"The Nameless World" Chapter 1
Noah never told his mom how much he hated the bus. It wasn’t the bus so much as the kids on the bus. They called him names. They tried to trip him. They covered him in spitballs. They made Noah’s life a nightmare!
That day was no different. With his hair in a twisted mess and a little dab of syrup on his chin, Noah was the ready target for everyone’s pranks and mean remarks. He climbed the stairs of the bus, sped to the first empty seat and slouched down beside the window hoping no one would bother him.
He unzipped his backpack and pulled out the book he had begged his mom to buy for him. They didn’t have a lot of money, but his mom managed to scrape enough together to buy him the book recommended by Noah’s science teacher, Mr. Porter.
Noah smiled as he looked at the black cover with the galaxy and planets surrounding a large, burning meteor.
The real things are much better.
Noah drifted into the memory of the meteor shower from the night before.
How cool it would have been to see it from the top of a mountain or in an airplane or sitting on a cloud just out of reach of the falling rocks.
His daydream was interrupted by the noise of the kids getting on the bus. Noah cringed. It was Kevin Swanson and Jake Maurin, two rough kids who liked to pick on him. Kevin was a year older, but in the fifth grade, too, because he flunked kindergarten.
Kevin, a big kid whose family was well off, was like a mean Dennis the Menace. Blond, floppy hair crowned his freckled face. He scowled a lot and only smiled when someone else was crying. He was always showing off the new toys his father bought him. He never let anyone touch them, and would charge money if other kids wanted to see his latest gadget.
Jake was an average kid, not skinny, not fat, with sandy blond hair that curled at the ends when it got too long. Jake used to be Noah’s friend when they were younger. Their dads worked together, but when Noah’s dad died, the two boys drifted apart. Noah wasn’t good at making friends after that. He and Jake would talk, but it wasn’t the same. Then Kevin came along and their friendship really changed.
Kevin and Jake knocked their way through the bus and plopped down in the seat behind Noah. Immediately, the torture began.
“What are you reading, dork?” Kevin bellowed out over Noah’s shoulder. “A book about rocks! Ha ha ha... the space cadet is reading about rocks! What a loser.”
Noah tried to ignore him.
“What’s so fascinating about rocks, Spacey?”
Noah closed his eyes, fighting the urge to tell him that it wasn’t a book about rocks, it was about meteors, but Kevin was too stupid to know the difference.
“I asked you a question, Spacey...” Kevin spat when he talked.
“You better answer him, Spacey, or else,” Jake piped in.
Noah clutched the book, desperate to think of something he could do to get away. Switch seats? Run off the bus next time it stopped? Fly out the window and never come back? He wished. Instead he just sat there, waiting for their next move.
It didn’t take Kevin long to swipe the book out of Noah’s hands and hold it like a trophy over his head.
“Maybe I’ll just have to find out what’s so great about rocks by keeping the book for myself.”
Noah’s face turned red with anger.
“I know what it’s good for!” Kevin exclaimed. “Beating rock heads!”
Thud. Thud. Thud. Kevin took great care to hit Noah square on top of the head. Noah’s face burned. It was humiliating, but nothing new.
Noah waited for the fourth whack on the head when all of a sudden the bus jerked to a stop, throwing everyone forward in their seat. Mr. Crowley, the bus driver, stood up and clomped like a bull let loose from his pen making his way toward Kevin and Jake. The entire bus fell silent.
“That’s enough out of you two,” he yelled. “Give that book back to him and sit down!”
Kevin and Jake cowered in silence. Noah wished he could peek at their faces.
“I mean it - NOW! And if I so much as hear a peep from anyone, I’ll stop this bus and give you all a whupin’!”
Mr. Crowley’s face twisted in anger.
“Here’s your stupid book,” Kevin grumbled as he dropped it into Noah’s lap.
Mr. Crowley stood in front of the boys long enough to make his point before returning to the driver’s seat. Noah was relieved that Mr. Crowley had seen Kevin hitting him, but knew it wouldn’t stop Kevin from getting even with him later. He heard Kevin mumbling behind him.
“If he ever touched me, my dad would sue the crap out of him. In fact, maybe I should tell my dad and get him fired once and for all.”
Noah put the book back in his bag. He didn’t feel like reading anymore.
The school day moved along like any other. First lesson was English. Mrs. Engles droned on and on about the importance of proper punctuation. During math, Noah learned that fractions are trickier than he thought.
As his teacher assigned the class math work, Noah gazed at the clock, counting down the minutes to his next class, science.
