by Nayt on Sun Jan 04, 2009 4:07 am
"Philosophy," replied Sturm as they walked, "Except . . . it's a Grammar and Literature course. Scott Thompson's course, in particular."
Which was especially odd . . . considering that particular teacher. What Sturm said alone was enough to merit the interest of anyone who happened to be in the school, educator and student alike--and that was likely the case. As they neared the back of the Hall, they found more and more people, both students and teachers, in the hall (although, not nearly as much as they could have found, considering that this was a Saturday).
Scott Thomspon was a truly astounding man, a scoundrel, a lecher, an intellectual bully, and an all around trouble maker since the day he was born. With time, those habits of his started to show less and less, but he was the same Scott Thompson as always: he was most characterized as an intellectual bully, and regarding his classes and teaching methods, he was known amongst the faculty as setting himself upon a high horse that no one could actually disprove or provide any reasonable excuse for him to step down from his sarcasm laden non-stop ego trip. The thing was . . . the man was a genius in his craft and a great teacher, albeit his condescending and joking attitude. He was also a chain smoker, and most frequently the cause for the teachers' lounge in this particular Hall being clouded with smoke (notably, no campus nation-wide was even close to smoke-free).
It wasn't often that Scott Thompson gave a student the benefit of the doubt, and it was even rarer when a student could out-argue him. This more than likely meant that something piqued the man's interests and he conceded to the student, since, with his mastery of the fields of grammar, literature, and writing, he could prove himself right even if he was, in fact, wrong. But still: if it was enough to shut Scott Thompson up, it was worth checking out . . .
The students in the corridor all made sure to respectfully give their professors space to move, and stepped aside when the two men were walking past--even letting them into the room at the far back of the hallway. Within the lecture hall, relatively packed with . . . what looked like almost all of the students and teachers on campus on this day . . . no one paid a glance to the two educators that entered. Nearly every gaze was transfixed upon the youth standing before Thompson's desk, and Thompson himself was standing near the entrance, the tall, scrawny, dark haired, bespectacled young man he was. He paid a glance to the two teachers as they entered, a grin, shrug, and a halfhearted wave.
Within the center of the room stood the student of interest, and just by looks alone, he undoubtedly stood out more than any other student enrolled in this prep school--possibly even the entire town, if only because of something he could not control: he had a strong case of albinism. His skin was nearly powder white, his hair, without pigment, appeared as a ruffled silver-gray, and his eyes were a chilling red. He was young; he couldn't have been older than fifteen, and wore his uniform without a jacket (which had been discarded sometime prior)--dark slacks, dress shoes, and a long sleeved white button down shirt. He was only five feet and ten inches tall, and likely hadn't an ounce of excess fat on his body. As soon as Eilert was within the confines of the lecture hall, the adolescent paused to look--ignoring Sturm and all others, and staring so briefly at only Eilert that it could not have been anything more than a wayward glance, yet it may as well have felt like hours--and smiled, before turning his attention forward once more.