They stood stock still — the tall, towheaded youth of thirteen and his younger companions, Tony the Chicano, Ezra the little black boy, the slyly grinning Eurasian girl, Iris, the fiery haired (and tempered) Irish miss, Maggie — they stood in wonderment at the pleasant response to their comments, then relaxed, grinning.
“What kinda refreshments?” asked Frank, the towhead.
“That all, Grandmaw?” yelled the dark-featured Tony. “No pot? No booze? We’ll come in your house for some real chow. Refreshments? Lemonade?” The others howled in glee.
Miss Palmer felt quite sick but persisted, nonetheless. “Whatever you want,” she said slyly. “I got” (purposely reverting to their form of communication) “some stuff inside you never seen before. Good grub and a lot of gold coins. A collection. I figured maybe you’d want to take a look.”
They gazed at her more respectfully. Frank looked at the others. “Old Grandmaw’s maybe got something. Wanta see?” Gold coins glittered in the eyes of each child:
They followed their leader through the gate of the picket fence and into the house behind Miss Clara Palmer, who had finally reached her individual breaking point.
“Now,” said Miss Palmer, “here you stay until you learn the rudiments of language and deportment which the Board of Education has not seen fit to bestow upon any of its students for the last ten years.
She was sitting at a worn wooden table in the huge windowless basement of the old house. Ranged around one end and part of the adjoining sides were her young charges, chained to things that were firmly embedded in the concrete walls. They were terrified and, for once, quiet.
The least terrified was the young Mexican boy, Tony. He spat at her and shouted, “My father, he kill you for this!”
They all started walking at once, and Miss Palmer banged her hand on the bell and raised the whip.
She stared at them and they were quiet again. “At present,” she said, “You are illiterate young ruffians. You have no manners, no knowledge whatever, and a culture that belongs back in the caveman era. Before you get out of here you are going to be well-mannered, cultured, moderately educated young people, a credit to the future of your country.”
The Eurasian girl, Iris, said, “I’m scared. Why you do this?”
“I just told you,” said Miss Palmer. “Parents and teachers alike are responsible for the way the young are growing up these days, and I am going to prove that decency and intelligence
“You are a God-damned old bitch!” shouted the Irish girl, Maggie.
Miss Palmer rose quietly from her desk and, whip in hand, approached the redheaded spitfire.
“One more remark like that,” she said, “and you will feel this whip against your legs. I do not wish to hurt you but if that is the only way you can be taught, then so be it. Is that clear?”
She looked around at the young, grubby, frightened faces and thought with satisfaction,
Back at her desk, she said in her pleasant, no longer icy-edged, schoolteacherish voice, “Now, children, I will explain how you are going to live down here. There will be no more privation than is necessary. Your chains are long enough so that you can lie on the floor and this evening I will bring down some blankets for you. Hot meals three times a day—”
“Hey, Grandmaw,” the oldest boy, Frank, taunted, “how we gonna pee?”
The bell sounded loudly. “Do you want to feel the whip?” she demanded. “First, you spoke without raising your hand. Second, I am not your grandmother nor anyone else’s. Third, you committed a vulgarism in referring to a natural function of the body. Keep still, all of you!” and now the iciness had returned.