“She’s
an alien,” Maria giggled. “She has to be. I think we’ve
got another Slitheen running the school. Seriously, check for zippers.
Our new headmistress is an alien.”
“I think she’s ok,” Clyde answered.
“Only because she didn’t enforce the detention you were given
by Miss Johnston during the holidays,” Maria told him.
“No, it’s not that,” Clyde replied “I like her
policies about school sports. PE lessons are proper, competitive games,
not just standing around waiting until Larry Appleton manages to hit the
ball with a rounders bat. Today we actually played a real game of football.
Under the old way of doing it, proper sports were only done after school.”
“PE lessons are not supposed to be competitive,” Maria insisted.
“They are supposed to benefit everyone, not just the fit kids who
are good at sports. Larry Appleton should get a chance to hit the ball.
It’s not his fault he has bad eyesight. It’s like our class
today. We had girls athletics. Miss Summers was there, watching with Miss
Baxter. She made everyone run the full four hundred metre track. Those
who did it in what she deemed a good time got merit marks. Those who came
in after that got demerits. Even Julie Khan…”
“Don’t you mean Julie Can’t!” Clyde sniggered.
“That’s not funny, Clyde,” Maria snapped. “I know
people call her that. But it’s not her fault. She CAN’T run
four hundred metres. She can’t even walk that far without her inhaler.
It was so not fair to punish her for not being able to do the impossible.”
“Well, maybe she won’t get the demerit. I’m sure when
Miss Summers realises that she’s got a disability… She won’t
punish her for that.”
“She will. I heard Miss Baxter telling her, and she wasn’t
interested. She said that ‘weak’ students should be weeded
out so that the best resources can be given to the worthwhile ones. And
if she means to apply that in the classroom, too, then Julie is really
going to have a hard time. She is off school so often in cold weather
when her asthma is really playing up, that she’s bottom in nearly
every subject. It’s like, Miss Summers thinks she’s waste
to be shoved aside. And that isn’t right, at all.”
“Her dad’s on the board of Governors, she’ll be all
right.”
“Larry Appleton’s, isn’t. What about him? Will she just
trash him, too?”
“Larry’s rubbish at hitting a rounders ball, but he’s
good at science and maths. Those binoculars he wears are ok for reading
with!”
“It’s still not fair. Julie was really upset. In the changing
room, after, she was crying, and then she needed her inhaler again because
she was upset and her breathing was a mess. I thought she was going to
be really ill. It’s not right.” She paused and looked around
the empty playground. They were starting to look conspicuous. They had
been warned that Sarah Jane would be late. She had to drop Brendan at
the railway station. He was going up to Leicester to give a guest lecture
at De Monteford University.
But even if she was here already, they’d still be waiting for Luke!
“How long does it take to sign up for another lunchtime club?”
Maria sighed.
“He’s coming now. They both looked as Luke emerged from the
school, among a group of other teenagers that Maria and Clyde vaguely
recognised, though neither of them knew any of them well. These were the
confirmed ‘geeks’ – the ones who were good at science
and maths but not particularly good at sports. Clyde regarded Luke as
only partial geek, because he had managed to grasp the offside rule and
after patient coaching managed to hold down a conversation that wouldn’t
be embarrassing around his other friends. But the rest of them, as far
as he was concerned, were a lost cause.
They all looked pleased with themselves. Luke, as he came to join his
two friends, was grinning all over his face.
“What’s with you?” Clyde asked. “Why are you so
full of yourself?”
“I passed the test to join the Elite Club. Miss Summers was very
impressed by my results.”
“Well, that’s no big deal,” Clyde answered him. “We
all know you’re a brain box. It’s not as if you ever had to
work on it. All the information was downloaded into your head by the Bane.
It’s easy for you.”
“Clyde!” Maria reprimanded him. “Don’t
remind him of that. It’s cruel.”
“It’s all right, Maria,” Luke assured him. “It
was very interesting. We did specially developed tests of intelligence,
as well as a general knowledge pop quiz. And members of the Elite Club
are to be excused PE and vocational lessons like woodwork and metalwork
in order to concentrate on the advanced theoretical sciences.”
“That’s not good,” Clyde responded. “PE and woodwork
are the lessons where you’re no better than the rest of us and you
have to be less of a geek.”
