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Chapter
Two
"Welcome
to 'Lion Tales', the Lawndale High TV newsmagazine," the voice on the
television said, a series of surprisingly professional graphics appearing on
the television screen. "And now, live from LHS-TV's Studio One - Tori
Jericho."
The image of
the attractive Fashion Club member, her butter-blonde hair falling down across
her shoulders in thin, stylish ringlets, appeared on the TV screen. "Hi.
I'm Tori Jericho, and I'm here to keep you up to date on Lawndale High news,
sports events and other items of interest."
"The
entire school is abuzz with the news that Doctor Kyle Armalin is back at
Lawndale High, and twenty-five lucky students have been selected for the
'Special Projects in Sociology' seminar. The seminar, which runs for five weeks,
is held once each year and is taught by a number of noted educators, including
Dr. Armalin. Among the students selected for the seminar was junior class
member Michael Jordan Mackenzie..."
"I've
heard a lot about the freedom and the creativity that the Doctor allows in his
classes, and the assignments are supposed to allow you to really find out what
kind of person you are," Mack's image said, obviously filmed in the
parking lot. "I'm looking forward to the experience."
"Hey,
everybody," Jodie said tiredly, plopping down next to Jane and Daria at a
cafeteria table. "What's up?"
"Not
student IQ's - the Fashion Club's made it onto the airwaves," Jane
smirked. "Don Henley's prophecies are coming true."
"I know
- I had to give up doing both 'Lion Tales' and 'LHS Today' so I could take the
seminar," Jodie sighed, referring to the daily news show broadcast live
from the LHS campus. "Oh, well. Gotta have priorities - and I'll be booked
up solid next year, so I have to take it now."
'Lion Tales'
went on the air weekly on cable access, locally on UHF Channel 79 - and for the
big events, on satellite uplink - another way Ms. Li constantly strove to show
that Lawndale High (under her guiding hands) was no less than the best high
school in the state of Texas. If nothing else, though, working on the two shows
was considered by most universities - and more than a few actual television
affiliates - as actual work experience in the field, and more than a few LHS
students took advantage of that to begin careers directly out of school. There
was actually a correspondent working for the British Sky News Service - a real
up-and-comer through the ranks, who had gotten her start with two years of
maintaining transmitter equipment and her senior year on-air at 'Lion Tales'.
"Besides
- after a few weeks of her on the air, everyone'll beg you to go back!"
Jane said. "Besides a pretty face, a great body, excellent clothes, and a
natural on-air rapport - what else does she have? Hey - we all know she
sucks!"
"Yes, we
do - the question for now is what," Jodie smirked, gallows humor evident
as she opened a large bag of chips - which made both Jane and Daria pull back
sharply, instant horror and disgust on their faces. "If I'd known that
they'd put 'Blond Ambition' on the screen instead of under the director's desk
- what's wrong?"
"Something
with your nose," Jane said pointedly. "What ARE those?"
"Jean-Claude
Dupres' Hellfire-Roasted', soul-burning, Cajun-barbecue-flavored 'Bayou Boiler
Chips', straight from Louisiana," Jodie all but announced, holding the bag
out - making Jane's eyes water and Daria's glasses fog over. "They come in
different flavors and seven levels of spiciness: tame, mild, medium, savory,
fiery, volcano and 'HELL!"
"And you
had to drag us into the pit of sulfur and brimstone right along with you,"
Jane muttered. "Man, one thing I can't stand is the really hot, funky
food! Penny's into it - comes from being down in tortilla and banana-land all
of these years ... you practically can't breathe in a kitchen she's been cooking
in."
"I LOVE
the hot stuff - and Andrea got a few bags for me when her family went to visit
their relatives near New Orleans a couple of weeks ago," Jodie smiled
happily. "God, I love these chips - and you practically just can't get
these things outside of the state!"
"And
everybody breathes a sigh of relief," Daria shot back, wincing as she
watched Jodie crunch down on a thick, dark, spice-coated chip and all but faint
with pleasure. "You want a cigarette with those? A leather hood with
zippers? How about a condom?"
"Hey,
look - it's another Fashion Borg!" Jane said, noticing that Sandi was now
on the television.
"Well,
as President of the Fashion Club, it is important for me to expand my horizons
and my perceptions of others," Sandi's image spoke. "I feel that by
taking this seminar, I will be able to gain a better idea on how to help others
in society by finding out how and why they do the things they do. This, in
turn, will allow me to understand the way they dress themselves the way they do
- and once we can understand that, we can help them to improve their manners
and style of dress and therefore, help them improve their society. After all,
if we all dress if a fashionable manner and act in a fashionable manner, we
will all eventually begin to think and behave in a fashionable manner - just
like everyone else. Once that happens, we'll have world peace."
"George
Orwell is spinning in his grave like the last tornado in 'Twister', Daria said,
turning her head from the television. "World domination through the use of
natural fibers. '1984' - the Fashion Club way."
"And
think of some of the great political books that could come out of a world ruled
by the Fashion Club," Jodie said. "How about 'The Little Red Dress
Book?"
"Let's
not forget 'The Art of War-drobe," Daria shot back.
Jane caught another whiff of the Sarin-chips Jodie gulped down
like a crazed ferret on a giant meatball, and drained an entire glass of soda -
ice and all - before wiping at her eyes with a handful of pocket-size tissues.
"Downwind, Jodie - please."
"I can't believe they let that idiot have air time, even
on the boob tube," Daria said, changing the subject as a pinpoint of anger
momentarily flashed in Jodie's eyes.
"That's
just what you'd call it now," Jodie echoed, looking up and noticing how
tight Tori's sweater fit across her chest. "Oh, yeah - the guys are
definitely watching to find out about the next mandatory school fundraiser, and
breaking news about Mr. DeMartino snogging Ms. Defoe in the bomb shelter 'til the
blessed olive oil runs out..."
"Someone's
been sipping at the sarcastic wine again," Jane spoke out, finishing off
her burrito. "What's this about Ms. Defoe and DeMartino?"
"Didn't
you hear? A couple of nights ago, I heard that some of the Glee Club kids were
practicing late, and they saw them going into the nurse's office! They didn't
get to see much because the security guards came and chased them out - but it
looked like they were in the mood to play doctor..."
"I
didn't think you gossiped, Jodie," Daria said, looking mildly disappointed
at the second girl.
"I'm not
- I've seen them together before," Jodie replied defensively.
"Remember, I'm the so-called 'good kid'. They slip up around me all the
time, because 'I won't do anything to hurt the proud reputation of 'good ol'
Lawndale High!"
"Let me
guess - bad time at Student Council last night?"
"The
Fashion Club was there - slutting around like dogs in heat and getting the boys
so worked up that they couldn't use their damned brains," came Jodie's
morose response. "You should have seen Sandi - and the piece of cloth she
almost wore..."
Daria and
Jane's eyebrows rose. "It would be an insult to actual dresses to call
what she wore that," Jodie hissed. "She must have shaved for a day in
order to put that thing on. To make a long story short - the Fashion Club got
their financial allotment increased by a third for next year. There's all sorts
of worthwhile programs and other things that could really put that money to
good use, but we're going to pay for those girls to play 'Who Wants To Dress
Like A Teen 'Ho'?' Sometimes, I really wonder if it's all worth it..."
"Not
giving in to your urge to beat Sandi and the rest of them into the middle of
their senior year?" Jane laughed. "You can't do that, Jodie. Daria
has dibs."
"Not all
of them, Jane," Daria cut in. "Just Quinn. Remember - she's a
red-haired step-child."
"I'd
just like to give Sandi what she deserves," Jodie said, pulling crusts off
her sandwich. "Sometimes, I have dreams where I'm a black panther and
she's an impala or antelope or whatever, and I get to chase her down, lock my
jaws around her neck and choke the hell out of her."
"You
don't eat her?"
"No, I
give her to the three J's. They're always there as wild dogs. Besides - that
would make the dream a little funkier than I think I'd like."
*****
"Hey,
hey, it's 'Jake the Snake'! How're you doing, schwing guy?"
Jake looked
up from the guest spot at the radio console as Warren Bing and Stanley 'The
Spatula Man' Jones slithered and bounced into the Z-93 FM studio booth, both
carrying 'Burger Barn' bags of food and wearing hot neon-rainbow colored
'Mental In The Morning!' T-shirts that could probably be seen from orbit.
"So where's that severely S-S-S-Smoking lady chef - get her in here so she
can whip us up a plate of hot lovin'!"
"Boys -
that's why I asked Ms. de la Ribas to come down at 11:15 instead of
11:00," Jake said calmly as the two took their places. "I wanted to
make sure I'd get a chance to talk to you. Alone."
"Gonna
tell us some 'Tales of the Snake?" Stanley laughed, pulling several onion
rings from his bag and flipping them, one by one, into his mouth. "Man, I
KNEW that you had to be getting some of that action - hell, with all of those
'friends' you have that pee sitting down, I knew you were getting some extra
somewhere! Damn, she's hot, and I know that you've gotta be on that seven-year
itch by now -!"
"He's just being a dick, Jake,"
Warren sighed, shaking his head. Unlike the terminally- and perpetually uncouth
'Spatula Man', 'Bing' and 'Warren' were two different personas. He and Jake had
met through Jake's working with Lauriel - Warren was also an aspiring chef with
a natural inclination towards game animals and foraged vegetables & grains.
It was a talent that Lauriel was helping to develop after she had judged his
contest-winning dish of stone-baked duckling in cornhusks with baby potatoes,
wild onions and dressing made from a patch of prairie wheat-grains in a local
cook-off.
Warren had also become a part of Jake's circle of drinking
buddies. "Don't take it personally."
"I'm
gonna ask that you turn it down for this interview, okay?" Jake asked.
"Yes, she's a beautiful woman - but when you only focus on that, it makes
her look like less of a professional and more like the 'Vanna White' of the
cooking world. She's really looking to try and build her rep, so ixnay on the
dragging tongues for this go-round, alright?"
"I'll go
along - the lady's been a lot of help to me, and she's an all-around class
act," Warren agreed. "Besides, after our last couple of contests,
getting dinner from Lauriel's definitely going to put this one on the map. You
hear that, round boy? We treat her like a lady."
Stanley
looked up from his 'Bust-A-Gut Burger', wiping sauce and a wayward onion from
his face, and gave the two men a stare of disbelief.
"You're gonna tell a bird not to fly?
Can you tell a politician not to lie? Can you put a Ruttheimer near a bed with
someone and say 'About getting some of that sex - you can't even try? Come on,
guys - you're asking me to cut my tongue out and file it under 'You're
screwed!' I can't do that, man - I'm a wacky DJ, and when I'm on the mike - the
'Spatula Man's' gotta FRY!"
"Yeah, I
thought you'd say that," Jake smiled, sliding a set of pictures out of his
briefcase and over to the still-feeding Stanley. "About that term - 'wacky
DJ's - how'd you feel if all of your listeners found out that in your case, we
need to add an 'H' into that word?"
Stanley spit
his food out all over the table, and Warren fanned in front of his face in
disgust. "And you'll be cleaning that up yourself."
"Oh,
come on - I was in a 'Take Any Dare' contest! I won $20,000! It's not like I
was in a bathroom stall in a grade school!"
"Doesn't
matter, Stanley," Jake said, holding his fist out and moving it in an
up-and-down fashion. "Behave like a good boy for the interview - or
tomorrow, the 'National Intruder'll be calling you the 'WHACKY DJ!"
Standing up,
Jake motioned to Warren. "Got a minute?"
"Let's
hit the hallway," the slender DJ said, stifling an urge to burst out
laughing. "Hey, Jake - can he keep those photos?"
"I've
got more," Jake smirked, closing the door as they moved into the hallway.
"Four...three... two...one..."
The two of
them laughed so hard tears fell from their eyes. "I don't suppose you want
him to know I got those from you?"
"Hell
no! If he thinks someone else's the one who got something like that on him,
he'll keep on doing the dumb stuff in front of ME!" was the reply.
"Hey, Jake - seriously now, you're not getting any stupid feelings for
Lauriel, are you?"
"As far
as I'm concerned, only one woman's cuisine reigns supreme in my Kitchen Stadium,"
Jake told him, his tone firm without being overly serious. "I can't tell
you how much Helen turns me on each and every time I see her. So what if there
are two or three billion other women? They just can't compete."
"You are
the original hopeless romantic," Warren sighed mockingly, "or you're
the type of guy who knows the secret to a good, long, happy marriage."
"Which
is...?"
"Once
the husband is whipped - he STAYS whipped!" Warren laughed. "Now, you
see, that also means the wife's got to pay attention to her man, and know when
and just how much of 'his medicine' that he needs to keep from wandering
off..."
