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I’m
a Presbyterian Church minister, for what that’s worth.
Not a lot these days. Not
since the noises in the church basement.
“Mice,”
Mr. Berkowitz said, and bought some traps.
He laid them in the corners, and near the back of the fridge in the
mint-green kitchen. Mrs. Miller
stepped on one, broke two arthritic toes in the snap, and, popping Nitro pills
like Pez candies, had to be rushed to the hospital.
Mr.
Berkowitz caught no mice, but the noises persisted.
The Board of Managers agreed to have a work bee on the Saturday next, the
25th, to tear the paneling from the basement walls so that they could
expose those “wretched vermin” to the light of day.
And smite them.
That
Sunday worship sported a typically low July attendance, about sixty-five
parishioners and a handful of visitors. Unfortunately,
my sermon on the Water-to-Wine story in John 2 was a little flat:
I could hear the crinkling of candy wrappers begin at the four-minute
mark. Usually I can hold the sweet-tooths
off for nine or ten minutes, but with this muggy July heat I just didn’t have
it in me.
Right
after the Prayers of Thanksgiving and Intercession, toward the end of the
service, I paused and stared as bubbles thick as dirty motor oil simmered on the
Presbyterian blue carpet. I cleared
my throat and announced the final hymn, “Rejoice, O people,” number 299.
In that moment the bubbles swirled together and a white lamb slurped up
out of the floor. It shook its
floppy ears, skipped down the aisle and sprang up onto the pew beside Mrs.
Miller.
Mrs.
Donnally fainted into the aisle. People
rose from their seats. “It’s a
miracle!” Hands waved, palms to heaven.
People stepped over Mrs. Donnally to get a better view.
“Amen! Hallelujah!”
Shouting drowned out the first chords of the hymn.
The
lamb blinked again, then morphed into a wooly behemoth of mucilaginous slime,
howling and towering over Mrs. Miller.
Someone
in the choir said, “Holy shit!”
It
reached down, clamped a shaggy limb onto Mrs. Miller's blue-tinted head, then
lifted her right out of the pew and shook her. Slime splattered the
wall. The Board of Managers just had the sanctuary painted a delicate
robin's egg blue the month before.
Parishioners
scrambled to get away—tumbling over the backs of the pews, or scrabbling on
all fours underneath the pews. Somebody
snatched Mrs. Donnally from the path of the faithful rushing toward the doors.
The
sour-smelling fingers held Mrs. Miller under both sides of her jaw and behind
her recently-coiffed head while she hung there, kicking.
Stubborn, she dug her hands into the slimy wool and tried to pull herself
free.
Then
the creature plopped Mrs. Miller onto her butt-worn pew and shrank back into a
lamb. It leapt off the pew and
darted up the aisle, melting into the carpet as it ran. Oily smutches rippled to the four corners of the sanctuary.
Mrs.
Miller scraped mucilage out of her hair with her hands.
I
thought I was dreaming. I just kept
thinking, Mrs. Miller—good choice!
Quite unbecoming, of course, but she and I had had our battles, and had
settled on a polite, seething truce for the past few years.
But I dream about her often. Usually
she does not fare well.
So
I figured this was just another one of my tabloid-style dreams.
Slime Lamb Attacks Church Elder in House of God.
Nothing unusual.
But
no, this actually happened.
The
sanctuary was empty now except for Mrs. Miller and me.
She
raised her arm, like God in Michelangelo’s The Creation of Adam on the
ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, although I don’t think creating was what she
had in mind. She pointed at me. I was barely protected by the pulpit.
“You,”
she hissed. “This is your
doing!”
I’ve
come to realize over the years that there are parishioners in every congregation
who view the minister as responsible for whatever ills befall the family of
God—poor attendance, tight budgets, fallen Angel Food cakes (“It was a mix,
it should not have fallen, would not have fallen if you hadn’t let all that
cold air in, Reverend.”). Mrs. Miller was one such bane.
“Me?”
I said.
“Yes,
you. I’ve known all along.
