Between Heaven and Hell

Where I store my NaNoWriMo novels.

Name:
Location: Smallville, Eastern Seaboard, United States

This is where I'm posting my 2009 NaNoWriMo entry and previous years entries. This is an entirely fictional work of literary nonsense. No resemblance to anyone living or dead is intended. Strictly a figment of my sick little mind for the month of November 2009. No rights taken or given, not responsible for anyone being offended by my novel. Get over it. Nano baby! As always, I hold the copyright on this ugly thing.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Karma Day 25. Will I Make It?

When I entered college I traded rural Mississippi for rural western mountainous Maryland. It was a big change for me in many ways but in some ways nothing changed. I studied hard when not in class and I worked as much as I could at a nearby pizza joint. Nose to the grindstone, no time for the kind of social interaction. Just like high school I didn’t date, I stayed home or worked. I knew I struck my dorm room mates as a stick in the mud but I didn’t care. I had my eyes focused on a future that didn’t include food stamps or having to make do and no handsome flirty boy or booze was going to derail that. Besides, I’d seen first hand where that lead from my days living with my momma.

The biggest change for me was losing the musical cadences of the various southern drawls of Mississippi and losing the melody of the passing trains. That unique southern music left my live. I felt as if I had invaded yankee land, going up north past the Mason Dixon line.

Plus it was cold, colder than anything I’d ever experienced in Mississippi. The coat I brought was perfectly serviceable in Mississippi but here in the Allegany mountains the fall wind cut right through it like I was wearing mere newspaper. That first winter I suffered from chill blains most cruelly even if I was thrilled to see snow for the first time.

All four years I studied at the Catholic college in Maryland slid by in a haze of work and school. I took the train home every holiday to see my grandmother and took occasional weekend side trips to Baltimore and Washington.

By the time I’d met Michael I was one year out of college and working in Silver Spring, Maryland as an OR nurse. I’d settled into a nice life in suburban Maryland, buying a new car and furnishing my first apartment with furniture from Ikea.

We had a very quick romance, going from dating to engaged to married in just under a year. In fact, we married on opening weekend at the Renaissance fair dressed in period clothing. After sending my grandmother copies of the wedding photos I got a lengthy letter telling me that this was just simply not done. You do not marry at a fair! I laughed reading her shocked words as she clucked over the fact that I’d trampled on her precious etiquette during my wedding.

I lay on Marvelette’s sofa and tried to figure out what had gone so terrible wrong between Michael and I. Those first years together we got along so well, so much in love. Michael and I bought a condo in Crystal City and planned a life together that looked bright.

The only dark cloud on the horizon was that Michael completely cut his family from his life. He complained that since he’d left law school they’d been dunning him for every dime that they could. I tried to never mention Michael’s family to him because it only put him in a terrible mood. It was five years before I had a chance to meet his parents.

And then I got pregnant after we’d been married for five years. We had never discussed having kids, it was just one of those things that seemed to loom way off in the future, a some day occurrence but not now. I’d been on the pill but ended up pregnant anyway. I remember the night I told Michael we were going to be parents.

The whole subject made me nervous because we’d never really talked about having a family so I had prepared to tell him the news carefully. I made sure the condo was immaculate and that I’d prepared all of Michael’s favorite foods right down to triple chocolate cake. I took care with my hair and makeup and I wore the dress Michael loved the most, form fitting, slinky and black.

But not matter how carefully I prepared he still flew into a rage when I told him we were to be parents and accused me of planning this to tie him down to responsibility. But after a few days he came around and said it would be good to start a family, in fact, we should look for a new larger home, something in the Virginia countryside, invest the money from the sale of my grandmother’s home. Which led to another fight.

Michael had been after me to do something with the money for months now. Once my grandmother had passed on her possessions had all been left to me. There wasn’t much to be had, some of her ancient furniture and the house. I packed up some of her things to take home but the majority had been auctioned off. The house sold quickly and I deposited the money in my name only at our bank. Michael was upset with me for not putting his name on it too. It should have been a tipoff, a warning sign but I was too much in love to see anything.

My pregnancy triggered an eighteen month search for just the right home for us. I was adamant I wanted a small farm or a rural homestead while Michael was insisting on a plastic sided house on a cul de sac in one of the thousands of identical neighborhoods encircling Washington DC like the outer rings of Saturn. We fought over what type of home and fought over prices.

Every weekend for months was filled with excursions to all the far flung outlaying regions of the Greater DC area, from southern Rhode Island all the way down to West Virginia and almost to Richmond. I fell in love with the Piedmont region of Virginia, the gracious rolling green hills fenced with white board held some of the finest horse flesh in all of the US with the looming Blue Ridge mountains in the not too far distance. Hard to believe such scenic bucolic landscapes existed within a ninety minute drive of Washington.

But when I first laid eyes on the falling apart farmhouse cobbled together out of an old log cabin I knew I’d found exactly what I wanted. The trouble was convincing Michael. He didn’t mind the drive, but he seemed most to mind that it was a farm. The fact was that Michael didn’t do farming or rural very well. I begged, I pleaded, I threatened but the purchase of what he called sarcastically ‘Tilted Acres’ came down to two things. That it would be much better for our child to be raised in a rural setting as opposed to the gritty inner city childhood he’d experienced and that I would be paying for the entire place with the money from the sale of my grandmothers home.

Through the years as I torn away the uglier updates to our home and redid the floors, pulled the crumbled plaster away from the river rock original fireplace Michael had sneered that the house would never be finished, it would be a perpetual money pit. We fought the hardest on the days Michael perused our checkbook and had seen that I’d spent almost nothing on groceries, getting peanut butter, dried beans and apples, eking out what he called ‘poverty meals’ just so I could pay the plumber and the electrician. He didn’t understand how much I loved it, from the rocky soil to the acreage that spanned gullies and hills to the house that was half traditional farmhouse and half log cabin through the train tracks running in front of the house. The place spoke to me.

Eventually I discovered it was just easier to make the monies I needed for the renovation from the farm. First I tried my hand at making herbal infusions, teas and medicines I’d learned from my grandmother back in rural Mississippi but there was only a limited market for such things, so I supplemented the herbs with hiring myself as painter, a private night nurse and other menial jobs until I settled upon making organic goats milk cheese, soaps, shampoos and lotions from the same goats milk and growing exotic vegetables for the gourmet restaurants of DC in my large garden. The problem was I was still working my day job at the hospital.

A few years of expensive day care combined with Michael suddenly finding religion led to me quitting my job as a nurse and becoming a full time wife, mother, home remodeled and part time farmer. We both agreed it would be for the best and Michael kept saying that as the head of the household under Biblical law he should be the breadwinner while I should be in my primary role of mother. I didn’t argue because I was exhausted from several years of trying to do it all.

I had to keep my business activities limited to what I could produce from the farm, the goats milk products, the herbs, the natural candles I made and the boutique fruits and veggies.

Michael’s sudden conversion to radical evangelical Christianity puzzled me and at first I was reluctant to join him, not even wanting to visit the church when he attended the Sunday services. But he kept nagging me to join him and it seemed like a good way to make friends in the new area we lived in. So I joined him, a non-believer in a sea of the righteous.

I still to this day do not know exactly what happened to Michael. Every time I asked him why he suddenly started believing in God and wanting to go to church he clammed up. Whatever had happened to him was powerful and too intimate to talk about. I did notice that a few guys he worked with also attended the church he picked out for us. I suspect they had leaned on him until he’d had a conversion experience.

No matter how I ran the scenario in my mind I just couldn’t wrap my mind around what had happened. It was just too unbelievable.

It wasn’t necessarily that I didn’t believe in God. I just hadn’t been raised in the church. My only real acquaintance with religion had been my years with the nuns. I could recite all of the Catholic liturgy from years attending Mass before classes. But I just didn’t get that God was as involved with everyone’s day to day lives as all the Jesus freaks claimed. God was in some distant place lofty and removed, too busy with bother with the lives of mere mortals. He didn’t care if you have toast or doughnuts for breakfast because He was engaged in some enormous struggle between good and evil, not our piss ant little lives.

Strange as it seemed, Michael, handsome Michael, vain Michael, competitive Michael turned into a regular Charlie Church. Every Wednesday night found him at Bible study, every weekend he was either helping out with one of the church’s many ministries or attended conferences and every Sunday the day was filled with church, church, church. He talked, ate and slept Jesus.

I don’t think I really took Michael entirely serious until he started teaching children’s Sunday School and humbly asked for my forgiveness for his former sins against me. He didn’t explain what he meant by that but after tonight I can well imagine that infidelity was one of them. He wanted us to put the past in the past.

Which wasn’t necessarily a bad thing. We had turned into one of those couples that started bickering in a second and fought over the most petty things. Once Michael was baptized and washed in the blood of the lamb his attempts to bait me into a fight trickled down to nothing and he started treating me in a more kindly fashion. It wasn’t the white hot passionate perfection of the early years of our marriage, it was more like a partnership rooted in the rules preached by the church. But I sometimes missed the passion, missed the making up after the fights, the intense sex all over the house.

At first everyone at Plover Creek seemed frighteningly strange. It wasn’t unusual to hear people praying for minutia guidance from God for such silly simple things as what to eat for lunch that day. And it frightened me just how many uneducated women were insisting that you only home school your children because public school was a cesspool of liberal thinking. Eventually I found myself joining in on the worship service and feeling a strange sensation, almost like a heaviness, a presence of someone else with me.

But I wasn’t entirely convinced until one night when I heard an audible voice telling me to come unto Him while I was silently praying one night alone out of the porch. I started to have a two way internal dialogue with the divine.

How do you not believe in the face of that? It’s not possible. I started on a path that led me closer every day into the presence of the heavenly.

The biggest miracle was that Michael stopped drinking entirely And smoking. No amount of pleading from me that he was making Jay’s asthma worse by smoking around him had any affect but somehow our new church did. He gutted it out and stopped smoking. Michael went to AA and I never saw him drink again. I owed the Lord an enormous debt for those two things because it eased things even more between us.

We entered a phase in our marriage that was the happiest of all times. We did all things faith related, from service to the poor, church attendance, Bible study and prayer as one. Michael quit resenting the fact that I stayed home with Jay and I made every effort to make his life as uncomplicated and tranquil as possible. I did everything, not that I left much undone for him before but now I made just that from the moment Michael awoke in the morning till he lay back in our bed with a sigh there was nothing in our home that need stress him. I look back on those days and can hardly believe how close we were for awhile.

Then after five or six years at Plover Creek things began to change. First, there was a church split over the role of women in leadership in the church. Those that believed it was alright for women to take high level leadership roles such as deacon or elder or minister formed their own church. There were tears, friendships ruined and families split apart. I watched with dismay as various sides alleged all sorts of sinful pride based behaviors that the other side engaged in. I tried not to take sides.

Not Michael, he took it hard, his best friend from work and in the church was appointed pastor of the new fellowship. His friend Lane went from being a deacon at Plover Creek to giving sermons each Sunday and writing the Statement of Purpose of the brand new church Amazing Life. The thing that freaked out Michael the most was that Lane refused to have anything to do with him once the church split happened because Michael hadn’t supported his faction in demanding that women have equal leadership status.

