The Student Teacher Blues
by Lubrican
Chapters : 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6-14 Available On 
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Chapter Two
Memories assailed Cecelia’s mind for what seemed like ten
minutes, but was in reality only sixty seconds. She hadn't thought
about Mr. Hawkins for years, but it all came back like an overpowering
wave of surf. She'd had a killer crush on him when she was in his
class. Part of her mind heard Mrs. Miller talking to him, and his reply
about the reports she had mentioned, but most of it was taken over by
feelings she had thought were both silly and long gone.
He'd been twenty-five when she was in his class. On the one hand, that
had seemed old at the time, but on the other hand she hadn't cared.
That he was married hadn't mattered either. As she sat in class, over
the months, she'd had disturbing ... but delightful thoughts about him.
His smile, his soulful eyes, and especially that cleft chin had drawn
her eyes like magnets. The first time she'd heard a particular song on
KY-104 Golden Oldies, it had instantly become "their song," though he
of course had no knowledge of that. Seeing him brought it all back.
Joe Elliott's "Pour some sugar on meeeeee," popped into her mind in
what seemed like full stereo. Her left arm jerked out to her side,
taking up the unconscious fingering position of the air guitar she'd
played wildly in her room as she whirled to the beat and lyrics of that
song. She'd fantasized that it was Mr. Hawkins singing it to her. She'd
watched the video of the band playing that song exactly once, and then
never again. She hadn't been able to fit Bob Hawkins into that visual
rendition. She also hadn't been able to get a clear vision of what
happened in her fantasies as she "poured sugar" on Mr. Hawkins, but she
knew it was delicious and something wonderful that would horrify her
mother. She got a taste of how delicious and wonderful it was as, in
the dark of night, her fingers had slipped between her legs and played
with her teenaged clitty until she felt the release that was required
so she could actually get to sleep.
She blushed with embarrassment and dropped her arm as she realized what
was happening. Mrs. Miller chose that particular time to say, "Thank
you, Mr. Hawkins. I'll expect those reports in a day or two."
"I promise," said Bob, looking earnest. His eyes went from the older
woman to his new student teacher.
"Cee Cee, is that really you?" he said. He was grinning again. "Wow,
what a difference a few years can make!"
Cecelia tried to get control of her mind and body. "Um...hi," she said
weakly. "I didn't know it would be you." She felt like a
teeny bopper all over again and felt a surge of frustration. Schoolgirl
fantasies were a thing of the past. And even though he looked just like
she remembered him, she was irritated that she was feeling like that
schoolgirl again.
"Same old dude," he said with a smile. "I am SO glad it's you. I had
visions of having to ride herd on some..." He stopped. "Never
mind. I'm just glad I have a good one to work with. Come in. Come in!"
Cecelia realized she was just standing there, where she'd stopped when
she’d first entered the room. She took a deep breath and made
her right foot move. Taking a step she realized she was headed for one
of the student desks in the room and she swerved drunkenly to avoid
sitting in the same seat she'd had when he was her teacher. Her
frustration surged as she looked around for somewhere else to sit.
Other than his desk chair, which was occupied at the moment, there was
nowhere else to sit with dignity.
He seemed to recognize the problem.
"Hang on a sec," he said.
He got up and went to the supply closet, which he returned from with a
hard backed chair just like the one in Principal Grimes' office. Her
eyes slid down to examine the bottoms of the front legs before she
jerked them back up to Bob's face.
"This is more fitting for a teacher," he said, smiling.
"Thank you," she said. She felt like she should say something else, but
couldn't, for the life of her, think of anything intelligent to say.
"How’s college?" he asked.
That turned out to be only the first of a string of questions he
peppered her with. It wasn't until ten minutes later that she realized
she had relaxed and that, by basically interrogating her, he'd calmed
her down. She wondered if he'd somehow known what she was thinking,
though he gave no direct evidence of that.
"And now here you are," he finally said. "I can imagine how this must
be affecting you."
She looked at him sharply, while he went on.
"It's a little like coming back home after you've gone off to college.
Your parents remember you as their little girl, and they treat you just
like they did when you left."