"I have
got to tell somebody about what Helen did the other night," Jake said,
leaning against a wall. "Low lights and incense. More candles than a
Catholic mass. Al Green on in the background, and Helen in this little red
number that she must've put on with a spray bottle."
"Brother
Jake is in the house!" Warren barked, his fist held skyward in a 'Black
Power!' gesture. "That's right - your woman's got to know how to sell
those goods!"
"You're
damn straight," Jake said, doing his best 'Isaac Hayes' impression as he
and Warren did a 'high five'. "Man, I am not about to lose a woman like
Helen for anybody! Let the idiots around here think whatever they want about me
and Lauriel, but I know that I hit the lottery, the jackpot and everything else
that pays off when I got my woman!"
"So,
Jake... if you're not doing anything with Lauriel... well, she listens to you, so,
could you hook me up?"
"Hey,
Warren - I like you and everything, but you'd be working without a net!"
Jake said, shrugging his shoulders. "She'd burn through you in under a
week!"
"Well,
that's how I want to go - 'Death... by 'bunga-bunga!"
"Too
late - I set her up with Anthony."
"Tony?
Man, that's not fair - he's been getting it all over town! You know he's been
tapping that sweet little arts teacher he works with for years, and I wouldn't
be surprised to find he's been serving that Asian principal his noodle up al
dente! He's like a dog, brother man, and somebody let him OUT!"
"Ease
up, Warren - I can hook you up with Helen's assistant!" Jake said,
playfully punching him in the arm. "Marianne's been separated for about
three months now, and she's a little lonely -"
"Lonely
enough to go out with a 'wacky DJ?"
"Yeah,
and if you're lucky, she'll keep the 'H' out of there!"
"What
about the letter 'H?" asked Lauriel, coming out of the elevator on the
other side of the hall. "You're doing alphabet jokes?"
"No - he
just wants a date," Jake said, standing up straight as Lauriel came over.
"I told him I'd see what I could do."
"Oh, I
see," Lauriel said, her voice holding a pleasant laugh. "So, Jacob -
does that mean you're my social secretary now?"
"Lauriel,
I didn't mean to be offensive, or to insult you-"
"Oh,
you're not," she said, turning to Warren with a smile that made him warm
and weak inside. "If you think that Warren's a nice man, then maybe I
should consider making an evening of it with him sometime."
She turned,
her hair flowing like water across her shoulders as she began down the hall.
"Maybe you should set something up, Jacob."
The two men
shook their heads as they took a long gaze at the departing woman, then turned
back to one another.
"Jake
Morgendorffer - you are either the most faithful husband since Joseph the
carpenter, or the single biggest fool in recorded history."
"Yes, I
am," he agreed. "And I wouldn't change it for anything."
*****
Kyle finished his root beer, and continued to speak to the
class.
"In each
seminar, we focus on a different concept. For this class - and in order to
honor all of those who were annoyed about the failure of this world to go
screaming into the first ring of Hell thanks to the Y2K bug - "
Kyle tossed Daria a quick glance. " - Complete with the
CGI footage of billions getting it in the neck in every imaginable fashion
except old age - our focus will be on 'human engineering'. For those of you
unfamiliar with the concept, think of it as the sole reason that Marina Sirtis
has been allowed to appear on American television... as though that's a
gift."
"And
Trekkies across the land plan the Doctor's slow and painful death." Daria
smirked. "He has dared to speak ill of a female Trek character with large
breasts."
"Since
we will only have these five weeks together, let's cut to the chase and get to
the primary project for this class," he continued. "Besides the ten
exercises which you'll have at various times during the duration, you'll also
have a class project - a group exercise which will compose seventy percent of
your total grade."
Kyle went to
the covered blackboard, and lifted the extended drop-down maps that covered it.
"One subject which has consistently held the interest of everyone, from
military scientists to TV sitcom writers, is the closed/isolated social
construct - a group of individuals who, for whatever reason, have no choice but
to live with one another and share experience and existence for an indefinite
period of time. It's a subject that we've seen in many forms, from 'The Lord of
the Flies', to 'Gilligan's island' to 'Star Trek: Voyager' - to the television
equivalent of breaking open the Seventh Seal which you all know as 'Survivor'.
Because of this, all of you should not only be somewhat familiar with the
concept, but have some ideas on what's needed to make such a group functional
and, perhaps, even effective and productive in some fashion."
"I've
suddenly got a REALLY bad feeling about this," Daria said, her eyes
suddenly going wide.
"Roger
that, Ghost Two," Jane echoed, eyes equally wide. "We're gonna end up
right dead smack in the hot seat."
"One
form of the closed/isolated social construct usually studied - and used quite
often in literature and entertainment - is the 'lifepod' construct," the
teacher continued. "This is a group of diverse individuals brought
together for the purpose of saving them from an event capable of destroying
life on a massive scale and eradicating civilization itself, with the premise
that they will be used as 'seed stock' to continue the species and the
representative culture that it came from. Think of a 'time capsule', but with
people."
"Oh,
great," Daria softly spat out. "Let's save some of the citizens of
Lawndale. Man doesn't really need a future that badly."
"Ladies
and gentlemen, this is your project - the 'Department Omega' extended
scenario," Dr. Armalin announced. "You'll be broken up into groups in
order to design a shelter to place a number of people within in order to let
them survive a period of... as Robert Heinlein so quaintly put it, 'cultural
disorder.' You'll design all facets of the shelter - basic design elements and
construction, supply and maintenance, armaments, transport and whatever else
you deem necessary to the shelter. You'll also have to worry about things such
as financing the project, mission security, post-containment operations, and so
on. During the first two weeks of the project, you'll undergo the construction
phase of your shelter - and trust me when I say that I'll throw roadblocks in
your way. Sometime during the third week, you'll send your assigned 'seeds'
into containment, where they will stay for x number of days in order to ride
out 'The Event."
"Excuse
me, Mr. Armalin," Mack said. "You said 'financing the project.' Are
we pretending to be government agents for this project?"
"No, Mr.
Mackenzie - but points for picking out sticky areas."
"All
right, Mack Daddy-"
"Mr.
Thomphson," Kyle said, dark anger in his eyes as he moved towards Kevin
like the coming of the Rapture. "That gentleman's name is Michael
Mackenzie. You will address him as Mr. Mackenzie, Mackenzie, Michael, or Mack,
as I understand some of his friends call him that. 'Mack Daddy' is not his
name. It is a derogatory term that not only makes him uncomfortable, but also
reinforces stereotypes. Don't use it again."
"Hey,
doc, I was just -"
"Getting
on my nerves," the angry teacher said. "Your choice for punishment,
Thomphson. Ms. Barch or me."
Daria was
somewhat amazed - and amused - by the way the color drained out of Kevin's
complexion. "Doc, I said I was sorry -"
"Choose."
"Mr.
Armalin - I mean, Dr. Armalin, it's okay, he doesn't mean anything by it -
" Mack began, but Kyle cut him off.
"Choose,
Mr. Thomphson. Ms. Barch or me."
Kevin's head
drooped. "You, doc."
"I
thought so, " the teacher said. "You're out of that uniform for the
rest of the day. Go to the restroom and peel it off - and if you come back
naked, I'll let Barch have you for an... independent study."
Kevin's
expression as he stood and walked to the door made him look like a lost puppy.
"Sorry, Mack," he said, stopping for a moment at the door.
"Oh,
poor Kevvie!" Brittany Taylor whined. "Doctor, he didn't mean to be
rude to Michael-"
"Which
makes it worse, Miss Taylor," Kyle concluded. "While Mr. Thomphson
gets into civilian attire, we'll divide the class up into three groups. Now,
only six persons will be allowed into your shelter, so you have to make some
hard choices and really pay attention to who the others in your group are.
You'll have to choose your 'seeds' on the basis of current and perceived future
abilities and worth, NOT personality OR popularity - and any shelter that looks
like it's holding the cast of an Aaron Spelling teen drama will earn that group
an automatic 'F' for the course."
"I knew
that we'd end up on the 'H.M.S. Stupid Class Project," Daria growled as
Jodie and Jane leaned in close. "Thanks a lot, Jane."
"Hey, it could be worse," Jodie told her, "at
least it's somewhat interesting, and it looks like we'll be able to do more
than parrot back answers to questions. Don't tell me that you haven't wanted an
assignment like this, Daria. Someone's finally allowing us to think for
ourselves."
"I
wonder if they'll let me bring an easel," Jane mused, scribbling on a
piece of paper. "Definitely need to bring extra running shoes;
solar-powered battery charger and extra batteries for my MP3 player..."
"What
are you doing?"
"Hey, I
figure that I'm good at long-distance running, so I'd make a good pathfinder or
long-range scout, and I know how to take care of kids, so I could be a midwife
or nanny," Jane said, not noticing how Daria looked at her - at first.
"Oh, come on! You've never wanted to be in something like 'Planet Earth'
or 'Ark II?"
"What's
'Ark II?"
"A
sci-fi show on CBS back in the '70's - Mom and Dad bought a Beta deck so they
could tape it every Saturday morning. It was like 'Damnation Alley,' but for
kids', Jane told Jodie. "No nuclear war, cool explosions or armored
man-eating cockroaches, but they did have a cooler vehicle, laser cannons and a
jetpack to fly around with. Hey, besides Mack and Kevin, what other guys in
here are jocks?"
"Why
would you want to know that?" Daria asked pointedly, more than a little
annoyed at how eagerly Jane was jumping into this.
"Well,
I've always been a big fan of sci-fi movies like this, and I want to know
who'll I'll probably be paired up with. An athlete, intelligent, some artistic
talent, likes kids and being outdoors, wants to have a close family -"
"What
are you writing out, Jane?" Mack asked, craning over Jodie to get a look
at her list.
"Her
wish list for the man of her dreams," Daria blurted out, earning a harsh
look from Jane as Mack looked in closer.
"Jamie's
a jock, too, and he's into photography - I guess that counts as art," Mack
said. "Hey, Daria - aren't you a camera hound, too?"
"I can
open a canister of film without it exploding."
"Hey,
Daria - film can explode if you try to take it out of the little cans?"
Kevin asked, his eyes going wide. "Really?"
"Yes, Kevin,
it's true - but you can disarm it by putting it in your microwave for five
minutes. Stay close by - you'll need to watch it."
"You are
a sick little bear cub, Morgendorffer," Jane chirped. "Jamie's the
only other athlete in here, and Mack's taken - he &Jodie'll have the
responsibility of making sure black people exist after the war."
"You'd
better believe it," Jodie laughed, squeezing Mack's hand into her own.
"Nobody's getting hold of you for a long time - in or out of a fallout
shelter."
"Because
of the class size, there will be nine people in Group Three," Dr.
Armalin's voice rang out, catching Daria's attention. "The following
people are in Group Three: Lane, Landon, Mackenzie, Griffin, Hecuba-Thorne,
Taylor, Morgendorffer, Thomphson and Dewitt-Clinton."
"Daria,
isn't Ted into martial arts?"
"I think so, Mack - I know he knows how to fence,"
Daria replied. "Looking at him as breeder material, Jane?"
"Say, Daria," Jane shot back, a smirk growing across
her face, "I caught the order in which he read those names off. Doesn't
that make you 'Seven of Nine?' Trent'll just love seeing you in that catsuit
and heels. Make sure you wear the brown one."
"Ha, ha. How would your ass feel about assimilating my
boot?"
"Dr. Armalin, " Jodie asked, raising her hand,
"we're supposed to build this thing because of some disaster. What kind of
disaster occurred, sir?"
"Use your imagination, Miss Landon," the doctor
quipped. "Who knows what could have happened? Perhaps there was a civil
war instigated by combined elements of militia groups and breakaway elements of
the military... maybe a small asteroid hit the Earth a la 'Deep Impact."
He smiled as he tossed a glance in Daria's direction.
"Maybe Miss Morgendorffer's dreams for mankind became reality... or,
perhaps, she simply unleashed her inner Vogon, and read some poetry at the
planet."
Daria felt her face flushing crimson over scarlet as waves of
laughter from the class poured over her. "You've got the rest of the
period to work on the project," Dr. Armalin said, holding up a folder from
a stack on his desk. "Here's your project folder with the necessary
information for the project simulation. If any of you are familiar with
role-playing games, some of this information will seem very familiar, and
you'll probably have an easier time in the start-up and development stages.
Everyone should pick up one of these folders, and then you should get together
with your group to start your planning. I recommend that you develop your
characters first; that'll tell you the type of talents and resources you'll
have to work with - but even more importantly, it'll tell you what you don't
have, what you need and what goals you should focus on."
"Has anyone ever really gone overboard with their project
- I mean, in terms of doing extra stuff?" Jane asked, drawing a very
curious look from Daria as she spoke.