Five, four, three… Noah watched the second hand tick by until a bell sounded overhead.
“It’s 11:00,” the teacher announced. “Those of you who have science in the lab can leave, but go straight to the classroom!”
Noah loved science. He knew science better than anyone else in the class and he loved the teacher, Mr. Porter. Mr. Porter was different than the other teachers. He didn’t wear suits and ties – instead he wore dirty, old khakis with oversized cardigans, some of which had holes in places Mr. Porter couldn’t see. He had little, round spectacles, but always seemed to look over them, even when reading. He never ate lunch in the teachers’ lounge. He would eat in the classroom while reading fascinating articles in science magazines. Sometimes he let Noah eat in there, too, and loaned him older copies of his magazines to look at while nibbling on his lunch.
A few weeks earlier, Mr. Porter made a change in his teaching schedule to educate the class about meteor showers, preparing them for last night’s event. Mr. Porter knew how excited Noah was about the topic and invited him to eat lunch in the classroom everyday since then so he could learn more about meteors from the collection of books and magazines.
Noah hurried into the science lab, took his seat and looked around the room. Mr. Porter’s ratty jacket was hanging on the back of his desk chair, but no Mr. Porter. He watched the clock, anxious for class to begin. There was so much he wanted to say about the shower!
Minutes ticked by. Noah scowled. Mr. Porter was nowhere in sight. It wasn’t like him to be late.
Maybe it’s for a good reason. Maybe Mr. Porter managed to capture a piece of meteor from the night before and is waiting to reveal his find to the class.
Noah envisioned how glorious such a moment would be: a table with a massive lump on it, covered by a glamorous silk cloth. Mr. Porter would pull away the cover and gleaming in its place would be a beautiful golden meteor, shining like the sun for all to see.
He was startled back to reality by the sound of a ruler being whacked against the chalkboard. The noise quieted everyone. Noah and the rest of the class stared in confusion at the crooked old man standing before them.
“Quiet now! I won’t stand for any misbehaving in my classroom.”
His classroom? Noah became disoriented. Did I go into the wrong room?
He looked around the lab and made certain it was Mr. Porter’s science class. It had the same pictures of animals on the wall and jars filled with creepy crawlies sitting on the windowsill. His classmates were all around him and, yes, Mr. Porter’s jacket was definitely on the chair.
What is going on? Who is this man and where is Mr. Porter?
As if the old man could read Noah’s mind, he looked at Noah and said, “I am Mr. Sput. I’ll be taking charge of this class for the next few weeks while Mr. Porter is...” He paused, searching for the right words to say, like he had a secret that he didn’t want the class to know.
“...absent.”
Absent? Noah couldn’t believe it. He had waited all day to share his encounter of the meteor shower with Mr. Porter. Mr. Porter was the only person Noah knew who would truly understand how magical the experience was. He wouldn’t pretend to care or smile at Noah’s silly stories. He wouldn’t laugh at Noah’s excitement. He would have listened and shared in the conversation, telling his own stories and fascinations.
How could he be absent, and for weeks? Why didn’t he tell me he was going to be gone?
Noah was in a daze for the remainder of the class. Mr. Sput rambled on about kingdoms and phylum and other things to do with scientific classification of earth’s living creatures. Noah didn’t care. He was too distracted by his own thoughts. He wondered if there was something more to Mr. Porter’s ‘absence’.
The lunch bell rang. Class dismissed. Noah would have some time to think. Then he remembered...recess. Noah’s heart sank. For the past few weeks, he was able to stay in Mr. Porter’s class clear through recess. Now he’d have to face the challenges of the playground once again. It wasn’t just recess...it was recess with Kevin and Jake. After that morning, he was sure to be in trouble.
Maybe I can find a place to hide. Maybe they won’t remember what happened on the bus. Maybe...
Too late. On the way to the lunchroom, Noah was intercepted by Kevin.
“You know I’ll be looking for you on the playground, nerd.”
Noah kept walking.
“You didn’t think I’d let you get away with getting me in trouble did you?” Kevin laughed as he shoved past Noah.
Just when Noah thought it was safe to run, Kevin turned around, sneered at him, smiled a twisted smile and punched his fist into his hand.
Noah shivered. This is it. I’m a dead man.
Noah could hardly eat. Not only did he have to worry about Kevin, but there was still the matter of Mr. Porter’s absence plaguing him.
Is he hurt? Is he sick? Maybe even dying!?
