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The Brain School – Chapter 4

Forward

Before I started writing the Brain School, I didn’t think of the beginning chapters of the book.  In my head, I would recreate the scenes that you will read in Chapter 5.  I had even written it in short story form a year before I began the book.  Chapters 1-4 were necessary evils, somewhat boring exposition which justified the later rising action.

The first four chapters of my first draft spanned 51 single-spaced pages, over 30,000 words.  I’m amazed at my patience.  I can also see how certain plot points conveniently but unrealistically pushed the story forward.  Warren realizes all too quickly how he is being brainwashed.  His investigations move along quickly, and his teacher coincidentally has an unexpected outburst. All the pieces fall into place too easily.

Now, we all have to suspend our disbelief to an extent, but young Solomon’s ramblings asked a little much of the reader.  If current Solomon had to revise the chapter, I would make the students at the Brain School more complacent and less ignorant.  They would be aware that they were being brainwashed, but they would be too sedated to really care.  This, in turn, would lead them to be more forgetful.  Warren, then, would not have a sudden realization of what was happening but would instead have to make a concerted effort to start caring.

Apart from pacing, I can see my writing improve compared to the previous chapters.  Around this time, I was entering in high school, and I had discovered a love for flashy – but unnecessary – adjectives and adverbs.  I will note I am disappointed in how I characterized Tommy.  I had intended him to be a complex character, one who was aware that something was going wrong but who also didn’t want to believe it.  He maintained an outward appearance of cheerfulness which masked his spite and impatience.  Instead, this chapter depicts him only as a jerk, an unreasonable one which clashes with his initial characterization in past chapters.

That said, I’m having fun meeting these characters again, and I look forward to seeing how my younger self handled his first “action” scene.

*

Chapter 4 – Realization

I awoke disheveled and grumpy.  As I sat up in my bed, a sharp pang of hunger attacked my ever-rounding belly.  I glanced at my watch.  A fuzzy “6:15 am” glared at me.

Silas and Robert were still sleeping soundly, but Tommy’s bed was empty.  He was a morning person, but he was usually still asleep this time.  I glanced under the study and bathroom doors.  No lights were on so I guessed he wasn’t in those rooms.  He must’ve left, but why?  Maybe it had something to do with last night…

Last night…for some reason, I felt as if I had forgotten some important thought.  My drowsy mind fumbled to recall what it was.  It seemed fog dimmed my thinking, causing any type of thought require a great deal of work.  Then—like a beam of light—the answer penetrated the miasma.

I groaned.  I had to stop forgetting!  But how?  How could I solve the problem when I couldn’t even remember it in the first place?  I began to rhythmically thump my head against the frame of my bed, hoping that it would somehow help my memory.

Why was I so forgetful?  Just a couple of weeks ago my memory was great, but now I could barely recall anything from the night before.  Something was wrong.  Hunger hurt my stomach as I concentrated, distracting me.  If only I had eaten last night, I wouldn’t be as depressed.  I hated my-

I was hungry.  Damn it, I was hungry.

There was a possibility!  Something might have been wrong with the food!  How could I have been as dumb as to not have thought of this earlier?  Without last night’s meal in my system, I was able to think better! 

I had a hypothesis; now I needed to test it.  Brain-washing foods!  I laughed quietly.

Cocky, I barged out of the room and headed toward the cafeteria.  I would eat only half of my meal at breakfast, and if I thought more clearly then, I would have proven my hypothesis. 

Despite it being early, when I entered the cafeteria several kids were already eating their breakfasts.  I wanted to stop them and tell them my idea about the food, but I doubted it would do any good.  Even if I had evidence, they probably wouldn’t believe me.  Hell, I still needed evidence to fully convince myself.

Choosing a restaurant at random, I moved to a Mexican-themed eatery.  A skeletal woman waited lifelessly behind the counter, blankly watching me with her pale, sunken eyes. Those eyes were ghastly, so vacant I couldn’t keep eye contact.  As my gaze fell, an object caught my eye.

A necklace was strung tightly about her neck.  The chain looked like it was only some cheap metal, but the single large, blue gem it held was magnificent.  Hexagonal in shape, the sapphire was about the size of a quarter, framed by a thin trim of gold.  The stone was so beautiful one would think it would be very rare, but it seemed very familiar to me.  While the feeling was mysterious, my mind already began to piece together answers.

Avoiding eye contact, I ordered my food.  As I took my food away, I noticed my breakfast burrito seemed to dwarf any other burrito I had ever eaten.  Bigger was better, and in this case, it meant it might hold more brainwashing goodness.  Eager to solve more, I cruised around the cafeteria to verify another curiosity.

It seemed my suspicion was true.  As I approached each eatery, I glanced at the workers and noticed each of them wore a similar stone.  Apart from their sickly statures, nothing was similar between them except that single gem suspended about their necks.  I couldn’t be certain the sapphires were all exactly alike, but I was certain it wouldn’t be absurd to think so.

Was it school policy for all the cafeteria workers to wear these stones or was this some cafeteria cult?  This seemed strange either way.

I wanted to study these workers longer to answer my questions, but my meandering soon attracted attention.  The other students kept glancing at me as they carried hushed conversations at their tables, and even the catatonic staff began shuffling and staring at me uncomfortably.

“Warren, what the hell are you doing?” yelled a kid somewhere in the cafeteria.  I looked and found Tommy, smiling and waving to me.  It seemed he had forgotten our fight the night before.  Plastering a smile on my face, I strolled over to his table.

“Thank God you got here,” he said as I seated myself by him.  “Absolutely nobody else I know is awake this early, and I would be an outcast if you didn’t show up.  Imagine that, me, all alone!”

“Yeah, whatever—” I started before I grasped the situation.  On my friend’s plate, a pound of food lay potentially festering with brain-washing agents.  We may have had a fight and I may have had no evidence, but I wasn’t going to let him eat all his meal without telling him what I thought.

“Tommy, don’t eat that!” I blurted just as he shoved a piece of bacon in his mouth.  With his mouth closed around the meat, he watched me, irritated.  “You can’t eat that,” I whispered.  “There may be something wrong with the food.”

“Huh?” he replied skeptically, spitting out the bacon.  “What’s wrong with my food?  It looks perfectly fine to me.”

“Uh…” I fumbled, my mind trying to create a reasonable explanation.  “This is just a hypothesis, Tommy, and it may sound ridiculous, but trust me on this one.  I…I think there is something in the food that is brain-washing us.  I mean, we’ve all been acting strange around here.  There has to be something in the food because last night I didn’t eat anything and now I can almost think perfectly.  You get what I’m saying?”

Tommy stared at me as he chewed the bacon in his mouth slowly.  He said nothing.  I could almost see the cogs running inside his head.  I just hoped they turned in my favor.

“Yes, I understand and agree with some of the things you said,” Tommy finally said, carefully selecting his words.  A sigh rushed through my lips in relief.  “Your theory is ridiculous and you have been acting differently, Warren.”  The breath of air came back with a sour flavor.

“I have to say, I have heard nothing more ridiculous than what you just said,” he continued, visibly disappointed.  “Why would the school want to brainwash us?  It’s stupid!  That stuff happens in horror movies, not in real life, Warren.

“Just because Wayne was called away doesn’t mean the school is conspiring against us.  We don’t know why he’s gone, but you don’t see the rest of us creating idiotic stories about drugged food.”

He stared at me condescendingly as I tried to keep my fist from punching him.  The idiot didn’t believe me!  He had actually insulted me!  I should have thrown away his food before all of this, so that way, in the end he’d see what I was talking about.  I was tempted to still do it, but eventually my reason came through.  Tommy wouldn’t tattle on me, but there would be hell to pay if I tossed away his food.

“Perhaps you’re right, Tommy,” I sighed, changing tactics, deciding to compromise rather than fight.  “Maybe I’m still shocked from last night, but I still think there may be something wrong here.”

“Whatever your worry is, Warren, don’t bother with it,” he grumbled.

I nodded casually.  Even if I couldn’t convince Tommy, I would test my hypothesis.  I had to know for myself.  I brought my monstrous breakfast burrito to my face and ripped off a chunk.  Hesitantly, I chewed and swallowed.

“I thought you said the food was contaminated,” Tommy sneered through a mouthful of eggs.  “Aren’t you afraid you’ll forget everything?”

“I am,” I stated bluntly, tearing off another piece of my burrito. “That doesn’t mean I won’t enjoy my breakfast.”  I winked at him, this time taking joy from infuriating him.  It amazed me how spiteful a fun-loving and carefree friend could get in a day.

