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Speechless(41)

By:Hannah Harrington


                Except this particular freak won’t stop staring at me, and it’s                     a chore to act like I’m concentrating on this math homework, so I write I’m                         Chelsea on the whiteboard and slide it to the corner of the desk so                     she can see. Maybe now she’ll leave me alone.

                Asha nods knowingly. “I know. I’ve heard of you,” she                     whispers.

                Oh, great. Is she going to give me a hard time, too? Even the                     freaks hate me.

                She rummages through her backpack and tears a blank page from                     one of her notebooks. She scribbles something down and then passes the sheet of                     paper to me.

                You’re the girl taking the vow of silence, right?

                News travels fast.

                I hand the paper back and start returning to my homework,                     except Asha keeps writing, and a minute later she pokes me in the shoulder with                     the corner of the page. I take it back, assuming that she’s written a                     profanity-laden attack on my character, but when I look down, that’s not what I                     see. And she doesn’t look mad or mocking—there’s                     something weirdly sincere about her.

                Since she doesn’t appear hostile, I decide to humor her. What                     can it hurt?

                I hear things. People say a lot in front of me because they                     don’t think I’m listening.

                What else have you heard? Don’t answer that. So what are you                     in for?

                I punched a teacher in the face.

                Seriously?

                No, but it sounds cooler than having a bunch of tardies.

                Point taken.

                Hey, your answer to problem number four is wrong. To find                     the domain you need to set the denominator to zero.

                Wow. I was not even close.

                Not really, no.

                It goes on like this for a while, until the teacher glances at                     the clock and says, “All right, you’re all excused.”

                Everyone clears out of the room like it’s on fire. Asha is the                     only one who takes her time packing away her knitting needles, zipping up her                     bag and tucking the newspaper under her arm. Now that we’re both standing up, I                     can tell exactly how short she is. I mean, I’m no giant, but I tower over her by                     a good three or four inches. Her sleek black hair sways back and forth as she                     walks in front of me out the door. I wonder how she deals with it—it must take                     forever to wash, and even longer to brush. I have enough trouble keeping my own                     tamed, and mine only goes a little past my shoulders. It’s flaming red and wavy,                     and no matter how much product I use, it always ends up looking wild and tousled                     within an hour of drying. Ridiculous.