...is rather an unsettling thing
june 2003
Last year he’d gotten bored during Sigilmancy and carved his name (STURM, all capitals) into his desk at the back of the room with a penknife. Obviously he’d been in a heap of trouble as soon as it was found out, and it wasn’t the sort of thing he could deny, as it had his name on it, but there had been names and dates and swear words and all kinds of bullshit carved into the old desks, at the old school, and Conrad had thought it a tradition worth keeping, an archive of teenage boredom and spite.
Now there were a few other names carved under his – not seven classes’ worth of names, yet, but he’d been right in assuming that the people who sat in the desks furthest from the professor were people willing to vandalise school property – and two swear words. He hadn’t done either of the swear words (though he’d gotten blamed for one, since he said it all the time) but he felt pretty proud of it anyway.
This was what he was thinking about, as he slung rocks over the sea (he wasn’t good enough at skipping rocks to want to skip them, so he was just going for brute force) – he was thinking about how he was proud of himself, not because he had anything at all to be proud of, not because defiance had paid off, but because – even if it hadn’t – he hadn’t compromised. It was the same fucked-up way he was proud of himself when he misbehaved, the same fucked-up way he was proud of himself even when he was punished for it. ‘
Do your worst’ proud.
Which was really confusing, honestly.
Zhenya, as she wasn’t on the precipice of graduation, was not thinking of anything remotely as fucked-up or confusing as Conrad, so he’d let her do all the talking on today’s meander. He wasn’t listening – he wasn’t ignoring her, or anything, just wasn’t really paying attention beyond keeping a general idea of what she’d just said, so he could zone back in if she asked him a question. She’d been complaining about Krylova for a while, maybe just because she knew he wasn’t going to disagree.
“If you’re bad enough at it,†he said sagely, weighing a stone in his hand, “eventually she’ll stop trying.†This had served him well, at least – maybe he just had less potential than Zhenya, or a worse attitude. He threw the stone overhand; it plopped into the water with a neat splash.
@Zhenya Shishkina