Alternate Beginnings
Part Four – Endgame
Mr Gladly paced the halls of Winslow High School, muttering to himself. He was angry; very angry. His every effort to engender some respect from the little shits in detention had come up short. Worse, they had scored on him with a double prank; the chair and the cup. And there was the sneaking feeling that Madison Clements had not actually been alone, that she had offered herself as a sacrifice, to play on his softer side, so that the others could escape back to the library.
But it was too late now; they were back there. He couldn't prove a thing.
And now he was so angry that he could not think, could not concentrate. He wanted to retrieve that mood of cool calculation, of smooth superiority. He wanted to feel in charge of himself again.
Rounding a corner, he almost collided with Carl, who was mopping at a stain on the floor.
"
Hey, careful there," the janitor advised him, with an easy familiarity. Normally, Gladly would have been irritated at that, but at the moment, he had far too much on his plate to worry about one school janitor.
"
Sorry," he said brusquely, and pushed past.
"
You know what you look like?" asked Carl to his back. "You look like a man with far too much on his mind."
Gladly turned on him. "And what the hell do you think I can do about that?" he demanded. "I've got five little shits in the library who've defied my authority at every turn. They've assaulted me, mocked me, and damaged my property. I want to do something about them, but I can't figure out what."
"
Well, the first thing you need to do, my man, is to relax just a bit," Carl advised. He put his mop back in the bucket, and the bucket on his trolley.
"
And how do I do that?"
Carl grinned. He took Gladly by the elbow. "The janitor knows all. Come with me."
<><>
We sat in a circle on the floor of the library, with our backs up against chairs, desks and walls. I buttered bread, using the bread packet as a makeshift table. The butter was soft enough to spread with the plastic knives I had grabbed, so I slathered it on; after all, it wasn't my butter.
Aisha borrowed Jason's switchblade again, to cut slices off of the ham. I was a little dubious about the cleanliness of such a thing, but she dribbled water over it (from a bottle that Madison had grabbed) and wiped it on her handkerchief. Any germs that were left, she declared, had to take their chances.
My sandwich had ham, cold beef, chicken and relish on it. I had also won rock-paper-scissors for one of the drumsticks. Madison and Eddie had also grabbed half a dozen bottles of soda; I took the Dr Pepper. It wasn't tea, but it was fizzy and sweet and cold.
Aisha bit into her sandwich – I think she had beef, ham, honey and avocado on it – and chewed with an expression of bliss on her face. I took a bite from mine, and washed it down with Dr Pepper; it was definitely worth it.
"So what did you do to get put in detention?" I asked her, curiosity overcoming my natural reticence.
She swallowed the bite of her sandwich and grinned at me. "You remember the cafeteria had that fire last week?"
I frowned; the school had had to be evacuated for two hours, and stuff had gone missing from my backpack. "Yeah."
She pointed her thumb at herself. "That was me. I was around back, sneaking a smoke, and someone came past, so I flipped it."
Eddie chewed and swallowed a bite of apple. "How did that start a fire?"
"The pile of dirty teatowels sort of helped," Aisha admitted. "That caught fire about five minutes after I left, and apparently it set fire to something else, and so on."
"Oh wow," marvelled Madison. "And they found out it was you?"
Aisha wrinkled her nose. "Someone snitched."
"Why aren't you expelled?" asked Jason.
"Because Blackwell can't
quite line up all her ducks. The witness sorta-kinda thinks it was me. So I'm getting detention on the off-chance that it really was me. Which it was."
I shook my head. "Wow. I wish it worked like that with me."
Aisha, Jason and Eddie turned to look at me. Madison was suddenly very busy with her sandwich.
"How do you mean?" asked Jason.
"I
mean," I replied, voice starting to get a little heated, "that I can complain and complain and complain about being bullied. I can get
shut in my fucking
locker for a fucking
hour. I can catch people red-handed pouring drinks over my head in the fucking toilet stall, and all Blackwell says is, 'Oh, if you can't prove it, it didn't happen.'"
