About 'auburn university gifts'|Auburn University Update
Wil Travis opened the front door of his house and stepped out into the small yard. Early morning sunlight brightened the sky with a rosy hue and in the other yards he could see his neighbors moving about, getting ready for work, school, or whatever actions and duties compelled them through out the day. He ran a hand through his shortly cropped dark brown hair. Hearing a sudden noise, he turned his gaze to his right, only to see his neighbor, restraining his senses so that he did no more than hear Ana Handier coming outside with her trash. "Good morning, Will! How's your family this morning?" "Well!" He said. "Excuse me. I need to get back inside. My brothers and sisters have to get ready for school and I need to prod them along or they'll be late." He waved a hand at the elderly woman as he made his way back inside the house. Ana Handler kept too close an eye on him for his contentment. Closing the door behind him, he started down the short hall, stopping at the doorways of the bedrooms and knocking to wake his siblings. "Tellie! Time to get up! Fera! Jon. School!" Slowly the household started coming to life and Wil made his way back to the kitchen, where he dished out bowls of hot cereal from the pan on the stove. While he was putting the cereal-filled bowls on the table, his sister Tellie came into the room. Quickly, she moved past him, getting jars of jam from the cold-storage unit and taking them to the table. "You should have gotten me up to help, Wil," she scolded. "You were up late last night doing that report for school. You need your sleep." Will took glasses out of the cabinet and put them on the table. Tellie followed behind with a pitcher of cold milk which she placed in the middle of the table. "It's my birthday tomorrow! I'll be fifteen. Old enough to help you out more around here!" She had turned to face him, her long braid whipping around behind her as she did so. "I don't want you leaving school, Tellie!" He spoke softly but with an urgency that could not be denied. "I just want to help. Look at us, Wil!" Her voice was a low whisper as they could now both hear the scampering of their two younger siblings as they rushed down the hall. She glanced mutely at the dull gray color of their clothing and the state of their worn shoes as the youngest two, Fera and Jon came dashing into the room and dived into their chairs. Both wore the same nondescript clothing as the older two. Wil shook his head, sitting down at the table. "Let's eat!" he said. "We have to be out the door in time to get you all to school." "I wish we could take the glider," Jon said wistfully. "So do I," Wil said, "but it costs too much to keep it up." "Walking is good for us anyway. You're doing so good in your athletics class now, Jon. You're faster and stronger than anyone else in your class and it's all because you walk more now than you used to." Jon grinned. "I did beat Orvald Bucher yesterday when coach called the races." He started eating with more gusto. "I got a hundred percent on my math paper and I only missed one in my writing lesson," Fera, the youngest of them offered. "My teacher said if I study hard I could get a scholarship for the university after I graduate." "That's something to work for then," Wil said. "I'm glad to hear that." Jon, done with his cereal, jumped up and ran to the sink where he washed his bowl out and put it in the draining tub. "Don't forget your milk, Jon. I was lucky to find that at the store yesterday and we can't waste it." Jon rushed back over to the table and picked up his glass, draining it in what seemed like one long gulp. Still seated, Fera finished her cereal before picking up her glass of milk. She drank it quickly, then got up and took her dishes to the sink. When she had rinsed them she came back to the table and but stopped before sitting down when Wil got up, carrying his bowl. Beside him, Tellie gulped down her last spoonful of cereal as she rose. She drank her milk as she rushed to the sink and Wil called out, "All right. Wash your faces and hands and get your things for school! We all meet by the front door before the first work bell sounds!" It was the same thing he had told them every school morning since the accident had killed their parents. Tellie and Jon went to the lavatory at the end of the short hallway while Wil and Fera washed at the sink in the kitchen. Then the three younger Travis children grabbed their school satchels and joined Wil at the door. Wil pushed the security panel on the door with his right index finger to open the door. When they were all outside, he did the same with a similar panel to secure it while they were gone for the day. The panel could be activated only by members of the household and Wil had an override to provide extra security for the mostly underage family. They started down the sidewalk that led to the pedestrian path that ran alongside the road, Jon and Tellie walked side by side and Wil and Fera fell into step behind them. Fera snaked her small hand into Wil's. This was unusual for his youngest sister and Wil glanced down at her with a quizzical look. "Is Tellie going to have a birthday party?" she asked. Wil gave a short laugh. "No. Not a real party, but we'll all remember to make it the best that we can so it will be a happy day for her. Maybe you could make her a card. She would like that, I think." "Yeah." They stopped in front of a large sandstone-colored building. On the road behind them, gliders pulled to a stop to let children out before moving on. The children all streamed toward the sandstone building. A large sign, the same color as the school, proclaimed that the edifice was Central Primary School. Wil dropped Fera's hand. "Run on in, now!" he told her, tousling her light brown hair. Jon, who had been walking with Tellie, was already halfway up the walkway that led to the school. Wil stepped forward to catch up with Tellie, who was already moving again, at the same time avoiding children who were trying to get to their classrooms before classes started. "Its always such a rush here!" Tellie said. "I'm glad my classes start later." "It does give us a little more time to get you to school. At least, after tomorrow, I won't have to walk all three of you to your schools all the time." Tellie