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Chapter One
The faded yellow sign still warned traffic that there was a school
ahead, but Steve Garnet knew better. After all, this was his latest
acquisition. His tender for the Upper Forks Road School buildings
and ten acres of land had been accepted and he was now the proud
owner of this strip of countryside, a two-hour drive from the
city. The last forty-five minutes of his journey, however, was
along a narrow gravel road, which zigzagged up a hillside, down
the other side and into an amazingly fertile valley of rolling
farmland.
After his Jeep Wrangler turned into the slightly widened pull
off area, Steve climbed out and walked up the concrete drive.
There it was, the two-classroom school, wooden, seventy years
old but still solid and in a good state of repair. The grass around
was short and, by the droppings dotted everywhere, had been kept
that way by grazing sheep. To his left was a collection of three
wooden outbuildings: a toilet block, play shed and woodshed still
half filled with firewood.
He walked to the door, reached for the bunch of keys the land
agent had given him and inserted the largest one in the lock.
It turned with ease and the door swung open without a sound. Oiled
floors and slightly musty smell of a closed interior hit his nostrils
but the long corridor with pegs along the interior side looked
clean and fresh. There was even a child's raincoat dangling on
a peg next to the yellow classroom door. Under the outside windows
a row of white porcelain sinks sat ready for use.
The place seemed lonely and empty but in others ways, felt ready
to receive children to come running in. It was like a school on
Sunday afternoon waiting for the youthful crowds to arrive on
Monday morning. Yet Steve knew the children had gone now; the
school had been closed for at least five years and had been sold
as redundant government property.
The cheeky tender he had put in, sight unseen had been accepted
so all of this was now his.
He smiled to himself, walked into the closest classroom and gave
a grunt of satisfaction. The afternoon sun bathed the room in
light. This was typical of these old schools, all built the wrong
way so they were shady in the morning and hot in the afternoon.
A group of children's wooden desks were still there and even faded
artwork and notices were pinned to the wall. An old square chip
heater sat in a corner with its steel chimney towering up to the
roof. Steve could imagine the children gathered around it on a
frosty morning with red hands and faces getting warm. Back in
his own school days at a small school, not too different from
the one he was now in, they used to toast their sandwiches on
the heater at lunchtime. The smell of burning wood and scorched
bread still tickled his memory as a warm fuzzy feeling of security
and peace.
Bye Old School. Merry Xmas, the yellow and red chalk writing on
the blackboard could still be read. With this was a conglomeration
of children's names sprawled across the board and half a dozen
children's sketches, some smudged out but others still quite clear.
Steve walked out and along the corridor to the second classroom.
This one looked dusty and deserted with only a few pieces of debris
lying around. It seemed that before its closure only one room
of the school was in use. Another door at the end led into a tiny
staff room, still equipped with a sink, small stove, zip water
heater, small table and a wooden couch with a mattress on it.
Once again, the room appeared clean and tidy. He turned on a tap
and after initial discoloring, clean water ran out.
A polite cough made him glance up. A woman with short dark hair
stood in the corridor. She had a faint, almost shy, smile on her
face. His first impression was that she was attractive, of average
height, well built without being chubby, and appeared to be in
her early thirties. She was wearing casual jeans and a light blue
jersey.
"So you're the one who outbid us in the tender for our school,"
she said in a pleasant educated voice and gave a wee laugh. "It
serves us right. We thought nobody would bother to tender so put
in a price way too low."
"Yes, actually I am," Steve replied and introduced himself.
"Lavina Ryland, " the woman said. "We farm the
adjacent property and those are our sheep grazing the school football
field. I'll move them out for you."
"No, leave them," Steve said. "I have no animals
to keep the grass down so, if you don't mind, they can stay there."
"I see." Lavina glanced at him with hazel eyes. "Can
I be rude enough to ask why you bothered to buy the property?"
"Sure," Steve said. "I'm a computer consultant
in the city but like the outdoors." He shrugged. "I
guess I bought it on impulse with a vague idea of converting it
into a hideaway-cum-dormitory. There are numerous bush walks around
and this could become a place to stay for my friends or myself."
"So you aren't just interested in moving the building out,"
Lavina said. "That's what happened to the school house. One
day a truck moved in and it was gone in a matter of hours."
"No, my first thoughts are to keep it as it is. I only took
it over this week."
"I'm glad," Lavina said with a whimsical, almost sad
expression. "I guess this is the last link to what was once
quite a thriving little community." She smiled again. "I
taught here, married Grant, a local farmer, and fourteen years
later I'm still here."
She walked into the first classroom and waited while Steve followed.
"I came back and taught the last term before the school closed.
It was down to twelve children. There were forty when I first
came."
"So all this was done by you?" Steve smiled and nodded
at the blackboard.
"Yes," Lavina said grinning. "I guess I should
have cleaned it off years ago. I've been the defacto caretaker
as we leased the land from the government. I've kept the building
clean. The locals used it for an occasional meeting but there
aren't even many of those now. Everyone drives down to the hall
on Lower Forks Road. I think this was last used as a polling booth
for the election a few months back. We must have had one of the
smallest number of voters in the country. I was polling officer."
She stopped and bit on her lower lip. "Oh here I go reminiscing
again. Please forgive me."
"Sure, that's fine. I thought I was completely alone. It's
good to meet a local."
"One of the few," Lavina said. "There are only
half a dozen families left in the valley now. Even the farms have
amalgamated. The dairy factory shut down before my time and the
local shop closed when I first started teaching at the school.
We even had a hall once but it burned down ten years back."
She gazed around the room and sighed. "The school was the
last thing to go. They don't even run a school bus up here any
more. My daughter was on correspondence."
"And now?" Steve asked.
"Cathy goes to boarding school." Lavina once again sounded
sad. "She's only twelve but we thought it was the best thing
for her."
