I could flat out refuse to do it.
I could fake an illness.
I could tell them Jake made me quit.
I thought about each option, imagining what I would say to Evelyn Bingledorf in each scenario. I could do it. I could talk myself into refusing, I could make myself sick just from the stress, or I could drop a hint to Jake that I wasn't happy about planning it and he would force me to drop the volunteer gig. It was as simple as deciding which excuse I wanted to go with.
A knock sounded on the door and I looked up. A scrawny boy with short-cropped hair and braces smiled at me. Judging by his height and build, he had to be a freshman.
“ Is this the counseling office?” he asked, looking at Charlotte's empty desk.
I straightened in my seat. “Yes. Mrs. Nordhoff isn't here right now but I'm sure she'll be in later.”
He adjusted his backpack and took a step into the office. “I'm not looking for her.”
I frowned. “Oh?”
“ You're Emily's mom, right?”
I nodded, confused.
“
And you're the one who
“ Oh,” I said quickly, feeling my face warm. “I'm not sure yet. Nothing has been decided...”
His grin widened. “I heard it was to help us get new computers. You know, to replace the ones that are...missing.” He shifted his weight again, trying to adjust the massive pack attached to his back. “I...I wanted to know where I can sign up.”
“ Excuse me?”
“ To perform,” he said. “I want to juggle.”
“ Juggle?”
The boy nodded. “Balls, knives. It's sort of a hobby of mine,” he explained. “A lot of people don't know I can do it and, well, I want to perform but I also really want computers back in our computer lab.”
I stared at the kid in front of me. His expression was eager, hopeful even, and, just like that, all of my excuses went out the window. I thought about the hundreds of students who were enrolled at Prism; not just this kid or Emily, but the the others who probably wanted a working computer lab back up and running just as badly as Evelyn Bingledorf did. They weren't the ones who had stolen them and they weren't the ones who'd forgotten to pay the insurance premiums. But they were the ones who it impacted the most.
I smiled at the boy and picked up my pen. “I'll add you to the list of performances,” I told him. “What's your name?”
“
Stephen,” he said. “With a P. And my last name is Morse.”
I
jotted his name down and, the minute he left, I grabbed my notebook and
Genevive Addai, the music teacher
I thrust my notebook in her direction.
“ What's this?” she asked, wrinkling her button nose.
“ Sign -ups for the talent show.” Before she had a chance to turn me down, I added, “I was thinking you could do a short piano piece. Seeing as how you're the music teacher.”
“ But—” she began.
I didn't let her finish. “Did you want to play a different instrument? That could probably be arranged but I know piano is what you usually play during the school concerts.” I continued. “We'd also like some students to perform short pieces; maybe you can count talent show performances as a grade or as extra credit?”
Her expression changed, from apprehension to one of thoughtful contemplation. “Extra credit. That's a great idea.”
I handed her the pen I'd shoved behind my ear and she took both it and the notebook from me. She wrote her name down and, for the first time since I'd agreed to coordinate the show, a tiny burst of hope surged through me.
Things were beginning to look up. I'd secured four acts in the last twenty minutes. With any luck, I had ten minutes of performance time at the talent show taken care. I took a deep breath, trying to bouy myself as I went in search of my next vict im.
After a quick stop in the front office, I made my way toward the theater classroom, dodging a group of kids who were heading outside for Phys. Ed. They looked to be Emily's age but I didn't see any familiar faces in the crowd. They completely ignored me, which made me feel ancient and invisible.
Alice Vercota, the drama teacher, was sitting on a makeshift stage at the far end of her classroom, eating a sandwich. She had a lap top in front of her, her eyes glued to the screen.
She looked
Her smile immediately crashed and
“I know,” I said
She stood and brushed bread crumbs off her black blouse