What kind of powers did
And ohmigod! What kind of psycho freak was Tracey Devon?
Chapter Four
JENNA WAS HAVING TROUBLE keeping her eyes open. As she went through the motions of Madame's breathing exercises, she used every intake of breath as an excuse to yawn. This meant that she always breathed out a second or two after the others in the class, which resulted in a frown from Madame aimed in her direction. Not that she cared what Madame thought of her-but there was something about the teacher that always made her cringe a little. It was almost as if Madame could see what was going on inside Jenna's head, which was ridiculous, of course. Only Jenna could see what was going on inside the minds of others. Strangely enough, however, she could never completely penetrate Madame's head. Not that she ever really wanted to. After all, what sort of interesting thoughts could a
Madame took her attention away from Jenna as she offered a sullen Charles some advice about the rhythm of his breathing. Jenna took advantage of this and closed her eyes. She could fall asleep so easily…
There were two reasons for this. She'd been up very late the night before. She wasn't exactly sure what time she'd drifted off, but she'd thought she could see the first rays of sunshine from her bedroom window. So she hadn't had much sleep, and that alone justified her yawning.
The other reason was the fact that she was bored, but that wasn't an unusual state of mind for her, especially here. Her classes were boring, her teachers were boring, and what was the point of being there anyway? She just didn't care what went on at school.
This class was the worst. It was too small and she couldn't hide. In other classes she sat in the back, where the teacher wouldn't notice her. There, she could tune out and amuse herself by listening to her classmates' thoughts. They were never especially amusing or even mildly interesting-other people's daydreams could be as dull as dirt. But in this class, she couldn't even do that. Madame knew her gift, and she was always watching Jenna's face for telltale signs of mental eavesdropping.
Of course, there were times when Madame was occupied with other students, like right now, and Jenna could concentrate on reading the minds of others. But these so-called gifted kids weren't any more entertaining than her usual classmates. Charles, for example, thought only about stuff like what he was going to demand for dinner that evening or what he'd make everyone watch on TV. It seemed to her that he totally ruled at home.
Madame was helping Ken breathe now, so Jenna turned her attention to Emily. When she'd first learned about Emily's gift, Jenna had hoped to find something interesting inside her head. But Emily was a total space cadet-she had no control over her gift at all. At this moment, all Jenna could see was a vague image of a raging forest fire. Somewhere, at some time in the near or distant future, a bunch of trees would burn down. Maybe. It was impossible to tell whether Emily was having visions or simply daydreaming.
Jenna focused on Martin's thoughts, but she knew there would be nothing remarkable there. Martin's head was packed with memories of all the times he had felt like a victim. The only moments when it could be intriguing to read Martin occurred when he was angry. Then Jenna could see a brilliant display of sparkling lights in lots of different colors, something like fireworks.
Sarah's thoughts were pretty boring. You'd think that a girl who could control other people might have some interesting ideas in her head, but Sarah was so
Jenna didn't bother to try Carter, the youngest student in the group. She knew there would be nothing inside his head. Sometimes she wondered how the strange boy could walk and eat and put on his clothes when it seemed to her that he didn't even have a brain.
Tracey was almost worse than nothing. Her thoughts were formless, just a big, thick black cloud of misery. Whatever bits and pieces Jenna could decipher were usually too depressing to read…
She frowned. Something unfamiliar was coming from Tracey's mind. There was a light…Jenna stared at her and tried to concentrate, to see into the light. But before she could make any sense out of it, someone else's thoughts broke in.
There was only one head that could produce a thought like this.
'Hey, Ken,' she whispered. 'Someone's calling you.'
Madame heard her. 'Jenna! What did I tell you about eavesdropping?'
'It's okay, Madame,' Ken said wearily. 'You can't really blame her. This guy is so
'No kidding,' Jenna said. 'I didn't even have to
'Would you like to share this problem with us, Ken?' Madame asked.
Ken sighed. 'He pops in about once a week or so, and he's really annoying me. Supposedly he was killed in an accident-he fell down some stairs and hit his head. But he claims his wife murdered him, and he wants me to call the police.'
'So why don't you just do what he says?' Jenna suggested. 'Tell the cops, and then he'll stop bugging you.'
Ken shook his head. 'I don't want to get involved. Besides, what am I going to say? 'Hello, Mister Policeman. A dead man asked me to give you a message'? They'll think I'm nuts!'
'Class, we've talked about this kind of problem before,' Madame said. 'What do we do when our gifts intrude on our lives? Martin?'
The scrawny little wimp murmured the standard response. 'We're supposed to ignore them.'
'Exactly. And if they persist? Charles?'
The boy slumped in the wheelchair spoke. 'I dunno.'
Madame looked at him reprovingly. 'Nonsense, Charles! You know what you're supposed to do, even if you don't always do it.'
Charles mumbled something.
'What did you say, Charles? We can't hear you.'
'You push them away!' Charles snapped. The vase on Madame's desk quivered.
Madame glared at him. 'Charles!'
The vase was still.
'Thank you, Charles. Yes, you're correct. We concentrate on forcibly pushing away the gift.'
'I'm trying to lose him, Madame,' Ken declared, 'but this guy's really persistent.'
Madame nodded sympathetically and addressed the group. 'Class, Ken needs our help. Let's try to come up with some ideas for him.'
Jenna hadn't meant for the groan to escape from her lips quite so loudly. Now
'Jeez, Jenna! Why do you have to be such a-' Ken caught himself. 'Well, you know what I mean.'
'We're all in this together, Jenna,' Emily added softly. 'We have to care about one another.'
Madame joined in. 'We need one another's support.'
Happily, the bell rang just then, so she didn't have to.
'We'll continue this discussion tomorrow,' Madame said. 'And your assignment for tomorrow's class is to report on a moment when you successfully controlled your gift.'
As Jenna moved to the door, she passed Tracey, and once again she got a glimpse of something unusual from her. But when their eyes met, Tracey let out a frightened little squeak and scampered away.
Jenna didn't really care. Even if there was something new going on inside Tracey's dull little head, what difference would it make? They were all nerds, these so-called gifted kids, each of them living a sad, pathetic,