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  Wisps of Wisdom

  Wisps Trilogy, Volume 3

  Ross Richdale

  Published by Ross Richdale, 2016.

  This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.

  WISPS OF WISDOM

  First edition. April 28, 2016.

  Copyright © 2016 Ross Richdale.

  ISBN: 978-1877438943

  Written by Ross Richdale.

  Table of Contents

  WISPS OF WISDOM

  PROLOGUE | Excerpt from the last chapter in Wisps of Snow | Book 2 in the Wisps Trilogy

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

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  Further Reading: Wisps of Snow

  Also By Ross Richdale

  About the Author

  WISPS OF WISDOM

  Ross Richdale

  ISBN 978-1-877438-94-3

  72000 Words

  In this third novel about Karla Spicer and her teaching career, we find her in charge of a thousand student Joseph Ward Junior High School in Auckland, New Zealand’s largest city.

  This is more than a story of Karla’s career but covers her personal life with her husband Ryan and also life of the teachers and students at Joseph Ward Junior High.

  After arriving at her new school Karla finds that Deputy Principal Michael White has been selecting more sporty pupils for his own syndicate. Karla stops this but believes the competition between the four school syndicates is at the expense of co-operation. It is as if there are four mini-schools all going their own way. Her hands on approach in melding the school into one identity is a distinct contrast from the previous principal who was more interested in being socially accepted in the business community.

  Avery Francis, a first year teacher at JWJHS is attacked and stabbed by an intruder late one afternoon but it is not a random attack for she knows her attacker, a prisoner escapee from her family’s past. New security systems brought in, help in getting Avery to hospital quickly. However, there are repercussions that affect Karla later in the year.

  Year 10 student Gwen Young, reports to Karla that she is scared for her friend Jasmine who is skipping school to meet a boy she only met on the internet, at Auckland International Airport. Karla with police help steps in and stops an abduction by a middle-aged paedophile. With Ryan and his computer firm she traces the incident to a whole paedophile ring on the internet. Ryan is contracted by the police to help trace students’ pages in a Petal Life social site that is popular with teenagers.

  Other girls have been attacked and Savannah an undercover detective with Ryan’s help sets up a webpage and pretends to be a fourteen-year-old junior high girl. A similar meeting with a fake high school boy similar to Jasmine’s encounter is all set up but are the safeguards sufficient to stop a tragedy?

  With an expanding roll and the popularity of JWJHS, a conflict with Westview Intermediate School to the south over the boundary between the schools’ zones escalates. Problems with the principal there, Peter Niles surface and is the reason for parents wanting to enrol at Karla’s school. The Ministry of Education steps after the Westview Board of Trustees resigns and a government commissionaire is appointed to run the school. Karla is also asked to help out as an Executive principal, a position she held before arriving at JWJHS.

  When the zoning issues are solved, Karla’s school needs extra classrooms to cope in the following year but how can they be built in time? Jon, their Board of Trustees chairperson, suggests they buy a modular block direct from China. Is this feasible?

  Throughout her first year Karla moulds her school into one to be proud of but there are always problems with personalities and actions of staff and students. There is also another personal situation for early in the year she becomes pregnant with her family’s second child. Can Karla cope with the huge responsibility of running a large school and that of becoming a mother again?

  All will be revealed in this final novel of the Wisps Trilogy.

  *

  PROLOGUE

  Excerpt from the last chapter in Wisps of Snow

  Book 2 in the Wisps Trilogy

  Joseph Ward Junior High School was huge with four teaching blocks with vertically arranged syndicates of about two hundred and fifty students in each. They were named after ocean birds; Gannet, Petrel, Tern and Shearwater and had their names prominently displayed on the buildings that incorporated six Year 7 and 8 home classrooms as well as a similar number of classrooms for the Year 9 and 10 levels. As well, each syndicate had its own science laboratory and art room. As well as these two-storied blocks there was a gymnasium, a music and performing arts block, a technology block, an auditorium, library and administration block.

  There were two deputy principals and two assistant principals was well as heads of subjects in the Year 9 and 10 levels. In the office there was an executive manager who dealt with accounts and the board of trustees business, who ran the school almost like a commercial enterprise.

  Karla took it all within her stride for in many ways it was similar to her other schools except for being larger. The students wore a yellow polo top summer school uniform with navy blue shorts for the boys and a choice of skirts or shorts for the girls.

  There were differences in the syndicates depending on the attitude of the four deputy or assistant principals who ran them and competition between the syndicates that was more than in just school sport. They competed in drama, music, art and other areas. Karla wondered if this was too competitive.

  A problem came to the fore not long after she began in mid-January and two weeks before the students arrived. At this time, all the classes had been made up the year before except for the two hundred and thirty new arrivals in Year 7 from the zone's contributing schools. There were also out of zone students to select as well as students whose parents had recently moved into their zone and had the right of automatic enrolment. If these numbers were too high the out-of-zone students would miss out and have to attend other schools to the north or south.

