house I realized that I really had saved her. Of course I wasnât about to win any awards, as technically Iâd put her in danger to begin with, but when youâre a fourteen-year-old boy with acne and a bad haircut, it felt good to be somebodyâs hero.
CHAPTER Eight
Last night, Eric brought me a two-week old newspaper.
There was an article about a riot that started when a negro
enrolled at the University of Mississippi. It seems strange
to me that we could put a man in outer space but have
trouble putting a black man in college.
GRACEâS DIARY
MONDAY, OCT. 15
I hated being back at school, which would have been true even without having Grace in my clubhouse, but somehow her being there made it worse. The day passed at glacial speed and all day I sat, chewing on my pencil while my thoughts revolved around Grace.
Spanish was my last class of the day and for some reason I kept looking back to the corner of the room where Grace usually sat. I felt strangely important being the only one who knew where she was. Mrs. Waller was going down the roll when she suddenly looked up. âHas anyone seen Madeline Webb?â
I looked straight ahead.
âAnyone?â
âI think sheâs sick,â a voice said from the back of the room. âI heard she had pneumonia.â
âOh.â She made a mark on the attendance sheet, put it back in her desk, and started the class.
As soon as the bell rang I set out for Graceâs locker. It wasnât easy to find. It was one of a dozen lockers on an obscure row placed in no manâs land. It was like the builders of the school had realized they had some extra lockers sitting around and someone said, âHey, letâs put them there.â I probably wouldnât have found it if I hadnât taken a break from my search to look for a water fountain and stumbled across it.
I took the folded paper with the locker combination out of my pocket and began turning the dial. It felt a little like I was breaking into a safe. It took me a couple tries to get the door open.
Inside Graceâs locker there was a mirror taped to the inside of the door and several pictures of cheerleaders cut from magazines taped to the sidewalls. I saw a stack of folded clothes sitting on the bottom of the locker and it occurred to me that she had been planning her escape for some time. Underneath the clothes was the red cloth pouch. It was nearly as thick as a brick but flexible. I wanted to look inside but didnât. I figured if it was that important it was best I didnât know.
I collected everything inside and was stowing it all in my knapsack when someone said, âWhat do you think youâre doing?â
I turned to see a broad girl with short brown hair. She was at least three inches taller than me and had a look on her face like she wanted to pound me into the ground and she probably could have. âThatâs not your locker.â
âYeah, it is.â
âNo, itâs not. I know that girl.â
I didnât know if she really was a friend of Graceâs or, more likely, if the unlucky recipients of these out-of-the-way lockers all just came to know each other by circumstance, like people stranded on a deserted island.
âIâm just getting some things for her.â
I slammed the locker shut, threw my schoolbag over my shoulder and walked away, hoping she wouldnât follow. She yelled something after me but thatâs all. I looked down at my watch. I was late for the bus. I broke into a run for the north doors, which I usually avoided because the hoods were always hanging around them. Fortunately they werenât there, but neither was my bus. I could see the last orange bus a hundred yards away from me rounding the corner of the parking lot onto Third East. I groaned. It wasnât like I could call anyone for a ride.
I had made the walk home before and vowed never to do it again. The school was about three and a half
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