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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Little Bill
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Emerson Middle School was one of two in Wiscasset, and the better of the two. They offered football and softball, for one, which each required the purchase of equipment and their crimson-and-gold uniforms. On the other end of Wiscasset, Harding Middle School's only sport was cross country, because it only required sneakers. Harding only had four field trips a year. Emerson had seven. The differences would have seemed insignificant to adult eyes, but through the view of their students, the differences were as clear as night and day. Harding's leaky roofs and red-faced principal made the school a juvenile equivalent to serving a term at Folsom prison, whereas Emerson's backpack regulations, PTA meetings, and considerable budget made their school a young Coloradan's idea of what walking through the courtyard at Harvard might feel like.

Today, eight of Emerson's students had felt as if they were select members of an ivy league university more than ever. The school's book club, instead of spending their Thursday studying geometry, The Outsiders, the Rain Cycle, or the Louisiana Purchase, had been brought early that morning to the Colorado State Library. Their tour, while as stuffy and long-winded as they had expected, included an outside lunch at the Library's picnic area, a picture with the library's turtle tank, and a tour of the Staff Only rooms. Some rooms were filled with banned books, others misprinted books. Rows of books that were used to carry messages in World War II, and books that were from China and read from the top down. Books that had been signed by famous authors, books that were hundreds of years old, and rare books that were now their text's only remaining copy. Donated books with doodles in the margins from the 1800's, textbooks checked out of schools signed by people like Harry Truman, and picture books made by artists in the 60's, bound with things like rubber, wood, denim, and fur.

Now, they were on the bus once more, returning to Emerson Middle School to be picked up by their parents or walk home. Fortunately, it was still autumn, and Wiscasset's autumns were far more pleasant than its winters. Rows of tall, deciduous trees paved the sidewalks and covered the streets like the ceilings of cathedrals, filling the streets with red, orange, and gold leaves that filtered the last bits of the day's warm, amber sunlight. The remnants of the long summer had all but disappeared, and every day there seemed to be fewer and fewer plastic pools or trampolines decorating lawns, and more and more gourds, plastic ghosts, and bundles of dried flowers decorating doors. Although the sleepy town was far from buzzing with excitement, it was still a picturesque portrait of a small town in the Rocky Mountains. Humble, one to two story vinyl-sided buildings made up the bulk of the town -- the past ten years having been far from a good time to develop real estate, if you listened to the boring matters that made up the adult world -- between clusters of rocky hills too short to call mountains, and too large to flatten and build more houses on.

By now it was nearly six, and on the other side of the sky, the sun was beginning to set. The school bus pulled into Emerson Middle School's parking lot, bringing their hours-long travel to an end with a satisfying hiss. At the head of the bus, Mr. George stood up from his seat with a grunt.

"Alright children, form a single file line." He said, pointing down the cramped aisle of the bus, only barely wide enough for them to have entered in the first place. "I have four of you marked for pick-up by parent and I see four sets of parents outside, good stuff. Remember, just because we had a field trip today, your presentations for Book Club are still up tomorrow." His second sentence was only half-heard, falling on ears that were rushing to leave the bus. Mr. George sighed, fastening his belt over his gut and giving a nod to the bus driver.

"See you for the museum trip, Georgie." The bus driver said in a gravelly motor rev of a voice, as Mr. George left the bus. George had always thought he sounded like Homer Simpson's wife, though he was no more likely to tell him today than he had been yesterday. Leaving the bus, Mr. George's eye caught that of one Elijah Cardozo, and the two exchanged a knowing nod.

"My man." Mr. George hollered, giving Cardozo a friendly finger-gun.

