Elliot's AcademyA Story by Kavitha8Four friends, two schools, one story ...A WHOLE LOT OF MAIL
The
summer had been an unbearably hot one. And now, all of a sudden, people were
forced to close their windows to keep the cold air out; the sky had turned an ugly
shade of grey, and, though it rarely rained, there was a moistness in the air
that couldn’t be explained.
To Alex,
this was a sure sign that something exciting was going to happen; that some
life changing event was just around the corner. But then again, to Alex, everything was a sign " only sometimes
you realized it, and other times, you let it pass you by, just like the storm
clouds that drifted across the city, not shedding much rain, yet leaving behind
a drop or two of fresh water; making their presence felt. Not that
Alex really wanted his life to
change, he was happy enough, living with his aunt and uncle in a little cottage
at the very end of Foster’s Lane. In fact, his life had already altered a bit,
with him having to leave San Fransisco behind, owing to his uncle’s transfer to
New York.
He did
his best, however. Aunt Stacy had become increasingly fidgety lately, and Alex
suspected that she hadn’t much supported the decision to shift here, either.
But the pay was better, and they had got the house cheap (though their
neighbors would have preferred to demolish the place-and would have done so if the previous owners hadn’t intervened.)
because the couple who had lived there before them was on some sort of goodwill
spree- saying they had only built the place there so that they could rent it
out at a low price to the less well- off.
Not poor. Such people never used that word.
Others were either better off or worse off than them. They never knew by how
much.
‘Alex,
dear, can you help me in the garden for a moment?’ Aunt Stacy’s head popped
into his room, and Alex looked up with a start.
As he
had been doing nothing but bending over his book and trying to decipher the
sparse notes he had scrawled onto the page, Alex stood up immediately, ready
and agreeable.
He
followed Aunt Stacy into the garden, pausing only as she stopped near the door
to pick up her gardening gloves. The rest of the afternoon he spent helping her
dig up and then re-plant some flowering plants.
‘Anything
else?’ he asked when they seemed to be done.
Aunt
Stacy opened her mouth to say something; then hesitated. ‘Don’t you have any
homework to do, Alex?’ she asked him with a worried air.
‘It’s Saturday’
Alex protested with a half- smile. Then he added reassuringly, ‘Don’t worry, I’ll
be done by Monday!’
His aunt
still looked doubtful, but said, ‘Well, there are some things I should like you to buy … if you could just head
to that store around the corner …?’
The
store she had mentioned was, in truth, over two streets away, but Alex nodded. ‘I’ll
go get my jacket while you draw up a list’ he said briskly, standing up and
dusting the flecks of mud off his jeans. He was too preoccupied to notice the
way his aunt stared at him until he reached the front door and went inside the
house.
Alex
whistled lightly as he walked down the street, checking his watch occasionally-
he had a date scheduled with Adriane for later that day.
Adriane
was clearly one of the most popular people in his new high school. Why she had
chosen to go out with him after dumping her previous boyfriend Jamie, Alex had
no idea. He had just been at the right place at the right time, he guessed,
which was to say, a table away from Adriane when she publicly broken up with
Jamie.
Anyway,
it couldn’t hurt people’s opinion of
him at his new school when they found that he was hanging out with Adriane, so
Alex had agreed most enthusiastically.
She wasn’t
the nicest person he’d come across " overemotional, snobbish and teasing " but
Alex had seen all types of people before. He had also seen people like Adriane
before, and so he knew better than to do anything that could irritate her. Alex
was the kind of person who preferred to stay on everybody’s good side.
So
absorbed was Alex in his thoughts that he did not notice a girl heading towards
him from the other direction. She did not see him either, owing to the
teetering pile of books she somehow managed to carry, which resulted in a
rather unfortunate collision, as the books the girl had been holding slipped
from her hands and fell to the ground.
‘Are you
alright?’ Alex was the first to recover, and, polite as ever, he stood up and
held his hand out to her She didn’t seem to have heard, for she simply remained
on the hard road, scrambling to pick up all the books she had dropped. So Alex
merely bent down and helped her to do so. ‘All done’ he announced cheerily,
picking up the last book. Only then did the girl even look up at him. Once
Alex looked at her properly, he found it quite difficult to look away; she was
unmistakably pretty, with long blond " almost white " hair which seemed to have
come undone when he had bumped into her and now hung over her shoulders. Her
eyes were a deep bluish purple, which Alex supposed would have seemed out of
place on anyone else, but they seemed to suit her perfectly. She was, however,
underdressed, in a loose T shirt and a pair of jeans. Presently, Alex realized
that he had been staring at her and held out her books to her.
