Authors: Lori Nelson Spielman
Here I am, in my very own one-room schoolhouse! And this time, every student is ravenous to learn. This is a teacher’s dream. This is
my
dream!
T
wenty minutes later I’m driving through Englewood. I try to focus on the fact that one of my favorite singers, Jennifer Hudson, grew up here, and ignore the fact that her family was murdered in this very place. A shiver goes through me. I’m relieved when I pull up to a large green house on Carroll Avenue that looks perfectly safe. But what’s with the sign in the front yard?
It’s hard to believe Sanquita Bell, three months’ pregnant and suffering from kidney disease, is a senior. The girl who looks to be of mixed race is as tiny as a twelve-year-old. Her wan face is barren of makeup, and her skin is silky and shiny, like pulled toffee. But it’s her hazelnut eyes that break my heart. They’re the weary eyes of a much older woman—one who’s seen far too much of a cruel world.
“I’m sorry I’m late,” I say, shedding my coat and gloves. “I saw the sign for Joshua House, and I thought I had the wrong address. What is this place?”
“A shelter for homeless women,” she says matter-of-factly.
I stare at her, thunderstruck. “Oh, Sanquita, I’m sorry to hear that. Has your family been here long?”
“My family ain’t here.” She rubs a hand over her still-flat belly as she speaks. “My mom, she moved to Detroit last year, but I refuse to live there. My baby ain’t gonna have that kinda life.”
She doesn’t define
that kind of life
, and I don’t ask her. I bite my lip and nod.
She crosses her arms over her chest defensively. “Don’t go feeling all sorry for me. Me and my baby’s gonna be just fine.”
“Of course you are.” I want to wrap her in my arms, this poor homeless girl, but I wouldn’t dare. It’s obvious this young lady doesn’t take kindly to comfort. “I don’t have parents, either. It’s hard, isn’t it?”
She lifts her shoulders dismissively. “I wanted my baby to know her daddy, but that ain’t gonna happen.”
Before I have time to reply, a short brunette rounds the corner, a baby on her hip.
“Hey, Sanquita. This your new teacher?” The woman takes my elbow. “I’m Mercedes. C’mon. Me and Sanquita will show you around.”
Sanquita lags behind while Mercedes leads me from the utilitarian kitchen into a spotless dining room. Two women fold laundry at a dining room table. In the living room, two more sit in front of an old television, watching
The Price Is Right
.
“This is nice,” I say, and look back at Sanquita. She looks away.
“Nine bedrooms in all,” Mercedes tells me, her voice tinged with pride.
We stop outside an office door, where an imposing black woman sits behind a desk, punching numbers into an adding machine.
“This is Jean Anderson, our director.” Mercedes knocks on the open door. “Miss Jean, come meet Sanquita’s teacher.”
Miss Jean raises her chin. After giving me a thorough once-over, she lowers her eyes to her adding machine and resumes punching numbers. “Hello,” she mumbles.
“Hi,” I say, leaning in with my hand outstretched. “I’m Brett Bohlinger. I’ll be working with Sanquita while she’s out of school.”
“Sanquita,” she says without looking up. “You need to get that prescription filled today. Don’t forget.”
My arm falls to my side and Sanquita glances at me awkwardly. “Uh, okay. See you later, Miss Jean.”
We climb the stairs, Sanquita a step ahead of Mercedes and me. “Miss Jean’s cool,” Mercedes tells me. “She just don’t trust white people much.”
“Gee, you’d never guess.”
Mercedes busts out laughing. “You’re sassy. You and Sanquita are gonna get along just fine, aren’t you, Quita?” Sanquita doesn’t respond.
Mercedes and I are still chatting when we reach the top of the stairs. I look up to see Sanquita standing at a bedroom door, drumming her fingers on one of her crossed arms.
“Thanks for the tour,” I tell Mercedes, and hurry into the bedroom.
A weathered bedside table separates a set of twin beds, made up with faded blue bedcovers. Two mismatched dressers sit on either side of a window that overlooks the street. Sanquita takes a seat on the bed. “We can work here. Chardonay’s at work.”
There’s no chair, so I perch beside her on the bed, careful not to stare at her swollen hands, her eyelids puffy with fluid, or the patches of pink skin on her arms and hands that look as if they’ve been scratched raw.
“How do you like it here?” I ask, fishing her folder from my satchel.
“It’s straight. Not too much drama. That last place I stayed didn’t have no rules. I got my purse stole there, and some crazy lady thought I was messing with her. She tried to fight me.”
