Baen Books Logo Mathemagics

Copyright © 1996

by Margaret Ball

Chapter

        I was just shoving a cart around the supermarket, trying to figure out where the new manager had hidden the star anise and Szechwan peppercorns, when he reared up in front of me: a big blond hulk with thews to die for, piercing blue eyes, gleaming chest and shoulders bared to the blast of the Frozen Foods section.
        “Vordo!”
        I dropped the package of Bagel Bites I’d been considering as an after school snack for Salla. My right hand went to my hip, automatically. But there wasn’t anything there except my blue jeans. Wallet in front pocket, Swiss Army knife in hip pocket. Even granted that the last time I’d seen him he had been running the other way, I wasn’t about to go up against Vordo with nothing but a pocketknife.
        Except, of course, it wasn’t Vordo. In the flesh, that is. It was only a life-sized cardboard picture of him, propped up in front of the magazine stand at the end of the isle. He was brandishing a short sword in one hand and holding up a girl with more hair than clothes in the other hand--I mean, that was the pictured pose.
        And I felt like a damned fool. If I’d been armed, I might have been startled into attacking a picture. As it was, I’d already acted silly enough to get more attention than I wanted.
        “Riva, what’s the matter with you? You’ve gone absolutely white--well, as white as you can get,” tittered Vera Boatright. I knew her slightly from school; her daughter Becky played with Salla whenever she could get sprung from the family regime of homework, housework and Bible study.
        “She’s found her ideal man,” suggested someone else whom I vaguely remembered seeing at PTA meetings; a perfect Junior League size four with one of those hundred- dollar sculpted haircuts, a “jogging” suit that probably cost more than my monthly grocery bill, and bright maroon lips pursed into an expression of permanent discontent. The pouting look was what jogged my memory. She had to be that little pill Orrin’s mom. Louise, that was her name.
        “I know him,” I blurted out. “What’s he doing here?”
        Vera tittered. “He’s not here, silly, that’s only a picture.”
        “Of course you know him,” Louise said, “he’s on half the covers in the romance section.”
        “He’s the hottest male model for romance covers since Fabio,” Vera put in. “Just having him on the cover doubles the sales of a book, they say.”
        “You must have seen his face every time you walked past the paperback books,” Louise added.
        “I never look at the romance novels,” I said.
        “Oh--well--neither do I, of course,” Vera said immediately. Her face turned pink. “My husband--I mean, our church doesn’t approve of all that filth.” She leaned towards me and whispered confidentially, “You wouldn’t believe the sort of dirty stuff they print in those books. Why, in the very first pages of Love’s Tender Promise--”
        “I mean,” I interrupted Vera without waiting to hear about the erotic promises of Love’s Tender Promise, “I know him. From . . . a long time ago.” Two years. And that wasn’t nearly long enough. What was Vordo doing on this planet?
        “Oh, suure,” Louise drawled, “and I suppose you used to date Vordo.”
        “That’s his name.” I nodded. “Vordo. Though if I were him, I’d have changed it, after the way he behaved.”
        Louise sighed and rolled her eyes upwards. “Give me a break, Riva. Of course you know his name, I just told you. That doesn’t prove anything. You’ve never seen him except on book covers, just like the rest of us. You’ve got to learn to distinguish fantasy from reality.”
        “It’s not as easy as you might think,” I muttered as she wheeled her cart away. I put the Bagel Bites back. September in Austin was too hot to risk putting frozen foods in the trunk of the car when I had another stop to make on the way home. It shouldn’t take long to straighten out this mistake at Salla’s school, but even ten minutes would be enough to turn the Bagel Bites into Melted Cheese Slurps.
        I had a bad feeling about this meeting at the school as soon as the principal’s secretary requested me not to go to Salla’s home room. “We prefer to conduct confidential meetings in here,” she said, showing me into a cubicle slightly bigger than one of Duke Zolkir’s prison cells.
        “There’s nothing delicate about it,” I said, waving the letter I’d received yesterday at her. “Somebody made a mistake, that’s all, and I’m here to help you straighten it out. Probably a computer error,” I added, remembering the magic words Dennis used whenever he called the bank.
        “Ms. Stankewitz will be with you shortly,” the secretary said. “We’ve found that the services of a professionally trained counselor are invaluable at stressful times like this.”
