This is a heavy scene. It is not pretty, but I feel that it is a necessary backstory for Ann the future Miss Brown) to give her a personal arc and good development, rather than being a flat character. This is a flashback that may plague her dreams, and then she tells Thomas about it, but whatever the case, I present to you the scene.
Quote:
I hug my textbooks close. Why does it alienate them? The tile flooring blurs under my feet as I walk down the locker hallway. They should be my friends if I’m smarter than they are. I stop at my locker and fumble with the key I shoved into the tiny pocket of my skirt, almost dropping it. I wish my hands didn’t shake when I’m nervous. Which is always.
I lay the books down in a neat stack and unhook my jacket, slinging it over my shoulder. Hang out with people smarter than you are and you’ll learn from them. That’s why we have teachers.
I close and lock the door, resting my hand on the padlock for a moment before facing the daily ritual of smirks and laughs as I walk out of the school building and back to the orphanage.
Why don’t they get that? They should like me.
A hand drops onto my shoulder. I gasp and try to turn around. But whoever it is puts his arms around me and hugs me tightly. Heat rushes to my face and I lift my foot to stomp on the boy’s toes.
“I miss you, Ann,” he whispers into my ear.
Alex! I relax and lean my head back onto his chest.
“You came back,” I whisper. I wipe my sweaty hands on my skirt. They stop shaking.
He lets go of me and I spin around to hug him properly. He laughs and picks me up so my toes can’t touch the ground.
You feel so much older, Alex. More of a… more of a man.
I don’t know why I talk to him in my head. But it makes me feel better…even when he’s not there at all. When no one is there. Which is almost always.
“You can put me down now, Alex,” I say, too happy to be really mad at him. He laughs again – I feel it in his chest – and sets me down like a bird.
I lean against the lockers and look hard at his face, smiling my braces at the world. I know you don’t care about them, Alex.
“You’ve been working out,” I say. His cheeks are defined, his favorite shirt looser around the shoulders than I remember.
“Nope. Just working.”
“You got a job!” My eyes go wide and I do a little skip-thing. I worried so much about you not finding work. You don’t know how much I worried.
“Real work?” I ask, looking him straight in the eyes.
“Yeah.” A little twinkle starts in his left eye.
“What?”
“I saved some extra…and I, I wanna take you out?”
“Now? You know the rules, Alex.” All too well, since you’re an expert working around them. “I have to be…”
“…at the orphanage before four o’clock. I know.” He runs his fingers through his hair. “But as soon as we get there we can’t be together. Ann, I miss you.” His eyes beg. “I didn’t come here just to say hi.”
I swallow. You miss me just as much as I miss you. I know. But I won’t get fostered if I get in trouble. You know that, Alex. There’s a reason your face wasn’t enough to get foster-parents. Your record held you down. And I…
“You won’t get in trouble, Ann. I’ll make sure it won’t happen.”
I look down at Alex’s shoes. You said that every time you got in trouble, Alex. ‘They’ll never know. I won’t let them catch me.’
“Ann, you need to talk to me,” Alex says quietly. “Out loud.”
“I…I want to get fostered, Alex. I’m at the top of the list, and if something happens now…” …I’ll be seventeen, at least, before I can get back to where I am now.
His eyebrows furrow. “Don’t you – you love me, right?” he whispers.
“Yes, Alex. I love you. And I won’t let you put yourself in danger of kidnapping charges just to be with me.”
“Kidnapping…?”
“I’m still a minor. You’re not. If we were both minors it would be totally different.”
He sighs. “---- laws.”
I bite my lip. You know I don’t like swearing, Alex.
He looks at me funny. Almost with a laugh in his eyes. “Sorry Ann, but it’s true.”
“I know…” I say.
“Alright, well let’s get going,” he says, turning away from me. “Don’t wanna be late.”
I hesitate for a moment. I’m sorry, Alex. I really am. I just don’t want anything to happen to you. Please don’t be mad. I can tell by the way he turned away that…
“Alex,” I say. “We can talk outside the orphanage until four. It – it’s better than nothing.”
He looks back and smiles, holding his hand out for me. “I know,” he says. “Anything is better than nothing.”