The rest of breakfast was spent in silence.  Neither one of us granted the other the pleasure of his gaze. 

I managed to choke down half of the burrito and a quarter of my OJ, leaving only digestion to prove or disprove my hypothesis.   A major portion of my food was still on my platter but if my suspicions were correct, a full meal could strike me with sudden memory loss.  I didn’t want to live through another month of ignorance.

“Are you going to eat the rest of that?” Tommy asked quietly as I got up from the table.  He didn’t bother to look at me.

I looked down at my plate and then at the back of Tommy’s head.  I opened my mouth, paused, and thought better.  I needed to say something beneficial, not snide.

“Tommy, have you been able to contact your family?”  

I left before he could respond, yet I sensed his reaction.  His silence seemed to indicate that his brain was finally starting to rotate its rusted cogs for the first time in a long time.

Despite my modesty, a smug grin spread across my face.  I couldn’t have delivered it more perfectly.  I had reached a receptacle encased in a fog of arrogance.  The thought of watching my surroundings never came to mind as I threw away my food.

“Hey kid, how come you’re wasting all that food?” barked the sickly skeleton of a cafeteria clerk, suddenly animate.  His shout didn’t match his twiggy body, but he was intimidating.

“I just wasn’t hungry, sir,” I replied sheepishly.

“Well, you better be hungrier the next time you come here, kid,” the man ordered gruffly.  “The staff at this school works hard to make the food you eat.  You can leave a few scraps on your platter, but kid, you threw out an entire breakfast!”

“Okay, okay, sir,” I pleaded. “I’ll never waste another meal, I promise!”

I fled from the cafeteria.  In the past, I might have stood up to the guy and argued for my rights, but I now lacked the ability to both fight and defend.  The man’s words contained more than a simple scolding.  They seemed to threaten with more than just janitorial duty.

I picked a good time to run.  In a few minutes, Mr. Drake’s class would start.  I raced to my dorm, retrieved my homework and some other materials, and started back.  I headed past the gym and down the staircase leading to the classrooms.

A woozy, light-headed feeling swept over me as I entered the classroom.  Grimacing, I stumbled to a desk near the door.  My stomach should have been digesting the food now.  If I was correct, brain-washing agents were already wreaking havoc on my body.  If havoc was the right word, that meant I’d also be feeling some pain soon.

“Good morning, class,” Mr. Drake boomed as he entered the room with the ring of the bell.  The class mumbled something back.  “Yes, today is a good day,” he replied jokingly.  “So what was I working on with you guys last class, hmm?  Oh right, the Pitcairn Island incident, whether the mutinous crew of the Bounty could establish a new government on a deserted island.  First, please pass up the essays I had assigned last class period.”

From my desk, I passed my assignment forward, cringing as I did so.  Something was definitely happening in my stomach.  Pain was eating away at its lining, something worse than indigestion.  Even if my imagination was exaggerating the pain, I was certain now that the school was brain-washing us.  I couldn’t ignore this pain.

Fidgeting uncomfortably, I focused my attention away from my pain and to my teacher.  As papers piled in stacks in front of the class, Drake moved from desk to desk to retrieve them.  As he bent down to retrieve one stack, the light caught something on his chest.  As I squinted to see the glimmering object, the image burned with striking familiarity.

A gigantic sapphire adorned his necklace.  There was no mistaking it.  It was exactly like those that the cafeteria crew wore.  Forget school policy, this coincidence reeked of more sinister matters.  I suspected I’d be recognizing a lot more blue rocks from now on.

“…making the island seem almost like a paradise!” cried Drake, breaking into my thoughts as he continued his lecture.  “The mutinous crew flung themselves upon the island and tried to live on it peacefully, but their stupidity and arrogance led them to their near destruction.”  Drake paused for a while, allowing us to savor the information.

“Amazingly, the crew didn’t totally completely eradicate themselves,” Drake continued, his voice becoming more tense.  His body twitched strangely as he spoke.  Even for a guy that gestured wildly, this was surprising.  “One of the last survivors of the original crew rose up to command the new generation of scoundrels on the island and led them to a new, prosperous life.  Today, the ancestors of Pitcairn Island are numerous and flourishing.”  Drake ended his lecture abruptly and his hands dropped to his sides.

“The human race’s stupidity has always puzzled me,” he mumbled loudly, a hand moving to his mouth in thought.  “They—We have always exhibited ignorant behavior throughout the span of our lifetime.”  Something dark moved subtly behind those cheery eyes.  “Man has been on the brink of destroying himself countless times, yet every single time, he has managed to survive.” Drake’s gestures now mimicked the jerky, stiff movements of a puppet’s.  A few kids around the classroom began squirming uncomfortably as we became aware of his growing anger.

“Why do we deserve to live?” Drake questioned contemptuously.  “What makes the human race worthy enough to live above all other animals?  Absolutely nothing!”  Drake slammed his hand against his desk causing a wave of surprise to soak the class.  Sweat dripped off his face as he continued, “We destroy our land without thought, pollute the environment uncaringly, and make humanity a hell for all other creatures.  One can only wonder why man deserves the intelligence given to him.  It seems the world would be a better place if we had never existed.” 

Mr. Drake stood soaked in sweat, his hands suspended in one last sweeping motion.  His chest heaved as he stared out at his students.  We gaped back, awed and frightened.  As seconds limped by, the chaotic fog in his eyes drifted away.  Realizing his stance and behavior, Mr. Drake straightened himself.

“Sorry, guys,” he laughed, immediately cheery again. “I must’ve woken on the wrong side of the bed.  You know how it feels when you smack into a wall that early; it’s an unnerving way to begin the day.”

The class chuckled quickly, relieved with this change.  After a few more jokes, Drake went on with the lesson, and the students forgot the speech.  I remained unmoved.

To me, his tirade was strange even if he was secretly cynical.  He randomly took a history lesson and transformed it into the damnation of humanity!  He may have woken on the wrong side of his bed, but would a bad start cause that rant?     

I liked Mr. Drake as a teacher, but in my current circumstances, I had to keep an eye on him.  His words might be the final evidence I needed to understand this school’s mystery.  Nonetheless, I couldn’t trust him or anyone else; everything had to be viewed with suspicion.  I’d mend friendships after I figured out what was going wrong. 

Once class ended, I headed to the library to mull over my collected data.  On some scrap of paper, I tried fruitlessly to list ideas to explain these weird coincidences.  Despite my small breakfast, it seemed I had taken in enough toxic agents to scramble my brain.  I could think, but it was difficult to keep focus, and my hunger only served to annoy me more.  With these factors against me, I could barely keep a thought. 

Considering my discomfort, I could assume a brain-washing ingredient was in the school’s food.  That meant consuming anything would numb my mind, but I obviously couldn’t go without food.  I had to eat sometime.  So far, I had proved I could live off half a meal; it would probably be best if I continued eating only half of all my meals.  Hopefully, that would provide sufficient nourishment and a functioning brain.  As for the cafeteria staff, to avoid their attention, I’d donate my uneaten food to my unknowing cohorts.  I would get an empty platter while they would get more food.  It seemed suitable to me.

As my day scraped by, I focused my waning attention on my teachers.  I registered both idiotic and probable ideas in my memory.  The sapphire-wearing fad seemed to be popular; every teacher and staff member I saw wore the necklace.  Some of the necklaces were partially concealed, yet I doubted they sported anything but a blue gem.  I even caught an eyeful of a student wearing a similar necklace.  I was hesitant to make assumptions, but if kids were also in on whatever this was, it didn’t look to good for me.

That night, I collapsed into my bed, exhausted.  The stress of starving myself and concentrating sucked me dry of energy.  I never realized how shoddy my brain and body were until I stretched their capacity.  My stomach grumbled for food but struggled with what was in it.  My brain had strained to solve the questions in my head while doing my homework and other activities.  Even with less brain-washing agents, my brain had fought to stay on task and remember what it needed to do.

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Posted by Solomon Rambling in The Brain School, 0 comments

The Brain School – Chapter 3

Forward

When writing the Brain School, I hadn’t intended to give Warren depression.  If anything, I had intended for him to have an anger problem, one that I thought I didn’t have.  However, my depression managed to worm its way in, and these first few chapters show how I believed the angsty, grumpy teenager was the norm.  Now, it is true that teenagers breathe sadness and exhale anger, but depression is certainly not the common denominator. 

