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Chapter 2 - Tuesday

Andrew Champion is given a "free-will" project, a weeklong assignment that tests one's ability to make strong choices. Saddled with loudmouthed friends, an unattainable crush, and the geekiest girl in school as a partner, he'll walk a rocky road.

Chapter 2 - Tuesday

Chapter 2 - Tuesday




D&C



XXXXX



TUESDAY



The exhaust beat steadily on the boy's legs as the Joltswagon left carpool for the open road. He watched the car flash behind a stream of trees before it disappeared altogether.



Andy stood before Starlight Jr. High with considerable trepidation, gripping the strap of his backpack tightly. He had not made the slightest bit of headway against his assignment, and he had the sinking feeling that he would somehow be judged for not doing so. If it wasn't Mr. Clark, then it would be Justin and Slick, when they had gleaned the information from him. Academics they were not, but they always let him know when he was behind in some way.



Standing haplessly for a moment. Then he grit his teeth, gathered up his book bag, and made for the school.



Which, today, was quite a different place.



Andy edged off to the side to make way for a kid coming to the back of him, who was currently wearing a large fedora on his head. Tromping over to the side of the schoolyards, the kid leaned against a tree and folded his arms, scanning the terrain for prey. After spying a rabbit, he took off after it, brandishing his belt like a whip. "Die, evildoer!" he cried out as his pants loosened around the waist, running off from the right onto the baseball field.



It was like this everywhere he looked. All around him were kids doing bizarre things, like throwing cards at people and jump roping right into the school. Two kids were even caught in a wrestling match with a teacher, trying to take down the man with a series of headlocks and full nelsons. Too bad they were losing badly, the teacher happening to know a few things about wrestling...and judo, and a whole bunch of stuff in between.



Andy stumbled haphazardly through the crowd before spying Justin and Slick, quietly sizing up the crazy situations, too cool for school. "What's going on here?" he asked the two, running over to them as means of seeking shelter against the storming students.



"Mr. Clark's little pet project made a splash," Slick commented, lightly combing his hair so that it more stylishly covered his eye. "Everybody's getting into it and goin' wild."



"Everybody's acting like a dork, you mean." Justin grumbled, looking over his peers with extreme distaste. "This is so uncool."



A monster card went flying out of nowhere into the small group, the kind featuring creatures with names like Grand Silver Gigatex. Andy, Justin, and Slick made way for the group of seventh graders rushing up, laughing as they carried their monster summoning game to a whole new level.



"So uncool," Justin concurred again, shaking his head in disdain.



Andy looked over at the card players with confusion. Despite the silliness of their action, they seemed to be having fun, so he had a hard time agreeing with Justin. Keeping his comments to himself, he instead opted to change the subject. "So...what are you guys doing for the free-will project?" he asked.



Justin blinked a bit, then glanced both ways to make sure no one was paying attention. Then, he leaned in close and gave Andy his first real smile, albeit a sneaky one. "We got a special thing in store for the girls in Gym," he said slyly, looking like the cat that had caught the canary.



"Yeh," Slick joined in, sliding next to his friend and thrusting his thumbs towards his chest. "Those cute chicky-boos are gonna see the full swingin' hipness of Slick C. Limestone."



Andy nodded in a half-patronizing way, subconsciously backing away from the amorous duo. Maybe he was underdeveloped, but he never could understand their obsession with girls...



A swish of green hair caught the corner of his vision, turning the boy's thoughts away from his judgmental accession of his friends' fancies...and into a fancy all his own. As Andy whirled away from his group, a lovely girl perhaps a little older than himself filled his vision, popping into the center of his thoughts with her long, full mane of green hair and her bright, gleaming eyes. A cap sat lightly on her head, with the words "TAB" printed on the front and two bat wings sticking out of the sides. All of this led up to an image of a tomboyish, yet extremely vivacious babe, able to woo the boys while kicking their butts in every sport offered.



