Read An Elm Creek Quilts Sampler Online
Authors: Jennifer Chiaverini
Marcia stopped at a door bearing a sign that read C
ONFERENCE
R
OOM.
She opened the door and let Sarah enter before her.
The conference room was roughly the same size as the waiting room, but it was almost completely filled by a large table. The four men and the woman sitting on the other side wore conservative business attire and stern expressions. Marcia closed the door and took a seat between two of the men. She gestured to a lone chair on Sarah’s side of the table. As Sarah sat down, the man closest to her poured a glass of water from a crystal pitcher and pushed it across the table to her.
“Thank you,” Sarah said. He ignored her.
“Well, let’s get started,” the man in the center began. “I’m Brian Turnbull, owner and CEO of PennCellular Corporation.” He reeled off the others’ names and titles so quickly that Sarah had no hope of catching them. She did get the impression that the group included the company’s top executives and representatives from the accounting department, but no one, it seemed, from public relations.
“It’s nice to meet you.” Sarah stood and tried to reach across the table to shake their hands, but she couldn’t quite make it. Embarrassed, she quickly sat down. Marcia smiled understandingly, but the others showed no reaction.
Brian Turnbull began by asking her the same questions she always heard at these interviews: what made her decide to go to Penn State, what she had accomplished at her last job, what did she think her strengths and weak-nesses were, and so on. She recited the answers she had prepared in advance, taking care to make eye contact with everyone around the table. They seemed satisfied with her answers, so Sarah’s anxiety began to ebb.
Then the man who had poured the water set down his pen and pushed his pad away. “Enough of this beating around the bush. How are your math and reasoning skills?”
Sarah started, not because the question was difficult but because until then no one but Mr. Turnbull had addressed her. And Mr. Turnbull had been much nicer. “I feel that they’re quite good,” she replied, trying to look confident. “As you can see from my résumé, I have a three-point-nine GPA in my accounting courses and experience in—”
“Yes, yes, I can see the résumé. That doesn’t answer my question.”
Sarah hesitated. Why did he look so annoyed? “Well—”
“Can you, for example, tell me how many grocery stores there are in the United States of America?”
“How—how many grocery stores?”
“Yes. How many grocery stores. You can include convenience stores if you need to water it down.”
Sarah stared at him. “Grocery stores. Sure.” She decided to take a drink to buy some time. She watched as her hand lifted the glass in slow motion to her lips. It trembled dangerously, and for an instant she imagined it sending a shower of water in all directions. She tried to smile as she carefully returned the glass to the safety of the tabletop. “I was probably sick the day they taught that.”
No one smiled.
Okay, wrong answer. “I guess I could try to figure it out.”
“Try.” The man on the end shoved his pen and pad at her.
“Okay, well, the population of the United States is about a quarter of a billion, right?”
No response.
“Okay, a quarter of a billion.” She scribbled the number on the pad, her heart sinking when she realized they weren’t going to give her a single hint. The interviewers’ silence made her nervous, so she described the steps in the problem aloud as she worked through them on paper. First she estimated the number of aisles in a typical grocery store, then the amount of time an average customer spent in line. As she used those numbers to calculate the number of customers per store per day, she knew her figures could be off by several thousand or by several hundred thousand, but there was nothing she could do to verify them.
She plowed on doggedly, since she had no other choice. As she worked, her nervousness hardened into anger. It was an unfair question, one with no relevance to the job she sought, one she had no chance of answering accurately. She had researched PennCellular, she knew everything there was to know about the latest trends in the profession—but none of that made any difference. All they cared about was this ridiculous grocery store tally.
The man on the end rolled his eyes and shook his head when Sarah had to double back to correct a mistake; she had been working with the number of people in the country rather than the number of families, which was a more appropriate figure since usually one person did the shopping for their household. She tried not to let the man’s disdain bother her, but she felt her cheeks growing hot and she wished she had never come. She raced through the last calculations. The sooner she finished, the sooner she could leave.
“Okay,” Sarah said at last. “If we have sixty-two million five hundred thousand shoppers—”
“That’s a pretty big ‘if,’ ” the man on the end muttered.
Sarah took a deep breath, fighting to keep the tremor out of her voice. “If that’s how many shoppers we have, we would need, um … four thousand, one hundred thirty-three and a half grocery stores. Except there wouldn’t be a half of a grocery store, so let’s say four thousand, one hundred and thirty five.” She stared at the figure. “That doesn’t sound right. It seems like there should be more than that.” She bit her lip and looked at the man on the end. “Is that right?”
He straightened in his seat, indignant. “How should I know?”
Sarah gaped at him. “But—”
“Well, I guess that should pretty much do it,” Turnbull said. “Do you have any questions?”
“Huh?” Her eyes were still fixed on the man on the end.
“Do you have any questions about PennCellular or the job?”
Questions—she had to ask some questions about the job. Frantically she searched her memory for the list she had prepared. Where was it? “Cell phones,” she blurted out. “You sell cell phones?” It sounded like a tongue twister. You sell cell phones by the sell shore.
Turnbull looked puzzled. “Yes, of course we do. I thought you knew that.”
“Oh, I did. I was just checking. Maybe you sell something else, too.”
“No, just cell phones.” He paused and studied her. “Anything else?”
“No—no, I don’t think so.”
“Well, then, we’re all set.” Turnbull rose and the others jumped to their feet. Sarah stood, her legs trembling. He reached across the table and shook her hand. “You’ll be hearing from us either way in a few weeks. Thanks for coming. Ms. Welsh will show you out.”
Sarah nodded. “Thank you.” She felt numb. Marcia led her to the exit and bid her good-bye.