"How you doing?" Elijah responded, attention halfway between his daughter's recollection of the library and something his wife was discussing with him. Always good to see another brother out here in the sticks. Mr. George reached his car, an old Pinto with an unfortunate paintjob somewhere between light tan and seafoam green, and entered with another grunt. He adjusted his rear view mirror, and flattened his jheri curls. The man watching him forty feet away silently shook his head. These were not the actions of a man who had committed a crime so great that it wasn't listed in public law. These were the actions of a blissfully ignorant man who had taken his class on a field trip. It had to have been one of the children. It had to.
Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by banjoanjo
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Aaron Schofield


Aaron walked. A lot. It was something even an toddler could do comfortably, but he liked to believe that he was better at it than most. Blindfold him and he'd still be able to navigate the walk from the school gate to his house, no sweat.

He reveled in this almost-night silence. The sounds of leaves crunching underfoot, distanced cars and chatter. The dim orange of sunset added a nuance to the peaceful scene. Aaron loved autumn a lot more than he should have.

Then the car pulled up.

"You're out late," Henry called out, poking his head out of the green Ford. He'd paid for it himself.

Resisting an instinctual frown, Aaron climbed into the passenger seat, dumping his backpack in the seats behind. "Yeah."

...

Crap, he was supposed to say more. "Elaborate". He always forgot.

"There was a field trip today. With the Book Club."

Henry overlooked the lull with deliberate pep, flashing teeth and crinkled eyes doing nothing but stirring a familiar discomfort in Aaron's gut. Effort lavished on a lost cause. Blurs of orange were prettier than Henry's forced smile so the boy turned to the window instead. Camberton Street. Just five more blocks. Good.

"Oh, I think I remember that one! State Library, right?" Henry pressed on.

"Mmyeah."

"Did you get to see the workbook from that kid in 1830? The one with a drawing that looks like Jimmy Carter."

"Uh, I think we missed that one."

"Your tour guide didn't know what he was doing then, skipping past the best exhibit. We laughed for a three minutes straight when we saw that thing."

"Oh. Uh, maybe we'll get to see it another time?"

"I think I took a picture of it. I'll show you when we get home. Speaking of, did you take any?"

"I didn't bring a camera."

"Ah, you should've told me about your trip! I would've lent you mine."

Aaron didn't feel like pointing out that the reminder for the Book Club excursion had been scrawled on the fridge calendar for weeks now, though he couldn't blame him for overlooking the highlighter yellow print that always seemed to disappear into the white page. Yellow for Aaron. Blue for family events. Green for Dad's assignments. Bright, bright red for Henry's commitments, a shade that demanded your attention even if you were merely giving the fridge a passing glance. There seemed to be a red reminder every two or three days while the yellow text dimpled a square once a week, politely squeezing itself in the Saturday boxes, the meager space underneath Henry's tutoring sessions.

"Yeah...sorry."

"Don't apologise, kiddo. It's just a camera. Hell, I probably took enough for the both of us when I went."

"...Yeah. Sorry."

A sigh escaped Henry's lips, one he'd incorrectly assumed would go unnoticed by Aaron. Guilt and weariness hit the younger boy with equal force.

"Did you have fun at least?"

"Mmhmm."

Elaborate, dammit.

"It was nice."

Pitiful silence filled the car for only a few seconds before the driveway mercifully made itself seen. Past the impeccably painted fence. Past the lawn that Aaron had trimmed himself. Aaron and Henry stepped into the house, a humble, single-floor property. It seemed far more spacious, more modern than it actually was, thanks to the careful eye of their mother.

"You're out late," David Schofield looked up from the television, looking pointedly at his youngest son.

"Field trip," Henry explained before Aaron could open his mouth, "They went to the State Library."

Aaron nodded in affirmation, the usual disappointment and relief colouring his senses as the patriarch turned back to the evening news.

"Mm. Did you learn much?"

"Yeah, it was nice." Aaron managed a reply and began moving to his room before he could overthink his vague response. While he walked, he could hear his mother in the living room with Henry, asking something about Jared Gleeson's son and tips on college essays. Last week it had been Barbara Diaz.