Jason stared at me. "That's fucked. So no-one got punished for the locker thing?"
I shook my head, tears starting to run down my cheeks from all the bottled-up frustrations. "You'd fucking
think so, wouldn't you? But no, Emma
fucking Barnes and Sophia
fucking Hess, and Madison the-power-of-cute, I-know-fucking-pranks Clements, all they have to do is back each other up, and it's like I'm talking to the
fucking wind!"
I was so agitated that I was on my feet by now, my sandwich forgotten at my feet. My last words came out in a scream, and I grabbed the chair next to the desk that I had been leaning against, and picked it up. Madison looked up, openly fearful, and cringed away from me. I threw the chair; it passed some feet over her head, over the desk she was leaning against, and clattered to the floor.
Everyone stopped and looked around, expecting Mr Gladly to appear and demand to know what we were doing. I had been so caught up in my emotions that I had neglected to check on him.
But he wasn't nearby. He wasn't even in his office.
My bugs moved through the school building, finding Carl's little trolley, but neither Carl nor Gladly.
Eventually, I found them on the roof, sitting up there in the shade of an air conditioner vent, smoking.
That's funny, I didn't know he was a smoker.
At that moment, Aisha got up and put her arm around my shoulders; she had to stand on tiptoe to do it, but she managed.
"Hey," she told me soothingly. "It's all right. Let it all out." She gestured to Madison. "You want to go a few more rounds with her, I'll help stand guard."
Putting Gladly out of my mind, I looked at Madison; there was nothing I wanted to do more than smash my fist into that hated face again, to grab that long silky hair and pull it out by the roots ...
I must have taken a step toward her, because she squeaked in fear and shrank away from me.
"You know, she
did take the fall for us with Gladly," commented Eddie.
"And she didn't turn in Aisha when she had the chance," Jason added.
And with that, the red clouds of anger cleared from my brain.
"Yeah," I conceded wearily. "She did all that." I slumped down to the floor again. "Who's got the apple juice?"
We didn't have any cups, but someone had liberated a huge half-gallon bottle of apple juice. I took it, opened it, and drank straight from the neck. Then I got up and picked up my still-open Dr Pepper.
Madison looked up as I walked over to her. I had to give her credit; she didn't flinch as I poured a small measure from the soda bottle over her head. Then I put down the Dr Pepper and used both hands to tilt the large bottle and pour a little apple juice on to her as well.
Aisha clapped and cheered as I walked back and sat down, leaving Madison with soda and juice soaking into her hair and dribbling down her face.
"We're not even yet," I warned her. "But that'll do for now."
She nodded wanly. "I know you probably won't believe me," she whispered, "but I'm really sorry for what I've done to you. What I helped do to you."
"Yeah," Aisha jeered. "Because you got caught."
I shook my head. Sorry or not, there was something I needed to ask her. "What I want to know, Madison, is this." I took another drink from the Dr Pepper. "What the fuck? I mean, seriously, what the fuck is it all about? Why are they doing this? Why are you helping them?"
Madison pulled out a handkerchief and wiped the worst of the juice and soda off her face. "I don't know why they're doing it," she confessed. "Honestly, I don't. And I don't even think they're on the same page."
"What do you mean, not on the same page?" I asked.
She dabbed at a stain on her top. It wasn't going to come out like that, and we both knew it. "Because Emma talks about you like you could be part of the group, once we toughen you up a bit." She considered that. "She hasn't talked like that for a while though."
I had to know, like probing a sore tooth with one's tongue. "And Sophia?"
"When I've talked to Sophia, she's basically decided that you're too weak to be part of the group, and if you try to step up, you have to be kept down in your place."
That made sense, except for the 'toughen me up' bit. But Madison probably didn't know any more than that. "Okay, fine. Emma wants to toughen me up, and Sophia wants to keep me down. I got it. But what do you want? Why are you doing this? What do you get out of it?"
She took a deep breath, staring at me. "Taylor … have you ever been popular?"
I clenched my fists, starting to my knees. "What the fuck sort of question is that?"
