pretty fresh, or if it wasnât Iâd have time to make a new one.
The white-tiled staff room smelled like dishwasher soap. A dozen women sat with their legs crossed on the couches while the loveable Grey and Dreaper, a couple of oversized math teachers with beards, sat playing canasta with Mahinda, a twig-necked divorcé from Sri Lanka.
âStay after dismissal today, Peter,â said Mahinda, âand I will teach you to play once and for all. Against two colonials they will never win.â
âTell me again how Iâm a colonial?â I asked.
Cam Vincent, our principal, circled the table to peer down at their hands, sporting a jet-black crewcut like heâd walked straight off an old baseball card.
âGiller, listen.â Cam stretched hairy arms way over his head like heâd been up early digging coal. âTurns out Nellaâs having her back surgery right around Christmas, George should be back by then, and her blocks are mostly eleventh grade, soââ
âOh, yeah, believe me, I want any classes I can get. All these kids are great,â I mostly bullshitted. âReally engaged with the material.â
âYoung and motivated,â sneered Dreaper. âKidsâll be the perfect age when we bring back the draft.â
âNo, no, if they already had Doctor Reid,â said Grey, âthen Mensaâs got to have helicopters circling overhead. This is Genius School!â
Back in September theyâd giggled until theyâd spilled their peppermint tea, telling me how Reid had his Ph.D. in Biology but instead of lecturing at Harvard heâd parked his ass back in his hometown to teach high school like a sucker. I couldâve told them that, similarly, Iâd started my masterâs in biochemâplanning to delve into stem cell research on, not surprisingly, Parkinsonâs diseaseâbut switched to education in order to earn an imminent-baby-supporting income somewhat sooner. But then Grey and Dreaper wouldâve pointed out that if Iâd only stayed in medical research I couldâve bought and sold Hoover ten times over. I massaged my irate earlobe.
âHelp, Doctor Reid!â Dreaper waggled his hands. âI swallowed a roofing nail!â
âI donât feel this Congo mess will carry on much longer.â Mahinda licked a fingertip and commenced rearranging his canasta hand. âYou see it with the Tamil Tigers at home, or the IRA, the PLO in those other places, if these rebel movements cannot renounce violence they eventually go down in flames.â
âBullshit,â said Dreaper, setting his cards down to reposition his belt under his gut. âThese M23 guys weâre fighting now, they were the Congo Army, then they quit for better money from the Rwandan guy! Theyâve got a million guns, a million guys with nothing else to do, and weâre scrambling around trying to keep them from raping their own women! And thatâs a noble cause, Iâm not going to complain about that, but thatâs not a job for a human being! Weâre getting torn to pieces by these M23 guys circling around at night, weââ
âInfrared goggles,â offered Cam. âSee anything in the dark.â
âTried that, remember?â Grey cupped his hands behind his head, displaying damp armpits. âThat infantry platoon killed those endangered goddamn anteaters.â
âIsnât it the LRA weâre fighting?â I asked.
âThatâs the trouble over there,â Cam said earnestly, dragging the back of his hand beneath his chin. âCanât say who exactly weâre engaging. Boys just keep coming home with their lips cut off.â
We all went quiet, the soles of our shoes squeaking absently on the tile. The women on the couches were laughing at yet another story about that kid with Aspergerâs.
âSo the ball hits the bottom of the rim,â gasped Melissa Jordan,