"Oh,
yes," Kyle told her. "The third time I taught the seminar was at a
junior college in central Illinois - you've probably never heard of it. One
group actually got permission to use a lounge area - it was reserved for the
school's role-playing game club - and actually redid it to serve as the
shelter!"
"So,
what did they do?" Jodie asked.
"Well,
they took it seriously. They had brought MRE's - that's 'Meals, Ready to Eat',
or the meals that American troops take into the field to eat - in as their
primary food source. For the occasional change in their diets, the group
jury-rigged up a decent hydroponics garden for fresh vegetables and fruits, and
they also worked with some engineering students and the College of Life
Sciences to come up with a self-contained environmental-control system that
tied into the hydroponics garden to purify the air in the shelter. Did I
mention that the students set up the room so that it was environmentally
separate from the rest of the college?"
"You let
them do all of that?" Ted asked, his eyes wide.
"I
didn't know what they had done until it was all over," Kyle said. "If
you go over the top and it works, people don't mention the outrageous lengths
you've gone to as such. If you succeed, you're 'incredibly motivated and able
to overcome the odds through unconventional thinking."
"See,
Daria?" Jane whispered, leaning in towards her. "There's hope for you
yet!"
"Rah,
rah. Go, normalcy."
"You
know, if I thought it would do any good, I'd tell you that you need to go off
to a place like New Orleans or Fire Island and get laid 'Blue Lagoon'-style,
with some six-foot-six dark-haired beach god and island drums beating in the
background for a week or two," Jane retorted. "If I thought it would
loosen you up, I'd say 'Go Cinemax!' and tell you to go for the tiny
platinum-blonde beach bunny with the huge blue moon-eyes and the 36C cup -
hell, I'd have sex with you if I thought it would do any good!"
"Yeah,
but you'd steal cab fare out of my purse while I was asleep, and a couple of
months later, I'd see how you took what happened and made it into an art show
just so you could get a grant from the NEA."
"Would
the two of you cut it out?" Jodie whispered as she leaned in towards them.
"Charles heard what you said, and I swear he nearly passed out and snapped
his desk in half - from the bottom, if you get my meaning!"
Daria and
Jane shared a shudder, and turned back to the front of the room.
"They
also had a small magnetically powered generator, electronic equipment, a
video-game console and a television/VCR/DVD combo unit for entertainment - you
name it, these kids either had it or came up with logical reasons why they
couldn't," Kyle continued. "Their environmental system also had a
flash-distillery and a molecular-level repurification system to provide them
with clean water and fuel from their own waste products! They designed a
micro-shower that was quite effective, used a magnetic stove - and put together
one SERIOUS electrical-field array as a security system!"
"Not
bad," Upchuck said, only marginally impressed as he scribbled in a
notebook, but Sandi raised her hand.
"Dr.
Armalin - did they really do all of that, or are you just stretching the truth
to get us to work harder?"
"Miss
Griffin - in the 1980's, two engineering students at an East Coast university
whose name escapes me at the moment collected or surmised information on atomic
weapons development, then used that data to construct an actual working
device," Kyle told the young woman, whose eyes went wide as he spoke.
"All those two students needed was plastic explosives, some weapons-grade
radioactive material, and they would have had a functional nuclear device capable
of leveling a city... and they got their information off the Internet and
through the Freedom of Information Act. If you're serious about a project and
are willing to put in the work - like they did - you can do anything."
Kyle happened
to glance over at Upchuck as he spoke, and for a moment, he saw a look in the
boy's eyes that gave him pause. He recognized that look... no.
The kid's a moneybag leaking hormones; he doesn't have the
stones... not a high school kid like him. What could a bantam rooster like him do
with a project like this? Better get ready for one hell of a video
presentation...
"And then, to prove that it wasn't just
smoke-and-mirrors, the lifepod group sealed themselves in for a full school
week. The administration wasn't happy with that - they thought that it was just
for show - but for five full days, no one could have or did get into that room
with anything short of military action. I didn't give that group 'A's - they
TOOK their grades."
"That must have been something to see," Jodie said.
"Do we have to do something like that?"
"Don't worry - I don't expect you guys to be THAT over
the top. I do, however, expect you to give me your best efforts possible."
Dr. Armalin picked up his briefcase and started for the door
when Brittany squeaked, "Doctor Armalin, you're not leaving us here alone,
are you?"
"You're almost an adult, Miss Taylor," he replied,
his gaze sweeping across the class. "You all are. It really doesn't say
much for me or any of you if I need to sit and watch over you while you work on
an assignment that all of you should be quite capable of at least beginning
without any help. It also doesn't say much about all of you if you feel that
you should coop yourselves up in a classroom to work on this - unless, of
course, you feel that you can work more effectively in a classroom environment.
I'll see you all in class tomorrow. Good day, Miss Taylor."
"So, that means that you ARE leaving us here alone?"
*****
About two
minutes earlier...
"Drink,
Anthony?"
"It's
12:45, Angela, and I teach history in a high school," Anthony DeMartino
said, looking out the window of the somewhat comfortable office as Principal
Angela Li turned the dials on her wall safe and brought out a bottle of
amber-colored liquor. "I could have used a drink three hours ago."
"Indeed,"
the stately Asian woman said, bringing out two crystal tumblers and returning
to her desk. "I wanted to ask you for two reasons. First - to join me for
a celebratory draught, to celebrate your incredible good fortune."
"Pardon?"
"A
letter arrived for you today, from the superintendent of the district,"
Angela said, pouring a generous dollop of Glenmorangie single-malt scotch into
a tumbler and extending it to him before pouring herself one as well. "Mr.
DeMartino - Anthony - it gives me great pleasure to inform you that you are now
the new Assistant Principal of Lawndale High School."
"AAAAAAAAAUUUGGGHHHH!"
"If it
wasn't for the fact that I knew Dr. Armalin had both Thomphson and Taylor in
the seminar, I might be concerned by that," Angela said, after the sound
of the Doctor's scream had passed.
"If it
wasn't for those two being in there right now - I'd say the universe doesn't
want me to take this job," Anthony agreed, "assuming I accept. I'm
not really all that interested in administration, Angela, MBA to the contrary.
I like dealing with the kids. Most of them. I'm not interested in giving up
teaching."
"You
won't have to, but I'm afraid that you will lose teaching hours
regardless," Angela retorted. "Your additional duties will leave no
other option than cutting back on some of your classes. I've been thinking of
asking the Doctor if he'd be interested in taking over those classes, and
coming aboard full-time."
"Angela,
I only ask that you tell me in advance when you're planning to have that
conversation - so I can be out of the building," Anthony laughed.
"You've tried this before. Accept that the kid's not going to do this
full-time and keep driving. Back to me, though - what else is in it for
me?"
"A
fifteen-percent increase in salary - apparently, they passed a special
appropriations measure to finance your new position - and an office of your
own, as well as a personal parking space and access codes for the schools'
tactical syst- I mean, 'security systems'."
Placing her
tumbler down on the desktop, Angela came over and faced down the man who stood
a good head over her. "Which brings us to number two. I would prefer to
not see my new assistant principal 'playing doctor' with my arts and crafts
instructor after hours in the nurses' office again. We have cameras in there,
too."
"You
never surprise me, Angela."
"Remember
that," she said, opening her desk and tossing him three tiny digital
videotapes. "Those will come out of your salary. The footage from the
overhead camera shot is especially... energetic."
"Thank
you," he said, sliding the tapes into his pocket and raising his glass in
a toast. "I can promise you, as your new Assistant Principal, that I'll
never do anything like that in the nurses' office again."
"Agreed,"
Angela echoed, raising her glass as well. "That's what your new office is
for."
They finished
their drinks. "Say, I don't understand something - how the hell did
Thomphson and Taylor get into that seminar anyway? I thought it was an advanced
study for the better students?"
"Miss
Taylor actually scored high enough in several areas to be considered for
this," Angela told him, "and as for Mr. Thomphson... he needed
something extra for his transcript besides 'A's in Phys Ed. Dr. Armalin
understands that through this opportunity, the boy is to bring honor, and
glory, to Lawndale High."
"So you
told Kyle he could really screw with his mind - as long as the boy gets a 'C'
in the class."
"And if
he gets a 'B' - honestly - the Doctor gets a $10,000 bonus at the end of the
school year."
"And if
Thomphson gets an 'A'?"
"If THAT
happens - the good Doctor will be spending a week at the Playboy Manor,"
Angela replied. "Hugh owes me a few favors..."
*****
"Hey,
Andrea - got any more of those chips?"
"I
should just hijack you down there so you can get your own," Andrea
Hecuba-Thorne spoke up, pulling a bag of 'Bayou Boiler Chips' from her
knapsack. "I've only got six of seven bags left -"
"Twenty
bucks."
"I'd
like to keep a few - there's a 'Fangs for the Memories' vampire-flick marathon
on 'Sci-Fi' this weekend, and I was going to -"
"Forty."
"Jodie -
you can't get these outside of Louisiana, and my cousins are jerks who always
forget to mail me chips even when I pay them up front -"
"Fifty."
"Come
over to my house about eight. I have to work this afternoon."
The two girls
started over to the cafeteria table where the other members of their group had
gathered. "Hey, are those hot chips?" Sandi asked, the lone person
not to draw back as Jodie pulled open her 'bag o' crunchy Hell-farts', as Jane
had taken to calling the fiery, fragrant chips - but not in the presence of
Jodie. "Can I have some?"
"NO,"
Andrea said, but Jodie let a thin, evil smile cross her face.
"Why,
sure, Sandi," Jodie said, "if you really think you can handle one.
They are really hot, and I don't want you-"
"One?
ONE! I was eating mashed jalapenos instead of pablum as a baby!" Sandi
huffed, taking SERIOUS offense at the implication that SHE couldn't do anything
that Jodie could do - that is, if she really wanted to... "I can eat those
bland things and probably not notice it!"
"Okay,"
Jodie said, picking out an especially large and spice-coated chip.
"Because I'm a nice person -"
"Jodie -
I got those for you, and I don't think that she'd like it-"
"Oh,
don't be a baby, Andrea. After all, she probably won't even notice that she
even ate it -"
"GIMME
THAT!" Sandi barked, swiping the chip, chomping down and sending it into
oblivion before Andrea could rise from her seat. "You see? That's not even
remotely as hot as -"
With Jodie's
recent foray into the 'burn your ass-hairs off' section of the EM spectrum (not
to mention snack aisle), Jane had taken to getting gallon-size pitchers of ice
water placed at any table Jodie was spending any time at. Sandi was fortunate
in that Jane had thought to get three pitchers for the group; without delay, a
single repentant glance or word of impetuous denial, Sandi grabbed at the first
pitcher and emptied it without a drop being spilled. As the table's occupants
watched with a mixture of mirth and amazement, Sandi finished the first pitcher
and downed two-thirds of the second pitcher's contents before putting the
container down and sitting back in her seat. She was sweating profusely, and
her complexion was now the bright-red shade of a really bad sunburn.
Jodie looked
over at a slightly reticent Sandi, and devoured a chip while giving the girl a
condescending look of nuclear proportions. "Amateur."
"Don't
worry - all that water should dilute it," Andrea said, her Goth-style
makeup adding a slight chill to her interestingly attractive facial features -
a touch androgynous, if one looked very closely. I hope, she also thought to
herself. "Before we start up, there's something you all should know.
Upchuck is going to try and steal Ted away for the group he's in."
Jodie and
Sandi both spun around from their spots at the cafeteria table the nine
students of Group Three sat at to look across the room at Group One, where
Upchuck sat. For his part, Upchuck ('Little Charles' to a select few, including
one Stacy 'Nibblet' Rowe - and it would have stunned EVERYONE to know that they
had been dating for the past year) glanced over at them in return, and turned
back to his conversation with his group...
"How do
you know that, Andrea?" Jodie asked.
"Yeah? I
don't want to work with him - he's entirely too rude and disrespectful to the
women around here!" Ted Dewitt-Clinton chirped. "Someone needs to
take him to a meeting of the 'Promise Keepers' and show him how real men
interact with the fairer sex!"
Andrea looked
at Ted the way she'd look at roadkill, then continued after a moment of
internal dissention - which didn't go unnoticed. "I heard him talking with
that Rowe girl, Griffin," Andrea directed towards Sandi. "Upchuck
said that he's got some stuff about the Doctor's other classes and the way he
grades, so they're going to - I think he said, 'do an end run around the
Doctor'. Something about backstops, backstairs. I don't know."
Ted's ears
pricked up like a cat that's just heard a mouse squeak. "Backstep?"
he asked, his eyes almost shining.
"Yeah,
that's what he said -"
Ted grabbed
his books and darted off towards Upchuck's table - to the surprise of everyone
save Andrea. "I guess that's something important to him," Andrea
surmised.