        She closed the door before I could tell her that the only stressful thing about this interview was having to wait in this little box of a room while my groceries cooked by solar heat in the car trunk. It was a flimsy door, too; in my home reality of Dazau I’d simply have put my foot through it, then stood on the woman’s throat until she fixed what was probably her mistake in the first place. But Dennis really liked me to conform to his people’s behavior standards, and after the third time he’d had to bail me out I’d promised to act like a Paper-Pusher woman unless Salla or he were in actual physical danger.
        Getting a stupid letter from the superintendent of schools and having to wait around to straighten it out probably didn’t qualify.
        With a sigh I smoothed the creases out of the letter and read it again. I’d thought I was making progress in reading English, but I couldn’t make any sense at all out of this-- probably because it had been supposed to go to somebody else, somebody whose kid was in trouble.
        “Dear Parent:
        “This school district is required to inform parents if their child has been determined to meet one or more criteria for being at risk of dropping out of school. Some of these criteria are: failing the TAAS, not being able to speak English fluently, emotional or psychological problems, engaging in delinquent and/or rebellious behavior, and lack of family support.”
        None of that applied to Salla. I’d have been told if she’d flunked the TAAS; her English was better than mine, or at least more fluent--I still tend to slip into ki-Dazau to enhance the limited range of expressions available in English. As for family support, well! Here I’d been commuting back and forth between my job on Dazau and a rent house on the Planet of the Piss-Pot Paper-Pushers just so Salla could go to a good school in a good neighborhood. It was only during the last couple of years, thanks to Dennis’s inspired negotiating after Baron Rodograunnizo tried to have me offed by wizardly tricks, that I’d been able to afford to stay here and study math while Salla went to school. And the money he’d got from Rodograunnizo was running out. . . .
        I yanked my mind away from my personal problems and went back to reading and rereading the letter. The second paragraph was as bad as the first.
        “All Austin administrators and teachers are dedicated to providing the support your child may need to stay in school and be successful. Transfer to the Alternative Learning Center, in-school tutorial or counseling sessions, or placement in an EBD classroom may be required. You are encouraged to call the school counselor to learn what is available to help your child and what you can do to help.
        Sincerely,
[illegible scrawl]
Superintendent of Schools”
        The door opened; a short, dark-haired woman in a blue suit waddled in. “Ms. Konneva? I’m Erica Stankewitz. I’m so glad you could find the time to visit us today.”
        “I can only see one of you,” I pointed out. “Are your colleagues invisible?” It was the sort of dirty trick Vordo would have pulled, getting a wizard to disguise his buddies under a cloak of invisibility so that he could claim to’ve beaten up an entire troop of brigands singlehanded. But I didn’t think the Paper-Pushers knew how to do that. Besides, as Dennis had explained and explained, they didn’t use physical force in most of their combats.
        A pity, that. I could have taken this woman with both hands tied behind my back. I thought about that while she smiled and explained that she was speaking for the School when she said “us.” “We haven’t seen much of you here, Ms. Konneva,” she said. “You didn’t come to the Back-to-School Parents’ Party, did you? Or drive on any of the field trips this year?”
        “I study during school hours,” I told her.
        “Oh,” she said. “How nice for you. Still, most really concerned parents make some effort to appear for important school functions.”
        The field trip to the Nature Center. The field trip to the antique shops of New Braunfels. The field trip to watch the Dallas Cowboys practice . . . It was only the end of September, and already Salla’s class had been on six field trips. I contemplated suggesting a minor change in school policy; how about we switched roles, so they taught my kid Earth history and literature, and I took her to the zoo? Wasn’t that the way it was supposed to work?
        But it wasn’t what I was there about.
        “Look,” I said, “we can discuss the proper role of parents in the schools some other time, okay? What I really came about was this.”
        Ms. Stankewitz nodded and jotted something down on her note pad as I handed the letter over. At last, I thought, we can get this cleared up.
        “It’s the standard form letter sent to all parents of at-risk students, Ms. Konneva,” she said after a brief glance. “I’m very glad that you’ve finally found some time to think about Sally’s problems. Now, if you’ll just sign these simple forms, we can get started on applying the test instruments.”