Noah didn’t want to think about that. Over the school year, Mr. Porter was the closest thing Noah had to a father. He couldn’t stand the thought of losing someone else who meant so much to him.
Noah stared at his lunch, head and heart pounding. He wanted to eat but his stomach was in severe turmoil.
Little white balls whizzed past Noah. One hit and stuck to his lunch bag. He knew that Kevin and Jake were having their fun with spitballs. He felt one hit his head. Hearty laughter echoed from a few tables away.
Noah looked down at his lap. His knuckles whitened from the stress of his hands curling into fists.
“Be brave, Noah,” he reminded himself. “Don’t sink to their level. Don’t be like a bully! Be a hero!”
He liked the sound of that. Noah the hero! Noah the superb! Noah the.... SPLAT. Another spitball nestled itself in his hair.
Defeated, Noah shoved his lunch inside the bag, grabbed his backpack and slipped out of the lunchroom. He’d take his chances on the playground.
The fresh air eased Noah’s mind. It was warm outside and the sound of kids playing lifted his spirits. He hoped Kevin and Jake would get caught up in a game of dodge ball or football and, if nothing else, wait for another time to pulverize him.
Scanning the playground, Noah spotted an empty spot under an old oak tree. He walked slowly in that direction, not wanting to catch anyone’s attention. Across the pavement to the grass - he started to feel better - past the swings, and still no sign of Kevin. Just a few more yards....
“Hey, jerk! Where do you think you’re going?”
Noah wanted to run, but his knees locked up. His lungs tightened. Breathing came hard.
“Just move...” he told himself. With all his will he was able to pick up one foot and slowly inch it forward.
“Don’t walk away from me, you little punk!”
“Just leave me alone.” Noah mumbled between clenched teeth.
“Oh yeah? What are you gonna’ do if I don’t?” Kevin’s voice grew louder. “You gonna’ cry? You gonna’ go run and tell your mommy?”
Kevin’s tone was cruel; the laughter of his friends egged him on.
Feeling vulnerable, Noah scanned the ground, looking for something to use as protection. He spotted a stone not three feet away. It wasn’t big, but might be enough to ward Kevin and his pack of bullies off long enough for Noah to run back inside.
Kevin’s shadow engulfed Noah. He urged his legs to take another step, but was jerked to a halt when Kevin grabbed hold of the backpack strapped to his shoulders. He heard the zipper open as Kevin reached inside the bag.
“Looky what I found,” Kevin gloated as he pulled the book about meteors out of the drooping sack.
“NO! You give that back, right now!”
Noah whirled around to face him. Kevin held the book up in front of Noah, knowing very well he couldn’t reach it.
“Give it back,” Noah demanded.
“I’m not through with it yet,” Kevin snarled.
“Give it back to me!” Filled with fear and anger, Noah raised his voice. There was no telling what Kevin planned to do. All Noah cared about was his book. Kevin dangled it in front of him, laughing.
“Fine. Turn around and I’ll put it back.”
Noah stood firm. He wasn’t going to fall for one of Kevin’s nasty tricks.
“Turn around, scaredy cat,” Kevin demanded.
Noah glared at him.
“I said turn around!” Kevin growled as he reached out and pushed Noah.
The force of the push knocked the wind out of Noah. Struggling to catch himself, he spun around, landing on his hands and knees. Noah’s lunch flew out of his hand, hit the ground and spilled into the grass. The wet ground cushioned his fall but made for nasty mud stains on his pants. He felt a sting and knew he was bleeding.
Noah could feel everyone looking at him.
“Oh, is the baby gonna cry? Is the baby crying?” Kevin mocked.
They all started laughing, even the girls gossiping on the swings giggled. Noah wanted to curl up and die.
“You’re pathetic, Noah. Why don’t you crawl back under the rock you came from?”
Kevin threw the book past Noah into a nearby patch of mud. The book stuck in the sludge like an arrow lodged in a tree trunk. Noah stared at his precious book covered in dirt and mud, water seeping into the pages.
Tears of fury spilled from Noah’s eyes as he watch the book sink deeper into the mud.
“That’ll teach you to mess with me, you little freak,” Kevin triumphed.
Humiliation was gone. Reeling with never before felt anger, Noah grabbed a stone and hurled it at Kevin, screaming with rage.
Bullseye! The stone met its target with perfect precision. Kevin didn’t know what hit him until blood trickled from the lump on his otherwise perfect forehead.
Right in the middle, like a Cyclops’s eye, the wound swelled and drained with Kevin’s foul blood. The sight of it made Noah queasy, but he felt like David slaying the giant, Goliath.