did not respond to this statement. Instead, she said. "Listen, don't go out of your way for my birthday, Wil. I know it's hard on you, being the only one who can bring in money. There's nothing I need, really." Wil stopped, grabbing her arm at the same time to turn her toward him. "Don't go noble on me, Tellie. There's a lot that you need, not the least being new clothes and new shoes and a proper father and mother to take care of you, not an older brother who has to work day by day to bring in enough to keep us together! But thanks. I'll keep your birthday simple. I'd like it to be nice, though." "Nice will be knowing that you didn't try to kill yourself to get extra money for something that can wait awhile longer." Wil dropped his hand and they started moving again. Tellie gave him a sidewise look. "Hey, thanks for keeping us together these last eight months. When Mom and Dad died I thought we'd be taken off to state homes for sure." Wil laughed harshly. "Just lucky for us that I had already turned fifteen." He stopped speaking abruptly. "I'm sorry, Tellie. I didn't mean it the way it sounded. I would never want you all carted off to a state home." "I know that. It changed your plans, though, didn't it, having to quit school and go to work. And not even at a steady job, but having to find something every day...". They were approaching another large building now. Gliders were pulling into an enclosed parking area or up in front of the walkway to let students out. Wil and Tellie stopped again and Wil touched his sister on the shoulder to get her attention. She looked at him, her gray-green eyes questioning. "I'll be back this afternoon before you get out of classes." "I may be out a little early. I'll wait in the front offices if I am." "I'll check there first then," Wil told her. "Have a good day!" Tellie smiled at him. "I will. I hope you get a good job for the day." Will nodded abstractedly. "Thanks," he said, before Tellie turned and walked toward the large building that made up the school. Wil turned and walked back the way he had come, stopping along the way at various buildings looking for a day's work but not finding any. Sighing, he made his past his house, noting Ana Handier slipping through her front doorway and nodding at a Guard who passed him without speaking as he strode the past him down the street. He made his way to the Central Government Complex. On days like this one, when there was no other work, he could almost always join the garbage detail. As he approached the set of buildings, however, he saw a form approaching and recognized Shawn Sanders, a man in his mid-twenties who also took single day jobs. He walked over to Wil. "They filled all the slots early today. I've been to every business that uses singlers and there's nothing. Looks like we get a day off." Wil turned around and fell into step with the other man. "Yeah." They parted at the next cross street, which was residential, and Wil continued walking toward his home. "Boy! Hold up a moment! I want a word with you." Wil stopped and turned to see where the voice was coming from. He was the only person out who could be thought of, even minimally, as a boy. He saw the source of the voice quickly enough. There was a man striding toward him purposefully, striding across the busy street. Wil folded his arms across his chest and waited as the man came toward him, taking the opportunity to size the man up. He was tall, with long auburn hair that hung neatly down his back. His skin was so light it was almost pale. A quick probe with his mind told him that the man was not obscuring anything. As he stepped onto the walkway, Wil said, "That's dangerous. What if you'd been hit? Or the Guards had seen you?" The man shrugged. His eyes, Wil noticed, were gray. "I don't worry about the Guards. Don't let people scare you about the Guards, boy! Just keep your confidence up. Not your arrogance! Your confidence! There's a difference you know." He looked Wil up and down, and then extended his hand. "I'm Ben Atkins." Wil clasped the extended hand. "Wil Travis." "Well, Wil Travis, if you are interested I have a day's work for you." Wil hesitated. It was risky, accepting the offer of a day's work from someone who just approached people on the street. "It's nothing illegal, nothing, ah. . . unsettling. I'm new in town and I need help moving into my new place. I might need help later too. Other days, you know. I'll double the normal singlers wage if you're interested and I won't need you until the next bell. What do you say?" "I can only work until the fifth bell. I have to pick my sister up from school." "Ah. That's one less question I need to ask then. Let me suggest a slight modification, then. We start work before the next bell and your day will end in time for you to pick your sister up. And you let me take you to the market. I'll add a good meal to your wages." Wil's mouth dropped open. "That's too much!" Ben held up his hand for silence. "Really? When is the last time you've been able to do more than grab a loaf of bread or a bit of meat? Take a minute to think about it, Wil. Food for your family and double your normal day's wages. What say you?" Wil stared at Ben, not completely believing what he was saying, and then he nodded. "Yes. Yes, I'll do it." Ben Atkins smiled at him. "Good! I thought you were intelligent. Now let's get going. If we stand here much longer, people will take notice of us. First, the market. I saw one not far from here, I believe." "Yes. It's two streets down." "Show the way then, Wil and consider that your workday has started." Wil stared at him, and then swallowed. "Yes, sir," he said. After purchasing food at the market, Ben insisted that it be taken to Wil's house. "That way you won't carry it around all day." Inside the house, Wil put the meat, bread, vegetables and juice into the cold storage unit while Ben waited in the living room. When they left the house he asked, "What happened to your parents, Wil?" "They were in a glider accident. I'd just turned fifteen three weeks before and they decided to go out and leave me with the kids. They went into Barrington for dinner and to see a show, but they never made it home. One of the city workers came to tell us that they were dead. We all had to go down to the morgue so that I could identify the