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Authors: Ian Lewis

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BOOK: Lady in Flames
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I heave Melissa for the last time and meander a crooked path away from the building. Once I sense we are at a safe distance, I let her down as easy as my clumsy body can and then collapse into oblivion.

Brutality, Firsthand

February 27
th
, 2002 6:37 PM

Mordecai Mothersbaugh walking home

Pulling the collar tight around my neck, I brace for the deadened, dagger-like air as I step out from the church’s front stoop. The walk home promises to be a bitter one; the ragged gusts cut to the bone.

The starchy fibers of my being, once solid, now bend under the burdens I’ve shouldered. Whether physical or spiritual, their cold ache drove from me the righteous fire I once wielded.

The ache seeped in over time and displaced the resolve that carried me for years. Such a leprous sensation at first, I often recoiled at its advances. Now the ache defines me; my waking minutes would seem bereft without it.

At last I finally admit it to myself. If I’m not broken then what am I? If I’m not the penitent preacher man, what can I claim as my own suffering? Is that what I’ve come to? Relying on some self-righteous priggishness to channel self-pity?

Racked with the selfishness of this, I spent several hours this afternoon planted on my knees in prayer. I pleaded with the Lord to renew my sense of purpose, to rebuild me. There’s no good that will ever come feeling sorry for myself.

Now half-dragging my way across the town, I’m deflated to find that the derelict houses and abandoned souls within them drag me down even further.

A small child shivers on a darkened porch; heated shouts eject from the open door behind her. Past this, a measly farm market stand hides under wooden planks, boarded up not for the season, but forever.

More of the same dejected scenes cry out as I go. Their smudge upon the landscape is a badge of hopelessness, and it rings in me that I’ve lost my purpose.

Each plodding step suggests it’s more than a loss of purpose, though. I mash my good leg into the snowy muck with an indifference that confesses what my mouth will not. This is a loss of being, a loss of self.

If I’ve failed at giving these people hope, at giving them a second chance, then I don’t know who I am. I committed my younger self to the Potter’s hands, and asked that He do with me what He willed. That’s the only identity I’ve known since I was twenty.

And I thought this was it—to spur on a small hope amongst the downtrodden. In that I would find fulfillment, but I’ve failed! How I’ve failed so miserably! I’ve invested so much that the thought of starting fresh laughs at me with a preposterous jeer.

As usual, Scripture finds its way to the surface. “I have labored to no purpose; I have spent my strength in vain and for nothing. Yet what is due me is in the Lord’s hand, and my reward is with my God.”

This world is built for younger men to will their own way upon it. I’m past whatever prime I might have had, but if it’s my lot to run out the rest of my days here, I’ll do so faithfully. Even if I’m the last of the faithful…

The road ahead narrows, a snowy gauntlet guarded by the vacant brick of decayed industry. Humble textile and pottery operations once flourished here; the meager structures ramble back to the reaches of their property, fading into the obscurity in which they reside.

These bygone reflections crowd around me as dear brothers. I’ve known their shadow and slant like one might understand the subtle inflections of a friend’s voice. We’ve grown world-weary together.

As I pass, a swiping hand darts out from between two ramshackle garages. A sharp, solid blow lands on the back of my neck and I crumble. A boot to my back side sends me flailing from hands and knees onto my stomach.

Icy grit stings my chin and cheek. Frozen hands buried, I push myself back up and roll to my side to see my attacker.

A glowering boy stands at the corner of the garage, balled fists shaking in slight pulses. He might be sixteen, peach fuzz and unkempt hair.

Three more sullen boys step out from the alleyway and circle around him. They match the first with their wild hair and silent scowls. Their mottled faces only hint at what they will do.

I scoot backward and try to stand, but I’m halted by the sturdy legs of two boys who appear behind me.

They look down at me with soulless eyes, no expression. Thick steam escapes their nostrils.

I turn back to the first—the one that struck me. “Son, you don’t have to do this.” It’s the only thing I can think to say. In what seems a fleeting moment of life, words evade my best efforts to be sincere.

The silent boy holds for an eternity, unmoved. Is he contemplating my plea? Is he wavering at the last minute? The violent jerking of his torso, right arm back, answers as a streaking, gloved fist lands a muffled thud against the bridge of my nose.

