Part Three of
Thorne & Bridges,
an expanded version of my
Terri and Bess
short story.
Synopsis: in Part One, Terri, age 18, falls in love with Cal Thorne, age 47, who dies unexpectedly, leaving her a widow at age 25. Their daughter Bess was six at the time.
In Part Two, Will Bridges marries Melinda and they move in next door to Terri and Bess. Melinda proves unfaithful and they divorce.
Alone Together
Terri Thorne spotted her neighbor Will Bridges out in his backyard early one evening and leaned on the chain-link fence. "Hey, Will!"
"Hi Terri."
"I saw a moving van -- what happened? If I'm not prying?"
"No, that's OK. Melinda moved out. Well, more like I kicked her out."
"Oh, Will! I'm so sorry! I thought you two were such a solid couple!"
"I thought so, too. She wanted an open marriage. I said no."
"Oh, Will, that's awful! How could she? Was it completely out of the blue?"
"Pretty much. At least she had the decency to come clean, not to keep playing me for a fool. But apparently she thought I'd accept infidelity."
"I can't imagine. I'm so sorry, Will."
"Thanks, Terri."
They each returned to their separate houses. Will couldn't help but think he and his gorgeous neighbor were both single now, or rather, she was and he soon would be. Fat lot of good that was going to do him -- he'd never asked a girl for a date, Melinda had asked him, and was the only girlfriend he'd ever had. The thought of asking a babe like Terri out was terrifying. He was sure she'd shoot him down in a heartbeat. Better to settle for enjoying the view.
And what a view! If Melinda had a lovely smile, Terri's could outshine the sun. If Helen of Troy's face could launch a thousand ships, Terri in a bikini could cause a man to overlook earthquakes and volcanos in his immediate vicinity. Her voice was low, rich and musical; her laughter was ambrosia. Not that she laughed all that often -- there was a sadness lurking behind her beautiful green eyes. Her husband Cal had died unexpectedly six years ago.
Terri's daughter, Bess, was now twelve years old, dark-haired and taller than her mother. She had always been cheerful and friendly. One afternoon when Will got home and checked the mailbox at the street she rushed over from her front yard.
"Mr. Bridges?"
"Hi Bess, how are you?"
"I'm fine, but where's Mrs. Bridges? I haven't seen her in forever!"
"Umm, well, Bess, we broke up. She doesn't live here anymore."
"That's stupid! Why would she do that?"
"Life gets complicated, sometimes."
"It's not that complicated -- she shouldn't have broken up with you!"
Will gave her a sad smile. "Thanks for that thought, Bess."
"Life sucks sometimes. I lost my Papa and you lost your wife. It's not fair!"
"No, Bess, life isn't fair. We just have to do the best we can. There's a world of people worse off than us, so we just have to count our blessings and carry on."
"I guess so. But I don't have to like it!"
Will chuckled. "No, neither do I." She gave him a high-five and returned to her house.
Trying Teen
After Bess turned thirteen and began eighth grade Will noticed Terri often wore a pinched, strained look. He stopped her one day to ask "Is everything all right, neighbor?"
"Oh, sure, well, a teenager can be a handful at times. Thanks for asking."
A few weeks later she stopped him at the mailbox. "Will, I'm at my wit's end! Bess is impossible! She curses me, blows up at anything, storms off to her room or out of the house. Her report card was all D's and F's this time and I recently learned she's been skipping classes. Now I've found out two of the group she hangs out with got caught selling weed!"
"Oh my, Terri! You have my sympathy. I haven't a clue how to deal with a teenager."
"Apparently, neither do I." Terri sniffed and wiped a tear from her eye. "She used to be such a sweet girl." He squeezed Terri's hand; she squeezed back, said "Thanks for listening, Will," and returned to her house.
A couple of evenings later Bess knocked on his door. "Mind if I come in, Mr. Bridges?"
"Not at all, Bess. Can I get you a lemonade?"
"Yes, please."
"Come into the kitchen, then." She took a seat while he poured her glass. She took a few sips and just stared at the floor. He had the feeling she wanted to talk but she didn't say anything.
"Would you like to play a video game, Bess?"
"OK, I guess."
"Competitive or cooperative?"
Her head lifted. "What's cooperative?"
