"How did this shape," I traced two curves in the air with each of my index fingers, "get to be thought of as this?" I curved my left hand into a fist and hit my breast just below my left collar bone with a thump. In other words, how did the shape of a heart become known as a heart? Mom started to answer me, then frowned. "I don't know, sweetheart," she said. "I know! I know!" said Jenny, waving her hand in the air and speaking like a three-year-old. She got that from me. She was really thirteen, but sometimes we just couldn't resist irritating our mother. "OK, Jenny, tell me why," I challenged. "Because it is, that's why." Did I forget to mention that speaking isn't the only way we imitate a much younger person? I shrugged at her and grabbed a scrap of paper to jot the question down so I could look it up later. A few minute later, I looked up again. "Mom, what would you do if I turned you into a hummingbird?" Mom looked at me furiously. "Amy, it's not going to happen, so why do you ask such ridiculous questions?" I compressed my lips. "Why can't it happen?" I demanded rebelliously, then paused, and then switched tactics. "I'm only doing research for my books. I need psychologically accurate information if I am ever going to succeed in this capitalistically oriented society as a novelist." I hesitated, then stood up. "All right, Mother. We do not approve of each others' worlds. Good night." I stalked away from the cream of mushroom soup. I had already taken my bath and was all ready for bed when I suddenly remembered the hearts. I hit my forehead in exasperation. Rushing out of my room and away from looking at the mouse cage, I grabbed the biggest dictionary in the house, a giant gray one that was falling apart at the seams, and I flipped through the pages. Hearsay . . . hearse . . . Hearst . . . heart. It had an amazing forty-four definitions, starting with: heart (härt), n. 1. a hollow, muscular organ which by rhythmic contractions and relaxations keeps the blood in circulation throughout the body. It went on to: 44. Archaic. to encourage. Other definitions mentioned the shape, the suit of hearts in cards, as the middle of something, and a whole mess of clichés using the term 'heart'. But not one explanation of how 'heart' got to mean both the organ and: 10. a conventional shape with rounded sides meeting in a point at the bottom and curving inward to a cusp at the top. Drat. I also looked up cross, because the definition of 'cross one's heart' intrigued me and I wanted to learn more. The definition told me to look under heart. Drat again. In order to relieve my frustration, I snapped the computer on, waited impatiently for it boot up, and got into the word processor, calling up one of my books. I had hundreds of books. I had millions of words. There was even one series, which involved two completed novels and twenty-something more in progress. That series was my favorite. I wrote feverishly until midnight, past my mother reminding me twice that it was time to hit the hay. I concocted spells that I would never be able to initiate outside of writing. I spun threads of story and wove them into a tapestry of meaning. I wished up things that my mother would never accept as real and embedded them in the memory of my computer's technology. "So, there," I whispered. "It's real, Mom, and you can't take it away from me." I did not sleep very well that night. It was summer, and summer school was over, and so was the family reunion. The next day, I would be getting my cat. I was already responsible for Saffron, our yellow queen tabby, so there would be nearly no new work for me. Jenny did not know it, and I did not intend to tell her, but I had already decided to name my new pet in honor of her. Jenny was the Oathbreaker, for she had promised to play imagination games with me and now refused. I could not remember the Norse gods of lies and of truth, so my tom cat would be Hermes-Apollo. A further irony was that I chose a black cat with grey underfur. I wonder what the god of light thinks about having his namesake nicknamed the Darkling?
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