‘Thanks’
she murmured feebly, as though she did not use the word much, and she got to
her feet rather shakily, the books weighing down her arms.
‘Need
any help?’ Alex offered graciously, wondering at the same time why anybody
would deem it necessary to have in their possession so many books, especially
since it was the weekend.
The
girl shook her head. ‘I’m almost at my house, anyway’ she told Alex, pointing
out a particularly large building that stood only a few meters away. Alex had
always (well, for the last week and a half, at least) wondered who lived in
that huge ancient looking mansion at the other end of the street. Well, now he
knew " sort of.
‘Ahh …
alright then.’ Alex agreed, thinking at the same time that the girl looked
fairly familiar. Maybe he had seen her on the street before? But he was rather
sure that he had seen her in school, too. He ran his hand through his already
tousled hair thoughtfully.
So, ‘Alex
Summers’ he introduced himself, holding out his hand. She didn’t
take it, unwilling to let go of the books, but she said, ‘I’m Elizabeth …
Lizzie, actually’
‘Lizzie …? Oh yeah,
Adriane’s told me a lot about you!’ Alex remembered, and wondered how he didn’t
recognize her before, then, as he recalled all that Adriane had told him about
Lizzie, he realized that he should have kept his mouth shut.
Sure
enough, Lizzie raised her eyebrow questioningly, ‘Really?’ though she
pronounced the word bitterly, she seemed unsurprised. ‘And what did she say,
may I ask?’
‘No … I’d
really prefer you didn’t’ Alex admitted, aiming to lighten the mood, but Lizzie
only shot him a fairly appraising look, which made Alex wish he had never
brought up Adriane’s name.
‘You’re
her latest boyfriend, aren’t you?” Lizzie said.
Alex
didn’t like the way she said latest,
but he nodded. ‘You know me, then?’ he asked pleasantly.
Lizzie
shook her head, ‘Macy mentioned it once’ she said. Macy must be that
short, buck- toothed girl who hangs out
with her a lot, Alex thought to himself, remembering the many times Adriane had
pointed out the two together.
‘Ahh …
sure’ Alex said, not knowing what else to say; Lizzie’s eyes fixed on his face
were seriously unnerving " she seemed to have even lowered the stack of books
to glare at him.
‘What’re
you planning to do with all those books, anyway?’ he asked after a moment’s
silence had passed.
‘Homework’
Lizzie answered shortly.
‘You actually
complete all that stuff?’ Alex sounded half- amused, half- impressed.
‘You
must know that there are some people
who actually spend their time resourcefully " not merely going out every other
night and spending the day in bed’ Lizzie said.
The
insult was rather direct, and Alex wondered what he had ever done to make her
hate him as much as she evidently did. Maybe, according to her, going out with
Adriane was enough.
Feeling
that it would be pointless (and perhaps hurtful, in case she directed any more insults at him) Alex said, ‘Nice
meeting you. (It was amazing how he could lie with such a straight face) See
you later (He sure hoped not)’
Lizzie
said nothing, but she nodded politely and walked off to her house, and Alex,
with one last glance behind him, which revealed that the girl was struggling to
carry all the books, not looking as confident as she had sounded, went on his
way to the store.
*
‘I’m back!’
Alex swung open the rusty metal gate that separated his house from the rest of
the street and heaved in the heavy bag he was carrying: his aunt had managed to
cram a large number of things for him to buy into the misleadingly tiny piece
of paper she had handed him.
Hearing
no reply, Alex made his way to the front door. It was bolted from the inside,
but Alex could hear hushed whispering inside. Scratching the back of his neck
in puzzlement, Alex knocked thrice. Almost immediately, the whispers subsided,
and a second later, the door was pulled open by his aunt.
Alex
peered inside the small living room, and to his surprise, he saw Uncle Jeff
seated on one of the chairs, apparently absorbed in a piece of paper he held in
his hands.
‘What is
he-?’ Alex began, but his aunt hushed
him with her finger, looking to her right to see if their annoying neighbor was
listening in- as it was, he seemed to be inside, for loud 80’s music blared
from next door. ‘Come
inside and we’ll talk’ she said, gently pulling Alex into the house, shutting
the door behind them.
All
three people in the room were quiet for the greater part of ten minutes. His
aunt had headed off to the kitchen to prepare some coffee for Uncle Jeff,
leaving Alex seated opposite his uncle. Presently, Aunt Stacy reentered the
room, holding a tray on which there were two cups of coffee.
She
offered Alex a cup, which she already knew he would decline, Alex eyed her expectantly,
wondering why his uncle had returned home from work so early.
