“Yeah, maybe that’s best.”
As I went to move back to sit behind Birdie, Sebastian and I stood so we could switch places again. We both attempted to pass each other on the same side and wound up banging into each other.
“Sorry,” he said.
“My fault.” I smiled.
I moved to my left, and Sebastian moved to his right, which meant we did the same thing again. This time, his eyes flickered to my lips before we managed to figure out how to step around each other.
Was I imagining that just happened? I didn’t think so.
He cleared his throat after I sat back down behind Birdie. “I’m going to . . . give Marmaduke some water before we head out.”
If what I’d thought just happened had really happened, Birdie seemed oblivious. “See, I told you,” she said. “Worse than pancakes.”
With Sebastian out of the room, I was able to do Birdie’s braid in just a few minutes. She ran to a mirror when I finished. “It’s so pretty. Maybe you can teach me how to do my own. I don’t think Dad’s going to be very good at it.”
“Sure. That might be a better idea.”
Sebastian returned from the kitchen. “Something came up at the restaurant, and I need to make a few calls. Why don’t you two take Marmaduke for his walk, and I’ll join you for the training session when you get back.”
“Okay, Daddy!”
I had no idea why, but I got the distinct feeling that something hadn’t really popped up at work for Sebastian. Though the man had let me back into his life, so I wasn’t going to do anything stupid. I smoothed the wrinkles from my pants. “We’ll be back in about twenty minutes.”
Outside, I took Marmaduke’s leash, and Birdie walked alongside me.
“I didn’t think you were coming back,” she said.
“I’m sorry about that. Something . . . unexpected came up. I didn’t mean to disappoint you when I had to stop coming.”
She shrugged. “It’s okay. I’m just glad you’re back.”
“So what’s new? How has Marmaduke been the last few weeks?”
Birdie giggled. “He ate the blanket off Dad’s bed, and there were feathers all over the place. Like, a million of them.”
“Oh boy. How did he handle that?”
“He was angry. That night, I heard him telling the lady that he wanted to bring Marmaduke to a farm somewhere.”
“The lady?”
“My dad talks to this lady sometimes at night. He does it from his room because he thinks I don’t hear him.”
We got to the corner, and I put my hand out to make sure Birdie didn’t keep walking at the red light. While we waited for the crosswalk sign to change, I dug a little deeper.
“Is the lady a friend of his?”
“He got her from the internet.”
I had to stifle a laugh. “From the internet? What do you mean?”
Birdie frowned. “I think he’s looking for my new mom. This girl Suzie at school said her dad bought his new wife from Russia.”
My eyes widened. “He what?”
“She said that her mom said that her dad got his bride through the mail.” She shrugged. “From Russia.”
“Honey, I think maybe Suzie’s mom is saying that facetiously.”
“Fay-sheesh-ly?”
I smiled. “Facetiously. It means sort of saying it as a joke to be funny.”
“Oh. So her dad didn’t buy a wife from Russia, then? I guess that makes sense. Because if he was going to buy one, he’d probably get one his own age, right? Suzie’s stepmom is really young.”
Or . . . maybe Suzie’s dad did buy his bride. Either way, this conversation had taken an odd turn. “What made you think your dad was looking for a new wife?”
“A few weeks ago, I was listening by his door at night, and I heard him tell her he wanted to be up-front with what he was looking for—that he’s not looking to date.”
Uh-oh. “Did he say what he was looking for?”
“No. But what else would he want if he didn’t want to date the lady?”
I wasn’t touching this one with a ten-foot pole. Perhaps it was time for a change of subject. I knew from her letters that Suzie was a girl in school who had been mean to her. So I thought maybe it might be an opportunity to see how things were going in that department.
“Is . . . Suzie a good friend of yours?”
Birdie’s little face scrunched up like she smelled a rotting fish. “No way. She’s the worst.”
“Why is she the worst?”
“She makes fun of everyone. About what they wear, their hair, even the books people pick out in the library during quiet time.”
The light changed, and the three of us crossed the street. “Do you know why Suzie is mean to people?”
“Because her soul is black?”
I laughed. “Where on earth did you learn about black souls?”
“In religion class. Well, they didn’t teach us about black ones. But they said good people have pure souls. And white is kinda pure. So I figured hers must be black.”
Well, her logic was pretty damn good. But I wanted to steer the conversation back to the real reason some kids were bullies.
“Actually, usually kids who are mean don’t really like themselves. They put other people down in an attempt to make them feel better about themselves.”
Birdie guffawed at that notion. “Suzie likes herself a lot. She thinks she’s the best at everything.”
“That’s what Suzie wants you to believe. But I bet you deep down, she’s really struggling.”
“I don’t know . . .”
Clearly Birdie wasn’t sold. “Let me see if I can guess a few things about Suzie.”
“Okay . . .”
“Is she overly concerned with what she looks like? Like, is her hair always done just right, and she wears nice outfits every single day instead of just throwing on a pair of sweats and a wrinkly T-shirt sometimes, like the rest of us do?”
“Yeah. She’s always perfect.”
“And does she belong to a clique of girls, and they all sort of travel as a pack—all together?”
“Yeah.”
“Does she start rumors about people at school?”
Birdie’s head whipped to me. “How did you know that? Last week she told everyone that Amelia Aster still wears pull-up pants to sleep because she pees her pants. But she doesn’t. I’m good friends with Amelia, and we’ve had sleepovers.”
“You see . . . I knew all that because those are all the classic signs of the mean girls who don’t like themselves very much.”
“Did you have mean girls in school?”
“I sure did. And you know what I found out worked best to make them stop picking on me?”
“What?”
“Smiling.”
Birdie looked confused. “Smiling?”
“Yup. Whenever a bully said anything mean to me, I would just smile back at her. After a while, when my bully stopped getting a reaction from me, she left me alone.”
A stray cat ran out from nowhere in front of us. Unfortunately, Marmaduke saw it before I did, so I wasn’t prepared when he took off running. My hand had been looped through the leash, and he tugged me along for the ride.