  Executive Manager Vivian Derran, a woman close to retirement age seemed efficient and co-operative and explained in detail what the school procedures were.

  "The class lists for the whole school are made up in December so the pupils know where they'll be in the new term? The new entrants from the contributing schools are also on the lists but it is only a tentative placement?" Karla asked.

  "That is correct, Karla." Vivian had only begun using her first name after Karla assured her that it was what she wished. "We find that this is necessary as there are numerous changes that need to be made, parents deciding to send their children to a private school, those out-of-zone students hoping to get in here and all the families who have shifted into our zone during the Christmas holidays. The other class levels are affected, too but not to the extent of the Year 7s."

  "So how's it going?"

  "Busy. We can only take twenty out-of-zone Year 7s this year, that's down to half of last year." Vivian grimaced. "There were a hundred and three out-of-zone applications and we need to tell the successful ones by the end of the week."

  "So it is just a random choice?"

  "Oh no. Michael always has a say."

  Michael White was the Deputy Principal in charge of Petrel Syndicate.

/>   Karla frowned. "And why is that?"

  "He's always done it. Mr Fessey, our last principal just delegated everything to him."

  "I see, and if it is not random, what criteria does Michael use?"

  Vivian shrugged. "Oh the usual, reports from their last year's school, how they would fit in here and so forth."

  "How they would fit in here? In what way?"

  "Michael likes the sporty ones and gives preference to those that were in the contributing schools rugby, netball, swimming and athletic teams."

  Karla stared at the other woman and felt annoyed. "Does he now?" she retorted.

  Vivian flushed. "He's a sporty sort, you know."

  "And he has made up a list?"

  "The tentative one, yes."

  "I want to see it, plus the list of all out-of-zone students who have applied for places this year."

  "You want it now?"

  "I do," Karla replied. "As well, I want any reports from the contributing schools about the students involved."

  "At once," Vivian replied. "I'll bring them up on your computer."

  Karla relaxed a little. "Thank you Vivian, you have been a great help. You may find that my priorities are different than Owen Fessey's but it is nothing personal."

  "Of course not, Karla, it is only to be expected." The elderly woman hesitated. "Owen was sixty-seven and clung on too long, I guess. I'm not saying he wasn't a good principal but he did allow Michael and to a lesser extent Sandra, to make most of the executive decisions."

  Sandra was the other DP in charge of Gannet Syndicate.

  "Michael thought he'd get the principal's position here but didn't even make the short list," Vivian continued. "I think most of the staff were pleased that somebody like yourself won the position. The rumour that local intermediate principals had been short-listed made the staff nervous."

  "So somebody unknown is better than locally known ones?"

  "Once you were appointed everyone found out about you. The Facebook pages were running red hot for a while."F

  "I never noticed." This was only a half truth, for Ryan had found several references on the internet with opinions about her including the one that called her The Iron Blonde.

  "Let's say that you are like a breath of fresh air that this school needs," Vivian continued.

  "Thanks," Karla replied. "I appreciate your comment."

  *

  Michael White was twenty years older than her and came across as being somewhat arrogant. She stared at him across her desk and came to the point straight away.

  "The allocation of the new Year 7s has to be redone by the end of the week," she said. "There is a discrepancy in the weightings."

  "How can there be?" he almost flustered. "It has worked perfectly over the last five years."

  "Amendments were made to the program to give your syndicate a bigger proportion of high ability sports students than the other three syndicates. The weighting has been removed from the program, Michael. However, all syndicate and class lists for Year 7s now need to be revised."

  He looked surprised and lost some of his self-assurance. "Nothing sinister was intended," he mumbled.

  "But it was! Why should your syndicate have an advantage in that direction and where would it stop? Place all those who are arty in one syndicate, the misfits in another or all the Asian children in a third. It is unethical, Michael." She was annoyed and knew that he knew.

  Michael's face drained of colour. "So we redo the lists?"

  "Yes. Also, no out-of-zone students will be given priority because of their sporting ability. They will be treaded fairly and be randomly selected. Understand!"

  "But some were encouraged to apply for a placing here on the understanding that their sporting opportunities would be enhanced at Joseph Ward Junior High."

  "That is cancelled. You can either revise the lists or I will get another staff member to make the out-of-zone selections. I do not care what other schools in our area do but I am not allowing this to happen here. If parents do not like the fact, they can send their children to one of the private schools around that cater for so-called sports ability."

  "You're the principal," White muttered.

  "I am," Karla whispered. "And with it goes the responsibility to be as fair as possible to all students, staff and parents." She glowered at him. "I am a hands-on principal, not just a figurehead in this upmarket office. I hope you appreciate that fact."