‘Umm …
why are we here?’ Alex said finally, if only to break the uncomfortable silence
that loomed over the room. Nobody said anything; Uncle Jeff merely grunted and
downed what remained of his coffee in one gulp while Aunt Stacy drummed on the
table beside her nervously with her long fingers.
Alex
stood up, feeling irritated now. ‘I’ll be heading up to my room, then. You’ll
find me there if and when you guys decide to speak’ he suggested, and started walking
towards his room.
‘Wait!’
his aunt cried suddenly, and Alex turned around to look at her. ‘We received
this letter, Alex …’ she began to say.
‘It’s about
your school’ his uncle said at almost the exact same time.
At these
two statements, Alex’s imaginative mind began to jump to a million conclusions
regarding what they could have meant, each thought more far- fetched than the
previous one.
‘I’ve been expelled!’ he cried out at last, picking out the most
plausible explanation that came to his head at the moment. Not that he really
saw why he should be expelled;
Not unless the principal had somehow found out that it was Alex who had
sneaked the rat into his drawer the previous Wednesday. But that was a dare, Alex thought, what else could he
have done anyway? Besides, there really was no way Mr. Ronan could have
discovered that Alex was the culprit, unless, of course, someone had had the
nerve to sneak on him. Come to think of it, Alex had never really trusted
Morris- that shifty- eyed, freckled loner in his group. Ruefully, he made a
mental note to pummel the guy the next time they met.
Shaking his head self- pityingly, as if he had already decided that he
was to be sent out of his school in shame, Alex looked at his aunt, a tiny
glint of hope in his emerald-colored eyes. To his great surprise, she seemed to
be holding back a smile.
Feeling much offended, Alex folded his arms contemptuously, ‘Is my
expulsion so funny to you, then?’ he asked.
She laughed again, then, on seeing his expression, cleared her throat
and said, ‘Don’t worry Alex; you are not
expelled from Riverside!’
A wave of relief washed over the boy, only to ebb when his uncle added
with a serious expression on his face, ‘But you will have to leave school young man’
His uncle always called him that. It was always just ‘young man’ or
sometimes even ‘nephew’. Not that Alex expected a ‘dear’ or ‘honey’ from the
old man, but really, plain ‘Alex’
would have sufficed.
Once again, Alex’s temper rose; here he was, barely a week into his
first year of high school- the peak of every teenager’s life- and he was being
asked- no, forced- to leave it. He
didn’t really think he could do that.
‘What?’ Alex didn’t really know what else to say, ‘But we just got here!’
‘Alex dear …’ his aunt sighed, and for a second, Alex felt sorry for
her. She didn’t really seem to support the idea of him leaving his school. But
then, why was she agreeing with his
uncle? Why couldn’t she put her foot down for once and tell him what she
thought of his stupid plans?
Then he looked up, his eyes filled with a resolute determination, ‘Well
then here’s news for you guys … I am definitely not leaving school. Not now.
Not ever … I mean, not until I finish high school anyway’ he corrected. He had
stood up involuntarily by now, and, aiming to make himself appear fiercer, he
stomped his right foot on the beaten carpet.
This action, however, only led to a rather large cloud of dust, which
caused all three of them to cough suddenly, Uncle Jeff even topping it off with
one of his humongous sneezes.
‘Now look here, young man!’
Uncle Jeff stood up, looking just as annoyed as Alex felt. At six feet two, he
stood a good four inches above his young nephew.
Still, Alex glared up at him defiantly and said, though his volume was a
notch lower than usual, ‘I will not leave …’
He was cut short by his uncle. ‘You will do as I say as long as you are
living under my roof!’
His voice was so loud that the nosey neighbor next door actually
switched off his radio and attempted to listen in on their intriguing
conversation. Noting this, Uncle Jeff coughed a bit and quieted down.
But Alex merely said, his voice firm, ‘Then I’m leaving!’
His uncle opened his mouth to deliver a few choice words, but Aunt
Stacy, who, up till that moment, had been as quiet as a church mouse, beat him
to it, saying wisely, ‘And where will
you go, honey?’
She does have a point, Alex
admitted to himself grudgingly. Still, that didn’t really change anything. So
he merely scowled noticeably and stared out of the window, looking vaguely at
the neighbors’ unkempt flower beds.
Out of the corner of his eye, however, he watched as his aunt took the
piece of paper that his uncle had been reading when he entered. She said
something to Uncle Jeff in a low voice. He nodded his consent, and so she held
the paper out to Alex.
‘This came for you some time ago, honey’ she said shortly.
