The School Made Him Untouchable for One Week, Then a Single Video Turned Every Head-yumihong

Ms. Bell reached across the nearest desk and turned the projector off with one hard click. The square of white light vanished, but my face stayed on thirty phone screens around the room, mouth open, finger pointed, teeth showing. Somebody coughed into a sleeve. Somebody else dragged a chemistry book shut so slowly the cardboard rasped against the desk like sandpaper.

‘Phones down,’ Ms. Bell said.

No one moved.

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She looked straight at me. ‘You. Bag. Now.’

The stool legs scraped when I stood. Sweat had dried under my collar, leaving the fabric stiff and cold, and my right knee knocked the black tabletop hard enough to rattle the beaker tray. Milo was not in chemistry. That almost made it worse. There was nowhere in the room to land my eyes except on the faces already turning away.

The hallway outside smelled like floor wax and old radiator heat. Ms. Bell walked half a step ahead, keys tapping against her ID badge, while clusters of students peeled back against the lockers to let us through. At 2:21 p.m., my phone buzzed in my pocket three times in a row. Then twice more.

Inside the assistant principal’s office, the air conditioner hummed above a bowl of mints no one ever touched. Dr. Kessler had printed screenshots already. They lay on her desk in a neat stack, the top one catching me with my hand stretched out and Milo’s sketchbook tilted just beyond his reach.

Dax sat in the chair by the window with one ankle on his knee. Knox leaned against the filing cabinet, chewing gum like nothing in the world had changed. Dax did not look at me when I walked in.

That landed harder than the video.

Dr. Kessler folded both hands. ‘Sit.’

The seat cushion wheezed under me. On the wall behind her, the second hand on the clock kept sweeping past the number twelve, thin and red and steady.

‘We have the library video,’ she said. ‘We also have three additional clips sent by students this afternoon. One from the cafeteria on Thursday at 12:43 p.m. One from the stairwell near the music wing at 8:06 a.m. yesterday. One from the science corridor at 1:14 p.m. today.’

A folder slid across the desk toward me.

The first still image showed Milo bent over the floor, reaching under a vending machine for his violin bow while my sneaker blocked the far end. In the second, Knox had two fingers hooked inside Milo’s backpack zipper while Dax laughed into his fist. The third one cut me at the worst angle of all: standing off to the side, watching, doing nothing, my mouth flat, my shoulders loose, as if cruelty had become weather.

Knox spat his gum wrapper into the trash. ‘Everybody’s acting like we killed him.’

Dr. Kessler turned her face toward him without moving the rest of her body. ‘You’ll be quiet.’

Dax finally lifted his eyes and looked at me, not like a friend, not even like a rival. He looked at me the way he used to look at an empty chair.

‘He wanted in,’ he said. ‘You can ask anybody. We didn’t force him.’

The room seemed to shrink around the desk. My fingers curled against the chair arms until the plastic bit my skin.

Two days earlier, Dax had looped that varsity jacket over my shoulders by the cafeteria line and said, ‘You learn fast.’ At 2:24 p.m., with screenshots spread out like evidence in a courtroom, he gave me away with the same easy mouth.

‘That true?’ Dr. Kessler asked.

The answer sat on my tongue and would not come out clean. Not yes. Not no. Not after the months of shoulder checks, spitballs, kicked books, the blue locker door against my spine, the corridor laughing while I picked paper off the floor. Not after the first lunch when a seat appeared beside Dax and the whole room stopped hunting for a place to stick its teeth.

‘He started it himself one time,’ Knox said. ‘The bow thing.’

My head turned toward him.

Knox shrugged. ‘What? He did.’

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