Read A Storybook Finish Online
Authors: Lauralee Bliss
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That morning several students bounded up to Jeff, ready to
hand in their money from the sale. Jeff nodded at them, taking
the money while rummaging around in the drawer for the
manila envelope that held the checks and cash from the last
several days. His hand patted around the inside of the drawer.
“Just a minute,” he told the students. He slid open the drawer.
No manila envelope. A jolt of fear passed through him. He
pulled out the length of the drawer and sorted through every
folder. He then opened the other drawers and pawed through
them. Oh, God, help me. Where is the money envelope?
Students began filing into the classroom for their history
lesson. They sat in their seats, staring wide-eyed, while Jeff
continued to ransack his desk. When at last he glanced up, he
saw the students looking at him in confusion. “Uh … open up
your textbooks to … to …” He shut his eyes for a brief
moment. “Just read the next section.” Where could the money
be? He searched every drawer then began hunting around
the classroom. The students’ eyes followed his every move.
Whispers abounded. Jeff came back and collapsed in his seat,
running a hand through his hair.
“Is something wrong, Mr. Wheeler?” one of the students
inquired.
“I just misplaced something.”
“I hope it’s not the money)” another student said.
The whispers grew to a tumult. Jeff ignored them and once
more shuffled through his desk. Perhaps he had inadvertently
brought the envelope home in his briefcase. He went through
the leather case but found no envelope. His home was bursting
with paperwork he would have to search through. Why is
this happening to me? If only I had locked that drawer or, better
yet, put the money in the front office as I was supposed to.
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I should’ve never left it here in the classroom.
The second period class came in, bringing Troy, Jewel and
Robbie. Jeff attempted to teach them but found himself
unable to concentrate. Jewel and Troy exchanged glances.
Robbie shook his head and passed notes to fellow students.
When class ended, several students came up to him, including
the infamous triangle, to ask what was wrong.
“I can’t find the class money I’ve been collecting the last
few days. Have any of you seen it?” Jeff stared at Troy and
Jewel. “You both wanted the money for a down payment on
the band. Did you take it?”
“Of course not, Mr. Wheeler,” Jewel said. She looked over
at Troy. “We didn’t take any money:”
“Where did you have it last?” Robbie asked.
“In the drawer here.” Jeff ran his hands through his hair
“This is a disaster. If I don’t find that money—never mind.
Go ahead to your next class.” Jeff left immediately for the
front office, hoping he had placed the envelope in the school
safe as he had done previous times. He searched through it
but found nothing other than the money he had placed there
late last week. He then went back to his room to check the
figures. His heart sank. Several hundred dollars were missing.
What am I going to do? Worry and fear weighed him down
to the breaking point. He groped for his cell phone. He had
to hear Lindsay’s voice. Deep down inside he was grateful
they had reconciled. He knew she would have the right words
in this situation. Instead, an electronic voice mail answered.
He left a message of anguish and hung up.
After school was over, Jeff immediately returned home and
tore his house upside down, searching for the money. What is
everyone going to say? Will they think I stole it? He whirled,
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staring into the small cracked mirror hanging above his
bureau. His deep blue eyes that Lindsay admired now
appeared dull and lifeless. His hair stood up like some wild
man’s. What am I going to do? If I don’t find it—” He
leaned heavily against the bureau. Someone must have taken
it, but who?
He sat down on the bed amid the sheets and blankets
tossed about in a fury after rising for work that morning. He
tried to decide what the next step should be. He would have
to do something quickly. If word of this spread among the
faculty, they would no more trust him with a piece of chalk
than with anything important in the school. He might even
lose his job. Jeff pressed his eyes shut, thanking God he had
spent some time reading the Bible this morning. He needed
God’s presence more than ever.
The doorbell rang. He tensed before rising to his feet and
venturing to the living room. He peered between the blinds.
Lindsay stood there.
“Jeff, I know you’re in there,” her voice called. “Please open
the door.”
He did so, slowly, only to find her arms thrown about him.
“I’m so sorry to hear about what happened. Have you found
the money?”
“No.” He stepped aside to allow her in. He didn’t care that
the place looked like a tornado had passed through. Papers
were everywhere. Books lay scattered across the rug. Cabinets
were wide open with contents spilled on the floor. The scene
illustrated his circumstances at the moment. He pushed some
papers off the sofa for her to sit down.
“Tell me what happened.”
