Teacher Spots A Girl’s Pain And Hears A Whisper That Stops The Room-heuh

By the time the register was nearly finished that Thursday morning, the classroom had already taken on the smell of early October.

Wet coats hung from pegs by the door.

Pencil shavings sat in a little wooden curl near the bin.

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The heater had come on with that faint dusty smell every old school room seemed to keep for the first cold week of the year.

Outside the windows, the sky was low and grey, pressing against the glass as the children settled into their places.

Ms Valerie Kincaid stood near the whiteboard with the maths sheets tucked against her chest and watched the room wake up in its usual untidy way.

Chair legs dragged against the floor.

Someone’s lunchbox clicked open before it should have done.

A boy at the back was telling anyone who would listen that his tooth was loose, although nobody had asked for proof.

Two girls near the front were trying to trade crayons beneath their desks with the seriousness of a bank transfer.

It was ordinary.

Then Valerie saw Lila Mercer.

Lila was not making noise.

She was not refusing work.

She was not crying, arguing, wandering about or doing any of the things that usually pulled a teacher’s eyes across a classroom.

She was sitting too carefully.

Her pale blue cardigan was buttoned over her dress, though one side seemed to sit oddly near the bottom.

Her hands were folded in front of her.

Her eyes moved down whenever the room grew loud, as if the sound itself might knock something loose.

Lila was the sort of child other adults described with approving words.

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