Hey Friends! If you’re new, here’s the scoop: We’re taking a walk through the book of Proverbs along with a girl named Eleanor. In Eleanor’s imaginative life, she is heir to an island chain. In real life, she is a freshman at an arts school—a seeming dream come true that will turn into her worst nightmare if she isn’t careful.
Proverbs 3:9-10
Honor the LORD with your wealth
and with the firstfruits of all your produce;
then your barns will be filled with plenty,
and your vats will be bursting with wine.
Wichita, Kansas
Principal Polovanka opened the door and there was Thuy Vu, Commissioner of the Kansas State Board of Education. Wrapped in a perfectly tailored, wool, green dress, she seemed to shoot up from the concrete floor like a stubborn blade of grass. Her horn-rimmed, black glasses shone.
Principal Polavanka, wearing her workout Spandex, stumbled backward as a kid butted her knees from behind. She shot Eleanor a warning look. Eleanor quickly picked up the kid and stood to the side.
Principal Polovanka smoothed out the Spandex that needed no smoothing and pushed a loose curl into her headband.
“Welcome, Dr. Vu. Please come in. Can I get you a bottle of water?”
Dr. Vu’s heels clicked on the tile floor as she crossed the room to look out the windows.
“It is time for our annual meeting. How will you put Kansas on the map this year, Principal Polovanka?” She shot a sharp look at the goat. “Is this an indication?”
“Eleanor was just leaving,” Principal Polovanka started.
“I want Miss West to remain. Have your daughter put the old goat in her place.”
Talia sucked in her breath, but after a nod from her mother, she took the kid from Eleanor and left the apartment.
With trembling hands, Principal Polovanka threw a blue sweater around herself. Eleanor pulled a pad of yellow paper from her backpack, threw on her favorite peach hoodie, and sat down at the table with Dr. Vu and Principal Polovanka.
For the next two hours the women discussed the Winter Spectacular which would be performed in January. It was two months away, but winter closed in in just those two hours, frosting the principal’s heart, hardening the soft place that had formed in the previous weeks, and forever banning the laughter-bringing goats from the principal’s apartment—and the school grounds.
Near the Village of Adamorobe*
When Starla awoke, pain pounded her, throbbing in her entire torso, her arms, and her legs.
She opened her eyes and saw the dark ceiling of a cave. Reflections of a fire danced there. She felt the warmth of the fire on her feet. She smelled fish cooking. She heard the pounding of the ocean in the walls of the cave. She groaned.
Someone moved near her feet. A face appeared above her, jarring her memory. It was the young man who had stood guard near the baby she had rescued—or tried to rescue. Perhaps this young man would kill her now. No. Concern and curiosity lived together in his eyes. He did not intend to kill her.
She heard the baby and turned to see the baby in her mother’s arms. She met the mother’s eyes. Thanksgiving lived there. The woman kissed her baby’s head.
Starla fell asleep again.
Over several months, the number of people living in the cave grew. The woman’s husband first. Then the grandmothers, some children. Then more families.
Starla slowly recovered, nursed to health in some way by each one. Water brought by a child. Herbs rubbed into her skin by the old women. The firewood supplied by the old men and young boys. Nets of fish caught and gutted by the strong men. They gave her everything except words. They had none to give. But she learned their beautiful language of gestures. She learned who was coming by the tread of their footsteps. Slowly, she became a part of the community. Slowly, she became a part of the underground movement to overthrow the ones who lived above.
* Inspired by Adamorobe, the deaf community in West Africa that developed its own indigenous sign language. Adamorobe, a village in the West African nation of Ghana, is known as the ‘deaf community’ due to a high incidence of a hereditary form of deafness
*Adamorobe Sign Language or AdaSL is a village sign language used in Adamorobe, an Akan village in eastern Ghana.