At Amazing Life Lane’s wife, Susan, was his co-pastor. They met in a small room over the old Exxon station in a nearby village and the church consisted of perhaps twenty members at first.

It was several years before anyone at Plover Creek or Amazing Life would have anything to do with each other and even then it was only on bowling league nights on Faith League night at the large bowling alley in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Michael and I hadn’t taken sides in the split but we’d been treated like the enemy anyway. That marked the first time that Michael showed any signs that he wasn’t utterly content with our faith life.

Six months later our church split again. This time it was the people who wanted to have a Holy Ghost experience, a revival atmosphere like that found at Brownsville Assemblies of God or even at the local AoG church. The agitators wanted us to be able to sing and dance in the aisles, laugh, howl, pound tambourines or even speak loudly in tongues.

Michael was the most horrified by their assertion that everyone needed to speak in tongues, that it was our own private prayer language. He ranted loudly about it many times in our house to me, yelling that speaking in tongues was only for back in Bible times, anyone doing it today was only fooling themselves and speaking in nonsensical gibberish.

I wasn’t quite so sure. I’d experienced a few odd things at conferences, like seeing angels and being slain in the spirit so I wasn’t as dismissive of it as he was. Thankfully he never found out that a group of ladies from Plover Creek once had an afternoon get together in the guise of a special Bible study to talk about this and figure out exactly how one went about speaking in tongues. I remember standing there in front of Sister Charlene’s crackling fireplace, opening my chapped lips and waiting, waiting to talk in tongues, waiting for what I knew not exactly.

By the end of the afternoon most of us were tongue less still and concluded it was a load of hooey dreamed up by someone listening more to the devil. Still, a few had ended that afternoon singing and crying and praying in strange phonic sounds like a long dead language. They were fervent believers now and told the rest of us to get with the program or we were going to miss out on heaven and all of God’s gifts.

I remember driving home in a rage, crying hard. I’d wanted all that God had for me. Why didn’t I get it, I’d raged at God, why? Did I do something wrong? Am I stupid? I’d asked Him, hearing nothing for all my pleading.

Michael never even realized I was in an internal turmoil in those days, wanting to believe the revival folks, but afraid to. Not seeing much evidence of what they claimed was the real truth. I stayed spiritually stuck all that winter, spring and summer until the split finally occurred.

When more people left Plover Creek many said good riddance, that most of the women involved in the first and second splits were sinful divorcees that were controlling and going to hell for it. Nothing worse than a controlling woman because manipulation was likened unto witchcraft according to the Bible. Divorcees and controllers burn in hell.

The second split caused those in our fellowship to take a tack more towards the extreme right. The eldest deacon’s wife demanded we cover our heads because St Paul said so and that we wear loose clothing to hide anything that might tempt a man into the sin of lust but still it should be feminine. No pants were allowed and many frustrated days I split wood for our wood burning furnace or drove my tractor wearing long johns covered by a thick flannel cotton petticoat topped by a long skirt and cursed the day we’d all been told pants were of the devil. No amount of tights, long underwear and flannel slip made up for not being allowed pants on the coldest of days.

When each of these new stricter rules had been announced Michael had inwardly seethed but kept an outward lid on his disagreement with them. He only took it out on me, barking out orders at me not to pay any mind to what those mindless holiness ninnies kept inventing in their spare time.

But I didn’t. I did what the church said because I didn’t want to lose my God or my friends. I found myself turning to them ever more as my relationship with Michael floundered into quiet disagreement and he spent more nights working late in the city before staying over in our condo.

My friends assured me if I just stayed a faithful, praying and obedient wife then Michael would eventually see the error of his ways and return to treating me well, with respect, with love again. Even my friends could see there was tension between us now.

I ignored it because I still loved Michael, as much if not more than I did that first moment I spied the handsome fallen knight at the fair. I’d aged, getting fine lines and silvering hair but Michael was even more handsome with a little age on him. I just knew if I stayed sweet and subservient with a true servant heart towards him that this would all blow over, Michael would make his peace with God and turn to me with renewed love and appreciation.

Until September eleventh two thousand and one I was convinced it would happened. My world had been destroyed in one short day.

I can’t say I slept much that long night on Marvelette’s sofa but suddenly sunlight was in my eyes and I felt confused. I sat up and looked around, wondering where I was for a few brief merciful seconds before the memories of the day before returned. I could hear Marvelette getting breakfast ready for her large brood, setting the table, smell the frying bacon and hot coffee. As I stretched I could see that Jay was sitting glumly in a chair across from the sofa staring soberly at me. He asked me, “Is Dad dead?”

With his words I wanted to crumble, to cry, never to get up again but some silent inner preservation mechanism kicked in and I smiled brightly and said, “No way, silly! Dad missed his flight to Los Angeles yesterday because he was stuck in traffic. He decided to go to the condo and take a later flight. I saw him yesterday evening. He’s fine! He’s just got a lot of work in the city so he might not be coming home for a few days. But I bet he calls you today!”

I certainly didn’t feel like the chipper pleasant everything is right with the way I was putting myself across as to Jay but I saw it was exactly what he needed to hear, tears filled his eyes and he said, “You promise? He’s not dead?”

Marvelette cut me a strange look with her eyes and frowned as I laughed out, “Promise, pinky swear.” and Jay and I solemnly crossed pinkies and shook.

It was only later when Marvellette and I sat down over coffee while her children and Jay ran shouting in the yard that I allowed my real feelings to show. Marve said nothing for awhile, she sat drinking her coffee dispassionately watching my sudden tears before saying, “Do you really think that was wise? He’s got to know sooner or later that his father isn’t coming home.”

At that moment I made a decision, one that would cause me heartache for a long time and I said, “He’ll come back, he always does. Michael gets bored with our life, or out of sorts and eventually he returns to our home and our marriage. This is just more of the same.”

Her face was kind as she said, “Look at me,” but I noticed she was firm, her eyes filled with the inescapable truth, “He’s not coming back. He asked you for a divorce. That’s what you told me last night.”

I got up from the table, suddenly eager to be away from Marvelette’s probing eyes, those ice blue eyes that missed nothing, “I was over wrung by the emotion of the day. Things seem different by the light of day. Besides, I thought you Mennonites were against divorce, all for keeping the marriage together regardless.”

She snorted, “Yeah, unless someone cheats, all bets are off. You found him practically in bed with someone else.”

I sighed, “Marve, I have to keep that door open to accepting him back. He always comes back. I have suspected in the past that he strays but he always comes back. I love him and I’m prepared to forgive him.”

It was much later before I returned to my own home. Jay ran upstairs to his room and his video games while I did the piles of dishes and rewashed the laundry. By this time I’d convinced myself that Michael hadn’t meant anything he’d said, it was just the shock of finding out that the World Trade Center was gone and how close he’d come to losing his life in the crash at the Pentagon. He was talking crazy talk, the talk of someone that has suffered an enormous shock to their heart and mind.

I’d give him his space and he’d come back in a few days or weeks, tail between his legs, contrite and sorrowful. I’d make sure in the meantime that everything was waiting him perfectly here and if I decided if he was unhappy with Plover Creek that it would be alright with me if we switched to another church, perhaps even Amazing Life.

That September twelfth I’d even cleaned our bedroom thoroughly, putting our best bed linens out and putting a dried rosebud on his pillow. I prepared the closest thing I had to a negligee, a sheer white cotton nightie with a hundred tiny mother of pearl buttons down the front. I was completely convinced he would return perhaps that very night.

I skipped and hummed worship songs through my day, more and more convinced I was right. Even a visit from Pastor Will Morgan didn’t dampen my enthusiasm. When I told Will that I was sure Michael would return home tonight he’d looked like I’d just announced the world was ending in five minutes or I was flying to Mars. He let go of the silver teaspoon in his hand and it dropped with a heavy plunk to the saucer beneath his teacup. I could see he thought I was mad, that I’d lost all sense so I airily explained that this was just another phase in our life, Michael would tire of his freedom and come home to momma.

That night I cooked a special meal, organic steaks with asparagus and salad. Jay and I waited to eat, waited as long as we could so that Michael would join us. But he never came, we lit the candles on the dining room table and sat down to cold steaks and shriveled overdone asparagus.

Finally Michael called, just as Jay was getting ready for bed. Jay got to the phone before I did and I ended up picking up the receiver in the kitchen, listening as Michael told Jay that he was leaving us, leaving home and divorcing me. And it hit me again, the trauma of the day before as I sagged silently to the floor feeling my heart breaking again. I sat on the polished brick floor and wept loudly, not seeing the polished copper pots hanging from the rack over the huge old Aga stove or the strings of dried onions and peppers festooned from the open oaken support beams overhead. I lay down, panting and crying, seeing nothing, feeling everything, every miserable painful word from Michael’s lips the night before.

Jay found me that way, laying on the floor moaning wordlessly my distress and I caught a glimpse of panic on his face as he said, “Mom, Mom! You lied to me, Dad says he’s not coming home.” He shrieked and started slapping at me, pulling my braid before he collapsed on top of me and we hugged together, weeping, faces pressed together.

How long we lay there crying I will never know but eventually I snagged one of my beautiful antique embroidered tea towels from the stove handle and wiped down Jay’s tanned face before patting down my own. We sat there Indian style cross legged on the kitchen floor and Jay began to ask me questions. I had to keep telling him I didn’t know the answers, no I didn’t know why Daddy said he didn’t love me any more. No, I didn’t know if Daddy would ever come home. No, I was never leaving him, regardless of what happened I would find a way to make it work out for us. Yes, Daddy might get tired of living alone and come home some day.

That night neither Jay not I could face being alone and I slept with him on his narrow twin bed, listening to his quiet breathing, smelling the mysterious aroma of green grass and fresh air that boys emit. I held onto Jay like he was my life line and secretly cursed Michael for so cavalierly throwing away our life, abandoning our son like this. I would always hate him for forcing our child to grow up sooner than he should have.

One of the biggest things Jay had been worried about was that we’d have to leave our home. He was afraid we’d end up in the streets. He worried about how people would perceive us now that Dad had left. I silently blamed Plover Creek for putting the idea in his mind that divorce was a shameful sin for the entire family.

The last night Jay said to me that night as he drifted off was the most haunting, “Mom,” he’d asked, “did Dad leave because of me, because he was disappointed that I don’t like to play sports?” I’d hugged him even tighter and reassured him that this was simply not the case. I didn’t know all the whys Michael had left but it wasn’t Jay’s fault and I made sure he knew this.

As Jay started to lightly snore between his Spiderman motif sheets I started to worry about the future. What would I tell people? Was what little I brought in from my herbs and goat cheese going to be enough? Was it folly to even consider staying on the farm?

I spent another long sleepless night and in the morning I didn’t feel near as hopeful as I’d felt the night before. Both Jay and I were slow to get up, in fact we were still in our nightclothes at the breakfast table when Will pulled up in our driveway. He’d come by to bring Jay his assignments and books just in case Jay didn’t return to school for a few days. Jay ran upstairs to get dressed while I made uncomfortable small talk with Will Morgan at the table.
Pastor Morgan looked at me solemnly and said, “I see the reality of what happened has finally sunk in.”