My young self assumed people were grumpy or stressed in their natural state.  Happy things made people happy, but when those feelings passed, we all returned to our base irritable mood.  In this chapter, I began to hint (rather obviously) that the students were being brainwashed in some way. The brainwashing agent was intended to lull all the students into a content daze, one which stunted their negative emotions.  At the time, I had probably thought I was describing what it would be like to be drugged, to experience a mindless euphoria.  I had captured that, to an extent, but in some places, I was just describing what it was like to not have depression.

I pity that boy.  He was so entrenched in his depression, but he believed he was emotionally stable.  He knew he had depression of course, but he genuinely believed everybody felt emotions in swings.  He thought it was normal to feel sad after a happy experience.  He figured that emotional fatigue naturally followed positive emotions.  Everything had to balance out, right?

Thank god for medication.

*

Chapter 3 – The Callings

“Whoa guys, look!  We got our schedules!”

“Seriously?  Where were they?”

“Right here on the floor; they must’ve slipped ‘em under the door earlier this morning.  Here Silas, this one’s yours.  Here is yours, Robert.  This one’s mine.  And Warren, here’s yours.  Warren?  Hey Warren, wake up!”

“What?” I mumbled as Tommy jostled me from sleep with a shove.

“It’s your schedule,” replied Tommy, giving me another rough shove to get me awake.  “I didn’t know a person could sleep that soundly before I met you.  I swear, with the way we plowed in here last night, I thought for sure you would’ve yelled at us.”  Tommy shoved me again before walking off and busying himself with his slip of paper.

Through my heavy eyelids, I saw the boys were already dressed, each one pouring over their schedules.  I crawled out from under my covers and fumbled some clothes out from the dresser.  

“I don’t have many classes,” mumbled Silas, perplexed.  “I have the main subjects and that’s it.  Well, plus Art and Spanish, but I didn’t want those…I’m sure I signed up for a computer class somewhere…”

“What does it matter?” laughed Robert. “We got four classes each day!  Who gives a crap if we have to take Spanish?”

“But we have weird times,” I sighed, joining the boys in the center of the room and glancing over my sheet. “My class times are 9:00 am, 11:00 am, 2:30 pm, and 4:30 pm.  We got class Monday through Saturday too.”

Robert cursed.

“Oh well,” Tommy interjected, radiating happiness and excitement.  “Look at the bright side; we get extra time between our classes to finish homework.  We can’t be called geniuses if we don’t procrastinate, right?”

Silas cursed next.  “Jesus, my first class is at 7:00!  That’s in thirty minutes!  What do I bring?  Were we supposed to bring folders or pencils?  I haven’t even showered!” And with that he bolted out of the room.

Robert cussed, continuing the trend.  He stomped out of the room, his voice trailing behind him, “Stupid class is at 7:00 too.  The teacher can go f…”

Tommy raised his eyebrows and glanced at me.  “Are you going not a morning person either?”  I laughed and shook my head.  “Well, I guess that just leaves you and me, Warren,” he said cheerfully. “My next class is with you; Ms. Deuce, right?” I nodded. “Great, so if you can wait, I’ll go shower and then we can go to breakfast.  Sound fine?”  He must’ve sensed my approval because the next moment he disappeared into the bathroom.       

I sat on my bed and placed my head in my hands, already weary from my colleagues’ excitement and my hunger.  To alleviate the hunger pangs, I directed my thoughts toward the rest of my schedule.  Science, Spanish, gym, math, social studies, reading, writing, and art:  all in that order.  The fewer classes a day sounded great, but the weird times made the free time seem less abundant.  And what was with school on Saturday? 

My thoughts were interrupted as Tommy erupted from the bathroom, his wet hair showering the room with water.  Before I could question the thoroughness of his shower, he pulled me into the halls of the dorms, through the drowsy lines of students littered in the dorms and gym, and past the black staircase to the cafeteria.  It seemed he was the morning person out of the group.

When we crashed into the cafeteria, we found it only a third full but probably the liveliest place in the school at 6:55 am.  Each student was with at least one other, trading schedules.  Everywhere there was a half-sheet of paper being passed around and analyzed.

Tommy and I split ways as we went to get our breakfasts.  The titles and menus above each eatery had changed to show breakfast options.  Starving as I was, my stomach chose the restaurant most fitting for only my appetite:  an artery-clogging, American-style restaurant.  After piling my platter high with eggs, bacon, toast, and sausage, I could barely keep myself from drooling.

“Looks like you slaughtered Old McDonald’s farm and put it on a platter,” joked Tommy as he found both my platter and me.  “Let’s just hope you don’t get a heart attack eating that.  C’mon, let’s sit next to some guys I met yesterday.”  Eager to stuff myself silly, I followed him closely to a table occupied by three kids.

“Hello, boys,” Tommy boomed, taking a seat by a small squirt of a kid, gesturing for me to do likewise. “Hopefully you guys remember me from yesterday.  Well, of course you guys remember, you were accepted into this school, weren’t you?  Hope you don’t mind if we eat by you.” Tommy gestured at me. “Warren here is a roommate of mine and I would like you to bond with him.”

“Wow, it’s 7:00 in the morning and you’re already trying to bother us,” mumbled a burly kid on the other end of the table. 

“The surprise is all mine, Butch; you already know me like an enemy,” Tommy replied, reaching behind the small kid to pop Butch lightly on the shoulder.

“I guess we should introduce ourselves,” said the last kid.  Realizing I was making a pig of myself, I refrained from stuffing my face and faced the three strangers.  “I’m Eli,” continued the boy, pointing a finger to his chest. “Like Tommy said, this big guy is Butch.”  Butch gave a small wave and returned to his bacon and eggs. “And this is Wayne.”  The small boy nodded and went back to spooning his applesauce around his plate with great care and focus.

“Good, that’s out of the way,” Tommy said. “Now show me your schedules.  I want to know who I’m stuck with over this semester or year or however long these schedules last!”

And so time passed in the cafeteria, filled with small talk and worthless conversations.  Full-bellied and bored, I didn’t stick around too long.  I found a break in the discussion, broke away from the table, and waddled out of the cafeteria.

It was strange.  After that meal, more than anything I felt bloated, but underneath the gas, I felt good.  All the angst and paranoia that had plagued me during the past months had evaporated with a single plate of food, leaving me in a state of fuzzy happiness.  In this euphoric daze, I giddily ambled about the school, visiting the game room before touring the library.  It was a weird feeling to feel happy.  It wasn’t supposed to happen to teenagers if I recalled correctly. 

The strangest thing was the feeling lasted.  Even when it was time to head to my first class, I felt the strands of contentment.  Normally the depression would set in along with the pessimism, but neither showed this time.  The feeling did subside when I settled into my classroom, but it had certainly pulled off a record in terms of stamina. 

Despite my enlightened being, my first class didn’t amaze me.  Ms Deuce made the hour and a half seem even longer with the slow drawl of her voice and her stern, expressionless face.  There were no lame jokes coming from that voice as she delivered the same memorized lecture we’d hear in seven other classes.  The monotony went unnoticed, however.  Entranced by her fashionably revealing dress and smooth movements, the class watched Ms Deuce as she sauntered through the aisles while expounding her lecture.  It mattered not that she radiated no warmth, emotion, or humanity; her looks were enough to hypnotize the boys and inspire the girls.  Although I was impressed myself with the woman’s unnaturally large bosom, I sulked within my corner in the back of the room.  I may have been happy, but I sure wasn’t going to act like it before any teacher.  At 10:30, we were freed from the classroom with a meaningless, easy assignment.  It seemed like my schedule so far was pretty stereotypical.

After class, Tommy and I headed back up to the main floor and to the game room to pick up school supplies.  Everyone’s first class had warned them that they would need at least paper and pencils for their next classes, so when we reached the game room, the supply cabinets were swarming with children.  Fortunately, these cabinets worked like multi-drawered vending machines.  To get supplies, we had to take our meal cards and scan it through a reader on the cabinet.  Each reading dispensed exactly the supplies we would need in a convenient plastic case.  Much to my disappointment, the machine was smart enough to also refuse me more supplies.  The mini-bar acted similarly, restricting my junk food splurges with a calorie limit.  Exiting the game room with less supplies and candy bars than I would have liked, I trekked alone to my next class.