As for Aaron, he walked a little faster. He wasn't stopped for further questioning.
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Hidden 7 yrs ago Post by Ejected
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Elaine loved books more than she loved most people. In fact, she loved books so much that when she first heard that about the book club's impending field trip to the Colorado State Library, she'd been so ecstatic that she brought it up in nearly every conversation she and her parents held, whether it was at the dinner table after they'd all blessed their food or at bedtime when her daddy tucked her in. "The trip to the state library is in a couple of days!" she'd proclaim for the umpteenth time, ignoring the groans and eye-rolls from her big brother, to which her parents would simply chuckle, nod, and continue on with the rest of the dinner discussion. She'd mentioned it about fifteen times total before her father decided to let her use his fancy Mamiya ZE-2 camera while on the trip.

"Now, with this camera comes a lot of responsibility, Ellie. Are you sure you can handle it?" Elijah Cardozo had said to his daughter, kneeling down so that he could look her in the eye. The young girl smiled and eagerly nodded her head, earning a hearty laugh and a quick ruffle of her hair from her daddy. Of course, Elaine's mother did not approve of her taking the expensive camera to the trip, arguing that she was too young and careless to handle it. Right before she'd left for the library, however, Mr. Cardozo slipped the camera into Elaine's hand and quickly ushered her onto the bus before her mother could see. "What she doesn't know won't hurt her, punkin'."

And so, Elaine used the camera. Hell, she probably wore the thing out with the amount of pictures that she took; she captured everything from hundreds of years old books and books that had been signed by famous authors, all the way down to the goofy faces her friends were making during their outside lunch in the Library's picnic area. She couldn't help but feel a shiver of enthusiasm on the bus ride back to Emerson Middle School, as she was very excited to get the pictures developed so that she could show them off to her family.

When it was time to get off the bus, Elaine got in the single file line as instructed, but barely heard the last few words out of Mr. George's mouth as she was already making her way down the stairs and skipping towards her parents' rusty Cadillac Seville. Her daddy had been leaning against the driver side door, and her mom stood not too far away. Elaine gave her parents brief hugs before handing the camera to her daddy, a wide smile on her face. "I was responsible, see? There's not one scratch on it." Elijah Cardozo chuckled and cast a nervous glance at his wife.

Janine Cardozo had her arms folded across her chest and her lips pursed, obviously not pleased with the two of them. "I thought we already talked about this, Elijah." She said with a slight tilt of her head. The older man just shrugged his shoulders guiltily before opening the car door for an oblivious Elaine, who'd still been rambling on about the trip. His wife let out a deep breath before walking back around to her side of the car. The conversation was over, for now, but he knew that she'd bring it back up later that night.

Before getting back into the car, Elijah locked eyes with George. "How you doing?" He'd called back in response before getting back into the drivers seat, starting the car, and pulling off. In less than ten minutes, the car had pulled into the narrow driveway of the small, single floor house, and Elaine had finally finished with her long-winded discussion of the library. The three walked into the house, instantly greeted by the familiar warmth and rich aroma of Elijah's signature Louisiana Creole cuisine. Fairly loud rap music could also be heard coming from down the hall. A quick peek in the kitchen told Elaine that her daddy had made Gumbo for dinner; the large Gumbo pot sat in its usual spot on the front stove burner. She was just about to pull open the lid before a pair of hands grabbed her from behind and lifted her from the ground. She laughed and screamed as her daddy twirled her around and sat her back down a few feet away from the stove. "Now, you know better than that." he said with a grin.

"She sure as does," Mrs. Cardozo said as she entered the kitchen, "Ellie, go and wash up. And tell your brother to cut off that damn noise and come set the table."
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Hidden 7 yrs ago 7 yrs ago Post by Peridot
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As the days approached the highly anticipated field trip, Maria wasn't entirely sure what she was more excited about; the books, the potential for taking pictures, or simply the fact that the eight members of the Book Club actually got to skip school for a whole day to travel somewhere. Maria loved to go on long drives, especially during this time of the year. The endless trees and bushes that filled the forests they drove through were beautiful hues of reds, oranges and yellows - an occasional clump of evergreen spruce or pine trees punctuated the sea of fire with their blue-green leaves. More than once on the way there Maria was tempted to ask the driver to stop, just so she could take several pictures of the spectacular view without it being extremely blurred. Naturally, such a request was too ridiculous to even attempt, so she made do with what she could. It was upon arrival to the library that her itching fingers were finally able to take some snapshots.