        Applying the test instruments? Sounded like something Duke Zolkir’s chief interrogator would have said while his flunkies were greasing the test instruments and heating them up.
        And the “simple” forms were a stack at least three inches thick.
        “She doesn’t have any problems in school,” I said. “This letter was sent by mistake. You’ve got her mixed up with some other kid. She’s in your Gifted and Talented program, for Nauzu’s sake!”
        “A placement error,” said the pasty-faced Stankewitz, “which can be rectified as soon as you sign--”
        “It. Is. Not. An. Error,” I said. “This is the error.” I jabbed my thumb at the letter on top of her stack of forms. “There is absolutely no reason why Salla should be considered at risk of dropping out. Now just check your files and find out who should have received this letter, and we’ll be done here.”
        “Oh, she meets plenty of the district criteria,” Ms. Stankewitz said, flipping through a manila folder full of papers. “We’re talking about Sally Konneva, right? Sixth grade? Margaret Fishbeck’s class?”
        “That’s another thing I meant to bring up, as long as I’m here,” I said. “What on earth is Ms. Fishbeck doing in charge of the G& T class? We were told Cathy Harper would be teaching the sixth grade G& T class this year.” Cathy was a friend of Dennis’s, as close as this world got to a wizard-scholar. She’d written a dissertation on Central Texas folklore and European mythology that was published as a popular book and earned, she said, far more than she’d ever made teaching. Salla had been looking forward all summer to taking Cathy’s special unit on myths and legends in world literature. She complained that Ms. Fishbeck had watered the material down and narrowed the focus and--well, I didn’t understand everything she said, not being any expert on this world’s mythology, but Salla had not been happy.
        “Here we are!” said Erica Stankewitz triumphantly, delving into the depths of her manila folder and coming up with a single typed sheet. “Sally qualifies for the Alternative Education Program under District Codes GT–103A, SD–22, F–1, and F–33b. It’s really very fortunate that we caught her problems in time, Ms. Konneva.”
        “Would you mind telling me,” I said as sweetly as I could, “exactly what those codes stand for?”
        Erica Stankewitz looked down at her paper. “GT–103A stands for Gifted and Talented, type 103, category A.”
        “So you admit she’s a smart kid.”
        “Yes, indeed. That’s one of the problems that alerted us,” she said earnestly. “A child who is so far ahead of her class often becomes bored with school. She can be a disruptive influence in the classroom; in fact, that problem has already been reported. SD–22: Rebellious attitude toward authority figures.”
        “You’re going to flunk her for being smart and having the wrong attitudes?”
        “We don’t ‘flunk’ children in this school, Ms. Konneva. We do feel it desirabe to adjust Sally’s attitude.”
        I was feeling a powerful urge to adjust Ms. Stankewitz’s attitude. Kneeling in front of me while I prepared to behead her would have been a good attitude. True, I’d left my sword at home, but I was prepared to make some modifications to my usual procedure.
        “According to Ms. Fishbeck, Sally has been marking up her homework assignments with red ink--‘correcting’ her teacher’s grammar and spelling.”
        I couldn’t quite see the problem in this. “So, were there mistakes in Ms. Fishbeck’s writing or not? And if there were, isn’t she glad to have a student alert enough to catch them?”
        “Moving on to the remaining at-risk codes,” Erica Stankewitz said briskly, “F–1 is the code for a dysfunctional family situation.”
        “I’m functioning just fine, thank you,” I assured her.
        She raised her eyebrows. “According to Sally’s file, you are unmarried, Ms. Konneva?”
        “So?”
        “And you were never married to Sally’s father?”
        “I should think not,” I said. “Bad enough I let that sleazeball--well, never mind.”
        Erica Stankewitz sighed. “And he does not provide child support or communicate with his daughter in any way?”
        “Just let him try!”
        “You seem to be missing the point.” She ticked off what she considered the relevant points on pudgy white fingers. “Single-parent household, history of early promiscuity, no father figure.”
        She had a few of those facts wrong, but I didn’t see any point in correcting her; it probably wouldn’t help Salla’s situation to point out that in fact I was sharing a house with the eighth-grade math teacher at this very school, and that Dennis was as much of a parent to Salla as I was.
