But maybe her instinctive alterna-ness (in her capacity as a CHS drama mod) made her more tolerant of dorkiness, less repelled by it, even when it radiated from the anonymous King of the Superdorks.
Two: She knew no one was watching.
This one almost goes without saying.
80
One: She was totally high.
Well, obviously.
M R. JAN I SC H’S U N DE RG ROU N D B U N KE R
I was mulling over some of these points in Geometry that
Monday when I felt an eraser hit me on the forehead.
“Somewhere else you’d rather be, Thomas Charles
Henderson?” said Mr. Janisch. He always calls people by their full names as they appear on the roll sheet. Just to be a dick.
“No, of course not, Mr. Janisch. Copying these problems
and their proofs from the front and back sections of this book respectively is the realization of a lifelong dream.”
Of course, I didn’t really say that.
What I did was: I gave him a look that was intended to
convey the impression that I had been contemplating the
mysteries of the world of Pure Geometry and that I had been on the verge of discovering an Important Truth that would
have been a boon to humanity and would also have had con-
siderable commercial value had my concentration not been
shattered by his supremely ill-timed, inappropriate, and possibly actionable eraser assault.
But at the same time, I was in no mood for Mr. Janisch’s
foolishness, so I’m not surprised that my look may also have managed to convey the sentiment “No duh, Einstein.”
Six of one, half dozen of the other, really.
The punishment for this sort of low-level insubordination
is usually that you are made to copy out something, typically a dictionary page, onto a sheet of notepaper. This is no big deal. There is little difference between this penalty and the other assignments they give you as part of your “academic”
work. The only difference is the thing you’re copying. A
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dictionary page is preferable to a chapter from The Catcher in the Rye, even, because, well, at least the chances are good that it will be a page you’ve never copied before and that’s special.
Mr. Janisch, for reasons known only to him, likes to make
you fill a page of notepaper, front and back, with zeros, in groups of three like this: 000,000,000, etc. The weird part is that he seems genuinely pleased when you hand him the finished page of zeros. It’s like he gets caught up in the excitement and forgets that it’s supposed to be a disciplinary
measure. My theory is that he saves these pages in a series of black binders in a specially designed rebar-and-concrete lead-lined underground bunker. When the bomb drops, or on
Judgment Day, or by the time he retires and goes under-
ground to plot his revenge, he’ll have thousands of binders filled with millions upon millions of zeros. Then he’ll add a one to the beginning and suddenly he’ll be in sole possession of the world’s largest number in manuscript form. Or I guess it’d be even better to add a nine. Then he can laugh mania-cally and die happy.
Whatever gets you through the night, big fella.
Anyway, that was my punishment this time. I enjoy it, ac-
tually. It’s mindless, routine, repetitive, familiar, and no more pointless than anything else they make you do in school. The hand moves automatically; the pen goes circle-circle-circle-tic, circle-circle-circle-tic, a soothing rhythm; and the mind is free to wander. I started trying to think up some lyrics to
“Trying Not to Believe (It’s Over).”
TH E F LOWE R P OT M E N
One thing that was slightly freaking me out was the thought that even though I felt I couldn’t be more different than the 82
CHS people at the party, we did seem to like a lot of the same music. Because I love the Who. But I’m not a fake mod like the dolphins at the party. Not at all. I don’t dress up like anything. True, I did let my hair grow a little longer and started to wear flared jeans over the summer when I got more into
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