Alex was quite determined to appear nonchalant, and he was now staring
out of the window, and amusing himself with the various cloud patterns in the
sky. And he managed it for about ten seconds before his dratted curiosity got
the better of him and, with a short turn of his head, he pulled the paper out
of his aunt’s fingers as ungraciously as he could.
Then, faintly furious with himself for accepting it, but at the same
time glad that he had not abstained from doing so, he ran his eyes over the
sheet of paper, wondering if it would explain his guardians’ strange behavior.
“Dear Mr. Alex Summers, we deem it a
privilege to notify you that you have been accepted into the ‘ELLIOT ACADEMY
FOR YOUNG MAGICIANS’”
‘Elliot Academy …?’ Alex looked at his aunt, puzzled; his eyes begged
for a proper explanation.
‘Umm … yes,’ she said testily,
‘that’s where you’ll be going, Alex.’
‘Oh!’ Alex replied cleverly.
Then, ‘So you guys are taking me out of a perfectly proper school just to put me in this unknown school that
I’ve never heard of before?’
His uncle nodded. ‘Just to be clear’ Alex said sarcastically. Then he
swore loudly.
His aunt, sensing a feud, quickly put in, ‘Your parents went to the same
school, Alex!’
Alex was quiet for a nanosecond before shouting, ‘And why exactly do you
think that would matter to me?’
‘I know it does Alex’ his aunt
replied quietly.
Okay … so maybe- just maybe-
it did. In his defense, Alex was a boy who had never seen his parents. He knew
nothing about them- their names, what they were like, and of course, he didn’t
actually know what school they went
too.
But all this was only natural for a boy who had no living relatives,
wasn’t it? Aunt Stacy and Uncle Jeff had adopted Alex when he was a baby. They
weren’t really his aunt and uncle, though Aunt Stacy had always insisted that
he address them that way. Alex had always just assumed that they didn’t know
his parents. He had even tried asking Aunt Stacy once before, when he was five
years old, whether she had known his father, and from the expression she had
given him, it had been rather clear that she had never met him.
Alex had always believed that. Until now,
when Aunt Stacy said, ‘Emily was my best friend Alex. We were next- door
neighbors. Once she was fifteen, she left for Elliot. But every vacation, when
she returned, we maintained contact with each other.
‘It didn’t take me very long to grow curious about where she kept
disappearing to every school year. And so, after a lot of coaxing, during her
final year at Elliot, she told me everything. I’ll admit, I didn’t really
believe her at first, but as she explained, it all fell into place for me.
‘After that, she had to leave, though we promised to stay in touch. But
I didn’t see Emily after that, until she came to me nearly seven years later
with a baby boy.
‘See, magicians are not allowed to stay with their parents when they are
young- which explains why Emily lived in a large mansion with only her
grandfather for company- so she had to leave you. You Alex, had no living
relatives, and I was the closest thing poor Emily had to a sister. So she gave
you to me.
‘I know your next question " you want to know whether your parents are
alive or not " but I honestly don’t know the answer. I never heard from Emily
after that night.’
Alex could do nothing but stare at his aunt, trying to see the truth in
what she was saying- that his parents had not abandoned him on their own accord
and that they may still be alive somewhere.
Not wanting to betray his true feelings, however, he growled, ‘So what,
I ask you? And what’s this about ‘young magicians’ anyway’ he glanced at the
paper clutched tightly in his hand, ‘something like whiz kids and brainiacs or
something?’ he demanded, though he knew the moment he said it that whatever it
was, it was much deeper than that.
‘It’s not what you think Alex …’ his aunt said softly, and Alex calmed
down just a bit.
‘Then what is it?’ he whispered back. He expected poor Aunt Stacy to be
stumped.
Instead, she said rather matter-of-factly, ‘Magicians, Alex. That’s what
they were. Real magicians. That’s why
they couldn’t see you for so long.’
After she said this, Alex just stared at his aunt, trying to see if she
was merely joking to lighten the pensive atmosphere. But her face said nothing.
She only nodded.
‘Wow, wow, wow!’ Alex stammered finally, falling back into his seat
involuntarily.
‘Yes Alex’ his aunt agreed, ‘This is pretty “wow” as you call it’ she
smiled. Alex
didn’t.
‘So this means I’m a magician
too, then?’ he asked hesitantly, for some reason- unknown even to himself-
wishing that he was.
His uncle answered the question, ‘Of course, young man!’ Then he got up
slowly and stretched his limbs, ‘I will be going now … it’s getting late, the
boss will keep me over time for this’ he said formally. And that was all. He
just left.
Alex looked bleakly at Aunt Stacy, whose eyes followed Uncle Jeff out.
