"Oh, yes, and I thought we couldn't very well have him come through without you having a chance to interview him."
Interview him! When Step had to get to Stevie's school?
Of course, he realized. This was how Dicky was getting back at him for speaking so sharply to him earlier today. Trying to put him into a position where he had to stay and miss that appointment. And the worst thing was that it was going to work. There was no gracious way that Step could tell Dicky to sit on his thumb, Step was taking his lunch now.
"Dicky, why me? I write manuals."
"Oh, Step, don't be so modest. You're not just our manual writer."
I knew it! thought Step. He knew about my secret assignment all along.
Dicky went on. "You're also the programmer of Hacker Snack. So of course Damien wants to get a chance to meet you."
"Great game," said Damien. "You're the best."
Yeah, right, thought Step. And you want a job here and you have the delusion, you poor thing, that sucking up to me will help you get it. Dicky here has probably already decided that you're not going to get an offer, and he's just using you to screw up my family life.
Well, Dicky, it isn't going to work.
Step did as Dicky asked-came in and sat down while the interview continued. But he knew Dicky had no intention of actually letting Step take part in the conversation. This was a humiliation game, so Dicky was going to make Step sit there in virtual silence while he conducted an interview in which Step was obviously not needed for anything.
So Step opened his attache case, took out a yellow notepad, and wrote a brief note to Dicky.
Dear Dicky, I'm putting this on a note so I don't embarrass you in front of your interview.
I'm going to meet with my son's teacher, as I told you I would. And I can't wait to be there at the meeting when you tell Ray Keene that you are now including me in the hiring process for programmers. With such a broadening of my responsibilities, I'm sure I'll get a raise!
Affectio nately yours, Step He stood up, wordlessly put the note on Dicky's desk, and left, closing the door behind him.
On the way to the school, Step tried to calm himself down. His anger at Dicky would do no good if it made him approach Mrs. Jones carelessly. He had to handle this exactly right with her, or he would do more harm than good. Being angry wouldn't help.
DeAnne had let him take the car today. He had been trying to catch more rides with other employees more often lately, because he knew how trapped she felt, being home all day without a car. Somehow he knew they had to come up with a second car-especially after the baby was born this summer. No way could he leave her home with a newborn without transportation. And yet it really didn't work out well fo r him to ride with others.
He always ended up keeping them late. Or coming home with Gallowglass, and he hated bringing Gallowglass to his home. He didn't even want Glass knowing where he lived, though of course it was far too late for that.
And Glass still asked him, every time, when Step was going to call on him to babysit. No, Step needed a car and DeAnne needed a car and there was no way they could scrape together the money right now even to buy a junker, let alone something dependable.
He pulled up in front of the school as the last buses were pulling out. Too late he remembered that DeAnre had told him that he had to take Fargo Road so he could park in that hidden lot up on the hill. Oh, well, thought Step. What are they going to do, shoot me? So he pulled in behind the last bus and followed it around the turnaround and pulled into a visitor parking place.
Dr. Mariner was at the door as he approached the school. "I'll bet you didn't know that parents aren't supposed to use the turnaround after school," she said.
"Actually, I did," said Step, "but I forgot until I was here and then I saw the last bus was leaving so I figured it wouldn't do any harm."
"Why, in fact, I think you're right. No harm done at all. Can I help you with something?"
"I hope so, ma'am. I'm Step Fletcher, and I'm here to-"
"Stevie Fletcher's father?"
"Yes," said Step, "I am."
"Oh, what a remarkable young man you have! And your wife is such a sweetie. And I think you have a little boy who's going to be in our kindergarten next year."
"Yes, that's Robbie."
"Well, I can hardly wait, though of course I'll be sad to see Stevie leave us. He's the sweetest boy, and so smart. Why, Mrs. Jones is always telling me how well he does in class, and of course you already know how he did with his second-grade project."
"I did hear something about it," said Step. He wanted her to tell him, in part because he didn't know which story was going to be true.
"Hear something about it indeed," said Dr. Mariner. "First-place winner, and you 'heard something about it.'
We don't get many students of his caliber. You must know that."
"Oh, yes," said Step. "But I'm glad to know you know it."
"Well, of course," said Dr. Mariner. "But I mustn't keep you--I'm sure you came to have a consultation with Mrs. Jones, and we don't want her to be kept waiting."
"Actually, she doesn't know I'm coming."
"Oh, well, all the more reason to hurry-you want to get there before she goes home. My I hope she hasn't already left! Do you know where her classroom is?"
"Actually, no," said Step.
"Then let me take you."
"No, just tell me, I don't want to inconvenience ..."
But she was already five steps ahead of him down the corridor.
Mrs. Jones was still there, though she was already shrugging on her coat and if Step had waited to get directions instead of having a guide, he probably would have missed her. So he thanked Dr. Mariner profusely, even as he wondered whether this interview was even necessary. Clearly the librarian's version of reality had been the true one.
"Why Mr. Fletcher," said Mrs. Jones, after Dr. Mariner had left. "We don't have many fathers come to school. If only you had made an appointment, I could have stayed longer."
"Perhaps this won't take long," said Step. "I mostly came to talk to you about Stevie's project."
"His project?" she asked.
"His second- grade project. The-environment thing. He did an underwater scene. Out of clay."
"Oh, of course, yes. That was so creative."
His heart sank. He should be relieved, of course, to know that Mrs. Jones had not given him a C. But it meant Stevie had lied.
No, he told himself. Don't give up on Stevie so easily.
He reached into his pocket and switched on the microcassette recorder. He had already tested it in the pit at work. It picked up very well through the denim of his jeans.
"I wondered if you could tell me, Mrs. Jones. What grade did you give Stevie for that project?"
"Oh, I can hardly remember, that was so long ago."
"A week ago," said Step.
"Oh, here it is." She had her thumb down on the gradebook, but Step noticed that she glanced toward the door. Why? To see if Dr. Mariner was still there? "My," she said. "I see here that he got a C."
"Ah," said Step. He felt himself to be on fire inside. Stevie had told the truth. And so had the librarian. The project won first place, and yet somehow, somehow it got a C.
"Yes, that's it," said Mrs. Jones. "Definitely a C."
"Well, now," said Step. "That's hard to understand."
"Not really," said Mrs. Jones. "There's nothing wrong with a C. It means average."
Step had already scanned down all the other grades in the column of her gradebook where Stevie's C was marked. "It's hardly average," said Step, "when everybody else got A's and B's."
"Now, Mr. Fletcher. We don't let parents look at other children's grades, and you clearly were peeking at the wrong column of my gradebook."
But Step was looking around the classroom, not at her. "I was hoping," he said, "to see what an A project looked like, if Stevie's was only worth a C. It would help us as his parents, you see, to know what the standard is that he must meet, so we could help him do better on future projects."