this way a little? Yeah, thatâs it. Say cheese!â
The photographer from the Brownâs Mill Reminder snaps his camera, Wally blinking from the flash. Around his shoulder his fatherâs arm feels heavy and damp. The temperature outside is steadily ratcheting up into the nineties but Captain Day is nonetheless in full uniform, and Wallyâs in a long-sleeved shirt with a clip-on blue necktie. After all, itâs not every day that one is named All American Boy by the American Legion.
âYou must be very proud of your son,â the photographer says.
Captain Dayâs face glows as brightly as his buttons. âYou bet I am.â
âHowâs it feel to be asked to lead the Fourth of July parade, Wally?â the photographer asks, snapping another shot.
âIt feels great,â Wally says.
His eyes move over to the kitchen, where his mother is watching from the doorway. She wasnât asked to be in the picture. Wally feels bad about that but says nothing. She doesnât seem to mind.
âIs that it then?â Captain Day asks.
âI think so,â the photographer tells him. âUntil the parade.â
âDonât you want a picture of the certificate?â Captain Day lifts the piece of paper that officially names Wally the townâs All American Boy. â For excellence in academic achievement and extraordinary devotion to community and nation ,â he reads.
âGood idea,â the photographer says, snapping a picture of Wallyâs father holding the certificate. âYou know what they say about the apple not falling far from the tree.â
Captain Day beams.
Wally feels as if heâll pass out from the heat. âMay I take the tie off now?â
âGo ahead,â the photographer tells him, being escorted to the door by Captain Day. âWeâll have you on the front page of next weekâs paper, Wally.â
The boy unclips his tie, popping open the shirt button thatâs been cutting off his windpipe.
âWeâll put this in our scrapbook,â his mother says, finally coming out of the kitchen. She lifts the certificate from the table to gaze at it. Wally can see his name written in calligraphy beneath stark black letters that read ALL AMERICAN BOY.
âScrapbook?â his father barks, returning to the room and startling his wife. âWeâll do no such thing. Weâll frame it! Hang it on the wall! This is the American Legion , for Godâs sake, Regina. Weâre not going to hide it away in a scrapbook.â
Wally blushes. His father takes the certificate from her and hands it to his son. Looking down at it, Wally feels his face burn.
âMay I change my clothes now and go over to Freddieâs?â he asks.
His father tousles his hair. âOf course, Wally.â
The boy carries the certificate to his room and stuffs it into the top drawer of his dresser. He hopes his father doesnât have it framed. Itâs not that Wally isnât proud of it. He is. He just doesnât want to have to look at it.
He changes out of his starched shirt and wool pants. His skin feels clammy. He pulls on a pair of plaid shorts and a T-shirt.
Heâs late. He told Josephine heâd be at her house by noon.
âIâm going to Freddieâs,â he says, coming back into the living room.
âAnother softball game?â his father asks.
âYup.â
âOkay, son. Hit a homer for me!â
âWill do!â
The screen door slams behind him.
Of course, thereâs no softball game. Thereâs never a softball game when Wally tells his father there is.
Instead, heâs heading to see Josephine Leopold, whoâs eighty-seven years old, and who, in her day, had been a great actress. She had trod the boards, as she put it, with all of the greats: Mrs. Fiske, Mrs. Campbell, and all three of the Barrymores.
âBut mostly Miss Le Gallienne,â Josephine told
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