“I am not a geek,” Luke answered him. “I am not a loser.
I am not inferior to you, Clyde Langer. I am an Elite. And you are the
one who is inferior.”
“Luke?” Maria was surprised by that comment. Clyde had always
called Luke a geek in a sort of joking way, and tried to ‘educate’
him to act like a normal kid by his definition, listening to the ‘right’
music, watching the right TV. He did it for Luke’s own good, really.
It could be hard being in school if you didn’t fit in. Clyde had
taught him to do that.
And Luke had never objected to being taught. Like Pinocchio, or the sad
little robot kid from A.I., he wanted to be an ordinary boy.
At least that’s what his friends thought.
“Luke, that wasn’t really what Clyde meant,” Maria ventured.
“Yes, he did. But it doesn’t matter. Those who seek to hold
us back from our true potential will be shunned.”
“Fine by me,” Clyde answered. “Maria, I’ll see
you around. I’m going to walk home.”
“Clyde…” Maria called out. But she didn’t know
what else to say. Caught between her two friends, she didn’t know
whose side she should take, if at all. Clyde had said some mean things
to Luke, but he had said some even meaner things back.
“You understand, don’t you, Maria?” Luke said to her.
“You’re not exactly an elite, but you are in the top stream
in all your subjects. You understand about striving for perfection.”
“I want to get the best results from my O’levels,” she
answered. “Because I want to go on to sixth form and do the A’levels
and then university, and then work for Torchwood. But I think there is
more to life than studying. We know there is. Look at all the things we’ve
seen and done with Sarah Jane. You can’t learn all that from books.
And… look… she’ll be here soon. You should really stop
talking like that. Because she isn’t going to be happy. Sarah Jane
wants you to have a normal life. Joining an Elite Group isn’t normal.”
“I will no longer hide my true potential among mediocrity,”
Luke answered. “Average results, average education, average students
are no use to me. I must strive to be the best. And if mum seeks to prevent
me from those goals, she, too, must be set aside.”
“Luke!” Maria actually stamped her foot in annoyance. “Luke,
that really is enough. Stop it. Don’t talk like that in front of
your mum. It really isn’t on.”
Luke lapsed into silence. So did Maria. They were both quiet on the way
back to Bannerman road. When they got there, Luke said he had homework
to do and went on upstairs to his room without stopping in the kitchen
for tea and a chat like he usually did. Sarah Jane was puzzled.
“How much homework could he possibly have on the second day of the
new term?” she asked.
“I don’t know,” Maria replied. “It might be this
club he joined. It’s all about intelligence tests and quizzes. And
he’s been a real prat about it, making out that he’s smarter
than the rest of us.”
“Oh, dear,” Sarah Jane said. “I know he does get bored
in some of his classes. But I really thought… his friendship with
you and Clyde… I thought he would be all right. I don’t want
him bullied.”
“Then he really needs to catch onto himself and stop saying silly
things,” Maria said. “I think it’s all the new headmistress,
though. She’s got some unusual ideas.”
“Miss Harriet Summers,” Sarah Jane said, thoughtfully. “There’s
a parents meeting tonight at the school. Something about the curriculum.
If you and Luke don’t mind amusing yourselves for a couple of hours,
I think I’ll go along. I think I need to have a talk with the new
headmistress.”
“I don’t mind if Luke behaves himself” Maria said. “He
can have supper at our house. Dad’s working until nine, but he said
he’d bring pizza on his way home.”
“That’s all right then. Now, would you like some help with
your homework before I go out? Luke never does, of course, even when he’s
in a good mood.”
“I’ve got an English assignment where I’ve got to write
a newspaper article,” Maria answered. Sarah Jane smiled and poured
more tea and then the two of them settled down to a pleasant hour with
Maria’s English homework before it was time for her to go out to
the meeting. Maria went upstairs to the attic to say hello to Mr Smith
and K9. As Sarah Jane’s car pulled out of the driveway Luke came
up to the attic, too.
“Are you going to be a bit nicer, now?” Maria asked him.
“I just want you to understand,” he answered. “Miss
Summers was explaining it all to us. What she plans to do with the school.
You see, the Comprehensive system of education just isn’t working.
