JOSEPH P. WISNIEWSKI listened to the slap and shuffle of
his Birkenstocks echo along the empty corridor of Caldwell
High School. He knew where his steps were taking him, but
he wasn't sure why anymore. That echo seemed to ping
around the empty spaces inside him, searching for the
answer.
He'd give himself until the end of the term to figure
things out or hand in his resignation. To quit teaching.
He navigated a crooked course along the wide vinyl hall
dulled by Mr. Stenquist's ineffective floor wax, avoiding
the sunlight flooding through the open classroom doors to
nurse his hangover in the shadows. It wouldn't be so easy
to detour around the back-to-school business with his
fellow faculty that was sure to nudge his early-morning
headache into a mid-afternoon migraine.
"Suck it up, Wisniewski," he muttered, rubbing a hand over
the last batch of four-day stubble he'd feel until deep
into Thanksgiving vacation. "This is why you get paid the
big bucks." Steeling himself to confront another school
year, he shouldered his way through the office door.
Linda Miller glanced up from her command post behind the
reception counter. "Well, look what the cat dragged in."
Joe's grimace eased into a smile. The middle-aged
secretary's crusty personality masked a gooey cream
center. Linda might be mouthier than the average clerk,
but she anted up pay phone coins for teen crises and found
more niches for hopeless grads than the local armed forces
recruiting office. "Hey, Linda."
"What? No tan from the tropics? No handwoven shirt from
Nepal? No bruises from a dustup with a jealous husband?
Exactly what kind of summer vacation did you take?"
"The restful kind." He turned to pull two months'junk mail
and memos out of his office box. "And I told you that
black eye was a misunderstanding. Pamela was legally
separated. The divorce decree was in the mail."
"Hmmph." She came around the counter with her nose in the
air, sniffing with a smirk. "Aramis. A seductive scent.
With undertones of Excedrin and Scope that almost disguise
the subtle hint of too much Scotch."
"Come on, Linda. Even you can't smell Excedrin."
"No, but I can see that whatever you took isn't living up
to its advertising." She pinned him to the wall with a
look that made him feel like he was ten years old and
smeared with enough incriminating evidence to get grounded
for life. "Just look at yourself. What a waste of tall,
dark and handsome, not to mention all that education. Have
you ever once used those over-the-top looks or that under-
the-radar charm to pursue anyone suitable to be the mother
of your children?" She shook her head. "You know, your
brains are interesting enough when they aren't pickled,
and your conversation's kind of pleasant when you bother
to move beyond the grunting stage."
Because he was just about to grunt a response before
moving out of firing range, Joe stood his ground, resigned
to taking a few more lumps. Knowing Linda, they were
coming.
"Shame on you. Forty years old and nothing much to show
for it."
"Thirty-nine."
"The way you look today, fifty would have been a generous
guess." She wagged a scolding finger under his nose.
"Well, it looks like you're finally going to pay the
piper."
The waving finger made his stomach pitch and roll. "I'm
really not in the mood for a lecture on overindulgence at
the moment."
"That's right — when it comes to lecturing, you're the
pro. But I'm not talking about talk."
Something about the gleam in her eyes set off alarm bells
that intensified the throbbing in his head. "What is it?
What's going on?"
The phone interrupted. Linda's lips spread in a smile that
hinted of hell on earth. "Duty calls," she said, patting
his arm before she retreated to her post. "Duty calls us
all, sooner or later."
He followed her into the cramped area behind the counter,
dumping his unread mail into the wastebasket. Carefully
nudging the clutter on her desk aside with one hip, he
settled in to wait while she recited the late registration
litany for a new parent.
"...Yes, I'm sure that would be all right, Joyce." She
tried to wave him away, but he dodged and stuck. "Donny
can take the forms home Monday after classes."
"Tell me," he said with a growl when she dropped the
receiver back in its cradle.
She folded her hands over a stack of fall sports
schedules. "Maybe if you kept in touch, you wouldn't come
back to nasty little surprises."
Behind him, another door clicked open. "Joe?"
"Speaking of nasty little surprises," Linda muttered under
her breath.
He turned to see Kyle Walford, Caldwell's principal, step
out of his office. Joe's headache shifted into migraine
mode ahead of schedule.
"Joe, buddy. Looking good." Kyle swept a hand through his
hair and smoothed down his tie as he moved toward the
reception area. Joe wondered, not for the first time, how
Kyle's wife got the greasy stuff out of his ties. Then he
wondered if there was any way to get out of grasping that
same hand when Kyle offered it in greeting.
"Where have you been?" said Kyle. "I tried calling you all
day yesterday."
"That's odd. There was no message on my machine." Kyle
threw a companionable arm around Joe's shoulders, an
awkward position for them both since Joe was several
inches taller. "Well, you're here now, and there's someone
I'd like you to meet."
"I was going to check on a few things before the faculty
meeting." Joe dug his heels deep into his Birkenstocks,
resisting Kyle's attempt to maneuver him into the
principal's office. "I don't want to be late."
"You can't be late if I'm not there," Kyle pointed out,
flashing even, white caps.
Joe remembered that Kyle's smile had been bartered for a
local dentist's outfield billboard. He didn't smile
back. "Who is it that's important enough to keep everyone
waiting?"
"Well, Joe...it's your student teacher."
