grading your paper.
“ Anyone know the answer to the first question?” Miss Sadler asked. A bevy of hands shot up, but Miss Sadler looked over at Carolina and there was no mistaking the look. She was looking right at her, not any of the other kids, just her. Almost like she expected Carolina’s hands to be folded in her lap. She half smiled, then she turned away.
“ Can you tell me the answer, Art?” His hand wasn’t up either. It never was, but that didn’t seem to matter to Miss Sadler.
He answered the question, “Albany.”
“ Correct.”
Brad Peters turned around, eyes blazing. “You gave me the wrong answer.” He sounded like a snake when he whispered, and she pictured him like that, big and thick, hanging from a giant tree, mean and waiting, with black snake eyes that you could see right through.
“ I didn’t know,” she said. “I missed it too.”
“ Yeah.” He turned away from her.
His head started shaking five minutes later, when the tests were handed back, and he saw that he’d missed all twenty. He turned around and pasted her with his beady, dark snake eyes.
“ Let me see your paper.” His face was so red she thought he was going to hit her then and there. She knew for sure she’d done a stupid thing, giving him all the wrong answers, but there was no way she was going to let him bully her, even if it meant failing the test and not going to Disneyland with her mother. Because she knew if she let him get away with it once, it would never end.
“ I didn’t do so good.” She showed him her paper with the red check mark next to every answer. She bit her lower lip, feeling bad about failing the test, but secretly satisfied that Brad had.
“ You are one stupid girl. I should have known better than to copy from you. Shit.” He turned away as the class was passing the papers forward to be collected by Miss Sadler. She watched the back of his head till the shade of his ears turned from red back to pale white. He was used to failing tests, but still he had been one mad, mad bully.
For the next half hour Miss Sadler talked about the animals that lived on the African plain. She had been raised in Kenya and she loved talking about it, but Carolina was only half listening. She bit her lip more and fought back tears. She wasn’t going to Disneyland with her mother. Now they would never get to talk things out. They would never be like they were. They would grow farther apart, instead of closer. And it was all Brad Peters’ fault. She hated him as much as she hated her mother’s boyfriends.
The bell sounded and the first recess came and it went. Then more talk of elephants and zebras. The lunch bell. She ate by herself in the cafeteria. Then more of Miss Sadler, this time math. The bell again and second recess came and was gone. Only an hour to go and Miss Sadler was droning on about family values. Carolina listened, with only half attention, until the final bell.
She opened her desk, dropped her book, pencil and papers into to it, closed it, sighed, stuck her lower lip out, blew the hair out of her eyes and looked at the clock. Three-ten, she stood up, stretched, and with a delicate move, reached out for the backpack she had so carefully draped over the back of her chair. Then she started for the door.
“ Carolina,” Miss Sadler called.
“ Yes, ma’am.”
“ I want you to stay after for a few minutes.”
Oh no, she thought. She’d looked at the tests. I’m in trouble now. But when she looked in the teacher’s eyes she didn’t see the fire she knew Miss Sadler was capable of. “I didn’t so well, did I?” she said.
“ Are you asking me or telling me?” Was she hearing right. Were those lips curving up into a smile.
“ Ta, telling I guess,” Carolina stammered.
“ I saw you showing the answers to Mr. Peters.” She always called you by your last name when she caught you doing something wrong, like passing notes, or talking when her back was turned, or not doing your homework. The fact that she called Brad by his last name and herself by her first, gave Carolina hope.
“ I, I-” she didn’t know what to say. She didn’t want to lie and she didn’t want to tell. “I don’t want to talk about it.”
“ What’s the capital of Nevada?” Miss Sadler shot out.
“ Carson City,” Carolina answered without thinking.
“ Florida?”
“ Tallahassee.”
“ New York?”
“ Albany.”
“ Just as I thought. You wrote the wrong answers on purpose. Don’t answer, I won’t make you tell.” As a teacher, she was the best Carolina had ever had. She had always been fair. She never made anyone stay after unless they really deserved it, never gave too much homework and never, ever raised her voice, even when she was mad, but it didn’t make any difference now. She’d failed the test. She wasn’t going to Disneyland. Her mother was going to be so disappointed.
“ I’m sorry,” Carolina said. “I don’t have any excuse for what I did.”
“ Oh, yes you do. I’m guessing that Brad made you show him the answers. I don’t know how he did it. You had to show him the answers, but you didn’t have to show him the right ones, did you?”
“ No.” Miss Sadler was so smart.
“ I’m also guessing he won’t ever ask to copy off of you again. That was your plan, wasn’t it?”
“ Yes,” Carolina whispered.
“ You get an A. Brad gets an F.”
“ What?” Carolina said, eyes wide and heart pounding.
“ You heard me. I’m giving you a hundred percent.”
“ But?” She couldn’t believe it. There were such things as miracles after all.
“ Case closed, go home.”
Carolina turned and walked quickly to the door, fighting back tears and a smile.
“ Carolina,” Miss Sadler called.
She turned.
“ Enjoy yourself at Disneyland.”
Carolina smiled, turned and ran down the hall and out the front door of the school, where she crashed into Arty.
“ I’ve been waiting to carry your books,” he said, grinning wide.
Chapter Three
“ We’re in trouble,” Arty said, as Brad and two other kids approached. His voice moved up an octave when he talked and Carolina could tell he was frightened. It wasn’t fair that Brad could bully nice kids like Arty just because he was bigger.
Bullies were the lowest of the low, lower than the stuff that grows under you toes. She wished she was a boy, then she’d give Brad something to think about.
“ Brad and the Shadows,” Carolina said. Ray Harpine scowled, making both his eyebrows and lips look thinner than they were. Steve Kerr scrunched up the left side of his face so much she couldn’t see the color of his left eye. Carolina knew Ray and Steve hated being called Brad’s shadows.
“ Shit,” Arty said under his breath, and Carolina saw his lower lip start quivering. She shivered a little herself, but it was cold and she wasn’t wearing a sweater.
“ Hey, did I hear you right, Farty Arty. Did you say shit?” Brad tucked his hands into his Levi pockets and thrust his pelvis forward. His thing was outlined by the Levi’s and she wondered how he’d like it if she gave him a swift kick where it would really hurt.
“ Maybe there’s hope for the mama’s boy yet.” Steve put his hands in his pockets, imitating his leader. It