"No, no," she said hastily, holding up her hands between us. "I didn't mean it as an insult. I meant it as a question. Just that. Have you ever done anything that made you popular?"
I had to stop and think about that. "I … uh … not really, I guess."
Her voice was bitter. "You're lucky."
I stared. "How do you figure that?"
"Because once you do something that makes you really popular, once you see people turning their heads and going out of their way to greet you, you're hooked. It's like a drug. You want more of it." She gestured down at herself. "I do the 'cute' thing. I'm petite, so I play on it. I make everyone want to pick me up and hug me. And I hang around Emma and Sophia."
"Wait." My voice was heavy with suspicion. "You're helping torment me because you want to be
popular?"
"I'm
sorry!" she burst out. "It's the only way. I'm not as pretty as Emma or as athletic as Sophia. And with those two, being the 'cute' one isn't enough. You have to present something that will make them let you hang around them."
She shuddered. "Competition's fierce. You can't imagine the jockeying that takes place when we're walking down the corridor. Push in front of someone who's a little bit more popular, and the next thing you know, all your social media sites are full of speculation about you kissing Sparky or something."
I shuddered. So did Madison.
"Who's Sparky?" asked Aisha, with interest.
"Living proof that you don't need a working brain to be in high school," Madison told her. "But anyway, I have to show them that I'm up to the task. So I think of pranks. Pranks to play on other girls, pranks to play on people who haven't shown Emma enough respect recently …" She paused.
"And pranks to play on me," I added flatly.
She sighed. "Yes."
I clenched a fist and showed it to her. "Well, you know what you'll get if you ever pull a prank on me again."
She nodded rapidly. "I'm done with it. Done with them. They threw me to the wolves. Fuck 'em."
"I got a question," Aisha piped up.
Madison looked over at her. "What?"
Aisha's voice was challenging. "You still gonna be like this, come Monday? Gonna be turning over that new leaf? Or soon as you see 'em, will you go straight back to 'em, like my mom used to go back to her boyfriend when he hit her?"
There was particular venom in Aisha's voice. Madison was silent, her head down.
I addressed Aisha. "Bad times, huh?"
She shook her head. "The worst. That sonovabitch would take it out on Mom whenever the drugs went dry, an' soon as they had more, she'd be right alongside him, toking up like normal." She took a deep shuddering breath. "One day he tried to … tried to … "
I put my arm around her and held her close. "It's okay. You don't have to say."
"I gotta say it to
someone. Bastard tried to molest me. I was eleven. I texted my brother to come help me, and I fought him off." She buried her head in my chest, her voice muffled. "Too damn close. Brian came in the door just in time. Beat the living
fuck out of him. He was fifteen."
"Wow, holy shit," breathed Eddie. "Your brother beat the shit out of your mom's boyfriend? No way."
I nodded. "Yes way. I've seen him. I could believe it."
Aisha lifted her head away from me and looked at Eddie. "Better believe it, bucko. He could kick
your ass, and any four of your buddies at the same time." She looked back at me. "Well, I know what the worst moment in your life is, and I just told you mine."
Second worse, I thought, but did not say. It was close enough.
Aisha was still talking. "You there. Tall, dark and Asian. What's the worst moment of your life?"
Jason started. "Me?"
Aisha nodded. "Yeah, you."
I took another bite of my sandwich, Aisha leaning up against me, as Jason considered.
"I guess … it would have to be the time Pa caught me stealing from the till."
"You stole from your old man?" Eddie asked. "That's all kinds of fucked up."
Jason nodded. "I know, I know. There was a girl -"
"Hah!" exclaimed Aisha, making me jump. "I knew it! There's always a girl!"
Jason coloured. "She was pretty and sweet, and she just wanted me to buy her something. Then she wanted more, and more. And I ran through my allowance, and promised her more … " He trailed off. "And then I heard that the ABB was paying. So I joined up. But they didn't pay as much as I'd heard, so I found myself behind again. I knew Pa kept a reserve of cash. I was gonna make it up with my next pay, honest I was. But Pa caught me." He paused, remembering. "The worst bit wasn't being caught, or the strapping he gave me. It was seeing the betrayal in his eyes."
