A Teacher Saw Bandages On His Notebook And Uncovered The Weekend Pattern-tantan

Every Monday morning, Andrew Miller came into Room 14 with his backpack zipped all the way to the top.

He was eight years old, small for his age, and careful in the way children become careful when the world around them has taught them that noise costs something.

His teacher, Emily Carter, noticed him because quiet children often vanish in busy rooms.

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Second grade was loud by nature.

The classroom smelled like dry-erase markers, pencil shavings, cafeteria syrup, damp jackets, and whatever snack had broken open at the bottom of someone’s backpack.

Chairs scraped.

Sneakers squeaked.

Water bottles rolled under desks.

Someone was always missing a glue stick.

Someone was always laughing too loudly at exactly the wrong time.

And through all of it, Andrew moved like he was trying not to disturb the air.

He said please before asking to use the restroom.

He apologized when another child bumped into him.

He raised his hand only halfway, as though even the answer he knew might be too much trouble.

The first time Emily saw the Band-Aid on his homework notebook, she thought it was sweet.

It was a blue composition notebook with his name written carefully on the front in block letters.

A cartoon Band-Aid was wrapped around the upper right corner.

Not slapped there carelessly.

Wrapped.

Pressed flat.

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