A solid, sharp jab comes next, digging into my side. Then it comes again and again. The steel toe of a work boot. Similar pains erupt in my lower back. Something thick and unwavering crashes over my head—a board?

I hunker deeper into the blistering snow as if the sting of it will dull my sensation, but I can’t get far enough away from the pummeling limbs that wreck me. On my side, the aggression shifts to my stomach, chest, and face.

These wayward boys. What drove them to this? Their stout, youthful vigor misappropriated by some reckless meandering of their souls. Do they have no bounds, no guidelines?

I accept the wet leather tearing into my cheeks, slamming into my ribs. I don’t fight back. I can’t, nor do I want to. These boys are some of the ones I didn’t reach. To lash out at them would only be to shift the blame.

I’d still try to show them the Way given the chance. A saving grace so perfect and true, it would break the tarnished shackles from their hearts. I’d look past this offense.

There’s no way to tell from which direction my attackers advance. They press in and strike from every direction all at once. Just as I grow numb to a softened, bruised patch of flesh, they find new targets for the hate of their fists and feet.

My arms can protect my face no longer. Slushy tread mashes into my forehead. My nose dribbles blood, or maybe it’s my lips. Maybe it’s both. Long past the point I thought I would last, my strength dwindles for the last time.

Then an unearthly howl fills the narrow street—a low, sonorous wail churning over a guttural moan. There’s something mechanical about it, yet it growls with the savage howl of a beast.

The piercing, searching glare of high beams illuminates the night; they widen the field of view in a blinding arc as they draw near. Their intensity matches the banshee shriek of the motor behind them.

My attackers scatter at once, leaving me as a crumpled speck in the sea of snow and light wash. The stutter of their steps fades into the unreachable lengths of darkness.

The oncoming vehicle slides to a stop, drawing up alongside as if it was shoring up to a curb. The roar of the engine subsides to a staccato wump-wump.

Leaning on my right elbow, I struggle to get up, unsure of the black two-door before me. No one exits or signals; the car remains steadfast in its cockeyed position in the middle of the street.

I stand and pause to regain my breath before limping toward the passenger-side door. The window lowers as I approach. Leaning over, I rest shaky hands on the frame.

A hidden face speaks before I can offer a thank-you. “You’re not dying tonight, Preacher. Get in.”

The shock of his statement mixes with the fainting of my body and the distressing cold. The cliché of being beside oneself seems appropriate; I’m barely with it as my hand reaches for the handle, disconnected from feeling.

The long, sturdy door swings out and I stumble around it, collapsing into the deep passenger seat. With burning ribs, I reach out in a labored grasp to pull the door shut. “Thank you…you most certainly saved my life.” I turn towards the man behind the wheel.

Shaggy black hair spills over his ears, neck, and forehead. Shadows create a jagged relief of an angular face—severe and no-nonsense. Yet there’s something pained there—something wounded in the carving of his features.

Man-handling the wheel, he straightens the car and beckons it forward. The howling subsides to a low moan as we pass from dimly lit patches to darkened stretches. With half a nod he says, “These aren’t the safest times. You ought to consider another way home.”

The glow of passing street lamps blurs in the streaking night as we cut into the thick of it all—a deft projectile dividing the street into the past. “I’ve walked this route for years; I’ve never needed an automobile.”

“Steadfast or stubborn? I can’t tell.” Sarcastic, the man remains fixed on the road.

I look away, caught off-guard by his forwardness. The man is calling me out on my oldest, most self-centered foible. “Maybe a bit of both. I guess a part of me never wanted to be underestimated or pitied for having a bum leg. That’s a bit of pride, I suppose.”

The dregs of Halgraeve rip by, muted and distant. They’re familiar yet strange; the recognizable seems to dissolve into angles and perspectives I’ve not seen before.

“Do you think this town wants to die?” The man cuts in with a new direction of his own.

I answer, too tired to give it much thought. “I don’t know. Part of me hopes there is still hope. Another part thinks Halgraeve died a long time ago.”

“Would you say there are still good people here?”

