With a sigh of relief, Collin Braxton watched the last car pull out of the parking lot, ending a very long day. A glance behind him at the pile of baseball equipment still to be packed up reminded the junior high school teacher that his day still wasn't over, but the blond haired twenty-six year old would settle for the last of his after-school charges being out of his care.
It wasn't that he didn't enjoy spending time with the kids; the fact was that he loved it. After all, if he didn't, why would he ever have chosen teaching as a profession? No, it was the extra duties that had been piled on him as low man on the seniority pole that sometimes drained his enthusiasm.
Aside from his normal teaching duties this year, Collin also pulled cafeteria duty twice a week and study group an additional two days – giving him little time during the school day to work on lesson plans or grade work. More often than he liked, he wound up doing both at home on his own time. Still, he knew the drawbacks when he applied for the job, and that eventually he would scale the seniority ladder and the benefits that would bring. Until then, he could handle anything they tossed at him – or so he thought.
That belief had been sorely tested over the last six weeks, ever since Principal Warren had added acting coach for the school's junior varsity baseball team to his duties. Normally, Coach Garcia worked with both the junior and senior teams, but with the latter having their best season in years, one in which they might very well make it to the county championships, the principal decided he should focus all his attention on them.
With that decision being made five weeks into the new term, there was understandably no rush of volunteers to take over the junior team. Unfortunately for Collin, it was brought to Principal Warren's attention that not only had the third year educator gone to college on a baseball scholarship, he had also led his own high school team to a state championship – either of which, in the principal's eyes, more than qualified him to take over the junior team. What wasn't commonly known, however, was that despite a proven aptitude in the area, Collin really had no great love of sports – at least not team competitions. To him, they'd always been just a means to an end, one that he thought he'd put behind him when he'd finished college.
It took another quarter hour to finish putting away the equipment, and as Collin locked the door of the practice field's storage shed, he noticed a red shape leaning against the fence in front of the dugout. Closer examination revealed it to be a student's knapsack, and a check of the attached identification tag showed that it belonged to one of his players.
'Now what am I going to do with this?' Collin asked himself, thinking that he couldn't just take it home and give it back to its owner come Monday because the kid might need it over the weekend.
He was fairly certain that once the boy's parents discovered the knapsack had been left behind, they would come back to look for it. So the simplest solution was to just leave it where he found it. Then a glance at a few dark clouds on the horizon and the recollection that the weather report had called for thunderstorms later in the evening pretty much washed away that idea. He knew from past experience that it didn't take much rain to turn the practice field into a flood zone – which would certainly ruin everything in the bag.
'So what am I supposed to do, wait for them?' he asked himself, finding that an unappealing prospect as he had no idea how long it would take for them to realize the bag had been forgotten.
He looked again at the address on the shoulder strap, a street at the far end of the district, a good twenty minutes away from the school and twice that from his apartment.
"Ah, fuck it," Collin said under his breath as he swung the bag over his shoulder and headed toward his motorcycle, parked at the edge of the field.
As little as he wanted to go that far out of his way, he couldn't in good conscience just leave the bag here to get ruined.
-=-=-=-
"Seventy-two ... seventy-four..." Collin silently read as he slowly cruised down Concord Street, coming to a stop in front of a tan, single story frame house with seventy-eight on the mailbox.
Even though he was only going to be there a minute, Collin locked the bike out of habit and, after pulling the knapsack out of the rear storage container, replaced it with his helmet, tripping the lock on the case as well. A few quick steps brought him up the walk and two more carried him to the porch, where he quickly located for the bell. Reaching for it, his hand paused when he noticed the name above the illuminated button didn't match the one on the tag, a discrepancy that made him double check the address.
Confirming he was in the right place, Collin rang the bell and waited, ringing it a second time when there was no response after a minute. When no one answered the second ring, he decided no one was home. Possibly, they were back at the field looking for the knapsack.
'Guess I could just leave here on the porch,' he thought, glancing down its length for the best place to leave it so it wouldn't get wet if it rained before anyone got home.
Spotting a bench under which it would stay dry, Collin stepped toward it, thinking he'd also leave a note on the door so it would be found. He was halfway there when the front door suddenly opened, causing Collin to pause and turn his head back in that direction.
"May I help you?" asked a woman's voice from behind the screen door.
Collin quickly retraced his steps until he was back in front of the entranceway. The woman on the other side of the screen stood a good half foot shorter than Collin, with short grey hair cut tight round a pleasant face. She had just enough age lines to give her face character, looking to be in her early to mid fifties.
