by trentm32 » 3/22/2007, 9:53 am
The story continues...
Chapter Twelve
“A Stained Glass Masterpiece”
Cassandra had drug me to this place a handful of times, but for the first time I had come of my own free will. It had been three days since the last call came through in my bedroom apartment. It had been three days since my dead brother had asked for my help.
It had been a long three days.
I told Cassandra that I had to work today—truth be told I was probably fired by now. My thread-thin part-time position at the local paper had likely already passed on to a new, unassuming intern.
Cassandra would have wanted to come with me if she knew that I was coming here. It was on the other side of town, and I still couldn’t even figure out why this, of all places, was the venue I chose to come to.
Every memory I had of this large, open space was one of boredom and lethargy. But still, it felt like the place to be.
I craned my head around the room to find that I was completely alone. I thought that I had heard someone in the balcony when I walked in, but a close inspection of the seats and rows high above me proved fruitless.
The sun was trickling weakly through the impossibly large stained glass windows hanging haunted above my head. The likeness of unnamed saints glared and smiled down upon me from their eternal homes; etched in fragile color, and detail. Every wall surrounding me was a stained glass masterpiece, extending to the ceilings that were already reaching toward the heavens.
I wanted to know what to do. I wanted to know how to help him.
I was looking for a sign, something—anything that would show me. I had gotten tired of watching the phone, so with a new cell in my pocket the idea to look elsewhere had finally risen to the forefront of my clouded mind.
Since I didn’t know how to ask, or who to ask for help; I figured I might as well just start talking, and maybe someone—something—up there might hear me. My eyes slowly rose to the massive chandelier dangling heavily at what could have easily been a mile above my head.
I had never been a praying man, so I wasn’t actually sure how to begin. I figured I should at least be in a church—maybe that way he would have a better chance at hearing me—so that’s why I was here.
I ran my hands through my hair and tried to piece together what I wanted to say.
Suddenly I heard a loud “clap” coming from far behind me. I jumped slightly, and quickly turned my head to find a man taking the final step off of the stairs from the balcony, onto the stone floor on which my feet rested.
It was dark, but I could make out that the man was tall and slender. His hair was dark; dark as night—and he had a pair of skinny jeans tied around his waist. He had an old, grey t-shirt that seemed to hang loosely off of his shoulders. He just stood there for a few moments, I felt like he was watching me. I couldn’t see his eyes, but I could feel them. Once a few more seconds had passed he slowly began walking towards me.
He finally passed underneath a light reflecting in from the back of the hall, and I got a look at his face. His features were plain, and his eyes seemed to sink back, deep into his head. He had a light layer of unkempt, scraggly stubble filling his cheeks, and climbing down onto his neck.
I couldn’t make out what color his eyes were, but I could tell definitively now that he was watching me. After a few more moments, and a few more steps, he was standing almost right beside me. Through the corner of my eye I could see him really well now. He looked to be in his early thirties, and seemed to have an air of unassuming madness and congeniality surrounding him incessantly.
I raised my head to find him smiling down on me.
“Hi,” he nonchalantly said.
“My name’s Jack.” His accent seemed Northern, but confused and not quite. A dash of Southern, a bit of Californian; and a hint of Mexican were all there, too. It was like a mish-mash of lives, and a mish-mash of places, was co-existing happily in this man’s spoken diction.
I hadn’t slept in a while, so before I answered him I haphazardly shook my head and searched around the large spacious room for, well; nothing, really. When I looked back up again, he was still there.
“Hello,” I finally replied, somewhat confusedly.
“I’m Jake.”
He smiled a wider smile at that, and reached his hand out to shake mine.
“Pleasure to meet you, Jake,” he said, as he bowed half-jokingly—yet with just enough seriousness to be believable, and sincere. After a couple of moments, he politely asked,
“Mind if I sit down?” I shrugged my shoulders as I looked around the empty room, filled to the brim with empty pews, and finally slid over to give him space on mine.
He just kept staring at me and smiling. Suddenly he spoke:
“So, how you doin’, pal?” He had a warm, content smile on his face. The sincerity and sheer curiousness of his question couldn’t help but bring a smile to my face. I laughed a bit. After a moment to think, I replied:
“I’ll be alright, I suppose.” At my answer he smiled one of those toothy, happy smiles and said:
“You’re ‘Alright’, aye? Well, pal, that doesn’t sound too good to begin with, now does it? What’s going on with you?” I didn’t really know what to say, so I replied with,
“Have you got all day, Jack?” I jokingly replied. At that he just nodded, and made himself a bit more comfortable in his seat.
“As a matter of fact, I do, pal—go ahead, hit me with it.” The way his voice bounced to an indefinable rhythm when he spoke just made me feel so comfortable talking with him. He was like a good friend that I’d always had, but never met before. I breathed in a deep breath, and decided to tell him—or at least to tell him some of it.
“Well Jack, here’s the short version: my brother died—“
“I’m sorry, mate,” he sullenly shot back. I just nodded back to him slightly, and continued on:
“—a little while back…and he was the only family I had. The only family.” It hurt to hear it said aloud. It always did.
Jack tried to smile, but I could see the sadness and sympathy in his eyes.
“It’ll be alright, pal. It always is,” was all he seemed to be able to think to say.
“You must have some friends, though, pal. A girlfriend; something like that?” I looked over at him and shrugged my shoulders.
“Yeah, yeah I do. Her name’s Cassandra. She’s great, she really is. But, she’s not…” I just shook my head and tried to rattle that train of thought off it’s tracks.
“She’s not what, Jake?” Jack was leaning in now, waiting for me to answer. But his voice was never forceful. His pale hands were resting in his lap as he patiently waited for me to continue.
“She’s not Faith.” The words came out so defeated; I could tell in Jack’s eyes that he could tell this was something I’d been trying not to deal with for a long while.
“Who is Faith?” he finally asked. I breathed in a deep breath, and finally started.
“We met in high school, and by our freshman year of college we were engaged. She was; she was perfect. We had the same sense of humor; we loved the same cheesy songs, the same bad movies. We got along ideally, and I loved spending time with her…I wanted to spend the rest of my time with her.”
At that I swallowed hard. Jack just lowered his eyes to his hands, still resting in his lap. I could tell he’d figured out the rest of the story. I finally finished,
“But fate saw it differently, I guess.” He just slowly nodded.
After a few more moments of sitting there--in that large, echoing room or rooms—Jack finally rose to his feet, and patted me on the shoulder.
“I’ll be seeing you soon, pal.”
"When looking up there, I just felt whole, like I belonged. Like one day I too would shine my most brilliant. Sitting there also made me think about sitting through services at my little country church back home. About that never-changing congregation of the same sixty-seven people and everyone has known you since before you were born. Now, out here in the real world, everything just seemed more vivid than when I used to sit in that little pew. That pew that was now so, so far away from where I was. I feared I had somehow left God behind there, too. I feared he was somehow just sitting there, saving my seat on the fifth pew from the front row, just waiting on me to come back. I left so quickly, I worried that he may not have noticed I was gone. And, now, I’m just too far away to find. So he’s just sitting there, patiently waiting on me to come back. I closed my eyes and prayed a moment. I hoped more than anything that he could still hear me." -an excerpt from my novella, A Sea of Fallen Leaves.
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