morph … I give up. I can’t even remember the word, let alone spell it. Something to do with phallus. Or was that tit?
‘Please copy this into your spelling books,’ says Mr Epeler. To show how clever he is, he starts to write it on the board. All I can think of while he is writing is, thank God I’m tall!
Tall means I get to sit up the back of the class. Tall puts as much distance between Mr Epeler’s armpits and me as is humanly possible. Let me explain, Mr Epeler is the sort of person who blanks out when the deodorant commercials come on TV. The sort of person who has a force shield around him that even flies won’t step into. The sort of … nah! You’ve got the picture.
Mr Epeler is still writing. One, two, three, four … I start counting letters. And give up at nine. Spelling should be banned. Don’t you agree? I’m thinking of starting up a petition. I mean, who needs it? It’s not like we haven’t invented spell check.
‘I’ve sorted you into groups,’ says Mr Epeler holding up colour-coded sheets of paper.
Don’t tell me, red is for the dummies (‘r’, ‘e’, ‘d’ — three letters) and aquamarine is for the brains (can’t tell you how many letters), and yellow is somewhere in between.
We start with aquamarine. ‘Angus, Madeline, Francesca … ’
Then yellow. ‘Kobi, Verity, Levon
Red. ‘Jake
Red! Knew it.
‘Kieran … ’
Hah! Kieran’s with me. At least
I
learnt to spell my name in kindy.
‘Adam.’
Someone else who’s brain’s gone walkabout. Jake. Kieran and Adam. It’s always the same. Red for reading, Red for maths and Red for spelling.
Osheen and Jung Sian are in Red for spelling, too. At least they have an excuse. They’ve only been speaking English for a few months. Osheen speaks four languages. I, on the other hand, only speak one. How’d I get to be so dumb? Grandad says I must’ve been at the back of the line when the spelling brains were handed out. He says he was, too. Only in his day, if you couldn’t spell at school they’d have given you the strap! I would’ve nicked off. They probably would’ve belted you for that, too. Grandad says he once got six cuts with the cane because he got his b’s and d’s mixed up. WhenI mix them up I pretend I’ve done it on purpose — mirror writing.
‘Everyone look at your list.’ It’s Mr Epeler, again. ‘There’s twenty words that are compulsory … ’
Twenty! A kick in the goolies would be more kind.
‘… and five that are optional.’
Optional? Let me tell you about optional. Optional is only for kids whose names
aren’t
Madeline, or Francesca, or Angus. It’s hard to believe, but with a double serving of brains those kids still haven’t worked out
optional
.
I look at my list:
because . .
. Yes! Betty eats cake and uncle sells eggs! My sister taught me that.
their
. They always throw in a
their
. But is it a
there
there or a
their
their. And where’s my favourite? Ah, second from the bottom,
which
. Which
which
is that? It’s meant to help but it only confuses me more. Mum says to look for the ‘t’. The ‘t’ is meant to look like a cross, which is meant to remind me of a cemetery, which is meant to remind me of a witch. Witch. ‘t’. Cross. Get it? But I keep forgetting what everything’s meant to remind me of. I mean, it’s not like I hang out in cemeteries. Come to think of it, it’s not like witches do, either.
‘You are to learn your list for Friday,’ says Mr ‘Sadist’ Epeler. ‘On Friday, we will have a spelling bee.’
‘Great,’ says Angus.
‘Goodie, goodie …’ says Madeline.
‘Gumdrops,’ Francesca finishes for her.
Where does she get off?
Mr Epeler stands there with a grin that reminds me of Smirk the Berk. ‘We will start the spelling bee with each child spelling Amorphophallus titanum.’
Luckily, the bell cuts him off. Torture session Number 1175 is finally over. Funny, I might not be good at maths but I can tell you that we go to school
Nicole MacDonald
Amy Woods
Gigi Aceves
Michelle Sagara
Marc Weidenbaum
Mishka Shubaly
S F Chapman
Trish Milburn
Gaelen Foley
Jacquelyn Mitchard