penpals
by Phaith on February 26, 2008Micah rolled his eyes at his best friend. Asher was doing front handsprings down the main corridor, sending several students ducking for doorways. Asher knew how much it irritated Micah when he acted out, so he did it as much as possible.
Of course, Micah was the only person who could restrain Ash, as well. When he glanced back and saw the look of disapproval on Micah’s thin, pale face, he stopped grinning and walked back to him. Apologetically, he took Micah’s hand in his own, and together they walked to class.
The middle seat in each and every one of Micah’s classes was always empty, due to Micah’s obsessive compulsive disorder. He needed an equal amount of people around him, with Asher always in the right side of him. Their first class was Latin, so Micah walked in, smiled at a few students—without meeting their eyes, so he didn’t really know who it was he was smiling at—and sat down at his desk. Immediately, he began scrawling random phrases onto the wood.
About twenty minutes into class, he was Pinged. He halted his assault on the desk and looked at his Tablet. It was, of course, from Asher, as he was the only one with Micah’s Ping code. He pulled out his Tabstik and opened the message.
What the bloody hell are you writing?
Micah smiled at his friend’s untidy script. Tapping on the “reply” key, he wrote:
Only things that the Latin 3 class would understand. Pay attention.
He hit “send,” then turned to Asher and smiled. The smile he got in return was dazzling.
The next class, Maths, flew by, and before Micah knew it, it was time for lunch. He and Ash stepped out of the school and into the overcast city of Dublin. The renovated cathedral that was now Saint Matthew’s Catholic School for Boys was easily the tallest building for miles. After the bombings of 2019, most of the city had been leveled out, save for the school and two or three churches on the other side of the city.
Asher led Micah down the street to their favorite restaurant. Halfway there, however, they ran into Gus Malarkey and his gang of thugs. They jumped off of the low wall they had been sitting on and surrounded Micah and Ash.
“Hey there, Princess,” Gus said, grabbing Micah’s tie and pulling him close. His breath smelled of cigarettes and beer. “You buying lunch for me today?”
Micah nodded and reached into his pocket. He stuffed a wad of cash into Gus’s outstretched hand. Gus, in turn, released Micah, blew him a kiss, and the gang walked away, guffawing loudly.
Asher came up to Micah and tucked his tie back into his vest.
“It’s okay, Micah,” Ash said. They were walking again, hand-in-hand, towards the restaurant. “I’ll get into his locker and get you your money back. One of these days, I’m going to kick that prat’s ass. You’ll see, Micah, he’ll get his dues.”
Micah sniffed and nodded. He, too, was tired of dealing with Gus. They had all met on their first day of primary school, and since that day, Gus had picked on Micah for many different reasons. Gus’s most recent excuse for picking on Micah was the closeness of Micah’s relationship with Asher. Some of the others had been Micah’s height (roughly five-foot-nine), Micah’s eye colour (light grey), and the paleness of Micah’s skin. Each time, Asher would stick up for Micah by either screaming at Gus or breaking into his locker to nick back whatever had been stolen from Micah’s possession in the first place.
By the time they had reached the restaurant, Micah had calmed down. They walked into the small building and sat down in a booth near the door. Immediately, the waitress came and took their order. Asher ordered a large plate of chips, a soy wrap, a salad and a large Coke. Micah asked for a veggie burger and a bottle of water. Within ten minutes, their food was placed in front of them with a flourish.
“So, what were you writing back in Latin class?” Asher asked around a mouthful of soyham. “It all looked like a bunch of gibberish to me.”
Ash’s foot kept bumping Micah’s, which was slightly distracting. Micah swallowed the food in his mouth and replied, “Several different things, really. ‘Art for the sake of art,’ ‘I came, I saw, I conquered,’ ‘Your fly is undone.’ Those sort of things. It helps that I learned Latin when I was seven. What’s so funny?”
For Asher had begun laughing hard enough that Coke had shot out of his nose. Grabbing a napkin, he cleaned himself up and grinned. “‘Your fly is undone’?”
“Gus walked by the window,” Micah explained quietly. “Damn thickhead,” he added, tears springing to his eyes. Asher leaned across the table and briefly squeezed Micah’s hand.
“It’s all right, I’ll get it back.”
A few moments later, they were back outside.
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