Sarah
Jane stood with the other parents on the sideline, watching the game.
Clyde and Luke were there, too, but Clyde was more interested in a handheld
computer game than the inter-schools match on the netball court.
“Maria is very good, isn’t she?” Luke said as she evaded
the goal defence and put the ball into the net very neatly.
“She’s very good,” Sarah Jane noted proudly. “Gets
it from me. I was really good at netball when I was a girl….”
“Yeah, mum, but that was last CENTURY,” Luke joked.
“Yes, very funny. I bet Clyde told you to say that!” Sarah
Jane smiled anyway. He was learning to be more like an ordinary boy every
day, including giving her cheek.
“The other team are very good, too,” Luke pointed out. “They’re
winning by 24 nets to 3.”
“Yes,” Sarah Jane sighed. “That’s a pity. Maria
and the others are working very hard. They’re doing everything right.
But they’re losing to a team that seems unstoppable.”
“It’s the same in ALL the inter-schools sports,” Clyde
said, looking up from his game. “Hockey, football, rugby, cricket,
gymnastics, swimming. EVERYTHING that the schools compete in, Beaufort
Academy is winning EVERYTHING this year. Should have seen it last week
when our football team was here. And, I mean, we’re good. We took
the inter-schools trophy four times in a row, and we only lost last year
on goal difference to Acton Grammar. But this year… I mean, they
put eleven goals past our keeper. It was embarrassing.”
“They’re winning EVERYTHING?” Sarah Jane queried. “Every
sport?”
She looked around. Beaufort Academy was a very different school to the
big comprehensive that Luke, Sarah and Clyde attended, along with almost
every teenager in the neighbourhood. It was a private school, of course.
It had excellent sports facilities, including indoor pitches, their own
swimming pool, and every advantage money could buy. That would explain
why they were achieving such a lot.
“Do you notice something, though?” Luke said as Beaufort netted
the ball again, despite the best efforts of the visiting team’s
defence. “When they score, they never look happy. They don’t
celebrate, even with a SMILE.”
“That was the same with the football,” Clyde
confirmed. I mean, we were told off for having too many Premiership style
celebrations on the pitch, but at least we look HAPPY when we score. And
there’s another thing. They’re the HOME TEAM. But look around
you. All the supporters, they’re all from OUR school. That woman
over there… She’s the deputy headmistress. That’s the
ONLY person watching who comes from THIS school.”
“Really?” Sarah Jane looked at the faces of those watching
the game. And yes, she did vaguely recognise most of them from the sidelines
of other sports games, from parent-teacher evenings and other activities.
“Well, that’s STRANGE, to say the least!” Sarah Jane
commented. “Maybe…” She ran a few possibilities through
her head. None of them made sense. “No, there’s no maybe about
it. That’s REALLY odd.”
“Maybe they’re all androids, programmed to win all the competitions,”
Clyde suggested.
“You’ve been hanging around in my attic too long,” Sarah
Jane answered him. “Androids!”
“Well, it COULD be,” Clyde protested.
“Androids are heavier than humans,” Sarah Jane pointed out.
“If that girl, for example, was an Android, then she would have
crushed our Goal Defence’s foot when she accidentally stood on it
just now.”
“Ok, aliens who look like us and are really good at sports.”
Clyde came up with several more fanciful ideas. Anyone else would have
laughed them all off at once. Sarah Jane knew better than that. But while
she knew that aliens often did come to Earth and disguise themselves as
Humans, while she knew there were such things as Androids, cyborgs, artificial
lifeforms, shapeshifters, and all sorts of things out there…
She could not think why they would go to such effort just to win an inter-schools
netball championship. It wasn’t even a national competition. It
wasn’t even London-wide. It was for schools in the Borough of Ealing.
Even aliens who want to take over the world usually had more ambition
than that.
Maria as Goal Shooter and a girl Clyde said was Mandy Traynor, in Goal
Attack, scored four more nets between them in the time left over. But
their counterparts on the Beaufort Academy team scored 15 more. The final
result, Beaufort Academy 30, Park Vale Comprehensive, 7, was, Sarah Jane
thought, not as bad as it might have been. The comprehensive school had
some very good netball players, especially in the defence positions. They
stopped the score being even more embarrassing, while Maria and Mandy
had fought a strong defence at the other end to score the seven nets they
HAD managed.
Park Vale looked despondent as they traipsed off the netball
court. The Beaufort Academy girls stood in a neat line watching them.
“Let’s have a big hand for the gallant opposition,”
said the deputy headmistress and as she blew a whistle the Beaufort girls
clapped. Sarah Jane watched them. They didn’t look as if they were
particularly triumphant about their win.
“There are refreshments in the dining room,” the headmistress
added. “For both teams and their friends and supporters. This way…”
“Do we have to?” Luke asked as Sarah Jane began to follow
the small crowd towards the school.
“It’s a chance to infiltrate the school, find their secret!”
Clyde enthused.
