School’s Out
A short dark story, set in England
‘COME ON, LET’s sit at the back,’ Belinda said.
‘They,’ Mel pointed back, ‘won’t want us. Sit here instead.’
‘If we don’t try, they will never accept us.’
‘No, thank God. Who wants to be in their gang?’
‘I do.’
‘You go ahead then; I’m sitting here.’ Mel’s mind was made up, and she plopped herself next to the window. The school coach was filling fast with excited teenagers.
‘Right, you lot, what is going on?’ Mr Jones, the English teacher, shouted and clapped his hands.
‘She started it,’ a broad-shouldered, overweight boy, stiff-finger pointed into Belinda’s shoulder.
‘Ow, that hurt.’ Her eyes drilled into his. He smirked.
‘Young lady, sit at the front where I can see you.’
Mel sniggered but joined her friend. She clambered over her to sit next to the window. She glared across the aisle at the Asian girl in the opposite seat.
‘Christ, look who we’ve got next to us now,’ Mel pointed her nose at the shy girl with the oversized school jacket. Sai joined the class midway through the term but had yet to make friends, partly because her Thai accent led to comments and mimics making fun.
‘What is it with you? Nothing fits, old and shabby. I bet it’s all second-hand?’ said Belinda.
The timid girl said nothing and studied her highly polished but worn shoes. The two girls opposite giggled and high-fived.
‘Listen up, please. As you all know, we are going to Brighton.’ A muffled cheer met the teacher’s opening line. ‘Please take a paper, then pass the questionnaire to the seat behind you.’ Mr Jones gave a small pile to the front seats on both sides of the gangway. ‘Our first stop is The Royal Pavilion. It is one of Brighton’s most famous landmarks, and its original owner is responsible for putting it on the map. There are multiple-choice questions on this. The Prince Regent built the iconic eastern-influenced palace as a seaside resort in the late 18th century and later became King George IV. Then, I expect a single paragraph on the following questions: What did George love to throw? Here is a clue—What has more courses than most people could manage—Later, you can see his fairy tale kitchen, the decadent dining hall and the sumptuous four-poster bed where his niece, the future Queen Victoria, slept when she popped in to see him. I want to read your impressions of the rooms that struck you most. Easy. So, enjoy the Palace. Oh, then we will go to the art gallery and museum. And there, we’ll have no questions. Instead, we will discuss these places on the way home. Don’t forget you are ambassadors for the school; don’t let us down. I’m looking at the back seat.’
They folded, stuffed, or crumpled the questions and tossed them on the floor. Belinda folded hers into a paper plane and threw it at Sai. It hit the window and fell to the floor. Sai bent and retrieved it. She smoothed it out and placed it on the next seat.
‘I don’t want it now. It is all dirty,’ said Belinda. Sai turned and looked at the motorway traffic.
‘Oy, I’m talking to you. Don’t you have manners where you come from?’ She turned and bent forward, her shoulders squared up. Mel smirked and tapped her friend’s leg. ‘Leave it.’
The tall English teacher clapped his hands for attention. ‘We have arrived. In an orderly fashion, please disembark and follow the guide to the palace doors. We will spend ninety minutes here, then after the museum, we will go to “The Lanes” and walk along the seafront. No swimming, please. Those wishing to visit the aquarium, be careful crossing the road. Then at four pm, we will all meet at the coach.’ Mr Jones smiled. A strained attempt at jollity, he was a worried man. He begged the head to let someone else take charge of this group.
Belinda and Mel got off behind Sai and started flicking her long black hair. They got no reaction, so they shrugged and strolled on. The backseat gang attempted to steal cutlery or anything else not nailed down. The security guard was wise to school kids looking for souvenirs. Belinda kicked one of Sai’s heels against the other, and she fell on hands and knees, causing laughter all around. The security man helped her to her feet.
‘Ooh, got a new boyfriend, or is it your first?’ Her schoolmates’ giggles pleased Belinda.
Sai escaped the others and opened her tourist map on the coach’s seat, and she tracked the aquarium. It was free to enter, and she was keen to see the fish she had missed from Thailand’s waters.
All the children wandered along the seafront, checking “The Lanes” and the pier. Sai counted her coins and ordered a “Mister Whippy Special” with a chocolate flake. She was proud of her purchase until someone knocked it out of her hands. Belinda and Mel made a big show of enjoying their ices.
Sai attempted to run away from the girls, and they followed her to the aquarium. The display captured their interest, and they marvelled at the fish. Sai led them to a tank filled with starfish. She smiled and remembered the creatures from the waters around the island of her home in Samui.
Earlier, a local magazine reporter had written an article using a photo shoot. However, he had left his equipment as he needed a tea break.
The sign said, “Please wash your hands before touching the fish”, ‘Mine are clean enough,’ said Belinda. ‘Mine too,’ said Mel. So they tried to catch a star and laughed at the contact.
Sai was busy fiddling with the electrical plug on the journalist’s lighting. Next, she dug deep, pulled the last coin from her pocket, and flicked it high. ‘Heads or tails?’ she asked.
‘Heads, it is one person. Tails, it is both,’ she said.
Sai moved one step to the tank and plunged the raw end of the electric cable into the water.
‘Sorry, I lied. It will be two people, whether it is heads or tails.’ The coin slipped back into her skirt pocket.
She skipped to the bus at the allotted time. Others were a few minutes late, and two didn’t make it.
The END
More of Colin’s stories HERE




As a former teacher this really resonated. Plus, gotta love a revenge story!