Nothing escaped Maria's camera. The books, the buildings, the librarians, the strangers, her fellow classmates and teacher, even her lunch gained a place in her ever-growing bag of developing polaroids. Dad and Barbara-Anne had bought her five lots of film to last her until her birthday, and all five were nearly used up by the end of their tour. Dad was sure to be annoyed - or at the very least, stunned - at how she'd managed to take 35 pictures in the span of only six hours. The remaining five would have to be saved for one of her explorations; hopefully she wouldn't find anything too interesting until her birthday when she could restock. It would be a shame to waste her last five pictures for something not quite worthwhile.

By the time the bus pulled back into their sleepy little town, all of Maria's pictures had developed in the dark safety of her satchel, and she was peering through them all with a bright grin on her face. Her grin only grew in excitement as she spotted her father waiting outside, his familiar tall frame and the glow of his cigarette making him stand out amongst the other waiting families. Waving at him from the window, Maria shuffled together her pictures carefully yet messily, haphazardly sticking them back into her bag and scurrying off the bus with the others. As she ran to him, Isaac dropped his cigarette to the floor and ground it under his heel, smiling back at his daughter.

"Have fun?" Though the answer was clear on Maria's delighted face, Isaac knew for sure that his youngest would have plenty to say about the trip.

"I sure did! The library was huge, I'm sure it was bigger than our whole school. And a lot of the books were so awesome! There were like, ancient ones there from like world war one, and there was a diary from one of our presidents when he was our age, and there was an original first edition of The Hobbit, and..." Maria chattered away happily as she grasped her dad around the waist, hugging him tightly. Even though she was nearly thirteen, she still barely reached his stomach. Isaac held in laughter, finding his youngest's enthusiasm contagious as she recounted the day rapidly, barely taking a breath before finally coming to an end; "...And I took so many pictures, you have to see them!"

"How much is 'so many'? You haven't used up all of your film already, have you?"

"No." She replied quickly, deciding that while she wasn't technically lying to him, maybe it would be best if he didn't know the exact number of pictures stuffed in her bag. Making a beeline for the passenger seat of her dad's Chevy, Maria only just noticed that the seat was occupied as she opened the door.

"Hey squirt, back seat's all yours." Wrinkling her nose, Maria ignored her sister as she looked at her dad accusingly over the car roof.

"Dad, why'd you have to bring Judy? I always have to go in the backseat when she's here!" She asked indignantly, earning a scowl and light jab in the side from her sister.

"Stop fighting. Maria, Judy needs to start her driving lessons, and I can't fit in a whole lot of time around work. You're going to have to suck it up in the back, kiddo." Maria now looked back to Judy, furrowing her brow in confusion.

"Lessons? You told me you already knew how to drive." Judy's look of annoyance swiftly froze as her eyes widened, though Maria was certain she'd heard Judy bragging about already being a pro at cruising. Isaac looked sharply at his eldest, who in the millisecond as his gaze switched between daughters, had managed to remove the deer-caught-in-the-headlights look to one of scorn.

"In theory, dumbass." She scoffed, rolling her eyes before looking back at her father's scrutinising gaze. "Dad! C'mon, don't look at me like I'm one of your suspects. I think you'd know if I was taking your car for joyrides." Which he certainly would; Isaac was a man who enjoyed driving both his work and home cars, and looked after both of them impeccably. If a certain daughter had been driving one of them illegally, he would have worked it out very quickly. Thankfully for Judy, he had no idea that she'd been driving her friend Roberta's car during various "study sessions" at her house. Although still looking somewhat suspiciously at his daughters, Isaac dropped the matter and entered the driver's seat, Maria scrambling into the back as Judy shot her an annoyed glare that quite clearly said "I will end you". Sticking her tongue out in response, Maria's eyes drifted to the car stereo. It wasn't a long drive between their house and the school, but there was enough time to get a good song in. It appeared Judy had the same idea, as she was already picking out an unfortunately familiar looking cassette.