He decided that this was probably a good time for questions. ‘Where are my
parents? Are they alive? Don’t they want me?
And where is this school? What do they teach? Magic? That’s all? What kind of
magic, exactly? Is this why you’ve been so nervous lately, aunt? And-’ ‘Alex!
Slow down!’ his aunt laughed, ‘Come, let’s go to the kitchen … I’ll make you a
cup of tea, then we’ll discuss this in detail’ Aunt Stacy always thought that a
steaming hot cup of tea was the solution to every one of life’s problems. And
before Alex could protest, she had steered him into the kitchen.
*
‘So
much work!’ Lizzie commented to herself as she adjusted her reading glasses on
her nose. She was
sitting in her bedroom- a huge, spacious area on the top floor of her mom’s
mansion- in the midst of a dozen or so piles of books of varying heights- the
smallest one containing merely two tiny dictionaries and the largest having
around twelve reference books, all of which she was browsing through for
information for her science project.
On the large, plush bed sat her laptop- open and running. On the screen
was a page on ‘Pride and Prejudice- a review’ which she was looking up for her
book report. Really, did they have to
make her read such a dry book? Lizzie had decided, five pages in, that it was
nothing more than a ‘silent movie in words’ and had decided to modify one of the
reviews on the internet.
Lizzie stared up helplessly at the red wall, on which she had tacked up
many self- made charts saying, “Don’t
delay! Do it today!” and “GET A 9.0
G.P.A!!!” Looking at them now, rather made her feel like
laughing instead of helping her out in her work, which was the intended purpose
of those messages.
After around ten minutes of attempting to work out math sums, she buried
her head in her math book that lay, open and threatening, in front of her. Not
that she didn’t enjoy homework- quite
the contrary, in fact- but this was far too much for one day. School had not
been going all that well lately " and by lately, Lizzie meant that she hadn’t
enjoyed school for the last couple of years. The last week was no exception "
she had managed to lose a mark in the first Math test of the year, get into a
fight with her supposed best friend Marci, and bump into Adriane’s dumb
boyfriend. And that was just the beginning of her troubles.
Just as she was wondering which
piece of work to tackle first, she heard a loud knock on the front door. Glad
for an excuse to abandon her books, she jumped up enthusiastically.
Then she sprinted down the spiral staircase so quickly that before she
knew it, she had lost her footing. The rest of the trip was spent tumbling down
the remaining three steps.
‘Ow, ow …. ow!’ she yelped,
finally landing on the soft red carpet. As she rubbed her leg sorely, feeling
more irritated than ever, the knock sounded again. ‘I’m coming!’ she groaned
loudly, dragging herself up and limping towards the door.
Maybe it’s mother, back early from Paris, Lizzie thought hopefully. Then
the fall would be sort of worth it. Her mother was a famous fashion designer
who spent most of her days away in exotic locations, forgetting that she had a
teenage daughter back home in some suburb in New York. Like now, for example,
she was away in Paris, opening up some new boutique.
It was not her mom who stood in front of her, however, when she turned
the knob hesitantly. She was greeted " rather warmly " by Matthew, their local
postman: a young boy of only eighteen years of age, working to pay off his
college fees.
‘I ran all the way down … and nearly broke my back and foot … for a
bundle of lousy letters?’ she cried out incredulously, addressing no one in
particular.
‘And to see me, of course’ Matthew replied with a wink.
‘Oh seriously, Matthew? I’m having a bad enough day without you being
part of it’ Lizzie said, rolling her eyes.
He replied in a slow drawl, that he considered very appealing- though to
Lizzie it looked like he was talking in slo-mo- and said flirtatiously, ‘Why, of course, Elizabeth.’ And Matthew
grinned. He, for one, knew that Lizzie’s bark was worse than her bite: though
the girl snapped a lot and was rude, she was a pretty nice person when she
wanted to be.
‘Don’t call me that!’ Lizzie protested, them ‘Anything else?’ she asked,
taking the letters from him. ‘Yeah " sign here’ said Matthew, indicating
where on the piece of paper clipped on to the green pad he was holding. ‘So ...
why do you sign your name as “Elizabeth” then?’ he asked mischievously.
Predictably, the door was slammed on his face less than a minute later.
Clearly, Lizzie was in a bad mood.
Slumping down onto the couch in the living room, Lizzie sighed deeply;
she had really been hoping for her mother. It had been almost three weeks since
she had last seen her.
Well … who am I kidding anyway? she thought sadly, hugging her favorite
red pillow close to herself. Mother’s probably got more important things to do.
If only I had a father, Lizzie thought wistfully. Her mother rarely spoke of
her father. She seemed pretty disturbed whenever Lizzie asked her.
