‘A boy?’ she eyed her suspiciously.
‘Yeah, he…eew! Mom, no!’ she had noted her mother’s apprehensive look.‘Good,’ she let out a sigh of relief. ‘Boys are trouble.’‘And yet you married one.’‘Sweetie, I married a man. That’s what you need…at least twenty years from now. Anyway, what about this “boy” is troubling you?’‘Well, some of the kids were picking on him and…’‘Why?’‘I don’t know. I guess he may be a little awkward…’‘Awkward?’‘Different. He’s different. He sits alone and he’s a bit of a klutz…’‘Stay away from him.’‘Mom?’‘I said keep your distance, Claire,’ she spoke sternly. ‘He seems like the sort of enigma that hails Charles Manson a hero.’‘What really vexes me about him is that he didn’t lash out when they bullied him or cry as most kids would do. It’s almost like…’ she also frowned, but thoughtfully, ‘like…’‘Like he’s been through worse?’ suggested her mother.‘Yeah, yeah, how did you guess?’ asked Clarissa.‘I once learnt with a kid like that in college, Claire. She was a girl though. She was the quiet type: kept to herself, didn’t talk to no one, preferred her own company and all the other descriptions necessary for defining her type. Turns out the reason she acted like that was because she had attempted suicide and was caught. And she became ashamed and was overwhelmed with guilt. The poor thing hung herself in her dorm before the break of the first semester.’Clarissa laughed, ‘I doubt this kid is the suicidal type, mom.’‘All the same, Claire. I want you to steer clear of him, you hear me?’ she firmly warned her.She shrugged carelessly, ‘I never even wanted to be friends with him in the first place.’ She looked at the table. ‘Now, shall we eat or are we going to stand around and keep talking about weirdoes and your prehistoric college years?’‘Goodnight, Aunt Janice,’ Sineas yawned as he made his way into his room. She yelled an almost inaudible “goodnight” from the living room couch. He fell onto the bed, his hands behind his head and his eyes to the ceiling. His mind was at work but he was not quite sure what it was working on. The day had been too long and boring. What bothered him was that his aunt expected him to repeat this same routine for the whole year.
He breathed in deep the fresh, smooth breeze sneaking in through the window. He loved to leave it open especially since it was summer and the searing heat advised him to do so.His room was still dark. He had often tried to remind his aunt to buy him light bulbs ever since he was six years old. Asking turned to pleading, pleading turned to begging and finally, he began to get accustomed to the darkness. He had finally told her that he didn't need the lightbulb anymore. He was now used to the dark. Each time he peered into its nothingness he felt at home. Nothing to see. Nothing to acknowledge and nothing to consider.Fatigue advised him to get under the covers but he knew that if he closed his eyes, in a split-second, Aunt Janice would be banging on the door telling him to get ready for school. He grumbled. He tried not to think about it. He took his cell phone out of his pocket. 9:05 P.M. ‘Nine more hours,’ he murmured. Yes, nine more hours and she would be at his door telling him to go take a shower, come down for breakfast and off to school. This was the nightmare he was to repeat for 264 days, approximately.‘So this is what the cat dragged in.’Sineas sighed in displeasure. ‘I don’t have time for this. I’m tired.’‘Neither do I, Sin, but we’re going to talk about this whether you like it or not. So, give me your best shot.’‘First day of high school was no better than hell.’‘Pop quiz?’‘No. I found out I’m going to be learning with a bunch of mindless idiots for the next two years.’‘And you’re not an idiot? *Laughter*'‘Did you forget my IQ test when I was fifteen? I clocked at one thirty-four. That’s way past genius level.’‘Yes- back then. This new school of yours is going to dumb you down to sloth speed.’‘Tell me about it!’ Sineas grunted.‘Did you at least make friends? They say friends are a key and even an essential part of life, you know.’‘I don’t think friends are what I need right now.’‘Good. Because I’m the only one you need.’‘Or the only one I need to get rid of.’