CCSS

R.1, R.2, R.3, R.4, R.7, W.3, SL.1, SL.2, L.4, L.6

Hard to Say

Val and her family speak different languagesor do they?  

Art by Katty Huertas

Slideshow

apomares/Getty Images (Beach); Jim Mapman® (Map); Shutterstock.com (other images)

    There’s so much I don’t remember about where I was born. Every memory of Venezuela feels like a dream. I don’t remember my school, except for the sweet face of my preschool teacher. I don’t remember our home, except for the balcony off the living room. I don’t even remember the languagemy first language.

    My sister, Clarísa, remembers it all. She was 10 when we moved, old enough for her memories to stay intact. I had my sixth birthday just after we got to the States.

PART 1

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    I walk into the kitchen to the sweet smell of cinnamon pancakes. Clarísa is speaking Spanish on the phone with our grandmother. My sister laughs and asks how our grandfather is doing. I know enough Spanish to at least figure that out.

    “Morning,” Mom says. She slides a plate of pancakes in front of me. It’s been a tradition since my last day in kindergarten.

    “I’m 15,” I say. “You don’t need to make me special last-day-of-school pancakes anymore.”

    “I’ll be making them all the way through college, kid. Deal with it.” 

    I pop the top off the syrup bottle. “So you’re going 

    to travel to my dorm room and make pancakes?”

    “I’ll FedEx them,” Mom says. “Or you can go to school close enough to come home for pancakes, like your sister.”

    I shove another bite in my mouth. Clarísa is still on the phone. Her mouth moves a mile a minute in perfect Spanish. I start to feel sad.

    Spanish was my first language. Now I have trouble piecing together the most basic conversations. It happened without me even realizing it. One day it was just . . . gone

    Dad walks in and gives me a loud kiss on the top of my head

    “History final today?” 

    “And I have to turn in my final art project,” I say, pointing to the painting on the kitchen table.

    “I call dibs once it’s graded. I want to hang it in my office.”

    Clari holds out the phone. “Dad, Ita wants to talk to you.” Ita and Ito became my grandparents’ names when Clari was little and couldn’t say Abuelita and Abuelito

    Dad grabs the phone. Hola, Mamá,” he says. Then he walks away before we can hear anything else.

PART 2

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    Dad’s voice floats down the hall, and Clari and I try to listen

    I can tell that something’s up. We turn our heads to Mom, who starts cleaning surfaces that are already clean

    Soon Dad shuffles back into the kitchen

    “Dad, what’s going on?” Clari asks.

    Dad runs a hand through his thick curls. “Things in Venezuela are not good. You know that already.” 

    We do, thanks to the news. We hear about the violence, the lack of food and medicine. Thousands of people have been leaving the country daily. My parents have been sending money to my grandparents for several years.

    Dad sits down on the stool next to mine. “Your mother and I have been working with an immigration lawyer. We wanted to wait until we knew for sure to tell you girls.”

    “And?” Clari asks.

    “We’ve got their visas.”

    “They’re coming to live here?” I ask. “With us?”

    Dad nods. “They’ll be here the day after tomorrow.”

    “That’s really soon,” I say. “Where will they sleep?” 

    “In your room,” Mom answers. “And you and Clarísa will share her room while she’s home for the summer.”

    My room is bigger. Of course that’s where they should sleep. But Clari and I have never shared a room. We haven’t shared much actually. I love her, but we’re not like TV sisters. We aren’t really close, but we don’t fight, either. We’re just . . . sisters.

    “Are you going down to get them?” I ask. Ito and Ita are in their 80s

    “It’s not really safe to go there right now,” Dad says.

    “Who’s going to help them pack?” I ask. All our family members in Venezuela moved back to Argentina several years ago. That’s where Ita and Ito are originally from

    “They have to leave everything behind,” he says. “It won’t be easy for them.”

    “No,” I say as I poke at the last bite of pancake. “I guess not.”

PART 3

    When we open the front door, Ita lets out a squeal. She grabs my face with both hands and looks into my eyes. I smile as she talks to mesomething about how grown-up I look. Then she turns to Clari and does the same thing

    I turn to Ito, and he gives me a shy smile. He looks much older than in the photos we have of him. His hair is whiter. The skin around his eyes is more wrinkled. I lean in to give him a hug

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    We sit down to eat in the dining room. There are empanadas as far as the eye can see. The ones on the white platter are Dad’s. The ones on the blue platter are Ita’s. Dad tells me I’m to eat one of each and compare.

    The table erupts into arguments about which one is better

    Or at least, I think that’s what everyone is talking about.

