This story is the third-place winner of the 2008 Moment Magazine-Karma Foundation Short Fiction Contest. Founded in 2000, the contest was created to recognize authors of Jewish short fiction. The 2008 stories were judged by Anita Diamant, bestselling author of The Red Tent. Moment Magazine and the Karma Foundation are grateful to Diamant and to all of the writers who took the time to submit their stories. Click here to learn how to submit a story to the contest.

To see this story in its original context, click here.
I get the phone call the day after Michigan kissed me. Iâm sitting between my two best camp friends, Orly and Michelle, when the camp secretary walks into our Shabbat service. Just as we rise to âkiss the Torah,â my counselor Becky scurries to hear the secretaryâs whispered message. Donât ask me how, but I know that they are talking about me. Iâm not surprised to feel a tap on my shoulder and follow them outside as the voices of my edah, my fellow campers going into seventh grade, sing âItâs a Tree of Life to those who hold fast to it.â
The cold air stings my bare legs, and for a minute I regret the decision to wear shorts this morning. All of the girls in my bunk wear long and short combinations on chilly mornings: either shorts and a sweatshirt, or jeans and a T-shirt. Today I am wearing denim cut-offs with the navy âOxford Universityâ hooded sweatshirt that Mom and Dad bought me in London. My bunkmates argue over who gets to borrow my sweatshirt nearly as much as they argue about who will wear Orlyâs perfectly faded Leviâs. Partly because I donât mind lending it, I am more popular this summer than last. My bunkmates are mostly like me: much cooler at camp than home.
âWhatâs up?â I ask Becky as I strain my neck to look up at her. She plays basketball at the University of Minnesota, is impossibly thin, and her sleek blond hair and blue eyes make her stick out even more than her height at Camp Shalom in Wisconsin. Most of us are shorter and darker.
âThereâs a phone call for you in the office,â says Becky as she takes my hand.
A phone call? No one ever gets pulled out of services for a phone call. Campers arenât even allowed to use the phone unless they get a message and then they must call back on the pay phone outside the dining hall. But we are headed to the main office.
And today no one should use the phone; itâs Shabbat. Thatâs why Michigan kissed me last night; it was a Shabbat Shalom kiss. His real name is Marc, Marc Mishilin, but on the first day of camp last year he wore a blue T-shirt that said MICHIGAN in frayed yellow letters, and ever since we call him Michigan, or Mich. A Shabbat Shalom kiss always has the potential to be the kiss that starts a relationship. Or not. I wish I knew if he really liked meâmy stomach has been flip-flopping all morning and everything feels really bright today. Until now.
At the main office, we find Rabbi Sykes, the camp director, talking on the phone. âThere is a flight leaving Rhinelander today at 5:30 which arrives in Kansas City at 7:15.â He looks up as our little group walks in. âJudy just arrived, Iâll put her on.â Rabbi Sykes smiles wanly at me as he hands me the phone. âJudy, your mother needs to speak with you. Becky and I will be right outside if you need us.â
Why would I need Becky and Rabbi Sykes? Before I put the phone to my ear I promise myself that whatever it is, I will not leave camp. âMom, whatâs going on?â I say into the speaker.
âHi, sweetie,â Momâs voice sounds slurred and far away. My legs feel wobbly, my head buzzes. âHow are you?â
âFine.â Why is she asking how I am?
âHoney, Daddy died this morning.â
âZayde?â I never heard my mother refer to her father as âDaddy.â
âNo, baby, Dad.â
I have no idea what she is saying.
âJudy, are you there?â I hear tears in her voice. âCan you say anything?â
I canât.
âRabbi Sykes booked you a flight home. Someone from camp is going to drive you to the airport. Michael and I will pick you up. The funeral is tomorrow.â
It sounds like my mother is reading from a script, like she is an actress playing the part of my mother.
âJudy, please, say something,â she begs.
âWhy is Michael coming with you to the airport?â Michael is my little brother. He is eight.
âHe wants to see you, he needs to see you. I need to see you. Sweetheart, do you have any questions?â
âDo I have to come home?â
“Judy, do you understand? Your father died. Heâs dead. Yes, you have to come home.â For the first time during the call, she sounds like my real mother.
How could my father be dead? Heâs not old like Zayde. He eats shredded wheat with bananas for breakfast and rides his bicycle everywhere. Even in the rain. He wears bowties, coached my soccer team in first grade and always has a book in his hands.
âMom, I donât understand,â and then, âAre you sure?â
âOh, baby. My poor Judy. He went for a bike ride this morning but came home after about 20 minutes saying that he didnât feel well. He lay down and complained that he couldnât breathe. By the time the ambulance got here he wasnât breathing at all. He had a heart attack, honey. The doctors say it didnât hurt.â Her voice sounds thin, like a little girlâs.
âMommy?â Where did that come from? I havenât called her that since I was six.
âYes, sweetie?â
âI donât want him to be dead,â I sob.