The handiwork of the devil.”
“You
don’t even believe in the devil, Mrs. Miller.
You told me so yourself.”
She
eased to her feet, back straighter than usual (a little bit of free
slime-chiropractic work never hurt anyone, I thought) and stalked out of the
sanctuary to meet the approaching wave of sirens.
I
sat down in the chair behind the pulpit.
I’ve
read that God exacts retribution: locusts,
floods, plagues. And I admit, Mrs.
Miller can indeed be trying. So
maybe that’s what this is, godly retribution.
Or
maybe there is a devil. Ha. Maybe he’s looking for recruits—little spindly blue-haired
ones.
Well...maybe
it was me. Maybe I did
let my fear of her get the better of me. If
I’d—
Now
just hold on a minute. We’re
talking a lamb grew out of the church floor and turned into a slime creature.
Yeah right, in my dreams.
I
shrugged to myself. Yikes.
What if it were true. I
could have toasted Mrs. M. right then and there.
(Opportunity knocks, and if you don’t—)
“Excuse
me.” The RCMP officer was standing at the back of the sanctuary,
hat in hand. “Can I talk to
you?”
“Yeah,
sure,” I said.
He
came forward, extracting a notebook and pen after tucking his hat under his
bulging arm. I notice biceps. Mine
are kind of weenie. Too many years
of books, not enough football. I
regret that sometimes, the—
“Can
you tell me what you saw, Father.”
“Just
call me Dave, Officer,” I said. I
told him about the lamb.
He
nodded, but he didn't take any notes.
#
I
called Mrs. Miller on the phone the next day, even though it was my day off.
“I
had to use beer," she said, "real beer, to get that goo out of my
hair. I actually had to go into the liquor store.
My word, if anyone saw me. And
stink, I’ll probably smell like a barnyard for the rest of my days.”
And
through the phone line I could taste her indignant acrimony.
There was a distinctly Mrs. M. taste to the energy, a bitter,
aspirin-like flavor. I could tell
as clearly as if I were reading her mind that she believed quite sincerely that
I had created that lamb to attack her.
#
On
Tuesday afternoons, I do my hospital visiting.
One of my least favorite duties. That smell in hospitals—maybe it’s
the cleaner they use, or maybe there’s anesthetic floating around in the air.
Bleah. Makes me nauseous.
Even after twenty-nine years of ministry.
I
found Lisa Michaels sitting up in bed, flipping through an issue of Sports
Illustrated. The one with the
bathing suits.
Lisa
had been depressed ever since her breast cancer diagnosis.
The surgeon removed a lump six months ago and gave her a clean bill, but
then last week she found another lump. She
and her surgeon began discussing the M word.
And now here she was, contemplating surgery.
“Hey,
Lisa,” I said.
“Hi,
Dave.” She whipped the magazine across the room.
It smacked against the wall and dropped into the garbage can.
A perfect shot.
I
went and got a chair, but before I could get my butt into it, Lisa said,
“Dave, will you say a prayer for me? I
know this is all supposed to be God’s will, and such, but I just don’t want
to go through with this. Will you
say a prayer? For healing?”
Jeepers.
These are the put-your-money-where-your-mouth-is kind of prayers:
let’s see what this God of yours can actually do, choirboy.
Lisa
is a very sincere Christian and a committed churchwoman.
But it’s been my experience that God doesn’t seem to have a whole lot
to do with cancer—neither giving it nor taking it away.
Although a person’s good faith does seem to help keep their immune
system strong. It’s not that I
don’t believe in miracles. I do.
Honest. I’ve just never
been party to one. God never seems
to want to use me to pull them off.
“And
do a laying on of hands,” she added.
I
smiled (although it felt more like a grimace), placed my hand on her shoulder
and closed my eyes to hunt around for some appropriate words.
I felt her fingers curl around mine and she slid my hand down onto the
side of her breast, and squeezed. I
pretended not to notice. But there
was the lump, irregular and hard, about half the size of a golf ball.
