A Home for Jessa

Read A Home for Jessa Online

Authors: Robin Delph

BOOK: A Home for Jessa
10.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To my wonderful Mother thank        you for being so supportive and never giving up on me. I love you so much.  

 

 

 

 

 

              
  A Home for Jessa

 

 

 

                      
By Robin Delph

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                       Part One

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                              

 

                    
          Prologue

 

      
Jessa Parks sat on the bench outside of school thinking about how her life had come to be what it was. When Jessa was five years old her parents were killed in a car accident. Jessa could still see the look on her babysitter’s face as she turned to tell her why the cops where at the door. At just five years old she knew that her life had changed forever, she no longer had a mommy and daddy. Who was going to take care of her? Her answer came all too soon as a social worker stepped in the door.

     Jessa was told that she they were unable to find any relatives to take her and she would become a ward of the state. The next thing she knew she was packing her clothes and being hurried out the door. Jessa was being taken to the local orphanage. She was told she would receive grief counseling and many other things to help her through her parent’s death.

 

 

                             Chapter One

 

 

       Friends were hard to make and keep at the orphanage because once you would made a friend they would be placed in a foster home, some of the kids were even lucky enough to find a family that adopted them. Jessa would look out the window and watch her friends get into the car and drive away. Some of them would return and some she never saw again. The one’s that would come back would always seem so different to her. Some had been beaten while others had been starved and some came back because the family had had a baby and just couldn’t handle a baby and them.

       Jessa never gave much thought to being adopted or to live with a foster family. She had been living at the orphanage for three years and had never had anyone want to adopt or foster her. That is until one day the social worker came and took her to the main office to meet a family. Jessa was told they wanted to foster her and that she would have a new home. Reluctantly Jessa left her comfort zone at the orphanage and headed out to her new home with Mr. and Mrs. Johnson.

      She loved her new home the Johnson’s were the nicest people she had ever met. Jessa fell in love with Mrs. Johnson they would play for hours and they at night they both would yuck her in and read her a bedtime story. Every morning she would wake to the smell of pancakes, eggs and bacon. Them Mr. Johnson would come in and say, “Wakey wakey eggs and bacy.” It always made Jessa laugh to hear him say that. They always had breakfast and dinner together like a real family. One night after dinner they told Jessa they wanted to adopt her and that they had a meeting that following week to get all the paperwork done. Jessa was ecstatic she was finally going to have a real family

       That weekend Mrs. Johnson went to see her sister and tell her the good news and Mr. Johnson and Jessa stayed behind to go to the zoo. After returning from the zoo Mr. Johnson received a phone call that his wife had been in an accident and didn’t make it. He decided it would be best if he didn’t adopt Jessa and sent her back to the orphanage. Jessa’s heart was broken when Mr. Johnson told her she would be going back.

     Eyes filled with tears Jessa climbed the stairs to her room to pack. As she looked around the bedroom she couldn’t help but think just this morning she was going to have a real family and within a few hours she was packing to go back to the orphanage. Her little heart had been shattered for the second time in her short life.

    Jessa dressed for bed wondering if Mr. Johnson was going to read and tuck her in tonight. After waiting for almost an hour she gave up on that thought and climbed into bed. Jessa lay awake that night and thought about how happy she had been here and knowing this would be the last time she would lay in this bed. Tomorrow she would be going back to the orphanage. She tossed and turned for hours before she finally fell asleep.

     The next morning she woke up got dressed and headed down stairs hoping Mr. Johnson had changed his mind and wanted to keep her. When she stepped into the kitchen she
knew he hadn’t, for the bags she had packed the night before were sitting by the door. Mr. Johnson opened the door and there stood a social worker to take her back. Her little head hung low as she picked up her bags and walked out the door never to see sweet Mr. Johnson again.

    It was all she could do to keep from calling out after him as she got into the social workers car, she just climbed in. she wanted to look out the window at the house that was supposed to be her new home but she couldn’t. Jessa just hung her little head and let tears roll down her cheeks. The car ride to the orphanage seemed to take forever and with each second they got closer her hopes seemed to slip away little by little. By the time they made it to the orphanage Jessa had promised herself that she would never let her heart be broken like that again, she would never become attached to anyone ever again.

                               Chapter Two

 

 

    
“Hello Jessa, welcome back,” Miss Nancy spoke as Jessa came through the door.

        “Hello Miss Nancy,” was Jessa’s reply as she headed toward the stairs to go to the girl’s sleeping quarters

       Once upstairs Jessa found a bed and a small chest waiting for her, she placed her backs next to the bed and began to unpack. The thought of being back here caused tears to well in her eyes which she quickly wiped away, “No sense crying,” she told herself. And with that she finished unpacking, made her bed and headed back downstairs to see what class they had put her in.

      It came as a shock to no one that Jessa loved school especially her English class. She loved to write stories, poems and she loved the books she got to read. Although she loved school her favorite thing to do was to go to church. A pastor came around to hold services at the orphanage at least once a week and a bus came on Sundays to take any of the kids that wanted to go to church.