She blinked. That's exactly how her parents had treated her. That very
first time she'd come back home they'd even told her what time to be
home when she'd said she was going out with some of her friends from
high school. It had taken her years to break them of that behavior.
"Not to worry," said Bob. "I know what you've been through, and none of
the kids will remember you. Now you're one of us, the evil staff, and
you get to strike terror in the hearts of unruly teenagers."
He grinned again. "I'm proud of you, Cee Cee. It's good to know that
sometimes a kid gets it and goes on to do great things."
Cecelia suppressed her urge to ask him not to call her Cee Cee. From
his lips it didn't sound so bad. It sounded normal, in a way. She felt
more relaxed and tried to say something adult.
"Well, it's kind of weird to be back, in a way, but it's kind of
exciting, too. I just hope I'm up to it. I have to admit I'm a little
nervous."
"I'd be worried about you if you weren't," said Bob. "But that kind of
nervousness will go away. I'm quite sure you'll be fine, with time. I
won't throw you to the lions right away. You'll have a chance to wade
in the alligator pond before we make you swim in it." He
grinned again. "Sounds like you've arrived in a zoo, huh?"
Then he chuckled. "Actually, it IS a zoo sometimes."
Cecelia found herself staring at that damned chin dimple. She jerked
her eyes up to his nose and stared at that intentionally. With almost
regret, she decided even his nose was handsome.
Then, as if an invisible switch had been flipped, Bob Hawkins was all
business. He described what class they'd be teaching, and showed her
the text book, which was a different one than what she'd had when she
was in the class. Then he handed her the academic records of the
fifteen students who would be in it.
"Take a look at those, so you know what to expect when the kids get
here next week."
Quite suddenly he was ignoring her, going back to the stack of papers
on his desk that he'd been looking at when she first arrived. She
wondered why he wanted her to look at whatever was in the folders.
Students were students, right? They were in your class and you taught
them. What else did you need to know about them?
She opened a folder and her eyes scanned the unfamiliar format. There
were test scores and grade reports. There was a synopsis of
disciplinary actions taken. Attendance was recorded, as well as
participation in extracurricular activities. She was astonished to see
there was a page with notes on potential problems at home. The one she
was looking at, for a girl named Haley Simpson, had a note that said
Haley's mother was single, worked nights and wasn't there to supervise
Haley's homework. She opened another one, for a boy named Theodore
Johnson. He had a peculiar mixture of very high and very low grades.
His standardized test scores suggested he was very intelligent. The
notes section said that he was the primary caregiver for a younger
brother and sister, and that his parents had been arrested multiple
times for drug violations.
By the sixth one she knew that these kids were the ones that she and
her friends in high school would have labeled "losers." She
couldn’t call them that now, of course.
"Mr. Hawkins, this is going to be a tough crowd," she said.
"Bob," he responded.
"What?"
"You can call me Bob, now." He smiled.
She was flustered again instantly. "I can't do that!" she blurted.
"Why not?" he asked, still smiling.
"I just don't think I can do that. I mean it just seems so wrong.
You've always been Mr. Hawkins," she said weakly. "Maybe Mr.
‘H’...but never Bob!"
"You keep thinking of me as your teacher," said Bob. "I get that,
because it’s easy for me to think of you as my student. I
need to get over that. The fact is that you've become much more mature
in your outlook on life. And, while I am, sorta, kinda still your
teacher, we’re both adults now, so you need to get over it,
too."
"I've had a lot to think about lately," she said somewhat vaguely.
"I'll try to work on that, though. I want to think of you as a
colleague, but that seems so ... I don't know ... pushy
maybe?" She frowned. "I mean I AM a student teacher. It seems
presumptuous to try to put myself in the category of being your peer."
Bob was quite willing to have a serious conversation with this
delightful young woman. It helped take his mind off how "delightful"
she was.
"At what point do you decide we're peers?" he asked. "It has to happen
sooner or later. Is it when you graduate? Is it when you get your
teaching license? Is it when you're hired for a full time position? Or
is it after you've completed your first year and decided to subject
yourself to that torture for another year? Seems to me like now is as
good a time as any."
Cecelia tilted her head and stared at him. She seemed to be deep in
thought.