Justin caught his ogling and rolled his eyes. "She's out of your league, Champion," he said to the other boy, his tone sarcastic yet with a touch of warning to it.



"It could happen," he insisted, never breaking his gaze for a moment.



"Yeah, when my grandma wins the All Starlight Beauty Pageant," Slick said, snorting into the cold morning air. "And she was ugly at twenty."



Andy half-ignored his friend and continued to contemplate the distant girl, who was admiring the basketball twirling on her finger. An idea was coming quickly to mind, causing his eyes to widen slightly in realization. "As a matter of fact," he said, his eyes now narrowing slightly with determination. "For my freewill exercise, I'm going to talk to Maru Mari by the end of this week." He slowly put his hands on his hips in an expression of confidence, his face shy but unrepentant.



The other two were less than impressed by this declaration. "Whatever," Justin moaned, waving him off and turning his back. "You'll never pull it off."



"Yeah," Slick said, a tad bit more sympathetic than the cold boy. "You sure you don't wanna go tour the girls' changing room? Adventure of a lifetime, dude."



"I'm sure," Andy responded with a smile, letting his bravado get even higher. He turned back towards the duo. "Don't you worry about a thing," he continued to reassure them. "You're going to see an all new me. No more wimpy waffling for Andy Champion..."



"Excuse me, guys," a soft soprano broke into his monologue, cutting him off. The boy looked up from his diatribe at the source of this disruption, and as a consequence felt his heart leap into his throat. Mari was standing right there with her hands on her hips, smiling innocently at the trio. For the second time this day, Andy was awestruck, perplexed...and completely overwhelmed as far as his mental capacities were concerned.



Mari raised an eyebrow momentarily at the boy's inaction, a perplexed expression on her face. After waving her hand to get his attention, she next pointed at an object rolling at the boy's feet. It was the basketball she was playing with earlier, which had somehow fallen inside the trio's inner circle...not that the boy had noticed. Justin and Slick, however, had gotten the idea, and quickly stepped aside, with Slick pulling the lovelorn Andy along with him.



Smoothly, the girl entered into the space the three boys had left for her. Bending over briefly, she scooped the ball up into her arm, tucking it against her side. "Thanks," she responded pleasantly, straightening the bill of her cap with her free hand. And then, she was running back towards her girlfriends, her green hair tossing behind her like a flag of a victorious freedom fighter.



After Mari had departed, Slick slipped over to Andy's side, a twisting smirk on his face. "Some syrup to go with your waffle, Andy-boy?" he said slyly, leaning lightly on the boy's shoulder.



Andy looked down at the pavement, a hot flush of embarrassment on his face. "I still got...four days," he murmured to himself.



XXXXX



The confines of the school were alive with the crackle of adolescent chatter, most of it frank and unabashed. In Starlight Jr. High, there was a fifteen minute break between second and third periods, where the students were free to wander the halls until the ring of the next bell. Many of the students used the time to talk to friends, complain about teachers, and perhaps discuss plans for a prank on teachers.



Andrew Champion had better ideas.



The boy was waiting behind the corner of a wall, his expression a cross between a big-game hunter and a peeping tom. He was careful to keep from overextending himself into the hallway, so anyone who looked would only see a fluff of green hair and big, bulging eyes. Within his sights was, again, Maru Mari, posting a bulletin for soccer tryouts on a corkboard. With her eyes glowing with eagerness, she was completely unaware of the situation she was in, just like a deer in the sights of a shotgun...held by a one-year-old with no fine motor control.



"C'mon, Andy," he urged himself under his breath, gripping the corner of the wall tighter. "You can do this."



The girl was just about finished placing her notice, and Andy knew he had no more time left to procrastinate. Steeling his muscles, he prepped himself like an Olympic runner about to start the 100 Meter Dash. The boy's gaze heated up in determination, as if he was going to start shooting lasers from his eyes. Then, roboticly, he began to move forward into the heat of battle.