"Okay, I
guess we're down to eight now," Jodie sighed, watching as Upchuck spoke to
an excited Ted and then moved over to make room for him at the table. "So,
we're supposed to use these conversion tables to determine what talents we
have, yada, yada, yada. First things first. We need to decide where we'll place
the shelter."
"Wrong,
Jodie, "Sandi interrupted. "First, we should nominate Brittany as our
chief of security. I remember how she handled her business out in the woods,
and she can probably kick anybody's ass here. Besides, she can cut Kevin off if
he tells anybody where we're putting the shelter."
Jodie opened
her mouth as if to speak, but then nodded. "Not bad, Sandi. Anybody else
got any nominations for security chief?"
"I was
thinking of Mack," Jane said, getting a strange look from Daria. "His
dad's a corporate security expert, so he probably knows all about how you'd put
together security for a place like this."
"Use
them both," Sandi said. "They should be able to keep Kevin from
opening his mouth. We also need to think about buying materials through 'dummy'
companies - that way, it'll be harder to trace things back to the
project."
Jodie nodded
as she took out her Dictaphone and turned it on. "Good idea, Sandi. I
think we need to begin by cordoning off the entire area for a five-mile area,
and putting all sorts of monitors out to watch out for people. Brittany, what
do we want out there?"
"Well,
we'll have a combination of active and passive sensors, Jodie," Brittany
said, sipping a diet soda. "We start with a network of ultrasensitive
bioscanners that'll detect the electromagnetic signal put out by the human
heart and brain about the area, as well as motion detectors, thermal-imaging
panoramic video cameras, weight-specific vibration detectors set for human-norm
weight levels and low-power UV laser-grids - if something breaks a beam, we'll
know they're there AND they can't see the beam without special equipment!
You'll also need to put scent-detectors on the laser-grid emitters - people try
to use mirrors to defeat the beams, but if we cue the scent-detectors to track
for human scents OR just for soap, you'll get them as soon as they get
close!"
People
started to ease themselves away from Brittany.
"We'll go ahead and electrify the fences - and run armed
patrols along the perimeter every thirty minutes, but stagger the start of each
period so that any intruder can't figure out any pattern to patrol times,"
the bubbly cheerleader continued. "We should also just go ahead and use
dogs, because they'll catch any bad guys that manage to defeat our tech and
they'll have better instincts on if something's wrong on the perimeter! One
more thing - we need to have a security strike unit on three-minute standby at
all times in case of hostile incursion or in case someone on staff breaks
containment during the construction phase! They'll need to be heavily armed,
and I recommend that they act in two groups: a unit in helicopters to quickly
locate and pin the intruders down, and a fast-moving ground unit in Humvees to
sanitize the area!"
The entire
table went dead silent. "What-?" Brittany asked, taking another sip
of soda.
"Nothing
at all, Brittany," Jodie said. "You work specifically on our security
needs - and tone it down, this isn't 'Stallion's Gate' we're working on."
"Stallion's
Gate?" Mack asked, curious.
"Place
in New Mexico - that's where the government ran 'Project Quantum Leap'
from," Jane yawned.
"If
we're going to do this the way Dr. Armalin says," Andrea spoke up,
"then that's exactly what we should do - just go ahead and assume that
we're a government operation. If it's not straight out military, then it's
almost definitely a black project."
'One, what's
race got to do with this? Two, he said that we're not government agents!"
"A
'black' project is a project that doesn't exist as far as the government is
concerned, Sandi," Brittany said, anger flashing through her pretty
features. "It doesn't have anything to do with race - and you shouldn't be
bigoted. It's wrong, and you should apologize to Mack and Jodie. Second - in
case you had REALLY been paying attention in class, he said we're not
government agents, but that the project's called 'Department Omega'.
We're a government agency."
"That's
cutting it pretty thin, Taylor," Mack said, giving her an extra-warm smile
for the way she just killed two birds with one stone - he saw how Jodie had
turned towards Sandi, and was surprised that she hadn't snapped and flattened
the girl long before. The debacle of Linda Griffin's buying her daughter a
Student Council seat and the resulting blowup the two had in the 'Class Land'
group house (may that abortion be buried and forever forgotten) had
stoked Jodie's underlying anger towards Sandi like a furnace at a German
death-camp...
"His
rules," Brittany smiled back, feeling a flush of warmth spread across her
face. Mack really did have such a perfect smile, when he had reason to have
one. You'd think that with Jodie as his girl, he'd smile more often - but then,
she'd never seen Jodie treat Mack the way he did her... you know, like someone
you really cared about like that... And you know, the Kevin thing's getting a
bit worn to the bone, and oh, look at Michael's shoulders, and his eyes, and
his hands are just SO big - Oops! Back to reality, girl!
"She's
right," Andrea allowed, noticing Brittany's split-second rutting over Mack
and letting it pass. "When you look at what we're supposed to do, it just
makes sense that we're 'the Man'."
"Looks
like you're the security chief at Stallion's Gate after all, " Jane said,
tossing a glance in Brittany's direction. Maybe she'll do after all...
"Cool!"
Brittany piped up. "I don't have to wear red, do I? Bad things happen to
security people who wear red, and I'm not going to be Security Guard 'Kenny' on
the 'U.S.S. Kevorkian!"
Daria looked
at the bubbly blonde cheerleader - and stunned didn't begin to describe how she
felt. Brittany had just made a joke. A good one. A sarcastic one. What was
going on? Speaking of which - when did Jane become a closet sci-fi fanboy? When
did Mack start getting attention from all the girls? How did I miss that?
"I'm
going to need some help," Brittany said, "so can I get at least one
other person to help out?"
"I don't
mind, Brittany," Jane said, and ignored the stare Daria gave her. "I
can do that-"
"Hold on
- I can do security stuff, too, " Mack cut in. "I'm stronger than
you, and I can outrun you!"
"You
might be able to run faster, but not farther than me, " she shot back.
"Oh, I
see - so endurance is what you're looking for..."
Jane rolled
her eyes, and Jodie pulled at Mack's ear to get him to sit down. "Horn
dog," she smiled. "Save it for after the bomb. Daria, you're good at
history and English - maybe you should be in charge of what literature,
historical and educational materials we take into the shelter. I also think
you'd work out really well as our backstop - you know, checking to see if
there's anything we've missed. You've probably the most well-read of us all, so
-"
"I'll
take that job," Andrea sounded off, beginning to write in her notebook.
"I've probably seen a few books that you guys haven't seen."
"How can
you be so sure of that, Miss-Goth-Is-Good?" Sandi asked. "At least we
know that Quinn's cousin is always reading because she doesn't date, but aren't
you always doing that spooky stuff?"
Andrea
sighed, then cracked her knuckles. "Okay - test time. Who's read 'The
Prince?"
Daria, Jodie and Brittany raised their hands, eliciting a
raised eyebrow from Daria. "What about 'How To Read A Book?"
Daria and
Jodie raised hands. "The 1974 edition of the World Book Encyclopedia,
volume 'S'?"
Daria's hand
went up. "The Turner Diaries?"
Daria and
Brittany raised their hands. "You're kidding," Daria remarked, her
eyes widening. "You're becoming a reader?"
"And
you're becoming a mean person!" the bubbly cheerleader pouted, turning her
head away from Daria as Andrea continued.
"The
Satanic Verses?"
Daria and
Mack raised their hands. "You read that?" Jane asked Mack, amazement
in her eyes.
"I was
curious," he admitted. "Holy war' and everything... hey, an entire
religion went after the guy."
"The
Autobiography of Malcolm X?"
Daria and
Jodie raised their hands. "Yeah, as if I'd get out of reading THAT," Jodie
smirked.
"The
Rock Says...' The Autobiography of The Rock?"
Daria's hand
went up. "Explain that," Jane laughed, and Daria glowered at her.
"I was
at Mom's office all day one Saturday, and her partner's son had left it there.
I was bored, she wouldn't let me leave, and it was the only book in the entire
place that didn't have law cases in it."
"'The
Sewing Circle?"
Daria gave a
start. "Never heard of it."
"It outs
lesbian film stars from the '30's to the '50's - kind of esoteric. I'll give
you a pass. 'Men Are From Mars - Women Are From Venus?"
Daria's mouth
started to open, then slammed shut. "Strike two," Andrea sighed.
"Any of the 'Sweet Valley High' series of books?"
Daria dropped
her eyes. "It's like Regis says, Daria - 'It's not the difficulty that'll
get you, it's the wide range of knowledge. One more: 'The Greatest
Generation?"
Daria
couldn't look up. "Damn. You need to read in the bookstores as well as in
the library. Just because it's popular doesn't mean you're shallow for reading
it - its called having range."
"I've
got range in my reading."
"The
'Necronomicon', or any of the books in the 'Left Behind' series."
"Andrea,
you don't have to rub it in," Jodie scolded, annoyed at Daria's sullen
silence and the smug smirk Sandi had suddenly grown. "You get to be the
librarian. Say, where's Kevin, anyway?"
Annoyingly on
cue, Janet Barch opened the door of the cafeteria and escorted a red-faced
Kevin - now in cargo pants and a hooded sweatshirt - into the area. "Just
remember - one screw-up, and the Doctor gives you to me," Barch hissed,
letting go of his arm. "I'll be waiting for you..."
"Oh, Ms.
Barch?" Upchuck said, coming up to the teacher. "Could I have a word
with you, please...?"
"What do
you want, Charles -?"
""Please,
over here..."
Kevin, suddenly realizing that Ms. Barch had released him, all
but sprinted over to the table where the others waited. "Whoa, dudes, I thought
she was going to kill me just by looking at me!" he blurted out, looking
over at Jane's unfinished snack and reaching out for one. "Hey, chicken
nuggets! Can I have - AHHHHHHH! OWWW!"
Jane stabbed at Kevin's hand as hard as she could with her
plastic spoon/fork utensil, also known as a 'spork'. "MINE!" she
hissed, pulling her spork out of his hand and grinning evilly as she watched
him rub the spot where the utensil actually left marks without breaking the
skin. "Don't put your hands on ANYTHING of mine unless I say you
can!"
"Jeez, Norma Bates, ease up already! I'm sorry!"
"Where were you, Kevvie?"
"They
had to call my mom," he said, sheepishly glancing around the table.
"She brought some clothes... I only had my jock on after I got out of my
uniform -"
"Too
much information - thank you very much, " Jodie snapped, wincing in union
with the others at the table. "Next on the list - where do we hide the
shelter?"
"The
shelter - you mean, the thing from class? You're working on that now?"
"Yes,
Kevin," Jodie sighed, already feeling the pressure build behind her
forehead at the prospect of having to listen to 'Kevin-logic'. "We need to
plan on where to hide the shelter-"
"Yo,
dudette - you can't hide the hideout!" Kevin cried out. "We've gotta
tell people where the place is, so we can get pizza delivered when we watch the
football games on Sunday!"
Kevin found
himself on the receiving end of seven very hostile stares, all wrapped in a
thick blanket of deafening silence. "Well, we gotta have pizza - right,
Brit? Right? Brittany, you know I gotta have my pie with everything on it
during the game!"
The others
silently stood as one and walked away. "Brit? Mack? Jodie? Aw, come on -
you know you want pizza delivery, too!" A short pause. "Guys? Where
are you going? Are you all going to the john at the same time?"
*****
"This
could be the single worst cup of coffee - no, the single most foul and vile
substance that I have ever tasted in all of what I've come to consider a
miserable life."
Seated in the
editing suite (actually, Morgendorffer Consulting's smaller conference room),
Jake, a stunning red-haired Englishwoman, and a handsome Italian man nodded in
communal misery as they glanced at their barely touched cups of coffee.
"She's a four-star chef, and she can't make a decent pot of coffee,"
Wendy Thackerell continued, pushing her heavy stoneware cup away and turned
back to the non-linear editing machine that had been set up in the room.
"So I guess all of us lesser females can finally rejoice - she of all the
hair and curves can't do one thing right!"
Love your
curves, baby, Vince Rizzo thought under his breath, thinking about the date
he had lined up with her for Thursday night and mentally licking his lips as he
noticed the way Wendy's T-shirt showed off her charms... not to mention her
disdain for undergarments. I've got some Yanni, a bottle of pinot noir and
sweet, sweet plans once I get you up in my loft, baby girl... I've heard stories
about you screwing like a jackrabbit on speed - well, now it's MY turn for some
of that action-!
That's what
you think, you greasy jerk bastard, Wendy thought to herself as she watched him with
her peripheral vision. She had seen that look before.
The blustery
thirtysomething who acted as the director and production manager for 'North of
the Border' tried to take another sip of the fetid liquid and nearly gagged.
"That must be really horrid if you can't get it down," Vince said,
smirking as Wendy pushed the cup away. "I mean, I've heard that you
swallow-"
Jake's shock
of Vince's comment was dampened somewhat as Wendy, eyes widened as an instant
surge of electric rage arced through her, snatched the cup up and whipped it
with all of her strength directly at Vince's head!
