Homeroom Headhunters (10 page)

Read Homeroom Headhunters Online

Authors: Clay McLeod Chapman

Tags: #Fiction - Young Adult

BOOK: Homeroom Headhunters
11.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
GHOST STORY NUMBER ONE: PEASHOOTER

Chosen Name:
Peashooter

Given Name:
Unknown

Area of Study:
English

Weapon of Choice:
Bic dart gun

Last seen:
Unknown

Notes:
Ringleader. Well read.

(The following segments are personal exchanges between individual Tribe members and the author. These interviews occurred in the field without the aid of a recording device, for fear of apprehension, scribbled down by the author as soon as humanly possible in hopes of retaining their accuracy.)

PEASHOOTER FIELD NOTES ENTRY #1:

LOCATION: BOILER ROOM

TIME: 10:00 P.M
.

Peashooter possesses the strongest set of lungs of anyone I've ever met. One quick inhale is enough to power up his weapon of choice: a hollowed-out ballpoint pen.

To discharge his weapon, he grips the barrel of his Bic in his palm so that the nose is barely exposed, then brings his fist up to his mouth and simulates a cough. Before his victim has time to blink, he can fire off as many as five hand-made darts.

PEASHOOTER: Whenever Mr. Rorshuck turned his back, I'd fire off a quick spitball. SMACK! I'd hit him right in the neck. I was an academic assassin.

ME: Ever get caught?

PEASHOOTER: Once. Some sixth grader ratted me out
.…
Riley Callahan.

Peashooter pulls the paper-clip piercing from his septum and unfolds it in front of me. In seconds, he's holding a slender dart, ready for loading.

PEASHOOTER: Anyone who rats on the Tribe gets one of these in their eyeball.

I believed him.

Notice the threat subtext:
Join us and we'll be the best friends you've ever had. Defy us and we'll be your worst nightmare.

Friends for life or foes forever
…

PEASHOOTER FIELD NOTES ENTRY #2:

LOCATION: AFTER-SCHOOL DETENTION
—
DAY 8

TIME: 3:00 P.M.

As a student, Peashooter practically lived in detention. He was there so much his parents stopped expecting him home in the afternoons.

PEASHOOTER: I liked having the classroom all to myself. After school, when most kids had already left and nobody else was around
—
this place felt like it was all mine.

That's where Peashooter created his reading list:

Lord of the Flies
, by William Golding.

White Fang
, by Jack London.

The Call of the Wild
, by London, too.

The Outsiders
, by S. E. Hinton.

Watership Down
, by Richard Adams.

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
, by Mark Twain.

The Art of War
, by Sun Tzu.

Johnny Tremain
, by Esther Forbes.

The Red Badge of Courage
, by Stephen Crane.

“Reading” is putting it mildly. Peashooter ate these books up. As soon as he finished flipping through a book, he'd start over again.

And again.

He memorized passages. He underlined sections. He dog-eared pages.

PEASHOOTER: It felt like these books were written just for me. Like each author wanted to have a direct conversation with me and me only.

Peashooter thought he knew these books better than anyone else. Even his teachers. He felt he understood their
true
meaning.

Whenever he raised his hand in English class, Mrs. Royer would take a deep breath, bracing herself for a hearty dose of devil's advocacy.

PEASHOOTER: I'd question her on everything. No matter what the book, I'd always dispute her: How do you know that's true? How can you be so sure that's what Jack London was writing about? Even if I knew she was right, I'd still call her on it. Just for the challenge. Truth is, I was the only one in class who actually read the books, anyway
.…

Peashooter was Royer's best student. Even if he was a pain in her butt.

PEASHOOTER FIELD NOTES ENTRY #3:

LOCATION: AFTER-SCHOOL DETENTION
—
DAY 10

TIME: 4:00 P.M.

For Peashooter, class was in session during detention. Not the other way around.

After a while, he couldn't help but feel bored by his regular school day. All six periods became speed bumps between him and his own personal lesson plan.

According to Peashooter, his teachers didn't teach middle school.

They taught day care.

PEASHOOTER: I couldn't wait for detention to start. All I wanted was to sit and read by myself.

ME: Why not just read at your house, then? If all you wanted was a little peace and quiet, couldn't you get that at home?