His victory was short lived, interrupted by a shrill wail coming from Kevin.
“I’m bleeding! Someone help me, help me!” Kevin screamed.
He was crying and carrying on like it was a bullet from a sniper’s gun. Noah couldn’t believe it. It was swollen, but hardly more than a scratch and Kevin was acting like the biggest baby. All of Kevin’s friends, including Jake, were dumbfounded, not just from the fact that Noah stood up for himself, but that Kevin was making such a fuss.
Noah had to think fast. He couldn’t just sit there. Surely someone would avenge their friend’s ambush, and Noah wasn’t about to take a beating from five people.
All of the commotion caught the attention of Mrs. Tourney, the recess supervisor. She hobbled over to the scene, held back by her own large thighs swishing beneath her flower-print dress. She sucked in a big breath of air and blasted a trill from the whistle hanging around her neck.
“What’s going on over there,” she demanded, waddling closer to the scene, heaving deep breaths.
Nobody answered. They were all focused on Kevin. Someone tried to get a tissue out of his pocket, but it ripped and fell to the ground. It was Noah’s chance to get away. He grabbed what he could of his lunch, scurried up off the ground, reclaimed his book from the mud and sped to his hideout - the old oak tree.
Noah struggled to catch his breath. He was quivering with excitement and fear.
“There is no way I’m getting out of this one,” he heaved. “How could I let him get the best of me? So much for being a hero.”
Noah cleaned off his book as much as possible and laid it out to dry. The pages were stiff and soaked with a dingy, brown film. Some of the words were smeared which made reading nearly impossible. Noah felt sick. It wasn’t just the book. It was what the book stood for: his excitement from the meteor shower, the money his mother sacrificed to buy it, all his hopes and all the dreams Noah harbored - now covered in mud.
The recess bell rang. Noah peered around the tree to see kids scrambling to gather kick balls and jump ropes as they all filtered back into the school.
“There is no way I’m going back in there.” Noah bit his lip, resolved to spend the rest of the day hiding, thinking of a way to explain what he had done.
The afternoon heat dried Noah’s book quickly. He picked it up to inspect the damage, scraped off clumps of dried dirt and tucked it safely into his backpack.
A squirrel scampered up and down the tree, gathering what few acorns remained on the ground from last autumn. Noah smiled at the squirrel’s work.
“Barely spring and already gathering for winter.”
He watched the squirrel scuttle from one acorn to the next, pausing every so often to eye Noah, making sure he was just another fixture surrounding the tree.
Sunbeams threaded their way through the oak branches. Leaves fluttered and danced in the quiet breeze. As Noah eyed the squirrel, his attention was drawn to a bright flash on the ground. His heart beat fast with curiosity. He took a deep breath and crawled over to the area that harbored the twinkling light.
He was surprised and bewildered to find, not a piece of quartz or rock like he expected, but Mr. Porter’s spectacles!
“How on earth did these get out here?”
A wave of concern flooded Noah’s mind.
“Mr. Porter wouldn’t go anywhere without his glasses, and certainly wouldn’t have left them outside behind an old oak tree.”
Noah got closer to study his find. The frame was in one piece, but one of the lenses was broken. Noah wondered if someone stepped on them and, not wanting to get in trouble, disposed of them in this clever hiding spot. That made sense, except the frames weren’t bent. Noah was certain they would have warped if someone stepped on them. He thought of Mrs. Tourney and what her massive foot would have done to such frail spectacles.
“No, it had to be something else.”
Noah hesitated, but realized he’d have to move the spectacles in order to get a better idea of what may have happened. He took great care in picking up the glasses, dusting them off and laying them next to his crumpled lunch sack. The shattered lens, broken into a hundred pieces, lay among the leaves and acorns. Noah didn’t try to salvage what was left. Instead, his attention focused on what was beneath the lens - something metallic, copper or brass in appearance.
He picked up a nearby twig and scraped the debris away. He found not just one but two pieces of metal shaped like identical puzzle pieces. They had fine lines engraved on them that formed an interesting pattern. Each side was the same shape and the pieces looked like they would fit together at any edge.
Noah had never seen puzzle pieces like these.
A loud RRRIIINNNGGG broke the silence of the playground, startling Noah.
“Oh no... school’s out!”
Pumped with curiosity, Noah snatched up the metal pieces and put them in his pocket along with Mr. Porter’s spectacles. Something was amiss and he was determined to unravel the mystery.
