cLASS, cOFFEE, & CONFRONTATION
PRELUDE
In a small, semi-detached home, clutter had won. It started at the front door and continued non-stop, foot-by-foot. Every piece of trash imaginable, a conglomeration of items that the resident had discarded after use, carpeted the floor. Time magazines rifled and left open to the last page read; mail envelopes with torn flaps and the contents not removed; TV, VCR, DVD, and CD remotes scattered; Bantamville Better Foods grocery bags emptied and flattened; Scotch tape dispenser, tissue boxes, throw and bedroom pillows used and strewn; Taco City wrappers with remnants of cheese stuck inside; t-shirts, socks, underwear, jacket, shoes, sneakers abandoned. So much for the living room. The kitchen and bedroom were deep with more stuff.
A young man, oblivious to his surroundings, sat at a desk and focused on a computer screen. He moved the mouse like an artist creating a masterpiece. Devoid of human expression, he worked the cursor, searched, then found the page he sought. When he saw an interesting tidbit, he held his breath as he read paragraphs or studied photos. “Yeah.” He muttered to no one but himself. “I can use that. Save to file.” Then after he clicked to highlight, copy, and paste, he exhaled and relaxed until the next caught his interest, and he held his breath again.
With the information secured in the computer memory, he moved back to his video palette and continued to search. Hours went by before he logged off. Enough photos and article excerpts were stored to make the time worthwhile.
The doorbell rang, and the young man switched off the monitor before he got up to answer it. “Yes?” He opened it as wide as the chain lock allowed.
“Hello,” the voice on the other side said. “I’m the real estate agent. Are you Mr. Zuno?”
“Uh, no. He’s my landlord.”
“Do you know if he’ll be here soon? He said I should meet him here.”
“I guess. He left a message that he’d be by. I didn’t realize he meant today. What’s your name?”
“I’m from the Worthen Agency. Benjamin Worthen. Ben.”
The young man looked through the opening at an athletic, clean-shaven man of about thirty. He wore slightly wrinkled jeans and a blue blazer over a more wrinkled, button-down yellow shirt that highlighted his tanned face and crewcut, dirty blonde hair.
Just then a car pulled up to the curb. Both turned to look. A gray-haired man dressed in a tailored suit, crisp white shirt, and red tie got out of the driver’s seat and waved.
“There he is,” the young man said. “I guess it was today.”
“Yes.” The real estate agent stepped back. “Hey, I’ll just go and talk with him. Thanks.”
He spun and hurried down the six steps to the curb, introduced himself, and shook hands. Art Zuno smiled and said a few words, then grabbed his briefcase from the car and walked towards the steps. Ben followed him up to the door where the young man waited for them.
“Hi, Scott,” Zuno said.
“Hi, Mr. Zuno.”
“Scott, this is Ben Worthen. He's from the Worthen Real Estate Agency. Ben, meet Scott Berger.” He wasted no time on small talk and got right to the point. “Scott, I’m putting the house up for sale, and Ben will be the agent handling it.”
“Really? So does that mean I’ll have to move?”
“Maybe, maybe not. Right now we need to … ” Zuno paused and frowned as he looked around the living room. “We need to clean this place up so it can be shown. You can stay until there’s a deal, but you have to keep it clean.”
Ben spoke with Zuno as they walked through the property. It was a typical semi with a living room, a smaller dining room, a kitchen, and a pantry on the first floor. Hardwood floors that were installed recently ran through the downstairs. The second level had a good-sized master and two smaller bedrooms along with a bathroom with vanity, toilet, tub with shower, and undersized linen closet. Fixtures were new, and the floor and walls were ceramic tile in a herringbone design. The unfinished but open basement offered decorating opportunities. A fresh coat of paint throughout would turn it into a millennial’s dream first home. Ben told Zuno the property would sell quickly. Young business people looking for good deals were interested in the neighborhood because the train station nearby made it ideal for commuters.
Since Ben left no stone unturned, he asked Zuno about Scott. His living in the house could keep buyers from jumping in.
“Art, are you going to continue to have a tenant once we start showing the property?”
“You mean Scott? That’s a touchy situation, Ben.”
“Why?”
“Scott is the son of a good friend. He’s twenty years-old and doesn’t have much in the way of prospects. His mother, my friend, pays the rent. Telling him to leave will be difficult.”
