Sunday 22 February 2015

A Long Day | Theland E. Thomas


Falling! Darren jolted awake with a shallow gasp. He sat up straight at his desk and looked around him. No one noticed. Alright. He fixed the pencil in his hand. All I have to do is take some notes… He opened his eyes briefly and stared at the last written notes that trailed from incomprehensible scribble to a line that traced all the way down the page. He strained to sit forward, cradling a nearly empty cup of coffee in his left hand. The clock on the wall read 10:22.
“So, as you can see,” the professor droned on, “if you take the derivative of 2y2, you get 4y. And if you take… let’s see here… the second derivative, you get just 3. Isn’t that right, Darren?”
Darren’s eyes flashed open. “Um, yes.”
“No, it isn’t,” the professor said, erasing the answer she’d written on the board, “because you would get 4. Maybe if you’d stay awake in class for more than five minutes, you could actually learn something.”
Heat simmered in Darren’s cheeks as he opened his eyes. He sat up and squinted at the board. Did he miss something? He was in the front row, for God’s sake. He couldn’t keep drifting off like that. Leaning his heavy head against the wall, he gazed at the other students. Their expressions betrayed them. Some were clearly bored, head in hand, eyes glazed over. Many held chronically quizzical faces no matter what. There was always that one brown-nosing nerd. The rest of the students who already knew the material just ditched, but she had to show up every day to generously flaunt her understanding upon the plebeians. Then there was the group of Asians behind him. Darren didn’t know what language they were speaking, but, God, if they would just shut up while the professor was talking… So disrespectful.
He blinked. All the students were gone. WHAT? Darren jumped up, sending his coffee careening into the wall. The classroom was vacant, the lights were off, and the boards had been erased. The white gleam of the moon shone on the desks. His gut churned with sickening weight. What a bunch of douchebags! They’d all just left him there? He walked toward the door and tried it, peering through the pane of glass to see that the building lights were already off. Turning around to face the windows, he realized they were his only chance of escape. Darren took off running toward them, and, as he jumped, he vaguely remembered that the classroom was on the fourth story. He turned his face as his forearms smashed through the glass. As he descended, his body twisted to view the shower of sparkling shards ready to impale him. His stomach dropped out from under him. He was falling!
“Ah!” Darren jolted awake. The classroom was silent. He looked around. Everyone was staring at him. Including the professor.
“I’m sorry, Darren,” she said. “Was my lecture interrupting your dream?”
Darren rolled his eyes. “As a matter of fact, it was. Bug out.”
A soft chuckle rumbled from the class, and the professor stood in shock, her mouth agape. The girl next to him turned to him. “God, Darren, you’re so edgy,” she said, looking him up and down. “I love a man that can stand up to authority.”
“Yeah,” Darren said, first matching her sultry stare, then watching her turn the pencil in her mouth, then glancing at her low-cut top, “Well, you know me.”
“Let’s get out of here,” she said. Like I need an invitation. He straddled the back of her motorcycle and wrapped his arms around her slender waist, pressing his body in close. Together, they sped off, the cloud of dirt in their wake blocking out the sun.
The light of it brought the classroom back. You gotta be kidding me! What time is it? Of course, there were no clocks in this room. He reached into his pocket and pulled out his phone. 10:22. Only an hour and half left. Dammit. He sat up straight in his seat, rubbing his eyes and yawning. The hum of the professor buzzed lightly in his ears. Okay. It was time to pay attention. Passing this class is hard enough when you’re awake. He reached for his coffee, but it was gone. He leaned forward to see it on the floor beside him, spilled into the carpet. Whatever. Quickly, he caught up in his notes and raised his hand.
“Yes,” the professor called on him.
“Okay,” Darren pointed with his pencil. “So, we know about the polynomial, but what about the pterodactyl?”
“Oh,” the professor smiled, pointing to the green outline of the pterodactyl that took up the whiteboard on the other end of the classroom, “I put that guy right over there.”
“Oh, okay, good.” Darren copied down the image of the pterodactyl exactly as it appeared on the board. He leaned back in his chair. He needed to stay vigilant. Something’s happening. Just as he’d completed that thought, men in suits and sunglasses burst into the room, waving pistols.
“FBI,” they shouted, hoisting Darren out of his seat and spilling his coffee everywhere. “You’re under arrest!”
“What?” Darren protested as they slammed his face into the desk and pinned his arms behind his back, “For what?”
“You have the right to remain silent!”
“You didn’t hear?” The professor said as they dragged him to his feet, “Sleeping in class is illegal under the No Slacker Left Alive Act. I reported you last week.”
“ARGH!” Darren exclaimed, “Thanks, Obama!
Darren bubbled to consciousness again. It’s going to be a long day. He took a sip of his cold coffee and gazed around the classroom in time to see seats full of his clones raising their coffee cups as well. Discreetly, he pulled his phone from his pocket. 10:22.

1 comment:

  1. Hey Theland,

    I really enjoy your style of writing. It is very active and entertaining. I am an editor for a serial publication site, ImageCurve.com. We focus on fiction and poetry in weekly installments. Short stories are something we’ve been looking to expand on.

    I would like to invite you to contribute to Image Curve.

    You can take a look at our manifesto and site here: http://www.imagecurve.com/manifesto/

    Thanks and have a good week,
    Milen
    milen@imagecurve.com

    ReplyDelete