bodies." "All of you? You've already mentioned a sister." "There are four of us. Two sisters and a brother. Tellie turns fifteen tomorrow. Jon is eleven and Fera is seven." Ben did not respond immediately. When he did speak he said. "We should go. There is quite a lot that needs to be done today." They left the house and walked down the walkway toward the street under the watchful eye of Ana Handler, who was outside tending to her garden. Once they were on the pedestrian walkway, Ben commented. "You have taken on a weighty task for one your age. Will your sister, Tellie, you said her name is, help you after her birthday?" "She wants to. I want her to stay in school." "Ah." He stopped suddenly and turned to Wil. "Let me give you a bit of advice. You'll get further in life if you don't try to lift all your burdens alone. Take help when it's offered from a trustworthy source." He turned away and started moving again. Wil hurried to catch up to him, his mind lost in thought. "Tell me about this town, Wil Travis. It's the tiniest township I've ever seen, even smaller than mine, which is saying something." Wil laughed shortly. "Well, that's about what it is, the smallest town on this planet. We do have the Worldcomm Network but nothing more. Oh, a pub, and a card hall as well, but that's about it." "Ah. Isn't there a recreation hall for the kids or something?" "No. The mayor won't let one be built. He says it's not economically viable." "I see. And so kids are left to find their own entertainment. There's nothing wrong with entertaining yourself. It builds your imagination, but if there was supervised recreation for kids after school it would solve a problem for you, would it not?" "Yes." "Turn here. This is where I'm staying." They turned into the yard of a small house. The yard was well-kept with a small garden in the front and a nicely pruned tree shading the grass. Ben unlocked the door using the touchpad and they went inside. Wil groaned a little as he saw the amount of unpacking that needed to be done, but Ben only glanced at him before saying. "We aren't starting in here. Come with me. The first thing I need to do is to set up my office. My superiors are expecting to hear from me by this evening." Shrugging, Wil followed him through the house to the room that would serve as an office. There were several boxes stacked on either side of the doorway and once again Wil groaned inwardly as he looked at the amount of work before him, but Ben simply said. "Well, let's get started, Wil. You want to earn this day's wages, if I judge you right." "Yes, sir!" Wil said, and Ben smiled at him enigmatically before gesturing to one of the boxes that stood near the door and they began working on the task of making the room ready for use. The sun was high in the sky when Wil arrived at the school to pick Tellie up. He turned onto the school walkway and went down the empty path, recalling all the days before his parents died that he had trod this path while he attended classes along with Tellie. The walkway had always been crowded, then, with students hurrying to or from the building. It was empty now, save for a small lizard that had been sunning itself until he got too close and it scuttled off into the hedges that lined the path. Wil hurried toward the school offices, using the pace that he had become accustomed to since his parents' death. When he reached the wide doors that served as the entryway to the administration buildings, they swung back for him as he approached. A guard eyed him warily as he started down the corridor, but, recognizing him let him pass. The third office down housed the administrative office and Wil went inside and stepped out of the path of the door. Tellie was sitting in one of the chairs in the waiting area. "Great!" she said. "I'm glad you're early. Miss Nira has some papers for you to sign." Wil sighed. He had been expecting this, even been a little afraid of it, but Ben had helped him to see that he could not overrule his sister on this. He nodded. Some of the other students who were seated in the waiting area looked up from their work to look at him curiously. "Just because a former classmate of yours has come to pick up his sister is no reason for you all to goggle at him! You are in school to learn, not to waste your limited time staring at someone!" the woman behind the counter snapped at the small grouping of students. Wil nodded at Tellie and walked over to the counter that separated the lobby from the administrative area. Miss Nira rose from her desk chair and walked over to the counter holding a data pad. "Here is the paperwork you need to sign for your sister. I'm sorry to see her leave us, but I do understand the reasons for it. And at least this way you will both be able to continue your education." She handed the data pad over to Wil. "Here, as you see, this withdraws Tellie from school as of tomorrow and enters both her and you into the remote learning resource program. A technician will come by your house tomorrow with the equipment, so one of you needs to be there. It would be best if you both were, but having one at home will be fine." "Ah. Yes. One of us will be home. Thanks, Miss Nira." Wil quickly scanned the document and then signed it. He was about to hand the data pad back to the receptionist when she said, "Just one more place, Wil. To sign for the lease of the equipment. Click two times on the top right hand corner to bring that page up." Wil did as he had been told, once again scanning the document before signing his name at the bottom. "And that's it! It was good seeing you, Wil. I hope this works out for you." "Yeah. Thanks, Miss Nira," Will returned, handing her the data pad. He turned to Tellie. "Come on! We need to be picking Jon and Fera up," he told her. "You aren't mad at me, are you, Wil?" Tellie asked as they strode down the street. "It's my business if I leave school!" "I know! No, I'm not mad at you, Tellie. I should have thought of the remote system myself, is all." Tellie laughed. "Well, don't be mad at yourself. You had to handle everything alone, after all. Here's the primary school. We're early today." They went to stand underneath the spreading branches of a tree. "So, did you make yourself into a billionaire today, my brother, or just enough to buy something for dinner?" "Oh, I