20
BY LUNCH TIME I was a nervous wreck. The entire fourth grade was abuzz about the auditions. It seemed to me that everybody wanted one part or another. Even one of the boys who had already taken a job as a stagehand buttonholed me to explain that he was sure he could play Edmund the Bastard and still work the curtain if I could just rewrite the script so that Edmund didn’t have to be onstage at the opening of acts I, II, or V. I told him I’d have to think about it and dashed off to the boys’ room.
When I got back to the cafeteria, the place was empty. I dropped my uneaten lunch into the trash can and started for the door, thinking that if I could just get to the nurse’s office unseen I might be able to get her to send me home right away. Mrs. Graham was standing at the door.
“Oh, there you are Peter,” she said. “It’s just about time for the auditions. Isn’t this exciting? I’ve never seen such excitement over one of these productions. You’re a born leader, do you know that?” She stopped and looked at me for a moment. “Are you all right?” she asked.
“I’m not sure,” I said.
“Are you going to faint?” she asked.
“Maybe,” I said. “I’m not sure. I’ve never fainted before.”
She made me sit down and put my head between my legs. She held her hand on my forehead for a while, and then she got a paper napkin and wet it with cold water and held it to my forehead. “How do you feel now?” she asked.
“I feel better,” I said, “except for my stomach.”
“Did you eat lunch?” she asked.
“I didn’t feel like eating,” I said.
She made me drink a container of milk, and that made my stomach feel better. “Okay, Peter,” she said. “It’s time. Don’t worry. This is going to be great fun.”
[to be continued on Monday, December 6, 2021]
You can listen to this episode on the Personal History podcast.
In Topical Guide 145, Mark Dorset considers Bastardy (“Illegitimacy”) from this episode.
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At Apple Books you can download free eBooks of “My Mother Takes a Tumble,” “Do Clams Bite?,” “Life on the Bolotomy,” “The Static of the Spheres,” and “The Fox and the Clam,” the first five novellas in Little Follies.
You’ll find an overview of the entire work in An Introduction to The Personal History, Adventures, Experiences & Observations of Peter Leroy. It’s a pdf document.