‘Careful now, Sin. That attitude is the main reason why you don’t have friends.’Sineas shrugged indifferently.‘Hey, I’ve got an idea.’‘What?’ he frowned.‘Take me with you to school tomorrow.’He flipped onto his buttocks, ‘No, no, no, no, no, I don’t want you to further ruin what’s already a bad thing for me,’ he objected.‘If you take me to your school, Sin, I promise to turn your hell into an oasis.’‘You talk too much.’‘And you talk too little. Come on, Sin, anywhere is better than here.’He laid his head back onto the bed again.‘Is that a yes?’He rolled onto his side and shut his eyes.‘I’ll take that as a yes.’Breakfast was very quiet that Tuesday morning at the Murphy’s house. It was cereal, but this was not the cause of the silence.‘Aren’t you going to say something, Sin? You didn’t even say good morning to me.’ Aunt Janice was in her infamous nightdress. She had not taken a shower yet.‘Good morning,’ he mumbled. He was poking the cereal like he was searching for an evasive cockroach that had fallen in. He was wearing his leather jacket and a white t-shirt and blue jeans. A pair of black Nikes concluded the gear. Aunt Janice reached for his hand as it lay idle on the table. He slowly pulled it away.She sighed, ‘You know I only want what’s best for you, right?’His eyes narrowed as he stared into his bowl, as if he had finally found the roach. ‘Does this cereal taste strange to you?’ he asked her before taking a mouthful. ‘The taste is a little familiar though,’ he snapped his fingers in an effort to remember. ‘Of course!’ his eyes lit up, ‘It tastes exactly like betrayal.
Clarissa smiled and sat beside Sineas. She moved her desk even closer. She was wearing a light green jacket and a white dress underneath. Like yesterday, her hair was pinned behind her into a rabbit’s tail. ‘Hey,’ she said beaming at him.‘H…hey,’ Sineas replied. He was just as bewildered as the rest of the class.‘Clarissa...’ Justin began, ‘The drugs you’re taking; can you hook me up?’She ignored him. She was busy opening her book, arranging her stationery on her desk. Everyone just looked on, looking thunderstruck. With all those eyes on them, Sineas felt even more awkward. He turned his eyes to Justin.‘Keep those eyes somewhere else, kid, not here,’ Justin warned him. He lowered his eyes into his book.Mr. Sawyer cleared his throat. ‘Now that we have solved that issue, the numbers are still unbalanced, but nevertheless; Sabrina, you can join Justin’s team.’She got up in a tsunami. Her eyes were stuck on Clarissa. She did not retract them as she made her
‘Say what you like but Justin’s right, Claire,’ Sabrina joined in from nowhere. Doreen was standing right next to her, arms folded and wearing a vile scowl on her face. ‘I thought you could do better,’ Sabrina continued. ‘We all did. Now you’re picking this kid over your own friends?’ There was a sign of grief in her voice.Sineas could only stare into the nothingness of the table. He was twiddling his thumbs under it.Clarissa shot to her feet and her nose almost touched Sabrina’s. ‘So you think I’m just going to sit tight and watch all you bullies make fun of Sineas like that?’ she hissed. They had finally drawn the attention of the entire school.‘You even know his name?’ Justin laughed scornfully as he pulled the girl deeper under his arm. She smiled. She seemed to be enjoying it. Justin rubbed his boxlike jaw. He walked to Sineas’ side, pulling the girl with him. She had an enormous grin on her face.Sineas was still twiddling his thumbs under the table. He wasn’t p
The voice, to Justin, sounded more like a man, or a rather hoarse-voiced woman. At this point, he could no longer guess. His mind was dazed and so were his eyes. ‘Justin,’ he answered. ‘And who are you?’‘Necessity,’ the stranger replied.His eyes came together to form a squint. ‘What kind of a stupid name is that?’‘A necessary one.’Justin began to hear the sound of steel on concrete again but this time it was more of a light tap. It was coming from between the stranger’s feet. ‘What…what’s that?’ he asked the stranger, pointing between his feet. The boldness and audacity in his voice was abandoning him. ‘I said what’s…’‘You look like a strong, young man. Are you an athlete, Justin?’ the stranger asked him. There was a certain calmness in the stranger's voice.Justin nodded robustly, ‘Rugby…basketball…’‘That sounds like it takes a lot of stamina.’He nodded quickly.‘Good. You see that house over there, Justin? Way down there?’ the stranger asked him,