“Oh, my gosh. Were you hurt?”
“I didn’t care about me. I was just worried about my baby. That’s when I came here.”
“I’m glad you’re in a safe place now. How are you feeling?”
She shrugs. “Okay. Just tired, that’s all.”
“Take care of yourself. Let me know if there’s anything I can do for you.”
“Just help me get my diploma. My baby’s gotta know her mama was smart.”
She says it as if she won’t be around to tell the baby herself, and I wonder just how sick this girl actually is. “It’s a deal,” I say, and pull a chemistry book from my bag.
After an hour, I have to force myself to leave Sanquita. I could spend all day teaching this child. Chemistry is especially difficult for her, but she listens carefully as I explain, and keeps trying until she finally succeeds.
“I usually suck at science, but today I actually get it.”
She doesn’t attribute her success to me, nor should she. Still, I nearly burst with pride. “You’re a hard worker,” I say, and slide her folder into my satchel. “And you’re one smart girl.”
She studies her fingernails. “When you coming back?”
I open my planner. “Well, when would you like to see me again?”
She shrugs. “Tomorrow?”
“You’ll be finished with your homework by tomorrow?”
Her eyes go cold and she slaps shut her chemistry book. “Never mind. I know you only gotta see me two times in the week.”
“Let’s see,” I say, studying my calendar. The only unscheduled slot tomorrow is an hour at noon reserved for lunch and paperwork. “I can come at noon. Does that work for you?”
“Yeah. Noon’s okay.”
She doesn’t smile. She doesn’t thank me. But still, I leave feeling warm.
I
call Brad on my way to Wentworth Street and leave him a message. “This job was made for me, Brad! I’m on my way to Peter’s house, so wish me luck.”
When I arrive, an obese woman opens the door, a telephone at her ear and a cigarette between her fingers. This must be Autumn, Peter’s mother. She’s wearing a baggy T-shirt with a picture of Sponge Bob. I smile at the whimsical character, but she simply jerks her head, which I take as a gesture for me to enter.
The stench of cigarette smoke and cat urine nearly knock the breath from me. A black wool blanket tacked over the picture window blocks any natural light from infusing the stuffy room. On the wall I can make out a framed picture of Jesus, his eyes beseeching and his bloody palms outstretched.
Autumn snaps shut her phone and turns to me. “You Peter’s teacher?”
“Yes. Hi, I’m Brett Bohlinger.” I take out my ID photo, but she doesn’t bother to look at it.
“Peter! Get out here!”
I smile nervously and reposition my satchel on my shoulder. Autumn plants her fists on her hips. “Goddamn it, Peter. I said get out here, now!” She barrels down a hallway and I hear her pound on a door. “Your teacher’s here. Get your ass out here before I break down the damn door!”
Peter obviously doesn’t want to see me. The rant continues until finally I step toward the hallway. “Look,” I say. “Why don’t I come back another time …”
Suddenly the door swings open. At the end of the gloomy hall, a figure takes shape. A large boy, with shaggy brown hair and a sprout of fuzz on his chin, lumbers toward me. Instinctively, I take a step backward.
“Hi, Peter,” I say, my voice shaky. “I’m Miss Brett.”
He breezes past me. “No shit.”
T
he one-hour session with Peter seems more like three. We sit at the Madisons’ sticky kitchen table, but he refuses to look at me.
Within earshot, Autumn yaks on the phone to someone named Brittany. Her gravelly voice competes with mine, and I deliver my instructions loudly, determined to win this contest. Peter simply grunts, as if I’m a huge annoyance he’s forced to endure. I consider myself lucky when I get an occasional terse, one-word answer. By the end of the session I’ve learned far more about Brittany than I have about him.
F
reshly fallen snow covers the windy city like a layer of white frosting, and the entire region slows to a crawl. It’s nearly five o’clock when I trudge up the stairwell and unlock my office door. I turn on the light switch and spot a fabulous vase of orchids on my desk. How thoughtful of Andrew. I tear open the enclosure card.
Congratulations on your new job, Brett.
Couldn’t be happier for you.
Best Wishes,
Catherine and Joad
What was I thinking? Andrew’s never been a flower kind of guy. I tuck the card back into its envelope and make a mental note to invite Catherine and Joad for Thanksgiving dinner.
The red light on my office telephone blinks and I lift the receiver to check my messages.