âI know, I really do, me neither. Judy, Iâll see you tonight. I love you, Judy.â
We donât really say âI love youâ in our family. Not because we donât, but it feels awkward. Now, I guess, everything is different. âI love you, too, Mom.â
Leaving the deserted office and stepping back into the chilly morning feels like walking into a blurry dream. Rabbi Sykes and Becky are standing directly in front of me. Becky tries to pull me to her boney chest. Even though I just found out that my dad is dead I donât want to hug her. I leave my arms where they are and wait for her to let go.
It suddenly occurs to me that everyone else at camp is going to have a regular day. After services they will head into the dining hall for lunch and singing. Michigan might stand up and help the counselors lead. Last week he was wearing his Michigan T-shirt and a kippah that said âGo Blueâ when he got up and belted out the first part of Chiri Biri Bim. Will he notice that Iâm not there? Will anyone?
âCan Orly and Michelle come help me pack?â I ask. I need to see my friends. Rabbi Sykes nods at Becky, and she goes to them.
Itâs so quiet and still as I make my way up the hill to my cabin that it feels like everyoneâs vanished. I canât help it; I think about him again. The thing that I like about Michigan is that while he is a really good basketball player, he also likes to lead services and act in the camp play. He was a lead gangster in Guys and Dolls. Most guys are either into sports, acting or Jewish stuff. Mich is the only one I know who is into all three.
Last year the counselors voted him and Orly the Cutest Camp Couple, but this summer Orly has an older boyfriend. She and Mich are only friends now, but it seems to me that Mich hangs out with us just as much as he did last summer, maybe more. For the past week, at the end of our evening activity, when we all stand in a circleâarms crossed and hands joined together singing Rad Hayom (The Day is Done in Hebrew)âhe has been right next to me. When it is time to send around the squeeze (someone squeezes the hand of the person standing beside them and they âsend it aroundâ), Michigan keeps a slight pressure on my hand even when our turn to squeeze is over.
Friday nights are the only time the whole camp comes together. After services everyone kisses. Just before dinner, when the sky is finally streaked with black, you turn to your bunkmates, your friends from home, your counselors and wish them Shabbat Shalom with a kiss. If a boy kisses a girl who is not his girlfriend, it is possible that he likes her. You are allowed to kiss anyone the whole night.
As I headed into dinner, Michiganâs sandy-haired, too-skinny frame approached, and I knew what would happen. âShabbat Shalom,â we said at the same time. He leaned in and kissed my cheek at the closest possible point to my lips. His lips were dry and surprisingly ordinary. The kiss was over so quickly, but I canât stop thinking about it.
When I reach the door to my bunk, I donât want to go in. Was Dad still alive the last time I was in here? What did he look like when he died? On TV it always looks like the person is asleep. I try to picture the way he looked on the morning I left for camp. He was wearing shorts. I know because when he hugged me goodbye I could feel the hair on his legs against my freshly shaved ones and the sharp tickle felt embarrassing.
Orly and Michelle find me standing outside the door of our bunk. Every time I see Orly I wonder why she hangs out with us. She is short and skinny but, unlike me, actually needs to wear a bra, and her light brown curls always stay coiled, even when it rains. She has green eyes and clear skin, and guys love her.
Although we both love Orly, it is good that Michelle and I have each other; sometimes it is easier to like someone who is not perfect. She opens the cabin door and we sit on my rumpled bottom bunk. âHow are you doing, Jude?â asks Michelle.
âI donât know, everything feels fuzzy.â
Orly puts her arm around me and rests her head on my shoulder. âWeâre going to miss you so much, sweetie,â she says.
âYou have to come back to camp if you can,â says Michelle.
âWhy wouldnât I?â
Orly and Michelle look at each other. I bet that they are thinking about how Adam Wolfeâs grandfather died last summer; he promised to bring bags of popcorn and Reeseâs Peanut Butter Cups back from Chicago for his friends, but he never came back.
As I get into the van for the airport, I whisper into Michelleâs ear as I hug her: âDo you think Michigan likes me?â
âYes,â she replies, âI think he does.â
As the van moves into the town of Rhinelander, Wisconsin, I try to picture my familyâs ranch house on a cul-de-sac in Overland Park, Kansas, a suburb of Kansas City. I have my own phone in my room, where I used to spend hours curled up on my bed talking to my friends. The problem is that no one has been calling me lately. Luckily, I have camp because the only people I have to talk to at home are Mom and Michael. Dad is usually at work or out riding his bike. Iâm pretty sure he has no idea that my friends stopped calling. Iâm not trying to keep it a big secret from him, but he just isnât home enough to know that I am different from who he thinks I am.
When I arrive at the airport in Kansas City, Mom and Michael are waiting for me. Mom has her hair in two lopsided ponytails on either side of her head, and her face is red and splotchy. Michaelâs hair is sticking up and he has chocolate smeared all over his face and on his clothes. They look as if they had been in a tornado. This is real, then.
âJudy, Judy sweetie,â Mom holds me as I finally cry. Dad is not with them. I reach out and pull Michael in. We form a little huddle, all of our hot tears mixing together, and landing on Momâs bare shoulder. I think that we may stand here crying in the airport forever. Finally, we go to the car clinging to our motherâs hands like little children crossing a dangerous road.
