“I told you,” he said.
“Let me start again. You haven’t told me how you feel about it.”
“I don’t have a right to feel anything about it. How can I? I didn’t know him. You and Isabel have a right to those feelings.” He started to say more on the subject, but the words didn’t come. “I’m just going to go back to my dad’s and work on that report. I want to have it done by Monday morning. I have some more homework to get done over the weekend, too. I got behind, you know . . . with Isabel having her baby and all.”
“Okay, good. You go work.”
“I’ll come visit you over the weekend,” he said.
“All the way from your father’s? You don’t need to.”
“But you know I will.”
“Raymond,” she said, before he could hurry out the door. “You have a right. You always have a right to feel.”
Raymond handed in the report to his social studies teacher, as he’d been instructed, first thing Monday morning before homeroom. He was proud of it, and anxious to hear what she thought.
“Oh,” Miss Evans said. “You’re back. That was fast.”
She flipped the pages on the report faster than she could read or even skim them. She was a sixtysomething woman with porcelain skin, a fiercely fair complexion. Aging had left her skin papery and nearly translucent. She wore big floppy hats from the front door of school to her car, even on overcast days.
“Seven single-spaced pages,” she said, sounding impressed. “Quite ambitious.”
“I guess I had a lot to say.”
“I’ll try to get it read at lunch,” she said. “So that when you come into class this afternoon, I can have a grade for you.”
He sat down at his regular desk in her class and waited. It was early. Six minutes to 1:00. There were no other students in the room.
“I’m just finishing it,” she said without looking up.
“Okay. I’ll wait.”
Less than a minute later she flipped back to its cover page and scribbled something on it with her red pen. She stood, walked down the aisle to him. Dropped it on the desk in front of him.
He looked down at his grade.
C-.
“C minus?”
“Did you think it deserved more?”
“Yeah. Much more.”
“Well, I’m sorry, but that’s my honest opinion. You took very good notes, and I gave you credit for that. But I didn’t like the conclusions you came to. I thought you went way off the beam with that. First of all, I’m not even sure why you thought you were supposed to draw your own conclusions about why the jury decided the way it did. Those people were there to do their civic duty. They listened to the facts in front of them and did what they thought best. You’re seventeen years old, and you weren’t in the jury room, and here you are going on about how people see facts differently based on a theory of us and them. It just sounded like a teenager thinking he knows better than our tried-and-true system of justice.”
Raymond sat stunned for a moment. Then his brain seized on one aspect of her little speech.
“Wait. So, the whole thing about tribalism . . . that sounded to you like something a seventeen-year-old would come up with?”
“Very much so. And it was a little bit New Agey, too, if you ask me. Like you have this theory that reality is completely subjective. But there’s such a thing as objective reality, you know, and those jurors were trying to find it.”
He opened his mouth to argue with her. To tell her she hadn’t been there. That if reality wasn’t subjective, she wouldn’t be assigning perfect civic honesty to a bunch of people she hadn’t met, or even seen. Maybe even to tell her that his seventeen-year-old’s theory of tribalism had been borrowed from a forty-year-old district attorney.
He closed his mouth again. Because he realized, clearly in that moment, that she had made up her mind. Nothing he said would change it.
He stuck his head into Mr. Bernstein’s English class at the end of the day.
Mr. Bernstein stood at the blackboard, erasing. Cleaning the board before leaving for the day. He was a young man, probably less than ten years Raymond’s senior, with a full, dark beard and a quick smile.
“Raymond,” he said. “What can I do for you?”
“Not sure if it’s okay to ask this.”
“Well.” The teacher dropped the hand with the eraser to his side. Offered Raymond his full attention. “You can always ask.”
“I wrote a report. You know, about the trial.”
“Right, right. How did that go?”
“Not so well.”
“Oh. I’m sorry. Were you supposed to hand it in to me? If so, nobody told me.”
“No. I was supposed to give it to Miss Evans for social studies class. But I was just . . . I’d really like to hear more than one opinion on it. I was wondering if you’d read it and tell me what you think. You know. As a piece of nonfiction writing. Maybe even give it a grade. It doesn’t actually have to count for my English grade if you don’t want it to. I’m just interested to hear what somebody else thinks.”
“Not a problem, Raymond. Not a problem at all. Leave it here and I’ll take it home tonight. You can come in first thing before homeroom tomorrow, and I’ll give you my honest opinion.”
“Oh,” Raymond said. “I just thought of something.” He felt foolish for not having thought of it sooner. “I need to be able to print out”—he almost said “a clean copy,” but he changed it quickly before he spoke—“another copy.”
He didn’t want Mr. Bernstein to see his social studies teacher’s grade, or the notes she had scribbled throughout. He wanted a fresh take, with nobody else’s opinion in the back of the man’s head.
“I’ll walk with you down to the office,” the teacher said. “I think they’ll let us use their printer.”
“Are you sure I can’t talk you into going to the store with me?” Raymond asked.
Mrs. G sat slumped at her dining room table, across from Raymond. Not drinking her tea. Not eating her cookie.
“I need more time to rest,” she said. “I would be very grateful if you would go and shop for me.”