Sineas had just finished taking a shower. He threw on a red t-shirt, a pair of blue jeans, a pair of white sneakers and he was good to go. ‘What are you watching, Aunt Janice?’ he asked her as he descended the wooden stairs, swinging his backpack onto his shoulder.She was wearing an orange blouse and her black waitress skirt. A shower cap was on her head. She usually took a shower just after Sineas. ‘Good morning to you too, Sin,’ she said without taking her eyes off the screen. ‘Come take a look at this,’ she beckoned towards him with her hand, still keeping her eyes glued to the TV. Her other hand was occupied with a half eaten slice of toast. ‘Oh, Breakfast is on the table,’ she informed him. Moments later he returned into the living room carrying a plate with three slices of toast and scrambled eggs. He stood behind the couch as he ate. ‘So, what’s up?’ he asked her shoving a slice of toast into his mouth.‘You just missed it. There was a commercial with second-ha
‘I said how is your new school treating you?’ Doctor Jacob asked him. He pushed his spectacles further up the bridge of his nose. Sineas was certain he had seen that move done in a movie. He shrugged. ‘Not bad, not bad,’ he answered the question.‘And…define “not bad”.’‘Not bad means not bad, Jacob,’ he replied in a harsh tone.Doctor Jacob made a deep sigh as he placed his notebook aside. He placed his hands at the edge of the desk. He said, ‘Sineas. We’ve been meeting in this same room for eleven years and yet you still don’t trust me with how you feel.’ There was a certain faintness in his voice.He crossed his arms quickly. ‘Should I start at the very beginning, Jacob? Because I think you and I both know you’re fully responsible for my mother spending an entire decade at Breechwood Asylum.’‘Sineas, my boy…’‘I think “Sineas” is just fine, thank you,’ he said glaring at him.‘Okay…Sineas. The only reason your mother is still in that place is because she
He stopped. He slowly turned his head around. He breathed a sigh of relief when he realized who it was. It was Clarissa. He could recognize her strange sense of fashion from a galaxy away. She didn’t look half bad in her simple white sweater, black leather skirt and black leather high heel boots. She wore a sorrowful look as she paced quickly towards him. She gave him a friendly hug. ‘Sineas! Oh, my gosh, I was worried about you.’He was shocked. Firstly; the hug was a bit unexpected. It had almost triggered the soldier between his legs into an involuntary salutation as her warm breasts firmly pressed against his chest. ‘Worried? Worried for what?’ he asked her trapped in a state of confusion.She released her embrace. ‘Yes, didn’t you know? Justin is missing.’ She now had her arms folded but the sorrowful expression remained.‘Oh, yeah, I saw it on the news this morning,’ he said.‘I know he can be a jerk but I really hope he’s okay,’ she said rubbing
She shook her head. ‘Sineas, you just sat there and took their insults. An hour later Justin even did worse to you here, on this same table we’re sitting at. Sometimes you have to just stand up for yourself or people will walk all over you and wipe their feet on you like you’re a doormat.’‘Can we just drop it, this entire subject, please?’ he responded. An acute frown had formed on his face.‘I’m sorry, Sineas. I’m sorry, okay?’ she apologized.He shrugged and avoided her gaze. Immediately, the siren rang. Lunchtime was over.Clarissa grinned as she wiped her hands free of the muffin crumbs. ‘I hope you’re ready to drip a little sweat, Mr. Murphy,’ she said as she looked at him sideways.‘What do you mean? What are you talking about?’ he asked her looking bemused.‘It’s time for gym class.’ When you walk through the school building of Malrich High, the first thing you would notice would be the many classroom doors on either side of the walls. To the right