bought dinner first! Let me tell you, sister, the man I worked for today paid me double the singler rate and insisted on buying food for us tonight, before I even started with him!" Tellie's eyes narrowed in suspicion at this. "That's odd," she said, her voice dropping in volume to what her brother knew to be the tone she used when she was concentrating on a problem. "And he said that if I worked well today he might hire me again." Tellie's eyes widened in surprise. "Truly? Oh, Wil. That would be marvelous!" Wil laughed. "Well, it wasn't a promise, Tel." "But still! We can hope." Wil nodded. "We certainly can," he said, as the bell rang to signal the end of the school day and the children came rushing out of the classrooms. The evening passed in its usual manner. Wil and Tellie cooked supper together while the younger children did their homework. When Jon had a question with a particularly difficult math problem, Wil helped him work through the steps to complete it while Tellie helped Fera review material for her sociology quiz the next morning. After supper, Wil pulled out one of the games they had all played together as a family before their parents had died and they played for an hour before he sent Fera to shower and change for bed. When she had disappeared down the short hallway, Jon turned to the older two and said, "So is Tellie quitting school, too? I've been wondering for awhile now." "No. I'm not. And Wil's going back. We signed up to take classes from here. They're bringing us the computer system tomorrow," Tellie told her younger brother. "That way we can both work and we can finish our schooling." "It should make things easier," Wil told his brother. Jon nodded. "If you want, I'll clean up the game." He started gathering game pieces and piling them into the box they kept the game in, still talking. "I wish I was older, then I could help too," he said. "You just keep out of trouble the best you can and that's plenty of help," Wil told him. "That time you got into a fight at school I thought we were headed for the government school for sure," Wil told him. Jon flushed a deep dark red. "Yeah. So did I. It's hard sometimes, though. Kids are always on me about something. I'm learning though." Wil reached over and clapped him reassuringly on the shoulder. "You're doing good," he said. Jon stood up, game box in hand. "I think Fera's out of the shower," he said, "so I'll go next." He headed off down the hall, pausing to put the game in its shelf before he disappeared into the rear of the house. Tellie watched him go down the hall before turning to Wil. "He really is trying," she said "Trying what?" Moving silently, Fera had come back into the front room, now dressed for bed. She plopped onto the floor between Will and Tellie. Wil sighed. "To stay out of trouble," he answered, wearily. "Oh. The other kids tease him lots, you know. They tease me, too, but I don't let them get to me." "Just as long as he doesn't deck anyone we'll do okay," Wil told his youngest sister. "You either, Fera!" Tellie admonished. Fera shuddered. "I won't! I don't want to go live at a government school!" Wil reached out and grabbed her in a bear hug. "That won't happen. Not now. We'll just all keep our heads on straight and we'll be fine." He dropped his arms from around her. "Now go give your sister a hug and go to bed." Fera nodded. "Okay." She dashed around the table to hug Tellie, and then rushed back to Wil to give him another hug. "That's for Jon, since he's in the shower," she told him. Tellie stood up. "I'll tuck you in, Fera," she said and the two went down the hallway together. Wil settled moodily into a soft armchair, his mind rethinking the events of the day, his stomach full of one of the best meals he had eaten in many months. He thought about Ben, wondering what had really brought him to this town. No one came to Firston by accident, although some did come believing that they were going to find a better life living away from the large, overcrowded cities. Some came looking for work, which was difficult to find due to the lack of factories or shipping in the area. But, somehow, Wil did not think Ben had come with either of those goals in mind. No use trying to figure it out, he told himself, as Tellie came back into the room, her long hair unbound. "She'll be asleep before the hour turns," she told Wil as she moved to the second armchair, the one their mother had always used. Once seated she turned to face him. "So how do we plan tomorrow? One of us needs to be here all day so they can set up the computer for us." Wil sighed. "I think you should stay, it being your birthday. I'll find work on the street detail or something." Tellie frowned. "But you've been working too hard every day! You need a break, Wil." Wil's eyes snapped with brown fire. "I'm still not happy with you quitting regular classes. It's not fair to you," he reminded her. "It's fair to you, though. I hate to see you getting old when you aren't even seventeen yet. It will make things better." Wil nodded. "I won't argue with you there. And it's your decision to make, not mine. I'll go out tomorrow, you go out the next day and we'll both take the computer classes." Tellie nodded. "All right." She stood up. "Seeing as I've got one last night of childhood left, I'm going to bed. I'll see you tomorrow when I'm no longer bound to the laws of the under fifteens!" She grinned and waved at him before rushing down the hall. The next morning dawned bright and clear. Wil woke up at his usual time, got dressed quickly and went down the hall toward the kitchen. As he passed the room the girls slept in, the door opened and Tellie stepped through. "I thought I'd help with breakfast this morning. After all, I won't be at school anymore, so I need to start helping more around here." Wil started to respond, but was cut off as the buzzer for the front door rang. "I'll get that," he said as they reached the end of the hallway. "I'll get the food out!" Tellie said bustling toward the kitchen. Wil went toward the door, shaking his head as he did so. The buzzer sounded again and he called out; "On my way!" Reaching the door, he pushed the controls that unlocked it and waited for it to open. Ana Handier stood on the step, a large package wrapped in bright purple paper in her hands. "Good morning, Wil! Is