PEASHOOTER: Don't ever ask me about my home again. Got it?

The look in his eyes made his message loud and clear.

PEASHOOTER FIELD NOTES ENTRY #4:

LOCATION: AFTER-SCHOOL DETENTION
—
DAY 13

TIME: 3:00 P.M.

As soon as one sentence ran out, Peashooter made sure to wreak enough havoc to land him right back in detention.

PEASHOOTER: I'd spitball the principal if it got me an extra week. Solitary confinement was just what the doctor ordered.

It was on one of these quiet and confined afternoons that Peashooter considered the fiberglass panels over his head.

PEASHOOTER: It felt like the ceiling was calling me
.…

He waited until the teacher on guard detail slipped out for a bathroom break. Alone, he stacked a bunch of encyclopedias on his desk, climbed up, pried apart the paneling, and peered in.

On the other side, he found three feet of crawl space between the classroom ceiling and the roof, a cobwebbed hollow full of air-conditioning ducts and electrical wiring. The lower ceiling was nothing more than an aluminum grid held in place by a series of wires suspended from the upper ceiling. Each square grid held its own fiberglass tile.

The next day, when the teacher left the room, Peashooter actually climbed inside. He crawled around for a bit, testing his weight, making his way from one end of the classroom and back without falling through.

PEASHOOTER: The panels aren't strong, so it's best to crawl across the aluminum frame surrounding the tile. The trick is to evenly distribute your weight. You don't want to place all your heft on one portion of your body. You'll fall right through the ceiling. Crawl on your hands and knees.

On the third day, Peashooter climbed up and never came back. He slid the paneling back in place, sealing him in and officially cutting off his ties with the world down below.

PEASHOOTER: All I wanted were my books. It was the only part of my old life that mattered, so I took them with me. Everything else, I left behind.

ME: That teacher must've been surprised to return to an empty classroom.

PEASHOOTER: Whatever. I bet he was happy to be rid of me once and for all. I bet the whole school was.

ME: Ever think you'll go back?

PEASHOOTER: Go back where? Out there? With the rest of
—
who? You? Them?
The Art of War
says, “Know thy self, know thy enemy.”

It should be noted that whenever Peashooter talks, it's a mash-up of books, most of which I'd never read. I imagine Peashooter hovering above everyone's head, reading to himself or listening to whatever lesson is happening below, soaking it in.

Talk about academic cannibalism.

PEASHOOTER: I don't belong out there anymore. None of us do.

ME: But it's just middle school
.…

PEASHOOTER: It's a jungle.

ere at Greenfield there will neither be peace nor rest
.” Peashooter's voice echoed through the empty hallways. “
Nor a moment's
safety!

I had no idea why I had been summoned.

All I knew was that I had snuck out of my house—just to sneak back into school.

Now,
that
was a first.

Having spent the majority of my middle school existence attempting to
break out
of school, never in a million years would I have imagined wanting to
break in
.

Mom was keeping a pretty close eye on me that night. She had already peeked her head into my bedroom three times, to make sure I wasn't up to anything.

“How's your homework coming?”

“Just reading.”

“Oh yeah?” She perked up. This was the most we'd said to each other all day. “What're you reading?”

“A story called ‘The Most Dangerous Game.'”

“What's it about?”

“This one guy hunts another guy in the jungle.”

“Sounds interesting. Any good?”

“It's okay, I guess.… I'm only halfway through it.”

“Anything exciting happen at school?”

If I'd told her I'd served yet another detention, she would have flayed me alive. “Nothing really. Hung out with some friends.”

“Really?” She seemed pleased. “When can I meet these friends?”

“I'm on a trial basis with them right now. They want to see if I'm a good fit.”

“Well…good luck, I guess. Is that the right thing to say?”

“Works for me.”

“Don't stay up too late reading, Spence,” she said as she closed the door. Through the paneling, I just barely heard her say, “Love you.”

I had to wait until I was sure that she was asleep before I tiptoed down the stairs and slipped through the kitchen window. Then I hoofed the two miles back to Greenfield.

While I walked, I did a quick supply check:

Flashlight?
Check
.

My Little Friend?
Check
.