The sharp,
quick sound of Vince's cry of pain, the thud! of the cup impacting against his
forehead and his unconscious form falling back from his chair greeted Lauriel
and Horizon as they entered the room. "Let me guess - he made a comment
about sex with your grandmother or your dog," Lauriel winced, shaking her
head as Jake quietly picked up Wendy's cup and slid it back across the table to
her. "If you can't stop dating the hired help, Wendy - could you at least
stop assaulting them in public?"
"I'd be
happy if you stopped living the 'redheads are evil' stereotype," Horizon
snipped, earning her an impatient look from Jake. "Well -?"
"Then
ask them to show a little more discretion or at least keep from dipping their
comments in the gutter before they open their mouths," Wendy growled, and
turned her eyes upon Horizon. "Piss off."
She turned back to Lauriel. "I was going to fire him
anyway - he's been using the cameras on the weekends to make 'videos'. When are
you going to learn how to make coffee?"
"I know
how to make coffee -"
"Not her
fault," Horizon winced. "I put some overnight cleaner in the machine
- and I forgot to mention it when I called in earlier. Sorry."
"Did you
at least bring my steak fries?" Wendy asked, glancing away from the
keyboard as Horizon set a bag down on the table. "Steak and cheese
sandwich, steak fries with ranch and cheese dip, and a large Sprite?"
"I got
it - I got it!" Horizon snapped, taking a smaller bag out and sliding it
over to her. "Why were you all trying to drink that coffee - it's almost 3
p.m.!"
"You've
never spent time playing 'edit bunny," Wendy said, wolfing down a BIG bite
o the large sandwich as the others watched in slight amazement - after all,
NOTHING Wendy did caused much of a rise after a while... 'slashing outlaw' was a
reasonable description of the woman. "Girls are 'edit bunnies', guys are
'edit mummies' - you spend a lot of time in a small room in the dark, usually underground.
Coffee is a vital fluid when you spend hours and hours in front of an editing
monitor. I thought you were an intern!"
"Business
- remember?"
"Oh,
yeah - right. Pass me some of that cheese sauce," Wendy said, chomping
down a couple of steak fries. "Hey, Jake! Make yourself useful - haul that
piece of crap out of here and stick a check for his severance on him! What
about you, Intern Girl - letting your brain necrofy in silence while you wait
for new kneepads to come in before finals? You help!"
Horizon
started over the table but was stopped by Jake. "Behave or I take the
car," Jake said, shaking his finger at her. "Lauriel, do you
mind?"
"You get
that side," the Latina said, grasping his left arm. "Let's go..."
They lifted
the surprisingly heavy man out of the conference room and down the hall to a
small room with a couple of soft, reclining chairs a television and a
single-size bed. "Lay him out here," Jake said, guiding them over to
the bed. "Just drop him."
They put a
still-unconscious Vince on the bed, and Lauriel dropped into one of the
recliners. "Give me a moment," she said, breathing a little hard as
she sat back.
"Are you
alright?" Jake said, going over to her - and trying not to notice the
incredible length and definition of Lauriel's legs as she leaned back.
"That shouldn't have tired you out-"
"I'm
pregnant," she stated bluntly - and laughed as Jake stumbled back, his
face absolutely drained of color. "Gotcha!"
"Don't
DO that!" Jake said, easing his way towards the other chair. "Now, I
need to sit down..."
"I guess
I need to start going back to the fitness club," Lauriel said, stretching
herself in the chair. "Time to pull the old orange pullover out of
retirement and start up with the jogging again. Want to come along?"
"No,
thanks - already had one heart attack." And watching you bounce around
an indoor track in a skintight leotard is not going to cause my next, he
thought. That's what I have a family for. "That's what did my
father in."
"I
thought I heard that your father was a Marine."
"And no
war could kill him - he had the fruit salad to prove it."
"Pardon
me? 'Fruit Salad?"
"That's
what they call all of the ribbons on the front of a soldier's uniform that
represent the medals he's won," Jake said. "God knows he earned every
one of them... Alexander Hamilton 'Mad Dog' Morgendorffer - a true-blue,
flag-waving, card-carrying 'real American hero. The old bastard managed to
survive three no-shit wars, God knows how many 'incidents' and every whorehouse
in Amsterdam, Germany and the Far East Theatre without a scratch or sniffle -
but he gets back here, stuck behind a desk on a permanent basis - and dies a
month later."
The
bitterness that usually preceded a rant began to bubble into his voice; he
looked up to see Lauriel kneeling down next to him, true concern in her eyes as
she took his hand in her own. "Was he a bad man, Jacob?"
The look of
true, honest concern in those large, gentle eyes calmed Jake down and allowed
his bitterness to bleed off into nothingness. "No," he admitted,
"In a very real sense, he wasn't. He was just trying to make me over in
his image - the next generation of the 'American fighting man.' I guess it
never occurred to him that I'd want anything other than to follow in his
footsteps - after all, he was a damned hero that kids all over looked up
to!"
"Really?"
"Dad
enlisted in the Marines in 1944, just after he turned sixteen - he was already
six-foot-four and built like a bulldozer," Jake told her. "He lied
about his age, of course, and they sent him to the South Pacific with a
flame-thrower and an attitude. He got the name 'Mad Dog' because - well, one
time, his unit was pinned down by heavy fire coming out of a dense area of the
jungle, so he managed to sneak out of the ambush. The others in his unit thought
he was a coward and ran away, but he was moving around and through the jungle
growth so he could come up from behind. "
He sat up,
more than aware of the warm touch of Lauriel's hand and yet not letting go.
"He was about a hundred or so yards behind them when he runs into five or
six of the enemy - apparently, they had the same thought he did about making
their way behind. They start shooting, he flames them as he gets hit - and his
tank gets nicked. One of the bad guys - I don't know, he must've thought about
getting a brand-new flame-thrower from the U.S. Marines was a good idea. So -
instead of just shooting him, he gets a belt from somewhere and gets it around
Dad's neck to strangle him - or at least keep him busy while another soldier
slices him with his sword."
Lauriel looked up. "His
sword? How did he -"
"Dad
swung the belt-guy around and HE got sliced, then got him with the
flame-thrower," Jake continued. "Now, here's where it gets weird -
because Dad swore he didn't remember any of this - but the guys in Dad's unit
suddenly see the jungle where the shooters are just explode into flames like a
Roman candle! The Japanese soldiers just start throwing their guns down and
running - in total fear of something coming behind them... and that's when they
see Dad charging after the soldiers, literally foaming at the mouth and yelling
incoherently at the top of his voice! He actually ran through the flames, with
the flame-thrower in one hand, the sword in the other - and the belt still
tight around his neck, looking for all the world like a broken leash!"
"That
would scare anybody."
"It
really bothered the platoon CO - he had Dad checked out for mental problems.
Meanwhile, the big-shots are looking over the combat area: it turns out that
the bad guys had the firepower to wipe out the entire unit and then move in to
do serious damage to the landing craft on the beach about five miles away. If
that wasn't enough to make them go nice with Dad, checking his flame-thrower
and finding his makeshift repairs -"
"Makeshift
repairs?"
"Chewing
gum and duct tape. They gave him the Medal of Honor three weeks later,"
Jake said. "The nickname 'Mad Dog' stuck almost immediately... and then they
stuck him behind a desk for the next three years - except for promotional
tours. They found out about his age but they couldn't put him back into action
- so he waited, went into Recon, and zoomed through jump school. When he turned
nineteen, he got married - and when Korea happened, he volunteered. I was born
the day he parachuted in."
"And he
was never around," Lauriel said. "You didn't have a father... you had a
walking recruiting poster. Jacob, I'm so sorry..."
"It was
okay, I guess - being the son of 'Mad Dog' - until they sent me to Buxton
Ridge. I hated he place," Jake reflected. "There was one nice thing
about military school, though: there was a cook there. Albert Horstmeyer. He
was career Army - thirty-five years running mess halls and dining rooms on
three continents, and even Presidents ate his food. He would tell me
stories..." Lauriel smiled as she saw the content, warm look the memories
brought over him. "I learned all sorts of things about cooking and food
from him. 'Gunny Horse-Meat' - they called him that out of backhanded respect,
because he could feed men a good meal with anything he got his hands on... Gunny
showed me that wearing a uniform and serving your country didn't have to mean
killing everything in sight, or being a 'big hero'... it could just mean making
the lives of the people around you a bit better, even if it's just for a single
meal. I guess that's why I always try to cook for my girls..."
"Jacob..."
Lauriel stroked his cheek. "Oh, Jacob..."
She reached
over and hugged him, and for once, he didn't resist as she put her arms around
him and held him tight. "I've never told anybody about 'Gunny Horse-Meat'
before," he said, "not even Helen. I just never - I mean, I didn't
think that she'd -"
Lauriel
gently parted from him. "Thank you," she said. "Thank you for
sharing that with me."
"You
understand," Jake said, brushing the hair away from Lauriel's eyes.
"When I lost that 'pet cigars' account a year or so back, I felt so empty;
like I wasn't worth anything. That's why I started cooking again. With
everything from Helen and her career to the girls to my business on the fritz,
I needed something to make me feel good again, like those times I had in the
mess hall at Buxton Ridge. And then, when I got a chance to work with you, and
all the time we've had together..."
A sudden,
uncomfortable feeling came over the both of them, and Lauriel pulled away from
his touch as she stood up. "I, ah, think that we should go back and edit
our lunches."
"We can
do that as we eat the show for next week," Jake echoed. "I'll get
some tapes from the Sony machine down the hall."
The two
exited the room quickly and quietly, each acutely aware of the other's personal
space as Jake allowed Lauriel to go ahead of him out the door. Neither gave a
second thought to the still insensate form of Vance, alone and prone on the
small bed behind them.
*****
"Thank
you, Ms. Li," Upchuck said, closing the door behind himself as he left the
principal's office.
"Charles
-!" came a whispered cry, and Upchuck looked up to see Stacy Rowe in the
doorway of an empty classroom, waving him over. "Come on -!"
Checking
around the hall, Upchuck darted across and inside, closing the door and locking
it before turning to the willowy, leggy brunette who looked at him with large,
shining eyes.
"What
did she say, Charles? Did she say yes?"
"She's
going to talk to my father - he's invited her to lunch at the office,"
Upchuck said, moving in closer to Stacy and delighting in the wide smile on her
face. "Everything looks good, though."
"Oh, I'm
so happy for you!" Stacy cried out, wrapping her arms around him in a hug.
"Everyone's going to be so impressed by what you're going to do - oh, it's
going to be so wonderful!"
"Nowhere
near as wonderful as knowing that I've earned the affections of a wonderful,
charming woman like you," he replied, giving her a chaste kiss on the
cheek. "I'm sorry that I can't give you everything that you deserve,
Stacy..."
"But you
have -"
"No,"
he replied, putting a single finger to her lips. "You are such a special
girl, Stacy Rowe. You should have guys running up to you and begging to do
anything you want. You shouldn't have to be around vain, empty-headed things
like Quinn Morgendorffer and Sandi Griffin and play their lapdog, constantly
telling them how smart and witty and pretty they are! Unlike you, not one of
them has a depth and a personality that makes their beauty even more
divine."
It was
moments like this that made Stacy feel like a princess in a Greco-Roman mythic
tale. A witty, godlike creature in love with her, a wonderful, divine presence
that literally swept her off her feet each and every time he cast a gaze in her
direction, or spoke to her with words of love and admiration. This, she
thought, she could enjoy for a lifetime.
She remembered how she was within the beginnings of a
relationship with Ted Dewitt-Clinton, but that ended when he would constantly
make disparaging remarks about Charles. One day, tired of the Sandi-esque
tirade of Ted's about Charles and his attitudes towards women, Stacy turned to
him and asked him, "Do you know Charles, Ted? Do you know him as a person?
If you don't, then how can you say all of these things about him?"
Ted
challenged her to live up to her own words. She did - after breaking up with
him - and sought out Charles ('Upchuck' at the time, she remembered with a
passing sense of shame). She wanted to find out why he was like he was - or if
he really was like that.
He was. Oh,
without a doubt, he was... but it was a family thing, she discovered. The
Ruttheimers was a family with a tradition of lasciviousness to shame the
Borgias, the Martin Sheen family, or any extended clan created by Aaron
Spelling or Jackie Collins. Lotharios and Valentinos filled the male ranks for
generations, while Mata Hari, Catherine the Great and Erica Kane might just as
well have been female Ruttheimers. Sexuality and sensuality was the order of
the day in the Clan Ruttheimer... which also disguised the fact that Ruttheimers
were also all-but-undisputed masters of whatever area they chose to enter.
