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"What about me?" blubbered Duncan. "What about me?"
Peter hesitated. "You'll have to hide out at my house," he said. "It's the last place anyone would think to look for you. If you stay there, you may be safe. Get going, Susan; you've got to get back to school as soon as possible. Don't worry about the pictures; I'll take care of that. Just move!"
I hopped on my bike and headed for school. By riding extra hard I got there just about the time my lesson was supposed to be ending. But I was all hot and sweaty when I sneaked back in. Even worse, I ran into Mr. Bamwick the moment I walked through the door.
He was furious." Susan, where have you been?" he shouted. "I've spent the last forty minutes waiting for you. We've got a concert in two days, and my star soloist can't even show up for her lesson!"
I did the only thing I could think of: I started to cry. It wasn't hard to do, since I was on the edge of tears, anyway.
"I'm sorry, Mr. Bamwick," I sobbed. "I'm just so frightened I couldn't come to my lesson."
Wow! So far so good. I was actually managing to tell him something that was pretty close to the truth.
But then I felt bad, because Mr. Bamwick, who really is a good guy, got upset about scaring me and started apologizing for putting me under so much pressure.
In the end it worked out better than I could have imagined. Mr. Bamwick went to Mr. Smith and explained that there had been a problem with my lesson, and since we had this important concert coming up, would it be possible for him to keep me for a little while longer, and so on.
It was great! I had a real excuse, and I even got to work on my solo.
Back in cla.s.s things were pretty quiet, until just before the end of the day when Mike Foran started throwing spitb.a.l.l.s at Stacy. I wondered if the two of them weren't actually enjoying themselves. After all, they had been so well behaved for the last several years that maybe this was the perfect chance for them to let off a little steam.
But it wasn't Stacy and Michael who were asked to stay after school that day.
No, that honor was reserved for yours truly. I was sitting at my desk, thinking that maybe we had actually gotten away with our litle photo session when Mr. Smith walked up to me and said, "Miss Simmons, I want you to stay after school. I need to talk to you."
It was amazing how two such simple sentences could teach me whole new levels of fear.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN.
Teacher Conference The other kids had left. I was alone with the alien.
At least Stacy had lingered at the door for a few minutes-until Mr. Smith turned to her and said, "It's time for you to go, Miss Benoit. I want to speak to Miss Simmons in private."
Stacy looked at me with an expression that said, "I tried." Then she hurried away.
Broxholm/Smith walked over and straddled the chair in front of my desk. He leaned toward me. "I know what you did today," he said.
"Oh" was all I could manage. I felt as if someone had dropped an ice cube into my heart. The worst thing was, I couldn't even be sure what he meant. Did he know I had skipped my piccolo lesson? Or did he know I had been inside his house?
I looked at the door and wondered if I would ever go through it as a living person again.
"Well?" said Broxholm.
"I'm sorry," I whispered. It was about all my voice was good for at that point. It was also just as vague as his first statement. I wasn't about to say what I was sorry for.
Broxholm looked at me. "I don't understand why you dislike me so much, Susan," he said. "I'm just trying to do what is right for this cla.s.s. Yet you've been hostile to me from the moment I walked through the door."
What an actor! I wondered if I would ever be that good. It was amazing how he was still pretending to be just a teacher who was having trouble with one of his students.
Suddenly he rose and crossed the room to close the door. "NOW," he said, sitting down in front of me again, "let's be honest with each other, shall we, Miss Simmons?"
Should I say something? Should I tell him I knew his secret?
"Why are you here, anyway?" I said at last, still playing his game of not saying anything that couldn't be taken at least two ways.
"I'm here to learn," he said smoothly. "After all, isn't that what school is for?"
Creep! I thought. But out loud I said, "I thought you were supposed to be the teacher." I tried to keep my voice from cracking. But it did, anyway.
Broxholm s.h.i.+fted in his chair. "A good teacher is always learning," he said. "Education is a process of give and take. I have to take certain things in order to learn. Look at all I've taken from this cla.s.s already. I've taken a lot of nonsense. I've taken a lot of snottiness."
Suddenly he turned and looked directly at me. "And I'll have to take a few more things in order to learn all I can-if you take my meaning, Miss Simmons."
I shrank back in terror.
I don't know how he did it, but I could actually see his alien eyes beneath his mask, as if they were burning with a light of their own.
"And I won't take kindly to any interference with my educational mission," he said in a voice without any emotion.
He had picked up a copy of Rockets and Flags as he talked. Now he began to squeeze it. I watched his fingers sink right into the cover, compressing the paper with the power of his grip.
I heard a horrible thumping sound. I glanced around to see where it was coming from, then realized it was the beating of my own heart.
"The universe is a very big place, Susan," said Broxholm gently.
He dropped the book. His fingers had left dents half an inch deep in the cover. If only I could get the book out of there, I would finally have proof of what he was. But, of course, he had no intention of letting me have the book. He picked it up and carried it to his briefcase.
"A very big place indeed," he said. "And there are more things going on in it than you can possibly imagine. It's important to learn all we can. Otherwise, terrible things can happen. Terrible things. That's my job-to prevent terrible things. Can you understand that, Miss Simmons?"