Spanish was always an immensely boring class to me, and it didn’t get any more entertaining at the Brain School. Taught by a timid, sickly Mr. Ripner, the class was even worse than Deuce’s.  He spoke barely over a whisper, but his tinny squeak of a voice prevented me from tuning him out.  Without a single familiar face in the room, I had no choice but to listen to the teacher.  Time barely sputtered along as he reviewed our enthralling curriculum for the year.  When the bell finally rang, I foraged what brain cells that survived that brainwashing and stumbled out of the class.

With two hours to spare before PE, I headed to my dorm to rest and salvage any sanity after the morning’s monotony.  I surprised myself when I got into the room.  I sat on my bed and worked on my science homework.  It was a revelation!  I rarely ever looked at an assignment before the hour it was due, but here I was completing the whole assignment.  Ten minutes later, I sat stunned with the finished paper on my lap.  A moment later, Silas burst through the door, breaking my stupor.

“You wouldn’t believe this place!” he cried upon noticing me.  He plopped onto the bottom bunk bed opposite me and let his school supplies tumble to the floor.  “I don’t understand this crazy school, Warren.  The first two teachers I met were whacko, and so are the other students.  When I went to get my supplies, the other kids practically tried to kill me to get theirs first.  The craziest thing is now I want to study.  I freaking want to!”

“Well then do it,” I replied indifferently, surprising myself. “It’s not bad to want to be a good student, even if it isn’t exactly normal.”

“Exactly, I don’t feel normal at all!”

“Everything’s fine, dude, don’t worry about it.”

“Whatever,” he mumbled.

“Well, I’m going to lunch,” I said, eager to leave.

Silas jumped from his bed.  “Let me go with you so I’m not alone!” he exclaimed.  “I haven’t met many people…”

“Fine,” I sighed as Silas followed me out the door.  It seemed my last roommate to classify was a hang-on, a parasite.

In the cafeteria, I found a seat next to Eli and his friends.  Silas found a seat at the table as well, but from the onset his presence wasn’t welcomed.  As lunch wore on, it became evident my poor roommate wouldn’t connect with any of these guys.  With nothing to say but pitiful jokes and unrelated, self-centered anecdotes, Silas distinguished himself as one of those social retards.

“C’mon Silas, let’s get out of here,” I said after we both had finished our meals.  A silence had swallowed our table, a sign Silas had worn his welcome all the way to the bone.  Grabbing him forcefully by the shoulder, I pulled Silas to his feet and led him out of the cafeteria, all the while throwing apologetic looks to Eli and the others guys.  I wanted to make friends with the middle class and having Silas around wouldn’t allow that.           

“What was that for?” Silas cried in the hallway.

“Nothing,” I hissed through clenched teeth, forcing my frustration into my stomach.  “I just wanted to…um…get to the game room so we could…um…do stuff.”

Quite tragically, he fell for my crappy excuse. “Sure!  That seems like that would be fun, bud.”

Bud?  My stomach roiled as I suppressed my frustration once more.  Swallowing bitter words, I headed to the game room with Silas in tow.  Disappointingly, although the game room was packed with kids still trying to get supplies, I couldn’t lose Silas among the crowds.  That meant I was stuck with him, and stuck I stayed.  Whether it was billiards, foosball, videogames, or poker, Silas retained his annoying behavior, totally oblivious to my growing anger. 

When that sweet time for my next class came, I hurriedly warned Silas I had gym and bolted away.  Much to my dismay, I found him trailing me, exclaiming in delight that he too had gym and would gladly accompany me there.  Not wanting to be a prick, I bit my lip and held back the hateful words.  Led by Silas, I slunk to the gym.  It appeared my parasite wasn’t going anywhere.

Gym was the first class that forced me to use my abilities.  My teacher was—low and behold—Mr. Mann, a man of many quirks.  The first quirk was he wore no type of sporting clothes.  He didn’t even wear jeans and a t-shirt.  He came clad in a black double-breasted suit which equally made him hilarious and intimidating.

Without even an introductory speech, Mann sent the unprepared to change into our gym clothes and prepare to run the mile.  The news sent us in an uproar.  A mile on the first day of school?  It was unheard of!  It was unhealthy!  All grumbling and mumbling, we reassembled ten minutes later in our t-shirts and shorts, not the slightest bit prepared for the mile.

“How come you’re not wearing any running clothes, Mr. Mann?” protested one boy spitefully.  “I doubt you can do anything in that suit.”

“I enjoy wearing fine clothing,” Mann replied.  “But who is to say I can’t play sports in these?”

“Nobody said you can’t, but I’m pretty sure you couldn’t.”  The comment was ludicrous even if it was directed towards a strange teacher.  We were stunned by our colleague’s stupidity and insolence.  Immune to our disapproving glares, he stood beaming up at Mann.

“Why don’t we make a deal?” Mann proposed, amused now. “We’ll have a race.  Only you and I will run the mile.  If you finish before me, I will never force you or the rest of the class to run the mile for the entire four years you are at this school.  However, if I win, the whole class will run three miles today, including you.  Do you find that a fair deal?”  He examined the student casually, his hands bunched in his slack’s pockets.

“Heck yeah, for me at least,” the kid said smugly.  “Are you sure you want to bet that much?”

“Oh, I’m sure, boy; I’m sure.”

“I must warn you, Mr. Mann, I was the best runner in my whole school, so if you want to change your mind about this-“

“I know what I’m getting into,” Mann assured him quietly.

With the stakes set, the two lined themselves at the edge of the gym, set to sprint once the elected girl blew the whistle.  The teacher had not removed a single part of his suit and prepared himself as one would before an evening walk.  The boy, conversely, stretched and carried himself with the arrogance of an Olympic athlete.  It was no secret he thought he already had the race won, and no matter how many of us suspected Mann had something up his sleeve, we thought the same.  At least, we prayed for the same.  The consequences of the boy’s loss would be all too tragic on our bodies.

The whistle shrilled overzealously, shattering the nerves of the spectators.

The kid never had a chance.  From the start, Mann sprinted faster than any of us could have predicted.  We watched dumbfounded as the huge muscle man barreled down the perimeter of the gym, lapped his amazed competitor, and then continued with both his tie and coat billowing behind.  He had finished the five and a half laps around the gym that constituted a mile before the kid could even finish his third.

“Okay, everyone,” Mann said as he straightened his suit while the loser came huffing and puffing back.   “I won the race.  Now all of you have three miles to cover.  You can thank your colleague for this privilege.”  Mann smirked and smoothed one last crease in his suit.

 “I expect you to keep a good pace during these three miles, not walk them,” Mann directed when he was satisfied with his suit’s condition.  “If you need to walk, only do so for a short period of time.  If I see otherwise, I’ll send you through the lap again until you do it right.  Understand?  Good, now start running.”

The rest of that class was devoted to running the sixteen and a half laps around the gym.  While wheezing my way through them, my only consolation was I lost Silas at the beginning of the sixth lap and wouldn’t have to live with his presence.  Meanwhile, Mann monitored his victory, yelling every so often at lazy kids to redo the lap. 

“Congratulations, everyone,” cheered Mann just as the last kid crossed the finish line.  He clapped his hands together and smiled joyously, mocking each and every one of us.  “Every one of you just finished running three miles or more; you should all be proud of yourselves.”  He winked at the kid who started the mess.

“Now we must be serious,” he continued, dropping his jolly façade.   “I will not tolerate arrogant remarks or anything from any of you.  I am your teacher, and I expect to be respected as such.  If any of you choose to behave like you did today, expect to be running every day.  Next time, come to my class with proper clothes and attitudes so we spend more time enjoying PE and less time running.

“If you have been ignoring me so far, I advise you to listen now.  You have been deemed intelligent, not better than gym.  In present society, you will never become a leader if you are sickly in stature.  A strong physical build is needed to gain the admiration of the people and lead them.  The brain may hold the leadership skills, but the average person follows the brawn and not the brain.

“In my class, I’ll help you become formidable in stature and in thought.  I’ll lend a hand in making you the perfect leader, so if you think you are too intelligent for this class, this school does not need you. 

“Now go,” Mann sighed as if his speech consumed all his energy.  “Remember, next class I expect better.”

Page 2

Posted by Solomon Rambling in The Brain School, 0 comments

The Brain School – Chapter Two

Forward

Oh god.  I remember why I sealed this book away forever.  This chapter demonstrated just how much I had to learn about writing.  I had some desperate need to thoroughly explain the layout of the school in painstaking detail.  Over 7,000 words of it.  What you will read is bad.  I even cut out quite a bit. 

If there is one chapter to skip, it’s this one.  Maybe the next one is bad, too.  I don’t know; I haven’t gotten there yet. 