I couldn’t even speak, all I could do was nod, I didn’t trust myself not to start crying again.

After Will left I barely had time to slip into an old set of clothes and start milking my goats. I was lugging feed into the barn when my own pastor, Pastor Chas Waverly, a tall craggy faced man with silvering hair, arrived. I dropped the feed sack and ran to him, dissolving into blubbery tears as he hugged me tightly. I don’t know who told him but Pastor Waverly knew that Michael had left me.

Thankfully Jay was with Marvelette and her children again because I spent the next several hours rehashing that terrible evening at the condo, telling Pastor Chas just how horribly off the rails my life had gone. “We’ll get through this together,” he’d assured me, “no matter if Michael does or doesn’t return allow your church family to surround you with love and support.”

At his words I’d felt an enormous weight lift off my shoulders and I’d sighed, sinking back into the old sofa. I’d need all of their prayers to get through this terrible time.

Before he left Pastor Chas slipped me the business card of a lawyer, said while he knew that the Bible counseled no divorce I certainly had Biblical grounds to divorce Michael and move on with my life. Even if I didn’t want a divorce it wouldn’t hurt to find out where I stood legally, he urged me to protect myself against Michael.

How stupid I’d been that day, I innocently said with the utmost naivety and sincerity that I knew even if Michael divorced me he’d be fair and he’d not abandon Jay and I to starve. We were adults and he knew his responsibilities. Little did I know.

We settled into a routine of normalcy, well, as normal as it can get once your world is blown apart. Jay returned to school and I kept on with my routine of taking care of my goats, making cheese, picking the herbs and making deliveries to my customers. We slogged along sadly, the same but not the same.

That first week I got phone calls from Plover Creek Church sisters and brothers, most were genuinely concerned wanting to know what they could do for Jay and I but a few were simply seeking to gossip and cluck over my misfortune. Some people sent meals over for Jay and I, almost as if someone had died in our family and a few of the men of the church came over to offer their services around the house. Several sisters came to do a thorough fall cleaning of my home, insisting I go up and rest.

But I couldn’t rest, that day I’d paused at the top of the stairs. I didn’t want to go into the bedroom I’d shared with Michael all these years. I couldn’t bring myself to do more than change clothes in there, I had taken to sleeping in the guest bedroom, on the firm barely used mattress, missing the comfortable broken in feeling of my own bed yet unable to sleep where I’d slept with the man who had betrayed me. I still felt mostly numb inside now.

But I didn’t want the members of my church knowing I’d moved out of the marital bedroom. They all murmured words of encouragement, telling me that Michael would come home. I just had to pray harder, beseech God to turn his heart back to his family. He would come home, everyone said so.

When my feelings returned they see sawed wildly from hope and optimism to the blackest despair. I had days when getting out of bed was an impossible task and other days when I bounded out, rejoicing in another day, sure that today would be the day that Michael returned.

Several weeks passed and I heard not one word from Michael. He didn’t call, he didn’t come home. As much as that hurt me I could see it hurt Jay even worse. He flinched every time the telephone rang, running from wherever he was in the house, waiting for me to pick up, listening hard until he could ascertain if it was his father. Once it was obvious it was not Michael he’d sigh, flinch and move along.

The first inkling I had that Michael was still determined to divorce me and that he would not be returning was the day I went to deposit my monies from the places that bought the produce of my farm. The teller at our bank told me that our checking account was closed, that Michael had closed the account and taken all the money several days before. I stood there, shaken to the core, realizing that the five hundred dollars in checks I held in my hand were the only things that stood between myself and poverty.

The bank manager and teller had been so kind to me, the teller led me over to the manager and the bank set up an account for me, only in my name. I was so embarrassed for them to know that Michael had humiliated me like this, abandoned us with nothing.

When I got home I started digging through all of our financial data. Checking the balances of our savings accounts online I discovered the same story. Accounts drained and closed. Even our stock portfolio was closed. I called Michael, first on his cell and then at his office, unable to get through to him. Clearly he was avoiding me. I left a series of messages on his voice mail, getting increasingly frantic and upset as time went by.

I realized that Pastor Chas Waverly was right, I needed to consult a lawyer. But the attorney he put me in touch with wanted a retainer, five thousand dollars up front and I just didn’t have that kind of money. What little I managed to get from the proceeds of my farm I needed for food, gasoline for my truck and electricity at the house. I’d come home and gone over the contents of the house with a eye for value. I had wept as I packed up the large wooden chest of antique silver I’d managed to accumulate over the years and I reluctantly took it to one of the better high end antique stores up on the main highway, coming away with enough money to pay the lawyer.

Before the week was out I’d sold a few more of my more valuable antiques and I was in a rage. Michael had not called, it had been three weeks and Jay had spoken to him. It was as if we didn’t exist to Michael.

That third week brought a series of humiliation to me. I applied for food stamps and aid to dependant children, hard working me, applying for welfare. I wept, thinking my grandmother was probably turning in her grave because of what I’d been reduced to. I went to the electric company and made arrangements to pay late, and made the hardest trip of all, out to Ryland Memorial School to tell Pastor Will Morgan that I had to pull Jay out of private school and enroll him in public school because I could not pay tuition.

Will didn’t say a word as I explained that I had been cut off from any money by Michael, he merely stared at me over the top of his steepled fingers, elbows planted on the top of his stately walnut desk. When he did speak it was to say, “Mrs Smith, there’s no need to worry about the tuition for this month. An anonymous donor here at the school has picked up two months tuition for Jay. Please don’t take him out now, what he needs most is stability, to feel that the important things in his life haven’t changed.”

I frowned, as glad as I was that I didn’t have to cough up tuition for a few months I was not comfortable with the idea of charity and I said, “But the most important thing in his life, our family, has changed. There’s no escaping that. But I cannot afford to keep him here, in this school, beyond the next eight weeks.”

Still Will sat unmoving and he said quietly, “I know that, I just knew that your husband wasn’t going to allow you access to any funding but I feel it’s more important to keep Jay here in school than to burden him with even more changes. Give me a few days and I might be able to come up with a solution that would suit everyone, can you do that?”

“Alright, “ I said, “ a few days, but I can hardly imagine there is much you can do about my situation.”

I went home that day, sad, defeated and tired. I couldn’t summon up the energy necessary to do anything beyond climb the stairs up to the bedrooms and lie down. I’d paused at the door of my bedroom, feeling sudden anger at Michael and went in. Surveying the room I took in it’s odd shape, tucked up over the family room the long hallway area in the room leading to a small square just large enough to hold our antique mahogany four poster bed and marble topped dresser. I stared angrily at the smooth creamy white walls hung with framed prints of hunt scenes, horses and other masculine pursuits of days gone by. I glared at the dark damask drapery and bedspread.

No more, I thought and I ripped down the drapes, pulled off the scratchy bedspread. Quickly I removed the prints, the china dogs on the mantelpiece and other masculine accessories. Why had I decorated this room in a style I didn’t like, just to try and please a petulant male that was wretchedly ungrateful? I was almost shaking with galvanizing cleansing anger. I couldn’t believe how much I hated the furnishings of this room. Quickly I boxed and bundled up all the things I hated about my bedroom and set to work hanging a set of white lace curtains, remaking the bed in pretty vintage linens with a white comforter. I ran around the house gathering well loved adornments to put in my bedroom, erasing any trace of Michael. Before I picked up Jay from school I started boxing up Michael’s clothes, thinking perhaps I should sell the entire lot of them on Ebay. Screw him for not taking care of us, leaving us to starve while he stole the money I’d scrimped so hard to save.

I sat back and surveyed my hard work. I’d moved the bed from the front wall under the windows to the side of the room, directly across from the fireplace. Both sets of windows had white lace curtains, lifting the gloom out of the room by allowing natural sunlight to filter into the room. The room took on a cheerful glow with the extra light and I’d hung floral prints on the walls, simple and pretty. I felt better already, more in control.

But that didn’t last long, as we got back from school I saw a strange truck in our driveway. Strange men in coveralls were lugging things out of the house and packing them into the back of the truck. I was horrified, was I being robbed? I didn’t pull into my own driveway but parked across the street at Marvelettes before dialing up the sheriff’s dept on my cell.

As we waited a familiar figure came out of the front door, carrying an armload of suits. Before I could stop him Jay had thrown open the car door and run across the road, throwing himself at his father. While Jay was hugging his father a sheriffs deputy pulled into the driveway.

I got out and crossed the road to where Michael stood with Jay and the deputies to find that Michael was busy removing anything from the house that he deemed his. He’d stripped out not just his clothing but some of our possessions such as the large screen television from the family room. The movers had packed up most of the electronics from the house, the stereo, the computers and even a few pieces of furniture.

“Michael, what are you doing?” I asked loudly, “Three weeks pass, you don’t call, you don’t contact us at all and now you show up to loot our home like you did our bank accounts.”

As one of the movers tried to cart my vintage Louis Vutton steamer trunk past us I turned and grasped it, “Stop it, stop it, that is mine, not his. Put that back.”

The officers stepped in and stopped the mover, “Son, you can turn around and put that back where you found it till we get to the bottom of this.” The mover backtracked with my trunk.

Michael sighed, rolled his eyes like he was dealing with the mentally deficient and stated baldly, “I told you three weeks ago that I am divorcing you. The paperwork has already been filed. And, officers, as this home is still half mine I am entitled to my own possessions. You cannot stop me.”

“You strip me of any money, our savings and investments and now you’re going to steal the antiques I haggled and bargained over,” as I spoke these words the true import of what was happening hit me like a sledge hammer and my voice grew in volume, ‘things I saved to buy, lovingly picked out that you never gave a tinkers damn about? You don’t deserve anything out of that house.” With that I kicked the dirt in front of me in frustration.

The officers exchanged uncomfortable glances, I knew both of these young men, The stocky blonde was the son of Kelly and Gene Jenkins of Amazing Life Church. The other man was slightly older, perhaps as old as thirty, dark and swarthy. I knew he was the son of migrant workers that had stayed behind many years ago after picking the fall apple crop. The Garcia family ended up being a valuable addition to this community.

Finally Garcia spoke and he said in an apologetic tone, “Ma’am, I’m truly sorry but your husband does have the right to remove whatever possessions he deems fit, at least until you get a court order prohibiting from doing so. There’s nothing we can do.” I knew that most cops hate family situations like this because they can so quickly spiral out of control and end in tragedy plus both men knew us. I’m sure there was just about anywhere else they’d rather be at that moment.

I replied as calmly as I could, “Is that my next step? Get a lawyer so that I can keep my ex away from my things?”

“Yes, ma’am, you need a court order.” Garcia replied seriously.

Michael frowned and muttered, “What on earth did you do to our bedroom. It looks atrocious, like something out of a Amish Living magazine. Where are my prints of hunting scenes and the Italian woven silk draperies? I want them?”

