"Hey," called out Corky. "Thought you might have left the country."
Jesse Little Horse simply grinned in that cocky, mocking way he had.
Jimmy walked past them without so much as a sideways glance until Corky reached out and grabbed him by the arm.
"Hey," he said, louder this time. "I'm talking to you."
"Yeah," chimed in Jesse. "Didn't think we'd have to teach you a lesson on the first day of school."
Jimmy could hear his grandpa talking in his head, that day on the Little Bighorn battlefield: You can have courage and face the tough things that happen to you.
He jerked his arm out of Corky's grasp. Then he turned and looked at his two enemies. "Come on, then," he said quietly. "Might as well pick up where we left off."
Jimmy stood, arms by his side, and waited. His calm gaze went back and forth between their faces.
Corky and Jesse were still grinning, but they noticed something about Jimmy McClean. He had grown a bit over the summer, so he was almost as tall as they were. But it was the look in his eyes that was different. They could tell he was not afraid.
Slowly their expressions changed. Their grins faded away. Corky Brin glanced nervously at Jesse Little Horse. Jesse, Jimmy could tell, did not know what to do.
Jimmy, meanwhile, was still waiting. He was still calm and clearly not afraid.
He waited a bit longer. "Well, maybe next time," he said. Turning, he walked through the doors without looking back. He knew they were looking at him and he might have to actually fight them. But he was ready, and he knew they knew that.
Jimmy McClean had a feeling this year would be a better year. After all, Crazy Horse, when he was Light Hair, had endured worse than Corky Brin and Jesse Little Horse. If Light Hair could do it, Jimmy knew he could, too. No sweat.
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