For the sake of brevity, here are my other observations while reading this chapter:

  • I had intended Warren to be smart, sarcastic, and likeable.  Looking back on him, he’s a whiny ass who happens to be an elitist as well.  If my memory serves me well, he becomes humble and mature as the book progresses, so it’s possible that I had unknowingly written a character with depth and growth.
  • For some reason, I had some descriptions that were objectively racist.  I understand why adolescent Solomon thought they were fine, but the descriptions would not fly today and have been eliminated as such.
  • We’ll ignore that I divided 1,200 kids between four staff members without the entire school falling into chaos.
  • Let it be known that I wrote this book before every kindergartener had a cellphone.  This was an age before the cell phone became a third kidney. 
  • The US were a strange invention.  I had never been bullied nor had I ever had a run-in with an elite student clique.  For whatever reason, I thought it would be good to have such a fantastical group in my book.

With that, enjoy.  Or not. 

*

Chapter 2 – The School of Brains

Summer went by quickly.  They say time flies when you’re having fun, but I didn’t enjoy any share of fun.  Maybe that proved time flew when it sucked too. Despite how hard I had tried to change my parents’ minds, they applied for the school.  Throughout the following weeks, more information arrived periodically.  I tried to destroy some of these letters, but after my parents caught me burning a pamphlet, they put a lock on the mailbox.  Letters could go in, but only Mom and Dad could get them out.  By the time I stole the key, the final application had been signed and sent away.

 So I had spent the summer in anguish, rotting in my room, showing my face only when I had to.  I called no friends; I had none.  I didn’t spend time with my parents; for all I cared, I had none.  I didn’t start anything, not a game, not a book, nothing.  I simply moped three months away. 

The black and tattered era of the School of Brains was to begin.  My clothes, possessions, and hatred were packed in two suitcases, the only items accompanying me into the new age.  Imprisoned in the back of the family car, I sulked, determined to force as much guilt as possible onto my parents before they deserted me.  As our small car sped towards our distant destination, my parents occasionally tried to talk to me, offering praises or pity, but I never answered them.  My angst was my final weapon, and they were going to get the full brunt of it.

At some point during the drive, I nodded off, falling into an uncomfortable but lengthy doze.  When I awoke, instead of cities or countryside, I found oak trees surrounding me.  The asphalt road had given way to dirt and rocks.  I briefly wondered if my old fogeys had gotten us lost, but the school came into sight shortly after. 

It looked like a prison.  Well, the top of the school and its middle portion looked like a prison.  The rest of the school was obscured by a massive brick wall that seemed to encase the entire school and its grounds.  Given my distant position, all I could discern was the school’s one story, but it was massive.  I couldn’t guess how long or wide it was, but it was definitely larger than any college or prison I knew of.

Our sedan slowly bumped into a clearing in front of the school’s closed entrance.  Judging from the number of people and cars in the clearing, it looked like the parents wouldn’t be going any farther.  Thank God.

After searching amongst an ocean of vehicles, Dad swung the car into an empty spot in the clearing.  He barely killed the engine before both he and Mom were out of the car and snooping for gossip about the school and my “rival” colleagues.  So much for waiting for their little baby.  Grumbling, I kicked my door open and threw my suitcases out of the car.  I slammed the door viciously once I stomped out, but my efforts went unrewarded.  I didn’t get a single curious glance.

I plodded over to my parents, suitcases in tow.  Unsurprisingly, they were already conversing with other parents and paid me no attention.  I dropped my luggage and myself five feet away from them, my idea of a rebellious move.

I gazed miserably ahead of me.  Everywhere I saw kids behave just as pathetically as I did.  Some unwillingly accepted the love of their parents.  Others still begged to be sent home.  Even more sat on their suitcases, watching apathetically as their lives slipped away. 

 A harsh groaning of metal against metal cut through the angst, gathering everyone’s attention towards the opening gates.  Mom and Dad beckoned to me as the other kids said their last goodbyes and headed towards the school.

Swallowing a protest, I willed myself off my suitcases and fell into my parents’ outstretched arms.  They embraced me lovingly; I didn’t do the same.  Even when I stared into their tearful eyes, I felt no remorse or sadness.  I mumbled a meaningless “miss you,” picked up my bags, and shuffled away.  I entered the crowd of children that marched to the school.  On a whim, I glanced back to see if my parents were still there, but I was pushed forward by the mob before I could recognize a face.

I could only march, down the dusty path, down to the school, down to hell.  I didn’t try to socialize with the students next to me.  They didn’t try to socialize with me.  In fact, no one did.  We were the lemmings racing towards the water.  No matter how deep our urge was to run away, we kept moving.  The best and brightest brains of the country ceased to work.

We marched on, passing few noteworthy landmarks.  Only a few trees spotted the grounds around us, bushes and boulders sparsely filling the other open areas.  Flowers and other decorative elements were nowhere to be seen.  Besides the trees and trimmed grass, the only other vegetation I could see was a type of pale, sickly mushroom that clustered in patches on the grass.   

I did not see a single football field, tennis court, or baseball diamond.  The only manmade items in sight were the enormous, tanned brick school and the enclosing walls.  As our column of students neared the school, I did catch an eyeful of another building, be it a small eyeful.  It looked like a cabin, but since it was situated deep in the farthest corner of the school’s yard, I couldn’t determine much more than that.  It seemed peculiar that the trees and boulders nearly hid the cabin from view, but this peculiarity was buried under my more pressing worries concerning the school’s lack of outdoor recreational facilities. 

My thoughts and our uniform parade broke apart when we came upon the open doors of the school.  As we entered, we broke apart and spread across the room, not caring where we were as long as we weren’t trampled.  The room we had entered was a gym, a gigantic one at that, containing two full basketball courts.  Even as the last kid stumbled in, we had more than enough elbow room.

None of us spoke.  Coughs, sneezes, and shuffles echoed everywhere, yet not a kid spoke.  Our uneasiness with each other was strong, but it wasn’t our main torment.  It was the thought that we were alone now; no parents to love us, care for us, or watch over us.  The thought paralyzed us, leaving us to worry and wait in our cemented positions.  When another door opened into the gym, we all brought our attention to it and the person who emerged.

“Welcome, children,” boomed the figure.  As it neared, “it” became “she.”  A pale woman dressed in black.  Her formal suit, her high heels, her hair, all black. 

 The woman clicked across the room and to the center of the gym, a walk that conveyed her confidence and power.  She took a moment to gaze around the room, passing a wry little smile over every student.  The whole room stared back.

“Welcome again, all 1,232 of you!” she boomed again in her sharp, high voice. “I am your principal, Ms Risped, who you have probably heard about over your summer vacation.  Whatever your feelings may be coming into the school, I know you will all come to enjoy your time here.  We have so much to show you, and I know something will appeal to everyone.

“Now, students, we will begin with a tour of the facilities here.  If time is kind to us, we will visit all of your classes, some of your teachers, the cafeteria and other rest spots, and, of course, your dorms.”  Excited murmurs past over the crowd, our timidity slowly washing away.  Ms Risped stopped her speech to let our attention reform. 

“After you see most of the building,” she continued, “you will be fed dinner and then assigned to your dorms, but the order in which these events happen may vary depending on your group.”

Ms Risped paused again, deliberately.  Like a smoke, the feel in the room changed to one of unease, and she hadn’t said a thing. “Before we begin, our purpose here at the School of Brains must be made known to all of you. This school was established to educate gifted young adults, not tolerate smart-alecks.  If any of you came to party, goof off, or otherwise disrupt the structure of this school, I strongly encourage you to inform us immediately so we can arrange you a safe return home.  If you disturb the peace of this school in any fashion, your punishment will be swift and severe.  The school staff does not wish to be harsh, but you are to learn here in the next few years, not treat this as an extended vacation.  Please keep this in mind during your stay here.”

The murmurs did not return.  I briefly thought of speaking out, but her tone had killed any defiant urge I had.  It wasn’t the introductory speech I had expected, but it certainly stirred me.

While the student body chewed on Risped’s comments, three more adults entered the gym.  They shuffled through the interspersed children, coming to flank the principal.   Again, the atmosphere seemed to change if only by how Risped changed her stance.  “Before we begin our tour,” she announced, fanning her hands out to display the strangers, “let me introduce these three fine men who will be some of your tour guides.

