For
those of you following Sally’s stories with me . . .
The
story you are about to read is true.
Somewhat.
The
days, weeks and months of Kindergarten were peaceful. Understandably so because
. . . Sally.
And it
was really nothing she did . . . well, other than knock a would-be bully onto
his can the first day in class. I’m not sure, but I like to think she changed the
whole course of his life. And everyone else who witnessed and/or heard.
Who’s
with me?
Anyway,
the peaceful days continued through the fall and winter and into the spring.
Continued
until what is written in the annals of Briercombe Elementary School as ‘The Day
of the Doll’.
Here
we go . . .
A
new girl moved into the area.
A
very pretty girl with long, flowing, dark hair by the name of Rachel.
Whose
name became . . . Betty.
It
shall all be understood . . .
It
was soon very clear to the rest of us at ol’ BES that Betty was determined to
vie for the position of ‘Top Girl’.
A
position held—to date—by no one.
Because
it’s elementary school. Geeze.
Before
long, Betty (see above) was terrorizing the smaller children. Taking their toys
and roughing them up.
Sally
and I, engaged with our friends in a cut-throat game of Jacks, heard the
scuffles. And indignant outcries.
And
the tears.
Sally’s
radar went off.
And
so did she.
Apparently
(because few of us actually saw it from start to finish) Betty had snatched little
Miriam’s precious Ava—her doll/constant companion/don’t-anyone-touch-her-or-I-may-faint-and-quite-possibly-die.
With
predictable results.
Sweet,
golden-haired Ava held high over her head, Betty was dancing around the playground,
taunting the much smaller, now copiously-weeping Miriam who was in
arm-outstretched pursuit.
Suddenly,
the rest of the playground fell silent and parted for the
newly-arrived-on-the-scene Sally.
Betty
stopped and stared at the red-faced little demon headed rapidly in her
direction.
I
think she managed to figure out that the tide had turned.
And
it wasn’t in her favour.
Clutching
the now-forgotten doll, Betty spun about and made a bee-line for the school.
And
the principal’s office.
An
interesting side note: It was the first (and only) time in the history of BES
that a student ran ‘to’ the principal’s office.
But
I digress . . .
Sally
was right behind her.
With
the still-weeping little Miriam, a faint and distant third.
I
watched as Betty skidded around the last corner and disappeared into the
school.
Now
I didn’t actually witness what happened thereafter.
But
there were enough reports from students who did that I’ve been able to stitch
together a fairly accurate account.
Betty
wasted no time asking for directions (it was a small school—finding the
principal’s office was really a no-brainer), but simply charged up the hall
until she happened upon her feverishly-sought goal.
She
dashed in.
And
took cover behind the principal’s desk.
And
the principal.
Sally
simply marched in and stood there, hands on her hips.
The
principal looked from one girl to the other. “Erm . . . can I help you girls?”
She
was a very polite principal.
Sally
just raised an eyebrow in Betty’s direction.
Betty
silently held out the doll.
By
this time, Miriam had arrived. Still crying.
Sally
snatched Ava from Betty and restored her to her rightful owner, who, clutching
the doll to her small self, turned and disappeared.
Then
Sally turned once more and glared at Betty.
Remember,
Sally at this point was still only in kindergarten. So . . . on the shady side
of five.
Betty
hovered somewhere around the ‘twice-Sally’s-size’ grade three level.
One
of them was obviously in charge.
And
it wasn’t Betty.
For
a moment, the two of them regarded each other. Then, as large tears started welling up in the bigger girl's eyes, Sally grabbed Betty’s hand
and pulled her back into the hall. “Hi, Betty. I’m Sally!” she said brightly.
Betty
looked at her. “Umm . . . my name’s not . . .”
“Welcome
to our school, Betty. You’ll like it here! Have some chocolate.”
I
have it on good authority that the principal merely shrugged and went back to
what she had been doing.
I
expect you’re wondering what happened to Betty?
Well,
maybe this will clarify . . .
Earlier
this afternoon, a delivery arrived for Sally. A fairly large package that
smells deliciously of chocolate.
In
the upper ‘sender’s’ corner were the words ‘Rachel. Aka Betty’.
And the
addressee?
“To
My Very Best Friend EVER”.
Yep.
Truth. Forgiveness. And chocolate.
In
the same perfect package.
Tuesday, July 7th is Global Forgiveness Day, Tell the Truth Day AND World Chocolate Day. I'm celebrating all of them with my friend!
Karen of Baking In A Tornado: Truth, Forgiveness, and Chocolate
Jenn from Sparkly Poetic Weirdo: Truth, Forgiveness and Chocolate
Sally needs a cape.
ReplyDeleteTruth, Forgiveness and Chocolate, what a perfect package that makes.
Love your Sally-stories ;)
ReplyDeleteOMG. Love this story so much! Sally was the most awesome girl ever. I'd say you should write about her, but of course, you're way ahead of me.
ReplyDeleteA big hooray to ALL the Sallys. The world over.
ReplyDeleteWell, that took a different turn! And not a bad one, at that :)
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely story! Totally surprise ending, too.
ReplyDelete"Sally just raised an eyebrow in Betty's direction."
ReplyDeleteTop girl, that Sally.