"Are you kidding me? Put something else on, this is all you've been listening to for nearly two months!" Maria complained, leaning between the front seats of the car to grab Judy's arm. Her elder sister wrenched her hand from Maria's grip, scowling.

"Oh my God, exaggerate much? For your information, I only just bought this today - so we're listening to it!" Rather than complain that they'd gone to the record store without her (Maria had been itching to get the latest Eurythmics album; although she certainly hadn't saved up enough pocket money to get it yet after spending so much time - and quarters - at the arcade, she was sure she could guilt-trip her dad into buying it for her), she resolutely decided to stick to the argument at hand. Exaggeration or not, Judy had subjected both the house and car to "In Heat" since it was released in September, whether it was listening to it on the radio, or borrowing her friends' records to play in her room. Maria couldn't be sure whether she liked The Romantics or not now, thanks to Judy turning endless playthroughs of the album into irritating white noise.

"Girls, put your seatbelts on."

"Let's listen to "Billy Idol" instead."

"You overplayed that way too much last year!"

"Girls, seatbelts!"

"I don't care! Idol jams way better than your shitty album."

"MARIA. Language!" Her father barked, shaking his head in exasperation as he put the car into gear. The sisters had bickered as soon as Maria had learnt how to talk and a three-year-old Judy had realised just how fun it was to annoy her younger sister, and he had no idea when that behaviour would change permanently. Now and again, there were moments of peace, but when it came to the very serious topics (Such as music), it was all out war. In an attempt to shut both girls up, Isaac inserted his own choice of cassette tape, and sat back with a smug smile as both daughters vehemently groaned, but then thankfully ceased their arguing. Maria slumped back down in the backseat, finally putting her seatbelt on and examining her polaroids again as the dulcet tones of Stevie Nicks filled the car. There were some really good ones amongst the bunch; some were blurred too badly to see what the original model of the picture was, but Maria had a tendency to keep the bad ones anyway.

The trio were only able to listen to two and a half songs from "Rumours" before finally pulling into the driveway of their home. It was a fairly old, large house; having belonged to the Valentia family since it was built in the late 1800's, the three stories had undergone plenty of repairs and renovations over the decades. As of now, it still looked quite outdated, and could use another coating of paint, but it was cosy enough on the inside. As the car engine turned off, Maria's head craned up to look at the upper-most floor where Judy had left her light on. Ever since becoming a teenager, the elder child had taken one of the attic rooms on the third floor as her bedroom, preferring the larger space for hangouts, and the extra floors away from her family for privacy. It was the best she could do to avoid the others in a house that forbade locks on all but the bathrooms and the gun cabinet. The second floor held three more bedrooms; a spare that had once been Judy's; the master bedroom where Isaac (And on most nights, Barbara-Anne) slept, and Maria's room. Although one of the smallest in the house, she had never wanted to move out into Judy's old room, or even the other attic room on the third floor. Not that Maria would ever admit it to anyone, but the smaller the room was, the less likely you could see monsters in the shadows, or creatures lurking in your closet. The past two years had brought with it more monsters of the imagination, and both sisters had defended themselves in the only way they knew how; Maria, with familiarity. Judy, with isolation. However, as they and their father entered their home, isolation wasn't an option at the moment. Welcoming them was a warm living room, a smiling Barbara-Anne, and the unmistakable scent of kentucky-fried chicken wafting in from the dining room.

"Hey! How was the field trip, sweetie?" Maria's grin returned as she began chattering once again about the library, pulling out a handful of pictures to show Barbara-Anne. Mouse greeted the three with a lazy "Woof", Isaac kissed his girlfriend on the cheek with a warm smile, and even Judy looked less apathetic than usual upon being told by Barbara-Anne (What she could say over Maria's eager conversation, that was) that a boy named Robbie had phoned for her in her absence. For the moment, the nightly monsters that the Valentia girls feared so privately were forgotten about.
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