“This man to my right is Deon; he will be teaching arithmetic classes.” Risped pointed to a tall, thin man beside her.  Of the four teachers, he dressed the most casually, sporting jeans and a t-shirt.  This contrasted with his distinctly sharp physical features.  His cheekbones were high, his goateed chin pointy, and his short brunette hair spiked upwards.  He stood at rigid attention, causing his bony body to seem all the more jagged.  My initial thoughts wanted me to believe this Deon was going to be a hip teacher, but his cold gaze and pointed frown persuaded me otherwise.

“This is Mr. Drake, one of our social studies teachers,” continued Risped, her wiry fingers directing us to the man on her left.  Mr. Drake, out of the four, seemed the most normal.  He had the average height and weight of the stereotypical teacher, the average look, and the average dress.  He was probably one of those teachers who was likable but ultimately forgettable.  With his run-of-the-mill looks, at least he appeared to be the only “safe teacher” of the four.

“And lastly, Bodie Mann, one of our P.E. teachers,” Risped finished, pointing to the man beside Mr. Drake.  He was a burly dude, possibly six-and-a-half feet tall and apparently all muscle.  I would have expected him to be a bodyguard instead of a teacher.  Hell, he could have been a mob lord with his dress.  He wore a doubled-breasted suit for Christ’s sake!  Four gold watches, two on each of his arms, also hinted at his enigmatic income and an even more dubious fashion sense.  Why he would need four watches made no sense to me, but then again, not much was at this point.

“I will now split all of you into four groups to tour the school,” Ms Risped instructed. “If your last name begins with the letters A through F, you will stay with me where we will first tour the various entertainment facilities.  G to M will follow Mr. Drake to view the classrooms and visit with some of your other teachers.  N to S will go with Deon to be assigned to your dorms.  T to Z will begin with dinner in the cafeteria with Mr. Mann.  Please students, leave your luggage behind so our staff can distribute them to your dorms.

Gradually, three quarters of the students filtered out of the room. “Thank you for waiting, students,” Risped said, commanding our attention once more.  “We begin with our gym.  All assemblies, P.E. classes, and other sports activities will be held here.  When class is not in session, the gym is open to any student who wishes to work, talk, or relax.

“While we have arranged measures to prevent emergencies, if we do experience one, the entrance through which you came is your exit out of this building.  In all other circumstances, no student is permitted to leave the building without written permission of a member of the school staff.  Leaving without permission will result in consequences.  While I would not expect trouble from any of you, these rules are enforced for your safety.”  She gave a slight smile at this and began pacing in front of us.  “In addition, we ask that none you enter the north side of the school where we have our teachers’ quarters.  Our staff requires privacy just as you do.”  She offered a wink that was less than playful.

This all seemed a bit severe.  Take one wrong step and there was hell to pay.  This whole situation didn’t scream normalcy.  Strange teachers and oppressive rules?  Something wasn’t right.

“Now let us continue, students,” called Risped as she began walking to the west side of the building.  I left my suitcases behind as I was told and squeezed in with our now smaller stampede of teenagers.  Most of us followed her silently, but some outgoing kids had started visiting with one another.  I was relieved some of us were beginning to act like normal kids.  I didn’t participate in the discussions myself, but I was content with listening to the kids talk about how much the school rules sucked in the presence of the principal.

As we passed through a set of double doors and into a seemingly endless hallway, our group edged around a massive, winding staircase that seemed to descend into a bottomless pit. Although every teenager gaped at its infinite maw, Ms Risped passed it without a glance.  Judging from her indifference, I guessed I would have to trust the metal plaque by the staircase that said it led to the classrooms.  Still, I wouldn’t have been surprised to find fire and demons dancing down there.

Our march continued, bringing us deeper into the hall.  Not far from the stairs, we passed the open doors of the cafeteria.  Inside, for a brief moment, I glimpsed the students of group T-Z scattered about the room.  I could’ve sworn I heard some of them talk in there, but the sounds of their eating silenced everything else.  Utensils against plastic, shuffling clothes, chewing, slurping.  The noise was discomforting, but it and the feeling passed with the cafeteria.  Curiosity filled the emptiness as we approached a pair of thick glass doors farther down the hallway and to the left.  Marked in bold, black lettering upon the doors, “The Hippocampus Library” welcomed us heartily.

“As you have probably already read,” Risped stated as she brought us through the doors of the library, “this is the Hippocampus.”  Her arms stretched out as she spoke, as if to enhance the brilliance of the room.  She didn’t need to. 

There were no statues of famous people or decorative plants or paintings, and there didn’t need to be.  For what it lacked, the library compensated in books, rows upon rows of shelves of books, stretching as wide as the gym and half as long as it.  Only a wall-consuming window on one side of the room was free of books.  The rest of the library overflowed with books of varying colors and sizes, painting a vibrant environment of parchment.  It didn’t matter that I didn’t care for books.  Quantity was enough to amaze.

Risped led us around the library, guiding us through all the genres of writing and past the desks, couches, and computers that resided closely in a corner of the room beside the window.  She commented as she led us, “This library contains all the sources you may need for your assignments or for your leisure in your spare time.  Your spare time begins at 6:00 am—when you are permitted to leave your dorm—and ends at 11:00 pm—when you are required to return to your dorm.  Of course, spare time is only during the time you have no classes.  The library will be open throughout the day, so classes will not impede your ability to use this facility.” 

The long line of student snaked through the bookcases as she continued, “Now come along, we still have two more rooms to tour in the meager time we have.” We marched obediently behind her, trudging out of the library and farther down the hall to another set of glass doors.

As we entered the room, Risped turned to face us and whispered as if not to wake something, “This is the Stem Green Room.  This place is neither a center for classes nor a place for research materials but simply an area to study or rest.  We recognize many of you are disappointed you will not leave the school building, so we have created this room to offer you the closest we can get to an ‘outdoor’ experience with our limited staff size. Please mind your behavior here. If you damage any of the flora here, you might just find yourself helping the school groundskeeper in this room during your spare time.”

We walked through the glass room, observing all the botany bathing in the setting sun and the few, scattered sun lamps.  While the room wasn’t necessarily wide, it was long enough to stretch past the library’s outer wall, allowing us to see more of the school’s grounds.  The girls of the group seemed more intrigued by the garden, adoring each little pink-stained leaf or exotic flower they passed.  Most of the boys, meanwhile, grew restless, asphyxiated by nature and drowned in the room’s oppressive humidity.  How anyone could stand this room longer than ten minutes was beyond me.  We wandered for a time, and we breathed a sigh of relief as Risped signaled for us to leave.

We resumed our tireless march down the hall.  Silence accompanied our walk, newly refreshed by the garden’s beauty or dullness.  The silence didn’t last long however.  As the students caught sight of the plaque at the end of the hallway, excited whispers broke out.  This last room was to be a fitting finale.    

Ms. Risped deliberately slowed her movements, as if trying to build the anticipation.  When we could finally see what lay behind those doors, happiness erupted, coming forth in smiles, cheers, and whoops. 

“Welcome, students, to the Nucleus Accumbens, otherwise known as the School Game Room,” Ms Risped said quietly.  “This room is self-explanatory.  Do not break anything or take anything from the room.  You have ten minutes.”

We tumbled in, or at least tried to.  While the dumber of the bright kids pushed and shoved their way in the room, the smarter ones waited for the oafs to make a pathway.  Being a part of the dumber group, I entered the room with only a couple of scratches and bumps.  With the few moments I had before the crowd came, I saw close to what I could call a paradise.  It was a massive room (apparently a motif of this school), easily large enough for three times the size of our group. 

A game room seemed misplaced in a school, but none of us complained.  The nerdy and geeky intellectuals had ten plasma-screen TVs, sound systems, and enough video games and consoles to last well over four years.  The more “popular” kids had the game tables—multitudes of them from foosball to billiards—so many they dominated a third of the room.  If these didn’t fit your fancy, there was everything else, from the endless arts and crafts drawers to the couches, recliners and enormous bean bags to the mini-bars. 

“Time is up, students,” announced Ms Risped, clapping her hands simultaneously.  This was met with some groans and her consistent sharp smirk.  “Our tour of the ‘hang-out’ areas is now over.  Dinner is next, so let us hurry to the cafeteria before Drake’s group comes this way and causes traffic.”

Our group paraded to the cafeteria and arrived just as Mann’s group was exiting.  When they cleared out, we filed into the blindingly white room.  Much to our delight, we had our own little food court with eateries built along the walls, spanning from specialties in Chinese cuisine to American burgers.  To us, this meant four years of fine food.

