Chapter One
â The homeless man claimed he had been sleeping in the school furnace room for over three months. âThe weekends were the best,â he said. âThere werenât no one in the schoolânot even janitors. I even took myself a shower in the boysâ change room a time or two. Slept like a top those nights.â â
Tara popped a grape into her mouth and continued reading.
â The man had used a ground-level vent to get into the building. Every night after dark, he removed the covering, lowered himself into the school basement and then pulled the vent back into place behind him. His hiding spot was discovered by accident. The vent cover fell off last week, attracting a curious skunk that decided to take a stroll through the school. When students and teachers started screaming and running for cover, the skunk took off back the way it had come. It was the custodian following behind who discovered the homeless manâs makeshift bed behind the furnace. Police were called in, and the man was apprehended when he entered the building later that night. The skunk made a clean getaway. â
Tara lowered the newspaper. âWell, good for the skunk. I feel bad for the guy though. He wasnât hurting anybody. He just wanted a place to sleep.â
I waved my fingers at the newspaper. âKeep reading.â
â The school board hasnât pressed charges. In fact, school trustee Norma Swanson took the story to a city council meeting. She urged members to look into the matter. âIf there arenât sufficient shelters and soup kitchens to address the needs of this communityâs less fortunate, something needs to be done,â she told councilors. â
âLetâs hope Ms. Swansonâs voice was heard.â Tara put down the paper, ate another grape and looked at me wide-eyed. âGood story, Laurel!â
âYou seem surprised,â I said. I wasnât ready for The New York Times , but I was capable of stringing a few sentences together.
âI am.â
My mouth dropped open.
âWell, not that you can write a good story,â she backtracked. âItâs just that this is way different from your usual stuff.â
I sighed. âI know. Compared to reports on school dances and whoâs getting cosy with who, this story is definitely more meaningful.â
âExactly,â Tara agreed. âItâs important. Itâs news!â
âRight,â I smiled. âThanks, Tara.â
âYouâre welcome, butââ She frowned. âWhere did you get it? I mean howâd you find out about it? I knew about the skunk, but not the homeless guy.â
I clucked my tongue and tried to look shocked. âSurely you donât expect me to reveal my sources?â
âUh, yeah,â said Tara. âI do.â
I shrugged. âIt was a combination of luck and eavesdropping. The day after the skunk incident, Miss Benson sent me to the office to get paper clips. The secretary wasnât there. While I was waiting for her to come back, I heard Mr. Wiens talking to some woman in his office. The door was wide-open, so the conversation was hard to miss.â
âWhat were they talking about?â
âThe homeless man. Mr. Wiens was telling the woman how he felt bad about kicking the guy out, because he had nowhere else to go.â
âWho was the woman?â Tara asked.
âIâm getting there,â I said. âJust listen.
The woman said she would raise the issue at the next city council meeting.â
Tara chewed on her lip.
âAhâ¦,â she said. âI bet sheâs a trustee.â
âRight.â I nodded. âSo anyway, after that I found out when the next city council meeting was, and I went. I had to sit for over an hour listening to half the city complain about streetlights and speed bumps before it was Ms. Swansonâs turn. Talk about boring.â
âWow.