Xander grunted and sat back. He figured Milo meant it, but he could also see his friend's struggle. It was enough that Milo took him seriously.
The history teacher was in a good mood today, and she had hung up all of the posters the kids had made all around the room. There were varying degrees of skill, talent, and care on display. Some people had done little more than put some words on colored craft paper while others had put in a lot of effort and research. There were a couple of posters missing from the group, but nearly everyone had passed the assignment. The teacher pointed out the ones with the most well-researched facts, Alec being one of those, and congratulated them on their research. One of the posters was not even particularly well made, but it did have a decent amount of research about the first war in Iraq that involved the modern USA. She praised the research but admitted the presentation was lacking. None of them did she say who they belonged to, though the names were on the back of all the posters except for a few that had put them on the front.
Austin was bright red and looked like he wanted to disappear. His poster showed... effort... but there was a dirty dog paw print on one edge and a tear in the corner, and some of the glue did not want to stick. Alec assured him it looked fine, but he was not consoled.
The teacher pointed to the posters relevant to what they would be studying that day and got started teaching. There was a lot she had to cover, and she did so very well, bringing a certain amount of liveliness to the class. She brought up some of the things mentioned on the posters but mostly followed her own lesson and fleshed everything out for the students. Their homework was basic "who did what when" history work answering questions from the book.
As they were leaving, Alec paused to frown at the Iraq war poster. Something looked wrong, but he couldn't put his finger on it.