I nodded my head indicating I would listen to no more and pointed towards the road saying simply, “Go.” I was struggling not to go crazy on Michael, the man I’d once loved more than life. Whatever love I felt for him had now been overwhelmed by shock and disgust. How could he keep doing this to us.

But when I saw my much beloved roll top desk in the hands of the movers it was too much, beyond my fragile state and limited self control. I went nuts, reaching out to attack Michael, slapping him, clawing at him and shouting. I didn’t care that the cops were there or not.

Before I could inflict any real damage I was physically whirled away from my husband and roughly body slammed against the cruiser hood. I tasted blood in my mouth from a split lip and experienced sudden knifing pain as both of my arms were twisted behind my body and hand cuffs tightened down. Please God, I prayed silently, don’t let the police do anything further in front of my boy.

Before I knew what was happening I was shoved firmly into the back of the police cruiser. As they pushed me into the car I caught a glimpse of my face, eyes wild, hair coming loose from my careful French braid. I looked like a mad woman.

The deputies left me in the back of the cruiser for over twenty minutes as they spoke with Michael and tried to talk to Jay. I couldn’t hear what was being said but I could see that the police were indicating to the movers to pack it up and go and that Michael was passionately arguing with them about something. As Michael and the movers drove away the back door of the car opened again and a crying Jay joined me in the back seat as Officer Garcia read out my Miranda rights.

“You’re arresting me?” I huffed out in surprise.

“Yes ma’am. Your husband, Mr. Michael Smith is pressing charges of spousal abuse, assault and battery. You’re being charged on all counts.” Officer Jenkins said in a weary voice, “Cooperate with us and you should be able to bond out in the morning. Don’t make this any worst than it already is.”

“Morning?” I roared, “What about Jay? He’s not being sent to jail is he?”

I could see the strange look that passed between the officers as Jay cried even harder. Garcia finally spoke, “Ma’am, your son is going into emergency foster care tonight. Your estranged husband refused to take possession of the boy. We have to take him in, it’s the law.”

As the sun set I experienced one of the most humiliating nights of my life. First, I was taken down to the county sheriff’s office, photographed and finger printed after Jay was removed to another section of the building to await a social worker. Then I was put into a small room containing only a chipped beige enameled table and uncomfortable chairs clustered around it and left alone for a long time. It felt like hours. They didn’t remove the cuffs and I became increasingly aware that I hadn’t eaten today as my stomach rumbled.

By the time the officers returned to take my statement my need to pee surmounted all my other needs and I was having the beginnings of a stress headache from not eating. I gave the officers a brief account of my outburst and subsequent pummeling of Michael. When I told the officers how Michael had been caught by me cheating and afterwards made sure that Jay and I were stripped of any money. While the officers were sympathetic to my problems with Michael, the law was the law and I had broken it.

Being that this was such a small town there was no room in the jail so I was put into the female drunk holding tank with a few other ladies, women I knew of but had no interaction with in the past. One was a disheveled looking red head missing most of her teeth. I knew she had a reputation as the town crack whore, blow jobs for five bucks and whatever you wanted to do of a sexual nature for ten. She was cackling and laughing madly with the other drugged out looking woman when I arrived to her cell. She laughed out, “Oh, how the high and mighty have fallen. You think you’re too good for the likes of us and guess what, here you is, blood on your face and your stupid lookin’ blouse torn. I loves it!”

I ignored her, going to the piece of polished steel mounted on the wall above the exposed toilet and realized she was right. My light weight white cotton button up blouse has a rip where the right sleeve joined the bodice, probably sustained when the cops slammed me to the car and snapped the cuffs on. I also have dried blood from my split lower lip to my chin and dotted on the blouse front. Irrationally the only thing I could think was that it would take a lot of work to get the blood out, like I didn’t have bigger problems.

Both of the other women heckled me for a while longer but I ignored their words. There was nothing they could say or do that could possibly measure up to the hurt I felt from the series of betrayals Michael had inflicted on me.

I was served a sandwich consisting of two slices of dried up white bread with limp tasteless baloney and wilted leaf of lettuce. The meal was rounded out by a spongy orange in a sickly pale shade and some unidentifiable drink I think was supposed to be iced tea. But I was so hungry that I ate it all and was grateful for the meal, bad as it was. A full belly is worth a great deal.

Once the lights were turned out and I gingerly lay down on a moldy smelling thin mattress on a steel bunk there was no way I was going to be able to sleep and I knew it. Another night tossing and turning, rehashing the recent twists and turns of my life. I tried comforting myself by praying silently as I wondered what type of foster home my only son was residing in tonight. I prayed that the foster parents were kind and loving and that there were no evil predators lurking in their home, that he wouldn’t be too frightened for me.

I couldn’t get over the fact that Michael had turned his back on our son. His son. Surely he wasn’t so selfish as to totally reject the child he’d help raise for the last eleven years. The cops had told me that Michael had told Jay that he would not take him in, that Jay was not his son because no son of his would be so bad at sports. Michael was rejecting Jay because Jay wasn’t a reflection of his own glory, a player and supporting prop in his inner sports fantasies. I lay in the dark and trembled with hatred for what Michael was putting Jay through tonight.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Karma Day 17

When we were about halfway home Reverend Morgan turned to me and said in a firm voice that brooked no argument, “We’re stopping. You haven’t eaten anything in hours and I don’t know about you but I am starving. I know you’re heartbroken but you’ll not going to be able to care for Jay if you don’t take care of yourself first.”

I’d stopped crying but now I was in a state of shock that went beyond petty things like food or human needs. I just wanted to go home and curl into a ball on my bed, hide under the covers forever. I croaked out, “I’m not hungry’\”

Politely, firmly, in a way a parent talks to a small stubborn child Morgan said, “You may not be hungry but you have to eat something. When you get home in 40 minutes you’ll need to be strong enough to meet Jay’s needs. He’s your primary responsibility now. Nothing that happened today changes that.”

He stopped at a restaurant I’d driven past something like a million times and never bored to visit, Town & County Restaurant. I’d glimpsed it’s red neon sign proclaiming the ‘best food in the world’ so many mornings and evenings but the old fashion looking exterior had never lured me in.

Inside the restaurant it was as deserted as the outside. But the interior was humble and quant, booths and tables with red checkered table clothes, framed photos on the wall of long gone celebrities that had once come this way. It was like a fancier version of an old fashioned diner on the inside, cozy and inviting.

Both the waitress and Pastor Morgan extended me mercy that evening. I kept staring at the menu and it might as well be written in ancient Aramaic because I understood it not at all, the words kept swimming past my eyes until Pastor Morgan offered to order for me. I nodded dumbly before saying, “Alright, Pastor Morgan.”

He stopped me and said, “We’ve spent a very long afternoon and evening together on the most difficult day our nation has experienced in many years. I think you can call me Will.”

My thoughts were so jumbled that day that I gasped out, “But, but, you’re a man of God and my son’s principal. I don’t think it’s right for me to be that familiar.”

Will Morgan, Lutheran minister, school principal, smiled at me and removed his clerical collar before my surprised expression and said, “There, now I’m just plain Will. Take off your head scarf and you can be Mary, or Mary Martha if you prefer.”

I didn’t know what to say to this. It seemed to me like he was playing fast and loose and I clutched the end of my head scarf and said in the most dignified outraged voice I could muster up, “Certainly not! Reverend Morgan you forget yourself!”

He shrugged and looked distressed, like he’d offered me a present and I’d ungratefully dismissed it. “I was just trying to make you feel more at ease.”

Fortunately for me the food arrived them and I didn’t have to bother making small talk any longer to my great relief. This had been awkward enough and I barely knew Reverend Morgan. Until the moment I smelled the aroma of the arriving food I hadn’t realized just how hungry I was. Will Morgan had ordered both of us the same thing, a hearty breakfast with country ham, eggs, toast, grits and biscuits.

While I was enjoying tucking into my meal I realized that Morgan had been truthful with me. He was obviously famished because he’s eating like this is his last meal ever. Suddenly I feel guilty that I’d been wrapped up in my world so much today that I could not see the needs of another human being and I decide to be nicer to him. I’ve been snappish and borderline rude because it almost felt like an invasion of my space for him to be here considering I barely know him. But I know he’s just trying to care for me, for Jay, to the best of his ability. It’s who he is.

So I stir myself to talk to him once the pace of our meal becomes more leisurely. “I never thought to thank you earlier for driving me in and tolerating that scene back at my condo.” I say, trying to muster up a bit of a smile. It feels alien and unnatural to try and smile after all I’ve been through today.

Will startled when I spoke, I’d obviously jolted him out of his head, out of the midst of who knows where, he certainly was far away from this table and he blushed before replying, “What else could I do? I’m concerned for all my students like Jay and it was fairly obvious that he was being severely impacted by today’s tragedy. But I must confess, this day hasn’t exactly worked out like I expected it to. I’m so terribly sorry you’ve been put through this, first thinking your husband was dead and then finding out that he was unfaithful. I know the pain that causes all too well. I want you to know that I’ll do everything within my power to help out Jay and you because I know you’re facing tough times ahead.”

I nodded, taking another sip of coffee before saying, “Today was a shocker but it’s not going to end badly. Michael will tire of his single life and come home. He always does.”

Will gasped, worry furrows appearing between his brows as he asked, “This has happened before?”

In that restaurant, in front of this man, I decide that like Michael, it’s time for some truth. “Yes, Michael has always been flighty, less committed to our marriage than I have been. I’ve never caught him cheating before but I think I always knew in the back of my mind that he was unfaithful. He’d go through periods of time where he was hateful and cranky and he worked long hours. Then just as suddenly as it started it would end, he’d show up on time at home, be loving, gracious and helpful, send me flowers and I’d know that whatever it was Michael was struggling with was at an end. This is just more of the same.”

“And the drinking? Is that recent too or a long standing problem?” Will asked.

“Early in our marriage it became obvious that Michael was an alky, his parents were, his siblings were. He recognized this was a problem for him and he hasn’t drank around me in many years. It was a surprise to see him drinking today. Makes me wonder if I ever really knew him. Is this a one time occurrence or a daily thing? I just don’t know. I don‘t have a clue how to handle his drinking it‘s been so long since he‘s been drunk around us. Back when Jay was a baby he roughly handled Jay, bruising Jay and I used that incident and his guilt to force him to stop drinking, at least around us.”

Suddenly Will Morgan looked very embarrassed, he turned red and almost started to fidget like a wayward school boy. Finally he spoke, “I know this is really none of my business but I’ve been wondering how I could broach the subject of possible abuse with you. I’m not trying to pry but I have noticed that your son seems by turns afraid of your husband or rudely dismissive of him. I worry about him. I haven‘t actually seen any signs of physical abuse but I have to be honest with you, your son does show signs of early rebellion that make me think things aren‘t great with Dad.”

I looked down at my plate, suddenly uninterested in my meal, “You’re right, it really is none of your business. Our marriage and parenthood of Jay has been fraught with the normal ups and downs everyone faces. Michael has never actually abused Jay.”