Her
terror wailed loud inside my head. I
tasted dry wood ash—my mouth seemed filled with it and my body overflowed with
a scorching mix of Lisa’s fear and grief and ember-hot rage.
“Dear
God,” I said, stunned. And then
the lump was in my hand, a slippery mass of hard tissue.
She
gasped. I gasped. I
jerked my hand away. The cancerous
lump smacked on the floor and rolled under the next bed.
Lisa
ripped open her gown, groping at her heavy breast.
She
shrieked and leaped from the hospital bed.
“It’s gone!” she shouted. “It’s gone!”
I
dropped to my hands and knees and grappled for the lump.
I needed the evidence. Lisa
was pulling at my clergy shirt.
There,
I had it.
She
jerked my to my feet and threw her arms around me.
She was laughing and crying. She
thrust her breast at me. “Feel
it.”
I
felt it. The lump was gone.
Or rather, it was in my left hand. We
just stared at it.
#
That
Sunday, worship was a tad tense, but at least the sanctuary was packed.
Lookie-loos, reporters, even the police were there.
I was sweating, wishing I’d polished my sermon a little more—I’d
pulled it together later than usual Saturday night.
It had been a very weird week.
The
service started off smoothly though. Call
To Worship. Only the usual peculiar noises from the basement.
Prayer of Adoration and Confession.
No lambs slopping up out of the floor.
First
hymn. And it was a bad one. Don’t
know what I was thinking when I picked it.
Maggie, the organist, butchers it every time.
I
could see little bumps of dark goo—as Mrs. Miller called it—bubbling around
Maggie’s Phentex-slippered feet.
The
hymn finally ground into its Amen without an eruption of slime violence.
The bubbles glooped back into the carpet leaving only a thin, viscous
film.
Jennifer
Keeley (her maiden name), recently divorced from husband Roger (speaking of
slime) and raising three kids, rose to read from the Old Testament—Leviticus
25, the Jubilee section.
Roger
had gone off to find himself last year after being fired from Sears, but all he
found was a twenty-three year old “chickie-poo” with big red hair and even
bigger boobs. That’s how Jenny
put it. I never much liked Roger.
His little adventure seemed to tear the guts out of Jenny's
self-confidence.
I
slipped down into the front pew as I usually do for readings—a much better
view, and it allows me to nip over my sermon notes without the congregation
seeing.
Jenny
cleared her throat and began to read. “And you shall hallow the fiftieth year,
and proclaim liberty throughout the land to all its inhabitants; it shall be a
jubilee for you when each of you shall—”
She
faltered. I looked up. She
was fiddling with the buttons on her blouse—or rather, clenching them.
Then
I could feel it. The slippery
tendril of energy coming from somewhere behind me in the pews.
Suddenly I could taste it, a corn-syrup sweetness with an aftertaste of
fish. Made me think of portly Edgar
McDonald for some reason, a quiet member of the Board of Managers whom everyone
liked.
I
was about to turn and confirm the source when I heard a soft pop, then a ping,
and then Jenny’s green skirt hit the floor around her high-heeled ankles.
I don’t know what Edgar hoped she was or wasn’t wearing under that
skirt, but he wanted to know, wanted to know something fierce. I hope the pink cotton underwear and knee-high nylons were
worth it.
Jenny’s
face streaked scarlet. I assumed
embarrassment at first, but then I heard it inside my head, the soaring howl of
her humiliation and rage. “Sweet
Jesus,” I muttered as I watched the acrid power roar out from her, blasting
every stitch of clothing off Edgar McDonald’s pasty Scottish body.
There
was a collective gasp, and then a silence so sudden and so deep that God should
have been checking in on us.
Glenda,
Edgar’s wife, generally had that demure, eyes-downcast look.
Not at this moment, though. In
fact, she had the look of someone with a confirmed hunch.
And if Jennifer Keeley didn’t kill Edgar outright, I was certain Glenda
would.
Mrs.
Miller started in on her Nitro pills—I could feel her eyes searing my head.
