Read A Storybook Finish Online
Authors: Lauralee Bliss
A STORYBOOK FINISH
by Lauralee Bliss
3 LAURALEE BLISS is a multi-published author of award-winning inspirational
fiction. Lauralee enjoys writing
novels that are reminiscent of
a roller coaster ride for the reader.
Her desire is that readers will turn
the pages until they reach the end
and come away with both an entertaining
story and a lesson that ministers
to the heart. Besides writing, Lauralee
home schools her son and enjoys gardening, roaming
yard sales, visiting historical sites, and hiking a mountain
trail. She invites you to visit her web site at:
www.lauraleebliss.com
Books by Lauralee Bliss
HEARTSONG PRESENTS
HP249—Mountaintop
HP333—Behind the Mask
HP457—A Rose Among Thorns
Don’t miss out on any of our super romances. Write to us at the
following
address for information on our newest releases and club
information.
Heartsong Presents Readers’ Service
PO Box 719
Uhrichsville, OH 44683
Or visit www.heartsongpresents.com
4 A Storybook
Finish
Lauralee Bliss
5 To the fundraising reps and workers of Great American and
their families, many of whom are ardent readers and supporters
of my books. Thank you so much!
With thanks to Stephen McDowell and the Providence
Foundation for the use of their book, “In God We Trust Tour
Guide” in the writing of this novel.
A note from the author:
I love to hear from my readers! You may correspond
with me by writing:
Laura lee Bliss
Author Relations
PO Box 719
Uhrichsville, OH 44683
ISBN 1-58660-8347
A STORYBOOK FINISH
Copyright 2003 by Lauralee Bliss. All rights reserved. Except for
use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in
whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical, or
other means, now known or hereafter invented, is forbidden without the permission of Heartsong Presents, an imprint of Barbour Publishing, Inc., PO Box
719, Uhrichsville, Ohio 44683.
All Scripture quotations are taken from the King James Version of
the Bible.
All of the characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any
resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or to actual events
is purely coincidental.
PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.
6 Once upon a time lived a crazy, stressed-out, fundraising
consultant.
She arranged programs for schoolteachers who wanted to raise
money for student projects. He, a mean, grizzly man taught in a
dark foreboding classroom at Western High, and he was the one she
feared the most. Every day he would pace back and forth before his
chalkboard, wondering how he would tongue-lash the poor fundraising
consultant the next time she called. And every day she
would brave the phone lines to carry on a decent conversation with
him. She tried to help him organize a program that would raise the
money he needed But, alas, she didn’t know if triumph or failure
existed in her future.
Lindsay Thomas snapped open her eyes and giggled. What
a fairy tale that would make. The mean teacher versus the innocent
fundraising consultant. The only question was, Would it
have a happy ending? She shook her head. Enough of that. I
have work to do.
She pulled out a checklist and scanned it. Sponsor folders,
prize poster fliers, classroom envelopes, team goal charts. Uh,
prize bag full of toys, prospect lists—” She halted and whirled
to the empty cabinet. “My brochures for the sale! If my
brochures aren’t delivered today, I can’t kick off that fundraiser
in the morning at Western High. That history teacher
will have my head on a silver platter.
Wading through the cardboard boxes in her office that
contained previous shipments, Lindsay managed to reach the
7 front door of her apartment. On the stone steps sat three
mangled boxes bound with tape, dropped off by the delivery
man. No doubt they had been tossed in the back of some
dirty truck like garbage. The ripped corners of the boxes
revealed the slick, colored paper poking out of their shrink
wrap. The corners were crinkled from the rough treatment.
With a groan, Lindsay dragged in the first box that
must have weighed forty pounds. She inhaled a breath to calm her
rapid heartbeat and lugged in the other boxes. She then
plopped down on the carpet to complete the destruction the
delivery service had apparently started.
At least they’re here. She sighed. The brochures showed pictures
of chocolates and other treats the students would sell to
family and friends. Now she had everything to kick off the
fundraising event bright and early the next morning.