Lizzie did know that her
father was British, however, and the reason they lived in a mansion was because
it reminded her mother of the house in which she had lived together with Lizzie’s
father- complete with a butler and maids.
Lizzie didn’t even know his name. Often, when she was lying on her bed,
all alone, staring at the dark ceiling, she thought of her father and who he
really was. Lots of thoughts sprung up in her mind, until she finally fell
asleep dreaming.
Without really meaning to, a tear slipped from her eye and fell onto the
pillow, deepening the red into a dark shade of crimson. Shaking her head and
coming out of her stupor, she started to sort out the letters in her hand,
mainly to occupy herself, and also to avoid returning to her homework.
Most of them were " predictably " addressed to her mother: brochures for
the latest fashion and bills for her various purchases. After all, her mother
was the only occupant of the house other than Lizzie herself, not counting the
two maids and the aged butler; and he was, at the moment, vacationing in some
remote island in the Caribbean, leaving Lizzie to fend for herself- little
things like answering the door.
‘Mother, mother … mother’ ‘Lizzie
chimed rhythmically, rifling through the many letters, disheartened. A small
heap of letters was now forming beside her.
She had just decided to abandon the task and return to her room- even
homework seemed more interesting compared to this meaningless occupation- when
she came across a blood red envelope that stood out contrastingly amidst the
other spotless white ones and the few brown covers.
‘Wonder what this is?’ Lizzie said to herself, fishing it out of the
bundle, unconsciously careful about it. Turning it over, she saw the words on
the cover, in neat, cursive script: “To
Miss. Elizabeth Parker”
‘Me?’ Lizzie squeaked
disbelievingly in a low voice, barely audible even to herself. She stared at
the letter, surprised to see her name on it; she hadn’t known that any of her
friends actually wrote letters … not that she had many friends. Still, she was
pretty sure Marci wouldn’t be caught
dead posting one.
‘Then who the heck is this thing from?’ Lizzie whispered quietly, and,
bubbling with mingled excitement and apprehension, she ripped open the
envelope. Inside, written on a plain sheet of white paper were the words, “Dear Miss. Elizabeth Parker, we deem it a
privilege to notify you that you have been accepted into the ‘ELLIOT ACADEMY FOR YOUNG MAGICIANS’”
Lizzie stared blankly at the paper for a few seconds before she actually
registered the strange words on it. ‘The Elliot Academy…?’ she mouthed, thrown
of balance by the strange letter. She had never heard the name before, and she
had most definitely not sent in an
application.
Then Lizzie briefly wondered if this was her friend, Marci’s, idea of a
prank. After all, the girl had ruefully sworn to get back at Lizzie for
embarrassing her in the cafeteria earlier that day. Loooong story. Lizzie didn’t think it was such a big deal,
really. She had first accidentally- as she reminded poor Marci three times-
tipped her lunch tray onto Marci’s new pink parka- really, who wore a parka in
autumn? She had only tripped in the first place because Adriane had stuck out
her foot, and Lizzie was quite sure that
that was no accident.
Anyhow, it hadn’t changed things: Marci’s sweater was covered in
spaghetti anyway, red sauce dripping onto her blue jeans. ‘My outfit! I-i-it’s ruined!!’
the poor girl had shrieked, staring at her dress in horror.
And what had Lizzie done? On her part, she was already in a pretty foul
mood, having lost one measly mark in the geometry test and she was in no mood
to hear Marci bawl about her blemished outfit.
So, pushing her hair back irritably, she simply said, ‘Just a little
sauce, Marci. It’ll wash off’ at which Marci had looked more mournful than
ever. Lizzie had just rolled her eyes- which she had quite a habit for doing-
and said carelessly, ‘Wipe that stupid expression off your face, Marci. The
parka didn’t look too good on you anyway.’
She had really meant to offer succor to her friend, but it hadn’t turned
out that way. Instead, Marci had shot her a look of loathing and cried out, ‘I’ll
get you back for this, Elizabeth Parker-’ most definitely a bad sign; Marci
only used Lizzie’s full name when she was really angry- ‘just see if I don’t!’
and she had stomped away to the restroom.
And what had Lizzie done after
that, with all the students looking at her expectantly? Well … she was not
really the dramatic type, so she didn’t rush after Marci, calling out the
latter’s name.
Instead, she glared at Adriane, who had a slight smirk on her piggish
face, and walked slowly back to her table. Once there, she sat down in her seat
and started to read the first lesson in the history text book, cramming for the
test that would be held during the next period.