Cojones?
Well
…
I might've left those at home
.

I circled around the building twice before discovering a window in the industrial arts workshop that had been left open. I shimmied through, landing in a pile of sawdust.

Great
. I stood up, coughing and completely covered in wood shavings.

Dusting myself, I heard faint rumblings farther off.

Voices.

Someone was shouting. I stepped into the hallway, and sure enough, it was Peashooter. I'd recognize his rally cry anywhere. It sounded like his voice was coming from the gym.

“You are savages! You know no law but the law of claw and fang!”

Someone else—Sporkboy, I bet—called back: “To the law of claw and fang!”

Slipping into the gym, I found the Tribe sitting within the center circle of the court. Each member had a javelin.

Peashooter stood above the rest—chest puffed, chin lifted—marching around the others in some fervent version of
Duck
Duck Goose
.

“This is your introduction to the reign of primitive law,” he bellowed. “The law of claw and fang!”

Sporkboy raised his fist into the air. Yardstick and Compass, too. Each one of them, save for Sully, had scribbled
CLAW
across the knuckles of their left hand and
FANG
over their right.

They roared—“Claw and fang!”

“Claw and fang!”

“Claw and fang!”

“Silence!” Peashooter had spotted me. “Look who finally made it.”

Sully looked over first.

“Sorry I'm late.… What did I miss?”

“We've brought in new blood to strengthen our tribal line,” Peashooter continued. “But first—the lamb must prove he's worthy of our ranks. He must earn his place among us, as we all did.”

Just what is Peashooter getting at here?

“Ready for your first pop quiz, Spencer?”

“Uh…pop quiz?”

“Tonight we put your survival skills to the test.”

“Survival skills? What's there to survive?”


Life is for the strong,
” Peashooter thundered, “
to be lived by the
strong, and, if need be, taken by the strong. The weak of the world were
put here to give the strong pleasure. I am strong. Why should I not use
my gift? If I wish to hunt, why should I not?

I recognized this.

“The Most Dangerous Game.” He was quoting “The Most Dangerous Game”!

I'd just read that. I quoted right along with him:

…
I hunt
the scum of the earth.”

Peashooter flashed me his patented grin. “Guess somebody did their homework after all. Sure hope you took notes.”

“So…what am I supposed to do?”

“You've got to find a way out of the building—or your head will end up mounted to the boiler room wall.”

Peashooter nodded to Sully.

“Thirty…twenty-nine…twenty-eight,” her voice intoned. The Tribe all stood, one after the other, picking their javelins up from the floor.

Hold on a sec, I thought, kicking myself for not finishing my assignment. How exactly did “The Most Dangerous Game” end?

“Twenty-seven…twenty-six…”

And why is everybody else armed with track-and-field equipment?

“Twenty-five…twenty-four…”

This doesn't feel right, Spencer. Something's really wrong here
.…

“Twenty-three…”

Run, Spence!

“Twenty-two…”

Now!

I booked it out of the gym and into the hallway. I could hear the numbers as they slipped away: “Twenty-one…twenty…nineteen…”

I kept the countdown going for myself, maintaining Sully's metronome pace just under my breath. “Eighteen…seventeen…sixteen…”

I had barely made it to the end of the hall before I'd reached the single digits—“Nineeightsevensixfivefourthreetwoone…”

A shrill cacophony of gym whistles pierced my ears.

The hunt was on.

• • •

Let me take this opportunity to briefly explain the layout of Greenfield Middle School.

Picture an enormous bat.

Beginning with the two fanged flagpoles on the front lawn, Greenfield was designed to suck the very marrow from its students.

The administrative offices serve as its head. Once kids walk through the gaping maw of the main entrance, they are plunged into the central hallway. All of the administrative offices funnel through the gullet, from Pritchard's lair, to attendance, guidance, and the school nurse. From there, you reach the expansive quarters—spaces like the gymnasium, cafeteria, and library—all connected together at the building's core. Think of this area as the bat's torso.

The cafeteria is fittingly positioned around the stomach.

The library is the heart.

The gym? Let's consider that the part of the bat's anatomy where the sun doesn't shine.

But what Greenfield has most in common with the bloodthirsty
Desmodus rotundus
is the fact that—this building has wings.