Jeff told her how yesterday he had counted out the money
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and put it in the envelope. He didn’t bother to confess that he
had been daydreaming about their relationship at the time
and that he had forgotten to deposit the money at the front
office. “Usually I try to keep the drawer locked when I leave
the classroom. I guess I didn’t do it that day.”
“Does anyone else know you were keeping money in the
desk?”
“Well, the kids have seen me with the envelope, but I usually take care of it. The only one I specifically talked to about the money in the drawer was Troy.”
He paused. “Troy wouldn’t
have taken it.”
“I hope not,” Lindsay began.
“He was interested in getting together with Jewel and
booking a band for the prom. I made a passing comment
about the money. I wanted him to know how much we had
raised.” His hand pushed through strands of hair. “What am I
going to do?”
“We’ll just have to screen everyone and find out who stole it.”
“Right. These kids aren’t going to say anything. I started to
see a great change in the classes after we came back from
Baltimore. They were taking an interest in history and asking
questions. They scored well on the quiz I gave. Even Troy was
showing an interest in history again. Everyone was excited
about the money they had raised. Now this.” He folded his
arms in frustration.
Lindsay lowered her face, staring at the carpet, with hair like
rivers of molasses showering around her shoulders. To his surprise
she said, “I’m sure I didn’t help any, telling you about Ron
and everything while all this was happening. I’m sorry. I wish I
knew what to do. I’ve had some things stolen, as you know. I
thought having my checks forged was the worst disaster in my
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life. At any rate, you should report this to the school principal
and the police. This is a robbery, you know.”
“Yeah, and it will be my head in the noose when word of
this leaks out. Don’t you see, Lindsay? This could be the end
of my teaching career. Everything I’ve worked so hard for is
gone. And it’s my fault.” He shut his eyes in despair, hoping
that when he opened them he would see the envelope sitting
on the coffee table.
Instead, he found Lindsay beside him on the couch, her
arm encircling him, imparting comfort that he cherished with
every part of his being. “We’ll get through this,” she whispered.
“Somehow we will.”
151 Lindsay could not get the predicament with Jeff out of her
mind. She spent time in prayer, asking God for wisdom
above all, clues as to what might have happened to the money.
The close bond she had forged with Jeffmade her all the more
conscious of his pain. Days passed, and each day Jeff called to
tell her no money had been found. Lindsay even called Jewel
to try to discover some clues. Jewel told her she had no idea
what might have happened. When Lindsay asked her about
her friends, Jewel blatantly denied their involvement.
“I wonder if Jewel might know something,” she said to Jeff
on the phone that night, sipping on a cup of herbal tea in the
hopes it might calm her.
“What do you mean?”
“I tried to find out if she’d heard any rumors, particularly
from Troy or Robbie. Jewel was quick to deny it, a bit too quick
in my opinion.”
“Everyone’s going to deny it. I’d call the police in a heartbeat
if someone confessed.”
“So you’re pretty confident it was stolen then.”
“What do you think?” His voice rose in agitation. “Do you
think I embezzled it? Everyone else seems to think so.”
The insinuation shocked her senses. “Of course not. Most
likely some student saw where you kept the money and made
offwith it while you were preoccupied.”
“I hope whoever did this is having a huge crisis right now,”
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Jeff said through clenched teeth. This thing has been following
me like the plague. The department chair has called me
careless and inept. He said I’d better find out what happened
soon. He sighed. I pray that I’m wrong.”
“Wrong about what?”
“Wrong that it could be Troy. He’s the only one I specifically
talked to about the money. He would have no reason to steal it,
would he?” Jeff seemed to wrestle with that very question.
“You’ll have to keep your eyes and ears open to anything.
And pray.”
I have prayed, and I’m still praying.
Lindsay had, too, though she didn’t say it. She hung up the
phone, feeling sorry for Jeff and sensing her own determination
to the perpetrator. But how does one go about tracking
down the guilty party in a large school? It could be
anyone attending Western High. She would need inside
information somehow. Perhaps she could offer a reward.
Lindsay turned to the computer and set to work designing
a poster. She put in huge letters: UTake back your school from
criminals! REWARD for information leading to the return of
the junior class prom money. Tips kept anonymous.”
I hope this helps you, Jeff. There isn’t much else I can do. Maybe
it would encourage someone to come forward. Although the
reward would not match the crime by any means, perhaps it
would lead them to the perpetrator.
Lindsay arrived early at Western High to put up the posters
on all the conspicuous bulletin boards around school. She had
just placed one in the hallway when an older woman stopped
to survey the poster over the rims of her glasses.
“A reward poster for what?”