Also from her appearance, he guessed that his unexpected arrival had caught the woman in either the bath or shower and that she had rushed out of it to answer the door. Her hair was still a bit wet and the normally shapeless blue housecoat she had on was damp in enough spots to show there was nothing beneath it but skin.
"I asked if I could help you," the woman repeated, looking at him through the screen with clear intensity.
"Excuse me, I'm looking for Richard Drake," Collin said, hoping that the woman hadn't noticed that he had been staring at her not unimpressive breasts, or more accurately, the pert nipples clearly visible through her thin dress.
"And what would you be wanting Richie for?" she asked, suspicion in her tone as she crossed her arms, making her bounty even more pronounced.
"I have his knapsack." Collin replied, holding it up for her to see.
"Do you now?" she further asked, her suspicion deepening as she took a second long look at him.
A glance down at himself suggested to Collin that he couldn't blame the woman for being guarded. After all, his appearance, dressed as he was with a simple blue and white windbreaker over a skintight black t-shirt and well worn jeans, hardly said responsible member of the community.
"I guess I should explain," Collin said, trying to assure the woman of his propriety with his best smile. "My name is Collin Braxton, I'm a teacher over at Lincoln Middle School, and also Rick's baseball coach. He forgot his bag at practice and I figured I'd drop it off on my way home."
The woman's gaze moved from Collin's face to the bag, then past him to the curb where he had parked his bike, the noise of which she had heard when he'd pulled up. By the time her attention had moved back to him, her expression and demeanor changed almost a hundred and eighty degrees.
"Yes, I do remember hearing Richie mention your name," she said, her tone becoming more pleasant, although Collin could almost swear there was also a bit of disappointment in it as well. "Won't you please come in?"
Collin glanced back over his shoulder for a brief second, then remembered he had locked his bike. It would be rude to decline the invitation, even if he could only stay a few minutes.
"I'm Mrs. Connelly," the woman said as he stepped inside, "Richie's grandmother."
Collin was glad she clarified that, because he had learned the hard way not to make assumptions based on age. Back when he was still a teacher in training, he had insulted a student's mother by assuming, based on her appearance, that she was the fourteen year old girl's grandmother. It never occurred to him that the prematurely white haired woman hadn't become a mother until she was nearly forty.
As he stepped inside, Collin took a quick look at the large living room just beyond the phone booth sized foyer. It was clear that the room was the house's central space, with doorways leading to what he guessed to be a kitchen, bedroom and bath. It was tastefully decorated in a dated but functional style, but not one he would've associated with a household that had a teenager – actually two, he corrected, as he remembered that Richie had an older sister who sometimes picked him up after practice. A college freshman, she was just legal enough for him not to feel guilty about the thoughts her appearance produced. Well, at least not too guilty,
"Can I get you something to drink, Mr. Braxton?" Mrs. Connelly said as, having locked the door, she led him past the foyer.
"No thank you, I'm fine," he replied, thinking that it was hot enough that he could use something cold, but better to keep this as short as possible.
"Are you sure?" she repeated, adding a remark that echoed his thought about the heat.
"Yes," he said with a broad smile. "Is Richie home yet?"
"Oh, Richie doesn't live..." Mrs. Connelly started to say, then suddenly paused, a look of concern on her face. "Oh dear, I really shouldn't have said that, not with you being from the school and all."
Collin was confused by her comment for a moment, then it came to him. Richie's family would hardly be the first to use a relative's address to attend a school outside their own district – Lincoln being a desired location since it was usually rated second or third among the county's six middle schools.
"Don't worry, Mrs. Connelly, I'm not here to check up on that," Collin said with a reassuring smile.
The look of relief on her face said that she was glad to hear her mistake hadn't caused a problem.
"Just out of curiosity, though, what school is Richie zoned for?" Collin asked, thinking that if it was on his way home, he might still drop off the bag.
"Jackson," she said.
Jackson Middle School consistently ranked sixth every year that Collin had been teaching. He couldn't blame Richie's family for using a bit of deception to keep him out of there. As far as a second trip to drop off the bag, it was also even further out of the way than Mrs. Connelly's house had been.
"I guess I'll just leave the knapsack with you, then, and trust you'll see that it finds its way to Richie," Collin said, holding it out to her. "And as far as I'm concerned, I was never here, so I couldn't know who lives here or who doesn't."
"You're a good man, Mr. Braxton," Mrs. Connelly said as she took the bag and placed it on a nearby table.
"It was nice not meeting you," Collin said with a grin as he started to turn back towards the foyer.