        “And,” said Erica Stankewitz, swooping on her last point with a gleam of triumph in her beady little eyes, “parent herself a dropout--there’s no record here that you finished high school or even middle school, Ms. Konneva.”
        They didn’t have high school where I came from. But that probably wasn’t relevant either. I decided to go for the big picture.
        “This,” I said as clearly as I could, “is a load of crap, Ms. Stankewitz. How dare you presume to judge my daughter on the basis of what you think you know about our home life and what an incompetent teacher says about her? Doesn’t her academic record have any place at all in this discussion?”
        “F–41A,” Stankewitz said, jotting the code down on Salla’s file, “parents not educationally supportive of their child’s teacher or administrators.”
        “You’re dyvopto right I’m not supportive,” I snarled.
        “On the basis of Sally’s emotional disturbance alone,” Stankewitz said, “I can recommend right now that she be referred to an EBD class.”
        Those initials had been used in the letter. “Translation, please?”
        “Emotionally and Behaviorally Disturbed.”
        “She is not emotionally disturbed.”
        “Just look at this picture!” Erica Stankewitz flipped the folder open and shoved it towards me. “When Ms. Fishbeck asked all the children to draw a picture of their home as the first six-weeks report on the mythology unit, this is what your daughter came up with!”
        I vaguely remembered Salla grousing, that weekend, about how she wanted to write papers and do research, not play with crayons like a little kid. Now, that seemed weird to me--as if school wasn’t enough trouble without complaining when once in a while it was easy. Once I learned enough mathemagics to apprentice to a wizard on Dazau, there was no way I was going to open another math book, much less work problems or write papers.
        Salla had chosen one of her favorite places to illustrate--the Fall of Nauzu’s Blood, in the mountains of Zemauri near my home village. She’d captured the splashing of the red- tinged water and the rounded smiles of the great slow-boulders so well that I felt a prickle of nostalgia as I looked at it. She’d even drawn in a cluster of chattering, three-legged krelyk winding around the trees that overhung the waterfall.
        “It looks fine to me,” I said. “Okay, the colors are a little off and the perspective could have been better, but what can you expect of a sixth-grader?”
        “Colors!” Ms. Stankewitz snorted. “Perspective! I’m talking about the subject matter, Ms. Konneva. That place looks like nothing on Earth. A river of blood hurtling over a cliff, three-legged snakes, rocks with faces? Your child is in serious trouble, and it’s about time you admitted the fact!” Her pen jabbed at the paper before her with short, angry downward strokes. “Code EB–4,” she announced. “Emotionally disturbed as a result of dysfunctional home situation!”
        A bell clanged in the wall over my head. “That’s all,” Erica Stankewitz announced, standing up and collecting her papers.
        “Oh, no, it isn’t,” I said. “We haven’t settled anything. I’m not satisfied that you understand Salla at all.”
        A smirk distorted Erica Stankewitz’s pasty face. “On the contrary, Ms. Konneva. I’m afraid it’s you who don’t understand. We don’t need your consent in a serious case like this, you know. If you’d spent more time at the school earlier, volunteering like the other mothers, perhaps your daughter wouldn’t be predelinquent now. Wild assertions to the contrary won’t help your case.”
        “In fact,” I said, “you don’t consider yourself answerable to the parents at all, do you? You people will do whatever you dyvopto please to my child and I’m not supposed to have anything to say about it?”
        “We consider ourselves advocates for the child’s best interests. This file will convince anyone that Sally should be referred for mandatory counseling, antidelinquent programming and an EBD classroom.”
        “Fine,” I said, taking it from her, “I’ll take it home and read it and see if it convinces me.”
        “Wait a minute!” Stankewitz’s voice rose to a pained squeak. “You can’t have that--it’s school property!” She made an ineffectual grab for the folder. Somehow her nose accidentally came into contact with my elbow.
        “Abd the codtedts are codfidedtial!” she squeaked while fishing out a handkerchief to stop the blood.
        “I promise not to send it to the local newspaper,” I said. Stankewitz edged around the desk and tried to block the door. This was a mistake. I accidentally stepped on her fat little black foot and she tripped and fell into the desk. I left her squealing about assault and battery and theft of school property and went to see about my groceries, which were pretty thoroughly cooked by this time.

Copyright © 1996 by Margaret Ball

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