"Hi, Andrew," a chirping soprano broke out behind him, like stain glass shattering in an otherwise peaceful church. His nerves twisting like licorice whips, he quickly turned around to find Tarah standing behind him, her arms behind her back in an innocent sort of pose. "W-what are you doing?" he quickly got out, stiffening up as if braking a bicycle within three inches.



"I needed to talk to you about..." The girl halted her dialogue to look beyond him, where Mari was. "Are you peeping on her or something?" she inquired, peering over his shoulder ostentatiously. "That's kinda a gross thing to do. Though I guess some girl's might like that."



"Ah, um..." The boy was practically breaking out into hives at her insinuations. "That was..." He suddenly jerked away from her and retreated completely around the corner, where Mari couldn't see him. "What did you say you wanted again?" he tried, rubbing the back of his head nervously.



"Professor Clark wants us to work together on this project, right?" Tarah began without preamble, her face honest and ernest. "Can I come over to your house this evening? We can get more work done that way."



"T-tonight?" Andy stammered out, scootching away from her as if she was a pit bull with rabies. "Tonight's not really a good night, y'see, I got a lot of work to do in Algebra and there's some chores to be done..." The boy's mind was racking itself for any excuse it could find. He really didn't want Justin and Slick knowing that the school nerd had gone over to his house.



At the end of Andy's babbling, Tarah's face had fallen until it practically hit the floor. "Oh," she murmured, bolstering a look of unhappy confusion. "Maybe another day, I guess." With her head lowered, the girl shuffled on down into the halls, her hands dangling loosely by her sides. And the boy was crestfallen by the girl's aura of depression, a look almost as dour on his own face.



"...hey, how about Wednesday?" he suddenly piped up, saying the first thing that had come to the mind.



The girl halted mid-step and turned on her heal, her pigtails flaying outwards. "Really?" she said hopefully, a look of excitement dancing behind her spectacles.



An embarrassed flush took over his face, as the situation was quickly turning much more heated than he originally intended. "Well, I don't have work on my hard classes that day..." Andy said, trying to put a damper on the excitement.



This did little to quell Tarah's good mood. "Okay, Andrew!" she cheered. "We'll get together on Wednesday!"



Her words brought on a renewed sweat in Andy, as he suddenly felt the presence of the rest of the children in the hallway. "Uh, could you not say 'get together?'" he said, looking nervously back and forth for anyone watching them.



His nervousness went completely over the girl's head. "Why?" she asked, putting her hands on her hips.



"He doesn't want anyone to know how much he loves you," a slippery voice squirmed in from behind the two. Andy jerked around madly to find Justin folding his arms in a 'well, well, well' sort of pose. His smirk was a razor edge carved into his face, preparing to cut the boy down to size. "Right, Champion?"



"It's a dorkapalooza!" Slick chimed in, spreading his arms as if he was some showboat announcer. "Nerds in love! Your thoughts please?" He thrust his pencil in front of their faces as if it was a microphone, seeming waiting for insider comment.



Andy fidgeted like mad within the wrath of his fiends for friends, trying to figure out some quick means of escape. He had almost decided upon the appropriate path of retreat when he saw a figure that now filled him with dread instead of love. Mari had dropped her task at the bulletin board to move into the scene, an interested look on her face. "You two make a funny couple," she said, her pleasant smile a sharp contrast to the look of abject horror on the boy's face.



Andy's eyes darted back and forth between Mari, Justin, Slick, and Tarah. The boys looked like they were going to bust their guts all over the floor in peals of laughter. Mari was cocking her head curiously like a puppy dog whom had just heard a strange noise. Tarah was oddly pensive, leaning away from the guys and looking to Andy for help. He had currently balanced out all their factors into a single course of action, one that he knew he could not deter from.



"See you, Tarah," he said quickly, mustering up a quick smile for her benefit. Then ZIP! he was off towards the other end of the school, leaving the four behind like dust in the wind.