I shook my head. Maybe I should say I shook my head harder, since I was already shaking all over.
He sighed. "Well, perhaps someday you will," he said. "For now, I simply want you to know that it is wisest-and safest-not to interfere with your elders."
He closed his briefcase. "I will see you tomorrow, Miss Simmons," he said. "I trust that you will spend the entire day here in the cla.s.sroom-and not enter my home again!"
I almost fell off my chair. He knew. He had known all along! Before I could say anything, he went out the door, leaving me alone.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN.
Concert Concerns It took me almost twenty minutes to get home. I cycled along the sidewalk slowly, watching every corner. I kept expecting aliens to leap out of the bushes and grab me.
When something did jump out of the bushes, I screamed so high and so loud, I was surprised I didn't break the gla.s.s in the street lamp overhead.
But it was only Peter.
"Are you trying to give me a heart attack?" I asked, straddling my bike and glaring at him.
"It would serve you right for bringing Duncan along today," he said.
I wasn't up for a fight, and I said so. Peter was mad enough that he might have kept it going, anyway, but when I started to tell him what had happened after school he got so interested he forgot about being angry. He insisted that I try to remember every word Broxholm had said.
"Where's Duncan?" I asked when I finished my story.
"Hiding in my closet," said Peter with a wicked grin. "We called his folks, and he's going to spend the next couple of days at my house."
"Didn't they ask any questions?"
Peter laughed. "If you were Duncan's mother, wouldn't you be glad to have him out of the house for a while?"
I didn't think that was very nice, but I let it pa.s.s. "Will you be able to stand him till this is over?" I asked.
"My problem is trying not to take advantage of him," said Peter sadly. "It's not easy. I'd really love to get back at him for some of the things he's done to me. But he's so terrified I don't dare have any fun with him. I really think if I popped a bag near his ear he would have a heart attack and die."
I laughed in spite of myself.
"What about your father?" I asked.
Peter grimaced. "He won't even notice Duncan is there," he said. "By the way, I took the pictures to the drugstore. We can pick them up after school tomorrow."
"If we live that long," I said.
"Relax," said Peter. "Broxholm and his friends are here to collect people. I'd be really surprised if they actually kill anyone."
That made me feel a little better. But it was only the thought that this whole mess might be. over when we got the pictures that kept me from losing my mind that night. Even so, I was so frazzled I couldn't think about anything else.
By morning I was such a wreck that my special session with Mr. Bamwick was a total disaster.
"No, no, no!" he kept yelling. "It's B flat, Susan. B flat!"
"Well, I can't get it right if you keep screaming at me," I said, trying not to cry.
I couldn't blame poor Mr. Bamwick. The concert was only a day away, and I was getting worse by the minute. But I just couldn't concentrate on the music. How could I, when I knew what else was supposed to happen? Could you play the piccolo, if you knew some of your friends-or maybe even you-were about to be kidnapped by aliens?
"Aren't you worried?" I asked Peter that afternoon on the playground.
"Not really," he said. His pale face split into a wide grin. "I told you, I've got an alternate plan."
"Listen, Peter," I said, taking his arm. "This isn't one of your science fiction books. And you're not Buck Rogers. Don't get carried away."
He shook my hand away angrily. "This is the greatest thing that's ever happened in this town," he said. "And don't you forget it, Susan!"
At that point Stacy and Mike went running by, yelling bad words at each other.
We started to laugh. "I heard Stacy say that her mother is going nuts," said Peter. "I bet Mike's mother is, too."
I nodded. I almost felt sorry for them. It can't be easy to have a kid who hasn't been in trouble since kindergarten suddenly turn into a maniac.
"Of course, Stacy and Mike don't have much choice," I said.
"Sure they do," said Peter.
"What do you mean by that?" I asked.
But he wouldn't answer me. "Just watch," he said. "You'll figure it out soon enough."
CHAPTER NINETEEN.
Peter's Choice That afternoon I finally began to understand Peter's "alternate plan."
Actually, it took me a little while to figure it out. I knew there was something strange going on when Peter-the kid who always knew the answer but never bothered to give it-started raising his hand for every question that came along.
And suddenly it all came clear to me. Peter wanted to be picked by Broxholm. He had decided that this was his big chance to live the kind of science fiction adventure he had been dreaming about. He figured if he really tried, he might just be able to make it from "bright, but unmotivated" to being, without question, the best student in the cla.s.s.
You could almost see the gleam in Broxholm's alien eyes when Peter unleashed his mighty brain. We were having a history lesson at the time, and Peter started to answer every question perfectly.
Broxholm started asking harder questions, but Peter never blinked; he just kept reeling off the answers. Even I had no idea how smart that kid was. (And as for Broxholm, I swear, that alien must have memorized an encyclopedia; or maybe he had one transplanted into his head. Who knows what these people could do?) When school was over I dragged Peter off to the side of the playground. "Are you crazy?" I hissed. "What are you doing?"
"Plan B," said Peter. "If we can't unmask Broxholm, I want to be one of the ones to go on the s.h.i.+p."
"Forget Plan B!" I yelled. "You don't know what they're going to do to you up there. They're bad!"
"You don't know that," said Peter.
"They kidnapped Ms. Schwartz!"