Inner Harbor
Page 31
She'd waited until the middle of the week, watching from a careful distance on Monday and Tuesday to gauge his routine, and the timing. Habitually, she now knew, the buses lumbered up to school several minutes before the doors opened and children began pouring out.
Elementary first, then middle, then the high school students.
That alone was a lesson in the process of childhood, she mused. The compact little bodies and fresh round faces of the elementary children, then the more gangling, somewhat awkward forms of those who hovered around puberty. And last, the astonishingly adult and more individual young people who strolled out of the high school.
It was a study in itself, she decided. From dangling shoelaces and gap-toothed smiles to cowlicks and ball jackets to baggy jeans and shining falls of hair.
Children had never been a part of her life, or her interests. She'd grown up in a world of adults and had been expected to acclimate, to conform. There had been no big yellow school buses, no wild rebel yells when bursting out of the school doors into freedom, no lingering in the parking lot with some leather-jacketed bad boy.
So she observed all those things here like an audience at a play and found the mix of drama and comedy both amusing and informative.
When Seth hurried out, bumping bodies with the dark-haired boy she'd decided was his most usual companion, her pulse quickened. He whipped his ball cap out of his pocket and put it on his head the moment he was through the doors. A ritual, she thought, symbolizing the change of rules. The other boy fished in his pocket and pulled out a fistful of bubblegum. In seconds it was wadded into his mouth.
The noise level rose, making it impossible for her to hear their conversation, but it appeared to be animated and included a great deal of elbow jabbing and shoulder punching.
Typical male affection pattern, she concluded.
They turned their backs on the buses and began to walk down the sidewalk. Moments later, a smaller boy raced up to them. He bounced, Sybill noted, and seemed to have a great deal to say for himself.
She waited a moment longer, then casually took a path that would intersect with theirs.
"Shit, man, that geography test was nothing. A bozo could've aced it." Seth shrugged to distribute the weight of his backpack.
The other boy blew an impressive candy-pink bubble, popped it, then sucked it in. "I don't know what's the big damn deal about knowing all the states and capitals. It's not like I'm going to live in North Dakota."
"Seth, hello."
Sybill watched him stop, adjust his train of thought, and focus on her.
"Oh, yeah, hi."
"I guess school's done for the day. You heading home?"
"The boatyard." There was that little dance on the nape of his neck again. It irritated him. "We got work."
"I'm going that way myself." She tried a smile on the other boys. "Hi, I'm Sybill."
"I'm Danny," the other boy told her. "That's Will."
"Nice to meet you."
"We had vegetable soup for lunch," Will informed everyone grandly. "And Lisa Harbough threw up all over. And Mr. Jim had to clean it up, and her mom came to get her, and we couldn't write our vocabulary words." He danced around Sybill as he relayed the information, then shot her an amazingly innocent, wonderfully bright smile that she was helpless to resist.
"I hope Lisa's feeling better soon."
"Once when I threw up I got to stay home and watch TV all day. Me and Danny live over there on Heron Lane. Where do you live?"
"I'm just visiting."
"My Uncle John and Aunt Margie moved to South Carolina and we got to visit them. They have two dogs and a baby named Mike. Do you have dogs and babies?"
"No… no, I don't."
"You can get them," he told her. "You can go right to the animal shelter and get a dog--that's what we did. And you can get married and make a baby so it lives in your stomach. There's nothing to it."
"Jeez, Will." Seth rolled his eyes, while Sybill only managed to blink.
"Well, I'm going to have dogs and babies when I grow up. As many as I want." He flashed that hundred-watt smile again, then raced away. "
'Bye."
"He's such a geek," Danny said with the shuddering disdain of older brother for younger. "See you, Seth." He bounded after Will, turned briefly to run backward and flipped a wave toward Sybill. " 'Bye."
"Will's not really a geek," Seth told Sybill. "He's just a kid, and he's got diarrhea of the mouth, but he's pretty cool."
"He's certainly friendly." She shifted her shoulder bag, smiled down at him. "Do you mind if I walk the rest of the way with you?"
"It's okay."
"I thought I heard you say something about a geography test."
"Yeah, we took one today. It was nothing."
"You like school?"
"It's there." He jerked his shoulder. "You gotta go."
"I always enjoyed it. Learning new things." She laughed lightly. "I suppose I was a geek."
Seth angled his head, narrowing his eyes as he studied her face. A looker, Phillip had called her, he remembered. He guessed she was. She had nice eyes, the light color a sharp contrast to the dark lashes. Her hair wasn't as dark as Anna's, nor light like Grace's. It was really shiny, he noted, and the way she pulled it back all smooth and stuff left her face right out there.
She might be cool to draw sometime.
"You don't look like a geek," Seth announced just as Sybill felt heat begin to rise into her cheeks under his long, intense study. "Anyway, that would be a nerd."
"Oh." She wasn't sure if she'd just qualified for nerd status and decided not to ask. "What do you like studying best?"
"I don't know. Mostly it's just a bunch of--stuff," he decided, quickly censoring his opinion. "I guess I like it better when we get to read about people instead of things."
"I've always liked to study people." She stopped and gestured toward a small two-story gray house with a trim front yard. "My theory would be that a young family lives there. Both husband and wife work outside the home and they have a preschooler, most likely a boy. Odds are that they've known each other a number of years and have been married less than seven."