He grabbed his backpack and headed across the deserted playground. If he ran, he’d make it back inside the school with just enough time to catch his bus before it departed.
That day was no different. With his hair in a twisted mess and a little dab of syrup on his chin, Noah was the ready target for everyone’s pranks and mean remarks. He climbed the stairs of the bus, sped to the first empty seat and slouched down beside the window hoping no one would bother him.
He unzipped his backpack and pulled out the book he had begged his mom to buy for him. They didn’t have a lot of money, but his mom managed to scrape enough together to buy him the book recommended by Noah’s science teacher, Mr. Porter.
Noah smiled as he looked at the black cover with the galaxy and planets surrounding a large, burning meteor.
The real things are much better.
Noah drifted into the memory of the meteor shower from the night before.
How cool it would have been to see it from the top of a mountain or in an airplane or sitting on a cloud just out of reach of the falling rocks.
His daydream was interrupted by the noise of the kids getting on the bus. Noah cringed. It was Kevin Swanson and Jake Maurin, two rough kids who liked to pick on him. Kevin was a year older, but in the fifth grade, too, because he flunked kindergarten.
Kevin, a big kid whose family was well off, was like a mean Dennis the Menace. Blond, floppy hair crowned his freckled face. He scowled a lot and only smiled when someone else was crying. He was always showing off the new toys his father bought him. He never let anyone touch them, and would charge money if other kids wanted to see his latest gadget.
Jake was an average kid, not skinny, not fat, with sandy blond hair that curled at the ends when it got too long. Jake used to be Noah’s friend when they were younger. Their dads worked together, but when Noah’s dad died, the two boys drifted apart. Noah wasn’t good at making friends after that. He and Jake would talk, but it wasn’t the same. Then Kevin came along and their friendship really changed.
Kevin and Jake knocked their way through the bus and plopped down in the seat behind Noah. Immediately, the torture began.
“What are you reading, dork?” Kevin bellowed out over Noah’s shoulder. “A book about rocks! Ha ha ha... the space cadet is reading about rocks! What a loser.”
Noah tried to ignore him.
“What’s so fascinating about rocks, Spacey?”
Noah closed his eyes, fighting the urge to tell him that it wasn’t a book about rocks, it was about meteors, but Kevin was too stupid to know the difference.
“I asked you a question, Spacey...” Kevin spat when he talked.
“You better answer him, Spacey, or else,” Jake piped in.
Noah clutched the book, desperate to think of something he could do to get away. Switch seats? Run off the bus next time it stopped? Fly out the window and never come back? He wished. Instead he just sat there, waiting for their next move.
It didn’t take Kevin long to swipe the book out of Noah’s hands and hold it like a trophy over his head.
“Maybe I’ll just have to find out what’s so great about rocks by keeping the book for myself.”
Noah’s face turned red with anger.
“I know what it’s good for!” Kevin exclaimed. “Beating rock heads!”
Thud. Thud. Thud. Kevin took great care to hit Noah square on top of the head. Noah’s face burned. It was humiliating, but nothing new.
Noah waited for the fourth whack on the head when all of a sudden the bus jerked to a stop, throwing everyone forward in their seat. Mr. Crowley, the bus driver, stood up and clomped like a bull let loose from his pen making his way toward Kevin and Jake. The entire bus fell silent.
“That’s enough out of you two,” he yelled. “Give that book back to him and sit down!”
Kevin and Jake cowered in silence. Noah wished he could peek at their faces.
“I mean it - NOW! And if I so much as hear a peep from anyone, I’ll stop this bus and give you all a whupin’!”
Mr. Crowley’s face twisted in anger.
“Here’s your stupid book,” Kevin grumbled as he dropped it into Noah’s lap.
Mr. Crowley stood in front of the boys long enough to make his point before returning to the driver’s seat. Noah was relieved that Mr. Crowley had seen Kevin hitting him, but knew it wouldn’t stop Kevin from getting even with him later. He heard Kevin mumbling behind him.
“If he ever touched me, my dad would sue the crap out of him. In fact, maybe I should tell my dad and get him fired once and for all.”
Noah put the book back in his bag. He didn’t feel like reading anymore.
The school day moved along like any other. First lesson was English. Mrs. Engles droned on and on about the importance of proper punctuation. During math, Noah learned that fractions are trickier than he thought.
As his teacher assigned the class math work, Noah gazed at the clock, counting down the minutes to his next class, science.
Five, four, three… Noah watched the second hand tick by until a bell sounded overhead.
