The Museum Door Closed, And My Classmate Thought No One Saw It-rosocute

The rain started before the contest results were even dry on Mr. Anderson’s clipboard.

I remember that because I was standing near the front of the classroom with two museum tickets in my hand, trying not to smile too much, while the windows behind him blurred into gray water.

Mr. Anderson had just announced that I had won the school history contest.

Image

For a second, I forgot how tired I was.

I forgot the missing study notes, the headache, the four hours of sleep, and the way my pencil had felt too heavy in my hand during the last ten questions.

Then Lily threw her arms around me, and the whole room clapped.

Kelvin clapped too, but only twice.

He sat two desks behind me with his mouth pressed into a flat line, and when I glanced back, he looked less disappointed than insulted.

That was how Kelvin looked whenever someone else was noticed.

The day before the contest, my study folder had disappeared from my desk.

It was a blue folder with every date, battle, museum term, and practice answer I had spent a month writing.

I searched my locker three times, checked under every chair, and even asked the janitor if he had seen it.

Kelvin was the only person who did not help look.

He sat at his desk, slowly packing his backpack, and said maybe winners should be able to remember things without notes.

I went home and rewrote as much as I could from memory.

Mom found me at the kitchen table after midnight with my head resting on one arm and my pen still moving in the other hand.

She told me I felt warm.

I told her I was fine because I wanted that contest so badly, and because children sometimes think wanting something is the same as having enough strength for it.

The test was harder than anyone expected.

By the time I turned it in, my eyes burned and my throat felt scratchy, but I knew I had done well.

When Mr. Anderson said my name, the tiredness disappeared under a rush of happiness.

He handed me the tickets, and I gave one to Lily before anyone asked who I would take.

She had quizzed me at lunch for weeks, and she deserved to go more than anyone.

Kelvin watched the ticket pass from my hand to hers.

His face changed so quickly that most people missed it.

I did not.

After school, the rain grew louder.

I went to the hallway hook where I had left my umbrella, but it was gone.

Kelvin stood near the trophy case with his backpack already zipped, pretending to read a plaque about last year’s science fair.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *