three feet behind her. But cursing himself he realizes that seconds before he was halfway down the hall.
He smiles, covering his frustration, and ushers her ahead of him into the room. Her heart slows, her breath deepens: the mouse convincing itself that it mistook the treeâs shadow for a hawkâs. He could not have moved so fast, so silently. She must have heard his approach, and ignored it.
The roomâs sparsely furnished. No posters on the walls. Row upon row of desks, forty children at least could study here. Blackboard, two days unwashed, a list of studentsâ names followed by checks in multicolored chalk. This, he likes: many schools no longer use slate.
She sits on a desk, facing him. Her legs swing.
âYou have a large room.â
She laughs. âNot mine. We share the rooms.â Her smile is sad. âAnyway. Iâm glad to see you here. Why did you call?â
âMy son. My wife asked me to talk with you about him. He has trouble in school, I think. I know he is a bright boy. His mother, my wife, she wonders why his grades are not so good. I think he is a child, he will improve with time, but I do not know. So I come to ask you.â
âHow can I help?â
Vlad shifts from foot to foot. Outside the night deepens. Streetlights buzz on. The room smells of dust and sweat and camellias and mint. The teacherâs eyes are large and gray. She folds her lips into her mouth, bites them, and unfolds them again. Lines are growing from the corners of her mouth to the corners of her noseâthe first signs of age. They surface at twenty-five or so. Vlad has studied them. He looks away from her. To see her is to know her pulse.
âWhat is he like in class, my son?â
âHeâs sweet. But he distracts easily. Sometimes he has trouble remembering a passage weâve read a half hour after weâve read it. In class he fidgets, and he often doesnât turn in his homework.â
âI have seen him do the homework.â
âOf course. Iâm sorry. Iâm not saying that he doesnât do it. He doesnât turn it in, though.â
âPerhaps he is bored by your class.â Her brow furrows, and he would kill men to clear it. âI do not mean that the class is easy. I know you have a difficult job. But perhaps he needs more attention.â
âI wish I could give it to him. But any attention I give him comes from the other children in the class. We have forty. I donât have a lot of attention left to go around.â
âI see.â He paces more. Good to let her see him move like a human being. Good to avert his eyes.
âHave you thought about testing him for ADHD? Itâs a common condition.â
What kind of testing? And what would the testing of his son reveal? âCould I help somehow? Review his work with him?â
She stands. âThatâs a great idea.â The alto weight has left her voice, excitement returning after a day of weeks. âIf you have time, I mean. I know it would help. He looks up to you.â
Vlad laughs. Does his son admire the man, or the illusion? Or the monster, whom he has never seen? âI do not think so. But I will help if I can.â
He turns from the window, and she walks toward him, holding a bright red folder. âThese are his assignments for the week. If it helps, come back and Iâll give you the next bunch.â
She smiles.
Vlad, cold, afraid, smiles back.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
âGreat,â his wife says when he tells her. She does not ask about the teacher, only the outcome. âGreat. Thank you.â She folds him in her arms, and he feels her strength. In the bathroom mirror they remind him of chess pieces, alabaster and mahogany. âI hate that building. The classrooms scare me. So many bad memories.â
âElementary school has no hold on me.â
âOf course not.â A quick soft peck on the cheek, and she fades from him,
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