Falling From Grace (15 page)

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Authors: S. L. Naeole

Tags: #Legends; Myths; Fables, #Juvenile Fiction, #General

BOOK: Falling From Grace
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You can’t read minds, though.
 
You can only hear what I want to share with you.

I glared at him, unable to say anything, by thought or voice.

Well, you aren’t a freak because you can read minds, since you can’t.
 
That’s what is bothering you, right?
 
You’re afraid that they’ll think you’ve got this freakish gift or something?
 
Well, don’t worry, because you don’t.
 
Your head is just as boringly normal and utterly predictable as theirs is in their minds

His words hurt.
 
They weren’t any different in tone than what I had heard every day for the past ten years, but for whatever reason, they were able to cut me like no one else’s could.
 
Lifting my chin up, determined not to cry, I grabbed my backpack from his hand and threw it onto my shoulder before turning around and walking away.

I could hear him calling for me.
 
He was actually shouting and not trying to throw his thoughts into my mind.
 
But I was too angry to let him in there.
 
I slammed that door shut, locked it, and the key was now resting comfortably in my back pocket.
 
People were turning their heads to look at me, then towards him.
 
He must not have noticed because he continued to call after me, running now.
 
I kept on walking.

I half expected him to grab my arm and make me turn around to face him.
 
Isn’t that what guys did when they wanted your attention?
 
When they were rejecting your rejection?
 
But it never came.
 
I kept on walking, and he stopped calling out for me.
 
I walked through the school doors, down the long hallway leading to the cafeteria, and headed towards the counter to buy a bowl of powdered scrambled eggs.
 
I took my eggs and sat down at an empty table at the far end of the cafeteria; as far away from the doors, and people, and disappointment as possible.

I knew I wasn’t a mind reader.
 
I was being sarcastic in my own thoughts, for crying out loud.
 
If I can’t be sarcastic with myself, who in the world could I be sarcastic with?
 
But did he have to call me boring and predictable?
 
Just like them?
 
I’m sure that they would have told me to take that as a compliment, that I should only be so lucky.
 
Lucky to be what, exactly?
 
Someone like Becca?
 
So self-absorbed, she’s oblivious to everything around her?
 
Or like Erica?
 
Mean and spiteful and as close to evil as one could get in high school?

I sighed.
 
She was also beautiful.
 
In truth, anything that was the opposite of what I was had to be beautiful since I seemed to be incapable of drawing the attention of the opposite sex in any capacity other than friendship, and even that was up for speculation.
 
I was too skinny, too plain, too quiet, too smart…too different.
 
I was also too weird.
 
The only girl in Heath to have never been friends with another girl

instead depending on the most popular guy in school for all the companionship I received, and being so blinded by that very companionship, I mistook it for affection.

So much for being too smart.
 
I snorted.
 
I got the joke now, the joke that I’d been the butt of all summer.
 
I could afford to be humble, now that there wasn’t anything else to be.
 
Would it turn out that Robert was also in on it somehow?
 
That the reason he hadn’t continued after me was because he was having a nice laugh with Erica about how big of a sucker I was?
 

I shook my head.
 
I might not know much about him, but something inside of me told me that he wasn’t the type to mess with people’s minds like that.
 
Not when he could so easily read what was inside of them.
 

When the bell rang, I gathered the thoughts that I had strewn across my mind, tucking them someplace safe.
 
I wasn’t going to be taking any chances that Robert wouldn’t try to sift through them and pluck out things to prove just how boring and predictable I was.

I walked into Mr. Frey’s class, choosing an empty seat near a rear window, and placed my head on the desk, tuning out the chatter that was going all around me while Mr. Frey snored soundly at his desk.
 
I had nearly perfected the silence when a hand gently touched my shoulder.
 

I raised my head to see who it was.
 
It was a girl I recognized, but couldn’t quite remember her name.
 
She had very familiar features: tip tilted almond-shaped eyes, hair the color of jet, straight and thick, a round face that complimented her round mouth that was pulled up in a friendly smile, and a small nose, all set on a backdrop of perfect porcelain skin the shade of an aged piece of ivory.
 
Instinctually, I knew she was Korean, like my mom; Korean, like me.
 
No one was like me.

“Hi.
 
We’ve been in the same homeroom class for the past three years, but we’ve never spoken, and…um…I thought today would be a good day to start.
 
My name is Stacy,” she said matter-of-factly, and held out her hand.

I stared at it, a little confused.
 
No one just came up to me to talk.
 
It wasn’t what normal people did.
 
Automatically I thought that either something was wrong with her, or something was up.
 
“I’m Grace,” I said, still eyeing her hand, trying to figure out whether or not I’d accept it, or hedge my bets and keep my hands to myself.

Hand still extended, she smiled.
 
“I know.”

I didn’t know what possessed me to do it; it seemed like I was being friendly to a whole bunch of strangers this week, but I reached for her hand and shook it.
 
She was eager to return my handshake, and smiled brightly at me.
 
“So what classes do you have this year?
 
I’ve got trig next, and then Spanish and open period,” she jabbered, flowing into a conversation as smoothly as if we had been doing it for years.

“Um.
 
