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Magdalene waits in the passage for Mary to come. Other girls pass by hurrying on to the next lesson. Mary comes along swinging her satchel over her shoulder, cursing. If that old fart’s teaching next term I’m off to join the convent and be a ******* nun, she says, looking back along the passage, her face flustered, her hair in her eyes. Magdalene says, what up? Has old Murphy had a go at you again? Mary sighs, moves along the passage and Magdalene follows, her eyes moving over Mary’s swaying hips, taking in her thighs outlined by her school skirt. Old Murphy’s long overdue to retire, Mary says, she should be in the graveyard of St Luke’s with dog’s ***** on her tombstone. She and Magdalene pause by the girl’s toilets, then enter in, making sure there’s no one in there, before they quickly and greedily kiss. They part and stand back staring at each other. I needed that, Magdalene says, all through R.E. I’ve thought of it, despite Fr Gragin going on about the Blessed Trinity. Mary says, I’d have done the same if the old **** hadn’t been on about the Civil War and what do I care? Mary Moran, says she, will you stop chewing gum and sit on four legs of the chair. I think she was after to giving me the ruler across my palms, instead she gave me 500 lines on how to sit on a chair and listen. They move to the mirror and attend to their hair and faces. Far off a bell rings. They look at their reflections in the mirror. They look at each other, then and touch hands and lips and part, one to double maths, the other to boring craft and art.
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Apr 29, 2012
Apr 29, 2012 at 10:43 AM UTC
BETWEEN LESSONS.
Magdalene waits in the passage for Mary to come. Other girls pass by hurrying on to the next lesson. Mary comes along swinging her satchel over her shoulder, cursing. If that old fart’s teaching next term I’m off to join the convent and be a ******* nun, she says, looking back along the passage, her face flustered, her hair in her eyes. Magdalene says, what up? Has old Murphy had a go at you again? Mary sighs, moves along the passage and Magdalene follows, her eyes moving over Mary’s swaying hips, taking in her thighs outlined by her school skirt. Old Murphy’s long overdue to retire, Mary says, she should be in the graveyard of St Luke’s with dog’s ***** on her tombstone. She and Magdalene pause by the girl’s toilets, then enter in, making sure there’s no one in there, before they quickly and greedily kiss. They part and stand back staring at each other. I needed that, Magdalene says, all through R.E. I’ve thought of it, despite Fr Gragin going on about the Blessed Trinity. Mary says, I’d have done the same if the old **** hadn’t been on about the Civil War and what do I care? Mary Moran, says she, will you stop chewing gum and sit on four legs of the chair. I think she was after to giving me the ruler across my palms, instead she gave me 500 lines on how to sit on a chair and listen. They move to the mirror and attend to their hair and faces. Far off a bell rings. They look at their reflections in the mirror. They look at each other, then and touch hands and lips and part, one to double maths, the other to boring craft and art.
terry-collett
Written by
Apr 29, 2012
Apr 29, 2012 at 10:43 AM UTC
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