Ten years ago.
It was a quiet night before Christmas. In the house all the lights were out and seemingly everyone had gone to sleep. Suddenly, in the middle of the night, this silence was interrupted by a short creak of a door, coming from the upper floor. Someone whispered something, but maybe it was just a wind outside. It was hard to tell from the living room where the Christmas tree was located. Another short creak on the upper floor, followed by whisper and quiet laugh. Then again silence for a moment, which seemed to be very long.
A sound of carefully placed and silenced steps appeared on the upper floor. They slowly moved to the stairs and moved down. They stopped for a moment, each time the stairs creaked.
"Honey, creaking is just a security measure, so no one can get in our house unnoticed," whispered a man, while silenced footsteps approached the living room.
"It just reminds me of our teenage years," a woman whispered back, with a smile in her voice.
"Yeah, your parents garded you well," man whispered. His words were followed by short and quiet femenin giggle.
"Hush, knight," the woman said quietly. "Put the biggest present in front, that's for Robbie," she continued after kneeling next to the Christmas tree.
"What did you get for him?" a man asked, while placing the big, wrapped present, in front of the Christmas tree.
"Something that every man would want for Christmas," the woman quietly replied, while placing and arranging other presents under the tree.
Man chuckled. "Don't you think he's too young for that?"
"Shut up, you dirty mind," the woman giggled. "He's just four years old and he'll get something nice from Lego."
"I don't know what you're talking about," the man smirked. " I was thinking about PlayStation. Marta and Annie also would love it."
"Marta is just six and Annie is just eight, and I don't want to turn this house into a non-blinking-sleeping-zombie world," the woman got serious.
Suddenly, a light switch clicked and the room was filled with bright light. At first, both adults seemed to be surprised by the lights coming on, but after a moment their looks turned to a young girl who was standing next to a door on the opposite side of the room.
"Annie?" The man was surprised. "Is everything ok? Why are you not sleeping?"
Young girl, with dark brown hair , dressed in her pink pajamas, looked at her parents in disbelief. She tried to say something, but nothing came out.
"Lyers," she unexpectedly cried out, bursting into tears. "I hate you," she shouted and ran over to the door on the other side of the room, and up the stairs, into her room.
THE DARK SIDE
Episode 1
Present
The school bell rang and my last fall semester as high school senior was over. As usual for the last class of a semester, it was with our class head-teacher, who handed out our final mark reports. Classmates packed their stuff, if they had any left on their tables, in their backpacks and hurried out, wishing Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, or just wishing happy winter holidays; while our head-teacher Ms. Pine tried to hug as many of them as she could.
I was finishing packing and reorganizing my backpack, when I felt someone approaching my table.
"Annie, do you have a moment?" Ms. Pine asked. I looked up. She was standing on the other side of my table and looked at me with her big eyes. I never managed to tell the color of her eyes. They are somewhat between dark blue and dark gray, but her pupils are always so big. I don't know why, but it's so hard to look away, when I look into them.
"Yeah," I breathed out. Ms. Pine smiled and moved to her desk.
"I want to talk with you about your grades," she reached her desk and took out a kettle from under it. I gave her a confused look. In response she just smiled at me for a brief moment and disappeared into the bathroom.
"Grades?" I breathed out and became a bit paler with every moment she was filling the kettle with water in the bathroom. I grabbed my backpack and looked for my mark report. "Is there a problem?" I think I vocalized my thoughts. I must say that my surprise and confusion lies in the fact that I'm a very good student. Almost Excellent, if not perfect. I can't recall a time when I had a mark lower than 8 out of 10 in any of the subjects.
While I was examining my mark report, water from the tap in the bathroom stopped running and Ms. Pine returned to her desk, plugged the kettle in a power extension cord and pushed the button on it, for boiling to start.
"Would you like tea or coffee?" she asked, like she hadn't heard my question. I took my eyes off the mark report and with the same confused expression looked at her. There she was again - behind her teacher's desk, touching the top of it with her darkly red painted fingernails, looking straight at me with her eyes, while her lips curled up in a pleasant smile.
"Um... Am..." came out of me, instead of an answer. Maybe some more unarticulated sounds, until the kettle started boiling and she turned away, to get cups.
"Let's have multi-fruit tea," she said, arranging tea cups on her desk and taking a package with tea bags out of one of her desk shelves. Meanwhile, I returned my attention to my mark report and scanned it one more time, but still I had no clue where the problem was hiding.
"Annie, come here," Ms. Pine said, as soon as the kettle turned off. "Or you would like me to bring tea over there?"
I looked up, but she wasn't looking at me. At least not directly. She was busy pouring water in tea cups. "No," I breathed out. " I'm coming."
I closed my eyes, counted to 10, opened them, stood up and walked over to her desk.
Take a chair, come and sit down," Ms. Pine encouraged me. "What's wrong Annie?" she asked as soon as I took a chair from a nearby table and placed it next to her desk, to sit down.
"Um... You said you want to talk with me about my grades. Em... But..." I touched the tea cup on my side of the desk and instantly pulled my hand away. It was enormously hot. I looked up at Ms. Pine who sat down on the other side of the desk and nodded towards me, while wearing a smile on her face. After a short moment I continued: "But, I don't understand where's the problem with my marks?"
"Annie, why do you think there's a problem?" Ms. Pine placed a candy box and package with cookies on the desk between our tea cups. I looked down, in my tea cup, in which a tea bag was floating and coloring water in a darkish tone of red. "There's no problem. With an average mark of 9.63 out of 10, you have the highest mark among high school seniors this semester," she explained after a brief moment of silence.
"Then, everything is fine?" I asked with worry in my voice, not daring to look at her.