"Wow," commented Madison quietly. "What did you do?"
"Broke it off with her," Jason replied. "She called me all sorts of names when she realised I wasn't going to be giving her any more things. Told me I wasn't really a man. I found out later that she was sponging off of three different guys."
"Shit," Aisha commented. "That's rough." She looked at Eddie. "You there. What's your worst?"
The burly shaven-headed boy lowered his eyes. "Dad's a dock-worker. You know that, Taylor; I've seen you around a few times."
I nodded. "Yeah."
"There's Dad and Mom and Cyndi, my sister. She's eighteen. Money's tight. We don't have a business to fall back on, like Jason there. When there's no work, there's no work. Cyndi had to drop out of college. We did our best to cut costs, but sooner or later there was no money for power or phone. And then I started getting feelers from the local Empire recruiters. I turned 'em down. Didn't want to be mixed in the gangs." He looked up at us. "And then one day, we had some cash. Not much, but it covered the bills. I didn't know where it came from. Dad and Mom were close-mouthed about it; Mom was crying, and Dad was mad about something, I didn't know what."
He drew a shuddering breath. "And then times got tight, and money turned up again mysteriously. I couldn't figure out where it was coming from. And then … "
He paused for a long moment. "And then, I caught Cyndi sneaking back into the house, wearing tight, revealing clothes. She was crying. She had a big wad of money in her purse." His voice broke. "My sister had been going out, offering herself to strangers, so we wouldn't lose the house."
Jason put a hand on his shoulder. "Shit, man. That's rough."
Eddie's voice was almost angry. "And the worst bit was when I realised that if I'd joined the Empire back when they first approached me, she'd never have had to do that. So I told her she was never doing it again, and I went and joined up the next day. Stood guard on a few robberies, and now I'm getting enough to keep us from going under." He raised his chin defiantly. "Say what you like, but I'll take working for the Empire Eighty-Eight over letting my sister go out and … " He shook his head. "Not ever again."
"Wow, shit," Aisha marvelled, looking at him. "That's … I don't even know how to describe that."
"Doing the wrong thing for the right reasons," I supplied.
She nodded. "Yeah. Exactly."
I looked at Eddie. "How's your sister doing?"
He shrugged. "She still cries occasionally. But she's got a temp job now. Nothing fancy, but it brings a little money in."
I nodded. "Good."
"So wait," Jason put in. "All that bullshit racist talk, that's just you keeping in practice?"
Eddie nodded warily. "Yeah. I don't come out with a few words like 'nigger' or 'spic' or 'slanteye' in casual conversation, my boys start to wonder about my dedication to the cause."
"And that's why you picked that fight with me," Jason added.
"More or less, yeah," agreed Eddie.
Jason shook his head. "Well, shit."
This was a lot to think about. Silence fell while we went back to our respective meals.
<><>
Gladly leaned back against the air-conditioning duct, stretching his legs out in front of him. The cheap folding chair creaked but held.
"
Oh man," he breathed, feeling the gentle breeze blowing against his face. "I've never known you could come out on the roof like this."
Carl took a hit on the joint, holding the smoke in, and passed it to him. Gradually he let it out. "It's like I told you, man," he commented genially. "The janitor knows all."
Gladly inhaled the acrid smoke, feeling it spread through his system, coiling tendrils of well-being in his brain. "This is good shit," he coughed. "Better than I ever smoked in college. Where do you get it from?"
Carl took the joint back. "That kid, Sparky? His old man's got connections to the Merchants. They're more into hard drugs these days, but there's always a market for good ganja."
Gladly closed his eyes, feeling the gentle breeze caressing his face with sylvan fingers. He thought he should write that down; it was a good turn of phrase. But even as he completed the thought, it had slipped from his mind. Not that he cared. He didn't care about very much at the moment.
He seemed to recall being very angry, earlier. He wasn't sure what he'd been angry about.