But I could see that Will wasn’t going to drop the subject. He looked very perplexed and said slowly, “You just said your husband was rough with the boy. That sounds like borderline abuse to me.”

I realized again how deep the denial I’d been living in all the years of my adulthood was, here I was, telling cleaned up versions of the truth. Truthfully I’d had to take Jay to the ER when he was a toddler with a dislocated arm from Michael grabbing him hard more than once. Somehow I’d managed to deflect the doctors questions about possible abuse and I’d kept it buried all these things, not wanting to acknowledge what Michael did to Jay when he was a toddler.

But I didn’t want this man before me, this virtual stranger, to know the depth of how Michael had once treated Jay and sometimes me. So I shrugged and looked up at him, eyes radiating innocence as I replied, “I’m speaking of things that happened once when Jay was a toddler. True, Michael and Jay aren’t that close but I think that has to do more with the fact that Michael works long hours in the city and travels a couple of times a month with his job than any abuse or drinking. Michael is gone from sun up to far past sun down and stays in the city sometimes as well. He’s just not around but it’s not by his choice, it’s the job.”

Will Morgan didn’t reply right away, he took another sip of his coffee. “I might have nothing to worry about with previous abuse in regards to Jay but after today I’ll be making sure the staff at school keeps an eye on him. This is not going to be an easy time regardless of how it works out in the long term. I would recommend that both you and Jay seek some sort of professional help to deal with the fallout of today.”

I laughed, “Pastor Morgan, you make it sound like Michael and I are going to be divorcing. Don’t make that assumption that divorce is looming. This will blow over. Nothing will change. Michael will come home.”

“How can you say that?” he asked me, “I was back there, listening to every word your husband said. He wants a divorce. I know you said this is just typical for you but you also said he’d never asked for a divorce before. I believe him, he’s serious and you’ll have to deal with that in a way that protects Jay. Kids sometimes don’t handle divorce very well.”

And just like that I felt my temper raging out of control and I snapped at him, “Don’t you know, my religion forbids divorce. As I said earlier, this will all blow over. Plus, I’m not giving Michael a divorce. God hates divorce, you should know that as a man of God. You’re not married and you don’t have kids so what do you even know about any of these things? You’ve lived the sheltered life of an unmarried pastor so I consider you unqualified to sound off on anything but my child’s education.”

I didn’t add that myself and many others at Plover Creek considered Lutheranism to be just a little less righteous and pure than our own. We Charismatic looked down upon mainstream Protestant religions as being lukewarm and Pharisee like. Will just didn’t get how our faith in God ruled every aspect of our lives.

Amusement sparkled in Will’s green eyes, amusement mixed with some sort of deep sadness lurking behind it all. “Oh, I’ve known tragedy and marriage and children. I’m not the goody two shoes you believe. Did you know I was once married?”

I started thinking about the implications of his confession, wondering how he could possibly be ordained and be a minister, deciding he had to have lost his wife to death. “No,” I stammered out nervously, “I’ve heard nothing about you but I do try to avoid gossip. God hates gossip.”

“Like you, I’m not local. I spent my growing up years living in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. My momma and daddy weren’t married and they split up and got back together again all throughout my childhood. Momma was a free spirit and Daddy always thought his band would make it big one day. I wasn’t taken to church as a child, in fact, I thought religion was for suckers, feeble minded losers and I wasn’t having any of it. I lived for the next beer, the next wave on my surfboard and the next pretty girl. I did so so in school and after graduation I started working in construction, doing carpentry work and drinking and partying every night. I never got in trouble and I was living a carefree fun sort of life, no worries about tomorrow, no real responsibilities. “

“Why are you telling me all of this?” I gently interrupted his monologue.

“Because you stated there is no way I could possibly understand your situation because I was unmarried, childless with a perfect life. I wish to shatter your illusions and show you I do understand your feelings, all too well. I’ve not always been a minister, hell, I haven’t always been a Christian even. I was a very bad boy for some time, never thinking about grace or God in any way.

I lived like that for a long time, till my mid twenties I suppose, until my regular girlfriend, someone I met through the beach bar party scene, ended up pregnant. We agreed we would get married for the sake of the child, so our baby would be raised by a set of two parents. Even though I didn’t know the Lord, I knew that abortion was wrong. Sarah wanted at first to get an abortion, but I talked her out of it. We married and it was a disaster, we didn’t have anything in common and neither of us really loved each other. I didn’t have the first idea of how to make a marriage work, I kept drinking and partying, Sarah was annoyed that I would abandon her alone at the house, knocked up and bored so I could bar hop after work.

But the minute I saw my baby girl it was all worth it, all the bickering, all the tension. I loved that child from the moment I laid eyes on her. Holding her in my arms was heaven, pure heaven. Something profound happened to me the night she was born, for the first time there was someone who was entirely mine, who looked to me for care, love, protection. It changed me in an instant. I swore I would do everything in my power to be the best father in the world.”

I didn’t say anything during Pastor Morgan’s recitation of his life, I just nodded and occasionally made an understanding noise as he continued.

“Part of that change for the best was accepting Jesus in my life. For months a couple of guys at work had been witnessing to me, trying to get me to turn away from the booze and pot and come to church with them. I’d always been very dismissive of those Charlie Church types but when I beheld the miracle of baby Hannah, that was her name, Hannah, I knew there was a loving and just God in the heavens and it seemed like the next logical step to turn to Him, thank Him for the gift of Hannah and to raise her knowing her creator. Plus I wasn’t entirely sure how to live a straight sober life. I knew I had to give up the alcohol and the drugs. My parents had been stoners and drinkers and I grew up living that way but I wanted better for Hannah.

None of this set very well with Sarah. She wanted me to return to the hard-partying Will she knew from the beach bar scene and wanted no part of my new life in Christ. She mocked me, saying leopards don’t change their spots and there was no way I would be able to stay away from the weed and the bar scene. I couldn’t get her to give it up either. Three months after Hannah was born Sarah stayed away from our apartment all night, calling at the middle of the night from a bar in a drunken haze to tell me she would come home when she damn well felt like it.

I was so tempted to use, to get so high I didn’t care. But I didn’t. I called up friends from church, who came over and prayed with me that Sarah’s heart be touched and she turn to the Lord. When she finally came home days later I was frantic and begged her to never do that again. In the meantime I’d lost my job because I’d had to miss work while Sarah was gone.

Getting another good job in construction wasn’t hard but things never did thaw between us again. Sarah and I lived very separate lives, I’d get up at dawn, feed Hannah, change her diaper and put her back in her crib before packing my lunch and going to work. Yeah, I turned penny pinching during those days, trying to save up to buy a house for Hannah to grow up in and for her to have a college education. I reminded myself every day that what I did, from work to staying with her mother, was towards the goal of being the best Dad for Hannah.

Motherhood didn’t affect Sarah quite the same way. I’d go off to work and much later the neighbors told me that Hannah would cry, sometimes for hours, while Sarah slept off whatever alcohol or drugs she’d consumed the night before. I wanted to beat her when I found out she was neglecting our daughter but my friends at church urged me to keep praying for her, killing her with kindness and be the best husband I could be to her and that eventually she’d come around.

Sometimes we got along better than others, every now and again I’d see things in Sarah that gave me a glimmer of hope that life was going to work out, that we were going to both be believers, fall in love with either other and raise Hannah up the right way. I had such foolish hopes then, but I didn’t know any better. I was so young.

After I’d been a believer for about a year I started getting very involved with life at church. I helped lead a cell group, teach Sunday School and one Sunday I was invited to speak to the congregation on the subject of how I’d experienced God’s love through the birth of my daughter strongly enough to give up drugs and booze. When I wasn’t working or caring for Hannah, both she and I were at church.”

“Lutheran?” I asked.

“Well, no, a Charismatic non-denominational congregation with quite a few Lutherans attending.

At the end of my second year of clean living I started to feel from my daily quiet time that perhaps God wanted me to become a pastor. I prayed about it for a long time and eventually I shared my belief with the leaders of my church, all of whom had been ordained through the Lutheran church. They encouraged me to do just that, go back to school and study towards ordination. It was a big step but I felt that is exactly where God would have me.

But Sarah was enraged when I told her of my plans. We’d been saving towards buying a house. She’d gone back to work as an nurses aide and I’d continued working in construction, building hotels and condos for the area tourist trade. We’d made a lot of money and she wanted to buy a house. For me to go into the ministry meant I’d have to quit my job and go to school during the day while she worked.

We fought for months over this. Sarah screaming at me that I was fooling myself that there was a God. She was still as scornful as ever over my religion, refusing to step foot into church and mocking me whenever she had a chance. That first night I explained I was going back to school she stayed out again all night. She hadn’t done that in a very long time, again she came home days later stinking of the streets, of stale smoke and booze and sweat.

And Hannah just kept growing up. So beautiful, the only source of perfect unconditional love in my life.

It was because of Hannah that I defied Sarah’s wishes and enrolled at seminary.
I quit my construction job, paid my tuition and made arrangements for us to move to a cheaper place, a handy mans apartment at a local vacation time share facility. We lived there rent free in exchange for myself and Sarah being on call 24 hours a day to fix the small things that happened on site. I figured if she continued to work as a nurses aide and I took a night job as a desk clerk at a hotel we should be able to make it through the years of schooling ahead of me without any trouble. I remember those years, days crammed packed with busy.

At first I didn’t notice that Sarah was worse, that she drank more and came home less. I was busy with class and my night job. Somehow I’d managed to get Hannah in free daycare at a school connected with the church and the hotel I worked the night shift at allowed me to bring her with me. I’d put her down in her portable crib to sleep in the room behind the check in area and I’d crack open the books between guests arriving at the hotel. Hannah was either with me or in day care.

Old friends started stopping by the hotel and hinting that Sarah was out at this bar or that one, getting high, hitting on this or that guy. I didn’t believe it at first, sure, I knew she drank and still got high but she was always loyal to me, telling me that even at her angriest at me that she could never cheat. And I knew she loved Hannah, even if she did sometimes act like Hannah was more of an annoyance than a blessing. I just kept holding on praying, thinking that eventually Sarah would see the light and settle down. By that point I was praying so hard for God to change Sarah because I didn’t much like her much less love her with the kind of love a man is supposed to feel for his wife. But I was committed to her, to seeing this thing through to the end. After all, isn’t that what good Christian men did?

One night in the second year of school Hannah was very sick and I had to leave my night auditor job at the hotel to take her to the ER. After we’d waited what seemed like forever for four year old Hannah to be diagnosed with an ear infection we walked in on Sarah. Sarah was in bed with a strange man, in our bed, wasted as can be. We had a huge fight after I threw the man out and Sarah told me the same thing you heard today, that she didn’t love me, had never loved me. Furthermore she knew that I had never loved her, no matter than I’d told her I did. She could tell because I’d always been a bad liar. She left me that night, gathered her things and ran out into the night.

At first it felt like a relief. I knew I could handle school, my night job and my handy man position just fine and care for Hannah. I knew Sarah loved Hannah but I also knew she felt trapped by having to care for Hannah, which is why most of the child care fell to me. But I didn’t mind, I had Hannah and I loved Hannah more than I loved life itself. Maybe even more than I loved God.