"Wait, hold up!" Slick called out after him, shaking a piece of paper he had plucked from the bulletin board. "Do her glasses smash your face when you make out? Inquiring minds want to know!"



"The press is waiting, Champion," Justin snickered, slowly following after him with the blond boy.



XXXXX



"I just can't do it," Andy was complaining later, as he picked at his food with his fork. "It's too much trouble."



"Oh, Andy, it can't be all that bad," Aunt Mary said, lowering her own fork and looking at the boy with concern."



"But it is," he insisted. "The day was a disaster. And I don't think it's going to get any easier."



"Hum," the woman sighed with a disappointed sort of air to her voice, not so much with the boy as with the situation.



The family: Andy, Aunt Mary, Uncle Noah, and Grandpa Moses, was sitting around the table for their evening meal. It was Salisbury steak night, an all-time favorite in the small household. Everybody in the family was a heavy eater, so there were generous potions on all of the plates along with large helpings of mashed potatoes and beets. Rounding off the meal was a tall glass of milk, a fine addition to the balance of the meal...and the perfect thing to drown your school-time sorrows in.



Uncle Noah took a large swig of his milk, as if the glass was filled with bourbon instead. "Maybe you're just shooting too high with this assignment," he tried, wiping off a milk mustache from his already impressive facial hair. "Nobody said you had to conquer the world with your choices."



"But the poor boy was so close last time," Mary insisted, shaking her head in disagreement. "I'm sure with effort, Andy will be able to get out how he really feels." Like Justin and Slick, the family was well aware of Andy's feelings toward Maru Mari. Unlike with the two boys, however, he had seen fit to tell them about it up front, while Justin and Slick had to deduce it by themselves. They were a close-knit family in that regard, even if they were an unorthodox one.



Andy sighed into the napkin on his lap, his head lowered in frustration. "It's not just that scene with Tarah," he explained, making a small swirl in his mashed potatoes with his fork. "I choked two more times after that when I tried again. It's like the incident is telling me that I'm not supposed to exercise my free-will, that I'm just supposed to leave things be."



"Yet, of course, there are alternatives to free-will," a gravely voice spoke up from the other side of the table. Andy looked up in curiosity to find Grandpa Moses staring at him pointedly from his half eaten meal. "What do you mean, Grandpa?" he asked curiously.



"Dad, don't confuse him now," Noah chided lightly, a touch of respectful warning to his voice.



"The boy has to do his assignment, but no one said he had to agree with the theme supported by it," the old man continued, ignoring his son's protests. "Simply explain the actions you have taken, and that accord to the results, you have decided you don't believe in free-will."



"But that's not going to empower Andy!" Mary jumped in, looking up from her cutting of the Salisbury steak. "We want him to believe himself strong enough to make his own choices."



"Is there any reason to make him believe he's stronger that he really is?" Moses said, putting down his fork. "Stronger than Fate? If we had people stronger than their own fate, we wouldn't have all these unmoving cowards in this world who refuse to take a stand for what they believe in. No Andy," he then looked back towards the youngest member of the family. "Life's one track, and the best thing you can do for yourself is understand that you're on the track, going to whatever ultimate destiny it leads to."



"That doesn't make any sense," Noah insisted, putting another bite of steak to his mouth. "You act like nobody has ever done anything big and heroic before."



"That's just their own path," Moses responded. "Those 'heroes' are simply on a track that leads to more productive behavior. It's nothing they're doing outside of Fate."



Noah shook his head and swallowed his mouthful. "I'm still going to say that any old joe can forge themselves into a doer of great things," he insisted, stabbing his fork into his meat and folding his arms, as if he had just slain a great beast.



"I say Andy already has that power now," Mary threw in with a self-satisfied sort of huff.



Andy regarded this exchange with a passive eye, drinking in all the knowledge without feeling the need to add anything in. He looked down at his half-eaten Salisbury steak, still speared with his fork. "A heroic path..." he murmured to himself, eyes half-closed in contemplation. "Am I a hero?"



-



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