Charles' father was a computer guru of the first order; his twin older sisters
were, respectively, a noted music critic and an Olympic-class martial artist
& fencer. And Charles? He could not only make a computer dance like his
father, but his skills as an artist were such that they could put Jane Lane -
Lawndale High's best - on notice that there was a new gunslinger in town. Stacy
still gasped in awe every time she went into Charles' room and saw some of his
works - the fractal image of a black hole in space, the reproduction of the
'nude, swirling demons' image from 'The Devil's Advocate', but with the faces
and figures of some of their fellow students from LHS - and a museum-quality
portrait of Charles' parents.
Stacy cringed
inwardly as she thought of them. Charles the Second was a nice man and had no
problems with their dating - but his mother...
Bronwyn Ruttheimer had married into the clan, and she was an
intelligent, statuesque Irish inferno that had absolutely no love for Stacy
whatsoever. None. Period. The end. She wanted Stacy GONE.
She tried to talk to her, but Bronwyn was adamant in her
belief that Stacy would one day meet someone else, turn on her 'Little Charles'
and hurt him. Stacy wanted Bronwyn to understand that SHE understood, that she
wouldn't hurt Charles like that, that she was coming to understand what being a
Ruttheimer really meant... and, she discovered one night, as she was drifting off
to sleep, that she wouldn't mind becoming part of that legacy...
She knew,
though, that any chance of that meant someday going head-to-head with Bronwyn.
That meant becoming tougher than she was now, stronger - it meant having some
friends who were strong enough to stand up to Bronwyn, too.
But that was
in the future. For right now, dealing with her Ruttheimer and his innate
drives came first...
"That
doesn't keep you from still hitting on Daria Morgendorffer," Stacy pointed
out, a sharpened point of actual jealously easing through her with painful
slowness. "How do you think it makes me feel when I hear about or see you
worming your way up to one of those girls -?"
"If I
didn't still make passes at them on occasion, they would wonder why I
stopped," Upchuck told her. "They would start prying, and then they
would find out about us. I don't want them to know until I've finished - that
way, I'll be able to give you what you deserve. You should be able to walk
proudly on your own... and walk with whoever you want."
"I
am," Stacy said, kissing the tip of his finger. "I'm going to walk
down these halls with you. I don't care about what any of the others in the
Fashion Club think about us, Charles. I want everyone to know how I feel."
"And
they'll always make fun of you - because of me... 'Upchuck," he objected.
"They've always made fun of me. I don't care, because I know what I am and
to hell with what any of them think... but not to you, Stacy. They're not going
to hurt you because of me."
"Is that
why you've got this whole crazy idea, Charles? For me?" Stacy said, and
big tears appeared in her eyes. "You don't have to prove anything to me
-"
"And
thank you."
Stacy wiped
her eyes, moved by the affection and emotion on the young man's face.
"Charles, you are listening to them if you don't think that you're good
enough -"
"We have
to sneak around in empty classrooms and go out only to places none of the
people we know will go," he replied gently. "I'm not good enough for
you. In the only way that matters - in the eyes of your friends - I'm
not."
He leaned
forward, and tears ran down Stacy's cheeks as they kissed.
"But I'm
going to be," he said, wiping at her face with a napkin. "One day,
I'm going to walk hand-in-hand with you down the halls of this school, and no
one is going to think the worst of you for it. That's a promise to you, Stacy
Rowe; a promise that I am going to keep."
Upchuck
kissed Stacy's cheek once again. "I do love you."
Stacy slid down into a chair, sniffling as she watched him
unlock the classroom door, blow her a kiss, and check the hall before he shot
out through the doorway.
"Don't
you understand anything, Charles?" she said, shaking her head as she tried
in vain to keep the tears from falling. "I love you, too; but I love you
for who you are, right now...!"
*****
"So,
Kyle -"
"Yes,
Angela?"
The Asian
principal's face produced a slight scowl. "Doctor Armalin, let me get this
correct. You've offered one of my prize students a high grade if she chooses
not to attend your special seminar - and in doing so, not giving her a chance
to use her superior scholastic skills in order to bring honor, and glory, to
the students and teachers of LAWNDALE HIGH-"
"Is that
what you're bent over and grabbing your ankles about? I thought you were mad
about my test-driving the cheerleading squad after the game last week!"
"Doctor,
that was an inappropriate and unnecessary comment, and I would prefer that you
not repeat it," Angela growled, her voice unnaturally low. "Now, back
to the case of Miss Morgendorffer. You decided to take it upon yourself to take
this course of action without consulting me -"
"I don't
call you for help unzipping my pants either - although, if you're so inclined,
I think that we could work something -" He let a huge grin cross his face,
countering the Siberian-grade stare Angela projected at him. "You see,
that's the problem here at Lawndale High. The people who're having all the sex
aren't the ones who need it!"
"Are you
QUITE finished, Doctor Armalin?"
The Doctor
leaned forward from the wall he was holding up. "Yeah. I'm finished. Now,
I'll listen to anything sensible that you have to say."
Angela almost
hyperventilated at the man's comment, but quickly composed herself.
"Doctor, I have been watching Miss Morgendorffer since her arrival here
two years ago - and aside from a number of... quirks, she has been a beacon of
academic progress and achievement! I personally recommended her for your
seminar because I felt she would come out of it as a superior pupil!"
"There's
only one problem with your idea, Ms. Li - the child doesn't want it."
"Excuse
me?"
"Ms. Li,
Daria's an incredible student, but she doesn't want to be here," the
Doctor said, walking over and sitting down on top of Li's desk. "Your
academic environment is slightly next to useless for bringing out the
potentials of a mind like hers, and when you factor in the excess baggage she
has from home, her so-called social life and God knows what else, she's a
walking time bomb running hot and loose in your nitroglycerine factory. You blew
your shot with Morgendorffer. If it wasn't for the few friends she has, you'd
have lost her at least a year ago."
"Why, I
- you, you can't say that about my school!"
"I just
did - and you know that I'm right," he said, looking her directly in the
eye. "Your hardcore, 'Stalag 17' approach to education may work for all
those kids who need for someone to watch over them and keep them on the
straight and narrow, but for a Daria Morgendorffer, this is barely 'Stalag 13'!
You need to get her into some program that'll not only challenge her mental
abilities and gifts, but may actually offer an environment that'll allow her to
open up and face whatever's wrong with her! You know she needs that, and even
if I did keep her in my program, it's not really geared for a girl like her. If
she really wanted to, she could ace the coursework without a sweat - but she
wouldn't enjoy it, and THAT'S one of the important parts of the program... that
the kids not only learn, but enjoy doing it"
The Doctor stood up and began to walk across the room.
"Ms. Li -for some reason, Daria simply doesn't enjoy life. She sees all of
this as a curse, and she'd ruin the joy of the course for the rest of the
students. What she needs is an environment where she can't simply say, 'I don't
have to bother with this because this is stupid." She needs to be among
young men and women with similar intellect - similar skills, abilities, perhaps
interests; other kids who'll look her in the eye and say, 'So, you think you're
better than us? Prove it!' - or they'll sit back and tell her, 'You think
you've suffered before? Before we're done with you, you're going to beg to be
back with those Lawndale High hicks!" She needs an environment that'll
provide experiences and challenges that will force her to grow beyond her shell
and her comfort zone, one that'll force her to rise above and beyond what she
is now - and in the process, begin to mature into an actual person."
Ms. Li sat silently as the Doctor turned back. "And if
she doesn't get it soon, it's going to be too late. The type of woman she could
possibly become... is not the type of person I want to think about."
"You have valid points," Angela finally said.
"But the fact remains, sir, that Daria does not wish to attend Grove Hills
- or any other preparatory academy, either."
"She will," the Doctor said quietly. "She
will."
Angela's eyebrows raised slowly. "Indeed. You have a way
with... altering a person's path - not that it's always successful..."
"DO NOT blame me for Trent Lane. He had - HAS - a
frightening potential... and I'm not the one responsible for that asinine stunt
in the bookstore. If people had listened to me, he wouldn't be wasting away
doing a piss-poor Cobain impression on any crappy stage that'll have him and
screwing all the local scrags."
There was a moment of silence. "I would appreciate it in
the future if you would keep me informed of what you're doing," Angela
sighed. "For example, I had a meeting earlier with young Mr. Ruttheimer -
something about the assignment in your class. You wouldn't happen to know
anything about that, do you? Or, should I say - would you like to?"
"News to me, more or less," the Doctor said,
"and no - I wouldn't want to know. In every class, some kid in my class
tries to do an end run around my primary assignment. This time, I think it's
this Ruttheimer kid. Let's see what he's got to offer: did I ever tell you
about the time..."
*****
Night was
slowly approaching, and under the fading wisps of sunlight, Group Three was
camped out on the Lawndale High football field - now brightly lit by the
stadium light that surrounded the field. They had come out to eat dinner while
working on their project in an area where they wouldn't be bothered; however,
one little thing was standing in the way of their continuing work...
"You're
being silly, Mack."
"I don't
care what you say, Jodie - I'm not kissing you if you've been eating 'Satan's
Pringles", Mack said, shying away from Jodie as they sat on a blanket on
the football field. "Those things reek, and I get dizzy after I breathe
near them..."
"And
somebody else says it, too!" Jane piped up, lifting her head from a giant
meatball hoagie and earning a sharp glance from the young woman. "We know
you love those things, Jodie, but those things are like radiation poisoning to
the rest of us!"
Jodie looked
around at the eight other faces camped out on the football field, and only
Andrea failed to shake her head in agreement. "Hey, eat your stuff if you
want," the Goth said brusquely, lifting her head from her copy of 'The
Shadow Exploded: Documented Facts and Specific Conclusions Derived from the
Case of Carietta White'. "I don't mind the smell."
"See
what happens when you attend one human sacrifice too many?" Jane said,
turning to Daria.
"I only
go for the pleas of mercy - the smell of Dad's cooking ensures that I could
body-surf through a landfill and never notice the scent."
"That's
something else - your dad's cooking is the bomb!"
"That's
the general feeling about it in Nagasaki."
"Sometimes,
I just don't get you," Jane observed. "If someone in my family was a
gourmet chef, they'd have to beat me away from the table with a cattle prod,
but you turn your nose up at all of it! You know, sometimes I think that you've
got it too good..."
Daria's
retort evaporated as Sandi turned her eyes onto Jodie and said, "Jodie, I
think that it's best that you should put those away. It's getting in the way of
all of out working tonight, and it's not as if they're going to go stale if you
don't eat them right away."
"FINE,"
Jodie snapped, putting her bag of 'Bayou Boiler Chips' into a Ziploc storage
bag before stuffing them back into her knapsack. "Is everyone happy
now?"
Jane hopped
up and began to do a passable Irish jig as Daria smirked and the others giggled
and tried to suppress their laughter. "Okay, Jane, that's enough,"
Sandi said darkly, tossing a Twinkie at her. "Can we get back to work
-?"
"Yeah -
hey, thanks!" Jane said, catching the Twinkie and gobbling it down.
"Man, that 'pop quiz' of the Doctor's was a mother-!"
"At
least it'll act as thirty percent extra credit - or in some people's cases,
thirty percent towards not flunking... for some of us," Jodie said, casting
a wary eye towards Kevin. "Has anyone figured out what he's going to do
for the project?"
"Kevin's
going into the bunker with a DVD player, eighty jumbo frozen pizzas, two
hundred Hot Pockets, thirty-five kegs of 'Bud Light', a 65-inch projection TV
and DVD discs of all of the college bowl games and the Super Bowls," Sandi
said offhandedly. "Every time he gets completely wasted, we'll take a
sample - and once all of his supplies are gone, we zero him."
Everyone
looked at Sandi with expressions of shock - except Andrea, who nodded with a
look of light surprise and respect, and Kevin, who was playing with a string of
cheese off a slice of pizza and wasn't paying attention. "Unless, of
course, someone wants to have children with him in the old-fashioned way..."
The girls all
looked away, distaste on their faces. "I thought so. I don't want to think
about the end of the world and Kevin as the only eligible man around - come on,
do you think Jodie's going to share Mack?"
"Hey, I
don't mind being a community boy-toy-"
"Stop
having your 'Last Man On Earth' fantasies before I bury you out on this
field," Jodie smiled, not minding how Mack waggled his eyebrows at all of
the girls and laughed as Daria blushed furiously. "I'll make do with Kevin
if you get out of hand!"
"Huh -
Really?" Kevin said, his ears perking up. "Hey, Jodie - you and me?
COOL! I never did it with a really smart chick before -"
Brittany snapped around, her eyes narrowed.
"-And since you're President of Student Council and a
jock, too, it's okay if we get it on! I always did like those skirts you wear -
Man, you've got some legs, and a NICE butt -!"
