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The Grave

Penulis: V.Nicot
last update Tanggal publikasi: 2026-04-15 01:38:50

Clara’s POV

Wednesday night James arrived at at eight.

He looked tired like he had not eaten properly since morning. I made him a plate without asking and he sat at the kitchen table and ate it while Gabriel spread the documents out.

“Margaret Reeves,” James said, between forkfuls. “Sixty-three years old, started at Blackwood in 1986 as a housekeeper. The school was still being set up, the founders had the building but the staff structure was not complete. She was one of the first people hired.
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  • The Lesson Plan    Three days

    Clara’s POVMonday morning Gabriel called the board session.I was at the sixth form college when he texted to say it was done. Formal notice issued, next Thursday. James confirmed, Aldridge confirmed, Carr notified as a former connected party.I texted back: good.He texted back: yes.That was the whole conversation.Tuesday was ordinary, he came with coffee, we worked. He fixed the curtain rail that had been loose since February without me asking. I made dinner without burning it, we went to bed at eleven.Wednesday he was not there when I woke up.Not unusual, he had early seminars sometimes. I made coffee, marked the Gatsby essays Theo’s class had submitted. At noon I texted: lunch?Nothing.At three: still at Pembroke?Nothing.At six I called, it rang out.I stood in the kitchen with the phone in my hand and thought about the last time he had gone quiet like this. February, three days. His father’s old office in London. Coming back with a plan.But this felt different.February

  • The Lesson Plan    His Fathers Son

    Gabriel’s POVJames took the envelope to London that afternoon.To his solicitor first — someone who specialised in trust law and who James trusted the way you trusted people who had been right about difficult things before. He called from the train at four to say the 1987 settlement agreement was genuine, the signatures were verifiable, and the fraud on a founding trust was exactly what Margaret Reeves had described.“What happens now?” I said.“We present it to the Blackwood board,” James said. “As trustees, formally. The board decides whether to pursue it legally or negotiate a second settlement. My recommendation is legal, but it is your decision.”“Not yet,” I said. “Give me a week.”“Gabriel…”“A week, James.”He agreed.I put the phone down and sat at my desk and did not open my supervision reading and did not text Clara who was at the sixth form college until five and did not call Eleanor or Marcus or anyone.My grandfather had been in a room in 1987 with evidence of fraud and

  • The Lesson Plan    The Grave

    Clara’s POVWednesday night James arrived at at eight.He looked tired like he had not eaten properly since morning. I made him a plate without asking and he sat at the kitchen table and ate it while Gabriel spread the documents out.“Margaret Reeves,” James said, between forkfuls. “Sixty-three years old, started at Blackwood in 1986 as a housekeeper. The school was still being set up, the founders had the building but the staff structure was not complete. She was one of the first people hired.”“Before the school opened,” Gabriel said.“Before it opened,” James said. “Which means she was there during the setup year, when the founding trustees were making decisions. When the philosophy was being written into the building.”“She saw everything,” I said.“From the inside, not as a trustee, not as faculty. As someone who was in every room because her job required it and who nobody thought twice about because domestic staff were invisible to the people running things.”“What did she see?”

  • The Lesson Plan    Spring

    Clara’s POVTuesday came and went.M. Reeves did not show up.I sat at the King’s Parade table from 10:55 until 12:15 with two cups of coffee and Gabriel on the bench outside and nothing. No call, no text, not even an explanation. Just an empty chair and the specific feeling of having prepared for something that did not arrive.Gabriel came in at 12:20.“Gone,” I said.“I know,” He sat down. “I texted the number, no response.”“Maybe they changed their mind,” I said.“Maybe.” “Or something happened.” “Yes, or that.”We sat with it for a moment. “Do we go to Blackwood?” I said.“Not yet, we do not know enough to walk into that building asking questions.”“We are trustees,” I said. “We have every right to…”“Rights and wisdom are different things,” he said.I looked at him. “James?” I said.“Already texted him.”“Of course you have.” He smiled.We walked back to the flat through Cambridge in the April morning and the city was doing the thing it did in spring — like it had been waitin

  • The Lesson Plan    What Ordinary Looks Like

    Clara’s POVSunday mornings had become ours without either of us deciding they would be.The specific way habits form between two people when nobody is performing anything anymore. Gabriel would arrive at nine with coffee and the weekend paper he never read past the books section and I would already be at the table with my lesson planning spread out around a mug I had not finished. We would work in the quiet for two hours and then one of us would say something about food and we would figure it out.This Sunday I was not doing lesson planning.I was writing the second draft of the referral structure.The first draft had gone to Catherine on Friday, She had called Saturday morning to say three things. First — the identification criteria were exactly right. Second — the escalation language needed softening in the middle section, too clinical, too much distance between the words and the actual child they were describing. Third — the final paragraph was the best thing she had read on the s

  • The Lesson Plan    The Framework

    Clara’s POVCatherine ran the first session on a Thursday, a conference room in a building near King’s Cross that the educational policy board used for exactly this kind of thing — neutral, functional, the specific absence of personality that made it easy to fill with other people’s ideas. Six of us around a table. Catherine at the head. Miriam to her left with a printed draft of the ethical structure she’d spent three months building. Eleanor beside Miriam, which I had not expected and which told me something about how far Eleanor had come since the hotel suite dinner.Me across from Eleanor.And two teachers Catherine had identified through the new transparent process, a man named Patrick who had taught in a Bristol comprehensive for twenty years and a woman named Sade who had left a London academy two years ago and gone into educational consultancy and had the specific quality of someone who had been angry about something for a long time and had recently found a productive use for

  • The Lesson Plan    Geoffrey

    Clara’s POVJames called at 9:15.I was at Gabriel’s, we’d agreed the night before without discussing it, that wherever the call came I should be there when it did. Gabriel had his seminar reading open on his desk and I had marking on my lap and neither of us was doing either of those things. We we

  • The Lesson Plan    January

    Clara’s POV January arrivedI went back to the sixth form college on the fifth.Theo had spent Christmas in Edinburgh with his father’s family and had opinions about it that he delivered in the first five minutes of the first lesson before I’d taken my coat off.“Edinburgh in January,” he said, “i

  • The Lesson Plan    No Way Out

    Clara’s POVNeither of us moved.The footsteps stayed exactly where they were, directly above us, not pacing, neither continuing down the hall. Gabriel’s eyes were still on the ceiling.“How long has that corridor been in use?” he said, his voice barely above a murmur.“I don’t know,” I whispered.

  • The Lesson Plan    Eight O’ Clock

    Clara’s POVI didn't sleep.I lay in my apartment above the Blackwood staff quarters, staring at the ceiling. I kept replaying the phone call in my mind, focusing on the same four words each time. It concerns one of your students. Not specifically Gabriel. Not an accusation. Just that clear, profes

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