The press went wild, flashes blinded me. Jenny yanked up her skirt and started down the aisle.
I could feel her pooling her energy.
I intervened—I had visions of her splattering Edgar into bloody little
bits of middle-management flesh. It
would take weeks to clean him off the newly-painted ceiling.
“Get
the hell out of my way, Dave,” Jenny growled at me.
“Jenny...”
“Y’know,
Dave, it’s high time I had a little chat with Roger,” she said.
Roger?
Yeah, Roger, her ex.
She
tugged on her skirt. “There are a few things I’ve been meaning to say to
him,” she said, “but I just haven’t been able to work up the nerve before
now.”
Indeed,
Jenny suddenly seemed to have her old confidence back.
I got the hell out of her way.
People
started yelling. Someone threw a
sports jacket over Edgar. The press
and police surged forward.
There
seemed to be no use continuing to worship, so I just raised my hands and
hollered out the benediction. Maggie
the Organist leapt in with the chords of the choral Amen, but they were drowned
out by all the shouting.
#
The
air conditioner in the manse’s living room was losing the battle.
I was down to my underwear, T-shirt and bare feet.
Not a pretty sight.
The
spaghetti sauce was plop-plopping on simmer in the kitchen and I was waiting for
the noodle water to boil. I like my
big meal at lunch time.
I
set my beer on the end table, grabbed the remote and turned on the TV.
I hoisted my feet up onto the hassock.
Monday is my day off. Mondays,
beer, and TV are a tradition for me, a tradition that started with my first
congregation, where the retiring minister, a wrinkly Edinburgh Scot, stayed on
as a parishioner, having ministered there for nineteen years.
He insisted that Monday was the cleric’s Sabbath, and was to be spent
with a good thick book and a pint of good Scotch Whiskey.
To help him relax. I never could get the hang of the whiskey.
And
after the mayhem following yesterday’s service, I certainly needed to relax.
I
sipped my beer and flipped to the read-along cable news channel.
Along the bottom of the screen I read, “—rain falling in Africa.
Astronomers announced today that the Hubble Telescope has detected
another fold in space. This second
wrinkle is between the orbits of Uranus and Neptune.
Last week, astronomers announced the discovery of the first fold.
They assure—”
I
turned off the TV and got out of my chair, beer in hand, and began to wander.
Out the living room window I could see four 1967 Corvettes—each a
different color—parked in Joe Frederick’s driveway. The kind he goes on and on about. The kind he never used to have.
Two
houses up is Brigitte’s place. She’s
a single mom on social assistance. The
ceiling in her kitchen fell in last month and that slimy troglodyte-cum-landlord
told her if she wanted it fixed she could bloody well go turn a few tricks and
make the money herself.
Brigitte’s
finally lost it, I thought. She was
outside, standing on a kitchen chair, picking leaves off the spindly maple tree
the city had planted last year to “green up” the neighborhood.
I got my binos and took a closer look.
Gadzooks. She was picking money
off the tree, fifty-dollar bills, and stuffing them into a green garbage bag.
The
phone rang. I set the binoculars on the TV and went into the kitchen.
The noodle water was boiling finally.
“Hello?”
“Reverend?”
Oh,
joy—Mrs. Miller. I gave up trying
to get her to call me by first name years ago.
And I sure as heck don’t call her by hers.
What is it anyway? Starts
with an L, I think.
“Mrs.
Miller. Well, what can I do for you?”
(This is my polite way of helping parishioners get to the point when they
phone.)
“Francis
wants to talk to you.” Francis is
Mrs. Miller’s forty-five year old handicapped son.
I could hear him in the background:
“Hi, Dafe. Hi, Dafe.
Hi, Dafe. C’mon.
C’mon. C’mon.
Hi, Dafe.”
“Put
Frank on the phone.”
“No.
He wants you to come here. He
wants to say...He...Please, Reverend, come talk to him.”
Mrs. Miller has never actually asked me for anything before.
