Post by brooke on May 26, 2009 14:27:09 GMT -5
.o.n.e.p.i.l.l.m.a.k.e.s.y.o.u.l.a.r.g.e.r.
.a.n.d.o.n.e.p.i.l.l.m.a.k.e.s.y.o.u.s.m.a.l.l.
.a.n.d.t.h.e.o.t.h.e.r.o.n.e.s.m.o.t.h.e.r.g.i.v.e.s.y.o.u.
D O N T D O A N Y T H I N G A T A L L
G O A S K A L I CE
W H E N S H E S T E N F E E T T A L L
A small, scrap of a girl could be seen racing down from the school,dropping a few things before she quickly retreated to pick up the fallen objects. Her performance was repeated as she froze before spinning around and darting back into the school. After slipping into the library, grabbing the book she had elft, she slipped back outside, glancing around to see if anyone had seen her.
Her long black hair was all over the place and she took a minute to pull it back out of her bright grey eyes before she settled down with her book, papers, and pen. She popped the book open to page nine hundred-and-twenty-six before she began to write.
Alyss, for that was her name, had been hard pressed to finish her work inside when it was such a nice day outside. She'd almost gone insane with the longing to sit in the sun. She was dressed in a pair of jeans that where two sizes to big for her, a belt, and a black shirt that bore the words, "We're all a little mad here," in sparky letters.There was also a sparkly picture of the Cheshire cat on the front, and a picutre of her namesake,Alice, with her hands on her hips.
The Junior, who was often mistaken for a freshman, was busy chewing on her bottom lip as she tried to figure out what to write. She was working on her History report, her worst subject, and was charged to write a paper on the Veitnam War that was aleast three pages long. She cursed the teacher as she grumbled through her work. Normally she'd been down under her favorite weeping willow in the park that was right next to the lake with a good book. It could have been anything from the new Beka Cooper book, to rereading the Harry Potter Series, or even a couple of volumes of a manga.But no, she was stuck doing her boring homework. Life was never fair.