Back to School
I wake up to my pink cane
propped up against the dresser--
a spot where I know
I didn’t leave it
before going to bed.
Mami put it there while I slept,
I’m positive,
as if waking up and seeing it
would logically make me grab it,
as if its nearness to my
carefully picked out
first-day-of-school outfit
would make it the natural accessory
for my first day back.
It doesn’t matter how many times I tell her
that I don’t want it,
she doesn’t listen--
always going on and on
with her metaphors
and cutesy phrases
insisting my cane is inspirational
and lecturing me on how using it
is just like someone using glasses
and so I shouldn’t be ashamed.
But it’s not that I’m ashamed--
it’s that I’m confused.
Nervous of what everyone at school will say
if I come to class with a cane some days
but not others,
like I must be hiding a secret,
like I did virtual school
just for fun,
like whatever they heard about me,
about my accident,
about my surgeries,
has to be a lie
because the Valentina in front of them
doesn’t look injured,
is rejoining her fencing gym this week,
because
the seventh-grade Valentina in front of them?
With her Dutch braids,
frowning face,
calendar counting down the days?
She looks exactly like the
tough
champion
athlete
she’s always been.
Background Noise
“No me voy a llevar el baston,”
I inform Mami
as I come down the stairs,
ignoring my stiff ankle and
cutting her off before she can open her mouth
to ask why I don’t have my cane.
Luis Manuel is already at the kitchen table
scarfing down chocolate Pop-Tarts
with a glass of milk,
and I see him make a face under his curls and
concentrate on his breakfast
because we both know those are fighting words
in the Camacho Gutierrez
morning routine.
I grab a can of guava juice from the fridge as
Papi instantly defends me,
saying there’s no point in giving people
the wrong idea
when I’ll be starting up my training again so soon.
Which then immediately prompts
one of Mami’s speeches,
her most common one,
the one about how I’m not the same Vale
who competed in Summer Nationals last year,
that me and Papi can’t pretend everything is fine
just ’cause we want it to be
and that
if we’re all being honest,
I probably shouldn’t fence again at all.
I practically have this argument memorized by now,
can mumble along with both of them
as I take each sip of my juice.
Papi all: She doesn’t need a cane. She just needs to strengthen her left leg.
Then Mami: If she didn’t need a cane, the PT wouldn’t have suggested one.
Then Papi: Look at her! She’s fine. Aren’t you fine, Vale? Tell your mother.
And Mami: She’s not fine! Didn’t you see her limping? Vale, show your dad.
I don’t bother answering either of them
because as long as I keep quiet,
my parents will argue alone
for twenty minutes easy,
even if everything they say
is just a repeat
of something they’ve said before.
Halfway through my juice, though,
my brother swallows the last of his food
and points at the garage door with his lips.
And even though I was supposed to ride the bus today,
even though Luis Manuel threw a fit last week
telling us all how driving me to Jefferson Middle
would make him late to Jefferson High,
his tall, lanky self
quietly leads me through the garage door,
leaving our parents still arguing,
and then drives me to school
without a single complaint.
I Know Me Best
I wish I could say Mami just got up
on the wrong side of the bed this morning,
but she says stuff like this all the time now,
buys me all sorts of random natural medicines
that don’t work,
the closer we get
to me being allowed to fence again.
It’s like she thinks giving up what makes me me
shouldn’t be a big deal at all,
that my energy could be better used trying out
whatever “new solutions” for my pain
she’s found online that day.
And I don’t understand how she can’t see that
fencing again,
the promise of it,
is the only thing that’s kept me going
through the surgeries
and the doctors
and the complete rearranging
of my life.
That fencing isn’t just a hobby
I can pick up and put down--
it’s who I am.
It’s what keeps me me.
And anyone who can’t see that
is clearly not Team Valentina,
even if it’s my own mother,
even if she insists
everything she says
is out of love.
Because We Love You
Before my accident
porque te queremos
meant my parents were tough on me
when I didn’t win.
It meant Papi would film me
so we could go over all my mistakes,
and I’d always get in trouble with Mami
if I didn’t eat enough carbs
the night before a match
or didn’t get enough sleep
due to nerves.