“Before we eat,” said Ms Risped, positioning herself in front of us to stop us from advancing, “I have some information about the cafeteria.”  She pulled a large stack of red cards from behind her back.

“These Meal Cards,” she continued as she waved the stack of cards in front of us, “have your names, IDs, and other information on them.  These will allow you to get food.  They also inform our cafeteria staff what food combinations will best maintain your health.  After all, here at the School of Brains, we support the mind and the body, not bad habits. 

“Breakfast is served from 6:00 to 10:00 am, lunch from 11:00 am to 3:00 pm, and dinner from 6:00 to 10:00 pm.  Food is not to leave this room.  If any one of you feels like disrupting the peace inside this cafeteria, serious consequences will ensue.  Now, when I call your name, take your card and get your dinner.  First is Abigail Aden; next is…”

After roughly a lot of names, I was called.  Although I tried to take my card discreetly, it felt as if Risped’s gaze burned into me.  I avoided eye contact and scurried in line behind some students in front of a pizzeria.  As I waited, curiosity turned me around to see if she was watching me, and sure enough, she wasn’t.   I didn’t even see her until today, and I was still freaked out by her.

“Meal Card, please.”  I flinched, not realizing I had come to the front of the line.  Behind the counter, a skeletal man stood waiting for my Meal Card, not looking the slightest bit enthused.  Hesitantly, I handed him my bright red card.  In one swipe, he removed it from my hands, through the reader, and back into my hands.  As I placed the card in my pocket, the Stick Man, as indifferent as before, stared at a nearby laptop. 

 “Okay kid,” mumbled Stick Man, still facing the computer. “You’re relatively healthy.  Take your pick of what you want.  Just watch yourself or you’ll be eating tofu for the next few weeks.”

 I placed my order meekly.  The sickly man quickly arranged my order onto a platter and shoved it over to me.  A faint smile graced his lips as he watched me take my tray.  “Remember to finish your meal, kid.  Otherwise, we might find it offensive and have you helping us next week.”

Page 2

Posted by Solomon Rambling in The Brain School, 0 comments

The Brain School – Chapter One

Forward

From the ages of 14 to 16, I wrote the Brain School, a horror novel geared towards young adults.  In the span of two years, I wrote over 300 pages of single-space, 12-point font.  Over the next year, I revised it, reducing the page count to 276.  Then, the book died.  Although I received only kind comments about my story, the general message was, “It’s not good enough.”  In time, I agreed with this. 

For over a decade, the Brain School has collected dust, and I had originally intended it to stay this way.  However, this summer, I changed my mind.  I came to realize that I had poured my very being into this book, and it does not deserve to be ignored, no matter its quality.  It represents my first steps as a writer, and it should be treasured.

I present to you the first chapter of the book, with more chapters to come.  This version of the book is theoretically its fourth draft, and this time, I have changed sections which did not make sense, and I cleaned up some descriptions.  The large majority of the book is the same as it was over a decade ago.  It’s still bad, but it’s mine.

Enjoy.

*

Chapter 1 – How My Troubles Began

I don’t like being smart.  Never did, and pretty sure I never will.  Sure, I could think better in certain ways, but I also earned that repulsive title, “gifted.”  Once that label had cemented, its brother, “social outcast,” found me too. 

My gifted privileges included “advanced classes” which shoved information down my throat like it was a garbage disposal.  The teachers lectured me on the importance of striving for some prestigious job in the medical or law field, but that meant nothing to me.  Gifted people didn’t get real jobs.  They either achieved worldwide fame or ended up on the streets, as my parents warned would happen to me “if I didn’t get my act together.”  

My only goal was to avoid the whole gifted system.  Up until 8th grade, I acted “normal.”  When I was “normal,” I could be the athlete, the popular guy, the kid who didn’t do his homework.  For a time, I could fool everyone:  my parents who wished I was smart, the teachers who tried to prove I was smart, and my friends who thought I was average academically.  Then I stumbled, dropping my façade and exposing myself to the world.

It happened one afternoon after school; I was stuck with an English teacher for ditching his class during a test.  He began our session with some scolding and finished it by forcing the test on me and stomping out of the room.  Unfazed by his tantrum, I looked over the test.  A perfect score was possible, but a C+ was more fun.  Several bubbled-in designs and irrelevant historical references later, I had that desirable grade.  Satisfied with my genius, I crumpled up the test and tossed it onto the teacher’s desk. 

With an hour left of my testing detention, I stared aimlessly around the room and fiddled with my thumbs.  My eyes drifted to the dry-erase board in the front of the room.  Distracted, I allowed my attention to meander until an object caught my eye.  I didn’t know it, but a trap had been laid for me.

Feigning boredom, I pushed myself away from my desk and shuffled to the front of the class.  Acknowledging an invisible watcher, I acted as if I did not come up to see the particular object and scratched away at the dry-erase markings on the board indifferently.  I continued the charade until my impatience dried up.  Scooting over slowly, I came to the object and snatched it from the board.

It was a written IQ test of sorts, one geared to be extra credit for students who had finished their work early.  I abhorred tests, but the combination my boredom and arrogance had piqued my interest.  Maybe I wanted to know what knowledge I was masking; maybe I just liked the word “IQ,” but either way, I felt moved to carry the test over to my desk and pull out a pencil. 

For a moment, I did nothing and wondered why I had the paper.  I glanced through the first few questions, determining if I knew the answers.  My hand followed, bubbling in the correct letters.  As if on auto-pilot, I filtered through the pages of the test, applying myself like I hadn’t before.  In the back of head, I was somewhat dismayed.  Why now? Why was I interested now?

 I spent the next hour finishing the text.  I feel into a kind of meditation, allowing the text to fill my thoughts as I scribbled away.  Little did I know my English teacher had re-entered the room and watched me work.  I had barely bubbled in the last answer when he snatched the test from me and scurried to his desk.

I was dumbfounded.  How had I ignored he was there?  What would happen if I scored too well?  I watched him jump and giggle at his desk as he found correct answer after correct answer.  Judging from how many times he fidgeted, it seemed my façade was thoroughly killed.  Exactly what my score was I never found out, but what I knew was my score was too high.  Like spotlights, it exposed me, leaving me vulnerable.  Staring blankly at my hysterical teacher, I could my life eat itself

In my eyes, the gifted program was “the system.”  It’s like the one that lunatics rave about when talking about government conspiracies.  The system was any structure put in place to force us into a specific role or lifestyle. 

Among its annoyances, the system I had come to know was also a fortune teller of sorts.  Depending on a person’s traits, that person would get a few different readings.  If the person was smart but rebellious, he’d either be famous or a bum, like I explained earlier.  If the person was athletic and dumb, he’d probably become a sports star or some cab driver.  If he had no remarkable traits, he’d find his place in the great machine in society and live a life of comfort or suffer from knowing it’s all meaningless.  To correct myself, everybody would get an average of two choices on how to live life.  It was stereotyping, but it seemed to be the truth. 

Those who followed the system were the lemmings in the arctic that run off the cliff and drown in the ocean.  Of course, there were a few, the minority, who made it out of the system.  They were the lemmings that somehow broke from the crowd of instinct-driven fur balls and watched from the cliff as their family and friends plummeted to their doom.  Either way it sucked, but the life of a living lemming sounded better to me than a drowned one.  Breaking from the crowd would be difficult though; those automatons who lived to fuel the system (teachers and principals) buried me deep in lemming crap. 

After my English teacher had graded the I.Q. test, it channeled through several different people.  When it reached the Gifted Program director, she grabbed me from all my average classes and threw me in the “advanced” ones.  There, a threat was kindly made, “Get good grades or enjoy the 8th grade again.”  I didn’t necessarily want to excel, but I sure didn’t like the idea of me stuck as a 15 year-old eighth grader, so I did what they said.

Things got worse from there.  My popular friends left me to the nerds.  I hadn’t been too kind to the nerds previously, so they also condemned me.  My parents began loving me more, which was awful.  Their constant bragging about their “brilliant boy” was almost as terrible as my ex-friends’ silence.  My parents got the intellectual they had always wanted but never dared to talk about while around me.  I didn’t know who to hate more:  all of the others or myself.

I wasn’t able to escape the system my 8th grade year.  Although I had managed to pass, by the last day of school I found myself friendless with a future of hard classes, mountains of homework, and a spot at the outcast table for my high school years. 

When summer finally blessed me, I looked forward to breathing a little more easily.  I had hopes that the summer would give me a vacation from the system. It only took a couple of days for it all to fall apart. 