"You always were one of the best teachers," she said suddenly. "I never
thought about why that was, until now, but I realize now it’s
because you treated us like grownups. You gave us credit for having a
brain, and let us use them."
"I MADE you use them," he said, grinning. "That's why some kids thought
I was one of the worst teachers."
She shook her head. "Hardest, maybe, but even that's not fair. I don't
remember your class being hard. I liked it. You gave us a lot of
homework, but I usually didn't mind doing it. I liked coming to history
class." She looked away, blushing for some reason.
“OK, then," he said. “We’ll
split the difference. To the kids, I’m Mr. Hawkins. To you,
when speaking of me in the third person to the kids, I’m Mr.
Hawkins. The rest of the time, when it’s just you and me,
you’ll work on calling me Bob." He waved his hands
in the air. “Abra cadabra...PRESTO! You, Cee Cee, are now my
peer."
He saw her flinch, and thought about that for a few seconds. He was
good at reading people, particularly young people. Her negative
reaction couldn't be the reference to her being his peer. Young people
in her situation wanted desperately to be considered peers of those
older, even if she was resisting it.
Then he thought he got it.
"Oh," he said softly. "I'm sorry. Old habits die hard. Here I am doing
the same thing I was talking about...treating you like my
student...using your high school nickname. I shouldn't even have called
you that back then, to be honest."
Her face turned so red that he was afraid he'd said the wrong thing.
"Did EVERYBODY know?" she almost moaned.
"Know what?" he asked, sounding puzzled.
"What that meant," she gasped.
"What it meant?" He was obviously confused now. "It was just
your nickname ... wasn't it? Cecelia Carter ... C-C."
Cecelia wanted to crawl in a hole and hide. Her assumption that he knew
what the boys had made the letters stand for, back then, had caused her
to get into a situation that she didn't know how to handle. She
couldn't just tell him about her breasts. She felt tears gathering in
her eyes as embarrassment almost incapacitated her.
"Hey," he said softly. "Don't worry about it. Whatever the wound, it's
over and done now. I'll be sure to call you Cecelia, OK?"
She felt a surge of relief as she realized he was giving her a pass on
explaining what was so horrible about her nickname. He'd always been so
cool. Her relief was followed closely by a resurgence of those silly
romantic emotions she'd been captive to four years earlier. She clamped
down on that and wiped her eyes.
"Cecelia is fine," she said softly. "I'm sorry. I feel stupid."
"Maybe someday you'll tell me about it," he said. "But like I said,
that was then and this is now. Nobody besides me probably even
remembers that nickname."
"Mr. Grimes did," she said, before she could stop herself.
"I'll have a word with him," said Bob promptly.
"Please, no!" she said. "He apologized too. Don't say anything to him.
It really shouldn't be a big deal. I don't want to make a fuss."
Bob's face was serious. "Listen to me. We're going to be working
together ... closely together. I'm not going to pry into your private
affairs, but the way you just reacted looked like it WAS a big deal. I
don't want you distracted by anything that will have a negative effect
on your performance here. Student teaching can make or break a career,
not because of your skill set, but because of the emotional strain it
can cause. If eradicating that old nickname will help remove an
emotional stressor, then that's what I want to do."
Cecelia had visions of Bob going around to everyone, frowning and
ordering them never to call her anything but Cecelia or Miss Carter.
"I really don't want to make a big deal of this," she pleaded. "It was
stupid. The boys just..." She stopped before she blurted out
the rest.
Bob saw her getting upset again and gave her another out.
"We'll worry about what we call each other later. I was just going over
lesson plans. That's as good a place for you to start as any. What do
you say?"
He smiled and again her eyes gravitated to the lips she had had
fantasies of kissing as she hugged her pillow at night. When he smiled
like that the cleft in his chin deepened.
"I'm ready!" she said, eager to get her mind on something other than
that dimple. She felt hot, suddenly. "They still haven't fixed the air
conditioning in this building, have they," she said grumpily.
"It's been fixed for years," he said, sounding surprised. He went to
the thermostat on the wall. "Says here it's seventy-two." He
looked at her.
She blushed as she realized there were other things that could make a
woman feel ... heated. It was obvious that her feelings for this man
weren't anywhere near as buried as she'd thought they were.