It wasn't often that Joe got angry enough to worry about
high blood pressure. But he could feel the adrenaline
pumping through his system now. There it was, coiling in
his gut and rippling along his jaw. He didn't want his
classroom turned into some sort of petri dish, didn't want
a stranger probing into the hows and whys of what he did —
especially when he didn't know how and why himself
anymore. He just wanted to get his job done and make his
escape every afternoon shortly after three o'clock. "I
don't have student teachers, Kyle."
"Plenty of teachers do, sooner or later." Kyle playfully
punched Joe's arm. "And now it's your turn."
"I don't have student teachers, Kyle."
"You've got one now." Kyle's fingers twitched a bit as he
smoothed his already smooth tie. "Come on into my office
and I'll introduce you."
EMILY SULLIVAN RECROSSED her legs, right over left this
time, and reminded herself not to swing the suspended
foot. Bruising the principal's shins wasn't the way to
make a professional impression.
She reached down to tug at the hem of her skirt and
watched it snap back into place a couple of inches above
her knees, just like it had snapped back the other six
times she'd tugged at it. Maybe she should have gone with
the ankle-length skirt. Oh, well. No use second-guessing
her morning fashion decision — and she did tend to step on
that longer skirt and trip when getting out of chairs.
Tripping and falling flat on her face probably created a
less professional appearance than swinging a shin-bruising
foot.
How could anyone relax in the principal's office? Okay,
the principal probably managed just fine. And at least she
wasn't staring at the fake walnut paneling from a juvenile
delinquent's point of view.
A delinquent adult's, maybe. Her family certainly seemed
to think so. That was why she had to clinch this student
teaching assignment. It was her last, best chance to
launch her grown-up life — even if, at twenty-nine, she
was rusting on the launch pad. She'd studied subjects from
anthropology to zoology, she'd waited tables in Dublin and
sold perfume in Marseilles. She'd done just about
everything but decide what to do with her life, blithely
hopping from one campus, one major, one country, one job,
to another. Now it was time to choose a career and stick
with it. She'd run out of hopping room.
Kyle walked in, wearing his alligator-on-campaign grin. A
dark, rangy man trailed him into the room, closed the
door, and slouched against it, his hands in his pockets.
Emily got a brief impression of worn jeans, wrinkled white
shirt, black hair in need of a trim and waves of hostility.
"Emily Sullivan," said Kyle, "meet Joe Wisniewski." She
rose, hand extended, lifting her chin to look her new
master teacher straight in his bloodshot eyes. So this was
The Wiz, the infamous seducer of impressionable young
minds and restless older women. He was exactly what she'd
imagined, right down to the scruffy sandals.
What she hadn't imagined was the potent appeal tucked
inside the Heathcliff packaging. The sexual left hook
knocked the wind out of her before she saw it coming.
"How do you do?" she managed to ask when she got her
breath back.
Silence. Emily fought the urge to tug at her skirt until
it morphed into a shroud. She wanted to wear it as she
slipped into the hole in the ground she felt opening
beneath her. And just when the absence of sound or
movement had stretched her nerves to the snapping point,
The Wiz shrugged away from the door and took her hand in
his.
"Fine," he said. His dark laser beam stare locked in on
Kyle. "Just fine. Thanks."
Emily slipped her hand out of his oversize grip and sank
back into her chair. She would have preferred to dive
under it instead, to tuck her head in the emergency
position and pray that the impending nuclear blast didn't
spew too much radiation in her direction. Something was
wrong — understatement alert. The tension in this office
was a palpable, living thing. A thing with pastrami breath
and a sinus condition, camped at an open fire. Which would
explain why it was getting so warm in here. And hard to
breathe. She tried to swallow without gulping out loud.
"So..." Kyle's smile wavered a bit at the edges. "You
might remember Emily's brother, Joe. Jack Sullivan?"
Another marathon silence followed the question. Then, with
a flick of a glance in Emily's direction, Joe grunted. "I
might."
"He was a senior the first year you taught here at
Caldwell, wasn't he?" Kyle didn't wait for Joe's
answer. "You made a big impression on young Jack, I hear.
A big impression."
The Wiz might have been carved in stone, except for the
tiny muscle rippling along his jaw.
Kyle vaulted over another conversation chasm. "Jack
Sullivan, Senior, was mighty impressed, too, I understand."
"Is that so?"
Emily winced. She supposed that "impressed" was one way to
describe sputtering, splotchy-faced outrage.
Actually, the member of the Sullivan clan who was the most
enthralled, the most entranced, the most impressed by The
Great and Powerful Wiz was impressionable thirteen-year-
old Emily. She would sit in her spot at the Sullivan
dining room table, swinging both feet, quietly devouring
Jack's civics class quote of the day and the delicious
debates that followed like servings of dessert.
She'd never taken her turn in the classroom of the man
behind the uproar. Shortly after Jack's graduation, her
parents had moved from the tiny mill town of Issimish to
shorten Dad's hour-long commute to his job in Seattle. And
her fascination with the infamous Mr. Wisniewski had
tangled with her fantasies into a knotty teenage crush.
Joe shifted his attention in her direction. "Is that so?"
he asked again in that soft, dangerous voice.
"Yes, it is." Time to focus on her goal, stiffen her
backbone, and turn on the charm. She smiled her best
Innocent-Your-Honor smile. "Quite an impression. In fact,
that's what brings me here."