It meant I wasn’t allowed to say I was tired
after practice
or say I wanted to take a week off
and if I ever complained
Mami would remind me
that she never got the chance
to ever compete
to ever take lessons in anything
and I’m lucky to have parents who work so hard.
And, yeah, Papi is still the same, I think
but it’s like Mami went to bed
the night of my accident
and woke up as someone brand-new.
And as bad as it sometimes felt
to be pushed and pushed all the time
this?
now?
is a million times worse.
Because if love used to mean
never letting me give up
what does it mean now--
now that Mami has forgotten
who I used to be?
Parallel Universe
Even though I’ve been counting down the days,
ready to restart regular life,
Jefferson Middle School still feels weird,
itchy,
slightly off,
and though I glare at everyone around me,
though my raised eyebrows dare them
to even try saying something to my face,
I keep catching kids
looking at me around corners and behind lockers,
trying to see if I’m limping,
WHICH I’M NOT
trying to see me doing anything
that would match up with what they were imagining
in their gossipy group chats.
And it makes the back of my neck prickle,
the temper Coach Nate always warns me about
threatening to flare up,
because it’s not like I asked
to get excused from group sports in gym
it’s not like I asked
to be allowed to walk slow
and arrive late to class
all because my flare-ups
are so hard to predict.
And maybe I should have brought my cane to school
just so I could test how similar to my epee blade
it could be
in knocking someone out.
Whatever.
It doesn’t matter anyway.
School is just the place I go to during the day
to learn all the things I won’t need
once I’m a pro international fencer
training day and night.
Plus, Amanda is here.
Amanda, with her straight
shiny black hair
and friendly eyes,
who surprises me today
with a bag full of 3 Musketeers
and says, “Te extrane, Vale,”
in her soft Mexican accent
like she actually means it
and is glad to see me
physically back at school.
I don’t really have friends,
if I’m honest,
because (a)
fencing is a big commitment
that most people don’t understand
and (b)
because I don’t always believe people
when they tell me things,
especially doctors and other fencers
and Mami most of all.
Amanda, though,
is not a fencer,
has never brought up my leg in texts,
and so when she offers me her arm at school,
I link mine through it,
because being stared at all day
is not as terrible with company,
and there’s definitely less chance of me
hitting someone
with Amanda next to me,
shaking her head.
Dinner Is Awkward
We all pretend this morning didn’t happen
and Mami even makes me my favorite--
arroz guisado--
but the nice gesture is hard to focus on
because all she wants to know
is how being back at school went.
All
“¿Te duele la pierna, Vale?”
as she hands me my plate,
all
“¿Como te sientes, Vale?”
as she sits down,
all
“¿Quieres que te de un masajito despues de comer?”
before Papi tells her to give me a break.
It’s as if the only thing
that could possibly be worth talking about with her
is my leg hurting
and the quick and easy solution
a simple massage for the pain.
I don’t need lotions or massages.
I don’t need Mami babying me.
I don’t need anyone to make me a special dinner.
Because guess what?
None of those things even help!
What I need
is for everything to go back to normal,
for each day’s trivia--
will I hurt today or not?--
to become part of my past
and disappear from my future,
for the dinner conversation to go back to being about
competitions and rivals
for life to go back to being
fencing
school
fencing
and for Mami to go back
to the way she used to be
before she became convinced I was something fragile--
back when she wouldn’t have cared if I was sore
she would’ve cared that I complained.
I eat quickly,
only half listening
as Luis Manuel distracts our parents
with the new mosaic piece he’s working on
for his independent art study this year.
Eat quickly, saying nothing,
even as my leg buzzes with soft heat
from my first full day walking down
concrete hallways
after so many months of
soft carpet
at home.
This is almost over, Vale,
I tell myself in between bites.
You’re almost there, I promise.
All this time of feeling weak,
all these months of staring at the wall
wondering if there was something wrong with my brain
for weighing how much it would hurt
if I just ripped my medical boot in two
and took off--
it’s ending.
I’m going back to fencing.
I’m going back to training.
