This is Part One of a three-part story.
They had already begun the slow descent. Both of them worked a lot of hours and were rarely home. When they
did
see each other, the smiles were fewer and farther between, and when they were shared, didn't last as long. But it was more than that. She just didn't seem to appreciate him anymore, and at times, he had to admit, he wondered if he even liked her, much less loved her.
They had come to this small town together, despite neither one having a connection of any kind to it. They made a pact after both finished school, and the pact had become something of a contest. Whoever was offered the first "professional" job would take it, and the other would accompany him or her to wherever that job led. Lara won.
She got a position teaching 4
th
Grade at the elementary school up in New Madrid. It was a tiny school, in a tiny town, in another state, hundreds of miles from Evanston, but it was a job, and even if it didn't work out, she reasoned, it was experience, and it would be invaluable in getting another, better job. She didn't mind the kids, or at least, most of them. The teachers and administrators, on the other hand, were quite a different story.
There was one exception: Juliette Nagy, who taught 6
th
Grade. Lara and Juliette had become good friends, a friendship that was only more securely cemented because he'd recently been befriended by Juliette's husband Paul.
He was writing for the local paper,
The Gorge Reader
. He pretty much wrote everything that appeared in its scant pages -- local government stories, promos for community or business events, a community calendar, and most importantly, all of the news connected to the Monteboro Area Public Schools, especially the high school's sports teams. It was only a weekly, and its distribution was less than 2000, but in that part of the Pine Creek Gorge, it was required reading.
Even though it was his first professional job, it was a step down -- at least a step-down from
his
expectations, however unrealistic. He had dreams of someday writing investigative exposés for
The Washington Post
,
The New York Times,
or
The Chicago Tribune
. He would have been more than happy to have found work as a fact-checker at
The Omaha World-Herald
or
The Des Moines Register
. That, at least, would have been legitimate journalism no matter how demeaning.
This
wasn't that.
And if he hadn't lowered his standards enough, he'd now begun moonlighting. Besides his job as small-town newspaperman, he was also a coach -- Assistant Varsity Basketball and Baseball -- for the
Monteboro Missiles
, the local high school teams -- so named because of the Air National Guard base several miles outside of town on State Route 44.
Technically, he was Assistant Coach of the Varsity Boys Basketball team, Head Coach of the JV team, Assistant Coach of the Varsity Baseball team, and Head Coach for JV Baseball, but the titles were euphemistic at best. The truth was, he and Paul Nagy
were
the
Missiles
' basketball staff, and he and Dave Robey were
Missiles
baseball. There were no other coaches in either program.
Though the teams were competitive enough, he wasn't expecting to get a call from
Penn State
any time soon. This was small town athletics and about the only attention it garnered came from the locals. To them, winning meant bragging rights over their neighbors a few miles up or down the pike. No one else paid much attention at all, and not a single kid in the region stood a reasonable chance to go on to play college sports. Besides, if it was anything, this was football country.
It was Paul Nagy who had talked him into coaching. Paul was a Science teacher at
Monteboro Middle School
and Head Basketball coach at
Monteboro High School
, and during that fall when he and Lara first moved to the area, Paul was searching for an assistant coach.
They met on the front steps of
Monteboro High
when he showed up a couple days after the school year began and a week in advance of the first football game of the season to interview Greg Lamont, Monteboro's Head Coach.
He was a bit taken aback by the coaching offer from someone he didn't know. "What exactly are my qualifications to be your assistant coach?" he sheepishly asked the short, stocky, young man, two or three years older than he, who had introduced himself only five minutes earlier. "Is it that I'm warm-blooded?"
"Well, that's true; you