She’s always told me what to do, what she thought I should be doing
that I wasn’t, mostly ordering me around like a ten-year old kid.
Like she orders Frank around, actually.
“I’ll
be right over,” I said, and hung up. I
turned off the gas under the spaghetti sauce and the noodle water, then poured
my beer down the sink. It’d be
flat by the time I got back anyway. What
good is beer without fizz?
I
slipped on my Birkenstocks. Figured
I’d just walk over. Mrs. Miller
lives quite close to the manse. Too
close.
Jeepers
Murphy! I need to put on some shorts:
I’m in my flipping underwear. I
hate summer.
#
The
midday heat was stifling.
I
nipped across the street and scooted down a back alley, taking the shortcut to
Mrs. M.’s big two-storey house.
I
noticed that the Berkowitz’s had replaced the chain-link fence around their
back yard with a heavy, high board fence, and painted it a lovely emerald-green
color. There was such a curious
sweet-cinnamon energy swirling in their backyard, and suddenly I was able to
look right through the new board fence as if it weren’t even there, just
because I wanted to see what they might be up to.
Mr.
and Mrs. Berkowitz were lying under their oak tree, which was now much taller
and fuller than it used to be, giving them sweet, cool shade in the midday heat.
They were nude, laying on the afghan she’d crocheted last winter.
There was a plate of Fig Newtons between them.
They were talking and laughing and eating Fig Newtons, and all the while
Mr. Berkowitz stroked Mrs. Berkowitz’s breast with the backs of his curled
fingers.
I
always knew they really liked each other.
#
Frank
was up in the mountain ash tree when I got there.
Mrs. Miller was on the lawn, in front of her favorite perennial bed,
demanding that he come down right this instant.
Frank
is a worker, always cutting grass or raking leaves or shoveling snow around the
neighborhood. He has a regular
paying clientele of church and non-church folks.
I’ve always wondered how much of that money Frank got to keep—I
figured the old bat was probably robbing him blind.
I’m sure that this is my own hardness of heart.
Mrs. M. just can’t be that mean. And
not that she needs the money either. Her dead husband left her and Frank very well cared for
financially.
“Leave
me alone, leave me alone! Bossy,
bossy, bossy! I want to leave, I
want to! You’re not the boss of me, y’know, you’re not.
I’m grown up.”
“Hey,
Frank,” I called out.
“Hi,
Dafe!” Frank gave me a big grin. “I’m gonna fly away, Dafe, live by
myself. Just want to say ‘Bye.’
I’m gonna fly! Bye, Dafe!”
“How’d
he get up in the tree?” I whispered to Mrs. Miller.
“Don’t
talk ’bout me!” Frank hollered. “Not
nice!”
“I’m
sorry, Frank. You’re right,
it’s not nice. I’m sorry.
How’d you get up in the tree?”
“I
fly!” he said. “I fly!” He
began flapping his arms. “Bye,
Dafe. Bye, Mom.
Bye!”
“No!”
Mrs. Miller pleaded. “No,
Francis! Don’t leave me!”
But
he did. Flapping his arms and kicking a little with his big feet, he
leapt from the tree and flew up over the two-storey house.
He looked jerky at first, like when he walks, but soon his arms flapped
smoothly with the strength years of raking and shoveling had given him.
And then he was gone.
Mrs.
Miller started shaking all over. I’d
seen her shake like that before when she was so mad at me she could hardly talk.
But I was sure it wasn’t rage that had control of her now.
She
started to wail, tears erupting from her eyes.
I cuddled my arm around her—she’s actually quite tiny—and walked
her up the stairs to the porch. Tea,
I was thinking, I’ll make her some tea. My
own heart was breaking for her. For
Mrs. Miller. Good heavens, I
thought, what’s the world coming to when I feel sorry for this little demon?
“I’ll
make us some tea,” I said.
#
Tuesday
morning I stopped in to visit Julia Castle, an elderly woman on our membership
roll who never comes to church.
“David,
how timely. I was thinking I might
call you today and ask you to come by,” Julia said.
