Leo arrived early on the first Monday of term. The Academic Support Centre hummed with that particular September light—too bright for indoors, too pale for outdoors. He sat in his assigned seat (C4, according to the laminated chart beside the door) and stared at the timetable.
“I don’t like it,” he whispered.
The pushpins suddenly seemed very sharp. asc timetables 2018
The timetable was pinned to the corkboard with three slightly rusted pushpins—a fragile monarchy ruling over twenty-eight desks, forty-two pencils, and one boy who couldn’t stop counting the ceiling tiles.
By October, Leo had memorised the timetable down to the minute. He knew that Mrs. Dhillon always started Literacy five minutes late on Tuesdays (staff meeting overflow). He knew that the Sensory Break on Thursdays coincided with the janitor’s vacuuming of the hall, which meant headphones were non-negotiable. He knew that the Thursday Social Communication roleplay was ordering at a café , and he had practised his line—“I’ll have a hot chocolate, please, no cream”—three hundred and seventeen times. Leo arrived early on the first Monday of term
“I know,” Mrs. Dhillon said. “But you’ve learned something bigger than the timetable this year. You’ve learned that you can survive the change after it happens. Not before.”
It was terrifying. But it was also a timetable. And timetables, he had learned, always tell you when the next safe harbour arrives. “I don’t like it,” he whispered
Every box was a promise. A narrow, colour-coded promise that the day would not spiral into noise, unexpected fire drills, or the sudden, terrifying collapse of routine.
Here’s a short draft story inspired by ASC timetables in 2018. The Last Train to Adjustment