your sister Tellie up yet? I wanted to give her something for her birthday. Fifteen's a big year, after all." "Yes. I'll get her. Come in, please." Wil stepped away from the door to let her through. "Tellie!" He called, "Ana's here with a present for you." Tellie appeared in the kitchen doorway. "Hello," she told their neighbor. "I didn't expect anything from you. Thanks!" She stepped into the living room to accept the gift while Wil moved into the kitchen to finish making the morning meal. While Tellie was opening her present, Jon and Fera trooped into the kitchen, both of them surprised at the presence of their neighbor in the house but neither of them asking about it. "Well, show it to your family, girl! I'm sure they're all bursting with curiosity about it!" the older woman told her. Tellie brought the gift, a new, brightly embroidered formal robe of a deep scarlet into the kitchen so that they could all see it. "It's beautiful!" Fera exclaimed. "Can she keep it, Wil?" Wil flushed. "Of course she can keep it. It's her present for her birthday. And she's fifteen today." Tellie turned to Ana. "Thank you," she said. "You shouldn't have gone to so much trouble for me, though." "Oh, it was no trouble. I didn't think your brother would be able to do that much for you. Anytime you need help, Wil," she said, turning to him, "I'm more than willing." "Oh, we're doing all right," Tellie told her. "And it will be better now that I can work." Ana's bright gray eyes sparked with light. "Oh, so that's your plan, is it? You'd be better off in school, girl, not that it's my place to say." "Wil, I'm hungry!" Fera said, turning to her oldest brother." "Oh! I'm holding up breakfast!" Ana exclaimed. "I'm so sorry. My own children have been gone so long that I've forgotten all about the school times." "I'll walk you out," Wil said. "You all start eating. I'll join you in a moment." With that, he ushered their neighbor out through the front door, thanking her again for Tellie's gift. When he came back into the room, it was to find it silent except for the sound of silverware against bowls. As he sat down, Fera stood up and carried her things over to the counter. As she crossed the room, her eyes fell on the box containing the robe, part of which was hanging over the edge of the box it was packed in. "It is really pretty," she said. Wil nodded. "Yes. It is. Go get ready for school, Fera." Fera nodded and left the room. Still seated at the table, Jon looked at his older sister. "Happy birthday, Sis," he said. Tellie smiled back at him. Of the three, he was the only one who called her Sis. "Thanks," she said. Jon swallowed his last bite of food and stood up. "I think we're running a little late today. I'd better hurry," he said as he cleared his place. Wil and Tellie exchanged a look as he deposited his things on the counter beside Fera's and left the room. "I'll take them in," Wil said, "then go out to find work." Tellie nodded. "All right. I'll clean up here, then." Fera appeared in the doorway. "Aren't we going? We'll be late for our first classes!" she called out. "Yeah. I'm ready," Wil told her. "Tellie, you don't mind getting my stuff, just today, do you?" "No." Tellie shook her head. "I'll see you this afternoon." Fera looked from Tellie to Will. "Aren't you coming, Tellie? To school?" Tellie shook her head. "No. I decided that we'll do better if I help out here. It's good, Fera. Both me and Wil can finish school now. We'll just not be in regular classes." Fera's brow furrowed in concentration. "Oh." Then her face brightened. "I heard about that program. You get special computers and study from home. Some of the towns in the outlands have them because there aren't enough people to have a school but they have to teach their kids. It's supposed to be a really good program." Wil shot her a glance. "Let's go, Fera. Jon's waiting on us." "With nearly unbridled anticipation!" Jon's voice called from where he was standing by the front door. Wil felt a rare smile break onto his face as he and Fera walked to the front door and stepped out of the house to start their day. Wil found a day's work at the market, sorting and shelving the inventory that had come in that morning. When the lunch bell rang, the market owner, Mikel Carl, came up to him. "Take a break, lad. Heard it's your sister's fifteenth today." Wil turned to face the plump middle-aged man. "Yes, sir." Come to me after work and I'll have something for her. She left school?" "Yes, sir. I didn't like it, but it's her decision." "Send her around and I'll see what I can do for her. Customers like to see pretty faces behind the counter." "I'll let her know," Wil told the man. "Go get something to eat. It's part of your pay since your staying longer today." "Yes, sir. Thanks," Wil said and turned to walk to the lunchroom, stopping on the way to pick up a meat roll and a bottle of juice for his lunch. He did not like the way the store owner looked at Tellie whenever they came into the store, but he would pass the message on anyway. He sat down at one of the long tables, which were filling as people took their lunch breaks. Before long, he was joined by another singler, Sal Benson. "Lucky today, weren't we? I'd rather be inside than out," she said, as she unwrapped her meat roll. "Yeah. How're you keeping, Sal?" "Paying the rent. Wish I could get back into school, though. I'd like to do something besides just scrap on by." "Yeah. My sister's fifteenth is today." Sal's eyes lit up. "Yeah? Good luck to her. She is staying in school, right?" Wil shook his head. "No. She signed up for that computer thing, though. Signed me up too. Any possibility you could do that?" Sal shook her head. "The one where the government brings you a special computer and you take classes from home? No. My place isn't secure enough. I've been robbed twice this quarter and I don't even have anything worth taking. They grabbed my best pot last time." Will stared at her. "Wow. That's awful. I guess I was lucky that my parents place was paid for when they died. We just have to worry about the bills." Sal nodded. "That was providential." Wil had finished his meal and so he stood up. "Listen. We're having a special meal for my sister tonight. Why don't you come by? There's sure to be enough for you." Sal's face brightened. "I'd like