Addie and the King of Hearts

BOOK: Addie and the King of Hearts
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Addie and the King of Hearts

The Addie Mills Stories, Book Four

Gail Rock

With thanks to Addie's good friends,
Alan Shayne and Pat Ross.

Contents

Prologue

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Epilogue

About the Author

Prologue

I'm an artist now, and I live and work in the city. It's a landscape of cement and noise and crowds—all very different from the little town where I grew up.

In the city I hardly realize it's Valentine's Day until the shops display ready-made cards, and the bakeries turn out heart-shaped cakes and cookies to take home at the last minute. But when I was growing up in Nebraska in the 1940s, I looked forward to Valentine's Day for weeks. I cut hearts from paper doilies and composed funny verses for them, and I saved my allowance to buy red satin boxes full of chocolates. When the day finally arrived, it was always a contest with my friends to see who got the most valentines.

But the Valentine's Day I remember best was in 1949 when I was thirteen. That was when I first found out about love.

Chapter One

We were milling around the seventh-grade classroom that morning, laughing and talking. For once, almost all of us had been early. It was the first day back in school after the Christmas-New Year's holiday, and there was a lot of talk about what we all got for Christmas, and about the fantastic blizzards that had been smothering Nebraska that winter.

The main topic of conversation, however, was speculation about the new teacher we would meet that morning. Miss Collins, who had started teaching our class that fall, had decided to get married over the holidays. All the other girls thought that was very romantic, but I just thought it was stupid. Lots of the kids in our class were starting to exchange rings and “go steady,” and I hated all that mush. The whole idea made me laugh. I planned to grow up and be an artist and never get married.

I was sitting on top of my desk talking to my best friend, Carla Mae Carter. Carla Mae and her big family lived next door to my dad and grandmother and me, and we had been friends for years. My worst friend, Tanya Smithers, came hurrying through the door. Tanya had been my worst friend ever since I could remember. We annoyed each other a lot, but we continued to be a part of the same group. There were only 1,500 people in the town of Clear River, so sometimes you didn't have a big choice of friends. Tanya planned to be a famous ballet dancer when she grew up, and she was always twirling around on her toes or striking some dramatic pose to remind us all of how talented she was.

“Here comes Pavlova,” said Carla Mae when she saw Tanya coming toward us.

“If she tells me one more time that she got new ballet shoes for Christmas, I'll scream!” I said.

“Addie! Carla Mae!” Tanya said to us breathlessly. “Guess what I just heard when I went by the principal's office?”

“The principal got new ballet shoes for Christmas?” I asked sarcastically.

Carla Mae snickered.

“No, you idiots!” said Tanya. “Listen to me! We're getting a
man
teacher to replace Miss Collins!”

“What?” said Carla Mae. “You've gotta be kidding!”

“A man!” I said. “Yuck! That's awful!”

“We've never had a man teacher,” said Carla Mae. “There aren't any in the whole school!”

“I don't believe it!” I said.

“I'm telling you it's true!” said Tanya, annoyed. “The principal says he's going to be here in a few minutes.”

The rumor spread around the room as others overheard our conversation.

“Oh, ugh!” I said. “He'll probably be an old grouch.”

“Tanya, what does he look like?” Carla Mae asked.

“I don't know,” Tanya answered. “I didn't see him. But I heard his name. It's Davenport.”

“Like the sofa?” asked Carla Mae.

“He's probably covered with horsehair,” I said, laughing. “He's probably a million years old with a beard and warts!”

I got up and hobbled around as though I were an old man with a cane, and everybody laughed.

Suddenly Jimmy Walsh shot a paper airplane across the room at us and I grabbed it in midflight, making a spectacular catch. I was good at that sort of thing.

“That's Billy Wild's New Year's resolution!” Jimmy shouted to me.

“It is not!” shouted Billy from across the room. “He made it up! It's his!”

Everybody was always teasing me about liking Billy Wild, and I always insisted I didn't. I had to admit he was tall and handsome—with dark curly hair and blue eyes—and that he was one of the smartest boys in the class, and good at sports. But that didn't mean I liked him any more than anyone else. He was forever strutting around in his cowboy boots, showing off. We had known each other for years and we still always seemed to be arguing about something, so I didn't see how anyone could say I liked him.

I unfolded the paper airplane and read it to myself, then burst out laughing.

“OK, attention, everybody!” I shouted, running to the front of the classroom. “Here's Billy Wild's New Year's resolution!”

“It is not!” he shouted again.

Everyone was laughing, and I climbed up on top of the teacher's desk to read it aloud.

“Dated January 1, 1949,” I read. “I, Billy Wild, resolve for 1949 to kiss every girl in the seventh-grade class.”

Everyone screamed with laughter, and Billy's face got bright red.

“It's not mine!” he shouted.

“That's one resolution you'll never keep!” I shouted, and folded the airplane, then shot it back in his direction.

Suddenly everyone stopped laughing and the room fell quiet. I couldn't imagine what was happening; and then I realized that they were all looking at something behind me. I turned.