After Sarah left I spent many long hours in prayer, begging God for a sign, wanting to know what to do next. Finally I decided she would probably return and if she did I was to offer her true forgiveness and welcome her back as my wife. I told myself that my primary tasks while Sarah was away was to keep on with the studies and keep taking the best care of Hannah I could.

I surrendered it all, put it in God’s hands, knowing He would either lead her back to me and we’d end up with a stronger union blessed by Him or Sarah would file for divorce and I wouldn’t fight it. In my mind I believed that if Sarah divorced me it would be because He was lining up the circumstances for me to be united with the great God sanctioned love of my life, that one woman He’d picked out for me before I was born. I knew the chances of Sarah making a good pastor’s wife were very slim and I thought perhaps this was God’s way of dealing with that problem.

In most ways life was easier and much more tranquil after Sarah left. At first Hannah would sometimes cry and ask for her mother and I would tell her that her mommy was off on a long wonderful vacation because mommy was tired. We wanted mommy to be happy and rested didn’t we, I told her, so we had to be patient and wait for her to return. This seemed to satisfy Hannah and before too many months she rarely mentioned her mother.

We continued on, Hannah started pre school and I entered another year of seminary. We struggled along. No word from Sarah, but we were happy. My parents adored Hannah and they willingly cared for her when I managed to land extra work on the weekends. My parents even came to accept that their son was going to be a minister, told me that they were proud of me and that I was well shed of Sarah, some day I’d met and marry someone who would fall in love with Hannah and be an excellent wife and mother. Forget Sarah and move on, they said.

And I did. I didn’t date because I didn’t feel free to do so while Sarah was out there and we were still legally married. I didn’t feel like it was right for me to file for the divorce because seminary taught that God hated divorce and you had to try all ways of mending the marriage before divorcing. Several ladies at church and seminary hinted to me that they were interested in me but I held off from any emotional entanglements until I knew which direction Sarah would go in dissolving our marriage.

That spring of my senior year in seminary Sarah reappeared, showing up on my doorstep one bright morning like almost two years hadn’t elapsed without a word from her. I could look at her and see that the last two years had taken a terrible toll on her. Gone was the pretty brunette with the sparkling blue eyes I’d married. She was terribly thin, like she hadn’t eaten a solid meal in days and her sagging skin had a grainy gray pallor. Even though I knew she was no older than I, in our late twenties, she looked like she could have easily been every bit of 45 years old. Sick, unhealthy and old. When she started speaking I could see she was even missing teeth.

Sarah whispered that she was sorry, sorry she’d left like she did and sorry she’d inflicted so much pain on me, sorry for all the things she’d done since she left. She didn’t go into specific detail exactly where she’d been and what she’d been doing but I could only imagine the worst after seeing the shell of her old self she’d morphed into. I didn’t ask for any answers. To know would be unbearable.

It wasn’t what I personally wanted, to have her show up like this when my life was so settled and mapped out for success but God gently reminded me of my promise to Him to take Sarah back with open arms and complete forgiveness if this was the path He wanted me to take. So I bit back whatever misgivings I had and did exactly that.

That first night Sarah told me she’d realized two things during her time away, that she needed God in a big way and that she genuinely did love and miss both Hannah and I. She begged me to forgive her, help her find a way to God and to simply love her as my wife. I stared into those blood shot eyes surrounded by puffy bloated lids and crinkles and felt only pity and the love of Christ for another human being so I silently prayed that God would help me find the love a man has for his wife for Sarah. The quicker, the better.

Unfortunately two years is a long time in the life of a small child. When Sarah left Hannah had been a playful four year old. In just two years time Hannah had matured into a very serious first grader, well behaved, studious and helpful. She barely remembered her mother and held her mother at a cold distance at first. I could see Sarah was hurt and I tried to explain to her just how hurt Hannah had been when she disappeared without a trace. Begged her to be patient with both Hannah and I because we were both going to have to take time adjusting to her presence in our lives again. She left just like that and arrived back the same way, with the speed and precision of a meteoroid strike out of the blue. The landscape is forever changed when a meteor hit’s the ground, scarred and damaged. She wanted us to pretend that no time had passed and there was no damage. That wasn’t possible.”

I interrupted Will here to interject, “And just like that you were able to accept her back to be your wife? Did anything change or was it more of the same?”

He sighed deeply before going on as I realized that the longer Will Morgan talked the sadder he’d started to look. Dredging up old painful memories he continued on, “I still didn’t love Sarah but I forgave her and accepted her again as my wife. For the first six months after her return she behaved perfectly, she accepted Jesus, starting going to church with Hannah and I and settled into life as a stay at home mom. She didn’t drink or drug and she finally stopped dressing like she was a bar fly, trading the skin tight jeans and mini skirts for more fitting clothing for the wife of a soon to be pastor. Whatever had happened to her out on the streets was bad enough to make her subdued, quiet and thoughtful, not the ball of fire she’d been. But we did settle in to a life together and I thought, okay God, so this is the woman You have for me and I made every attempt to conjure up romantic love for her. I didn’t love her but I didn’t find having a wife to be a trial either. We rubbed along nicely and eventually Hannah did thaw towards her mother.

By the time I graduated and was ordained things in our little family were on an even keel and I was relieved. I knew to be a pastor and a single father would have been frowned upon so I was glad to have a wife again. We settled into our first pastorate position over in rural North Carolina, up in the mountains at a small church. There was a tiny white clapboard house behind the church. I liked our new community but I knew quickly that she found it restraining, confining. Whenever I came home from work every day Sarah would complain, timidly at first but with ever increasing litany of the wrongs of our small town. I could tell Sarah was bored but I urged her to take up a hobby and start an outreach program through our church.

Sarah’s answer was to decide we needed another child and to go off her birth control pills. In the previous six months she’d started to heal from the months of alcohol and drug abuse and she looked and seemed quite healthy. I didn’t know she had contracted herpes and hepatitis C while she was away from us.

I didn’t want another child right thing. We were busy settling into an entirely different life in a new place and I felt we needed to concentrate on helping Hannah make the transition to our new situation. The last thing we needed to do was to strain our meager finances with another mouth and split our attentions on another child.

We fought bitterly over having another child. I begged Sarah to put it off for a year, just till we settled into our first position but she was adamant, she would get pregnant as quickly as possible. At first I avoided all relations with her but eventually I couldn’t control myself, finding it too difficult to have a willing woman in my bed without making love to her. Soon enough she was pregnant.

I accepted it as a gift from God, swallowing my disappointment that I was being burdened with a big expense I couldn’t afford so at Sarah’s urging I asked to be appointed to a bigger church with a larger salary. And we moved again, this time to Virginia Beach, Virginia, to a larger congregation. I was almost afraid to go there because, just like Myrtle Beach, it was a tourist town and a beach atmosphere known for partying and all the other negatives we’d left in Myrtle.

But Sarah seemed to have no interest in the party scene, pushing herself into establishing our household and decorating the small ranch house the church rented for us. She seemed happy. I liked our new church situation better so I thought this was just another example of God blessing us when I thought it wasn’t going to be good.

I worked hard and Sarah’s pregnancy progressed. Hannah settled into the Lutheran school connected to the new church and soon made new friends. I should have known it was all too perfect and couldn’t last.

And then my son was born, seemingly health weighing eight pounds and ten ounces with a full head of dark hair. We were both over the moon when Jason arrived and I started feeling something akin to the first stirrings of love for Sarah.

We settled into life with our two children. I coached Hannah’s T-Ball team and Sarah took her to Brownies and to Missionettes. I loved my new congregation and they embraced our small family.

Things didn’t start to fall apart until six months after Jason’s birth. Both Sarah and I started to worry because with every major developmental milestone that sprang up Jason wasn’t able to measure up. At six months he couldn’t lift his head, he didn’t smile and he couldn’t roll over. He was stuck about the newborn stage. Finally our pediatrician recommended a specialist and we brought Jason to the new doctor for an evaluation.

What he told us was earth-shattering and ultimately the thing that ended our marriage. Turns out that Jason had contracted both herpes and hepatitis c from his birth and as a result of these diseases rampaging unchecked in his body he was now retarded and suffering from liver disease. There was no cure for either.

Our family physician kept repeating, “If I had only known you had herpes and hep c this could have all been prevented.” Sarah kept howling that she didn’t know, she didn’t know. I was tested for both and found to be negative. Hannah was also clean.

I turned against Sarah, turned a cold shoulder to her after this. How could she had exposed me and our son to these illnesses, how could she not have known she was sick? My restless brain turned over and over the fact that herpes confirmed she’d been with other men during our separation and her promiscuity had doomed our son. I moved out of our bedroom and started sleeping in the study, interacting as little as possible with Sarah. Hannah was confused by all of this, why I didn’t want to be around mommy and why her mother was so sad all of the time.

This went on for six months or so until I started to hear rumors that when I was working Sarah had started to hit the party scene again. She started dressing in a revealing fashion once again and took to the bar scene with a vengeance. I fought with her about it and our diocese asked me to explain the actions of my wife because they found it embarrassing to the church. I tried to explain and spent every ounce of energy I had trying to keep things at home on an even keel. I even asked Sarah to go into marital counseling with me, offering to forgive and forget if we could go into therapy. I even told the lie that I loved her. She refused.

Then tragedy struck while I was away on a three day charge conference in Northern Virginia. Last on the second day of the conference there was a cryptic message that I was to come home as soon as possible from the local Virginia Police. I drove home out of my mind with fear, afraid that Sarah had abandoned the kids or maybe that she’d snapped under the influence and hurt Jason.

It was bad, but not any of the negative scenarios I’d imagined. From what the police pieced together Sarah had been giving both children large doses of a over the counter antihistamine to make them sleep while I was gone and going out drinking and partying with her pals. That day she’d done it again, left the kids alone in the house and headed out for the bars along the beachfront boardwalk. Some time after she left, an hour or two, an electrical short caused an intense fire in the kitchen. When the fire dept arrived they were able to extinguish the blaze quickly but it was too late for Hannah and Jason. Both had died in their sleep of smoke inhalation. The only mercy is that neither of them suffered.

If I had been hurt when Sarah left me or when we discovered that Jason was mentally handicapped it was nothing compared to the pain I felt upon their deaths. In the police station I attacked and tried to strangle Sarah, blaming her for their deaths. The police arrested Sarah on a number of charges but she ended up only serving eighteen months in prison for both deaths. She divorced me while she was in prison, citing ‘emotional cruelty‘, still unable to admit she‘d killed our children. Shortly after she was released she made her way back home to Myrtle Beach and she killed herself with an overdose of pills on top of the graves of our children.

Shortly after all of this happened I asked to be transferred, somewhere with a school preferably so that I could help kids, protect them from themselves, from the screw ups for their parents. I’ve been here five years now and all that happened in the past seems unreal like a bad dream. I like it here, but I’m not sure I can ever trust enough again to marry or have children.

So, you see, I do know what you’re going through today. You snapped at me, said I couldn’t, but I do.”

