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    Sisters

    Page 5
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      at me, at us," Edna said. "Like we're going to fall over

      any minute. It's really bad. I don't think I'm going to get

      sick, but... It's like people are afraid to touch me."

      "I know," Letitia said.

      "Why is that?" Edna said, voice trembling.

      "I don't know," Letitia said. Edna just stood before her,

      hands limp.

      "Was it our fault?" she asked.

      "No. You know that."

      'Please tell me."

      "Tell you what'?"

      "What we can do to make it right."

      Letitia looked at her for a moment, and then extended her

      arms, took her by the shoulders, drew her closer, and hugged

      her. "Remember," she said.

      Five days before graduation, Letitia asked Rutger if she

      could give a speech at the ceremonies. Rutger sat behind his

      desk, folded his hands, and said, "Why?"

      "Because there are some things nobody's saying," Letitia

      told him. "And they should be said. If nobody else will say

      them, then..." She swallowed hard. "Maybe I can."

      He regarded her dubiously for a moment. "You really

      think there's something important that you can say?"

      She faced him down. Nodded.

      "Write the speech," he said. "Show it to me."

      She pulled a piece of paper out of her pocket. He read it

      carefully, shook his head--she thought at first in denial--and

      then handed it back to her.

      Waiting in the wings to go on stage, Letitia Blakely

      listened to the low murmur of the young crowd in the auditorium.

      She avoided the spot near the curtain.

      Rutger acted as master of ceremonies. The proceedings

      were somber, low-energy. She began to feel as if she were

      making a terrible mistake. She was too young to say these

      things; it would sound horribly awkward, even childish.

      Rutger made his opening remarks, then introduced her and

      motioned for her to come on stage. Letitia deliberately walked

      through the spot near the curtain, paused briefly, closed her eyes

      and took a deep breath, as if to infuse herself with whatever

      remained there of Reena. She walked past Miss Darcy, who

      seemed to glare at her.

      Her throat seized. She rubbed her neck quickly, blinked at

      the bright lights on the catwalk overhead, tried to see the faces

      beyond the lights. They were just smudges in great darkness.

      She glanced out of the corner of her eye and saw Miss Darcy

      nodding, Go ahead.

      "This has been a bad time for all of us," she began, voice

      high and scratchy. She cleared her throat. "I've lost a lot a

      friends, and so have you. Maybe you've lost sons and daughters.

      I think, even from there, looking at me, you can tell I'm

      not.., designed. I'm natural. I don't have to wonder whether I'll get sick and die. But I..." She cleared her throat again. It

      wasn't getting easier. "I thought someone like me could tell

      you something important.

      "People have made mistakes, bad mistakes. But you are

      not the mistakes. I mean.., they weren't mistaken to make

      you. I can only dream about doing some of the things you'll do.

      Some of you are made to live in space for a long tine, and I

      can't do that. Some of you will think things-I can't, and go

      places I won't.., travel to see the stars. We're different in a lot of ways, but I just thought it was important to tell you..."

      She wasn't following the prepared speech. She couldn't.

      "I love you. I don't care what the others say. We love you. You

      are very important. Please don't forget that. And don't forget

      what it costs us all."

      The silence was complete. She felt like slinking away.

      Instead, she straightened, thanked them, hearing not a word,

      not a restless whisper, then bowed her head from the catwalk

      glare and the interstellar darkness beyond.

      Miss Darcy, stiff and formal, reached her arm out as Letitia

      passed by. They shook hands firmly, and Letitia saw, for the

      first time, that Miss Darcy looked upon her as an equal.

      Letitia stood backstage while the ceremonies continued,

      examining the old wood floor, the curtains, counterweights, and

      flies, the catwalk.

      It seemed very long ago, she had dreamed what she felt

      now, this unspecified love, not for family, not for herself. Love

      for something she could not have known back then; love for

      children not her own, yet hers none the less. Brothers.

      Sisters.

      Family.

      (ebook v1.1 Separated from short story anthology ‘Tangents’, page titles and #s removed, some paragraph formatting added , converted to rtf, quick spell check done)

     

     

     



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