     The days at the orphanage were long and dreary especially for Jessa. She had no friends and made no attempt to make any. She had been called in twice to speak to the counselor about why she chose to stay to herself and she always told them the same thing, that it was easier for her that way. If you didn’t get attached to anyone it wouldn’t hurt when they left. Jessa knew this was the wrong attitude to have but she just couldn’t help it.

     “Jessa it’s time to go see the counselor,” Miss Nancy said stepping into the room.

     “Okay,” was the reply Jessa gave as she turned away from the window and headed downstairs.

     Once in the counselor’s office Jessa sat waiting for Mr. Henson to come in. While she waited she looked at all the books that were in the bookshelf. As she looked threw them she noticed that they were mostly children’s books on how to handle and cope with different things.

    “Well hello Jessa. How are you today,” Mr. Henson asked as he entered and took a seat.

      “I’m fine Mr. Henson.”

     “Have you made any friends yet?” he asked

      “No and I don’t want to.” Was her only reply.

     Jessa sat for half an hour and listened to Mr. Henson tell her the importance of friendship and why it wasn’t good for her to spend so much time alone. She tried to tune him out as best as she could. She didn’t want or need any friends and that’s how she saw it.

     “Jessa I think it would be good if you kept a journal. You don’t have to show it to anyone and you can write whatever you want in. Does that sound like something you would like to do?”

      Jessa thought for a moment, “Could I use it to write stories in?” she asked.

     “You can write whatever you want in it. It will be yours and for your eyes only.”

     “That would be nice Mr. Henson, but I don’t have a journal or a notebook to use as one. All I have is the ones I use for school and Miss Nancy said not to use them for anything else.”

    “How about this what if I gave you one, would that work?”

    “Yes. But do you think Miss Nancy would let me keep it?”

     “I’ll talk to Miss Nancy, I’m sure she will. Jessa come back by this evening I should know something by then.”

       “Thank you Mr. Henson.”

     Jessa raced back upstairs with a smile on her face. How wonderful it would be to have a something to write it stories in she thought as she plopped down on her bed.

    At five o’clock she decided to go and see Mr. Henson. She wanted to barge in his door but deciding that would be rude she took a seat and waited outside his door. Thirty minutes later Miss Nancy came out the door.

    “Hello Jessa. I think Mr. Henson is waiting to see you,” she said with a smile.

     Jessa knew by the look on Miss Nancy’s face that she was going to get the journal. It took everything she had in her to keep from jumping up and running through the door. She contained herself as best she could and got up and walked into Mr. Henson’s office with a big smile on her face.

     “Well hello Jessa. I believe you’re here for this,” he said handing her a thick leather bound journal.

      Jessa’s eyes grew wide as she looked at the leather journal. It was the most amazing thing she had ever seen. “Thank you so much Mr. Henson. I promise I’ll take real good care of it.”

   “I’m sure you will dear. Now run along and have a nice night. I’ll see you in few days.”

     Jessa could contain her excitement no longer she ran out of his office and up the stairs. She could not wait to start writing in her new journal. Once upstairs she plopped down on her bed grabbed a pencil and opened her journal. She could hardly believe she had something like this that was her very on, but know she needed to figure out what to write first. After thinking about what to write for a couple hours she fell asleep.

    Jessa woke even more excited than she was when she fell asleep. She rubbed her eyes and got dressed in a hurry so she could write before it was time for class. After she was
dressed she sat back on the bed and opened the journal.  As she began to write her first story she decided she would make it a funny short story about a dog named Lady. Writing seemed to take her into a completely different world one that was her very on.

 

                       Chapter Three
  

 

 

       A few years had passed and Jessa sat on the bed wondering how she would spend her tenth birthday. She decided to look through her journal at the short stories she had written over the past two years. They were all short stories some about dogs others about princesses and things of that nature. She was pleased with the stories she had written and had even shared a few with Miss Nancy and Mr. Henson. Jessa had also written about some of the changes over the past two years. Miss Nancy had married and longer worked at the orphanage and a plump older widow named Mrs. Drew had taken over for her. Miss Nancy was kind, compassionate and loving. She had treated the children at the orphanage as if they were her very own. Mrs. Drew was no Miss Nancy. The woman seemed to be bitter and cold toward them and Jessa had never seen the woman smile.

     “Jessa Mrs. Drew wants to see you in her office,” one of the younger girls had poked her head in the room and said.

     I wonder what she wants now Jessa thought had she headed downstairs to Mrs. Drew’s office. It can’t be good the only time she wants to see any of the children here is to jump on to them for something. And he lately I have been her main target. First it was the way I stay to myself then
about my writing. I wonder what I have done to make her mad this time.

Other books

Tree Fingers by Li, Augusta
Someone Like You by Vanessa Devereaux
Saved by the Rancher by Jennifer Ryan
Drawing a Veil by Lari Don
Words Fail Me by Patricia T. O'Conner
Everyone's a Critic by Rachel Wise
Ghost Claws by Jonathan Moeller