We Are All Such Humans Here

Importance is as importance does, and in my case, I wasn’t important at all. The way I lost my job was as muddled as it was all too clear. I could recite poetry, but I wasn’t very good. I taught ninth grade English, and my students were uniformly bored, unhappy, and sporting lousy standardized test scores. But as any right-wing nut job with a podium will tell you: lousy teaching is hardly the reason for a teacher to be fired. Besides, my younger colleagues liked me well enough and maybe appreciated the way in which I made them look good by comparison, and as it turned out, my firing had nothing to do with the classroom. Instead, I got caught, pure and simple, having withdrawn funds from a field trip account, funds that I fully intended to repay but hadn’t quite gotten around to doing so. There were bills, and then there were more. Repayment would have taken some time and money which I didn’t have, and when one of the guidance counselors smelled a rat, my time was finally up. My principal, a kind, grandmotherly sort, gave me the choice: I could resign, or I could go out swinging, in which case, the police would be involved. I’d still be fired, but I’d also suffer the indignity and shame of a criminal record and a loss of my down-the-road pension. I refused union intervention and resigned. But I told Ellen I’d been fired for being a less than satisfactory teacher because the truth was too tawdry and embarrassing to admit.

“Since when do they fire lousy teachers with twenty-plus years of service?” Ellen said when I told her. “You must be the first.”

She was perplexed, and she had an idea that I wasn’t telling her the whole story, and I could tell that she suspected something else, inappropriate touching or sexual innuendo or a dinosaur moment when I might have said something acceptable only in 1986; there were so many crimes I could have committed. But I never gave in, not to her and not to my equally puzzled parents. Maybe my one act of character.

 

 

 

David Borofka

David Borofka is the author of Hints of His Mortality (winner of the 1996 Iowa Short Fiction Award) and a novel, The Island (MacMurray & Beck). His latest collection of stories, A Longing for Impossible Things, was released in 2022, as part of the Johns Hopkins Poetry and Fiction Series and was chosen as the winner of the American Fiction Award for the Short Story by the American Book Fest; his novel, The End of Good Intentions, was published by Fomite Press in September 2023; and a new collection of stories, The Bliss of Your Attention, will be published in 2025, once again by JHUP. David recommends the Oregon Shakespeare Festival and Reedley College Literary Arts.

 

Edited for Unlikely by Jonathan Penton, Editor-in-Chief
Last revised on Friday, September 27, 2024 - 05:54