There was something about the way Kaley's eyes sparkled even though there seemed to be no life from the exterior.
She was a quiet girl who kept herself to herself and hardly spoke unless spoken and it was as if she almost blended in with the dark and gloomy brown walls of the first period maths classroom.
From the exterior there was nothing particularly special about Kaley but she had a talent, a talent which could make her stand out from the maths class walls, a talent which could cost her more than her life.
She kept this talent hidden between the silence of her almost stitched together lips and thought it unwise to step out of her blended in persona and just drifted through endless days each the same as the last.
But on this particular day Kaley happened to notice something different about her maths class, there seemed to be a different energy in the room, she could feel it pushing against her own, it was like a moving current, pushing against her body as she took in each breath and she was unable to put her finger on what was causing this current but was on high alert as a unfamiliar face stepped through the classroom door.
His face wasn't like all the other faces of her class that just seemed to be all the same like they were all merged into one, as if they were just one person multiplied but his face was different.
He had these eyes that just pierced through you like a knife and these eyes so strange coloured, one was bright and sparkling and blue and the other dark and mysterious and brown and it was almost like he could see into the depth of her every thought and this scared her to the pit of her stomach.
Kaley had never seen eyes like this and was lost in the depth of them instantly and was almost late to answering her name on the register because she couldn't get his eyes out her mind. How could two eyes be two different colours, how was that possible and this question remained in her mind throughout the whole period and was only broken from thought when the mysterious stranger shadow towered over her desk.