"I'll be fine," she said, somewhat stiffly. "Shall we get started?"
Bob explained that it would probably be fruitless to try to cover five
thousand years of history in two months, particularly with students who
were scholastically challenged. What he wanted to do was try to teach
these kids how to properly study history, should they want to do so at
some future date.
"The primary reason to study history at all," he said, "is to learn
lessons from it that apply to your current or near future situation. If
all history amounts to is a bunch of dry statistics, it doesn't do you
any good at all. But history really DOES repeat itself, and what
happened decades, hundreds, or even thousands of years ago really CAN
have an impact on your life as it recycles itself into the new
generation."
She felt like telling him he was preaching to the choir, but only
nodded while he went on to explain that his intent was to inspire the
summer school class by reviewing the major world shaping events of the
twentieth and twenty-first centuries. That history could be brought
alive because it could be shown how those events created the culture
these kids now lived in. Understanding why things were the way they
were was what he thought might grab their attention.
In other words, he'd abandoned the official curriculum for the class,
and was teaching what HE thought would result in scholastic success.
Cecelia was astonished, and it showed.
"I wouldn't do this during the regular school year," he said. "At least
not to this extent. But these are kids who have to be here for summer
school while their friends are out having fun, and this might be their
last chance to get a diploma before just giving up on the idea. I guess
what it breaks down to is that in my opinion, the true art of teaching
is to teach kids HOW to learn and then motivate them to keep doing it.
After that they can learn on their own.
It made all kinds of sense to Cecelia, but it went against everything
she'd been taught. Curriculum and approved lesson plans were the rule!
That's what you did! You weren't supposed to just decide what was
important and what wasn't. You had to teach it all! What he was talking
about, though, sounded like it would be fun, because it really COULD
illuminate aspects of their current lives. She swallowed her arguments
and told him to go on.
They kept at it for an hour, reviewing each day's plan for the first
week of class and discussing what techniques would be used to teach it.
Some of what she'd heard as theory in college took on more meaning as,
for all intents and purposes, he lectured her. Except it wasn't like a
lecture. It was more like a philosophical discussion, or debate, in
which he was presenting a view he was trying to get her to accept. She
remembered his style when she was in his class, and how a student could
disagree with him about some interpretation of a historical event, and
finally understood why she'd loved coming to World History. His style
was loose and, if you wanted to, you got to participate in the
conclusions of the discussion.
The classroom door opened and Mr. Higginbotham, one of the vice
principals, stuck his head in.
"Bob, didn't you get the memo about them fumigating today?"
Bob sat up straight. "Yeah. I just forgot."
"Well you weren't the only one," sighed Higginbotham. "Hence the need
for me to traipse around the whole building running people
out." He glanced at Cecelia and his eyes showed appreciation.
"You must be the new student teacher," he said, and then by way of
introduction: "Jeremy Higginbotham, Vice Principal in charge of
discipline, among other things."
"Cecelia Carter," she said automatically. She knew him, but he
obviously didn't remember her. Then again, she'd never gotten
detention, which was Mr. Higginbotham's special area of expertise.
"Carter," he said. "Sounds familiar. Do I know you?"
Bob laughed, and Higginbotham looked at him questioningly.
"She's an alum," said Bob. "She was one of the good ones ... you know
... the ones you never had anything to do with?"
Higginbotham's eyebrows rose. "Carter," he repeated. "Cheerleader ...
right?"
Cecelia's cheeks darkened a little. Was that the only thing anybody
would remember about her? "Yes sir," she said.
Higginbotham grinned widely. "Sir! She actually called me sir! Miss
Carter — is it MISS Carter? — never
mind—Cecelia, you have made my day. Welcome
aboard!" He kept grinning. "Now leave. It wouldn't do to have
our new student teacher gassed like all those people in the
concentration camps that Bob here teaches students all about. Bob we
could probably do without, but the school board frowns on killing off
student teachers." He kept grinning, no doubt at what he
thought of as his clever repartee.
"OK, we're out of here," said Bob. He stood and collected the papers
they'd been going through. "We can move this to my house. I have air
conditioning." He grinned.
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