It was the first week of summer vacation when the system struck.  Catching me while I was mowing the front lawn, our kindly mailman unwittingly delivered my cold, black fate in the form of a letter.  The envelope lay on top of the others, its swooping, red letters bearing my name.  The mower was forgotten as I focused on the envelope.  I tore the flap tentatively, pulling out a collection of papers.  I found the system had hidden itself in a cover letter on thick parchment:

 Dear Warren Bent,

To answer the call for an advanced education program for gifted children, the School of Brains has been established this past year to provide a suitable learning environment for the brightest children of America.  In this visionary school, children who have never experienced intellectual challenge shall truly learn at their pace. Our boarding school offers skilled teachers who we have meticulously selected from across the country.  In a matter of a year, you will obtain all the credits needed for your high school diploma, allowing you to move onto college-level curricula for the remainder of your education. By graduation, you will emerge ready as a future leader of the world, wielding not simply a diploma but college credits and more knowledge than any other student their age.

After careful consideration, we have selected you, Warren Bent, to join our school.  Room and board will be covered by a generous scholarship donated by our sponsors.  Neither you nor your parents will be expected to pay for your education.  In exchange, we will ask of you to remain on campus grounds for the entirety of the four years.  Due to our rigorous curriculum, we ask for your dedication to our program and your time.  As such, communications and visitations may be limited.  We care for your ability to connect to the outside community and your family, and we also stress the importance of your commitment to intellectual advancement. 

We understand this wonderful opportunity may sound daunting, and we assure you your time at the School of Brains will be comfortable, enjoyable, and meaningful.   If you choose to join the School of Brains’ community, please fill out the included documents with your parents or guardians.  More information will follow explaining our program, its unique environment, and our expectations. 

We hope to welcome you through our school’s doors in the future.  Until then, may you enjoy your vacation.

Sincerely,

Ms Risped, Principal of the School of Brains

Great, now I could join a whole school of nerds.  I was thoroughly disinterested, yet, as I returned the papers to the envelope, I had to admit this was a new face of the system.  I never had heard of a school which emphasized that I had to stay there for four straight years, with “communications and visitations limited.”  The thought sounded about as pleasant as a long-term illness.  Knowing my parents would think otherwise, the letter would have to be destroyed. 

Destroying the letter ended up being more emotionally trying than I had assumed it would be.  As I walked inside and into the kitchen to throw away the letter, second thoughts flourished in my head.  Initially, they were easy to push aside, but just as I held that evil letter above the trash can, they made me hesitate.  Consequently, I thought more, and that was all my doubts needed to guide me to the kitchen table with the letter still in hand.

Anger immediately consumed me as I sat down at the table.  Why the hell was I even having doubts?  This was school; this was what I hated!  Screw the challenge and prestige; I didn’t want them or any nerdy friends.  If I was going to suffer, I was better to suffer at home than at some school anyway.

I cycled through these thoughts multiple times, but whenever I gathered enough will power to throw away the letter, more doubts assailed me.  Couldn’t this be my escape, from the teachers, from my ex-friends, from my parents?  I could start life anew at this school and leave behind all those jerks who betrayed me.  With all the crap that had happened to me so far, this was probably the best thing that could happen.

These thoughts urged me to celebrate, but always at the height of my rapture, the anger would return and strike me down.  Over and over again, anger and joy clashed inside my head, ripping my thoughts apart.  On one hand, my brain screamed that the letter was an invitation to hell; on the other, it cried that the letter was heaven’s messenger.  There was no middle ground, and thus, I was screwed.

Exhausted and torn, I let my head fall against the table and stay there.  More thoughts would just add to my problem.  I needed some action to spur a decision, but in my state, I couldn’t create that action.

If I had acted, the worse would’ve never happened.  Instead, my parents frightened me into action when they came in through the front door, having returned from grocery shopping.  Spurred by adrenaline, I made a decision:  there was no way in hell I was going to this school.  The known was better than the unknown.  The letter was going in the trash or—better yet—the garbage disposal.

Unfortunately, my body didn’t agree with me.  As I snatched up the mail and shot up from my chair, one of the chair’s legs caught my right foot.  My left foot could have easily come in and regained my balance, but it was already heading towards the trash can.  So it came to pass that my face connected with the tiled floor.  The chair fell on top of me, and the mail flew from my hands and scattered everywhere, a fantastic finish to the spectacle my parents witnessed.            

“What the hell?” my dad exclaimed as he rushed to my side, hoisting me to my feet.  My mom responded just as quickly, but it was the chair she picked up before swiftly moving to the letters.

“My goodness, Warren,” she fussed as she unknowingly scooped up that terrible letter and put it along with the others.  “What made you do all this?  It was like we frightened you or something.”

“You wouldn’t be wrong,” I whispered as she sat down at the table and rifled through all the mail.  A sickness in my gut grew as her hands came to my letter.

She paused as her fingers brushed against the back of the envelope.  She looked down at it and frowned.  “Warren, did you open this?” she asked accusingly, holding up the letter so I could see the torn side.  She gingerly took the papers from the envelope and began reading the cover letter’s contents.  As the meaning began to register, she became giddy.  Curious, Dad walked away from me and started to read the letter from over her shoulder.  The giddiness overtook him as well.

“Our son is invited to a top-notch boarding school!” Mom squealed.  She repeated herself over and over again and hugged Dad, who had started chanting the same words.

I watched horrified.  In a matter of minutes, my next four years were determined.  Damn it.  I couldn’t let my life slip away this easily.

“Mom! Dad!” I shouted.  They stopped cheering and looked at me excitedly. “I don’t want to go to this school.” 

Their smiles melted as the phrase registered, but before they could react, I created an excuse.  “I just don’t think I can do that well at the School of Brains.  I mean, I’m afraid I’ll get bad grades and be made fun of for being stupid.  Heck, they only found that I was smart this year.”  I dropped my head to the floor, feigning humility.

 “Oh honey,” Mom cooed softly, “why would you be worried about that?  Your IQ doesn’t just jump that high in one year.  You were born with that, so what’s the chance you’ll do badly at this school?”

“What about my friends, Mom?” I whined, clinging to anything that could get me away from going to this school.

Dad cut in now. “What friends, Warren?  You said all your ‘friends’ deserted you after you were placed in the gifted classes.  This school is a great opportunity to meet new people, better people.  With your personality, I’m sure you’ll make friends.”

“But what about you guys?” I cried in desperation.  “I won’t see you for four whole years…uh…I’ll be homesick!”  My head was screaming at them.  This was my last hope. 

They paused.

It was working.  Hallelujah!

“Warren, we know you’ve wanted to leave this house for years,” Dad answered quietly.  “You’ll love it at the school, and I know you just said all those things for us.”  Mom became tearful at this point while Dad’s voice choked as he continued. “We’ll miss you, and we love you for thinking of us, but we know going to this school is more important to you.” 

What?  No.  This wasn’t happening. They thought I was the one whowanted to go?  They were kidding me!  I couldn’t let this happen.  It didn’t matter what they thought; this was my life! 

In one last glorious attempt, I told them my real reason I didn’t want to go.  As I attacked and insulted the school, my parents listened, dumbfounded.  Although I didn’t know it then, “dumbfounded” was a bad thing.

 “What the hell has gotten into you, Warren?” Dad growled once I had finished. “Many people would give everything to have your intelligence, and you don’t want it?  Do you know what you’re wasting?  If you don’t value your ability, it’s best your mother and I value it for you.”

 I stared at him in frustrated bewilderment.  Use your ability to its fullest?  All around the world, people with my “ability” were emptying garbage cans or bussing tables for a living.  They chose that life, didn’t they?  They chose not to use their “ability.” Why couldn’t I do the same? 

“Just because I’m smart doesn’t mean I have to act like it!” I retaliated one last time, more to rebel than anything else. “You guys don’t seem to get that.  I don’t need to go to some nerd school just because I’m smart.  You idiots are the ones who want to go there, so why don’t you guys sign up instead?  Wouldn’t that make everyone happy?”

I glared at my parents to sustain the tension.  They returned my gaze impassively.  

“Go to your room,” Dad said after a few moments of silence, his tone calm but commanding. “We’re doing what we think is best for you.  You’ll thank us in four years.”

I gritted my teeth and screamed through them.  As I turned my back to my parents, I damned the system.  I swore I’d get my revenge.

Chapter One End

Posted by Solomon Rambling in The Brain School, 0 comments