The art room, though wide and well-ventilated, smelled faintly of charcoal. The faint buzz of quiet conversation between students filled the air, as well as the scritch of pencils on paper. The general effect of the atmosphere in art class would have been pleasant for Melli, but all she could feel was the sweat on her face, and the dry, crumbly taste of powdered charcoal in the air.
The sketchbook on her desk was covered in several, dark, childishly scribbled lines. She glared at the failed attempts at drawing with disgust before looking down at her left hand. It was shaking violently, barely managing to hold on to her pencil. She clutched her left wrist, stabilizing it momentarily, and glanced to the left. It didn’t look like anyone had noticed.
That was good. If she dropped the pencil now, it would be a disaster.
She turned to a fresh page with her right pinky, and laid the tip of the pencil on the paper.
Deep breath, back straight, and don’t tense up. Relax.
No sooner than she thought those words, her left hand suddenly moved seamlessly across the paper. It drew a short, straight line near the top of the page, slanted slightly to the right. The pause after she drew was all that she needed to register what was happening.
No. No, not again.
Her hand went on to draw curved lines below the first stroke. All the blood drained from her face, and her right hand stiffened, too shocked to even stop her dominant hand. The hum of her classmates’ voices, the light pouring in through the windows started dissolving, melting into echoes of her own thoughts. “It’s happening again... it’s happening again...â€
A viola was half-drawn on the page. Melli’s eyes swept the room frantically, too quick to register anything coherent in her field of vision. She bowed her head so that her pale hair shielded the sketchbook. No one must notice.
The sketchbook on her desk was covered in several, dark, childishly scribbled lines. She glared at the failed attempts at drawing with disgust before looking down at her left hand. It was shaking violently, barely managing to hold on to her pencil. She clutched her left wrist, stabilizing it momentarily, and glanced to the left. It didn’t look like anyone had noticed.
That was good. If she dropped the pencil now, it would be a disaster.
She turned to a fresh page with her right pinky, and laid the tip of the pencil on the paper.
Deep breath, back straight, and don’t tense up. Relax.
No sooner than she thought those words, her left hand suddenly moved seamlessly across the paper. It drew a short, straight line near the top of the page, slanted slightly to the right. The pause after she drew was all that she needed to register what was happening.
No. No, not again.
Her hand went on to draw curved lines below the first stroke. All the blood drained from her face, and her right hand stiffened, too shocked to even stop her dominant hand. The hum of her classmates’ voices, the light pouring in through the windows started dissolving, melting into echoes of her own thoughts. “It’s happening again... it’s happening again...â€
A viola was half-drawn on the page. Melli’s eyes swept the room frantically, too quick to register anything coherent in her field of vision. She bowed her head so that her pale hair shielded the sketchbook. No one must notice.