Jodie and Brittany glanced over to one another, and a look
passed between them as they both rose from the field... one that made Mack glad
he knew Jodie cared about him.
"Kevin... why don't you come with us?" Brittany said,
her voice holding a baby-doll, 'come-hither' tone that enticed stupid men and
made guys with a clue run like terrified impalas. "Jodie and I have
something to show you..."
"Really? Oh, man, this is SO cool!"
"I wasn't thinking cool, Kevin," Jodie said, letting
her finger run across his shoulder and the back of his neck as she walked
around to where the clueless boy sat. "I was thinking about the opposite
temperature..."
"Huh?"
"Hot, Kevvie," Brittany said, glancing over at
Jodie. "She means hot. We know that you like it that way."
"Hey, you know it, babes," Kevin said. "Let's
all go on over to my Jeep..."
Mack didn't like the way this was going. "Hey, Jodie
-"
A firm hand planted on Mack's shoulder kept him seated, as did
the look on his girlfriend's face. "We'll be back."
"And when they come back, they'll be real women!"
Kevin crowed, his arms around the girls' waists. "Hey, Mack! If I'm not
back in a day - call my dad and tell him that I'm a real man now!"
"If he's not back in a day, we'd better call O.J.,"
Daria shot back, watching as the girls led Kevin away. "If he can hide the
knife, he can help them ditch the body."
"Well, while they're adding chapters to the Barth
'respect girls' manual, we'd better get back to work," Sandi spoke up.
"Andrea, what about the CD's and E-Book idea you had for your
library..."
*****
Meanwhile, at
Stacy Rowe's home, Stacy and Upchuck were in her bedroom, his laptop computer
and her desktop model both active as they downloaded information on Kyle, his
seminars from the past, and his military records.
"Before
we're done," he said to Stacy, 'We'll have a really great idea on what the
good Doctor's going to have planned for all of us in his class..."
*****
"And
this, ladies and gentlemen, is MY version of a pop quiz. Yeah, I know that it
must really swallow the pickle, but look on the bright side...there won't be any
more pop quizzes... I promise."
Kyle smiled
as he leaned back in his chair, almost relishing the images of communal looks of
discomfort throughout the class from the day before - and the choruses of
mumbles and groans almost made him laugh out loud, especially as he recalled
the young faces before him. Sitting on the desk before him were the results of
a specialized test battery he had surprised the students in his seminar with
three days earlier - the 'Pop Quiz', as it was called by the instructors in the
program.
As the seminar teaching syllabus recommended, Kyle always
sprang 'the Pop Quiz' on the kids in his seminar at about a week and a half to
two weeks into the program. It gave him an idea on who to focus on - and
ensured that all but the chronically idiotic would score at least a 'C' in the
course. Got to keep the parents and administrators happy, so we can keep coming
back to the schools...
For his part, Kyle always considered the test battery as
someone's own personal tribute to the supersecret training simulation made
famous in 'Star Trek'. He actually marveled at the fact that, after the six
years he had been running the seminars at schools in the Midwest (and over
twenty years of being given out by instructors in 'The Program' - 'Project Fast
Forward' had been operating since 1979, when it began in several schools in
Central Illinois), no one had ever spilled the secret about 'the Pop Quiz'. It
was a test that, in conjunction with the school administration, was given at
the beginning of the day - as it was almost as difficult as the ACT or SAT
testing, and took almost four hours to complete.
There were
several reasons for 'The Pop Quiz'; unknown to the students, each was given a
set of situations, questions and problems specifically designed and tailored
for each individual student to create and foster optimum levels of mental
stress and personal discomfort. Creating subconscious messages within the
student did this; messages that questioned, made insinuations towards or raised
doubt about the environment and home life the student was raised in, as well as
certain closely held beliefs, attitudes, desires and even fears.
Lane's quiz, for example, prefaced almost everything to convey
subliminal images and messages about the positive benefits and advantages of
stereotypical American family values and lifestyles - the 'nuclear family' - in
respect to the negatives of any other family grouping or structures. It also
generated images and messages about the intolerance and general antipathy
society held towards the 'starving artist', touched upon the blatantly selfish
and morally vacant nature of individuals who criminally chose their own needs
for artistic expression above the needs of their offspring, and how persons who
subjugated their desires to 'explore their muses' in order to obtain financial
and personal success and acclaim were not only destined for greater things - but
were, in fact, more honest & in touch with themselves, as well as having a
more focused and insightful worldview. Coming from a bohemian, 'latchkey child'
upbringing and yet being subjected to a concentrated dosage of stimuli which
suggested that her lifestyle wasn't conducive to her becoming an 'upstanding,
successful member of society', Lane would gradually exhibit greater levels of
stress and discomfort during the test - which would certainly factor into how
she would view the stated situations and complete the questions
One of the
things the test measured was how far off their normal behavioral patterns the
kids would go after being subjected to these unconscious levels of stress;
another was the 'default factor'- the near-instinctual set of behaviors that
each individual would fall back upon in times of stress. Very similar to the
'fight-or-flight' response in almost all beings (including humans), the
'default factor' was something that could be altered or supplemented by
training. The intensity of the training, and the relative age and intelligence
of the subject, were primary considerations involved in the alteration of a
person's DFI (Default Factor Index).
Young,
above-average OR below-average intelligence, and positive responses to very
intense training and indoctrination. Those were the elements for a 'perfect'
DFI rating of 15 (on a scale of 0 to 30), and DFI ratings of 12 to 17 were
considered as 'viable for consideration of recruitment'. Anyone with a DFI
rating below five would NEVER change - they simply didn't have the mental
faculties for even short-term shiftover (the term used to describe DFI
alterations). DFI values between 19 to 23 were considered average, and a good
70%to 80% of all those tested scored in this range. Over 25 - well, in about
half of those cases, their minds would accept new skills and training, but that
training almost never seemed to become second nature in stress situations,
particularly combat - except in one specific area. In those cases, the person
had an almost-genetic predisposition towards specific areas - 'savant' was the
perfect term for them, and they were practically useless for anything else. The
remainder of those DFI-25 and over, well, those persons were just too damned
smart (not to mention 'quirky', 'eccentric' or just down and outright
'strange') and for them to be of any use, their special talents or skills had
to be identified and reinforced as soon as possible. Overall, those persons
tended to become 'specialists' in one area or another, possessed of the ability
to make fundamental advances within their area of expertise ... if found and
trained soon enough. Too long, and... Kyle shuddered, thinking once again of
Trent Lane - the only 30 he had ever heard of since the program began.
I actually
found a DFI-30, and they went and blew it. What a waste. Oh, well...
Kyle went
through the results. Lane - 20. Surprisingly well balanced kid - well, good for
her. Taylor - 13. THAT was a surprise - or maybe not, considering the stories
he had started to hear about the girl. Security and military interests - and
martial arts skills, well before kickboxing gained favor with women and
'Tae-Bo' reared its ugly head? She bore watching... Griffin - 17. Same as Taylor
- better keep an eye on her... and NOT for that. Ruttheimer - 26. He had heard
stories - LOTS of stories - about Ruttheimer men... Well, the kid's got money - I
fear for the women around him, if he's an 'heir to the family gift'...
Landon - 15.
Big surprise. Her parents had beaten her into mental submission so long ago that
all she WOULD be good for is learning new things to please whoever was around.
Not really worth looking further into, but she might make one hell of an
effective diplomat someday... see if she's got some language skills, and make a
call or two for the child. Mackenzie - 20. He really wasn't a consideration.
Thomphson - 6. Another surprise... thought he wouldn't go higher than 4. Guess
that's why he's the QB - Woo-hoo. Hecuba-Thorne - 21. Statistically average.
Dewitt-Clinton - 24. See? Home schooling works - if you want to make a superior
intellect, bereft of basic social skills, that'll spend the rest of his or her
like in a futile search for emotional synchronicity with everyone around them.
Can you say 'Lieutenant Commander Data', anyone?
Morgendorffer
- 15.
Kyle shook
his head, wiped his eyes, and looked at the coding sheet a second time.
Morgendorffer?
DARIA Morgendorffer?
Fifteen?
FIFTEEN?
What the hell
was going on here?
He dug
through the pile of tests until he found the one he wanted, and took a sip of
his cold root beer before he began to read through the thick test booklet...
moments later, he went through his briefcase and pulled out an 'E-Book'. He
turned the device on, and after a few commands, brought up a copy of Daria's
personal file...
Raised in
two-parent family - one sister, no brothers... though there was some question
about a possible pregnancy in 1980... a son - died at birth? If the report
was verified (and something about the report seemed distinctly shaded), he
would have been in his early twenties... Kyle doubted Daria and her sister had
ever been told about the earlier pregnancy or their brother...
That seems
par for the course with the mother. Helen Miranda Morgendorffer (nee
Barksdale) - late forties, former flower child who repudiated her '60's roots
as thoroughly as Reagan did his Democratic background... no more 'Lavender', I
see. Now an associate at a local law firm of some repute, fast-tracked
to become the first female partner in the firms' 109-year history. Cut her
teeth in her early days on criminal cases - hellishly effective in the
courtroom, but then moved over to civil litigation and corporate work.
Wonder what happened? Now the firm's fiercest enforcer, she had been noticed
and recruited by several other firms... Holy crap. Those L.A. bastards at Wolfram
& Hart actually offered her a position - and when she didn't accept, put
her on retainer to act as their representative in Texas? She's got the attention
of some heavy hitters!
Barksdale.
No, that couldn't be... Control would have known about that, and they wouldn't
have arranged for a Barksdale to be set up for the program! But still, if Helen
was one of THEM, then he needed to know...
Oh, great.
Now I'll have to do something I don't want to do. She only lives a few
towns away, so I'll have to call and ask her to come over.
Kyle put his head back, and sighed as he closed his eyes for a
moment. Damn. I don't need this - not her, and damnit, not right now... I don't
need to turn my life back into a soap opera right now.
Keep your head on straight, he told himself, picking the E-Book back
up. Just get past it - when she comes over, don't provoke her, don't pick
fights about the past, and for God's sake, don't sleep with her! -
And right now, get back to work. I really need to go out and
find a girl around this town. I really need to forget about her - just get her
out of my mind...
Yeah. That'll happen soon enough. Meanwhile, I'd better get a
good set of binoculars, so I can watch pigs fly. Damn.
Kyle continued to read.
Controlling,
dominant personality, quite forceful in interaction with others, enjoys using
personal and other forms of power to achieve personal and professional goals.
Holds a matriarchal-dominant control over all facets of her personal life; will
not hesitate to use any method or form of control to achieve her ends...
Lovely. Bet her kids'll forget where SHE lives when they turn twenty-one...
Father. Jacob
Stewart Morgendorffer. Mid-forties, a year or so younger than the wife -
bet that's a sticking point of contention. Son of Sergeant Major A. H.
Morgendorffer, United States Marine Corps -
The 'Mad Dog' was this guy's FATHER?
Holy shit...
Kyle reread the file again.
Daria Morgendorffer's the granddaughter of the MAD DOG? Holy
shit! No wonder the kid's such an opinionated, uncompromising little hardcore
pain-in-the-ass - it's hard-wired in her genes!
He sat back, stunned respect on his face. Kyle had read about
Alexander Hamilton Morgendorffer all the way back in basic, out at Camp
Pendleton! That guy went island hopping back in WWII and was born-again HARD -
and had the Medal of Honor to prove it! Shame they didn't have a son... the
grandson of 'Mad Dog' Morgendorffer would have been an absolute bad-ass! Looks
like it probably skips a generation; Jacob looks like he should have been a
camp counselor, or an artist of some kind... Marked skill as an amateur
gourmet chef; marital tensions rampant because of his enthusiasm for cooking.
The bitch won't back her man because he'd rather cook than be 'a corporate
success'... Typical. Oh, well - hope she keeps plenty of 'D' batteries on
hand in her nightstand.
So what
we've got here is a young woman raised in a home where her true interests and
skills are either ignored, the cause of friction within her family or she's
pushed towards using them to become 'a success'. She obviously has been doing
the minimum amount of acceptable work to keep Mama Bear at bay, and yet she's
developed a cynical outlook created as she grew up in a Petri dish of hypocrisy
and manipulation... not to mention seeing dear old Dad slammed 24/7 for
attempting to do what makes him happy - but having to settle for being
miserable and, at best, marginally competent in the world his 'loving wife' wants
him in. Even moreso, the young woman still wants - on some level - the 'Brady
Bunch' fantasy family life, even though she knows that it's a pipe dream at
best and absolute bull at worst. She wants to believe in something - she wants
to fight for something... she's looking for a Cause... and, very likely, a special
someone to share her 'revolutionary fervor' with. No, that's not fair. She
wants a nice guy in a life - hell, being raised in America, deep down somewhere
within her, she has the 'I'm a princess & I'm looking for Prince Charming'
program running... She wants that, and yet she knows that, for the most part,
it's all a lie - so she wraps herself up in knowledge and cynicism, pretends
she doesn't care about most of the world and denies herself even the most basic
and simple of pleasures, so she won't start to believe in the lie... Well, well.