I was crying by this point in Will’s narrative, wondering how he wasn’t stark raving bonkers. I know I would have been had it been Jay dying tragically like that at Michael’s hand. I would have killed Michael, no question about it. I could only reach across the table and take Will’s hand and squeeze it while murmuring, “I’m so, so sorry Will. I know better than to judge someone or their situation and your story is a good reminder of how I need to not make assumptions. You must have tremendous inner strength to live through that and still walk with the Lord.”

Will looked as though he were close to tears himself and he said, “Am I strong or just too weak to do anything else, Mrs. Smith?”

I blushed, suddenly ashamed of myself for my assumptions and judgments and I stammered out, “You can call me Mary.”

We dawdled as long as we could over coffee. Will assured me that he would be supportive of Jay and myself, he’d help out as much as he could at the school to make sure Jay had loving support. When we finished the drive home we were talking like old friends. Will’s story of what he had endured had opened a dialogue between us, a commonality that I didn’t know existed. I felt worlds better even though I had lived through hell today.

The good feelings lasted until Will dropped me at my home. As I unlocked the door and walked in I noticed that my charming farmhouse more resembled a pig sty. The people who’d came over to wait with me in my house had left a mess, clean laundry trampled on the rug of the study, dirty plates and dishes on various surfaces, mud tracked across the beautiful oriental rug in the living room. I started to weep at the sight of wet marks, ghostly rings on my shiny oak dining room table and when I went into the nearby powder room to get tissue to blow my nose I noticed that all the toilet paper was gone and the medicine cabinet door was ajar.

Suddenly the house felt far too suffocating and I ran from it, not caring it was after eleven pm, I ran from the house and across the yard, seeking out the warmth and love at Marvellette’s house across the road. But an oncoming train stopped me and I wept and wailed as it passed, wondering how I got to this sorry state from my long ago childhood in Mississippi. The trains passed by our house this closely too, shaking the foundation of the house, a constant lullaby.

It always irritated Michael, these trains rolling past our house but for me it only brought back memories of a time when I felt loved and secure, golden feelings of childhood. Tonight it didn’t. I stood shrieking and crying by the side of the railroad grade, upset at being delayed once again.

After what seemed an eternity the train passed and I ran across the blacktop to Marvellette’s house. She sat up with me while I unloaded all the events of this day. I’ll always remember the look of shock on her face as I told her of catching Michael with another woman. She understood when I said I could not face a night sleeping in the same bed that I’d shared with Michael all those years and I spent that fitful night laying on her sofa. Tomorrow would be time enough to sort out what I would do next but I knew I’d never spend another night in the bedroom I’d shared with Michael.

After Marvellette returned to bed I lay on her lumpy old sofa staring at the ceiling, wondering exactly how I’d failed Michael so badly that he would so easily abandon me like this. I pleaded with God to give me an answer to this all.

As the trains passed by again, whistle blasts long and low in the distance, I thought anew about how my life could have taken a turn like this. When I’d been a girl, even though I was poor without many opportunities, I’d believed that life would take me many places.

In those days I lived mostly with my grandmother in her large old house along the main drag in Toomsuba, Mississippi. Sometimes I lived with my mother in a series of rented trailers and small houses but most of the time I stayed with my grandmother. I never knew who my father was and my mother was a bartender who seemed to have a never ending parade of male companions must to the horror of my very proper grandmother. I started living with my grandmother after childrens protective services kept putting me in foster care because my mother would sometimes disappear for a day or two.

I never minded the shuttling back and forth and I didn’t even mind foster care. I always found being part of a large family to be a welcome change that I didn’t mind I was glomming onto someone else’s family.

But once I arrived at my grandmother’s home life took on a steady pace. No running out in the middle of the night on the landlord. No more eating beans from a can and baloney. No more being able to go roam the neighborhood at any time during the night or day. But I welcomed that change too.

My room in her home overlooked the local train yards in the distance and the sound of the trains underpinned most of my days and nights.

Once upon a time my grandmother had been a wealthy woman, now she eked by on her social security payments and whatever she could collect from CPS towards my care. I didn’t realize until I was grown that she got food stamps for having custody of me or that I was on Medicaid.

But I didn’t know we were poor. To me life at my grandmother’s house seemed like paradise. And I’d been too dumb to realize not everyone lived like my mother and I did. All I knew is that I had regular meals now, clean clothes, the nicest ones I’d ever worn and a house so pretty that most of the girls at school asked it if was true that we had one room just for our piano. No one pointed at me as the daughter of the town easy lay and no kids at school accused me of being ‘stinky’ any longer.

I stopped going to the local elementary school and my grandmother enrolled me in a the St Mary Academy for Young Ladies. In exchange for my tuition I worked on the grounds of the school, helping Sister Agnes in the library, scrubbing pots with Sister Thelica in the kitchen or I helped Sister Lalonda pull weeds from the vegetable garden. For two hours every day after school I worked at the convent school on whatever task was set before me. I credit those years working under the tutelage of the nuns as truly forming who I am today. How else would I have learned to grow my own food or to sew my clothing. Not from my mother, goodtime Gertie and certainly not from my grandmother, grand dame of society once upon a time.

What I did learn from my grandmother was how to function graciously in a world starting to go mad with rudeness and self centeredness. She taught me how to properly set a table, the correct way to converse in polite company, how to sit, how to stand, how to dance. I left her home with manners that could have put me in any blue blood family even if I was on food stamps. It wasn’t until many years later that I realized how big a gift she’d given me.

From the age of 7 years old those nuns became a sort of family to me, a family I’d never experienced and one that loved me and supported me up until the day I left the convent in rural Mississippi to go to nursing school. The nuns had turned me into a scholar in those years so I landed a full scholarship to a smaller college in Maryland.

Between the lessons from my grandmother, the education and practical knowledge learned from the convent I was ready to go out into the world to face anything. Or so it felt like.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Day 13

So they made plans for me. Someone switched off the tv and insisted I take at least a drink of water if I wouldn’t eat, They started talking at me, to me and around me, my pastor, my friends and my neighbors, deciding that someone needed to drive me to Reagan National Airport to meet up with the other family members and see what information that American Airlines could give us. I had nothing to add, I could only cry as others decided what next. My pastor was always good at delegating responsibility and he asked Marvelette to take charge of Jay for today and tonight, got someone else to stay here and answer the phone and started trying to find someone to drive me into town.

Before the pastor could assign anyone or someone volunteered there was a knock on my front door. When the door swung open I could see my 11 year old son standing miserably on the front porch accompanied by the headmaster of his school, Pastor Morgan. Jay, poor Jay, had red eyes. He’d obviously been crying. The body language of both seemed to indicate that this was awkward for both of them.

Jay ran through the door and flung himself into my arms, breaking into sobs as he moaned, “Dad’s dead isn’t he? I just know he’s dead.” I knelt and hugged him tightly, finally getting a grip on my own tears. Now I just felt numb, I knelt in front of my son and told him, “Sweetie, we don’t really know for sure but, yeah, it looks like he went home to the Lord today. I’m going to the airport right now so we need to pack you an overnight bag and your school books because it might be late before I get home. You’re going to stay with Marvelette and Jimmy just for tonight.”

Jay hugged me tighter at my words and wouldn’t let go. He’d gone in an instant from being a 11 year old going on 35 to what he actually was, a little boy. Sophistication melted away in the face of his father’s death.

With a gentle touch and the kindest of voices Pastor Waverley steered Jay away from me with the murmured words, “Go get your things son. Your momma needs to leave, to go find out what happened.”

Jay ran to Marvelette and hugged her even tighter than he’d held onto me. I could imagine that her stalwart bulk and unchangeable nature was the very thing he needed in this exact moment. She was like a second mother to my son and I knew with him at her home I didn’t need to worry. She’d mother him all he needed at this time. I knew he loved being with her children, both older and younger than him. Her kind nurturing home was where he needed to be while I tried to determine what the outcome of today would be.

Pastor Waverley picked up his jacket from the bulging coat rack hanging in the tiny entryway between the living room, den and foyer, slipping it on and saying, “My dear, we need to go. Now go comb your hair and tidy up your appearance. I’ll be waiting in the car for you.” The one thing the group had concluded is that I was quite unable to drive myself to the airport and our pastor had been appointed to take on this task.

As I turned to go upstairs to my bedroom Pastor Morgan stepped forward, red faced and said in a quavering voice, “I’ll take her to the airport, that is where you’re going, correct? It’s no trouble.”

While I’d been reunited with my son Pastor Morgan I could see that he stood just inside the front door looking like a man who would rather be anywhere else in this universe than in my home. He shuffled nervously from foot to foot, looking like he was waiting for the very ground to open up and swallow him in one rapid earthen gulp. He added, “Waverly, I think you’re needed over at Bob Johnson’s house. His wife was also on the same plane with Michael Smith. I, I ran into a member of your church at the school, Barb Yowell, she told me about Bob’s wife.”

Before Pastor Waverley could reply Hannah jumped forward to gasp, “You.. Drive.. Mary Martha.. Alone? But what would people think? They’d talk!”

It was one of the few times I’ve seen my minister lose his temper as he whirled and snapped at Hannah Jenkins, the member of our congregation most prone to gossiping about others, “How can you think about things like chaperones at a time like this? Good gravy, woman, people are dead and our nation is torn into bits and all you can do is yammer on about improprieties.”

Hannah blushed to the roots of her hair, suddenly embarrassed to be put in the harsh spotlight like that and she took three steps back from Pastor Waverly, suddenly interested in the books in the shelve behind her.

Before I knew what had happened I found myself sitting in the passengers seat of Pastor Morgan’s newer Volvo station wagon. We rode along in silence in the deserted landscape. There were virtually no cars on the road going in the direction of the city, only a steady stream of commuter cars fleeing Washington DC, going in the opposite direction.

I remember staring out of the window thinking that a day that held such monstrous events shouldn’t be gloriously beautiful and sunny. It was a travesty. There needed to be gray skies, ominous thunderheads, lightening, tornados, driving rain. Not this serene turquoise sky filled with white fluffy cotton candy clouds.

Thankfully Pastor Morgan never tried to engage me in conversation during that long ride. He just kept driving the car. His own comments were every now and again he’d mouth some platitude about the goodness and mercy of God and I’d look at him like he had three heads. What type of freak was he?

I just simply could not wrap my mind around the idea that the man I loved, had loved for many years now, my soul mate, was gone, vaporized in an instant when his plane hit the Pentagon. I could not imagine a life that didn’t contain Michael, a long vista of lonely days and many tears. It wasn’t supposed to be like this, it wasn’t fair, I thought as I looked at the set grim faces in the vehicles leaving Washington.

When we arrived at the airport we walked right into Bedlam, a crazy house. It was crammed with people in states ranging from that of sheer panic to mild hysteria. A collection of misery, I thought as we walked past a group of people arguing with a ticket agent about the fact that the Federal Aviation commission had grounded all flights indefinitely. People were upset that they were literally stuck here. I don’t blame them.