“You realize, Art, that the prospective buyers are people who will want to live here themselves. A tenant in place may turn a lot of them off.”
“I know. You see, Scott had some trouble in his hometown. At school. He never graduated. And his mom thought it best he leave that environment, so Bantamville provided a change of scene, a good step. He’s doing online courses, and she says he should be able to get a GED. Once he has that, he’ll be in a better position to get a job, so he won’t be here.”
“Okay. I’ll work with it,” Ben said.
“I appreciate that, Ben. And he’ll leave before the property is closed on once it’s sold. I’ll make sure of that.”
“Great.” Ben’s quiet response said he was unconvinced Zuno had that power but knew he had to be careful not to lose the listing. “Let me finish up here, and we can be on our way.”
He took about an hour to complete the preliminary walk-through, take his notes, and discuss things with Zuno who seemed to want to sell quickly, turn a profit, and from the looks of the place, get the property off his hands. He said he would write a proposal and e-mail it to the owner for his approval. They decided to list it at $175,000, which Ben said fit the neighborhood and the size and condition of the house.
On his way out, he found Scott at the computer searching the internet for something. Unaware that Ben came up behind him, he paused to read information from a school website on the screen.
“Scott, thank you for your time. I’ll be leaving now.” Ben’s eye zeroed in on the name of the school, and he hesitated as though to process it.
“Yes, Scott, thank you,” Zuno chimed in. “And, hey! Seriously, clean the place up, okay? Scott, I don’t want to have to throw you out, okay?”
“Sure,” Scott said, still focused on the monitor. “No need to threaten. I’ll get it in shape. Bye.”
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1 Getting to Know Her
“We have an issue here at the Pirate Ship. Can you help?”
The scratchy voice over the radio elicited a response instantly.
“I’ll send Jessica right away. What’s up?”
“Uh, let’s just say the slide down into the cove was a little too exciting for a three-year-old. He did what I would probably do if I had to walk the plank.”
“In the water?”
“Thankfully not. But the slide is much slipperier than it was a few minutes ago.”
“Okay. Jess will direct the clean-up. Can you take care of the kid and anyone else who might be, uh, grossed out?”
“Can do. It’s pretty calm. Just need to clean the slide.”
“Keep me posted. Thanks.”
Sunshine. Temperatures between eighty and ninety degrees. Shrieks of laughter. Blasts of hip-hop, rap, and pop music over the speakers. Splashes of water on her legs. The slight scent of chlorine. The occasional child ignoring his need to go to the bathroom until he was at the top of a water slide and it was too late. These elements filled Kassi Stanton’s days at her summer job as a greeter at the Wet Zone water park. And she drank in every element. The title Greeter was misleading though. Her real job involved keeping the teenagers who worked there on task. And despite the occasional voiding on the slide, she enjoyed the summer weather at a job where people were happy and had fun. It was a one-eighty from her real one teaching English to Bantamville’s high schoolers. Though maybe it was a three-sixty since she still supervised teens.
As she enjoyed her lunch break, Kassi read a text from her friend, Renee Dumont, who always got any school news first and shared it right away even in the summer. Now she passed along the information about their new principal, Rikki Parks. It raised questions about Parks’ doings at her previous school. Renee said she would check Google for more. Though she trusted her friend to send it her way, Kassi wanted to meet the new boss. She had been around education long enough to realize she needed to introduce herself within her first week on the job and make a first impression, good or bad.
So she planned to interrupt her vacation job, take a day off from the water park, and get a first-person view.
When she ventured into Bantamville South High School on that hot August day, the smell of bleach and chemical cleaners attacked her nose. Summer in a school building meant super cleaning and disinfecting time. Custodians jammed the hallways with everything they emptied from the classrooms: desks, books, podiums, filing cabinets, posters, supplies, and anything else not nailed down. This gave them room to scrub and wax floors, wash walls, disinfect desk surfaces, and return the rooms to their shiny, untouched state, at least for a month or two before September brought a new year’s opening, and about one thousand teenagers stampeded through the halls.
As Kassi made her way through the main hallway, she met Hank Broadbent, her favorite custodian. The one thing every education major is told in college to ensure success at school is to befriend the building’s custodian. He or she can make life heaven or hell. If you like trash cans that get emptied each night, doors that open, close, and lock, desks that aren’t graffiti-covered, file cabinets positioned strategically, and floors and fixtures free of dust, he or she held the power. Kassi did and took her professor’s advice to heart from her first day of teaching.