“Hello, Brett. It’s Garrett Taylor. Just feeling a little anxious, wondering how it went today with Peter. My four o’clock canceled, so I’m available whenever you are.”
I dial his number and he picks up on the first ring.
“Hello, Dr. Taylor. It’s Brett Bohlinger.”
I hear him sigh. It sounds like a sigh of relief rather than annoyance.
“Hi, Brett,” he says. “And it’s Garrett—no need to call me Doc.”
I like his informal tone, like we’re colleagues.
“Everything go all right today?”
“I still have my hair, so I’m considering it a success.”
He laughs. “That’s good news. So he wasn’t so bad?”
“Oh, no, he was a complete asshole.” I slap a hand over my mouth and my cheeks flame. “I’m so sorry. That was totally unprofessional. I didn’t mean—”
Dr. Taylor laughs. “It’s fine. He can be an asshole, I agree. But maybe, just maybe, we can help this little asshole develop some social skills.”
I tell him about Peter’s reluctance to come out of his room.
“But he finally came out when he heard you say you were leaving. That’s positive. He wanted to meet you.”
The dark cloud that’s been trailing me since I left Peter’s house lifts. We discuss Peter for another ten minutes before the conversation takes a personal turn.
“Were you a classroom teacher before you took this homebound job?”
“No. I’m a disaster in the classroom.”
“I doubt that.”
“Trust me.” I lean back and prop my feet on my desk. Without meaning to, I plunge into the story of my day substituting at Douglas Keyes, embellishing it for entertainment purposes. It’s freeing, hearing him laugh at my tale, like a lead balloon miraculously rising and floating off into the heavens. I’m guessing this hour would cost me a couple hundred bucks if I were sitting in his office.
“I’m sorry,” I say, suddenly embarrassed. “I’m wasting your time.”
“Not at all. I’ve seen my last patient, and I’m enjoying this. So,
even though your day as a substitute was a challenge, you knew teaching was your passion.”
“Honestly, it’s my mother who insists it’s my passion. She died in September and left me instructions to try it again.”
“Ah. She knew it suited you.”
I smile. “I guess so.”
“I have great respect for your profession. Both my older sisters are retired schoolteachers. My mother taught, too, for a short time. Believe it or not, she actually taught in a one-room schoolhouse.”
“Really? When was that?”
“Back in the forties. But as soon as she got pregnant, she was required to resign. That’s how it was done back then.”
Shamelessly, I do a quick calculation. His oldest sister was born in the forties … he’s pushing sixty, minimum. “That’s not fair,” I say.
“Certainly not, although I never sensed she regretted it. Like most women during that era, she spent the rest of her life as a homemaker.”
“What made you choose your profession?”
“My story is a bit different than yours. My father was a physician—a cardiac surgeon. Being the only son, I was expected to join him after med school, and eventually take over his practice. But somewhere between med school and my internship, I realized I craved relationships with my patients. During rotations it was always the same issue, ‘Taylor,’ my supervising physician would say, ‘you can’t make money talking to patients. Get the facts and shut the hell up.’ ”
I laugh. “Too bad. I wish more doctors cared.”
“It’s not that they don’t care. It’s just that medicine has become an assembly line of sorts. The doctor’s got twenty minutes to get the patient diagnosed and out the door, with either a prescription
in hand or a referral for further testing. Then it’s on to the next patient and the next. It wasn’t my style.”
“Well, from what I can sense, you chose the right specialty.”
It’s six thirty when we finally hang up, and I’m as relaxed as a cat in the sun. Peter will challenge me, no doubt about it. But I have an ally now, in Garrett.
Mine is the only car left in the dimly lit parking lot. Without an ice scraper, I use my mitten to brush the snow from the windshield. But beneath the snow lurks a layer of ice, too thick to crack with my hands.
Sitting in my car with the defroster blasting, I spy the red flash from my cell phone. Four text messages: one from Meg, one from Shelley, and two from Brad. Each is a similar version of the same message.
How was ur day? How was crzy kid?
I type a quick reply to each, feeling a lump in my throat swell until I can barely swallow. I rub it down and work to breathe.
Nothing from Andrew. Not even a simple,
U ok?
T
he drive home is akin to an obstacle course. Drivers aren’t used to winter conditions yet, and every block or two it seems I have to swerve around a fender-bender, or double back to avoid a traffic standstill. Finally, at eight twenty, I pull into the parking structure. Just as I turn off the ignition, the date on my dashboard catches my eye. I rotate the key and the dashboard lights up again. November 14.