“I have something to get off my chest.
Please come in.” She
stepped back, sweeping me inside with her hand. Her apartment was refreshing and
cool.
I
have spent many hours here with Julia over the past ten years.
Although her heritage is staunch Scotch Presbyterian, she hasn’t been
to church since she was in her twenties. She
professes atheism, but gives regularly to the congregation and reads systematic
theology for fun. Julia is
frightfully well read (she thinks television is for idiots).
In fact, I don’t think the woman sleeps much anymore, but instead
spends her long nights devouring books.
She
made tea and brought out the Peek Freans, my favorite, and some home-made
scones. Julia hasn’t made scones for tea in years.
Serving me with her Royal Albert Country Rose china, she chatted lightly
about her various neighbors’ feats and foibles.
Finally,
she sat in her Queen Anne chair with Matthew Fox (named after the theologian),
her golden Lhasa Apso, curled up in her lap like a cat.
Matthew Fox looked quite comfy. Stroking
him lightly, she sighed.
“I
am afraid that I am finally losing my faculties,” she said. “And since I
have no other living relatives, as you know, I wanted to confirm with you your
role as executor of my will.”
I
took a Peek Frean. Julia isn’t
one for histrionics.
“I
don’t really know how to explain,” she said, “so I’ll simply come out
and say it. I have been having
delightful intercourse with Matthew Fox all week.”
I have explained to Julia on several occasions that we rarely use the i-word
for anything but sex anymore. She
doesn’t seem to pay heed to my advice. On
the other hand, Julia doesn’t get out much, so it probably doesn’t matter. “You see,” she continued, “he...he has been
participating. In fact, he is
becoming quite the interlocutor. I
am discovering that he has a unique and poignant perspective.
Quite refreshing, I might add.”
I
swallowed my Peek Frean.
“The
first thing he said to me was, No. Just
like a child. An important first
word for anyone wishing to develop a critical mind, don’t you think? No, what? I asked him. We
were about to have tea, just like this. No,
thank you, he said. That’s very
good, I told him—it’s always important to reward good manners—but that
wasn’t what I meant. I explained
that I wanted to know why he said No.
I don’t like Peek Freans, he said, and we always have Peek Freans now.
You used to make scones. I
like those better. So I made him
some scones. He was quite beside
himself with delight.”
Matthew
Fox looked up at her, a perfect Disney-dog gaze.
“It’s
not you, Julia,” I said, thankful that I would no longer have to share the
Peek Freans with the dog. “You’re
not losing your marbles. The
universe has gone kind of wonky. Not
really in a bad way, though.” Slime
grabbing Mrs. Miller by the head wasn’t such a bad thing, was it?
I
told her about Mrs. Miller, and about Frank and Lisa and Brigitte.
I left out the part about the Berkowitz’s.
“I’m not really sure what God has in mind,” I said to her as a kind
of conclusion.
Julia
stroked the rim of her teacup with her index finger.
“Honestly, David, it sounds to me like God is quite out of the picture. God just doesn’t have this rich a sense of humor; God has
more of a knock-knock-joke sense of humor.”
I
chewed. Atheists will use anything
to get a leg up in the existence-of-God debate.
Julia
fed Matthew Fox a piece of scone.
#
I
stopped in at Mrs. Miller’s on the way home from Julia’s.
I’m not sure why. I just
felt I needed to.
I
had never heard Nathan shout before, but he was shouting now.
“You asked me to come, and I agreed.
But I’ve had enough. I’m
leaving!”
Whoa.
Wait a second. Nathan is
dead, remember? You buried him, for
Pete’s sake. Three years ago.
“Please,
Nathan, please stay.” Mrs. M. was
actually begging.
She
must have felt me come into the dining room because she turned to me, her eyes
wide. “I just want to talk to
him, if only for a while. It’s
been so long. Please, David, please, make him stay.”
David.
Wow, she was desperate.
“Hey,
Nathan. Uh, good to see you again.
