Read A Storybook Finish Online
Authors: Lauralee Bliss
95
knew what many papers contained—meaningless sentences
filled with historical errors and grammatical mistakes. He
should get on Mrs. Coates to teach her classes better writing
skills. He flopped down, looked at the video in his hand and
inserted the tape into the VCR. To his surprise, Lindsay had
stopped the tape right at the scene where the hero and heroine
of the story confess their love. He watched the characters
in the soft moonlight, singing a love song to each other.
Maybe he needed to be like the hero and wait for the heroine
to return and find her future. Maybe he should wait for
Lindsay to discover if her future included him, without trying
to push and shove his way into her life. He already had an
inkling she belonged in his.
Jeff stared at the calendar book placed prominently on his
desk, wishing it were Thursday. He met with the art teacher
running the new fundraising program and offered his assistance
on that day if the teacher needed it. Inwardly, his real
motive in helping was to be with Lindsay again. Every day
since the pizza gathering he’d thought of her with her head
turned upward, singing the song from the movie State Fair.
He rented that film also and could see why a woman would
like it, with a brother and sister who each find their true love
in unexpected ways. It held nothing of historical significance
that whetted his appetite, but he told himself that whatever
interested Lindsay should also interest him.
The students filed in for another day of class in which he
would begin a discussion of the Lewis and Clark expedition.
To his surprise, he noticed Jewel and Troy sitting on opposite
sides of the classroom. He had never seen them sit apart before
and wondered what spawned the distance. Troy seemed
96 to have his head in the clouds, gazing at times out the window
to the sports fields beyond. Several physical education
classes were taking advantage of the warm fall day to kick a
soccer ball around. Jewel sat on the other side of the room,
doodling in her notebook or chewing on an eraser tip. They
seemed as far as east was to west. When Jeff posed a question
to the class, hoping for Troy to throw up his hand or shout
the answer, he remained quiet and distant.
When the bell sounded and the students began leaving, Jeff
stopped Troy, who was about to scoot out the door. “Hey,
what’s up?”
“Nothing.”
“Nothing? I find that a little hard to believe. I’m expecting
my straight A student to know the answer to every question.
You look as if you’re on Mount Everest. Anything you want
to talk about?”
“No.” Troy began edging his way to the door.
“You sure? We’ve had some good talks in the past.”
“Look—I really don’t need you hanging on me, okay? I can
take care of myself. And I’m not your straight A student. I’m
just like everyone else.”
“Of course you’re an A student. You have a great mind. I
can see you as a scholar or a history professor one day. I want
you to keep going. I’m thinking of having an advanced placement
history class next semester, and I’d like you to take it.”
“I’m not going to be a history major, okay? I changed my
mind. And look—I’m not your prized student or anything
else. I gotta go, or I’ll be late for my next class.”
Jeff said no more. His throat closed over, watching the
young man shuffle off. Troy must be feeling pressure from the
other students and likely from one source. Robbie. Jeff shook
97 his head. He remembered his time in high school when fellow
students badgered him and called him The Worm. It
affected him greatly, more than he knew. Maybe he should
tell Troy about that time in his own life. He needed to get
past it and look to the future. Jeff shook his head. He doubted
Troy would listen to much of anything right now.
Jeff ran a hand through his hair, mulling over the situation,
when he heard a soft voice like a gentle breeze. He jerked his
head upright to find Lindsay entering the classroom. She
looked amazing, outfitted in a navy blue dress. He would
have stared more, were it not for the cloud of Troy marring
his thoughts.
“Hey, I just wanted to thank you for the great time the
other night,” she said. “I’m here to do a pre-start with Mrs.
Meyer, the art teacher.” She paused. “Is everything okay? You
don’t look so good.”
Jeff sat there, amazed by her perception. Lindsay was
beginning to see right through him. “It’s Troy. I think some of
the students are pestering him for being the hotshot of the
history class. He’s starting to lay low. He won’t answer questions
in class or even talk to me.”
Lindsay set her briefcase down on the floor and sat in a
nearby desk. “Do you think Robbie’s in on it?”
“More than likely. I don’t know what to do. I can’t let Troy
slip away. All the gifts inside him will be lost. He’ll never
reach the potential God has for him.”
“He won’t reach it anyway without God.”
“That’s true. I was making headway with him. But ever since
the field trip to D.C., our relationship has soured.” Jeff sensed
his frustration building. “I thought it would be a great trip
where the students could discover a real God in American
98 history. Instead, they seem to be slipping further away.”
“Jeff, don’t read too much into it. Just remember it’s up to
the students to decide for themselves what they’re going to do
with the knowledge you give them. You can’t keep them from
sliding down the slippery slope if that’s where they want to
go. You can try to keep them from going astray by talking to.
them. You can pray for them. That’s about it. God gives each
of us a free will.”
“I guess.” He blew out a sigh of disappointment. “You
know, at first I was hoping the money from the fundraiser
would get me where I need to go with my teaching career.
Teaching is great, but there’s so much more to it. What I
really want to see is these young people change for the better.
Money isn’t going to do it. Maybe new programs won’t either.
It’s working with them, taking time to listen, showing them
that God loves them and cares about them.”
“Maybe I could talk to Jewel again and find out what’s happening
among the trio,” Lindsay suggested. “She and I hit it
off pretty well the first time. Even if I have to eat at that
greasy spoon again.”
“Greasy spoon?”
“You know, the Hickory Diner. Mom always called it a
greasy spoon. I went there not too long ago with Jewel. They
pile your plate to the ceiling with the greasiest French fries
you’ve ever seen.”