For all Pastor Morgan’s silence and actions indicting a high level of personal uncomfortableness he managed to snag someone from American Airline and tell them that I was the widow of someone on Flight 77 and just like that we were taken to an abandoned flight lounge to sit with many others. I sat silently, now numb, looking around at the others, realizing they too had all lost someone they loved dearly. I was now at a state beyond prayer.

Eventually an airline rep came out and announced that yes, like we’d heard on the television, that there were no survivors on Flight 77. I barely heard the rest of what he said, something about each of us giving contact information to the airline and being taken to wait at a nearby hotel or going home and they would have more information and help in the morning for us.

I know I must have sat with someone official from the airline and given them some information but I have no memory of it. Just that suddenly we were in Pastor Morgan’s car again and he was asking me what I wanted to do, go to the hotel with the other victims families or go on back home and he’d drive me back in the morning.

As we were walking back to the car I’d noticed that I still wore my dirty garden clogs. I had a smear of mud on my right calf and dirt caked under my nails and for the first time I realized the picture I must present. Did I comb my hair at any point in the day? I just didn’t know.

“Can you take me to our condo in Crystal City?” I’d begged Pastor Morgan, indicating I wanted most desperately to at least change shoes and wash my hands before making any real decisions. He’d nodded yes before telling me I needed to give him directions.

Back when Michael and I had been newly weds, with him working as a junior attorney at a large firm in DC and I working shifts in ICU over at INOVA Hospital in Fairfax Virginia we’d decided to buy a place halfway between both. We’d ended up with a new condo in a high rise building near the Pentagon. We’d kept it all these years, even after we’d bought our farm and moved to the countryside. Michael stayed in our condo on those weeks when he was pulling long hours on a case and we all stayed there on weekends we visited the city. We’d rented it out for awhile when money was tight but for the last five years it had been exclusively our second home and a wise investment. It had quadrupled in value in the time we’d owned it.

When we’d driven past the Pentagon on our way to the condo I’d made Pastor Morgan stop the car. We’d stood on the wide concrete shoulder of the road and stared at the blackened hole in the side of the gray granite building. For the first time all day I’d been overtaken with uncontrollable wailing and I’d collapsed onto the pavement, making noises barely human. It felt like my heart had been ripped still beating from my body and I was dying.

Pastor Morgan sprung into action, scooping me up from the pavement to hold me tightly in his arms. I snuggled against his chest, against the black broadcloth of his clerical coat and wept as he whispered, “Shhh, shhh, I know, I know..” into my hair. We stayed like that for a long time, I could feel the light outside shifting into twilight before I looked up. He fished a handkerchief from his pocket and forced me to blow my nose like a child before he wiped my face and pressed the hankie into my hand.

It was almost full darkness before we got back into the car and continued on to my nearby condo. After parking under the building we took the elevator up to the seventh floor. Something had happened between Pastor Morgan and I when I’d started crying. Now he took almost a protective posture over me, helping me in and out of the car and standing here in the elevator with his arm around my back, patting me in a mindless comforting way.

He followed me as we walked down the long hallway leading to 710, the small two bedroom condo overlooking the Potomac. Fortunately I’d picked up my keys when I’d left the house and I quickly found the worn old key that opened up the first home I’d shared with Michael.

But as the door swung open I realized it wasn’t silent and dark as I’d imagined it would be. Light and noise pulsed from the nearby living room and we both stepped towards the sounds. What I’d seen knocked me for a loop, instead of a silent living room containing a tasteful collection of modern furniture in neutral shades what met my eyes looked like something out of a Playboy magazine. My husband, very much alive and wearing only boxer shorts and socks, was hopping around like a madman on a Dance Dance Revolution play mat in front of the television while one of the recent hits by a pop band blared from the TV speakers. I gasped in shocked, stepping backwards, bumping into Pastor Morgan right behind me.

But Michael wasn’t alone. Drinking from a full champagne flute and wearing only a filmy nightgown a tall red head sat on my sofa, my sofa, like she owned the place. I couldn’t help but notice the empty liquor bottles on the coffee table and the fact that the nightie sported by the other one was one of my older ones left in the closet here.

My shock increased as I realized that the other woman was my opposite in every way, she was tall to my short stature. My hand crept up to the kercheif on my head, feeling my braid as I eyed her glossy red curls. Red polished nails, makeup, even a glossy red lipstick, she looked like a model, beautiful and polished. Suddenly I was acutely aware anew of the mud on my legs, my dirty hands and gardening shoes.

They didn’t notice us for a few moments, so caught up in the game of Dance Dance Revolution they were. Eventually the woman spotted up, leaping up unsteadily from the sofa to shriek, “Mikey, who is this?”

I could feel Reverend Morgan tense up behind me, feel him clutch my arm and squeeze, seeking to show me silently his support for the difficult situation I found myself in suddenly. Michael sat down suddenly on the dance mat, his mouth a perfect O of confusion before he gasped out, “That’s my wife.”

The red head drunkenly wobbled over to him and tossed her champagne in his face as she shouted, “Your wife? You told me you were divorced.”

Before I could help myself I added my voice to the confusion before me, “Michael,” I gasped out red faced, “I thought you were dead. You are dead!”

He pulled himself up from the mat and swaggered over to me, “Look, none of this means anything. I was just having some harmless fun so I don’t get why you thought I was dead. So I lied about the LA trip. I’ve been working hard and need some relaxation.”

With his words I didn’t have time to formulate a response before the other woman erupted in a volley of curses, “Not mean anything, you bastard, you dirty bastard. You told me you loved me!” She stomped off and slammed the bedroom door so hard that a nearby picture fell from the wall, glass shattering all over the wood floor.

An idea dawned in my head, unbelievable almost given the scope of this day and all that had happened, “Michael,” I asked, “did you spend the day in here with her drinking? Have you not looked at the news or switched on the television?”

For years Michael had struggled with alcohol and I’d thought he’d been sober for a long time now but after this discovery I wondered how many of these benders, hidden lost weekends, he’d managed to pull without my notice. He seemed a little too casual and unrepentant for this to be a one of.

“And why would I be sitting around looking at the television during the day? I have to work for a living.” Michael snarled, touching on something we’d fought about for years. He hated the fact that I stayed home to run the farmette and raise Jay. He wanted me to work full time because when I had worked I’d pulled down serious money in nursing. I tried to explain to him time and time again that to earn top dollar I too would have to drive into the city every day. I wasn’t willing to leave Jay so far from parental care daily.

“Terrorists,” I gasped out, tears coming finally as I realized my entire marriage was a sham, a carefully constructed lie, “Terrorists flew planes, the plane you were supposed to be on, into the Pentagon and the World Trade Center. I thought you were dead, I came up here to talk to the airline.”

Realization dawned on Michael and he moaned out, “Oh God!”, suddenly sober as he reached to switch on the news. He slumped down on the sofa.

Throughout all of this Pastor Morgan had remained silent, standing just outside of the living room in the hallway. He’d barely shifted when the mystery woman had brushed past him first to get into the bedroom for her clothes and later to storm out of the front door. He simply stared sadly at Michael and myself, a unwilling witness to the end of our marriage.

The conversation that followed Michael’s realization that our world had changed forever was a painful one. In light of the tragedy before us Michael simply came clean, he told me what was in his heart and his mind.

As the years had passed he’d turned from a conservative Christian into someone that no longer believed in God. He hated our church, hated all the fools he saw before him and felt disconnected from me because I still embraced fully our church and our life. This surpassed simply growing apart, it was more like we inhabited different planets. He was city bound, liking the modern times and freed from the constraints of faith while I was increasingly drawn into the world of being a Proverbs 31 wife, faithful, thrifty, Godly and righteous. The lines were drawn.

The most shocking part of my husband’s suddenly candid announcement was that he hadn’t loved me for a very long time. He stayed with me just for the sake of Jay he said, he had never really loved me. Why marry me, I’d wailed to him. He looked at me like I was crazy but had no answer. I knew he was lying to himself to self justify his addictive behaviors but it still hurt, knowing I’d been convenient only, not much loved. Had I misjudged him that much in the years we’d spent together?

He ended his diatribe by asking me for a divorce. “I just want to be free, free of you, free of Jay, free of Plover Creek and it’s hordes of hypocrites. You can have the farm free and clear but I want my freedom regardless of what it costs.”

I reminded him that the church frowns upon divorce and I couldn’t willingly go along with his attempts to shed me like a discarded worn out pair of pants. “Please, Mar,” he begged, “If you ever truly loved me you’d give me my freedom. I swear I’ll keep supporting Jay but I am getting a divorce. You can either cooperate or not.”

I can’t say I was entirely shocked because I’d known something was wrong between for a long time. He spent longer hours at work and here, at the condo, away from Jay and I. I knew now that he’d been living as he pleased as a virtually single man. He’d been defensive and touchy for years now but I never dreamed it would come to this.

Mostly I was glad Michael was alive. In my heart I believed we belonged together and this was just a phase. If I gave Michael this freedom, allowed him to separate from me we’d end up back together. He’d realize how much he loved me, needed both Jay and I and Michael would return soon enough. I hated that he was drinking again and had been dabbling in infidelity but I knew he’d return.

Again, I told him I’d give him time to decide what it was he really wanted, but that I would always welcome him home with open arms and forgiveness if he was truly ready to repent.

Michael had smiled at me suddenly, amused by my assumption that he would tire of single life and he murmured, “But Mar, that’s not going to happen. I’m not going to suddenly give up this life, my life, the right thing for me, just because I made a mistake by getting married in the first place all those years ago. I’m not the marrying type. I ignored my inner misgivings and marrying you. Huge mistake. I only married you because all my friends had gotten married and everyone was pressuring me to the do the same thing. I tried your boring life. I’m not a farmer, I’m not a preacher, I have to be true to who I am.”

But this was too much for me to digest I broke down weeping at his words. Mistake? I thought we’d been happy, well, mostly happy anyway despite a few nasty intervals early on. Michael let me cry, not moving any closer as I wailed but Reverend Morgan moved into the room to sit next to me and hug me tightly. Michael shrugged and walked away, picking up pieces of discarded clothing as he called over his shoulder to us, “Should I stay till she’s calmer?”

Pastor Morgan replied in a deceptively quiet voice, “No, you’ve done enough. Leave us please.”

Michael stopped in the hallway, “But this is my home. You leave. Both of you. Mar, I’ll be in touch to make arrangements to move my things.”

And that’s how we left it. I limped out moaning and wailing, in the arms of Reverend Morgan. Passersby in the underground garage stared at us as if we were dangerous, he in his black ministerial get up and me looking like a good little fundie wife. It was some time before I could quit shaking. Pastor Morgan waiting patiently with me in the car while I tried to get a hold of my emotions. We sat in silence in the dark garage for a long time. I had lost all track of time, day or night, time, season or any other identifying factor. This was the endless day.

But eventually he did start the car and away we went. I remember blinking in confusion under the orange sodium arch street lights, wondering how much longer this hellish day would take. A solemn hush had fallen over our area, there was almost no traffic, the skies were utterly clear of the screaming jets usually circling overhead, it was like the world was ours alone.