"
Being angry's a waste of energy," he told Carl solemnly. "It doesn't help. People don't care. I don't care. Nobody cares."
Carl eyed him critically. This week's lot had been fairly powerful; he'd have to commend Sparky's dad on the quality. But it had gone to town on Gladly. The man was wasted.
"
You, my man, are wasted," he told Gladly.
Gladly waved his arms in a vague attempt to embrace the sky. "I love the world," he told Carl, and started to snore.
Teachers, Carl told himself, could not handle their weed.
He took another hit. Why not? It wasn't going to smoke itself.
<><>
"Okay," Madison announced. "Challenge."
She had soaked a handkerchief in water and washed her face, and scrubbed the dried juice and soda from her hair. Aisha had produced a brush from one of the capacious pockets of her jacket, and Madison had returned her hair to its normal appearance. I felt vaguely envious.
"What challenge?" asked Aisha.
Madison pondered. "Who would you make out with, if you had the chance?"
Aisha grinned wickedly. "Student or teacher?"
"Student."
Aisha considered. "Eddie," she announced.
"What, me?" blurted Eddie.
Aisha paused. 'Well … actually, does it have to be someone at Winslow? Because my bro's got this buddy, curly dark hair, all emo and big dark eyes."
"So what's his name?" I asked, despite myself.
Aisha grinned at us. "Alec."
I nodded. "Nice one. Madison, your turn."
Madison thought about it. "Jason."
"Huh?" asked Jason. "Are you just saying that because Aisha said Eddie?"
Madison shook her head. "I'm saying that if I spent more time with you, I could seriously get to like you." She grinned. "And I won't sponge money off of you, either."
"Oh," Jason muttered. "Wow."
Madison nodded. "Okay, Taylor. Your turn."
I rubbed my chin. "If we're going for people outside Winslow, then … Aisha's brother Brian."
Aisha's eyes opened wide. "What, really?"
I nodded. "Seriously, he's all kinds of hunky."
Aisha made amazingly realistic gagging noises. "Ew, I'm not gonna think that way about my
brother." She turned to Eddie. "You're up, stud-muffin."
He hesitated for the longest time. "You'll laugh."
"No, we won't," promised Aisha. I could see she had her fingers crossed behind her back.
Eddie took a deep breath. "Sophia Hess."
Aisha and I spoke at the same time. "No, you don't."
Eddie turned to me. "Look, I know she bullies you, but this isn't a real thing, right? I think she's hot, and I'd make out with her if she'd let me."
"Quite apart from the fact that your white-supremacist boys would string you up by the nuts for just thinking about going near a woman of her 'polluted' bloodline," Jason pronounced solemnly, making air-quotes with his fingers.
"And also quite apart from the fact that
she would string you up by the nuts if you tried to come on to her," Madison added.
They both looked at me. I shrugged.
"I was just going to say that she's a bitch, and everyone knows it," I confessed.
"Well, that too," agreed Madison. "Jason. Lucky last. Who would you snog, given the chance?"
Jason looked thoughtful. "Taylor."
I felt my jaw drop, and my face heat up. I'd never actually had any guy pick me over any other girl before; at least, not a guy who was actually good-looking. "Me?" I squeaked.
Jason nodded firmly. "I like tall women. And skinny ones."
"So the one who took all your money … ?" asked Aisha.
"A bit tall, a bit skinny," confessed Jason.
"Case closed," Aisha grinned.
To hide my confusion, I took a drink of apple juice – there was still plenty left – and immediately asked, "What should we do now?"
<><>
Carl finished the joint and carefully stowed the butt away in a zip-lock bag. He looked at the peacefully snoring Gladly; the man obviously needed his rest.
"
Whereas I need to get back to work," he mumbled to himself. Pulling himself to his feet, he headed for the roof access. There was still a lot of mop to floor. Or floor to mop. It didn't matter.
When he was stoned, the work always went by really fast.
<><>
"This is a bad idea."
Madison shushed Eddie, as Aisha worked at the door to Gladly's office. He'd had the foresight to lock it this time. Unfortunately, he hadn't had the foresight to frisk Aisha Laborn.
