to Adam. Maybe Heisenbergâs theory was true on a larger-scale system, too. Maybe, while Iâd been able to measure the inputâthe electricity, the conductor, the positioningâto a high degree of precision, Iâd let my finger slip on the output and that was where the uncertainty had slipped into the equation. I had no way now to measure what Adam had lost except to say that he seemed to have lost close to everything.
I glanced at the clock. Only ten minutes had passed. Dr. Lamb had sunk into the meat of her lecture, and instead of taking notes, I was worrying about Adam. Suddenly fifty unsupervised minutes felt like an eternity. I chanced a glance at Owen, but he was scribbling in his notebook, tongue pinched between his teeth.
A dead body was enrolled in my high school. There were approximately ten thousand things that could go wrong. I tried to concentrate on Dr. Lamb but could only grasp the movement of her lips without being able to assign any meaning to the words that were forming there, so, instead, I pulled out my black-and-white composition book and began scribbling notes from the last day and a half.
I was detailing my second line of observation when there was a jab at my back and my hand slipped, causing me to leave a long pen mark across the top of the page. I spun around in my chair. Behind me, Knox Hoyle was pretending to listen intently to Dr. Lambâs lecture. I grimaced. Knox had beady, foxlike eyes and a thin face partially obscured by a fringe of shaggy hair smashed underneath the brim of a ragged old ball cap. He was the punter on the football team and Paisleyâs on-again, off-again boyfriend. Together, they were the closest thing we had to a William and Kate. The secret to Knoxâs popularity wasnât that he was a good football playerâhe wasnât, he was terribleâbut that he was the guy who knew how to get anything. Fake IDs, alcohol, hall passes. He was the favor guy, and everyone at school knew him because of it.
I turned back around, but no sooner had I done that than Knoxâs tennis shoe jabbed me in the spine again. My back stiffened. The rational part of me felt sorry for Knox that he had nothing better to do with his mind than formulate ways to mess with me, a girl who registered as a point-nothing on the social Richter scale. The more primal part wished I could dislodge his shoe and shove it in his mouth.
He had no idea who he was pestering. I had created life during the last few days alone, and he probably hadnât even finished last weekâs math homework. Come to think of it, I could be one of the most famous scientists in centuries already. Right up there with Darwin, Edison, and Faraday. I glared at the page in front of me and squeezed my hand into a fist. Stage Two , I reminded myself. We were only entering Stage Two. I had to bide my time, which meant for now, there was the eleventh grade.
When Knox rammed me in the back once more, I whipped around so hard I nearly pulled a muscle. âWhat is your problem, Hoyle?â
His eyebrows shot up in a look of faux-surprise. âWhat?â
â What? â I shot back. âReally?â That weasel.
âMs. Frankenstein!â Dr. Lambâs face became pointy with annoyance. âOutbursts belong out side.â She nodded toward the door. âNo one here is above the rules, and thatâs twice that youâve interrupted class today.â
âButââ
She pointed the open end of her marker. âNow.â
I ground my teeth together and clamped down on the monologue brewing inside me about how cosmically screwed up the high school universe was for me to be the one getting kicked out of class.
âFine,â I said, sliding my notebook underneath my arm and leaving behind a snickering Knox. It would be better for all humanity if we didnât have to breathe the same air, anyway.
I let the door close behind me too hard. The corridor was empty and
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