*This #fridayflash piece comes from the world of Starred. Mary Beth Fischer is the antagonist, but I wrote a scene showing what drives her forward. Mary Beth is in 6th grade in this piece.*
Never Good Enough
“I got my
report card today,” Mary Beth said, skipping into the kitchen with the
enveloped report card.
“What did you
get, sweetie?” Mama’s knife didn’t miss a beat as she chopped carrots.
“All A’s,
except for one B.” I breathed in heady scent of yeast from the homemade bread.
My stomach grumbled for dinner.
The knife
clattered on the cutting board. A carrot piece bounced off it, fell upon the
tiles, and rolled under the counter. The moisture fled my mouth when Mama
whipped around and yanked the report card from my hands. Brown envelope shreds
drifted to the floor, and Mama held the flimsy paper. I thought she would rip
it apart, too, but she didn’t. She moved to the table and set it on top of it
as she sank into the chair.
“One B in
math. In math, Mary Beth. We went over and over it.”
There was a
scuff upon my Mary Jane’s. I rubbed it along my tights. “I tried, Mama. I
really did. I messed up on my fractions. I’m sorry.”
“Come here.”
I didn’t move.
“I said ‘Come
here.’”
My shoes
clicked as I walked toward her. The scuff was still there. “Yes, Mama?”
She grabbed
my chin and forced my eyes to meet hers. I wanted to look away, but I didn’t
dare. She held on for a moment longer before releasing me into my shame.
“A "B" won’t
make you valedictorian, Mary Beth. It won’t win you scholarships. You have so
much potential to get out of this town, to do something with yourself. Don’t
you want that?”
“Yes, Mama.” I
liked New Castle. I loved the small town, but I knew if I told Mama that
answer, it wouldn’t be good. She wanted me to better myself. Live in a big city
like Roanoke or Richmond.
“Good. Now go
up to your room and study that math. I’ll call you down for supper later.” She
kissed my cheek and smelled of vanilla.
“Yes, Mama.”
I wanted to be a big fish in a small pond.
Instead, I
went upstairs to study math.
7 comments:
Aw, you can't help but feel for her! Sometimes parents so want what's best for their child without realizing just what is best for them.
Poor Mary Beth. And poor Mama who must really hate her life.
I would always get B's in math :'(
A "B" in math is unacceptable. This is good parenting.
Cherie, I looooved your dialogue. So realistic! I could feel the emotion, the conflicted emotion. Great job!
That was intense. Great job!
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