“Yes, some. But the number dwindles. The socioeconomic realities contribute to all manners of faithlessness.” I pause to get another look at the man’s face. “I’m sorry, I don’t recognize you. Do you live in town?”

“Just visiting.”

I turn back toward the window, dazed from a combination of physical exhaustion and the hushed, lulling effect of the dream-like qualities of the passing landscape. Houses seem a mile from the street; snow banks tower like mountains. I lean against the headrest, eyes heavy. “Well, I’m sure you’ve seen it, then. It doesn’t take long to notice.”

“People in these types of towns are searching for a reason to live. Something gets them out of bed in the morning whether or not they acknowledge it. They have some small sliver of expectation—maybe even faith—that says tomorrow might be better. That’s what I’ve seen, anyway.”

I blurt out a careless reply. “You’re young. You can still say that without lying.” I’m immediately embarrassed by my cynicism. I’m supposed to be a beacon of light, uplifting to those in my midst.

The man doesn’t seem affronted. “I don’t begrudge you your weariness, but you might be the only part of hope that these people see. You can shirk that if you want, but it doesn’t change the fact that you know better.”

I retreat back into exhaustion, head swimming with contention. I’m struck with the fact that I really don’t know where we’re going; the man never asked or said. Another glance out the window reveals the lights flashing by at a blinding rate as the hammer of the motor builds to an ever-increasing pitch. “Maybe you should slow down, son.”

The man doesn’t acknowledge me; he only peers down the road as if it might disappear.

My head floats, bubbling up to the surface of unconsciousness as we blast faster and faster down the road. The drone deafens my waning thoughts.

As I fade out, the man looks at me for the second time since entering the car. “Remember who you are.”

His words resonate in the thickness of my head and then echo faint ripples that dissolve into blackness.

A Seed

February 27
th
, 2002 7:26 PM

Mordecai lying outside his church

Sapped and in a stupor, I lift my head from my coat sleeve to find that I’m lying across the church’s salty front stoop. The torture of the beating sticks; each blow calls back in remembrance. The car ride is less vivid.

The man’s arrival came as a Godsend. His blunt words left their stain. What happened after that blurs in the slush of subconscious.
Remember who you are
. That’s what I remember him saying.

A motorist slows when he sees the disheveled heap that’s me, but I ignore him as he stares past. I should probably get up. Reaching for the skinny rail, I drag myself to a wavering stance, turn, and unlock the solid door. I’m not ready to head home yet; I need some warmth.

Crossing the warped threshold has me wondering why the man drove me back here. The waning glow of a streetlamp sneaks in through the tall, narrow windows. Blades of intersecting light criss-cross the darkened sanctuary. The pulpit sits vacant, a vanishing point in the far reaches of the shadows.

Collapsing into a pew midway, I close my eyes and drift for a moment.
Remember who you are
.

Who am I? That’s the question that begs most earnestly for an answer. It’s the focal point of the resonating doubt in my heart. Who I am makes the difference; it’s everything. I can’t function until I’m sure of who I am.

If I believe I’m a frail, useless man, left to his own devices in a faithless world, then I will wither away as I hew my life out of the crumbling dirt of the earth. It’s bitter and coarse, but it’s easy.

The alternative—that I’m a man of God—remains an intellectual belief but doesn’t resound in the depths of my soul. It used to, but I’m so tired. If anything can sum up this valley of despair, it’s that I’m exhausted.

Leaning forward, I rest my chapped brow on the pew in front of me. My mind is too scattered…too fragmented for prayer. I don’t want the burden of having to think for a while.

Behind me, the heavy brass knob turns with a rattle and the door opens with a gust of frigid air. I turn with a start to see a boy standing in the frame, the weak light casting a pale glow on his features.

A mop of hair hangs over his forehead. He stuffs his hands into the pockets of his oversized work coat, never taking his wary eyes off of me.

“Have you come to finish what you started?” Fatigue strangles my best attempts to move away.

The boy’s brow rises and his mouth hangs open as if he’s struck in genuine surprise. Taking a step back to leave, he seems to reconsider and moves forward. Looking down, he says, “No. I’m done burning.”

BOOK: Lady in Flames
9.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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