“Well, maybe not ‘infiltrate’” Sarah Jane answered.
“A bit of a look around wouldn’t hurt. Anyway, since we’re
driving Maria home, and she would be expected to attend, as a member of
the team, we really don’t have a lot of choice. Anyway, if they
do a decent cup of tea, I’d be happy.”
The two teams headed for the showers, of course. By the time Maria and
her friends joined them in the dining room Sarah Jane had her cup of tea
and a plate of sandwiches and she and the two boys were looking at the
notice board where the Beaufort Academy’s achievements were proudly
displayed. The school had only opened a year ago, at the start of September.
And yet they were top of the league tables in all of the competitive team
sports – netball, football, rugby, cricket, hockey, lacrosse....
And a cabinet beside the board was already full of trophies from gymnastics
and swimming competitions.
“And GYMKHANAS!” Maria said with scorn in her voice. “It’s
easy when you have money!”
“And look at these,” Sarah Jane said as she noted that the
school’s achievements were not limited to sports. “Inter-schools
Maths knockout championships… Prizes at the schools science fair
at Earls Court! Schools Challenge…” Sarah Jane paused and
repeated that phrase again as if it meant something to her.
“It’s like University Challenge, but for secondary schools,”
Clyde said, thinking that Sarah Jane hadn’t heard of it. “Park
Vale got knocked out in the first national round. The third round onwards
is on TV.”
“They’re in the third round…”
Maria observed, reading one of the notices. “It’s going to
be recorded on Sunday. The TV people are coming here. Oh, that’s
not fair. I wish our school had got through. They should have had Luke
on the team. But they picked all fifth formers.”
“Is there anything this lot are not good at?” Clyde complained.
“Smiling,” Luke answered as he looked at the group of netball
players. The Park Vale girls had put on casual clothes afterwards, since
this was an after school activity, but the Academy girls were in pristine
school uniforms of grey skirts, neat white blouses and a candy striped
blazer. They drank tea or bottles of mineral water but didn’t bother
about the sandwiches. They didn’t talk much, not even among themselves.
“Stepford teens!” Clyde commented. “If a bell rings
and they all start taking little tablets…”
“Your imagination,” Sarah told him with a smile. But again,
she knew that such things were not impossible.
“Good afternoon,” said the deputy headmistress. “I see
you are interested in our achievements?”
“Yes,” Sarah Jane answered. “They are quite remarkable.
You’ve done so much in such a short time. Tell me… the school
dinners… do you use any special oil on the chips?”
“I beg your pardon!” The deputy head laughed
softly. “Chips? Our luncheon menu is specially selected based on
the healthy eating programme advocated by the famous chef Sir Jamie Oliver.
Chips are NEVER served.”
“I’m very pleased to hear it,” Sarah Jane answered her.
“Is there an entrance examination for the students? You are selective,
of course? Is there a waiting list?”
“There is no examination. We pride ourselves that even the slowest
student can excel in our classrooms. But such excellence costs, of course.
Our fees are considerably higher than other private schools. But can you
put a price on your child’s future?”
“Indeed, not,” Sarah Jane answered. “May I ask what
your fees ARE?”
The deputy headmistress smiled in what Sarah Jane thought was a thoroughly
patronising way.
“If you have to ask you can’t afford it,” she said.
“Which of these youngsters IS your child?”
“Luke,” Sarah Jane replied, putting her hand proudly on his
shoulder. “He is a very clever boy for his age, and I really don’t
feel that the state system can offer him enough stimulation. I would be
prepared to pay ANY price. And don’t worry. I CAN afford it.”
Sarah Jane smiled, too, and met the deputy headmistress’s stare.
“Shall we go and discuss this in my office?” the Deputy headmistress
said.
“An excellent idea,” Sarah Jane answered. “Luke, you
and Clyde and Maria wait here for me.”
“But… mum….” Luke protested. “I don’t
WANT to change schools. I’m fine where I am.”
“Your mother knows what is best for you,” the Deputy Headmistress
said, with another simpering smile as she steered Sarah Jane away.
“But…” Luke watched in horror as she
left the dining room with the deputy headmistress. “Mum…”
“It’s ok,” Maria assured him. “She’s not
REALLY going to make you change schools. She’s just trying to find
out a bit more about the school.”
Luke relaxed. Of course she was right. His mum wouldn’t send him
to a private school. She wanted him to be ‘normal’. That’s
why he had gone to Park Vale in the first place. So that he could learn
to mix with ordinary, average students and do the kind of things ordinary
boys his age did. She would NEVER send him to a place like THIS.
He relaxed and made the most of the refreshments along with Clyde and
waited for Sarah Jane to get back, then they could all go home.
Sarah Jane was away nearly an hour. Everyone else had gone. They were
sitting at a table in the empty dining room when she finally appeared.
She was smiling brightly.
“Luke,” she said. “Wonderful news. I’ve got you
in. You start here on Monday.”
To Be Continued...
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