The House of Seven Mabels

The House of Seven Mabels by Jill Churchill Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: The House of Seven Mabels by Jill Churchill Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jill Churchill
again at the end of the year, and see what sort of improvement was made.“
    “I see,“ Jane said, wondering when Miss Milton would get to the point.
    “This is a national test. I forgot to say that up front. And your Todd tested into the high ninety-ninth percentile.“
    Jane was too astonished to speak for a moment. “Are you sure of that?“ she finally managed to ask.
    Miss Milton nodded. “It’s a remarkable skill that he’s never shown. His previous scores in past years on the same sort of test put him in the upper sixtieth percentile. That’s good, of course. But we have no idea why this great leap of skill happened.“
    “He went a few weeks to that half-day summer school the district set up,“ Jane said, “but didn’t seem to enjoy anything but the math class. And he’s become unusually studious this year. He’s never really cared what kind of grades he gets, but seems to have turned a corner. Hormones, maybe,“ Jane finished with a smile.
    “You’re sure that’s it?“
    The smile faded. “Excuse me, Miss Milton. You’re not suggesting that Todd cheated, are you?“
    “I’m not suggesting it at all, but I’m forced to ask when there’s such a remarkable difference.“
    “When was this test taken?“ Jane asked.
    Miss Milton told her date.
    “I’ve got my datebook in the car. Let me get it.“
    When Jane returned, she had the datebook open to the week in question. “Monday he did his social studies homework right after school and was allowed to go to a seven o’clock showing of a movie. I picked him up. Here’s the note of the time I was to be there,“ she said, pointing to the entry. “It’s not noted here, but he came home, watched a television program with me about some sort of little furry African animals I’ve forgotten the name of, and went to bed with the lights out.“
    “So he wasn’t memorizing something late into the night?“
    “Certainly not.“
    “Mrs. Jeffry, I’m sorry I had to ask. Todd is a nice boy and you have a reputation for raising bright children. I’ve checked Mike’s and Katie’s records. I’m simply required to confirm that he’s actually made this improvement.“
    “Miss Milton, Todd’s always been a lazy student. He’s very bright about things he wants to be bright about. But it’s too easy to slide by with a B average. I think I can promise you there was no cheating done.“
    “Mrs. Jeffry, I believe you a hundred percent. As I said, I’m required to ask.“
    Good news, bad vibes, Jane thought as she drove home. With a bit of the third child syndrome thrown in. Had she failed Todd? Was there the slightest chance he would cheat? No.
    She stopped at Shelley’s house before going home. “Sorry to interrupt you, but I want to tell you something,“ Jane said. She recounted the conversation with the teacher.
    “How outrageous!“ Shelley exploded. “Todd? Todd cheat? No way, Jane.“
    “He’s always been the quietest and most self-sufficient of my kids,“ Jane said. “I didn’t have to badger and nag him as I did Mike and am still doing with Katie. Have I completely misjudged him? Have I accidentally neglected him?“
    “I’d like to slap you upside the head for even saying that,“ Shelley said. “Of course not. How many of his soccer games have you sat through, even though soccer bores you senseless? How much did you spend on Legos when he was only interested in them? You didn’t leave the house for a full week when he had his tonsils out. He told my son that you treated him like a baby and nearly drove him crazy bringing him Jell-O and soft drinks. You’ve driven him all over the place for camps. You’ve done the room-mother thing for
    him. He’s a thoroughly nice kid. Just quiet and self-contained compared to your older kids. Come to think of it, I’d rather slap that teacher upside the head instead for even putting the thought in your mind.“
    “I would, too. But she was right. When a kid improves that dramatically, it

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