It was the end of second period. An announcement came over the PA. Administration needed the staff to meet in the gym during snack. While technically that included me, I figured I really didn't need to be there as subs tend to be exempt from these sorts of things, so I headed to the restroom instead. I was sure I'd hear about whatever it was later.
I had just gotten back from the restroom when the in-class phone rang. It was the secretary, and I just knew what she was going to ask. The fourth period she wanted me to cover was choir, not too far from the room I was in for the day. The bell was just about to ring, so I headed over.
And here's where this all makes a very hard left turn...
As security let the class in, Mr. C, the band teacher next door, clued me in to the issue. Ms. C, the choir teacher (no relation--different C-name), was on campus. That announcement? It had to do with the death of a student.
And it hit the choir teacher hard.
Mr. C texted the choir teacher for plans, and he got the class started. They had a competition coming up the following weekend, and they needed to do a run-through. Better if the teacher is there, but the student leaders know enough to get something accomplished when a sub is there.
(Think Glee when I say "performance". Singing. Dancing. Contemporary radio hits music. I've covered the choir class before, but not lately. The current choir teacher replaced the choir teacher who retired last year.)
The students hadn't been informed of the death yet. They were going to do it in waves. Just as soon as they got the counselors in place.
The class got set up. The girls warmed up. (All-girl choir.) They got into position. They started working on blocking.
I sat and watched. It hit differently when I knew what was coming.
Then the phone rang. I was to send two students to the library. The notifications were starting.
I sent the girls on their way.
They were curious as to being sent to the library. (When students get called out of class, they are never called to the library. Attendance office, usually. Sometimes counselor's office. Maybe health office. Or front office.) But they went.
Then security showed up with another list. Another five students headed to the library.
After those girls left, an email went out school-wide. Student wasn't named, but the student's passing was announced.
The remaining choir girls started doing some figuring. The student must have been involved in the school musical as the choir girls already gone had all been in the musical. As had their teacher (been involved in staging it).
They managed a run-through of their show. This was a little weird as all their soloists were in the library. But, the backup gets rehearsed alone quite a bit, so they were able to do it.
They had just finished a full run through (which took about 20 minutes) when Ms. C returned to the class. She knew that the girls had already heard. I let her know that while they had heard much of it, they did not know the student's name.
Ms. C provided it.
And that's when I realized I knew who the student was.
It was the end of class, and several of the students were in tears. Some had returned from the library. They were processing. Naturally.
I headed back to the class I was in for the day. And the day prior, and the day following.
During sixth period (statistics), I had a couple students I recognized from period four. One did not make it to sixth from fourth period. She had been one to be summoned to the library. I was not surprised to not see her in class.
While the statistics students didn't do their work (I was warned they've got senioritis and weren't going to be very productive), I perused the online attendance for the class. The school is on a block schedule, and we were on the even day.
I took the attendance back a day. Looked at third period. Then I took the attendance to the next day and looked at third period.
Yup. They had removed the student from the attendance. They wouldn't be in class the next day. I had seen them the day before. In class.
I... Yeah. This might hit me harder than I thought it would. (There's more story here, but this post is long enough.)