She was working away at the lock with what looked like two pieces of bent wire to me; I was expecting the door to pop open at any moment. But Hollywood's expectations were spoiling me; two minutes had gone by without any result.
Aisha sighed in aggravation and put the pieces of wire – lockpicks? - away. Then she pulled out what looked like an ordinary blank house key, a pair of pliers and a small hammer. She slid the key into the lock, gripped it with the pliers, and applied torque to it. Then she tapped the head of the key rapidly with the hammer.
This was somewhat noisier than the pieces of wire, and I could see why she'd been reluctant to use it. And it didn't seem to be working either …
… until it did.
All of a sudden, there was a click and the key turned easily.
"Hah," she mumbled. "Knew that'd get it."
She opened the handle, and we were in.
<><>
For the second time that day, we crowded into Mr Gladly's office.
Madison turned to Aisha. "I have to ask. Why do you carry lock-picking gear with you?"
Aisha shrugged. "Why do you carry a makeup case with you?" After washing her face, Madison had carefully redone her makeup.
"I dunno," Madison replied. "Just in case, I guess."
Aisha grinned. "Same here."
I sat down carefully on Gladly's chair; he had screwed it back together, but I didn't trust it as far as I could spit it. His laptop was in a drawer; I took it out and opened it up.
"
Now can I staple his papers to his desk?" asked Madison of Aisha.
Aisha shrugged. "Knock yourself out. Or glue them. Whatever works."
Madison gleefully set to work, aided and abetted by Jason and Eddie, while Aisha leaned over my shoulder. "How's it going?"
"Poorly," I admitted. "It's password protected."
"Crap. I can open locks. Passwords I have more trouble with."
I half-closed the screen of the laptop, then opened it again. "I might have a chance here. A computer issued by the school would require fairly stringent passwords. But it looks like he brings this one from home, going by the stickers on it." I thought for a moment. "What's his date of birth?"
Aisha shrugged. "No fuckin' idea." She turned to Jason and Eddie. "Hey. Wonder twins. See if you can find anything that can tell Taylor what Gladly's date of birth is."
It took a little while, but they located an old driver's licence, tucked at the back of a drawer. I set about typing in permutations of his date of birth.
"Seventy-five percent of people use this," I explained to Aisha. "It's easiest for them to remember." And indeed, after six tries, I was in.
"Fuck me," Aisha marvelled. "I am fucking impressed. You're gonna have to teach me that shit."
I grinned at her. "Teach me how to pop a lock like that, and it's a deal." We shared a high-five, then I turned back to the computer.
At first, there didn't seem to be anything of interest on the laptop. Everything on the desktop was vanilla-bland. But I did a little checking, and grinned as I noted something interesting. "Ah ha."
"Ah ha what?" asked Aisha.
"His download registry is clean. Empty."
"Uh, wouldn't that mean that he doesn't download shit?"
I shook my head. "No. When you're online, your computer downloads updates all the time. And all his programs are up to date. No, he cleaned it. Which means one thing."
"What's that?"
I grinned. "That he's been using this laptop to download stuff that he doesn't want other people knowing about."
"Like what?"
I had an idea, but I shrugged. "Let's look around and find out, shall we?"
It took a while to find, but then, I was looking through a haystack for a needle that looked like a piece of straw. In fact, I found something else of interest first.
"Huh," I muttered. "I always wondered who put this rag together."
The
Winslow Weekly was a newsletter, purportedly set up by and for students, but espousing fairly bland pro-school sentiments. It announced school events, ran cute little articles on consenting students or teachers, and in general managed to avoid upsetting anyone by never taking a stance on anything. I had vaguely wondered why the 'popular' students often graced its pages; now I knew. Mr Gladly had a certain bias toward them.
I took a few moments to browse through the latest offering, and found that it was blander than unseasoned tapioca. An article about upcoming sports events had a photo of Sophia Hess, winning the hundred-yard sprint. School fashions were typified by – surprise surprise! - Emma Barnes, wearing something fairly ordinary, but managing to make it look like a Gucci original. Other popular students were featured as well.