I have ]French Four next, and then Calculus,” I answered hesitantly.
 
“I also have open period after that.”

She seemed thrilled by that.
 
“Ooh, that’s great!
 
Where do you go?
 
I go to the cafeteria ‘cuz my mom works there and I can get some lunch while it’s still hot.”

I couldn’t imagine the food here tasting that much better while hot, but it would be a great concept…imagine that, hot cafeteria food.
 
“I went to the library yesterday…”

She nodded her head, seeming to understand why I would choose isolation to food.
 
“Maybe I’ll join you today.
 
Would that be alright?”

I shrugged my shoulders, half hoping that she’d make the same decision she had made yesterday.
 
“Sure, why not?”

She beamed at me as if I had just given her a gift.
 
“Thanks!”

An awkward silence began between us, but I didn’t have much experience speaking with other girls, so I couldn’t exactly start up a conversation with her about the things she’d probably be interested in, and she appeared to be trying to read my thoughts.
 
The idea of that made me laugh.
 
Loudly.

She stared at me, startled.
 
“What’s the punchline?”

“Er- I was thinking about something I had read yesterday.” I improvised quickly.

She seemed to accept it, and was about to say something else when mercifully the bell rang to head to first period.
 
Sighing, she waved at me.
 
“I’ll see you in the library, Grace!”

“Sure,” I said back, and looked around as a couple of heads turned to stare at me.

I grabbed my backpack and headed out of the classroom towards Madame Hidani’s class on the next floor.
 
She was once again writing something on the board.
 
From what I could see, it appeared to be the same assignment we had had yesterday.
 
Obviously having only two out of twenty students turn in their assignments wasn’t going to fly with Madame Hidani.

I ignored the stares of the other girls in the classroom.
 
I ignored the way their eyes felt like they were burning holes into my skin, ignored the way they seemed ready to either ask me a million questions about Robert

I wondered if they even know his first name

or strangle me for having the audacity to share the same airspace as him.
 
I focused on my desk and headed towards it.
 
I’d be bombarded with questions, accusations, and insinuations soon enough.
 
I might as well be comfortable while it happened.

Placing my bag on the floor beside the chair, I sat down and awaited the onslaught.

But it didn’t come.

Instead,
he
did.

One minute the entire room was on edge, and the next, it was as though a wave of calm and serenity had washed over everyone, leaving them drenched and satiated.
 
Everyone except me, that is, because I was irritated by the source of that calm.
 
I watched as he was surrounded, like a wounded calf by starved lions.
 
He was glowing amid their attentions and for some reason that annoyed me even more.

I had to turn away then.
 
I couldn’t watch the fawning and the cooing.
 
But mostly, I couldn’t have him see it on my face, or perhaps hear it in my thoughts if he were trying to do that, too.
 
The way I was feeling was as close to jealousy as I wanted to allow, and there was no reason for me to be jealous; how could I lay any claim on someone I had known less than twenty-four hours?
 
He was, to quote Graham, in a different league than I was: the league of the impossibly beautiful and otherworldly.

When the bell rang to announce the beginning of class, I switched into student mode.
 
I listened to Madame Hidani give out instructions, basically a repeat of yesterday only with an emphasis on turning it in or failing the semester on the second day.
 
I wondered if I was exempt from having to do the assignment, since I had turned a completed one in yesterday…even if I didn’t actually do it.
 
Not wanting to take any chances, I removed my binder from my bag and took out a sheet of filler paper.
 
I reached for my pencil and started the process of identifying my paper.

But it already was covered in writing…and not my own.

I scanned over the words and realized who had written it, the elegant handwriting familiar.
 
I turned my head to look at him and saw that he was staring at me, his eyes pleading.
 
I looked back to my paper, the fluttery feeling in the pit of my stomach threatening to crack my hard exterior.

Grace, I apologize if you took what I said today in the parking lot the wrong way.
 
I hadn’t meant for it to offend you.
 
I was referring to everyone else’s minds being boring and predictable, and that that predictability would make them assume that yours was exactly the same, when that is the furthest thing from the truth.

I replayed the conversation in my head, trying to see where he was wrong, trying to find one thing to contradict his statement, but I heard the words clearly as though he had just uttered them and realized he was right.
 
But did I want to admit that?

I grabbed my pencil and started writing on a blank line.
 
Why didn’t you say so in the parking lot?
 
I looked at him, half expecting him to answer me verbally, but he looked at the paper on my desk, letting me know the answer was already there.

I wanted to, but you didn’t exactly seem willing to listen.
 
And I didn’t want to tell you in front of everyone that was watching that I think they’re all idiots and that you are phenomenal.

I put my pencil to paper and wrote.
 
Where did you go, then?
 
Did you stay outside with the
idiots
while phenomenal me went inside to feel sorry for myself?
 
I stopped writing, realizing that I had just admitted to the hurt I had felt at his perceived insult.
 
It was too late to erase it, as new text started appearing below mine.

I stayed outside because if I had followed, everyone else would have as well, and I did not want to proceed to upset you further.
 
Your neighbor showed up just as you walked into the school, and he would have had to witness your pain.
 
As would his girlfriend.
 
But
she
would have enjoyed it.

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