“It’s 11:00,” the teacher announced. “Those of you who have science in the lab can leave, but go straight to the classroom!”
Noah loved science. He knew science better than anyone else in the class and he loved the teacher, Mr. Porter. Mr. Porter was different than the other teachers. He didn’t wear suits and ties – instead he wore dirty, old khakis with oversized cardigans, some of which had holes in places Mr. Porter couldn’t see. He had little, round spectacles, but always seemed to look over them, even when reading. He never ate lunch in the teachers’ lounge. He would eat in the classroom while reading fascinating articles in science magazines. Sometimes he let Noah eat in there, too, and loaned him older copies of his magazines to look at while nibbling on his lunch.
A few weeks earlier, Mr. Porter made a change in his teaching schedule to educate the class about meteor showers, preparing them for last night’s event. Mr. Porter knew how excited Noah was about the topic and invited him to eat lunch in the classroom everyday since then so he could learn more about meteors from the collection of books and magazines.
Noah hurried into the science lab, took his seat and looked around the room. Mr. Porter’s ratty jacket was hanging on the back of his desk chair, but no Mr. Porter. He watched the clock, anxious for class to begin. There was so much he wanted to say about the shower!
Minutes ticked by. Noah scowled. Mr. Porter was nowhere in sight. It wasn’t like him to be late.
Maybe it’s for a good reason. Maybe Mr. Porter managed to capture a piece of meteor from the night before and is waiting to reveal his find to the class.
Noah envisioned how glorious such a moment would be: a table with a massive lump on it, covered by a glamorous silk cloth. Mr. Porter would pull away the cover and gleaming in its place would be a beautiful golden meteor, shining like the sun for all to see.
He was startled back to reality by the sound of a ruler being whacked against the chalkboard. The noise quieted everyone. Noah and the rest of the class stared in confusion at the crooked old man standing before them.
“Quiet now! I won’t stand for any misbehaving in my classroom.”
His classroom? Noah became disoriented. Did I go into the wrong room?
He looked around the lab and made certain it was Mr. Porter’s science class. It had the same pictures of animals on the wall and jars filled with creepy crawlies sitting on the windowsill. His classmates were all around him and, yes, Mr. Porter’s jacket was definitely on the chair.
What is going on? Who is this man and where is Mr. Porter?
As if the old man could read Noah’s mind, he looked at Noah and said, “I am Mr. Sput. I’ll be taking charge of this class for the next few weeks while Mr. Porter is...” He paused, searching for the right words to say, like he had a secret that he didn’t want the class to know.
“...absent.”
Absent? Noah couldn’t believe it. He had waited all day to share his encounter of the meteor shower with Mr. Porter. Mr. Porter was the only person Noah knew who would truly understand how magical the experience was. He wouldn’t pretend to care or smile at Noah’s silly stories. He wouldn’t laugh at Noah’s excitement. He would have listened and shared in the conversation, telling his own stories and fascinations.
How could he be absent, and for weeks? Why didn’t he tell me he was going to be gone?
Noah was in a daze for the remainder of the class. Mr. Sput rambled on about kingdoms and phylum and other things to do with scientific classification of earth’s living creatures. Noah didn’t care. He was too distracted by his own thoughts. He wondered if there was something more to Mr. Porter’s ‘absence’.
The lunch bell rang. Class dismissed. Noah would have some time to think. Then he remembered...recess. Noah’s heart sank. For the past few weeks, he was able to stay in Mr. Porter’s class clear through recess. Now he’d have to face the challenges of the playground once again. It wasn’t just recess...it was recess with Kevin and Jake. After that morning, he was sure to be in trouble.
Maybe I can find a place to hide. Maybe they won’t remember what happened on the bus. Maybe...
Too late. On the way to the lunchroom, Noah was intercepted by Kevin.
“You know I’ll be looking for you on the playground, nerd.”
Noah kept walking.
“You didn’t think I’d let you get away with getting me in trouble did you?” Kevin laughed as he shoved past Noah.
Just when Noah thought it was safe to run, Kevin turned around, sneered at him, smiled a twisted smile and punched his fist into his hand.
Noah shivered. This is it. I’m a dead man.
Noah could hardly eat. Not only did he have to worry about Kevin, but there was still the matter of Mr. Porter’s absence plaguing him.
Is he hurt? Is he sick? Maybe even dying!?
Noah didn’t want to think about that. Over the school year, Mr. Porter was the closest thing Noah had to a father. He couldn’t stand the thought of losing someone else who meant so much to him.