I closed the file, and kept looking.
Now that I knew there was something to look for, I soon found it. An innocuous zip folder, with the name "Statistics", amid other files of similar names. But it was the only zip folder with a password lock.
He hadn't been stupid enough to use the same password as his laptop. But it took only a few moments to tickle it open; he had simply reversed his usual password.
And this was definitely something that he didn't want people seeing. It was porn, of course, but porn of a specific type.
"Holy shit," muttered Aisha, still looking over my shoulder. "The dirty bastard."
The models were eighteen and over, of course. But they were, one and all, dressed in school uniforms. Or at least, approximations thereof. There were quite a few pictures; he obviously trawled whatever sites offered these images religiously.
"What's in that folder?" asked Aisha, pointing.
I hadn't noticed the folder until she mentioned it; selecting the folder, I clicked it open.
"Whoa," I muttered. "Holy fuck."
"What?" asked Madison, leaning over to look. "Wait – fuck – is that
Emma?"
I shook my head. "Face, yes. Body, no." I quickly checked the rest of the images. They were each of a porn star, with a popular – and pretty – girl's face photoshopped on to it. Including …
"Fuck!"
Eddie and Jason, attracted by Madison's shocked expletive, crowded around.
"Wow, Madison," Jason chuckled. "You never looked so good."
Madison coloured to the roots of her hair. "Go fuck yourself." She turned to me. "Can you delete it?" she appealed.
"He'd know that someone had been in his system, then," I warned her.
"I don't care. I don't want that perv looking at that picture and imagining he's looking at me."
I rubbed my chin. "Hm. Let's see ..."
Pulling the photo into his up-to-date version of Photoshop, I fiddled for a few moments. "There. That better?"
She looked at it; the lower half, beginning just above where anything began to show, was obscured by a bright green rectangle. "What's that?"
I shrugged. "Image lost in translation. Happens all the time." I saved the new image over the old one, then went into the properties and adjusted the last save time.
<><>
Gladly stirred. He rubbed his eyes, and sat up. Carl was nowhere to be seen. He still felt very mellow; the sleep must have done him good. Also, the weed.
It had been years since he'd had a toke. He must have lost his tolerance to the stuff; this lot had hit him like a freight train.
"
Damn." He rubbed his eyes again. "What's the time?" He checked his watch. "Fuck. A quarter after four."
Stumbling to his feet, he made his way to the roof access door. His clothes should be dry by now. He needed to present a proper appearance to his students.
<><>
After doing a few more things, I shut the laptop down and replaced it in the drawer. Jason and Eddie were assisting Madison in her artistic work; not only had every piece of paper been glued or stapled to the desk, but the new strip of staples in the stapler had been glued into place.
"Okay, guys," I told them, mindful that Gladly was on the move again, "time to pack this up."
A few minutes later, they were finished, and we were out of his office. Aisha pulled the door to with a solid
click, and we headed back into the library.
<><>
"So what can you do?" asked Eddie of Jason.
"Huh?" responded Jason.
"What can you do?" repeated Eddie.
"Oh, uh, I can't do anything," Jason evaded.
"No, that's bullshit, everyone can do something," Madison told him.
"Well, okay," Jason admitted. "My mom says my
jadu geonpodo soseu is the best she's ever seen."
"Which is …?" prompted Aisha.
"Plum raisin sauce," explained Jason.
"Huh," Aisha responded. "Eddie, what about you?"
Eddie grinned, and pulled two apples and an orange from his pockets. Standing up, he started to juggle them; slowly at first, then faster and faster. After about a minute of this, he caught them all and put them away. We all applauded.
"Damn," Jason commented. "I am impressed." He turned to Madison. "What about you?"
"Uh … I can give Aisha and Taylor makeovers," suggested the petite girl. "I'm really good at that."
She looked to Aisha. "How about you? Apart from lock-picking, I mean."
Aisha grinned. "It's not something I can do, but I got a secret that none of you can tell. I mean, shit, no-one. Cross your heart and hope to die."