You’re looking great.” He
looked younger than I remembered. In
fact, he looked better dead than he had those last couple of years before his
heart attack.
“Hi,
Dave. You’re looking pretty good
yourself. You lost some weight?”
I
blushed. “Yeah,” I said,
“I’ve been working out this summer.”
That was a bald-faced lie, but I pumped my arms up and down to show him
anyway. I made a mental note to
order some new short-sleeved clergy shirts—mine were getting snug
around the biceps.
“Reverend!”
Mrs. Miller stamped her foot.
“See?”
Nathan said. “You always nose in,
take over the conversation, work it around to something you want to talk
about. And since I’m here anyway:
that’s not all. Remember how you were always accusing me of running around on
you, rolling in the hay with some secretary from work.
Well, I’d have been nuts to: you’d
have skinned me alive. So just so
you know, I never did, even though you never believed me.
You’re just a jealous, bitter-hearted woman.
And you have been from the day Francis was born.”
“That’s
not true. Tell him that’s not true, Reverend.”
I
held up my hands, more to protect myself than to defer.
I’m as afraid of her as Nathan was.
But he’s already dead and I’m not, and I don’t want to be, so I
just kept my mouth shut.
There
was silence. A stalemate. But something had changed in Mrs. Miller.
I could taste it, more like black pepper, less like aspirin.
She looked at Nathan and spoke, her voice soft, quiet, like I’ve never
heard it before. “Did you ever
love me, Nathan?”
“Yes,
Lil, I did. For a long time. Then,
after Francis was born, things changed. Inside
me, inside you; between us. And it
was never the same after that.” He
sighed. “How is Francis?”
“He
left home, Nathan. He flew away.”
Nathan
simply nodded, as if Frank’s flying away was an ordinary thing.
An expected thing.
“What’s
going on, Nathan?” I said.
He
looked at me and shrugged. “The
universe is growing up, Dave. It’s
transmogrifying—I think that’s what Calvin would call it.”
“John
Calvin, the Reformer?”
He
snorted. “No, Calvin of Calvin and Hobbes.”
“Oh,”
I said. That Calvin. Mrs.
Miller used to complain that Nathan did all his reading on the toilet.
(The things people tell you when you’re a minister.)
Nathan
shrugged again. “The universe is
going through a gawky adolescent period right now.
Bending, folding—melting down all the walls.
Your lives will soon be more like my life, more like what life is like on
this side.
“But
until those barriers are gone completely, I’d rather stay over here on my
side.” He turned to Mrs. Miller.
“It’s been too long between us, Lil.”
Something
snapped inside my head. I heard it,
like the crack of a timber under weight. I
tasted wood ash again.
Mrs.
Miller nodded slowly. “All
right,” she said. She took a
moment to look at him, to really look at him.
“Good-bye, Nathan.”
Nathan
said nothing in response, but waved at me, then slowly dissolved into the air.
Mrs.
M. tipped her head back and howled. Like
one of the Hounds of Hell. The
windows rattled. I slapped my hands
over my ears. The house began to
shake and white-hot flames roared around us.
But there was no rage left in her, just sheer, unadulterated grief.
I
reached out, pulled her tiny body against mine, and held her hard.
I was no longer afraid. Of
her, or of anything else.
Her
howling filled me, wound through my body, coursing electric.
I tasted her bitter life. It
melted in my mouth. The bitterness
became turmeric, then lemon rind. I
wanted to spit it out of my body, but it was part of me now.
Had always been part of me.
After
a long time the howling ebbed. Then
slowly the flames fell back, as this first wave of grief eased.
Then
there was silence. And the
gentleness that comes after the long, harsh storm.
So,
the universe is transmogrifying, I thought.
Growing up. The dead should
know.
Might
as well get used to it, I told myself.
And
so, as I held Mrs. Miller, I rained iris blossoms on us, right there in her
dining room, because I remembered that she said once how much she loved irises.
They rained like purple snow, their rich sweetness surrounding us,
filling the air we breathed.
The
End
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