Elementary first, then middle, then the high school students.
That alone was a lesson in the process of childhood, she mused. The compact little bodies and fresh round faces of the elementary children, then the more gangling, somewhat awkward forms of those who hovered around puberty. And last, the astonishingly adult and more individual young people who strolled out of the high school.
It was a study in itself, she decided. From dangling shoelaces and gap-toothed smiles to cowlicks and ball jackets to baggy jeans and shining falls of hair.
Children had never been a part of her life, or her interests. She'd grown up in a world of adults and had been expected to acclimate, to conform. There had been no big yellow school buses, no wild rebel yells when bursting out of the school doors into freedom, no lingering in the parking lot with some leather-jacketed bad boy.
So she observed all those things here like an audience at a play and found the mix of drama and comedy both amusing and informative.
When Seth hurried out, bumping bodies with the dark-haired boy she'd decided was his most usual companion, her pulse quickened. He whipped his ball cap out of his pocket and put it on his head the moment he was through the doors. A ritual, she thought, symbolizing the change of rules. The other boy fished in his pocket and pulled out a fistful of bubblegum. In seconds it was wadded into his mouth.
The noise level rose, making it impossible for her to hear their conversation, but it appeared to be animated and included a great deal of elbow jabbing and shoulder punching.
Typical male affection pattern, she concluded.
They turned their backs on the buses and began to walk down the sidewalk. Moments later, a smaller boy raced up to them. He bounced, Sybill noted, and seemed to have a great deal to say for himself.
She waited a moment longer, then casually took a path that would intersect with theirs.
"Shit, man, that geography test was nothing. A bozo could've aced it." Seth shrugged to distribute the weight of his backpack.
The other boy blew an impressive candy-pink bubble, popped it, then sucked it in. "I don't know what's the big damn deal about knowing all the states and capitals. It's not like I'm going to live in North Dakota."
"Seth, hello."
Sybill watched him stop, adjust his train of thought, and focus on her.
"Oh, yeah, hi."
"I guess school's done for the day. You heading home?"
"The boatyard." There was that little dance on the nape of his neck again. It irritated him. "We got work."
"I'm going that way myself." She tried a smile on the other boys. "Hi, I'm Sybill."
"I'm Danny," the other boy told her. "That's Will."
"Nice to meet you."
"We had vegetable soup for lunch," Will informed everyone grandly. "And Lisa Harbough threw up all over. And Mr. Jim had to clean it up, and her mom came to get her, and we couldn't write our vocabulary words." He danced around Sybill as he relayed the information, then shot her an amazingly innocent, wonderfully bright smile that she was helpless to resist.
"I hope Lisa's feeling better soon."
"Once when I threw up I got to stay home and watch TV all day. Me and Danny live over there on Heron Lane. Where do you live?"
"I'm just visiting."
"My Uncle John and Aunt Margie moved to South Carolina and we got to visit them. They have two dogs and a baby named Mike. Do you have dogs and babies?"
"No… no, I don't."
"You can get them," he told her. "You can go right to the animal shelter and get a dog--that's what we did. And you can get married and make a baby so it lives in your stomach. There's nothing to it."
"Jeez, Will." Seth rolled his eyes, while Sybill only managed to blink.
"Well, I'm going to have dogs and babies when I grow up. As many as I want." He flashed that hundred-watt smile again, then raced away. "
'Bye."
"He's such a geek," Danny said with the shuddering disdain of older brother for younger. "See you, Seth." He bounded after Will, turned briefly to run backward and flipped a wave toward Sybill. " 'Bye."
"Will's not really a geek," Seth told Sybill. "He's just a kid, and he's got diarrhea of the mouth, but he's pretty cool."
"He's certainly friendly." She shifted her shoulder bag, smiled down at him. "Do you mind if I walk the rest of the way with you?"
"It's okay."
"I thought I heard you say something about a geography test."
"Yeah, we took one today. It was nothing."
"You like school?"
"It's there." He jerked his shoulder. "You gotta go."
"I always enjoyed it. Learning new things." She laughed lightly. "I suppose I was a geek."
Seth angled his head, narrowing his eyes as he studied her face. A looker, Phillip had called her, he remembered. He guessed she was. She had nice eyes, the light color a sharp contrast to the dark lashes. Her hair wasn't as dark as Anna's, nor light like Grace's. It was really shiny, he noted, and the way she pulled it back all smooth and stuff left her face right out there.
She might be cool to draw sometime.
"You don't look like a geek," Seth announced just as Sybill felt heat begin to rise into her cheeks under his long, intense study. "Anyway, that would be a nerd."
"Oh." She wasn't sure if she'd just qualified for nerd status and decided not to ask. "What do you like studying best?"
"I don't know. Mostly it's just a bunch of--stuff," he decided, quickly censoring his opinion. "I guess I like it better when we get to read about people instead of things."
"I've always liked to study people." She stopped and gestured toward a small two-story gray house with a trim front yard. "My theory would be that a young family lives there. Both husband and wife work outside the home and they have a preschooler, most likely a boy. Odds are that they've known each other a number of years and have been married less than seven."