Author's Note
Ann Berrybush and the other characters in this story are not original. They originate from the Ann Berrybush stories posted on Yahoo Groups, of which there are now hundreds of stories by numerous authors. In most of the stories, the hapless, repressed schoolmarm Miss Berrybush is stripped in slapstick fashion, usually by her student nemeses, Amber and Brandi. This story references earlier stories in the Berrybush canon, but knowledge of those stories is not necessary for enjoyment.
*****
A voice crackled through the walkie-talkie: "Hit it, Amber!"
Amber flicked the switch and the sound of machinery whining down filled the room.
The doors on the elevator opened no more than an inch before they stopped.
"Oh no, looks like it's stuck!" cried Miss Ann Berrybush.
Tommy Effenheimer didn't verbalize his surprise. That feeling was soon pushed away by the realization of the opportunity he had just been given. "Allow me, Miss." He stood up to the door and puffed out his chest. His slender fingers curled around the edges of the door.
"Hah!" he grunted. His arms gave out, letting his fingers slip over the polished surface. He made a second attempt, which had the same result.
After he had failed a few more times, Ann said, "If you said you were feeling ill, you shouldn't exert yourself like that. Why don't you let me give it a try?"
He stepped back. She struggled just as he had, which made him smile. If she had managed to get it open, he would have looked weak. On top of that, there was no other person he'd rather be stuck in an elevator with.
"I just can't get enough leverage. The doors are too close together. Looks like we're going to need help." She pressed the call button and leaned toward the intercom. "Hello?"
No answer. She pressed the alarm button a few times. The bell echoed through the elevator shaft. She sighed. "Everyone's probably gone home by now."
-
While Amber made her way up to the floor the elevator had stopped on, Brandi took the steps up to the next door. Earlier that day, she had picked the lock on the service door that led into the top of the elevator shaft. She dangled her legs down the shaft and let herself fall onto the top of the elevator car.
Meanwhile, Amber was assuaging the group of boys gathered around the elevator doors. "Quiet. You're going to see more of Miss Berrybush than you've ever seen before."
"This better be worth staying after school for, Amber," said one of the boys.
"Don't worry, it will be."
-
A strip of paper fluttered from the ceiling and landed in front of Ann. "Where did this come from?"
She picked it up and read it aloud. "Dear Miss Berrybush. I am sorry to say that the F you gave me on my last paper is unacceptable. I cannot afford to fail your class. If you agree to change my grade to an A, fold this paper lengthwise and slip it through the door. If you do not, you may not like the consequences. Love, Brandi."
Ann crumpled the note. "Those two! I should have known."
Tommy went pale. Ann looked over at him. "Oh dear, you look even worse than before. Are you going to be all right?"
"Yes, Miss. Perfectly fine." This was a mere half-truth. Tommy's stomach was not, in fact, doing back flips because of illness.
"Well, I'm not going to play games with them. You need to get to the nurse." She cupped her hands over her mouth and pressed herself to the door. "Open the door this instant! There's a sick boy in here who needs help!"
When no response came after a minute, she banged on the door. "Open up!" She turned to Tommy. "I don't think anyone's out there."
"Are we stuck, then?"
"Hold on. Let's see what happens if I push the note through the door. I don't have to keep my word, after all." She folded the strip of paper and flicked it through the opening in the door.
A moment later, a second note dropped from the ceiling. Ann grabbed it and read., silently this time. Tommy peeked over her shoulder to read along. "Nice try, Miss Berrybush, but we want some kind of guarantee that you're telling the truth. How about you give us your suit - jacket, blouse, and skirt - as collateral. Then, maybe we'll open the door."
Ann answered to only one authority - Reason. And that authority required honesty. There was no choice. She simply could not give in to Amber and Brandi. But she couldn't abandon her duty to Tommy. "I just cannot allow this. I will not let those two corrupt the integrity of my classroom. But I can't let you suffer for this, Tommy. You need to get to the nurse, so I'll do what I must. Brandi may get my clothes, but she won't get her A."
As Ann hesitantly slipped out of her jacket, Tommy asked, "What do you mean, Miss?"
"What I mean is that I'm going to hand over my suit so you can get the medical treatment you need."
She reached up to undo the first button on her blouse. Tommy flinched. No, this was not going according to plan at all. It was his fault that they were trapped in the elevator. It was his fault that Ann was about to humiliate herself.
The second button came undone. Silk and lace peeked through the opening in Ann's shirt. Her fingers thumbed the third button. A paler shade of white swept over his face. She frowned. "My goodness, Tommy, you look even worse now."
When Amber and Brandi had torn apart Miss Berrybush's dress at the dance, he had been there to lend her his jacket. When they had reduced her to a bra and half-slip before her class, he had helped her escape. He couldn't let her down now, especially since he was responsible for this entire predicament in the first place.
"Oh, and this is my last good jacket, too," she muttered to herself as she undid the third button.
Tommy couldn't bear to see Ann sacrificing her dignity. He worked up the courage to speak at last. "Stop, Miss Berrybush."
"What? Stop? You need a nurse."
"Look, Miss, I'm not really sick. I lied."
"Tommy? What do you mean?"
"I'm so sorry, Miss Berrybush. Really, I didn't mean for this to happen. I just wanted a little bit of money."
"Start making some sense, Mr. Effenheimer." Ann's tone turned harsher, squeezing the last bits of truth from Tommy.
"Amber and Brandi paid me to act sick. But I swear I wasn't gonna play along with their plan. I was gonna take the money and then show them what's what if they tried to pull any funny business on you, ma'am."
Ann's eyebrow raised. "That's very sweet of you, Tommy, but look where your dishonesty has gotten us."
"I'm sorry, honestly. I didn't think this was gonna happen. I thought they were gonna wait 'til after we got to the nurse's office. Then I was gonna tell you to hide in there in case they showed up. You don't have to give them your suit."
"So we stand our ground then." She sighed and leaned against the back wall of the elevator. He mirrored her action.
"Yeah." He paused. "I'm just a rotten liar, I guess. Are you mad at me, Miss?"
"Lying wasn't the right thing to do, Tommy. But, after what you've done for me, I know you didn't mean any harm. Let this be a lesson to you. But I know you're not rotten. You're a kindhearted young man."
A wave of relief ran through him. She had always been forgiving toward him. When he accidentally destroyed the locket he meant to give her, he had told her he was as worthless as that piece of broken glass he had created. But she insisted otherwise, showing him just how beautiful even that little shard was when light shone through it. That feeling, when she had held him in her arms and proved him wrong, returned.
"Thanks, Miss. I'm lucky to have you as my teacher."
She smiled. "Well, I better button this up now." But when she moved to button her shirt, her hands could move no farther than the sleeve of her jacket allowed. She jerked forward and snapped back, as if trapped against the wall.
"What's wrong?"