When the history teacher, Jeff Wheeler, had called on the
phone a few weeks back, asking her for a painless promotion
so the junior class could raise money for the prom, Lindsay
was delighted. She loved the idea of doing a program at her
alma mater, Western High. She talked him into signing up
for a program in which the students would sell items from a
brochure and which guaranteed the money he requested.
Instead of the usual enthusiasm she received from teachers
eager for revenue to meet their needs, Jeff Wheeler had
grumbled. “Why I was appointed to do this is beyond me,” he
said gruffly. “I’ve been in this school only a year, and they lay
this responsibility on me. They must like the idea of initiating
fresh blood. ‘Here’s the peon of the teaching force. Let him
run the fundraiser for the junior class.’”
“I’m sorry to hear that, but—”
“I was hired to teach history, the same as you’re hired to
8 conduct fundraisers. I never spotted the junior prom on my
list of teaching responsibilities. It’s just another thing I have
to do. My plate is full enough as it is.”
Lindsay wondered if the guy was really this uptight or if life
in general treated him badly. Maybe his wife had burnt the
morning toast or shrunk his favorite Rugby shirt in the wash.
He rattled on about the quizzes he still had to correct while
Lindsay thought back to her own junior prom and the wonderful
time she’d had with a guy named Ron. She had pleasant
memories of the evening—great dancing, good food, and a
lovely corsage with a scent that carried her across the dance
floor. She’d never spent more on a dress in her life.
Unfortunately, after graduation, Ron left for college on the West
Coast. They hadn’t spoken in years.
Jeff Wheeler continued. These students need history more
than a prom, if you ask me. No one can tell you anything about
the history of our nation. When I ask the classes what ship the
Pilgrims sailed on, they say the Carnival Cruise Line.”
“i’m sure they’re just joking,” Lindsay managed to say when
Jeff paused to draw a breath. She never knew guys to be talkative,
but this one had already outdone himself in ten minutes.
Maybe he had to get things offhis chest.
“One student actually put that answer on a test. I took ten
points off his paper. His father called me up, asking me why I
took off ten points when the question was worth only three.
When I told him I wouldn’t tolerate that kind of answer on a
test, the father said I had no sense of humor. He said I should
give the kid twenty points for creativity. Sure I would, if this
were a creative writing class. This is history. They’re supposed
to know historical facts. I wish the parents would also understand
that.”
9 Lindsay looked at her watch, thinking about the other
clients still awaiting her attention that day. She wondered
how long he would ramble on. This was a primary fault of
hers, the inability to cut off clients when they were in the
midst of a diatribe. She felt that if she did interrupt she would
face a cancelled contract. That would mean less in sales and
less money in her pocket.
“And I might as well tell you,” he went on, “I’m not thrilled
about working with salespeople. I’ve had bad experiences with
telemarketers. And those vacuum cleaning people who knock
on your door in the middle of dinner, forcing you to eat a
plate of cold spaghetti—”
Lindsay dearly wanted to interrupt and move on to other
things. She prayed the sales figures for this group would outweigh
the time lost in contacting other clients.
Jeff continued. “The kind that want to pick your pocket
when your back is turned. I don’t trust them. The only reason
I’m even doing this project is to try to get my foot in the door
of this school. I want to do some great things, like a history
club, for example. Or maybe even a history quiz bowl. But all
that needs money.”
“Sounds like some fine ideas the students would appreciate,”
Lindsay interjected, surprised she could sneak a word in edgewise.
“Perhaps after this project you would consider raising
money for those events?”
“This is plenty for me to handle right now. If this fundraiser
is a bust, then it won’t happen. How do you plan to ensure its
Success?”
“We have a wonderful prize program to motivate the students
to sell.”
“What kind of prizes? Not that cheap stuff you spend five
10 bucks to win at the county fair.”
