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3 days before the wolves

  Three Days Before the Wolves

  November 5–7, 2016

  Age 17

  “The wolves do not knock. They arrive with blood in their teeth and names in their mouths.”

  —Bloodvex, Entry 11

  ---

  Day One: The Watcher Blinks

  They called me to the office.

  Asked about Amy.

  Asked about where I was, what I knew, what I saw.

  I lied. Of course I did.

  But something shifted.

  When I walked back into class, Ms. Kathy looked at me too long. Not like a teacher. Like a witness. Like someone who’d seen something she wasn’t supposed to.

  I smiled at her. She didn’t smile back.

  That’s when I knew.

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  She’s not just a teacher. She’s a threat.

  That night, I couldn’t sleep. I kept thinking about her eyes. How they lingered. How they blinked too slow. Like she was memorizing me.

  I wrote in my notebook:

  “The Watcher sees. The Watcher must forget.”

  ---

  Day Two: The Knife Dreams

  I stayed after class. Told her I didn’t understand the lesson.

  She believed me. She always does.

  She walked me through the worksheet. Her voice was calm, patient, warm.

  I imagined what it would sound like if she screamed.

  I watched how she moved. How she packed her bag. Where she kept her keys. What she touched. What she didn’t.

  She offered to walk me through the assignment again. I nodded. Took notes. Not on the lesson—on her.

  She said, “You’re quiet today.”

  I said, “I’m just thinking.”

  She said, “About what?”

  I said, “About endings.”

  That night, I sharpened a pencil until it snapped. Then I sharpened another.

  I wrote in my notebook:

  “The blade is patient. The bell is near. The lesson is almost ready.”

  ---

  Day Three: The Bell Tolls

  She said something about Amy. Something small. Something harmless.

  “I hope she’s okay.”

  I said, “She’s fine.”

  She said, “You’d tell me if you knew anything, right?”

  I said, “Of course.”

  She smiled. That fake, teacher smile. The kind that says, I’m watching you.

  That’s when I decided.

  Tomorrow. After school.

  One last lesson.

  I packed my bag with care. Notebook. Pencil. Protractor.

  I cleaned my nails. Brushed my hair. Wore my best shirt.

  I wrote in my notebook:

  “The Educator’s Exit Exam: One student. One question. One answer.”

  ---

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