by S. Nadja Zajdman
raspberry zinger tisane
It was summer, long ago. I was ten years old, and at camp in southern
Ontario. I hated volleyball and hiking
because they made my flat feet hurt. I
detested wearing shorts because they made my fat legs look even fatter. I dreaded the overnight camping trip. How could I possibly “go in the bushes?” Luckily, we were always rained out and had to
come back the same day.
The one spot I loved was the
lake. I would wander off and sit on “my
hamburger rock—I call it that because it looks like a giant hamburger” (I wrote
in a letter I sent home), to watch sunbeams, like sequins, dance on the water,
and contemplate the fireflies that flickered in the evenings under a velvet sky
studded with stars as large as chunks of ice.
I was artistic, un-athletic, and my boredom with my bunkmates must’ve
showed. They tormented me.
Ryan resided in the boys’ bunk across
from ours. He was my age. He would sit on the stoop staring out at no
one, and nothing. He was tall, dark,
skinny, and I remember him wearing thick, black-framed glasses. He talked to no one; he played with no
one. All summer he was perched on the
porch of his bunk, like an owl. Little
did I, nor anyone else realize that he was observing, and
absorbing—EVERYTHING!
One
day, an envelope was slipped under the door of my bunk addressed to “Miss
Sharon.” I
grabbed the envelope before
my bunkmates had a chance to tear it open.
I took it down to my hamburger rock.
When I was safely alone, I opened it.
The letter was written with a cartridge pen in the “real writing” we’d
all just learnt (as opposed to print), and it read:
“Dear Miss
Sharon. The other girls are mean to you
because they’re ignorant. They’re
jealous of you because you’re better than they are. You are very intelligent, and you are very
pretty. You have very nice eyes, and
very nice hair. Soon you will get
braces, and when your teeth are fixed your smile will be even nicer. And don’t worry, it's just baby fat. You’ll grow out of it. When you’re older, you’ll get nicer
glasses. Then when you grow up, you will
be beautiful. Don’t listen to those
other girls. Don’t let them hurt
you. You will be fine. Everything will be O.K.” It was signed, to my amazement (and this, in
big block letters),
YOUR FRIEND, RYAN.”
I’d barely noticed Ryan, and when I
did, like the others, I ignored him. I
had a crush on Louis. Louis was an older
man. He was sixteen, had blue eyes,
blond hair, and didn’t know I existed.
Years later, I had occasion to speak to Louis. He was two inches shorter than me, and he was
booooring.
The next afternoon I saw Ryan, as
usual, chin in palm, sitting on the stoop.
Shyly, I approached. “Thank you
very much for your letter, Ryan. It was
really nice.”
Ryan coughed, choked, mumbled,
stuttered, and managed to splutter something like “Zokay. You welcome.”
I
tried to talk to Ryan, but conversation was awkward and clumsy. He was more comfortable on the page, and it
was in this intimate place that we conducted a private, enriching relationship
in which we both became each other’s mutual secret admirers. This relationship was my introduction to a
world I would come to live in as a working writer.
About the author
S. Nadja Zajdman is a
Canadian author. Her short story
collection, Bent Branches, was published in 2012. Her nonfiction, as well as her fiction has
been featured in newspapers, magazines, literary journals and anthologies across
North America, in the U.K., Australia and New Zealand. Zajdman has completed a second work of
fiction as well as a memoir of her mother, the pioneering Holocaust educator and
activist Renata Skotnicka-Zajdman, who passed away near the end of
2013.
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