STG Boy jumped the service counter and put his hands in my
cash-register—not really, but close enough—it’s how I reacted, how I felt about the
situation; There wasn’t a service counter, only a well thought out barrier of
tables, and the till wasn’t a till at all, it was a desk drawer where I store
prisoner ID’s when they borrow pencils for class assignments. STG Boy thought he had made a name for himself; he’s classified under “Security Threat
Group.” He’s a gang-banger, a Latin King or Count or whatever. He has tattoos on
his face. He’s young.
I had the school officer escort him from the building, no
handcuffs required. The teacher across the hall watched from a safe distance. “You’re
not writing him a threatening behavior ticket?” she asked.
“No,” I answered.
A day later the teacher across the hall asked if I had any
volunteers to help iron graduation gowns for an upcoming ceremony. I sent her two students. I sent her STG Boy.
She asked, “Are you sure this is a good idea?”
“No,” I answered. “But his prison clothes are clean and
pressed and I told him that it’s penance for what he did the other
day.”
I had heard that he had done an exceptional job.
4 comments:
Maybe there is hope for an erosion of his stupidity.
You are insane ly funny. Way to break in the new help.
JR-you kill me with your quiet wisdom. That dude never saw it coming. Personally, I'd rather take a beating that iron!
A good framework for a short story, though sort of situation- specific.
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