I really was pretty
inconsiderate, Lizzie realized now, thinking back on the incident. Then,
sighing, she said softly, ‘Nothing can be done now, however!’ and she looked again at the letter.
‘I don’t think Marci would have had the time to post this letter anyway
… then …’ Lizzie continued to stare at the red envelope, partially entranced by
it. It was important, she knew. She didn’t know exactly how she knew that, though.
‘This is really weird’ she finally concluded, picking up the phone to
call her mother. She dialed the number hopefully, praying that her mother would
pick up.
A soft melody sounded on the other side- one that Lizzie was so used to
hearing whenever she rung up her mother. Halfway through her favorite part of
it, it stopped abruptly.
‘This is Charisse, Mrs. Bella Parker’s secretary … she is not available
at the moment … can I take a message … please press 1 if you … press 2 …’ the
connection was pretty pathetic, and Lizzie could only vaguely hear Charisse’s
voice.
However, she had heard enough to know that she wouldn’t be able to
contact her busy mother for some time. So, she decisively punched the number 1
on the phone and said, ‘Hi mother! This is me, Elizabeth (her mother had always
preferred her given name; she was the one who had given it, after all) I’ve received this strange letter … so could
you please come back as soon as possible? Like, say, tonight? I hope you take
the trouble to at least listen this message!’ she finished. Then
she sighed again and stared out of the window unregistering, wondering when her
mother would be returning … whenever that would be.
*
‘Race you home, dear brother!’ Diana yelled over the bellowing wind. She
rode her cycle swiftly along the muddy road, maintaining her balance perfectly.
After all, she did ride the cycle almost every day after school.
‘You are so going to lose this
one!’ her brother, Carter, called back from somewhere behind her, though he
seemed to be having quite a hard time keeping up with her; every time he came
close, she simply revved up and shot ahead, laughing like a maniac.
In reply to his seemingly meaningless threat, Diana merely gave another
one of her devilish laughs, ‘Yeah right
Carter! That would be the day, now!’ she scoffed. Her short black curls flew
behind her in the strong gusts of wind as she raced ahead of Carter, clearly
enjoying the race, even more so the fact that she was seemingly sure to win.
Carter grumbled and tried to speed up, only succeeding in further
falling behind.
‘Almost there!’ for one glorious second, Diana had nearly won- she was
just inches away from the finish. The next second, her wheel struck against a
jutting rock and she took a tumbling fall into the creek below. ‘Diana!’
her brother screamed worriedly as his sister took a spectacular fall, but not
before riding well past the finish line- a clothesline that hung between two
tall trees in the backyard.
Then he kicked his bicycle aside and rushed over to help her up. He
found her all right- save a little wet- but it could have been worse, he told
himself.
Even then, as Carter hoisted her up, Diana gave a deep moan, ‘My arm …
ow … this is all your fault!’ she groaned irritably.
‘What?’ Carter was incredulous. Even he couldn’t really see how his
sister was going to blame him for this accident.
‘Well …’ Diana started, looking at him ruefully from under the thick
curly mop of hair that covered her face, ‘If you hadn’t been so slow at
bicycling, then maybe you would have won and there would have been no need for
me to try to go so quickly, because I would have known you could win, and so I
wouldn’t have tripped on that stupid rock!’ she concluded- and once she had
done so, the excuse sounded feeble even to herself.
‘I don’t believe you!’ Carter snorted in disbelief, dropping his sister’s
hand so suddenly that she fell right back into the muddy water, evidently
caught by surprise. Uncaring, Carter added, ‘And I did win, anyway!’ Angered by his words, Diana pulled him into the
water too and landed a blow on his face.
Needless to say, a pretty wild fight ensued, and when the two siblings
emerged up the mound, dragging their misshapen cycles behind them in a most
pathetic manner, they resembled nothing so much as the two old vagrants who
begged for food at their doorstep during harsh winter days.
‘Oh " not again!’ their mother
cried out disappointedly, as they left two sets of muddy tracks behind them
when they entered through the back door, Diana neatly avoiding the laid out mat. ‘Were you two fighting again?’ she asked
them, mopping up the footprints. Carter nodded while Diana shrugged guiltily.