She chatted away for a few more moments before saying she must
be off and excused herself. Steve escorted her to the gate and
watched as the pleasant young woman climbed in an ancient Land
Rover.
"I live just around the corner," she called out the
window. "Feel free to visit any time you're here. The kettle
is always warm."
"Thanks," Steve replied. "I might just do that."
He watched as the old farm vehicle drove away, then turned and
went back to lock up. The early spring shadows were already crossing
the playground and a chill was in the air, a reflection of the
higher altitude of the area.
Steve returned to his jeep and sat deep in thought for a few moments
before he started up and headed back to town. He was glad he'd
bought the old school. It had distinct possibilities. In his mind's
eye he pictured a dormitory in the second room, the main classroom
as a living area and somehow the vision of his visitor came back
to complement the picture.
***
Steve's home at 23 Ashley Grove was a large modern light brown,
two-storied stucco house with a double garage, and immaculate
lawn. Inside there seemed to be two of everything, including two
spacious living areas with balconies overlooking the hillside
below and the city beyond.
It was not a happy home though. In fact Steve tended to live in
only half the building since his wife, Trish, had left.
With the shift to his apartment and busy work commitments, Steve
didn't return to Upper Forks Road School for three weeks. The
spring was now moving into early summer and it was a hot cloudless
day when he drove in with a trailer load of supplies behind his
Wrangler. The garage at his house had been emptied and there was
no room at the apartment, so he had decided to bring his builder's
workshop out to the school. Most of the gear that he had inherited
from his father, a builder, had been barely used and he thought
the power saw and other items would be useful at the school.
"So this is the great holiday camp," Noel Capra, one
of Steve's employees and a personal friend from High School days
commented. "It looks in pretty good condition."
"Yes, I was pleasantly surprised," Steve said. "Everything's
there. We'll need bathroom facilities and perhaps a bigger kitchen."
He showed his friend around and the two men lifted the equipment
from the trailer into the second classroom.
"Come on, let's look around the property," Steve said.
"I haven't even been down the back yet."
After a walk around the boundary and admiring the bush covered
hillside across a steep valley the pair ended up at the old swimming
pool; a fifteen-meter rectangle surrounded by a high wire netting
fence and padlocked gate.
"This would be great if you got it filled and filtered."
Noel grinned. "Do the filters go?"
"I have no idea," Steve said. He found the padlock key
from his selection and opened the gate. Apart from the inevitable
grass and weeds growing through cracks in the concrete, the pool
looked in good order. There were even faded paintings of fish
beneath the few centimeters of slime and mud that covered the
bottom of the pool.
"The filter looks okay," Noel called out from the wooden
shed at the end of the enclosure. He stuck his head out and grinned
at Steve. "If you like, I'll have a play around here for
a while. If we can find where the water supply comes from
"
Steve knew Noel was a real handyman and could get anything working.
"Sure," he said. "I want to go and check out the
school."
"Yeah, I'll give you a hand there, too," Noel replied,
but he was already absorbed in checking out the filters.
Steve smiled and strolled back across the small crumbled weed
strewn tennis court to the classroom and let himself in. With
the power now on, he found everything worked well. For an hour
or more he worked at cleaning the rooms and had just sat down
at one of the desks and started drawing a floor plan of the building
in his laptop when, once again, a polite cough interrupted his
thoughts.
Lavina, dressed in shorts and white tank top, caught his eye.
He immediately thought how attractive she was with tanned limbs,
curved figure and short but not severe hairstyle.
"Hello again, Steve." She smiled. "Got a worker
slogging it out over at the pool, while you're playing computer
games I see."
"Hi, Lavina," Steve replied and flushed at his innermost
thoughts. "That's Noel. He's the handyman. I'm full of ideas
but when it comes to practical work, I'm all thumbs." He
turned the computer screen in her direction. "I'm sketching
my ideas for converting the corridor into a bathroom and kitchen
unit."
"Can I have a peek?" Lavina stepped close to glance
over his shoulder. He could smell her presence, the clean smell
of hair shampoo and soap together with a faint whiff of perfume
as she bent over to see his plan.
"You've got quite a talent, here, Steve." She turned
so her eyes gazed into his. They were wide and smiling, almost
like Trish's back in those earlier student days.
"Yes, well," Steve muttered. "You feed in the data
and the computer can create different scenarios. I'll show you."
He pressed a few keys and a three dimensional drawing of a kitchen
unit appeared, showing a new wall, door and sink unit in what
was now just the corridor.
Lavina stared at the screen. "That's great."
"It's one of the programs my firm has refined," Steve
continued. He found it so easy to talk to this woman he'd only
met once before. "There are several from the big firms overseas
but they use huge amounts of RAM. I wanted one that could be used
in a home computer
" He stopped and smiled. "I'm
rambling, aren't I?"
"No. Keep going. I'm interested."
Steve grinned and spent several moments showing her his ideas
for converting the old school into a small lodge with sleeping
for a dozen or so visitors.
"Steve," Lavina said quietly when he'd finished, "I
think your idea is grand. This is what the valley needs."
She stood up from where she'd been crouched beside him and grinned.
"Actually, I came across to invite you up for afternoon tea.
Your friend too, of course."
"That's kind of you. I'd love to come."
"Great!" she said. "Make it forty minutes. I think
I told you last time, I'm at the white house just up around the
corner to the right. You can't miss it. See you soon."
"Thanks." Steve's eyes followed her as she walked out
and past the classroom windows. Just before she disappeared from
sight she turned, smiled and gave a tiny wave. My God, she was
a good looker!
Steve immediately reprimanded himself for being stupid, turned
back to his laptop but found his concentration had gone. He switched
the computer off and strolled out into the sunshine to find Noel.
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