Noah stared at his lunch, head and heart pounding. He wanted to eat but his stomach was in severe turmoil.
Little white balls whizzed past Noah. One hit and stuck to his lunch bag. He knew that Kevin and Jake were having their fun with spitballs. He felt one hit his head. Hearty laughter echoed from a few tables away.
Noah looked down at his lap. His knuckles whitened from the stress of his hands curling into fists.
“Be brave, Noah,” he reminded himself. “Don’t sink to their level. Don’t be like a bully! Be a hero!”
He liked the sound of that. Noah the hero! Noah the superb! Noah the.... SPLAT. Another spitball nestled itself in his hair.
Defeated, Noah shoved his lunch inside the bag, grabbed his backpack and slipped out of the lunchroom. He’d take his chances on the playground.
The fresh air eased Noah’s mind. It was warm outside and the sound of kids playing lifted his spirits. He hoped Kevin and Jake would get caught up in a game of dodge ball or football and, if nothing else, wait for another time to pulverize him.
Scanning the playground, Noah spotted an empty spot under an old oak tree. He walked slowly in that direction, not wanting to catch anyone’s attention. Across the pavement to the grass - he started to feel better - past the swings, and still no sign of Kevin. Just a few more yards....
“Hey, jerk! Where do you think you’re going?”
Noah wanted to run, but his knees locked up. His lungs tightened. Breathing came hard.
“Just move...” he told himself. With all his will he was able to pick up one foot and slowly inch it forward.
“Don’t walk away from me, you little punk!”
“Just leave me alone.” Noah mumbled between clenched teeth.
“Oh yeah? What are you gonna’ do if I don’t?” Kevin’s voice grew louder. “You gonna’ cry? You gonna’ go run and tell your mommy?”
Kevin’s tone was cruel; the laughter of his friends egged him on.
Feeling vulnerable, Noah scanned the ground, looking for something to use as protection. He spotted a stone not three feet away. It wasn’t big, but might be enough to ward Kevin and his pack of bullies off long enough for Noah to run back inside.
Kevin’s shadow engulfed Noah. He urged his legs to take another step, but was jerked to a halt when Kevin grabbed hold of the backpack strapped to his shoulders. He heard the zipper open as Kevin reached inside the bag.
“Looky what I found,” Kevin gloated as he pulled the book about meteors out of the drooping sack.
“NO! You give that back, right now!”
Noah whirled around to face him. Kevin held the book up in front of Noah, knowing very well he couldn’t reach it.
“Give it back,” Noah demanded.
“I’m not through with it yet,” Kevin snarled.
“Give it back to me!” Filled with fear and anger, Noah raised his voice. There was no telling what Kevin planned to do. All Noah cared about was his book. Kevin dangled it in front of him, laughing.
“Fine. Turn around and I’ll put it back.”
Noah stood firm. He wasn’t going to fall for one of Kevin’s nasty tricks.
“Turn around, scaredy cat,” Kevin demanded.
Noah glared at him.
“I said turn around!” Kevin growled as he reached out and pushed Noah.
The force of the push knocked the wind out of Noah. Struggling to catch himself, he spun around, landing on his hands and knees. Noah’s lunch flew out of his hand, hit the ground and spilled into the grass. The wet ground cushioned his fall but made for nasty mud stains on his pants. He felt a sting and knew he was bleeding.
Noah could feel everyone looking at him.
“Oh, is the baby gonna cry? Is the baby crying?” Kevin mocked.
They all started laughing, even the girls gossiping on the swings giggled. Noah wanted to curl up and die.
“You’re pathetic, Noah. Why don’t you crawl back under the rock you came from?”
Kevin threw the book past Noah into a nearby patch of mud. The book stuck in the sludge like an arrow lodged in a tree trunk. Noah stared at his precious book covered in dirt and mud, water seeping into the pages.
Tears of fury spilled from Noah’s eyes as he watch the book sink deeper into the mud.
“That’ll teach you to mess with me, you little freak,” Kevin triumphed.
Humiliation was gone. Reeling with never before felt anger, Noah grabbed a stone and hurled it at Kevin, screaming with rage.
Bullseye! The stone met its target with perfect precision. Kevin didn’t know what hit him until blood trickled from the lump on his otherwise perfect forehead.
Right in the middle, like a Cyclops’s eye, the wound swelled and drained with Kevin’s foul blood. The sight of it made Noah queasy, but he felt like David slaying the giant, Goliath.
His victory was short lived, interrupted by a shrill wail coming from Kevin.