that! Thanks, Wil." Wil nodded. "Just after the evening bell, all right? You remember where I live?" Sal nodded. "Yeah. I'll be there." Wil waved at her as he walked through the break room and back into the market. That evening, after the bell rang, the Travis family had just gathered around the table when the door chime sounded. "I'll get it!" Fera said, darting across the room. Wil heard her voice piping through the house." Wil, this man says he knows you!" Wil rose and went into the living room to see Ben Atkins standing framed in the doorway. "Yeah. I know him, Fera." Glancing past him, he saw Sal Benson coming down the street toward the house, a wrapped box in her hands. He turned to Fera. "Sal Benson's coming for dinner. Why don't you go meet her while I introduce Ben to the family?" Fera nodded and scampered off happily to greet Sal, slipping past Ben as he entered the small house. Wil led him into the kitchen and introduced him to the rest of the family ending with Fera and Sal Benson when they joined them at the table. They sat down to a simple birthday dinner that Tellie had prepared herself, using some of the groceries that Ben had bought the day before and after they ate they watched as Tellie opened her gifts. From Fera, there was a small book that Tellie had seen in a store one afternoon and mentioned that she liked. Fera had earned some money helping clean her classroom during the lunch break at school and had saved the money for a present for Tellie. From Sal, there was an embroidered scarf that would keep her hair from being blown about in the winds that came with the winter storms that plagued the planet. "Did it myself!" she told Tellie proudly. "It was the one thing my mother passed on to me. Needlework skills. She said when the hard times come knowing how to handle a needle can keep you in clothes like nothing other than cooking. Seems she was right, too." "It's beautiful! Thank you," Tellie told her. At that point, Ben cleared his throat. "I don't have enough knowledge of young girls to feel comfortable buying presents for a fifteenth birthday. It seems too late for dolls and too early for jewelry." He shifted in his chair. "However, I do have something I can offer, and it is not only for young Tellie, but includes the rest of you." He turned to Sal. "You as well, if you are willing." Sal nodded her understanding. "My company has sent me to this town to scout for new people. When I find young people with potential, I send back word to my supervisor and see if we can find a spot in our training schools." "Training schools?" Wil burst out. Ben raised a hand. "Just a moment, while I explain, Wil. When I approached you it was after watching you carefully for several days. And not just you but your entire family. I've taken note of you as well, Sal. My company specializes in taking people in your situation who show potential and training them at our cost. We teach not only academics, but vocational and creative skills as well." "Loscal Academies. You're from Loscal Academies!" Jon exclaimed. Ben turned his eyes on him and nodded. "For six years now. I joined them just before the last election." "And you weren't removed during the transition period?" Sal asked. Ben smiled at her. "Why should I have been? Loscal is a private endeavor. The harder the government tries to shake us up the stronger we get. Don't answer me now. Talk about this among yourselves and I will come back tomorrow night." He turned to Sal once more. "You will come back as well? I would like to hear your decision as well." "Of course. Wil, is that all right with you?" "Yeah. Yes, of course! Stay and talk this out with us tonight if you like." Sal looked around the table, taking in the faces gazing back at her. Suddenly she grinned. "I think I will!" she told them. Ben nodded solemnly. "I'll leave you all to your deliberations," he told them. He turned and walked toward the door, then turned back suddenly. "Wil," he said. "If I were you I'd be careful of your neighbor. She's a bit too watchful of you for my comfort." Wil nodded, already standing to see their guest to the door. "We are. But I'll be even more careful now. Thank you for everything." Ben nodded again. At the door he turned to shake Wil's hand. "Until tomorrow night," he said. It was Wil's turn to nod in acknowledgement. "We'll have our answer then, but I won't speak for Sal," he raised his voice at the end so that Sal could hear him. "I'll know my answer tomorrow evening," Sal said. Ben nodded once more before stepping out the door and Wil returned to the family table, where the deliberations over Ben's offer took up the next two hours. At the end of the evening, Jon and Fera were sent off to bed and Tellie went into her room to put her presents away, leaving Wil alone with Sal. "I should be going," the young woman said. "Thanks for asking me over. I don't see a lot of people outside of work," "Yeah. I know the feeling. Except for my family, of course. Thanks for coming, Sal." "Sure," she said in acknowledgement. "I'll see you tomorrow." "Yeah. We usually eat a little earlier than we did tonight." Sal nodded. "I'll come straight over from work. Is that all right?" "Yeah." Wil watched her as she stepped through the door and disappeared down the street, her nearly black hair swinging around her shoulders as she walked. Stepping back inside, he nearly bumped into Tellie, who had come back into the room. "So I go out to work tomorrow," she said. "You're all business," Will replied, stepping around her. Tellie shrugged. "I guess we have to be. I learned it from you, brother." "Yeah." Wil sank down into the worn armchair that their father had always claimed for his before his death. "So how was your first day out of school?" Tellie chose the sofa for her perch. "All right. I was fortunate enough not to burn my lunch," her eyes sparked with humor as she spoke. "Ana Handier kept a close eye on this place, but that's normal." "Yeah." Wil stood up. "We need to clean the kitchen up. We can talk while we do that." Tellie nodded and they both made their way into the kitchen. "Fera! Quit it!" Jon's voice rang out the next morning. "You know Wil told you no!" Wil dashed into his sister's room to see what was going on. In the middle of the room, a small whirlwind of small pieces of glitter swirled in the