Some custodians, though, made warming up to them tough. She remembered Walt Torrance, the custodian during her first year, who resisted any of her attempts to be nice to him. Coffee and donuts. A friendly hello. Lottery tickets for holiday gifts. Nothing worked, and she never figured out why. She didn’t need to. He was transferred that summer.
But she got along well with Hank from the start, and from the moment of their first meeting fifteen years ago, they were friends. He just happened to clean her building. As an added perk, he had accurate inside information on district happenings, so Kassi hoped he could fill her in on Parks. He didn’t disappoint.
“Hello, stranger,” he said when he saw her coming down the hall.
“Hi, Hank. How’s it going?”
“Back from that cushy summer job of yours already?”
“For a day. I need to check on something here.”
“So what do you think about this one?” He pointed down the hallway.
“Who?”
“The big guy. Parks.”
Kassi smiled. She was sure he knew the principal was a female, but he still referred to Parks as the big guy. “I guess she’s okay. I don’t know. She’s new yet.”
“Yeah, that’s true. But she has quite a record.”
“Really?” Renee had filled her in on the rumors, but Kassi promised herself that she would give the new principal the benefit of the doubt before she let the rumors affect her judgment.
Hank related the tales of Parks’ past for her. She came into a school district like a gangbuster, took down almost everything that existed, and replaced it with the policies and people she wanted. Kassi thought that standard for most new administrators, but the gossip mill overflowed with stories of unfairness from Parks. In her last school, rumor said, she denied tenure to ten out of fifteen teachers. The ten did not fit her idea of what a teacher should be in the classroom or in lifestyle. Living with someone of the opposite sex without a marriage certificate doomed six of the ten. Being openly gay took down three others. Discrimination never became an issue because beginning teachers have no protection, a hidden advantage to a principal and school district that allowed them to get rid of a nontenured teacher at will.
“I’m just saying that’s one story,” Hank said after he highlighted more details of that rumor.
“Not a great one,” Kassi said. “Hank, let’s hang in there for a while and see what she does here. In fact, have you seen her today? Because I came back to meet her.”
“She’s around, yeah. Hey, good to see you. Enjoy the rest of your summer.”
“Thanks, Hank. You, too.” She watched Hank push his mop and bucket down to the next classroom for cleaning then walked around the corner and into the main office and said hello to the secretary. “Hi, Lil. How are you?”
Lilith Chiarello had been a school secretary for as long as Kassi had been teaching. She had the one quality that every principal looked for in a right-hand assistant. She knew all the secrets of the school, the teachers, the administration, and just about everything else—and kept them. Or at least knew which ones she needed to keep!
“Hey, Kassi. Surprise, surprise. What are you doing here?”
“I came back to town for a day or two and figured I’d stop in to see how things were here and maybe meet the new principal. Is she in?”
“Yes, she should be down there.” Lil pointed towards the office of her new boss. “Take a walk and see.”
Kassi stepped slowly and softly toward the door, stopped before she put her whole body in, leaned her head through the doorway, and said, “Hi. Do you have a minute?”
There before her stood Dr. Rikki Parks, newly appointed principal, dressed in an Anji Veltri baby herringbone jacket and matching pants, navy blue silk blouse, and blood-red sandals. She would find out later that they were Bolton Limited Gladiator-Strap Stacked priced at about three hundred dollars. With her perfectly coiffed black hair, she made a first impression that would stick with Kassi for quite a while.
Parks presented the polar opposite of the previous principal, Lou Hudson. Rumor had it he owned five suits, each a variation of black or navy blue. He also owned ten white shirts and ten ties: red, blue, black, gray, red and blue, red and white, red and gray, red and black, yellow, and orange. He would start the week with all his suits hung on the top, side rack of his closet. Each day after wearing a suit, he would hang it on the rack at the back of his closet so as not to repeat the outfit. At the end of the week, the suits on the back rack would be collected and either sent to the cleaners or put back on the rack for the next week to repeat the process. He wore the same color combinations each week. And from her friendship with him that went back to the days when they chased race horses at the track, Kassi knew it to be true. The details came from Lou, himself, who sometimes shared too much personal information.
