
It was my last act of defiance at my last teaching job. Not really much defiance. But a bit. I'd been working on two large projects for over a year--the first was rebuilding a library, and the second was creating an art project for a retaining wall in our garden. Actually, the wall that supported (retained) our garden. A mosaic done in concrete squares. The first project was never finished; the school closed two years after I left and they never got their act together. And the second project wasn't completed for a long time--by a boy scout who has since died, his eagle scout project. I remember being really stunned and impressed when he got it all together. And now I think about him every time I go down that street.
But anyway.

But I stepped into that little room with a two word thought that started with the letter F and ended with the letter M and included the letters uck the. I put on a pair of garden gloves, looked at Mary, and she knew what I was going to do.
I took about 25 squares/stepping stones. Thick ones, almost all of them ones she and I had made to intersperse with the student-made ones. We loaded them up in the back of my van with the remainder of my supplies and a few scant classroom materials I owned that, again, that two word phrase I was not going to leave behind. And we drove away.
Now they live in my yard. A few in back, a few lost under mulch around this or that tree. A few under the porch. And the rest are a half-hidden path across my front yard where the mailman walks.
2 comments:
I hope they give you pleasure, nestled happily in your back yard, rather than remind you of your anger??
Oh yeah, that's long gone!
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