The house was still. It was the kind of stillness that only settled after the weight of day had bled out—after the dishwasher hummed to silence, after the last notification…
The paper was too white. It glared up at her like an accusation. Dayton sat at her desk, the wood still dented where she’d pressed her Guardian certification manual for hours every night last…
The living room lights glowed soft and golden against the late twilight filtering through the blinds, casting long, clean stripes across the hardwood floor. The news played at a low…
Dayton walked from the bus stop to her house. She didn’t live far from school but was on the border of needing bus or being able to walk. Normally she took the bus so that her and…
The second floor of Roosevelt Middle School felt like a different world after hours. Gone was the cacophony of adolescent voices echoing off lockers, replaced by the institutional quiet…