She wondered about the saying “Clothes make the man.” It fit Lou. Did it apply to a woman, too?
She snapped to attention when Parks extended her hand and motioned her to sit. “I’m Kassi Stanton,” she said as she took a seat. “I’m the English/Language Arts team leader. I wanted to stop by and introduce myself and say welcome.”
“Well, thank you.” Parks stood behind her desk. “It’s nice to meet you.”
“I wish you luck in the district. I’m sure you’ll find it an interesting one after you’re here for a while.” Kassi noticed the absence of a chair behind Parks.
“Yes. Yes. I’m sure it will present challenges, too.”
“I think you’ll find capable people at all levels.” Kassi hoped to give her a positive impression of the staff.
“Yes, yes. So far, everyone’s been helpful,” Parks said. “You’re the E/LA team leader? I hope you’ll let me pick your brain soon about the duties of that position. The board has asked me to do a white paper on the pros and cons of restructuring the hierarchy to eliminate the team leader position. It is something I want to look at seriously.” She paused after she said it and focused on Kassi for her reaction.
Kassi nodded slowly. “Interesting. That’s an idea I hadn’t heard before.” The suggestion that her position might be eliminated did not foster relationship-building.
“We have to focus our efforts on raising our school ranking. I’m not sure team leaders offer much in doing that.”
Ouch! Kassi thought. Nothing like making a good first impression.
“Really? Have you worked with the team leader structure in other schools?”
“No. But it seems an extra expense to pay ten or fifteen people extra money to unpack books and supplies. Because that’s pretty much what you do. Am I right?”
Ouch again! Is my job about to be eliminated?
“Mostly we work with our individual teachers to find methods that help them to be more effective. And we serve as mentors to new teachers.”
“Right. I’ve been told that. But I’m not sure that is what’s happening on every team. And whether it’s the most efficient way to operate.”
“Maybe if you see it at work, it will convince you.”
“I’m sure you will give me insights to help me in my decision. We’ll set up an appointment to talk about it.”
“Of course,” Kassi said. How did a meet-and-greet turn into your position is probably unnecessary? And is Parks sold on getting rid of the team leaders? Has she already made up her mind? And why doesn’t she have a chair?
At that point, Parks’ cell phone buzzed to alert her to a meeting with board members in ten minutes. She gathered her things, thanked Kassi for coming in to meet her, shook her hand, and said she needed to go.
As she watched Parks stride out of the office, she recalled a scene from The Odyssey movie she used in class when she taught the epic poem. Parks strutted down the hallway and carried her cell phone and laptop the same way Odysseus does when he takes the sack given him by the wind god. Both adventure and danger await him and his men if the bag of breezes, squalls, and gusts is opened too soon. Kassi had wondered that day which way the winds would blow for the school in the coming months and what adventures awaited. When, she had wondered, would Parks open that bag?
In four weeks, when she officially reported back for the start of the new year, she would find out. For now, Wet Zone awaited her return. As she gathered her thoughts and was about to leave Parks’ office, a bird chirped. Her first instinct made her check her cell phone. No number or caller’s name flashed. She heard it again. She turned in its direction near the wall to the left of the door and saw a cloth embroidered in a purple and white crossroads design lain over a dome-shaped object the size of a Tiffany table lamp. She lifted it, caught a glimpse of thin metal strips and a tiny, yellow and green shape. She shuddered, dropped the cover, and walked out of the room as quickly as she could, and thought Is that an omen?
“Bye, Lil. Have a good rest of the summer. Gotta go.” She scooted out of the main office and headed for the parking lot.
About to get into her car, she heard Hank call her. “How’d it go?”
“Okay, I guess, Hank.”
“Any predictions for the year?”
“No. Not yet. But I’ll give her a C+ on this one. Maybe a B. We have to wait and see.”
“Not an A, huh?”
“She may have some good points. I’m the optimist, you know?”
“Okay. We’ll see. Enjoy the rest of your summer!”
“Thanks, Hank. You do the same.”
“Optimistic. Okay.” The word hung in the air as he walked away.
Optimistic, but guarded. Yeah. Guarded, she thought as she drove away. I don’t think I’ll spend much time in Dr. Rikki Parks’ office this year! Of all things, does she have to have a pet parakeet?