Sarah spotted the truck in the parking lot and almost ran to it. “Thank God you’re here.” She took her seat and leaned back, closing her eyes.
Matt started the truck. “I’ve been here a while. They sure kept you long enough.”
“I spent most of that time in the waiting room. That was the most bizarre interview I’ve ever had.” She told him what had happened, not omitting a single strange or embarrassing detail.
When she finished, Matt shrugged. “Sounds to me like you handled everything just fine.”
“‘Just fine’? I sounded like I never made it past high school algebra.” Then she thought of something else and slapped a palm to her forehead. “Oh, no.”
“What?” “I calculated how many grocery stores there need to be, not how many there are.”
Matt glanced away from the road to look at her. “That doesn’t really matter, though, right?”
“What do you mean? Of course it matters. It’s a completely different issue.”
“Maybe he’s interested in how you tackled the problem, not in whether you got the right number. It’s not like he could check your answer, right? Maybe he was also trying to see how you respond to pressure.”
“Do you really think so?”
“Well, sure.”
“Then it’s worse than I thought.”
“Oh, Sarah.” He chuckled and shook his head. “I’m sure you did as well as anyone else they talked to. Probably better.”
“Think so? You didn’t see the waiting room. All those older men, with all that experience. How am I suppose to compete with them?”
“They probably wonder how they’re supposed to compete with someone younger who won’t expect as much money and won’t be thinking about retirement in five or ten years.”
Sarah looked out the window and said nothing. True, she did wonder why anyone with their experience would be interested in an entry-level job and why they would be out of work in the first place. But those men surely wouldn’t be out of work for long, not with their backgrounds. Everyone else who passed through that waiting room that day would probably have another job before she even had another interview.
Nine
T
wo days later, Sarah finished her work in the library and was ready to move on to the next cleaning and inventory assignment. But not right away. First, she wanted to continue her quilting lessons. She took the stairs two at time and hurried to the sitting room.
“Fine work,” Mrs. Compson remarked, studying Sarah’s finished Sawtooth Star block with a critical eye. “These stitches are a bit crooked here, but not so bad that you need to rip them out. Fine work for a beginner.”
“What’s next?”
“You’ll need to make templates for your next block, the Double Nine Patch. This block is still rather simple since it has no curved seams or set-in pieces, but it can be tricky. Some of the pieces are small and there are many places where the seams must match up perfectly or the design will be ruined.” As Sarah took a seat, Mrs. Compson handed her the template drafting supplies.
The Double Nine Patch block, Mrs. Compson explained, was one of many quilt blocks based on a three-by-three grid; they were called nine patches because a single large square was divided by the grid into nine smaller squares. In the Double Nine Patch, the smaller squares in the corners and in the center were further divided into nine even smaller squares.
This time Sarah made two square templates, one large and one small. She cut four of the bigger squares from the cream background fabric, then used the smaller template to make twenty-five little squares from the dark red fabric and twenty from the cream.
“The first quilt I ever made was a Nine Patch,” Mrs. Compson remarked, picking up some quilting of her own to work on while monitoring Sarah’s progress. “Not a Double Nine Patch, a Nine Patch. It looked like a checkerboard in all different colors.”
Sarah looked up from pinning two of the tiny squares together at the corners. “Did someone give you lessons like you’re giving me?”
“Hmph. My sister and I learned together, and our lessons were hardly this pleasant. Nothing ever went smoothly when Claudia and I were in the same room. See now, I think that’s where my mother went wrong. Instead of teaching us at the same time she should have taught Claudia first, a few years earlier, when I would have been too young to care.” She shook her head and sighed. “Perhaps that would have made a difference.”
“What happened? Will you tell me about it?”
Mrs. Compson hesitated. “If you’ll get me a glass of water first.”
Sarah jumped up and quickly returned with the glass. Mrs. Compson took a deep drink, then set the glass aside. “Well, then, I’ll tell you,” she said. “But don’t get so distracted that you don’t pay attention to your quilting. If your stitches aren’t good enough I’ll make you take them out.”
My sister, Claudia, was two years older than I, but since I was just as smart and almost as big as she was, people treated us as if we were the same age. Claudia was the pretty one; she had our mother’s thick brown hair rippling in shining waves down her back, while at that age my darker hair was always dull and wildly unkempt from running around outdoors. All the grown-ups said Claudia was the very image of Great-Grandmother Anneke, but they respected our ancestors too much to hold any of them responsible for my appearance. I did better with my lessons, but the teachers always liked Claudia best. Everyone did. She was always friendly and cheerful, while I was sulky and sensitive. I imagine it must have been a terrible disappointment to our mother, to have a child like me after doing so well the first time.
The winter when I was five and Claudia was seven, we had a blizzard. It snowed so terribly that we couldn’t go to school. Claudia was relieved; she had not learned her lessons for that day and dreaded to disappoint our pretty young teacher, Miss Turner, whom everyone liked. I, on the other hand, fretted for hours, glaring out of the nursery windows and stomping about. What if the other children learned something and I missed it? My mother assured me that none of the other children would be going to school that day, either, but I was not consoled until she promised to teach us something new that day. “But not reading or math,” she said, to my surprise. “It’s time you two girls learned to quilt.”
We had watched Mother sew before, but this was the first time we would be allowed to quilt, like our aunts and Mother’s grown-up lady friends. They used to quilt all the time. Some of their quilts may still be around here someplace—up in the attic, perhaps.
So Mother showed us how to quilt, very much as I have shown you, except with scraps from her sewing basket. We scarcely wanted to stop for lunch, we were having so much fun. We carefully selected the prettiest scraps, cut our pieces, and sewed them together. By late afternoon we had each finished several small blocks.