And then it’ll be like I was never even
in a stupid crash,
like nothing ever happened--
just a small hurdle
I’ll tell the sports interviewers
when years from now
they make a documentary
about my life.
Gym
Sitting out during basketball on Wednesday
“just for a little bit,
just to be cautious”
is annoying
but it also lets me daydream about
my big fencing return tomorrow,
now that my ankle can bend
whatever number of degrees my doctors decided
made it okay for me to fence.
It’s weird, really,
how my return is more about angles
measurements
X-rays
and not how my body feels inside.
Weird, but good too,
because those numbers
gave me something to count toward
during the months
when I couldn’t even make it to the bathroom
without leaning on my rolling walker
the whole time.
It’s embarrassing, honestly,
how many weeks I spent listening
to doctors
to Mami
to my brother asking if I was okay
when I could have been listening
to the sharp computer beeps
announcing every touch of my blade,
could have been listening
to the sneakers shrieking
as the other kids
hoped for a win on the strip
only to have to face me
and lose.
Luis Manuel has always said
fencing bouts sound too angry
smell too awful--
like sweat mixed with the sound of stress.
But he’s wrong
because nothing compares
to the adrenaline of your own body
as you win
the scent of strength
in every one of your pores
as you face someone in all your armor
and score the winning touch.
I’ve missed fencing
of course I have
missed the weight of my jacket
stamped with U.S. CAMACHO
a whole lot.
Sure, it’s not always fun;
fencing is a lot of work.
Worth it, though.
Forever worth it
for those sweet high-pitched beeps
those sliding sneakered feet
and the rush
the thrill
every time the referee calls out
my winning touch.
Physical Therapy
Dr. Claudia is Puerto Rican like me,
which is why I think my parents picked her
out of the list of names my surgeon gave us
after the operation where he put
pieces of metal in my leg
so I could be half robot as I healed.
And she’s nice, Dr. Claudia,
she is,
but I wish she’d focus more on the fact
that I’m pretty much
a pro athlete
which means that she should be speeding me through
a fast and serious recovery plan
instead of whatever slow and easy kid schedule
she has laid out in the notebook
that she’s always writing in.
I mean, I like her special massages
her stretches
her exercises
and all the weird fancy tech she uses on my leg,
but every week when I ask her,
“When can I stop coming here?”
she waves me off,
answers with sentences that mean nothing, like
“Let’s see how your leg responds to this first,”
which might work on her other patients
but won’t work on me.
And seriously,
how can I get good enough at physical therapy
to graduate from it
when I don’t even know what the rubric is?
What Do You Mean, “Forever”?
Today I come to therapy with my mind made up,
because now that I’m back at school
about to be back at Fencing Paradise
I need Dr. Claudia to be honest with me
and tell me when
I can expect to get fixed.
I’ve got goals, you know?
Summer Nationals are calling my name!
And I’m done being patient
when I need answers
not later, not eventually,
NOW.
“Dr. Claudia,”
I say seriously,
or as seriously as I can
while lying face up on a table
as my whole body vibrates
from the special massager
she’s using on my calf.
“When can I stop coming here?
And give me a real answer this time.”
Dr. Claudia stops the massager
and helps me sit up.
“Valentina,”
she says.
“I can’t answer that question.
But more importantly,
just because you eventually stop coming here
stop working with me
doesn’t mean you won’t have to do stretches
and massages
maybe forever
at home.
Sometimes our bodies change
temporarily,
but sometimes those changes are more
permanent,
and the goal with physical therapy
is not to fix
but to strengthen
not to change
but to give you the skills
and tools
to adapt.”
And I try to focus on what she’s saying
but I’m distracted by the woman
at the table next to me
laughing
as she gets her knee brace taken off.
Yes, yes,
some things are temporary
and some are permanent,
but for my leg?
This is just a setback.
A challenge.
Like when my ex‑best friend Stephanie
tore her ACL years ago
but since then has been fine.
This leg thing?
Just a tiny obstacle for me to conquer
on the path to being
a worldwide champ.
Copyright © 2025 by Andrea Beatriz Arango. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.