  "I'll have it all done and ready to be emailed out to all the students by Friday, Mrs Spicer. Can Vivian assist me?"

  "Certainly."

  Karla sat and watched her deputy principal leave the office. From all reports on him she had seen, he was a good teacher and administrator who perhaps resented her appointment. She glanced up as Vivian came into the room.

  "I've never seen Michael so humbled," she said. "Wants me to help revise the Year 7 placings and the out-of-zone selections. Is that okay?"

  "It is," Karla replied. "So what else have we got scheduled today."

  "The usual," Vivian replied. "Those sub-contractors laying the new carpet in the canteen haven't arrived. I called them and said it had to be done before school began next month... You have to keep onto these guys you know. As well there's the..." She continued on with a summary of items that needed doing before the new academic year began.

  *

  This year the Joseph Ward Junior High roll topped a thousand for the first time including two hundred and fifty-four Year 7s and another forty new pupils at the other three levels. As well, there were four newly graduated teachers, one in each syndicate, another two new teachers and Karla. She sat on the auditorium stage and surveyed the sea of yellow polo tops and navy blue shorts, for most of the girls had opted for shorts rather than skirts in the hot Auckland weather.

  After a formal welcome by Michael, Sandra and Jon on behalf of the board of trustees, Karla stepped forward to speak.

  "I am just one of two hundred and ninety-seven new faces here today," she said to the hushed auditorium. "I welcome you all to your new school, our new school and to the eight hundred and eleven students who are returning to school this year, I thank you for this wonderful welcome, the school choir, the musical items ... everything. I am proud to be here and hope that we all have a successful journey throughout our stay at Joseph Ward Junior High. Shortly you senior school students will go to your allocated rooms and the Year 8s to your last year's homeroom. Year 7s will remain here and be introduced to your new home teacher and told where your new rooms are." She smiled. "Don't worry if you get lost. I've been here two weeks now and still end up in the wrong syndicate building from where I intended to go. It's lucky they have their name on the outside..."

  A chuckle went through the audience. She spoke a little longer before she sat down and watched as the syndicate leaders began directing students to the various syndicates. As the students dispersed she glanced up and saw Ryan standing by a side door. He had Alexis in his arms.

  "What are you doing here?" she asked after she walked across to the pair.

  "Alexis wanted to see Mummy's new school and all the big kids," Ryan replied.

  "Hello girls," said Karla to a group of lingering girls who looked to be about fourteen. "This is my husband Ryan and my little daughter, Alexis."

  "Hi Alexis," one of the girls said. "Welcome to Joseph Ward Junior High. Your mummy is a very important lady here."

  *

  CHAPTER 1

  It was only a little after eight in the morning on Auckland New Zealand's North Shore but the cafeteria attached to Joseph Ward Junior High School performing arts block was busy. Operated by a private company with its own access and parking area from the street, it opened at seven in the morning and until eleven was available to the public as well as the thousand pupils attending the school. Between that time and two it was reserved for the school students before being again open to everyone until five.

  The school's principal, Karla Spicer sat at one of the corner tables e
ating her breakfast. She usually had breakfast there a couple of times a week. Although, summer was moving into the southern hemisphere autumn of early March it was still warm in the mornings so the sliding glass doors were wide open and umbrella shaded tables stretched out across the forecourt. The petite blonde woman in her thirties watched with interest at the customers, for as well as thirty or more of the junior high students dressed in their school uniform of yellow tops and navy blue shorts or skirts, there were twenty or so students dressed in the navy blue uniform of the senior high school a block away. Several families with younger children from nearby contributing schools and a splattering of adults dressed in business suits completed the clientele.

  She glanced up when Megan Penrose, the cafeteria's manager came up with the coffee she had ordered. Megan placed the coffee down before her but hesitated as if she wanted to talk.

  "The new morning hours appear to be a success, Megan," Karla said with a smile.

  "Oh they are. Look at the senior high kids from who are here. Their own cafeteria doesn't open to the public nor does it serve breakfast. Several of them are regulars who come in almost every morning and there are those adults too." Megan nodded at a chair. "Have you a moment or is your day too busy?"

  "Not at all. Take a seat. And are the student's identity smart cards working?"

  Megan grinned. "A little too well, in some cases. About half use their identity cards to pay. The rest and the other customers use ordinary cards or pay in cash."

  Every student at the school had an identity card the size of a credit card with their photo, name, syndicate and class on it. If approved by parents, it could also be used like a credit card to purchase items at school such as exercise books, clothes for the school uniform and sports gear or to pay for school fees and so forth. Again if parents agreed, this was extended to buying food at this cafeteria. Once a month, the pupil's or in most cases their parents' accounts; the outstanding money owed was paid by a direct debit. In this quite wealthy part of Auckland city there was little problem in payment.