    Soon Clari jumps up and puts a napkin ring on 

    Ita’s head and laughs. When I hear her sayla reina,” 

    I finally get the joke. Clari has crowned Ita the queen of empanadas

    It only gets harder to keep up after that. I grab another empanada off the tray and pick at its edgesThe conversation goes on around me

PART 4

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    I sleep in the next morning, because it’s summer and I can. When I finally go downstairs, Ita and Clari are in the kitchen. My sister is chopping something green while lta gives her directions.

    “What are y’all making?”

    “Chimichurri,” Clari says. “To go with dinner.” 

    I hug lta

    “Buenos días, Tinita,” she says. Tinita was her nickname for me. Mom and Dad used to use it too. But when we moved hereI asked them to call me Valentina or Val. Now I kind of wish I hadn’t.  

    “Buenos días, Ita,” I tell her

    I point to the pile of herbs Clari is working on. “Can’t you just make that in the food processor, like Dad?” Chimichurri is sauce from Argentina; Dad probably makes some every week or so

    Clari shakes her head. “Ita says hand chopped is best.”

    “,” Ita responds. A mano.”

    “Can I help?” I ask

    “You can grab the oil,” Clari says

    I hand the oil to Ita. Clari dumps the parsley into the bowl with the rest of the ingredients. She asks Ita something that I don’t understand

    “Mírame,” Ita says, pointing to her eye. Watch. She slowly pours the oil with one hand. With the other hand, she begins to stir the mixture. She looks like a Top Chef contestant

    Clari has more questions. And the two of them are off again. The more excited they get, the faster they talk. And the faster they talk, the more I’m left out

    I stick my finger in the bowl and lick it. It’s good. Better than Dad’s.  

    Then I go back to my room. The chatter continues in the kitchen. Ita and Clari don’t even notice I’ve gone.

PART 5

    “We were having fun and you just left,” Clari says as she comes into the room.

    No, you were having fun, I think. But I don’t say it. I try to stomp past her, but she stops me

    “Just tell me what you’re mad about.” 

    “Ugh. Clari. I don’t want to talk about this right now. Especially with you.” 

    “What does that mean?”

    “It means you can’t understand. You and Ita are, like, best buds.”

    “We were trying to include you.”

    “Well, you were doing a bad job.”

    Clari leans against the door frame, and I squeeze by her.

    I finally let myself cry once I shut the bathroom door. Of course Clari doesn’t understand why I’m upset

    I get in the shower. The steam fills the bathroom while I let the water wash away the tears.

PART 6

Rob Crandall/Alamy Stock Photo (Beach); Shutterstock.com (All Other Images)

    When I step into the kitchen, Mom is sorting through a bunch of bags. “Oh, good. There you are,” she says.

    “What is all this?” I ask.

    “I took Ita to the art supply store to get some paint.” Mom pulls a tube from one of the bags

    I look around. “You guys didn’t need to buy all this. I have plenty of paint and brushes.”

    “Ita likes to use oil paint,” Mom says. “She says that you don’t use the same type of brushes for that.”

    No one at school uses oils. You have to wait days for one layer of paint to dry before you can work on top of it again. I can’t even wait all the way through a YouTube ad without hittingSkip.” 

    Ita walks into the kitchen holding an old box. “Come,” Mom says. “Sit.” The timing of all this makes me wonder if Clari told Mom about my meltdown

    Ita sits at the table and opens the box. It’s full of old photos. She pulls out one of me and Clari

    “Qué linda,” Ita says. How cute

    A photo of a beach catches my eye. I reach for it. I know I remember this place. The palm trees. The red sand.

    “That’s Playa Colorada, in Venezuela,” Mom says over my shoulder

    “I’ve been here before?” I ask.

    Ita nods. “¿Te acuerdas?” Do you remember?

    “. Me acuerdo,” I say. “Or, I think I do.”

    Ita starts to tell me the story, then switches to telling Mom. That’s her way of asking Mom to translate. Mom tells me we went there a few months before we moved to the States

    “I think I remember. Clari buried me in the sand . . .”

    Ita nods, smiling. Her smile makes me remember more

    Me playing with the other kids. Dad hacking open a coconut

    Ita grabs the beach photo with the palm trees. She says something to Mom, nodding to me.

    “She wants you to paint this.”

    Me? I thought she was the one painting,” I say to Mom

    “I show you,” Ita says to me

    And she does. We start with the sky, using blue and white. The oil paints blend together so easily. I love the feel of it

    After a while, Mom leaves us on our own. The second I realize she’s gone, I start to worry. What if I have a question? What if Ita asks me something and I don’t understand?

    But as I start to paint the sand, I realize we don’t need words. I pay attention as Ita changes the angle of her brush. I watch as she shows me how to get the texture of the sand just right

    The brushstrokes are their own language

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