Then she slumped down on the straw chair and began to wolf down the cookies on
the plate in front of her. ‘Did I ever tell you that you’re really disgusting?’ Carter asked his
sister, staring at her pointedly. ‘Only about ten times a day!’ Diana remarked
cheerfully, still stuffing her face. Carter sighed and turned to his mother, ‘Why
did you ask us to come home early, Mama?’ he said to her. Mrs. Forsythe was now sweeping the ground,
and she looked up at the question. She didn’t answer, though. Carter picked up a cookie from the tray
that Diana had already half- finished and chewed on it decently, whilst staring
at his mother, an expectant expression on his face. ‘In a second, dear.’ Mrs. Forsythe replied,
dusting at some invisible speck of dirt on the ground. ‘Sure’ Carter said
bracingly, looking around- anywhere but Diana: the sight of her when she was
positively ravenous was not a pretty
one. The Forsythes lived on a farm, right at the center
of one, in fact. They had literally grown up with cows and chickens and pigs.
The mother was the head of the household- both Carter and Diana had never seen
or heard of their father. Nor did they care. Anyone who left their mother was a
waste of their time. They were happy enough as it was: a little wooden cottage
in the middle of nowhere. Diana was a girl of about fifteen, eight
months younger to her brother. They went to the same school in the country- to
the very same class, in fact. She was rather short for her age, with thick
black hair, dancing black eyes and elfish ears that stuck out a bit. She was
cheery and helpful most of the time, though she did fire up every once in a
while. Diana’s brother, Carter, was not really much
like her. With his fair hair and grey eyes, he had an ever- serious expression
on his face, though in truth, he was really a rather nice person, though a bit
over- protective of his little sister. Of course, they went to school- a humble
country school just two miles away from their dwelling. There were only about
twelve students in their class. The whole little town was a small, close- knit
one, free from external influence. ‘Oh God!’ Mrs. Forsythe plopped down onto a
chair, wiping her brow with the same dirt- streaked cloth she had used to wipe
the ground minutes ago. Carter pretended not to notice; Diana, on the other
hand, really hadn’t. She was done with the cookies, and now sat
contentedly, waiting for her mother to start talking. ‘Are you gonna say
anything or not?’ she demanded crassly after ten seconds of silence, ‘Lucy
called me to a movie with some others after school, you know! And I declined,
saying that you had something to tell me. Anyhow, if all we’re gonna do is sit
here and stare mutely at each other’s faces, then I might as well …’ ‘That’s enough, Diana’ Carter broke in " his
tone soft but firm. He, for one, had noticed how tired his mother looked and he
felt that his sister was being really inconsiderate. His mother, however, shook her head and
said, ‘She’s right, Carter. I called you both here for something, and it’s
about time I told you.’ And so, surveying the two pairs of eyes- one
black and the other a deep blue- staring intently at her with a smile, she
continued, ‘It’s about your father …’ The two teenagers didn’t really know what to
say to this totally unexpected piece of news. ‘Oh!’ Diana said unsurely. Carter was quicker
to react. ‘Yeah, so what about him?’ he asked his
mother in a rather clipped tone. Carter had always maintained that his father
had abandoned the family, and so he had no desire to talk about him. His mother looked like she wasn’t really sure
of what she was going to say, but said it anyway, ‘He was a magician.’ And again, her two children looked rather
stumped. Diana gave a low cough and said, ‘You mean to say that father some
sort of a ‘stage’ performer? …. Oh! And did he suddenly make himself disappear?’
she sounded pretty enthused by the idea. Carter ignored his sister’s questions and
said, ‘Really, mama, is that what you wanted to say to us … that our father was
a magician … that was some news I could
live without knowing …’ ‘Not that
kind of a magician!’ his mother said suddenly, ‘A real one … who can
perform good old magic … you both are magicians too!’ Diana stared at her mom, ‘Oh, come on, mama,
I’m not a first grader any more. So you can’t really think of fooling me with
the idea that magic actually exists, like you did on my fifth birthday so long
ago. Now come to think of it, that was pretty dumb …’ her voice faltered when
she caught sight of the serious expression on her mother’s face. Then she
whimpered, ‘You’re … not … kidding …
are you?’ Her mother simply shook her head and pulled
an envelope out of one of the drawers in the table next to the chair on which
she was perched. ‘Read this please’ she said to the two of them. ‘Umm … okay then’
replied Carter vaguely, taking it from her. He opened it delicately and took out the
paper inside. Twenty seconds lapsed as the two siblings stared at it, not
knowing how to react to what was written on it. ‘So …’ Carter said finally, ‘we’re going to become magicians too?’ he
looked dubious at the very thought. When he thought of his future- which he did
quite a lot- he had always pictured himself as a doctor … not a magician, of all things. Diana, on the other hand, looked faintly
excited, ‘Do we … do we get to wear starry cloaks and pointed hats … and carry
wands? And …’ Her inquiries were endless. She had so many
questions that in the end, her mother had to cut her off with a laugh. And the
rest of the evening was spent explaining.
© 2016 Kavitha8Author's Note
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