Vast, academically segmented wings.

Outstretched at either side of the school's torso is an annex of twenty classrooms. Crescent-shaped, they curve inward as if in mid flap, ready to pluck up some poor unsuspecting student with their claws and fly away.

Math and sciences, along with several of our elective courses like industrial arts and home ec, are found within the left wing—while English and history, plus the auditorium and the orchestra room, are found on the right.

Whoever designed this building probably didn't take into account that this fat bat turns into a death trap at night. The school was cavernous enough during the day when the lights were on, but in the dark, without any windows, the halls felt more like century-old catacombs. And the lockers clustered together could have been tombs, for all I knew, each one containing the mummified remains of some sixth grader.

I could've sworn I heard a few bony fingers scraping across the other side of those tiny metal doors as I ran by.

Quit it, Spence. Keep a grip on that overactive imagination of
yours!

• • •

I headed for the right wing. There was an exit at the very tip.

I gripped my flashlight but kept it off. The light would have been a dead giveaway.

That meant running in the dark.

If I can just reach the end of the hall, I might have a chance at
breaking out of the building before losing my head.

Just then—
whack!
A thump in the stomach. The impact sent me buckling over.

I briefly turned on my flashlight to see what it was.

A track hurdle.

I aimed my light farther down the hall.

Dozens of hurdles were lined up along the corridor.

As I stood there, my flashlight darting through the maze, I thought I heard footsteps. I snapped off the light and strained my ears.

Nothing. Everything was silent.

Hold it together. Keep quiet. They could be close.

No time to reach the exit.

I tried to open the nearest door.
Locked
.

So I tried the next.
Locked
.

Come on, come on!

Sweat started rolling down my brow, into my eyes. The salt stung.

This is not good. This isn't good at all.

One more door. I grabbed hold of the handle.

Please open please open please—

Unlocked!

I rushed into the pitch-black classroom and slammed the door behind me.

Quick. A barricade. I need a barricade!

The teacher's desk.
Perfect.
I pushed the desk against the door. The legs squealed over the linoleum—
instant giveaway
.

But I was safe. Better to be stuck in here with them out there.

All the windows in our classrooms, save for those in industrial arts, were hermetically sealed year-round, but I tried opening this one anyway.

No luck.

No way out.

No air.

A wave of light-headedness rushed over me, and I leaned against the bulletin board to keep myself from falling.

Quick: Huff a puff from My Little Friend.

I let myself slide to the floor and sat there trying to hold it together. I closed my eyes, slowly getting my breath back.

WHOOSH!
—the air hissed by my shoulder.

I reached out and plucked a technical drawing instrument that had skewered the bulletin board.

Someone was in the room with me!

Looking up through the dim light, I could make out a ceiling panel that had been pushed back.

Oh no oh no oh no…

A shadow shifted across the room.

Compass.
He scurried down an aisle of desks and disappeared.

I leapt to my feet and shoved the front row of desks together, boxing him in. Then I grabbed the nearest corner of the teacher's desk and yanked. The desk was too heavy to budge much, but it gave me just enough space to open the door and squeeze through.

But not before another compass buried itself into the door's wooden paneling.

“Whyah!”
I blurted out as I toppled back into the hallway.

I shined my flashlight in front of me and charged every single blockade that stood between me and the exit.

A javelin struck a locker to my left. The rattle of metal reverberated through the hall.

“Yea-ah!”

Something grabbed my ankles.

One second I'm hightailing it down the hall, doing my best at half-blind hurdling—the next, my legs are tangled together.

“Whoa, whoa—”

Instantly cinched.

Face-plant.

Carpet burn.

My flashlight. What happened to my flashlight?

The beam rolled back and forth across the carpet before finally stopping on a pair of bare feet heading my way.

Yardstick.

Other books

The Four Seasons by Mary Alice Monroe
He's So Fine by Jill Shalvis
The Village by Stan Mason
Enchantress Mine by Bertrice Small
Now Until Forever by Karen White-Owens
God War by James Axler
Dixie Lynn Dwyer by Her Double Delight
This One Time With Julia by David Lampson
Alan Govenar by Lightnin' Hopkins: His Life, Blues