The New Magic - The Revelation of Jonah McAllister by Landon Wark (free ebooks for android txt) ๐
Read free book ยซThe New Magic - The Revelation of Jonah McAllister by Landon Wark (free ebooks for android txt) ๐ยป - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Landon Wark
Read book online ยซThe New Magic - The Revelation of Jonah McAllister by Landon Wark (free ebooks for android txt) ๐ยป. Author - Landon Wark
The foot gave an inch and his head rose above the confining sand.
He screamed.
The thing retreated back down into the sand as the classroom exploded into anarchy. The teacher, roused from her imaginary binge was wading through the bodies of children and pulling the larger boy off his back. He was already aware that he was crying, but there was no way to stop it. Tears spread the grit all down the side of his face and his hand, still clutching the blocks wiped furiously at the sides of his face despite the teacherโs attempts to stop him. For the most part the other children just milled about, half curious, half disturbed.
There was a moment of clarity, a moment of realization that the horror was over, but his mind would not seem to fully grasp it and he continued to scream, tears flowing faster and faster down the side of his face. His body throbbed with rage and embarrassment.
The solemn brick structure, itโs beauty forgotten by the world toppled over as the teacher led the boy out of the room and closed the door.
The world rushed by the car window and all was silent within. He was vaguely aware that he had done something wrong. The teacher had taken him down to the principalโs office, which was where they sent kids who had done something wrong. He had sat there for what seemed like an eternity before his mother had come to collect him. In all that time he had been crying, a torrent at first and then wallowing sniffles for the remainder.
His mother was silent beside him. Even at his young age he was beginning to grasp the fact that grown-ups could not handle everything. Between Saturday evening movies there were flashes of anarchy in places he was just beginning to learn about and there were stories told when he was dragged along to neighbourโs houses for afternoon coffee about thefts and beatings and other such things. He was just beginning to understand, but that understanding grated on his sensibilities. It made him feel edgy and vulnerable, even sitting in the car next to his mother.
She broke her silence.
โDo you know why that boy was picking on you?โ
He merely shrugged.
She was silent a moment longer, the kind of silence he would come to recognize as helpless silence.
โYour teacher says youโre having trouble making friends. Have you talked to any of the other kids?โ
He shrugged again. The truth was he didnโt like the other kids. They ran around and toppled over his blocks (the few times he got to play with them) and they screamed too loud when he was trying to read one of the thin storybooks hidden on the back shelves.
โAnd you donโt know why he was picking on you?โ
He shrugged, but this time answered. โI just wanted to help. The tower was falling over. I donโt know whyโฆโ
It was hard to talk out loud.
โIs this the same boy who hit you last week?โ
โNo. I donโt know why he hit me. I just wanted to answer the question, so I stood up.โ
She frowned as she turned the steering wheel.
โYou wanted to show off?โ
โIf you know the answer youโre supposed to answer. Iโโ
โDo you answer a lot?โ
He frowned. He didnโt like these kinds of questions. And he didnโt like being interrupted.
โI try to. The teacher doesnโt always pick me though.โ
โMaybe you should let the other kids answer.โ
โBut if you know the answer youโโ
โSome people donโt know the answer all the time,โ his mother said, struggling for terms a six year old would understand. โAnd sometimes they get mad at people who do. I bet if you just answer one question a day the other kids might like you a little more.โ
The boyโs hand rolled up into a fist and for an instant he could feel the thing that was with him down in the grime of the floor, skulking at the edge of his vision. His face welled up, red.
A string of nonsensical muttering let out.
โAnd stop muttering,โ she exhaled.
There was a long silence as the awkwardness of her command ate up the air in the car.
โI got you something,โ she said, reaching into the backseat and clutching at anything that would move them forward, past all the tears. Her hand re-emerged holding a hard, glossy rectangle.
The thing from the classroom receded and the boyโs eyes lit up, most of the trouble had dimmed. He eagerly grasped at the hard block of shiny paper.
โItโs about plants, and how people use them to make things like medicines and other things,โ she explained as he rifled carefully through the pages, trying to take in all of the sharply coloured pictures he could before tracing over some of the hard to read words, sounding them expertly.
"I don't like medicine."
"Well, it's something that people need. And food. Everyone needs food."
"Like cheese and crackers."
โI guess. Itโs a little ahead of where you are in school, butโฆ I tell you what; you read that book, but donโt tell anyone about whatโs in it. Weโll make it our little secret. Donโt even tell your teacher.โ
The boy nodded furiously, starting in the middle of the book and running his fingertips over the lustrous sheets.
He would read it all and he wouldnโt tell anyone.
Part One
Jonah McAllister Goes to School
Days were bright misery.
The sun shone
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