“If you think it will help—talking to Jewel, that is. I’d like
to know what’s going on myself.”
“I can do that.” Lindsay rose to her feet.
Jeff watched the dress she wore caress her legs as she moved.
He found himself jumping to his feet as well. “He would need to do
some scouting the weekend after next. Want to come along?”
99 She crinkled her nose in such a way that he nearly chuckled.
She looked like a petulant child when a plate of brussels
sprouts was placed before her nose. “Scouting? Like Boy
Scouts?”
He allowed his pent-up anxiety to escape in a rumble of
laughter. “No, no. Scouting as in searching out a historic site.
Baltimore to be exact.”
“Baltimore! That’s a long way from here.”
“Only about two and a half hours, if the beltway traffic isn’t
too bad. We’ll soon be starting the War of 1812 in class.
want to scout out Fort McHenry, learn a few things, get
patriotic. It’s where the original Star-Spangled Banner flew,
you know, and where our national anthem was born.”
She hesitated for a moment. “Okay. I went to Baltimore
once when I was a kid. I guess I haven’t been much of anywhere
since I was a kid. And when you’re a kid, you never
remember where you’ve been.”
“Great. And this time we’re on our own. No students.”
“Sounds good.” The smile she gave before exiting the classroom
carried him through the remainder of his afternoon
classes and well into the evening. He envisioned her singing
songs to him, with the navy blue dress sweeping her petite
form. Maybe on the way to Baltimore, she would sing more
Songs from her favorite movies. The thought helped to ease
the anxiety he felt over Troy.
100 The overwhelming stench of fried food assaulted her nostrils
while Lindsay sat in the booth, playing with a spoon inside a
cup of coffee. Jewel was already fifteen minutes late. She
wondered if it had been a mistake to get involved with the
students like this. Yet seeing Jeff’s disappointment over both
Troy and Jewel, Lindsay knew she needed to do something.
She didn’t know why Jeff’s reactions affected her so much.
Perhaps she really was developing an affinity for him. Did
this signal the start of something new in their relationship?
She nearly laughed when she considered their rocky beginnings
and the looks of disapproval that had once radiated from
those deep blue eyes of his. Now she found herself becoming
even more involved with him, to the point of accepting a trip
to Baltimore. How could this be the innocent fundraiser
suddenly hooked up with the grouch of Western High? Only
God could help arrange such an unlikely relationship. There
was wisdom in allowing Him to find her the perfect husband
and in the most imperfect of circumstances. At the outset,
Ron seemed a fitting candidate. He was successful, rich, good
looking, and he wanted her, or at least she thought he did. But
the night he came, asking for a date, she saw something different.
He was not the match for her. She would rely on God’s
peace to guide her and not her mixed emotions.
At that moment, the door to the diner opened, and several
young people walked in. She saw the top of Jewel’s curly
101 head and then Robbie wearing a sleeveless shirt that displayed
his bulging muscles. Terrific. Why did she have to
bring him along?
“Hi,” Jewel said rather shyly, slipping into the booth opposite
Lindsay. Robbie took a seat on a nearby stool and ordered
a soda.
“Does he have to be here?” Lindsay whispered.
“Why not? Robbie hasn’t done anything wrong. In fact, I
think he’s been great–showing me how much Troy was trying
to control me.”
Lindsay shook her head in confusion. “I thought that’s
what you wanted. You were literally begging Troy to
announce his undying love for you. That’s why you wanted
the Goofy phone.”
“I used to think so.” She shook her head at the waitress who
came with plastic coated menus, stained with dried ketchup.
“When Robbie told me how a lot of the students are mad that
Mr. Wheeler is giving Troy better grades on his essays and
tests, it got me thinking. Maybe it isn’t such a good idea hanging
around him. I mean, I work just as hard as he does. Why
should he get special favors just because he likes history?”
Lindsay gaped at the accusation before glancing at Robbie’s
back. He slurped away on his soda while talking to a friend
occupying a neighboring barstool. “Jewel, none of that is true.
The only reason Jeff, that is, Mr. Wheeler, took Troy under
his wing was because he saw a great potential in him. He
cares about all his students.”
“I don’t know. He sure doesn’t act like it. It’s like Troy is the
model student, and the rest of us are nothing.”
Lindsay could see the war Jewel faced—loving a guy one
moment, hating him the next. Her mother often said when
102 she was young that teenagers were kids and adults mixed up
in one body. Yet, as she stared at Jewel’s innocent face, she
only wanted to help her. How could she keep this young
woman from making the biggest mistake of her life? Not that
Lindsay wanted her going out with Troy instead. Rather she
wanted Jewel to look beyond relationships to the One who
created relationships in His own timing. She wanted to convince
Jewel that she didn’t have to search for acceptance in
people but could find acceptance and importance with God.
“Hey, it’s getting kind of hot in here. Wanna take a walk|
with me in the park?”
“I don’t know.”
Jewel cast a questioning glance at Robbie. The look grated
on Lindsay’s nerves. Now who was controlling whom? When
Jewel announced she was going for a walk, Robbie shrugged,
to Lindsay’s amazement. She thanked God for the window of
opportunity.
Lindsay and Jewel meandered out of the restaurant. Orange
rays of sunlight gleamed behind the brick buildings that comprised
Main Street. She used to know every inch of this place,
but over the years the town had changed and the people with
it. She thought of herself and Ron and how different they had
become since they walked these sidewalks and drove the
familiar streets.
They walked along until they came to the park. A sprinkling
of fall leaves covered the grass. A small fountain, raised