the front door and found her standing on the stoop. âHappy birthday. Is Suzanna here yet?â
I eyed Mitzi uncertainly and she gave me the same look right back, but with a hint of a question, like Well?
I donât know what had come over me. Mitzi was my best friend and here I was treating her like a stranger at my birthday party. Luckily, I caught myself in my momentary rudeness, smiled brightly, and ushered her inside.
âThank you!â I exclaimed, placing her present on the little table that Aunt Em had set aside for that purpose. âSuzanna and Jill are by theââ
I didnât get a chance to finish my sentence. âMy mom says happy birthday, too,â Mitzi said over her shoulder, already making a beeline for the corner, where snobby Suzanna Hellman was slumped against the wall, looking straight out of a magazine ad in her brand-new dress with a fashionable wide collar and a bright pink sash while her sister, Jill, helped herself to Aunt Emâs signature potato puff balls from the snack table.
âThank goodness youâre here,â Suzanna said, her face cheering in relief when she saw Mitzi approaching. âI was beginning to wonder if Jill and I would be the only people under a hundred. Not counting Dorothy, of course.â
I giggled at the barbâprobably more enthusiastically than I should haveâand tried to pretend that it wasnât at my expense.
It would have been easier to let it roll right off me if Suzanna didnât seem so right . The sparse crowd milling around the living room was almost entirely made up of Uncle Henryâs friends from neighboring farms, and none of whom were a day under forty, if that. I had been hoping for a few of the handsome farmhands, at least, but I guess theyâd all been left behind to keep an eye on the livestock.
âSo, Dorothy,â Suzanna said, turning her gimlet-eyed gaze in my direction. âBeen in any good parades lately?â
This time, there was no sense in pretending she wasnât poking fun at me. Suzanna couldnât bear to see anyone else getting more attention than her, and was always acting like the one little parade theyâd thrown for me after Iâd survived the tornado made me some sort of spotlight-hogging monster. It had been years ago, but she would never let me forget it.
Frankly, I hadnât wanted snobby, mean-spirited Suzanna Hellman at my party in the first place, but Mitzi had insisted that there was no point in throwing a party if you werenât going to invite the richest girl at schoolâthe only rich girl at school, actuallyâand so Iâd relented.
Now I looked over at my friend, expecting to see her indignant, but she just averted her eyes to the floor, her face flushing. If I hadnât known better, I almost would have thought she was stifling a laugh.
Fine. I might as well admit it. When I say that Mitzi Blair is my best friend, what I mean to say is that she used to be my best friend. For most of my life, the two of us had been inseparable, but that had all changed after Iâd ridden the cyclone.
Mitzi was the only oneâother than my aunt and uncleâwho Iâd told the truth about my adventures in Oz after Iâd come back. It hadnât gone well. Instead of marveling at everything Iâd been through, Mitzi had called me a liar and a show-off.
Weâd made up a few weeks later, but that didnât mean things had gone back to normal. These days she was spending more and more time hanging around with awful Suzanna Hellman, not to mention with Marian Stiles and Marjory Mumford. As for meâI was spending more and more time by myself.
Oh, I didnât care. This was my birthday, and Aunt Em had put so much effort into it, not to mention money that we couldnât well afford, with the farm doing the way it was. If she and Uncle Henry were kind enough to throw me a party then I was going to enjoy it whether Suzanna