Lindsay proceeded to tell him about the prizes: animated
phones, lava lamps, cameras, CD players. She also told him
about the first-day prizes and how the beginning of the sale
was critical to its success.
“Well, Miss Thomas, I expect it to be painless and profitable.
I haven’t the time or the gumption to deal with problems.
Fundraising is a necessary evil, but there’s nothing I
can do about it. I’m saddled with it. You understand, correct?”
Lindsay offered a salute to the phone sitting on the desk
while answering with a calm, “I’ll do my best to ensure a
satisfactory program, Mr. Wheeler.” She knew the importance
of instilling confidence in an irate teacher as she had been
taught to do in sales school. Yet all she wanted to do was get
off the phone and run to the bathroom for an aspirin to
relieve her headache.
“Just be sure you raise me the money I need, and everything
will be dandy.”
This guy’s a genuine toad on a lily pad, she thought, returning
to her prep work for the fundraising start. How someone
could live with a person like that went beyond her sense of
reasoning. During the last few days leading up to the sale,
Lindsay contemplated the success of the project. The idea of
initiating a program with an agitated sponsor did not bode
well for its success. Lindsay, however, was determined to make
it work. She had dealt with teachers’ emotions in the past.
She would put her best foot forward and do what needed to be
done to raise Jeff Wheeler the money he required. In the end,
he would sing her praises. That was the essence of her job as a
fundraising consultant.
Lindsay carried a stack of brochures to the office, nearly
11 tripping over a cardboard box left from a shipment of prizes.
Prizes, she knew, were the key to motivating the students to
sell. If they sold a certain number of items from the brochure,
they won the prizes: from banks filled with candy to stuffed
cartoon characters, to a radio or even a talking telephone.
She had sat up for hours one night studying the prizes,
making mental notes on how she would present the items to
generate enthusiasm among the students. In the conferences
she attended, the speakers told the sales reps how to make
the most out of their presentations. Playing with the prizes
in front of the student body was part of the game plan. She
went over it all step by step, everything she would need to
relate to the students, all the information in the mere twenty
minutes Jeff Wheeler had allotted for the assembly. Again,
she winced at the tone of his voice that spoke of his control
over the situation.
“You get a twenty-minute assembly, and that’s all I can
give,” he’d told her when she discussed aspects of the presentation
only yesterday. “I have enough trying to teach my
classes with the amount of time they give me on the schedule.
Please don’t waste time going over details unrelated to the
sale. Make it short and simple.”
“I feel sorry for his wife,” Lindsay grumbled, placing the
materials she would need for the next day inside a crate. The
Bible says contentious wives are the ones that live in the corner
of a roof. What about contentious men? Do they live in the basement?
Actually, he belongs in a pond where he can croak out his problems
to his heart’s content. I’m not to blame for his predicament with
the junior class. She exhaled loudly. Her breath fluffed the pale
brown bangs sweeping across her forehead. All I do in this job
is deal with other people’s hang-ups. No wonder I have no energy
12 left to handle my own.
Her hands began to shake while trying to put a folder of
envelopes inside the crate. This pent-up anxiety over Jeff
Wheeler and the presentation would never help her in the
end. She paused in her work to offer up a prayer for God’s
favor. Not long ago, she had heard a famous preacher share
words of wisdom about one’s thought life. No matter what she
might construe about Jeff and his personality, she must shift
her mind to good thoughts about the upcoming program.
Think on things that are true and of good repute, she recalled
from Scripture. Okay. The students are gonna love the prizes. The
Silly Slammers and Goofy phone will talk right on cue so the entire
assembly goes wild. In the end, Jeff Wheeler will smile and thank
me for a job well done. Lindsay nodded at this array of thoughts
that replaced the doubt.
That evening she doused any remaining flames of worry
with music from her favorite CD, along with a relaxing bubble
bath. Everything will go fine, she reasoned to herself, tracing a
path through the bubbles. Jeff Wheeler will be civil, and the
fundraising program will be a huge success. Oh, Lord, only You can