Sam Samuels rubbed his stiff neck. He’d removed his tie and
unbuttoned the top button on his dress shirt. He’d left his sports coat in his
truck, but he still felt over-dressed. By now he should have shed his business
attire for worn jeans and a tee shirt.
He’d put
in a long day. His notebook page was full of ways the school security system
needed to be improved. It had taken years to get the board to agree to look at
a plan and proposal for his company to do the job. Small town-folks in Georgia
weren’t into change, but recent violence in so many schools, even small-town
ones, pointed to the need for caution everywhere.
Sam had
waited until after his regular calls to begin this part of his plan. His son
was a student here and he’d make it a safe place for Sean, even if he had to
cut his price to the bone, past cost. This wouldn’t be the first time he’d cut
his price to put a good security system where it was needed. The one at his
parents’ church and the community center had been donations, pure and simple. Nothing
was more important than taking care of family.
Sam’s
mobile phone startled him.
“Samuels,
here.”
“Samuels,
here, too, Dad. Coach said to remind you I need my physical exam papers and
your permission slip by next Wednesday or I can’t start Spring practice.”
“Well,
Samuels, your doctor’s appointment is Friday at four and I’ve already signed
the permission slip.”
“Oh,
yeah. Got a library stop after supper with Bill and his parents, then some of
the guys wanted to ...”
“Don’t
be late.”
“But I
don’t have school tomorrow.”
“Not one
minute after eleven, you know the rules.”
Sam
grinned as he broke the connection. Sean always made curfew at the last minute.
One mess-up, one speeding ticket, or even one bad grade and he’d lose the
Corvette his mother bought him. He’d lose the car and football. For a traffic
offense he’d surrender his driver’s license, his mother’s rule. Shared custody
had worked well, especially with her traveling on business a lot since the
divorce.
He
rubbed his five o’clock stubble, then started on his second page of meticulous
notes. His cramped handwriting made his eyes hurt. He shouldn’t have left his
reading glasses in the truck.
Clicking
heels on wood distracted him. The wearer sounded small but business-like, in a
hurry. He glanced in the direction of the feminine sound. The lady wore navy
hose and a navy skirt. He smiled and nodded at Ms. Roberts as she passed him on
her way to the parking lot. “Good evening,” he said to her back as she barely
slowed her exit, leaving a light floral scent to wrap around him.
Her
impersonal nod toward him could have been meant for anyone. “And a good evening to you, too,” he
muttered
to the closing door. Typical for her. She wasn’t the friendliest woman
he’d ever met. Most women at least gave him a smile when he spoke to them. Suddenly
his gut cramped. He glanced around the deserted hall. Familiar pressure built
in his head. A premonition attack was coming on. Why now? Why when his son’s
teacher had passed by? He didn’t need an attack now. He hurried to the school
parking lot to catch up with the cause of his discomfort. He’d finish his
figures later.
4 comments:
I enjoyed writing this scene. Do you see where the story is going? Do you want to know more?
Yes, it's a good scene. The side of the font was trimmed on the right side on my pc so I was straining to fill in the ends of words. Yes, I want to know more. Love the kitty cover.
Great excerpt! Absolutely we want to know more.
Like Beth, the right side of the font was trimmed on my pc, also.
Strange! Glad you liked the scene, but the cover isn't mine.
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