A Corner of
the Universe
by Ann M. Martin
On Thursday I try not to think about Adam. I take my walk into
town. I paint with Dad in his studio. I lie on my bed and read a
library book. I help Cookie in the kitchen. Finally I realize that
I miss Adam. So I feel a happy flutter in my stomach when I hear
him come whistling up our front walk late that afternoon. I run
outside to meet him.
"Ho, ho, and good afternoon, Hattie," says Adam. He's all dressed
up, wearing a too-small summer suit with a lime green bow tie and
a broad black felt hat, so I think he's expecting to see Angel again.
But he doesn't ask about her. Instead, he plops down in a porch
chair, crosses one leg over the other, regards me seriously, and
says, sounding as if we might be in a business meeting, "Very well.
You shared one of your secrets with me, Hattie Owen. Now I'll share
one of mine with you."
"Okay," I reply, trying to catch up with Adam. Sometimes I feel
that he is miles ahead of me.
"Give me a date, Hattie, any date," says Adam.
"A date?"
"Yes. A month and a day and a year. January seventh in the year
nineteen fifty-two, for example."
I think for a moment. Then I say, "Okay. September sixteenth, nineteen
forty-one."
"Tuesday," says Adam promptly.
"What do you mean?"
"September sixteenth nineteen forty-one was a Tuesday."
"How do you know?"
"I just do. It's in my head."
"Are you sure you're right?"
"Positive. You can look the date up. Give me another one. A date
you know." Well, I happen to know what day of the week Cookie was
born on, so I give Adam Cookie's birth date.
"Saturday," says Adam.
"That's right!"
Adam is grinning like a Halloween pumpkin.
"You can really do this with any date at all?"
"Absotively."
"How come it's a secret?"
Adam leans forward and whispers loudly, "Because Mother says it's
a circus trick and it's embarrassing and it must be kept in the
family. The bosom of the family, I might add, although Mother didn't
say that."
No, I can't imagine Nana saying "bosom" under any circumstances.
"So there you have it," says Adam, settling back in his chair and
looking satisfied.
I have missed something. "What?" I say.
Adam's eyes grow unfocused. He glances away, then back to me,
then away again. "My little corner of the universe," is all he will
say.

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