air. "Stop it, Fera. You know you can't do that. Not if we want to stay together." It was the morning after Tellie's birthday dinner and they had already finished breakfast. The glitter fell to the floor, leaving sprinkles of color on the tile. "I know. I just wanted to see if I still could do it." Wil smiled down at her. "Just don't make a habit of it. And Jon, don't yell at her. We're all a little uptight these days." "Yeah." Jon hefted his book bag and sulked his way into the front room. "Let's go," Wil told Fera, who was staring at the glitter on of the floor. "Are we going to go with Ben?" Fera asked. "I don't know. What do you think?" Fera picked up her bag. "You and Tellie wouldn't have to work all the time, then. That would be good." Wil grinned at her. "Right you are. Go on now or you'll be late!" Fera nodded and rushed down the hall. Wil heard Tellie bustling her and Jon out the door as he crossed the room to pick the two dolls up and put them carefully on Fera's bed. When he turned and went back into the front room, his siblings were already down the street. He looked around the room, not sure what to do first although common sense told him that the dishes in the kitchen needed to be tended to. Resolutely, he turned to the kitchen and started stacking the breakfast dishes in the washer, glad that there had been enough money three days before to buy the soap that served for both their clothes and the dishes. The door chime startled him, and he barely kept the soap from spilling into the washer. Grabbing a towel, he wiped his hands while he was running to the door. Opening it, he found Ana Handier standing on the front step. "Good morning, Wil. I didn't realize you would be here today. I was hoping to see your sister." "Tellie took the kids to school. I'm staying here today." "Ah!" The older woman's eyes sparkled. "Both of you are out of school then. That's too bad. Well, I'll just talk to her tomorrow, then, if she's here then." Wil nodded. "I'll tell her you want to talk to her. If you'll excuse me, Ana, I need to get on with my work. No one's been home during the daytime since my parents died, so there's a lot of catch up work to be done." "Sure, sure," Ana responded. "I'll see you later, Wil." "Okay. Good day, Ana!" Wil responded. He watched as Ana walked back to her house, wondering why she was taking such an interest in them. Halfway through the morning, Wil walked to the grocery store to buy food for supper that night. After stepping out the door, he turned to face it, and after looking quickly up and down the street, he directed a tiny nudge of energy from his mind to the lock, smiling quietly as he heard the whir of the locking mechanism as it clicked. He could still do it! After all of these years, since he was Fera's age, when his father had found him levitating his toys in his room and told him not to, that it was dangerous for anyone to find out about his abilities; "It gets messy when the government finds out about people who can do things with their minds. Best to keep it quiet, son," he had said. Now, walking down the street, Wil wondered about that statement. It was true. He could remember twice during his school days that one of his classmates had been suddenly removed from the school after being involved in two strange incidents. He also recalled that after the second incident, the boy's family had left town suddenly. Now Wil found himself wondering if their exit had been entirely voluntary. Shrugging mentally, he turned onto the walkway that led to the market he had worked at the day before. "Good morning, Wil!" Mikel Carl called out when he spotted him from across the room. "I've hired all my singlers for today already." Wil shook his head. "I'm not here for work. I came to buy something for dinner tonight." "Ah. Now that I can help you with," Mikel replied as Wil walked to where the vegetables were stocked. Quickly, he chose peas, beans and potatoes and went back to the front of the store. When he placed it on the counter in front of the market owner, Mikel said, "That's not much, son. Are you sure you don't want to get something more?" Wil shook his head. "No. This is enough for today." Mikel shot him a quick, shrewd glance. "All right. Your sister didn't come by today. You did tell her. . ." "Yes. I did. It's up to her, whether she comes by or not. Maybe someone hired her before she got here." Mikel nodded. "Maybe. Not many jobs out there for singlers, though. You know that." "Yes. I should get one credits back, Mikel," he reminded the man. Mikel nodded. "I hadn't forgotten. You remind your sister what I said now!" he replied as he handed Wil his change and bagged the groceries. "I'll do that," Wil said as he picked up his sack. "Goodbye, Mikel. I'll see you tomorrow." "So long, Wil!" Mikel called out, as Wil retreated through the door of the market. Back at home, Wil chopped the potatoes and other vegetables before adding them to the stew. Then he went to the computer and turned it on. When the screen lit up he saw that it had been set up so that only he or Tellie had access to the program. He accessed his name and started looking at the coursework, which came up as soon as the screen cleared. He blinked. The coursework started at a lower level than what he had been doing when he left school. "Maybe they think I need a review," he said to himself, staring at the screen. He stared at the screen for a moment, then accessed the lesson titled Basic Mathematics-Level 8, although he had been in level 10 classes when his parents had died. When the early afternoon bell rang, Wil turned off the computer. He had found all of the lessons easy enough, and been frustrated that the coursework was set up so that he needed to complete the first lesson in each subject before the program would let him advance to the more difficult ones. He had been absorbed enough by his work, though, that he had he had missed his midday meal. He got up and stretched, working out the kinks in his neck as he headed to the small kitchen. A quick bite to eat, he decided, and then he would straighten up the house a little before his siblings got home from school--and work, he amended. Shortly after the evening bell rang, Sal came over. She looked more careworn than she had the day before, but when Tellie gave her a cup of hot tea to drink, she