“For information leading to the person or persons who
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might have stolen the junior class money.” Lindsay explained.
“The students will say anything to get the reward money
you know. They’ll lead you On a wild goose chase.”
“They’ll only get the reward if they find the one who stole
it. And it would be helpful if the teachers could also keep
their eyes and ears open. We could use everyone’s help.”
“I have no interest in bailing out a teacher who had no
business putting a large sum of cash in an unlocked drawer in
the classroom. Plain foolishness.” The teacher began moving
down the hall.
Lindsay bristled. “And no one has the right to steal hard
earned money from a student function, even if the money was
sitting out in broad daylight. It’s a shame We can’t trust our
own teachers and students in a school. We must keep everything
under lock and key, twenty-four hours a day.”
The teacher turned. “Perhaps you don’t realize it, but this is
the real world.”
“It’s a pretty sad world if you ask me. There’s something
wrong when crimes like this are committed so easily. When is
something going to be done?”
The teacher disappeared into a classroom, leaving Lindsay
to stew over the exchange. How the teacher could hurl the
blame on Jeff and forget the one who committed the crime
burned her to the core. She stuffed the stapler and tape back
into the bag and marched down the hall, only to find Jeff
approaching her from the opposite direction.
“What are you doing here?” he asked, somewhat bewildered.
“Trying to catch a thief. I’ve put up posters.”
“Huh?”
She took out one of the posters from her briefcase. “We
can’t let this juvenile delinquent get away with it, Jeff.”
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“Thanks, Lindsay, but you’d better take them down. The
school won’t like it one bit.”
She sighed. “I guess you’re right. I don’t want to make
things worse than they already are.” She put the poster away.
“I’m only trying to save your neck from the guillotine. You
have a nice neck, too.”
He stepped toward her, his blue eyes softening, his lips turned
slightly upward. “You’re something else. Why do you want to hang out with a guy like me who can’t take care of money?” “Jeff, you had a bad day. We all
forget things. I’ve forgotten
things. I’ll wager no one in this school is perfect, even though
some think they are. They shouldn’t be throwing stones at
you. But if they do, you have God on your side. And He’S big
enough to get us out of this slight crisis.”
“A slight crisis, eh?” He laughed. “Lindsay, what would I do
without you?” His arms began to encircle her.
Lindsay pushed him away slightly, aware of the students
beginning to file into the building for morning classes. “Jeff,
not here,” she whispered fiercely.
“Later then. As it is, I’ve been doing some thinking. I know
we didn’t go to Fort McHenry for nothing. I want to get the
victory in this. This is war. I may have been caught off guard
by my stupidity, but I still plan to be in my fort with the
American flag waving above me at the end of it all.”
“It’s the story of life, Jeff. The hero must win out in the
end, with the sword in one hand and the shield in the other.
Only then can the hero and heroine live happily ever after.”
The smile on his face turned into a broad grin of delight
before he picked up his briefcase and moved toward his classroom.
She was glad to see his resolve. The heroes and heroines
154 of the past had encouraged a new hero to go forth in his conquest
for good. Warmth rushed through her at that moment,
and more than just the warmth of attraction. She had a true
bond with this man that no trial could break. They had been
put together for a reason, and they would make it through
this crisis.
When school let out later that afternoon, Lindsay placed
herself strategically near the front door, keeping an eye out for
Jewel. She prayed beforehand that Jewel wouldn’t be surrounded
by Troy or Robbie. A belief brewed in the back of
her brain that Jewel might be willing to help her discover who
had taken the money from Jeff’s desk. Lindsay felt she had
enough of a friendship with the teenager after the meetings at
the diner to warrant this experiment. She hoped beyond hope
that Jewel might be the ticket to exonerating Jeff.
Jewel finally emerged from the building, her curly hair
flouncing around her shoulders. Lindsay smiled. Jewel walked
alone, just as she had prayed. Lindsay moseyed on over, pretending
to head for an appointment inside the building. “Hi,
Jewel.”
“Hey, Miss Thomas, what’s up?”
“Not much. What’s up with you?”
“I have a ton of work to do.” Ringlets of hair partially hid her
face as she gazed at the grass. “I have a vocab test tomorrow in
Mrs. Coates’s English class. If I don’t pass it, I might flunk. I
already failed her last two.”
“Vocabulary wasn’t my strong point, either. Some friends
used to quiz me.”
“I asked Troy to help me, but he says he’s too busy with his
own schoolwork. Robbie got a new job after school, helping
out at a pizza place, or so he’s been telling me. I probably