You need a Cause, something to believe in and someone to believe in & be
there for you - and yet, do it on your own terms? . Now, this is something I
can work with.
But first, I
need to ask some questions...
His root beer
was warm and watery when he finished examining the test. His eyes blinked; he
didn't even notice that the sun had gone down or the lights in the hallway had
been dimmed.
Kyle guzzled
the last dregs of his soft drink, flipped through the booklet once again,
scanning pages that he had dog-eared to mark his place - and then reached into
his jacket for his Dictaphone.
"Priority
memo," he said, switching on the device. "Completed preliminary study
and analysis of raw data from DFI test battery - stop. Five students have
achieved DFI scores within parameters for further observation - stop. Recommend
no further observation of subjects Landon, J. and Ruttheimer, C. - subjects
have family histories that affects scoring - stop. New paragraph. Will begin
changes in program to maximize shiftover potential of subject Morgendorffer, D.
- period. Recommend that subject Morgendorffer, D. be persuaded to relocate to
regional training location within 90 days - period. Already have begun process
by speaking to administration personnel - period."
Kyle took a
deep breath. "New paragraph. Will send results of all subjects ASAP -
period. Priority recommendation: family history of subject Morgendorffer, D be
cross-checked immediately for any familial connections to one Eleanor Barksdale
of Rutherford, Texas - period. New paragraph. Strongly recommend that subject
Morgendorffer, D be examined for possible consideration of POGO capability -
period. New paragraph. If examination is satisfactory, strongly recommend that
subject Morgendorffer, D be considered for recruitment and possible selection
for POGO Program - period. End priority memo. Transmit and verify."
He hit a
small button on the device, and a series of three beeps, silence, three
additional beeps and a tiny green light on the side indicated the machine had
done its job.
*****
Daria came up
the partially lit stairwell, and grimaced as the muffled sounds of her mother's
failing efforts to contain her cries of pleasure filtered through the door.
Jeez, get
a soundproofed room...
She turned
towards her own room, and heard the sounds of the shower running. Quinn must
have heard their parents going at it again as well.
Why does
she always act this way whenever someone brings up the topic of sex? Come on,
Quinn, what do you think the 'Three 'J's' want you for, anyway - macramé? Act like
you've got a clue - or doesn't sex come up in the Fashion Club? Or... does it
come up, but not about guys...
Oh, don't go
there. Quinn as a lesbian makes as much sense as I do as a - Whatever. She
probably doesn't even understand that foreplay has nothing at all to do with
golf. Bet she's going to have a surprise on her wedding night, when her husband
starts to get undressed and she wonders where the second bed is, because he's
NOT getting into bed with her...
Dismissing
her sister from her mind, Daria went into her room, and as she undid her boots
and slid out of her jacket, hit the power switch on her IMAC and logged on to
check her e-mail. Nothing unusual: an anti-virus update, an ad from 'Miss
Cleo', and an ad promising $50 bucks off when you subscribed to - ugh. One of
the fun web sites for Kevin Thomphson and the other jocks - 'www.
hot_wet_and_nasty.com'. Block sender.
She pulled a
box of fruit juice from a drawer, and started to spear the top with the straw
as she scrolled the screen down. Get a FREE issue of 'Val' magazine and a FREE
'Val' CD, featuring today's freshest bands and the coolest dance mixes, if you
subscribe online. Get a free e-mail account with MSN Hotmail, and let the
infernal minions of Bill Gates monitor your online travels and dealings. Get a
'Teen Debit' bankcard that'll help start your descent into chronic debt. You,
too, can become a member of 'The Sandwich Cookie Global Anti-Defamation
Coalition', and help fight the ongoing battle to restore dignity to a proud
bakery product that has brought smiles to the faces of children for decades.
Six billion people on Earth, and some of them have absolutely too much time on
their hands.
And then she
saw it - a link to 'Ultraswave Universe'. Upchuck's hell-spawned web site that
all but screamed 'I LOVE ME!'
I don't
need this, she thought, looking at the heading: 'About Dr. Armalin's
seminar: an offer you can't refuse'. Oh, I think I can...
She moved the
icon, and was about to hit the 'delete' when she decided not to get rid of the
message, after all. I'll read it later - that way, I'll have a reason to plant
the sleazeball on his butt again!
Daria logged
off, and lumbered over to her bed. She was sound asleep before her head fully
settled on the pillow.
*****
"We
have the ships - we have the weapons - we need SOLDIERS!" the dramatic
voice boomed from the wide-screen television at the front of the class. "Soldiers
like Lt. Stach Lumbries... and Capt. Carmen Ibanez..."
Kevin's eyes
were wide open as he watched the DVD of 'Starship Troopers', while behind him,
Mack, Jodie and Jane enjoyed the film and shared a package of 'Twizzlers'
licorice. In the next row, Brittany watched as well, mouthing the words of the
film with the perfect sync of someone who's seen it many, many times, and even
Upchuck managed to tear his eyes away from Brittany's supple, shapely
silhouette to watch the screen.
"Soldiers
like Private Ace Levy and Lt. John Rico..."
The face of
Casper Van Diem appeared on the screen, and in the back, Kyle surpressed a
smile. If it hadn't been for working with that peacock Franklin Davers, Kyle
would have sworn on a stack of Bibles that people THAT attractive NEVER did
time in uniform. If they did, they served only as embassy personnel, special
honor guards and in other various high profile, high-visibility duties where
they looked good in their perfectly fitted and spotless dress uniforms.
"COME
ON, YOU APES - YOU WANNA LIVE FOREVER?"
Kyle almost
laughed - then grew slightly somber. Franklin changed his mind quickly during a
particularly vile mix-up on the Yungas Road in Bolivia. Starting out with only
a pair of Beretta 9mm pistols with six spare clips for each pistol and his own
field-issue knife, the strutting peacock tore apart a reinforced battalion of
gunsels from the DaCosta drug cartel. He single-handedly ran a holding action
while Kyle and his team hustled a group of international health workers to the
safety of waiting helicopters, some fifteen miles away... and managed to stay
alive for three days until he could be lifted out. Maybe the pretty boys could
do damage after all...
"We
need you all! Service guarantees citizenship!"
Daria sat
back listlessly, her head propped up on her fist, as she watched the end of the
film clip, then sat up and yawned as the lights came up.
"All
right, comments, opinions, questions," Kyle said, walking to the front of
the classroom. "Miss Morgendorffer?"
"Couldn't
you have found something better for us to watch than some paternalistic,
jingoistic, flag-waving piece of tripe with bad actors with good skin and
stupid, over-the-top messages about serving the so-called common good?"
"Oh, I'm
sorry, Miss Morgendorffer. You must have me mistaken for one of the REGULAR
teachers here!"
Daria started
to rise from her seat, but Kyle caught her with a look that would have made the
Good Lord eat His peas and carrots. "STOP - right - there, Miss
Morgendorffer," his vocal blast echoed, making even Daria wilt under its
force. "If you're going to make comments of that nature, then you will
take the time and show enough respect for the others here to justify what
you've said. Don't think that your smart-aleck remarks will just go without
challenge in MY presence. If nothing and if nowhere else - in here, you will be
held accountable for your words."
Daria stood
silently, gathering her thoughts.
"The
film's a bad film."
"Defend
your position."
"The
film is filled with former models with no acting skills."
"Did the
actors convey a sense of emotion through their performances that allowed you to
experience, in a carthatic manner, the sensations and context of the
film?"
"Did
they-?"
"Did you
feel, at any moment in the film, like you were actually with Rico and the
others - out in space, fighting a war against those creatures, and fighting to
keep yourself and your troopmates alive and well?"
"No - I
knew that the movie was a load of crap-"
"So you
didn't attempt to get into the heads of the characters, choosing instead to
focus on the actors' portrayals of soldiers at war," Kyle said. "Have
you ever served in uniform, Miss Morgendorffer?"
"No-"
"Have
you ever fought in a war?"
"No-"
"Are you
familiar with anyone who has actually served in a time of conflict and has come
under fire?"
"No-"
"Have
you studied historical, psychological or military records focusing on the
day-to-day life of the foot soldier in combat?"
"No-"
"Then,
Miss Morgendorffer, whether or not the portrayals of the soldiers in the film
is accurate or not is irrelevant - because you have no point of reference to
accurately judge those re-creations in any fashion whatsoever," Kyle said,
and even Kevin winced at the way his glance slashed through Daria. "And before
you come out with the tired old notion that everyone is entitled to an opinion,
let me just say that if those opinions are as singularly uninformed as yours
is, then they are in no way entitled to them."
Even Sandi
felt a glimmer of sympathy for Daria, who appeared as though she wanted to just
curdle up and melt through the floor. "In other words, Miss Morgendorffer
- you've wasted class time by talking, when it is quite apparent that you don't
know what you're talking about. SIT DOWN."
As Kyle turned
away from the rest of the class to retrieve another root beer, Jane placed a
consoling hand on Daria's forearm. "He didn't get enough sex this
morning," she smirked. "Either that, or no one here's going to let
him have a fatted calf for sacrifice."
With hearing
more acute than they could realize, Kyle heard every word, and covered his
smile by drinking before turning to the waving hand in the front row.
"Miss Taylor?"
"Well,
one thing the film got right was that you're fighting for more than yourself -
you ARE fighting for your country!"
"Really?"
Kyle said, and Jodie started doing a silent prayer as she saw the way Kyle
turned towards the cheerleader. "Explain that to us..."
"Well,
you get to know all of the people that you're going to be doing soldier stuff
with when you begin your training and you have to spend all of that time with
them, so you know about them and their lives back home!" Brittany piped,
twirling a lock of hair. "Like, if all of us were soldiers, then I'd know
about Charles' brothers and sisters who are all twins, and Jodie's little
sister and brother and how her mom wants to go back to work, and how Jane's got
the HOTTEST brother who's a musician, and how Daria's mom's a big lawyer who
wants to be a politician and her sister'll be a big-time model someday-"
"Miss
Taylor."
"Well,
if we were all in the Army, then we'd all be from different parts of the
country," she said. "When we go to fight, I'm going to try to get the
bad guys to keep my people alive. I'm fighting for them, and for the people
around the country who I know about through them - and that's how I'm fighting
for my country!"
"An
interesting answer, Miss Taylor," Kyle said, and a glimmer of a smile
cracked through the granite expression on his face. "We fight for our country
when we fight for our friends."
He looked up
at the clock. "Let's take what Miss Taylor said and make it into our next
assignment, due in three days. I want two to five pages on that idea: 'What
would you fight for?' Put some thought into it - and Kevin, if you need help,
ASK for it! I don't want two pages describing how you're going to write the
paper, and if I see that you're counting words or putting down nonsense to fill
lines..."
He looked
around the class. "Take off."
Kyle popped
the top on another can of root beer; he noticed that Daria was still seated.
"Is this going to be a civilized talk, Miss Morgendorffer, or should I get
my body armor out?"
"You don't like me."
"I don't
know you," he lied. "Tell me, why should I like you?"
Daria sat quietly,
and Kyle came around to the front of his desk. "There's only one thing I
know about you, Miss Morgendorffer. You don't seem to care about anything or
anyone."
"I
care."
"Do
you?"
Kyle sat down
on the front of his desk. "What would you fight for, Miss Morgendorffer?
What do you care enough about that's worth taking a real stand, and not just
doing because you're being stubborn and want to piss off your folks or whomever
you want angry?"
Daria looked
away from him. "What would you die for? Why should anyone believe you? Why
should anyone place their life or the lives of those they care for in your
hands? Why should anyone trust you?"
He looked at
Daria for a long moment. "Think your answer over. Two to five pages, due
in three days."
Kyle stood
and left the classroom, leaving Daria alone with her thoughts.
I am
really, really starting to dislike this class...
*****
The seminar continued on... and Daria's discontent grew, as
did the exuberance of the other students, to her surprised disbelief.
Jodie's aggravation due to Sandi began to darken, and build
upon itself...
Helen's discomfort with Lauriel in her husband's life became
more palpable as Jake's persona became more confident, less unstable... and
generally happier.
Upchuck's plan expanded and began to take shape.
Kyle watched over all of the students. He watched them work
together and plan for the main event in the seminar, wondering with mirth and
an unexpected burst of anticipation as to what the students had in mind for
him. He hoped they would surpass his expectations, but regardless, he wasn't
about to make it easy for them... especially not for Daria...
And two weeks passed.
*********************************************************************************