ad of away from them. Several folks sped past me, nearly toppling my backpack off my
ollowed the student wave after rea
es. They were all staring at something I couldn't quite see yet, muttering to each other. I dodged under a few arms and worked
folding a few feet in front of me. However, there was an even more powerful force prope
ught sigh
e face of a
e he was creating. His white shirt was lying limply across his body, shredded, perhaps by the other guy's futile attempt t
hitting the other boy in the face. His attacks had an almost animali
ervene to stop Hudson's fists. However, the crowd's jeers were so loud that their entreaties to stop were hardly a
went beyond a performance
articular intensity, a calculated desire for agony. If you didn't pay close attention, you may believe Hudson had lost his mind. However, Hudson had complete control over each wound he c
youngster by aggression and gore. I felt something deep in my chest,
nt of time that had gone by when three police officers, not the small-framed high school security officers, had their large arms encircling
om my fourth period. Tyler Herring is a boy who once made fun of our teacher's receding hairline and offered me
idea of him still standing there, pretending he hadn't nearly killed T
abbing a damp towel over his bloodied face as I watched, and I hated myself for thinking such thoughts. His blood-streaked, aristocratic nose, with its flawless slope
and a split lip, but h
to interpret what was going on there. However, even as he turned away, I