When I wake up the next morning, I pad across the house to my parentsâ room and peek inside. Mom is sitting in the middle of the bed in her underwear and a purple tank top. She is surrounded by pictures and old letters, sobbing. I close the door. I open Michaelâs and find him curled up with his old stuffed rabbit, asleep on the floor, his thumb in his mouth. I wonder if I will go back to camp.
After I get dressed, Mom says, âBubbe and Zayde are coming over soon.â For a minute, I think about the fact that Mom still has two parents, and I only have one. Mom says that Aunt Molly and Uncle Steve are coming, too. âWe are all going to ride to the funeral together in the limousine,â she tells me. I have never been in a limousine before.
They all arrive at the same time. Bubbe kisses my cheek and then she and Zayde take Michael to his room to change out of his Spiderman pajamas. Did he forget how to dress himself?
I am glad to get out of the house. Michael and I climb into the back of the limousine; Bubbe scoots in next to me and holds my hand. Her hand feels solid, the one thing that is keeping me here, with my family, in this car. If she lets go I might float away.
The funeral is at the funeral home my sixth grade Sunday school class visited last year when we learned about Jewish life cycles. The funeral director pins torn black ribbons on our clothes. His voice is low and deep, as he explains that while some Jews rip their clothes when they lose a member of their family, others wear these torn ribbons. I donât want to do either and plan to take the ribbon off as soon as no one is looking.
The rabbi begins the ceremony, looks at us and says how my fatherâs memory will be a blessing. W hat does that even mean? The cantor sings some Hebrew songs. At camp we sometimes sing one of them, Esah Eynay, but we sing it fast and loud. The cantor sings slowly and alone. I used to like that song; now itâs ruined.
The worst part, though, is the box. A plain unfinished wooden box, decorated with nothing but a Jewish star, rests on a platform. When my class visited, the funeral director told us that Jews are supposed to be buried in a plain box that would disintegrate and return to the earth. My dad has nothing to do with that box. I cannot look at it.
After the funeral everyone comes back to our house. Some of my former friends, the ones who stopped calling, come with their parents. I see Mandy, Nili and Margo clustered in my living room, whispering. Iâm not ready for them. I was supposed to have the whole summer to recover from Mandy telling Nili and Margo that my breath smelled and that I was sometimes chosen last for basketball at PE. I had hoped everything would reshuffle in the fall.
After they tell me theyâre sorry about my dad, I find my Mom and ask, âW hat am I supposed to say back?â
âI donât really know, but Iâve been saying âthank you.ââ
âAm I going back to camp?â I didnât mean to ask that. But now that I had I really wanted to know.
âGod, Judy, your father died, and youâre acting like the only thing that you care about is camp. I donât know! I donât know anything anymore. If you want to go back, go back!â Her voice is high-pitched and wobbly. I can feel everyone looking at us. I race to my room.
As I flop onto my bed, I look up at my dresser and see the house made of old wine corks. The fairy house. When I was six I asked Dad if he would help me build a fairy house. It took more than three years to collect the corks, and I was past the age of caring about either fairies or building houses when Dad and I finally made it. For the past two years, I had pretty much stopped seeing it. Iâd probably always see it now.
Just then Mom opens my door. I can barely look at her. âIâm sorry that I snapped at you, Judy. Things are going to be rough around here for a while.â
âI know.â I feel like crying again.
âHoney, I think the best place for you to be, if you still want to, is at camp. Uncle Steve offered to drive you back on Tuesday.â
âBut Mom, I donât know if I should. I think Michael needs me. Heâs turning back into a baby.â
âMichael will be okay for three weeks. Itâs up to you, but what I really came to tell you is that you have a phone call.â I wait for her to close the door behind her before I pick up my phone. Itâs Orly telling me that everything is not the same and that Michelle and she tipped the canoe because I wasnât in the middle. Then Michelle gets on the phone to urge me to return to camp. I ask, âMichelle, if I come back do you promise to tell everyone not to say âIâm so sorry about your dad?ââ
âI promise.â
âDo you really think Michigan likes me?â
âYeah, Orly thinks so, too.â I hear rhythmic murmuring coming from the living room as I reluctantly say goodbye to my friends. Services are starting. I look back at the fairy house. How can I leave?
When school starts in the fall I am going to be the Girl Whose Father Died. When Niliâs parents got divorced the summer between first and second grade and her dad moved to California everyone stopped talking to her for a while, even me. It was like she was a different person. I donât think any of my former friends are going to talk to me now. I am going to have to help Michael remember how to eat and dress himself, and I have a feeling Mom is going to get sadder and smaller.
At camp, it will be weird at first but then it wonât. Orly and Michelle will make sure of that. Iâll bring back goodies for my bunkmates. On cold mornings Iâll borrow Orlyâs Leviâs and Michelleâs orange T-shirt, which she assures me looks great with my shade of brown hair. I think Iâll give away the Oxford sweatshirt. Iâll see Michigan again. We will walk down to the lake arm in arm to Friday night services. I have never told anyone, but at camp I kind of like services. Afterwards there will be kissing.