It only really benefits average students with average ideas. In the old
days, when there was the 11 plus examination, the best went to grammar
schools and were taught to strive for excellence, and to be future leaders
of society. And the others went to Secondary Modern schools where they
learnt practical skills to fit them for the workplace, and where they
would be managed by the people who had learnt to be leaders at grammar
school. They would all know their place.”
“Well, it doesn’t sound a good idea to me,” Maria answered.
“Making some people leaders and the others workers sounds terrible.
It’s like making the lower ones into just slaves who aren’t
allowed to do anything but what they’re told.”
“It’s called meritocracy. And isn’t it right that the
brightest and best people should rule? Why shouldn’t we?”
“Not if you’re going to lord it over everyone else,”
Maria answered. “It’s wrong. And if that’s the sort
of thing Miss Summers is going to be telling our parents at the meeting
tonight, I don’t think she’ll be headmistress for long.”
“Why would our parents not want the best for us?”
“Because… Look, it’s like you said. I’m in the
top stream. You’re brainy. We’d be all right. But I don’t
think we can just abandon everyone else. What about Julie Khan. She’s
not stupid. She just misses out on so much school because she’s
ill all the time. She needs extra help to catch up. But Miss Summers would
just put her in the bottom class and leave her to rot.”
“Because the resources are best spent on those with the potential.”
“Oh, for heaven sake. I’ve heard enough,” Maria snapped.
“Come on, Luke, before we fall out as well. Let’s… I
don’t know. Let’s challenge Mr Smith and K9 to a chess tournament.”
They did just that, and they passed their time happily after that until
Maria saw her dad’s car across the street and they went to join
him for the promised pizza. After that, Alan engaged Luke’s interest
by showing him the blueprints of the building that his firm were doing
the electrical installations for. Everything seemed normal again.
Except that Sarah Jane was late. Very late. When they realised how late
it was, Alan tried her mobile phone but found it switched off. He phoned
the school in case the meeting had gone on longer. He debated whether
to call hospitals or the police.
“You’d better sleep here, tonight, Luke,” Alan suggested.
“On the sofa. Yes, I know there are K9 and Mr Smith over the road,
but they hardly qualify as responsible adults. Not Human adults, anyway.”
“I don’t want to sleep until mum is home,” Luke answered.
Maria agreed with him.
“Yes… but…” Alan began. Then there was a loud,
insistent knock at the door. He looked and saw a police car outside. Luke
bit his lip anxiously. They all had the same thought at once. Sarah Jane
had been in an accident!
Alan went to the door. There were two policemen and a woman in a skirt
suit and neatly pinned up hair who stood between them.
“Is there a boy named Luke Smith here?” asked the policeman.
“Of 13 Bannerman Road.”
“Well, yes,” Alan answered. “But what’s the problem?
What’s happened?” He opened the door fully and the policemen
came into the house. Luke and Maria stared in surprise at the woman with
them.
“Miss Summers? Why are you here? Where is my mum?” Luke asked.
“Your mother has been very silly, Luke,” Miss Summers told
him. “She has been arrested for trespassing on the school premises.
She was caught in my office, rifling through the filing cabinets. Very
strange, altogether. However, that is for the police to deal with. I am
here to take Luke home.”
“My home is over there,” Luke answered, pointing in the general
direction of 13 Bannerman Road.
“I meant, to my home,” Miss Summers answered.
“I have obtained legal custody of you while your mother is detained.
There is no reason why you should suffer because of her silliness. Come
along, there’s a good boy.”
“No,” Maria protested. “This can’t
be right. They’re not real policemen. It’s like last time.
They’re androids. They must be.” She pulled out her sonic
screwdriver and aimed it at one of the policemen who looked at it with
a puzzled expression. Nothing happened. She tried the other one, and then
Miss Summers herself.
“Androids?” Miss Summers laughed. “What a strange imagination.
Really, Mr… Jackson, isn’t it? I wonder if your daughter has
been exposed to some unsuitable elements. But I have the paperwork here.
It is all in order. Luke is to come with me.”
Alan held Maria by the shoulder comfortingly as Luke was led away by Miss
Summers, flanked by the policemen. She watched as they all got into the
police car and drove away. Alan shut the door and turned to her as she
struggled to say something.
“They were real policemen,” she managed. “It’s
real. Sarah Jane really has been arrested.”
To Be Continued...
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