Success is liking yourself, liking what you do, and liking how you do it. (Maya Angelou)
Ella finds two dolls inside the top floor of the dollhouse set up in the library. The male figure is noticeably smaller than the female doll. Nevertheless, they become Daughter and Daddy. Daughter and Daddy are their names.
One staircase and three floors is incidental. No problem. The characters move to the higher levels as if walls and open air did not exist. Hops are required on stairs. I become Daddy. Ella is Daughter.
When I comment that the leap from Daughter’s bedroom to attic has been a doozy, Ella does not respond. Either she is too involved in the game, or the slang term doozy is outdated.
“Carry me to bed, Daddy,” she says.
One plastic doll next to the other looks more like the letter X. But I have been living in the real world too long.
“Okay.”
And the same scenarios repeat. In cycles so rapid day and night have no meaning. The relationship between child and father does.
“Carry me to bed, Daddy.” Followed by, “Daughter needs ear drops.”
And Daddy carries Daughter safely—over the chasm of rooms that have no entrance or exit. Her ear infection disappears within two minutes per the library clock, and perhaps four trips up one set of toy stairs and one jump into the impossible.
I am Grandmother. Playing a role. When I first sat down on the floor my mind was immersed in the plot for a short story for grownups. It got sidelined temporarily. Somewhere between make-believe and the profound. In make-believe I enter the imagination of a little girl with special needs and special love.
Daddy is always available, whether he is big enough for the task or not. He shines. Daughter’s physical problems dissolve. Ella idolizes her father.
I speak in hushed tones. This is a library. Ella talks as if she were in the toy room in my house. A woman sits at an adjoining table. She does not complain. When Grandpa pulls out his car keys as we get ready to go, Ella offers to drive.
The woman bursts out laughing. She has been amused, not annoyed. I am happy to have the job of grandma.
Ella has left a few blessings behind.