"You and me take on the bad guys and try to save the world."
"Sounds cool! Let's do it!"
Bess loved the game. They played for more than an hour, then Will paused it and said "Bess, I'd better let your mom know where you are."
"That's OK, I probably need to get home anyway. Thanks, Mr. Bridges, can we do this again sometime?"
"Sure thing, Bess."
He phoned Terri from work the next day to fill her in; "Is it OK for her to come over like that?"
"Yes, thanks, Will. She came home in a good mood, told me where she'd been and we didn't fight for the first time in weeks that I can remember."
"Glad I could help, then."
After that Bess was over at Will's almost anytime they both were home. He kept Terri posted on what they did, which was mostly video games but sometimes a TV show or movie. Will enjoyed Bess's company -- as well as the excuses her visits provided for him to chat with Terri.
Copy Wrongs
Bess, a good writer, had blown off too many assignments in 8th grade English and was failing the course at the holiday break. Terri had a long talk with her and she resolved to get back on track, maybe salvage a 'C' for the year.
Their teacher moved away over the break so she had a new one, Mr. Ames. Bess thought that might be just as well, a chance to make a good impression with a fresh start. Their first assignment was to read a biography of one of the Founding Fathers and write a book report.
Bess remembered her mom talking about John Adams and she found a book about him at the school library. She thought it would be boring but instead was impressed and fascinated by all his contributions to the early republic. She quickly dashed off five pages -- more than the required two -- put it aside, came back to it the next day to pare it down to three-and-a-half pages, and proudly turned it in on Monday.
On Thursday Mr. Ames returned the papers. Bess's had a large, red 'F' on the cover page; below that were the words 'obvious plagiarism'. She was stunned. What did she do wrong? How could she explain this to her mom?
She took the paper home and handed it to Terri. "Mom, doesn't plagiarism mean you copied what someone else wrote?"
Terri looked at the paper, then answered slowly: "Yes, or used their ideas without giving proper credit, even if you put it in your own words. Did you copy anything for this paper, or use ideas without giving credit?"
"No way! I read the book and wrote it all myself!"
"And I see you properly cited the book and some direct quotes. You've always been a good writer, Bess. I think I have some of your old papers." She went to her study and returned with three papers from sixth grade, all marked 'A'.
"Bess, this is very important. If any part of this report is not your work, aside from the quotations you've properly cited, I need to know that now."
"I swear, Mom, it's all my writing."
"All right. Don't worry about it. I'm going to talk to the principal tomorrow. We'll get this taken care of."
In all Bess's years in school, Terri had never asked to meet with a principal. Her mom avoided confrontation like the plague. Bess, in fact, had taken complete advantage of that fact for the past year or so. She couldn't imagine what her mom hoped to accomplish, but she decided to wait and see.
Terri drove Bess to school, told her to go on to class, and headed for the office. After the first period Bess was told to report there. The secretary ushered her into Ms. Johnson's office, where she, Terri and Mr. Ames were waiting.
Her mom turned to the principal and said "Thank you. Here is a paper my daughter wrote for Mr. Ames and turned in Monday." She handed it to Ms. Johnson.
The principal glanced at the cover and said, "Mr. Ames! We have protocols for accusations of plagiarism! This isn't how we handle such things!"
"I, um, I just thought I'd scare her straight rather than go through all that."
Terri spoke up: "Did it never occur to you Bess might actually have written this herself?"
"She was failing the class! Students like that don't just up and write high-quality papers like that!"
Terri turned to her daughter. "Bess, why were you failing the class?"
Bess hung her head and said quietly. "I didn't do most of the work."
"You and I talked about that over the holidays. What did we decide?"
"I agreed to do all the work for the rest of the year and try to bring my grade up to a 'C'."
"Bess, what's the lowest grade you've ever gotten on a paper you actually turned in?"
"B plus -- and I dashed that one off in a hurry."
Terri turned to Ms. Johnson. "Here are some of her papers from sixth grade."
The principal glanced over them, then handed them back to Terri. "Mr. Ames, you are suspended pending a disciplinary hearing. You may leave the school premises, we'll be in touch. You are dismissed."
The shocked teacher opened his mouth, promptly shut it and left quietly.