I'd like to thank Kenjisato again for editing and my friend Anaya for input.
It Started With Camping
I was a new teacher, sort of; I had taught for six months in another district, the teacher had had a heart attack and was told by his doctor to stop work.
My name is James Davis, I was twenty-five and single, thanks to a drunk driver who killed my fiancΓ©e, Sandra, two weeks before our wedding and one week before we were to graduate from college.
Sandra my love
Sandra and I had met in our sophomore year of college. From day one, we were inseparable. We had such great plansβ house, kids, vacations, growing old together and then in moment nothing! Only memories of what could have been. A life stolen from Sandra and Me. We had it all, Love, Goals, Ideas, We were even house hunting. Sandra had signed a contract for teaching elementary. I had signed a contract for teaching middle school, We were going to teach in the same district!
The district let me out of my contract
Commencement
I went through commencement, so my parents could see they got their money's worth, I owed them that. Most of my friends gave me their condolences, but once they graduated, they went on with their lives. Mom and dad stood by me. The autopsy showed that Sandra was just a couple of weeks pregnant. I received a small settlement that was nothing more than hush money. I was allowed to give a victim impact statement for her parents and myself at the drunk's trial. Part of what I told him was that I forgave him, 'but I will remember he is spending time in prison maybe twenty-two years and I am walking free.'
I took over a year off from the real world. I was helped monetarily by an inheritance from a single uncle, who passed away during my junior year. I went to a bunch of baseball, football and hockey gamesβ anything to take my mind off Sandra. I did a lot of fishing, camping and hiking to clear my mind.
After one outdoor trip about 16 months after Sandra Death, my mom noticed a change in me. I had started to brighten up. I had basically sat on the side of a mountain and 'talked to God.' I realized that 'death was just a part of living,' to quote a line from a movie. I stopped doing the 'poor me' routine. I knuckled down and went looking for a teaching job. I got that first six-month job. When the school year ended, the district let me go because of 'Reduction In Force', RIF. No biggie, I got a good recommendation.
I was hired in another district to teach seventh and eight-grade math at a K-8 school. I still did a lot of camping and fishing on the weekends. I was settling in and was becoming part of the school community.
Back to school night
I met with all the parents who came out to Back To School night; mom-and-dad couples, a couple of single dads, and a bunch of single moms. I was kind of hit on by a couple cougar moms. Fortunately, I had been warned by a couple of the male faculty to keep my eye out for them. For the most part, it was a good night.
I had Steve in my class, he was a kid who 'you learned his name the first day.' I did meet Steve's sister
.
Kimberly, twenty-four, his guardian. Their parents had been killed as innocent bystanders during an armed robbery, leaving the two siblings as orphans; it had been in the papers. Kimberly was quite the looker; blue eyes, dark-blonde hair, legs that went on for miles, a torso that any model would like to have. They were not hurting for money because both parents had life insurances that were put into a great trust mortgage; insurance paid off the house and Kim's SUV. She worked in a law office as a first year paralegal, and was trying to get her law degree at night.
As the first few weeks of school passed, Steve was not doing well emotionally and was acting out, getting after-school detention from many teachers. Well, he tested me one day, and got detention. He was the only student I had that afternoon, so basically, I sat down and just started talking to him. I had a couple pictures of fish I caught on my wall. He told me that he thought it was really cool. He told me that his dad used to take him camping and fishing; he had tears in his eyes. This kid was hurting. I was giving him attention and he was just soaking it up. He was showing me he could smile. I said, "Maybe, I'll see you sometime up at the lakes." We spent almost the whole forty minutes talking; I asked him if he'd try a little harder to behave in all his classes. He said he would try.
I had left a message for his sister, saying that he was staying for detention. Near the end of detention time, Kimberly came into my classroom with watery eyes. I think it was about the sixth time that he had had detention, Kimberly was doing a hell of a job with Steve, but she was showing the stress. I told Steve to go to my little fridge and get three cokes out. I gave one to Kimberly, one for Steve, and I took the last one. I sent Steve to dump my trash can out. It was a five-to-ten-minute task, depending on just who you asked to do it. I knew it would take Steve about ten minutes.
When Steve left I told Kimberly she was doing a good job with Steve, and that it would get better. I asked her where she could find some stress relief. She said the outdoors, that she loved to go camping with her parents. I suggested that she and Steve do just that. She said that her parents had done that for years. Her parents did everythingβ packing the truck, setting up camp, setting up the tent, cooking. She had calmed down by the time Steve returned.
She told me, "Thank you Mr. Davis,."
I used that old saying, "Call me Jim, Mr. Davis, is my dad."
She smiled a big smile.
Camping
I was planning my last weekend-camping-fishing trip of the summer-fall camping season, for a three-day weekend. Steve had chatted me up, when I let it slip that was going camping and what lake I was going to be at. He went home and somehow convinced Kimberly that they should go camping, and told her that he had heard of a good lake to fish at.
On Friday, my last period of the day was my planning period, so I was able to cut out early and drove my F-250 Super Crew out of town. I had built a big box that fit in the bed of my pickup, it was like a slide out, and it held all my camping gear; all I had to do was to restock the 'chucker box' items and put ice in the cooler. I got to the lake's campground before sundown, and I set up my tent and cots; I used the second cot to keep stuff off the tent floor, in case the tent leaked. I had a fire going and was enjoying a 'cool one', sitting in a nice camping chair. It was now dark and the campsite next to me was unoccupied. The only sound I heard was the crackling of the fire, the stream flowing by, and there was an owl in some tree nearby. I was thinking this was the life. Sandra and I had camped a few times, and she was starting to like it.
It was then, that I saw and heard a pickup pull into unoccupied site. I thought, wow, they will have a hell of a time putting a tent up without light.
I then heard someone say, "I know that truck." Steve then walked into the firelight and said, "Hi, Mr. Davis,."
Just then, his sister walked into the firelight and said, "Hi Jim." Kimberly turned to Steve and asked, "Did you know he would be here?"
I saw Steve look at me with a face of pain, fear and terror. I figured Steve told his sister a story, and didn't mention that I'd be there. I followed the 'bro code' of don't kick a guy when his sister might smack the hell out of him.
I piped up, "I didn't tell him. But it is nice to see you." With a wink, I said, "Steve get you and your sister each a chair out of my truck."
Kimberly said, "We got to get the tent up."
I asked her. "Have you ever put up a tent? At night?"
"I have seen my dad do it."
In my most sarcastic tone, I said, "Just because you have a cookbook, doesn't mean you can bake crΓͺpe Suzette." After a brief pause, "I'll tell you what, it is going to get cold tonight. I'll have Steve get the foam pad out of my truck, he can sleep on the floor and you can sleep on the second cot."
Steve said, "Cool."
Kimberly started to protest, but Steve had already gotten the foam out and was headed for the tent.
"Oh Steve, get your sleeping bags, too."