was still too shy to say
much more than hello to me。
The one who was still walking around with my first kiss。
How could Shelly have wormed her hand into his? That pushy little princess had no business
hanging on to h
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