I put my fingers between his and squeeze them tight. Sasha looks away and digs in her locker when we walk past her. Rachel stops talking to her and rolls her eyes. Some of the guys raise their eyebrows and wink.
But no one catcalls. No one laughs at me.
I look up at Alex’s face, my eyes teary. Thank you, darling. Thank you.
He doesn’t look at me, but squeezes my hand just a little, to let me know that he knows what I go through, that he wishes with all his heart that he could be here every day to walk me home.
He pushes the school door open and we walk into the sunlight.
+++
“This way,” he says, leading me around a familiar turn off the route to the orphanage. I know immediately where he wants to go. The orphanage is two minutes away. It’s 3:55. We have time to go back one last time. Almost as good as a date.
We start running. I stifle a laugh at the memories. It was the only place we were free. Climbing the rafters. Playing tag. Laughing. You found it for us, Alex.
We skid around the corner of an old brick building and I stare for a half-second at the front of the old warehouse.
There’s an old sign above the huge sliding door: McKE nd IPS, INC.
McKendips, incorporated. Still here.
“Cummon,” he says. “Let’s go inside.”
I laugh. “What else did we come here for?” You sound…excited, Alex. Too excited.
He drags the door open just enough for us to slip inside. It’s dark and smells like memories I’ve forgotten under layered stains of tears.
Then he shoves the door closed.
Light filters weakly through dirty windows high above us, and I realize how gloomy it is. It’s not the same place anymore – most of the windows are boarded over and it stinks like mice.
I suddenly don’t want to be here.
I turn to Alex. “Hey, can we go? I don’t like…” I stop. He’s staring at me without moving, his face in the shadow.
“I didn’t come just to say hi, baby,” he whispers, breathless. “I came for… more than that.”
Alex? He slides a hand behind my head, stroking the soft spot under my ear with his thumb. Stop, Alex! You’re scaring me.
“Alex, what are you doing?” I whisper. His other hand settles on my hip.
“This,” he whispers, leaning forward and pressing his lips against mine.
My gasp is lost in a flood of conflicting emotions. He feels so real, so good; but this is not the only thing he came for. He wants more. And I – I want to give myself to you, Alex. I do. But this isn’t….its not right.
I try to push away, but he resists for a second. Then he lets go.
“Alex!” I say, stumbling backwards. “Not now! Please. You love me!”
“Yes. I love you, Ann,” he says, smiling. “But I need you, too.”
“But you have to wait! Please. For me?” Please, please, please don’t do this to me, Alex. I love you too much. Don’t lose yourself like this.
He looks down, then flicks his gaze up my body until he’s looking at my eyes.
“I'm done waiting, darling,” he says, almost sad. Then he jumps forward and hugs me close, his hands slipping under my shirt, exploring my back.
I scream and try to push him away.
“Don’t worry, baby,” he whispers in my ear. “I know what I’m doing.”
My heart stops. Alex? Alex? Where are you? Come back!
Please, I’m begging you.
Come back.
+++
My heart burns. My eyes hurt, and I can feel the dried-out trails of tears on my face. I don’t want to move. There’s nowhere for me to go now. Nothing.
How could you? Alex…
I squeeze my eyes closed and wish more tears would come. But they are long gone. You were the only one I had…
I am on fire. My body hurts. I open my eyes.
It’s dark.
I uncurl and sit up slowly on the gritty warehouse floor.
My hands shake as I smooth my skirt down over my thighs. The buttons on my shirt refuse to line up.
I stand up slowly and stagger towards a wall. What do I do?
My life is gone. He took it away and…
Now what?
The orphanage. They’ll help. Or at least try.
I take a deep breath and smooth my skirt.
Just take one step, Ann. Don’t keep yourself in this hell. Move.
I put one hand on the wall and walk, searching for the door.
My other hand is sweating. I wipe it off on my skirt.
Just have to keep moving.
Questions: Do you get a sense of her intelligence? She is, like Thomas, very smart. At the end, do you feel that it would be a natural turn for her to shut other people out and become a self-made "ice-queen" so to speak?
Overall, do you think I handled this type of scene well? If anything, what would you change?
Also - is this anything at all like orphanages really work?