"Uh, sure," I agreed. "Promise."
One by one, the others agreed.
Aisha leaned toward us, and lowered her voice. "My brother's a supervillain."
Madison's eyes opened wide. Jason's jaw dropped.
"You're
shitting me," blurted Eddie.
"That guy who dropped you off? That brother?" I asked, more to confirm than out of doubt.
She nodded. "That's him. Brian."
I shook my head. "I would never have believed it."
"Believe it," Aisha advised me. "Okay, how about you. Apart from your leet hacking skillz, what can you do?"
I looked at her. "Your brother's really a supervillain?"
"Yeah," she agreed. "He is."
"Well then," I told her, and held up my hand. Bugs clustered over the top of it, swirling in a vertical pattern that spread out and then formed a cloud around me. All four sets of eyes were wide, staring. I grinned self-consciously. "It looks like I'm a superhero."
"Holy shit," exclaimed Aisha. "How many bugs can you control?"
"Every single one in my control radius," I told her. "Two and a half blocks."
"Ah fuck," Jason blurted. "So that's how you knew where Gladly was."
"Where is he now?" asked Eddie.
"Well, he's been asleep on the roof for the last couple of hours. He's currently getting dressed. And before you ask, no, my bugs can't see that well. Thank god."
<><>
When Gladly looked in, twenty minutes later, we were sitting around and talking in a desultory fashion. We had divided up the remainder of the food in an amicable fashion, and it was stowed in our various bags – or, in Aisha's case, the pockets of her jacket.
"Time to go, boys and girls," he announced. "Some of you, I will see here next week. You know who you are."
Aisha came to rigid attention, holding an impeccable salute. "Sir, yes, sir!" she announced, and then marched out of the room. The rest of us followed, trying to hide our grins.
Out in the parking lot, Aisha's brother was already waiting, while Dad was just pulling in. We paused at the top of the steps.
"Well, see you guys," I said awkwardly. "Madison, I might take you up on that makeover sometime."
"I'd like that," she replied shyly, then headed down the steps.
Aisha surprised me with a hug. "Thanks for having my back," she told me. "Come on, I'll introduce you to Brian."
"Uh, no, wait, really, it's all right," I stammered, but there was no help for it. She tugged me down the steps; Jason and Eddie followed, side by side, watching with matching grins.
"Hey, bro," she called out to the tall black youth, "I want you to meet Taylor. She's my best bud here at Winslow, and she totally thinks you're hot."
My blush hit the roots of my hair. "Aisha!"
"What?" she asked impudently. "It's true!"
"What's true?" asked Dad, getting out of his car.
"Nothing," I called back, then I turned back to Brian and lowered my voice. "Could I … get your number … or something?"
He looked me over, and I swore I could feel trails of heat from where his eyes lingered. Something touched his expression; interest? Amusement? I didn't know.
"Sure," he agreed, and dug in his pocket for a pen.
Moments later, I was clutching a piece of paper with Brian's phone number on it; the first I had ever gotten.
The fact that he was apparently a supervillain, while I was a superhero, mattered not to me at all.
By this time, Dad was standing nearby, watching the proceedings with interest.
"So, was it a good day?" he asked.
I nodded. "Yeah. We learned a lot about each other." I waved to Eddie and Jason as they got in their respective cars.
"See you around," I told Aisha.
"High five, sister," she responded, and we slapped one anothers' palms.
Dad and I got into our car, and I did up my seatbelt.
"So, did I just see you get a boy's phone number?" he asked me.
"Uh, yes?" I asked.
He smiled. "Just checking."
Turning the key, he started the car.
"Let's go home."
<><>
Gladly yawned. Despite his sleep on the roof, he was still feeling lethargic. He went to his office, took his laptop from the drawer, and booted it up.
The Weekly still needed printing out; he'd had it ready to go when the kids had interrupted him.
He established the wireless connection to the printer, and pulled up the file. Clicking Print was but the work of a moment.
I'll go home, and collect them Monday morning, he decided.
End of Part Four