smiled brightly and relaxed against the cushions of the worn sofa. Almost as soon as she had started sipping at her drink, the door buzzer sounded again and Wil went to answer it, admitting Ben. "Supper will be ready in a few minutes," Wil said. "Its nothing fancy, though." Ben laughed. "I'm not one for fancy meals," he told the boy. "Especially when the circumstances of so many are the direct product of the more affluent in our society neglecting those who are reduced to poverty by accident or abuse." Wil smiled grimly. "Let's go into the kitchen, then. Fera, Jon, go wash up please." "I need to wash up, too," Sal said as she rose from her seat and followed Wil's siblings to the washroom. Ben turned to Tellie. "I trust you had a good work day today, Tellie." Tellie nodded somewhat abstractedly. "Yes, I did! I worked with the street cleaners today, so I was busy all day long." They all rose and walked into the kitchen, where Wil started dishing up bowls of stew. Without speaking Ben picked up two stew-filled bowls and carried them to the table. Wil started to object, but, at the quelling look he received simply said, "Thank you." When the rest of the group trooped in, it was to find the food on the table and the two men already seated. They sat down quickly and began to eat, each of them talking about their day as the meal progressed. When the meal was nearly over, Wil looked over at Ben. "And how about you, sir? Have you been busy today?" Ben laughed. "Oh, yes. My days are very full right now. I have to report to my superiors, you see, and that means that I have to keep myself on task so that I have something to report." Wil nodded. "That makes sense. Are you getting anywhere, then?" Ben chuckled once more. "I wouldn't be here now if I wasn't. Not to rush you, but the sooner I hear your decision, means the more quickly I can get on with my work. I have both a time limit and a personal travel limit, you see." "Oh," Wil responded. "Well, I can give you my answer," Sal interrupted quickly. "I'll go with you. I'm tired of grubbing for money every day and knowing that it will never be enough and that I'll never make enough to save anything. And maybe I'll feel safe again. I haven't felt safe since my parents died and I had to move" Ben nodded. "That's fine, then. Wil?" Wil swallowed hard. "Well, we talked about it today, after the younger ones came home from school. We'll go with you, Ben. From what we figure, just about anything that is trying to make a difference for people like us is better than hanging on here." Ben's face cracked into a grin. "Marvelous! We'll leave, tomorrow then, at daybreak. Sal!" He turned to the young woman. "Can you be here by sunup?" Sal gulped. "Sure! It's not like I have a lot to pack or anything." Ben gave her a slight smile. "As a matter of fact, you don't need to pack anything. For this new life you're all setting out on, you won't need to bring much." "Just anything special you want to keep from your old lives." Sal shook her head. "No. I had to sell them all." Wil shifted in his seat. "You can stay here tonight, Sal, if you like. If you don't need to go get anything, that is. It would probably be safer than your place." "Yeah. You've got locks on the door that work. That's more than I have. I'll stay here then, if you mean it." "Great!" Fera exclaimed. "Can she sleep in our room, Tellie? We have room. Come on, Sal. Come see our room!" The little girl was on her feet, tugging on Sal's hand to get her out of the kitchen and down the hall. "Sure!" Sal said. "I'd love to see where I'll be spending the night!" and she went with Fera down the hall and to the girl's bedroom. "So we're really doing this?" Jon asked. I mean, we talked about it, and we all said yeah and everything, but I still didn't really believe it. It's like a kid's story or something, you know? Some guy comes to a bunch of orphan kids and offers them a new life. But in the stories, it never works out." "Well, stories are different than real life, kid, so maybe from here on out is where things change from the stories. Are you willing to take a chance on it?" Jon nodded. "Yep. I've been planning to leave this place when I'm out of school anyway. Why not take the chance to go now?" He stood up. "I guess I'm done here. There's no homework for me to do, since I'm not going back to school, and I want to pack my bag. There are a few things I'd like to take with me." He turned and left the room. Ben rose. "I'll be here tomorrow morning at sunrise. You'll be ready?" he asked Wil. "Yeah. I guess I should get the kids to bed or they'll never get up in time." He stood up and walked to the door with Ben "Thanks, Ben. I'll never forget what you're doing for us," he said as Ben stepped out of the doorway. "It's my pleasure. Until tomorrow, then," Ben replied, stepping away from the house. "Don't forget to lock up!" "No, sir. I won't," Wil told him, stepping back from the door and keying the door panel. As the door whooshed shut, he could hear his sisters behind him, looking for extra blankets to make a pallet for their sudden guest. Half a year after meeting Ben Atkins, Wil Travis stood on an outcropping of rock overlooking the settlement he now lived in with his family. World's End, the settlers called it, and the traders and occasional visitors who made their way to the colony thought they understood why, not realizing that the settlers themselves considered themselves refuges of a sort, all escapees from the ravages of a society that was fearful of those it perceived as being dangerously different from them. He was learning not only to control his psi abilities, but to use them in conjunction with his mental acuity, as was his sister Fera. All of them were back in school, along with Sal, who was smiling more now than Wil had seen her do since she had left school to take care of herself after her parents died. Wil turned to walk back down the worn path back to the house they all shared with Ben, who stood as their guardian. He smiled to himself. A day might come when he was the one picking up the young strays of a community. Until that time, he intended to spend his time learning, growing and giving back to the community that had given his family a chance at a life that was more than mere survival. |
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