There standing just inside the door was a tall, blond, handsome, young man. For a moment I thought I must have seen him in the movies; then I realized that he looked a bit like Alan Ladd. Of course he had to be the new teacher. And he had found me standing on his desk, flying paper airplanes!

I stood there frozen. Miss Collins would have dragged me to the principal's office. He just smiled. He had a wonderful smile and crinkly blue eyes. I thought he was the most handsome man I had ever seen. I suddenly realized I was still standing on top of his desk.

“May I help you down?” he said to me.

He extended his hand and helped me down as the class snickered behind me. I was numb with embarrassment, both at being found on top of his desk and at the way he looked. He was so attractive that I felt I should look away.

“Won't you have a seat?” he said, and I sheepishly went back to my desk. I knew I should say something to him, but I was tongue-tied. That was not at all like me.

“My name is Douglas Davenport,” he said to the class, “and I'm your new teacher.” He turned to the board and wrote his name there.

Carla Mae, who sat behind me, leaned forward and whispered to me.

“Is he gorgeous? I don't believe it!”

I didn't say anything. I was still speechless.

Tanya leaned over to join in the conversation from her desk across the aisle.

“He is an absolute doll!” she said.

Mr. Davenport turned back to the class and noticed a watercolor hanging on the wall near his desk.

“Did someone in the class do this painting?” he asked.

I opened my mouth, but no sound came out.

Carla Mae spoke up behind me.

“Addie Mills did it,” she said, pointing to me. “She's the best artist in the class.”

“Oh, the paper airplane pilot,” Mr. Davenport said, smiling at me again.

Everyone laughed, and my face burned.

He was still smiling at me.

“Well, Addie,” he said. “I can tell you're very talented. Studying art is one of my hobbies. I'll have to talk to you more about that.”

Carla Mae swooned behind me and whispered, “You lucky dog!”

I just sat there staring at Mr. Davenport and feeling strange.

In the next few weeks we all got to know Mr. Davenport better, and it was soon clear that he was to be one of the most popular teachers our class had ever had.

All the girls agreed that he was an absolute dish, and though the boys thought we were ridiculous for gushing about him, they liked him a lot, too. We discovered that he was only twenty-four years old, that he drove a tan Chevrolet convertible coupe with white sidewall tires, and that he wore neat, tweedy suits and incredible argyle socks, and smoked a pipe. We spent hours discussing these little details about him, and I collected this information more avidly than anyone, though I never let on.

The strange feeling that had stricken me when I first saw Mr. Davenport still lingered whenever I would talk with him. I talked with him often. I felt I had much more in common with him than the other kids in the class. Somehow I was more grown-up than they were, and I was able to talk to him about all kinds of things that the others just weren't interested in.

I knew that I understood Mr. Davenport better than anyone in the class, because I was going to be an artist when I grew up and he was particularly interested in art. He had been in Paris at the end of the war and had brought back some French art books that he loaned me now and then. I couldn't read the texts because they were in French, but I pored over the paintings for hours and tried to copy some of the artists' styles with my own paints at home. Then I would discuss the paintings with Mr. Davenport, and he always seemed very pleased that he had somebody to talk to who understood art as well as he did. He encouraged me to continue my studies in art, and I knew there was a special bond between us, even if he was eleven years older than I.

By the end of January I realized that I was spending a lot of my time either talking to Mr. Davenport or thinking of a reason to talk to him—or just thinking of him for no reason at all.

I studied art more feverishly than ever so we would have something to discuss. I learned that he liked poetry, so I dug up a copy of Robert Browning that someone had once given me. I had looked at it scornfully when I first got it and had never opened it. I had thought love poems were disgusting. Now I studied them carefully, trying to find an appropriate verse to discuss with Mr. Davenport.

My grandmother wondered why I was sitting around the house all the time, reading and “mooning about,” as she called it, rather than going out with the girls. I couldn't explain it, but I just wanted to be alone. I stopped wearing jeans all the time and, for the first time in my life, worried about how my clothes looked. I stood in front of the mirror, wondering how I could look older.

My father threatened to take my favorite record and grind it up for fertilizer if I didn't stop playing it over and over. I told him he had no romance in his soul.

Chapter Two

By early february, only five weeks after I had first met Mr. Davenport, I realized that he had become the most important person in my life. My after-school chats with him were the highlights of my days, no matter how much teasing about being “teacher's pet” I had to take from the other kids. They didn't understand the real reason for my interest in him. I never discussed it with anyone, which was unusual for me because I usually said exactly what I thought about everything. This was different. I knew I had to keep it to myself.

One February afternoon I sat impatiently at my desk, watching Mr. Davenport write our English assignment on the blackboard. I wasn't paying much attention to what he was saying, because it was almost time to dismiss school for the day and I was rehearsing what I would say when I went up to his desk after class. I was returning one of the art books he had loaned to me, and I wanted to say something intelligent about the French Impressionists.

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