“I’m bleeding! Someone help me, help me!” Kevin screamed.
He was crying and carrying on like it was a bullet from a sniper’s gun. Noah couldn’t believe it. It was swollen, but hardly more than a scratch and Kevin was acting like the biggest baby. All of Kevin’s friends, including Jake, were dumbfounded, not just from the fact that Noah stood up for himself, but that Kevin was making such a fuss.
Noah had to think fast. He couldn’t just sit there. Surely someone would avenge their friend’s ambush, and Noah wasn’t about to take a beating from five people.
All of the commotion caught the attention of Mrs. Tourney, the recess supervisor. She hobbled over to the scene, held back by her own large thighs swishing beneath her flower-print dress. She sucked in a big breath of air and blasted a trill from the whistle hanging around her neck.
“What’s going on over there,” she demanded, waddling closer to the scene, heaving deep breaths.
Nobody answered. They were all focused on Kevin. Someone tried to get a tissue out of his pocket, but it ripped and fell to the ground. It was Noah’s chance to get away. He grabbed what he could of his lunch, scurried up off the ground, reclaimed his book from the mud and sped to his hideout - the old oak tree.
Noah struggled to catch his breath. He was quivering with excitement and fear.
“There is no way I’m getting out of this one,” he heaved. “How could I let him get the best of me? So much for being a hero.”
Noah cleaned off his book as much as possible and laid it out to dry. The pages were stiff and soaked with a dingy, brown film. Some of the words were smeared which made reading nearly impossible. Noah felt sick. It wasn’t just the book. It was what the book stood for: his excitement from the meteor shower, the money his mother sacrificed to buy it, all his hopes and all the dreams Noah harbored - now covered in mud.
The recess bell rang. Noah peered around the tree to see kids scrambling to gather kick balls and jump ropes as they all filtered back into the school.
“There is no way I’m going back in there.” Noah bit his lip, resolved to spend the rest of the day hiding, thinking of a way to explain what he had done.
The afternoon heat dried Noah’s book quickly. He picked it up to inspect the damage, scraped off clumps of dried dirt and tucked it safely into his backpack.
A squirrel scampered up and down the tree, gathering what few acorns remained on the ground from last autumn. Noah smiled at the squirrel’s work.
“Barely spring and already gathering for winter.”
He watched the squirrel scuttle from one acorn to the next, pausing every so often to eye Noah, making sure he was just another fixture surrounding the tree.
Sunbeams threaded their way through the oak branches. Leaves fluttered and danced in the quiet breeze. As Noah eyed the squirrel, his attention was drawn to a bright flash on the ground. His heart beat fast with curiosity. He took a deep breath and crawled over to the area that harbored the twinkling light.
He was surprised and bewildered to find, not a piece of quartz or rock like he expected, but Mr. Porter’s spectacles!
“How on earth did these get out here?”
A wave of concern flooded Noah’s mind.
“Mr. Porter wouldn’t go anywhere without his glasses, and certainly wouldn’t have left them outside behind an old oak tree.”
Noah got closer to study his find. The frame was in one piece, but one of the lenses was broken. Noah wondered if someone stepped on them and, not wanting to get in trouble, disposed of them in this clever hiding spot. That made sense, except the frames weren’t bent. Noah was certain they would have warped if someone stepped on them. He thought of Mrs. Tourney and what her massive foot would have done to such frail spectacles.
“No, it had to be something else.”
Noah hesitated, but realized he’d have to move the spectacles in order to get a better idea of what may have happened. He took great care in picking up the glasses, dusting them off and laying them next to his crumpled lunch sack. The shattered lens, broken into a hundred pieces, lay among the leaves and acorns. Noah didn’t try to salvage what was left. Instead, his attention focused on what was beneath the lens - something metallic, copper or brass in appearance.
He picked up a nearby twig and scraped the debris away. He found not just one but two pieces of metal shaped like identical puzzle pieces. They had fine lines engraved on them that formed an interesting pattern. Each side was the same shape and the pieces looked like they would fit together at any edge.
Noah had never seen puzzle pieces like these.
A loud RRRIIINNNGGG broke the silence of the playground, startling Noah.
“Oh no... school’s out!”
Pumped with curiosity, Noah snatched up the metal pieces and put them in his pocket along with Mr. Porter’s spectacles. Something was amiss and he was determined to unravel the mystery.
He grabbed his backpack and headed across the deserted playground. If he ran, he’d make it back inside the school with just enough time to catch his bus before it departed.
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