Authors: Nancy Rue,Stephen Arterburn
Tags: #Fiction, #Christian, #General, #ebook
“What
did
you do?” Sully asked.
“I sat down with him, and he put his head in my lap and cried himself to sleep.” She swallowed again as the layer disappeared once more. “The next day I packed up and came back to the States. Okayâso I have a question.”
Sully wanted to back that truck up, but he said, “Ask away.”
“Where is the Christian part of this counseling?”
He took his time refolding his legs. The wrong answer would send her straight for the door, after she took him out at the knees. “You warned me that you didn't want me beating you up with Ephesians,” he said.
“I meant don't just quote Scripture to me and expect me to change. If I could do that, I would have already. I read the Bible. I pray.” She gave him her squinted look. “It isn't working right now.”
“But you do want faith-based counseling,” Sully said.
“Okay.” She brought up her hands parallel to her face as if she were forming goalposts and spoke between them. “Before I went to Africa, I was the tithing, pew-sitting kind of Christian. I went to Bible study, I sang the praise songs. I was there every time the doors opened. And don't get me wrongâ”
Sully was sure that wasn't going to happen. She was leaving no room for error between those goal post hands.
“All of that is important,” she said, “if it leads you to a real experience with God. I think a lot of the people in my congregation in Chicago had that. I didn't.”
“So what changed in Africa?”
“What didn't? I never darkened the door of a church while I was there, but I talked to God more than I ever had in my life. Maybe not talked. Yelled. Ranted.”
Her eyes blazed. Sully had a moment of pity for God.
“I wanted to know how he could let those children be used to kill people.”
“Did you get any answers?” Sully asked.
“No. I gotâ” Ryan glanced at her watch. “Look, our time's almost up, and I don't feel like we've gotten anywhere.”
“Actually, I think we might have just arrived. Tell me what you got.”
She gave him a doubtful look. “I got images. And not likeâlike woo-woo.”
Yes, she'd already established that there would be no woo-woo. “It isn't like I purposely imagined what I wanted something to look like, the same way I don't set up a shot when I'm making pictures. I just take what's there.”
“Tell me some more,” Sully said.
She resituated in the chair. “I would be in a situation, maybe praying, maybe shooting, and I'd get a clear picture in my mind of something that might not have anything to do with what I was thinking about. And I would know it didn't come from me.” For the first time, she looked at him without a challenge in her eyes. “Does that make sense?”
“I'm getting there,” Sully said. “Give me an example.”
She directed her gaze to the painting again. “The night Khalid cried himself to sleep in my lap, I didn't want to move, so I sat there for hours, with mosquitoes the size of garbage trucks feasting on me, and I got a clear picture in my mind of Jake.” She glanced at Sully. “My older son.”
“Right.”
“He was curled up in his bed at home, in a fetal position, staring at the wall and crying without tears. It was like a shot God framed for me, which is why I know it isn't just me thinking it up.” Her voice went dry. “That and the fact that the images aren't what I would set up. Believe me.”
“I know you want to leave here with something,” Sully said. “And I don't blame you. You've struggled with this for a long time.” He slanted forward again, arms resting on his knees, shaping his words with his hands. “I want to talk more about your relationship with God next time. It's the key to all of thisâthat's where the Christian part comes in. But in the meantimeâand I just want you to hear me out on thisâI think you can start to use your ability to visualizeâ”
“I told you I don't set it upâit just comes to me.” She, too, slid forward, so that her feet finally hit the floor. “I know where you're going with this, and I'm sorry, but when some detective tells me my son is a racist, I can't see me stopping to calm myself with a vision of”âshe chopped her hand toward the paintingâ“White Sands. By the time I do that, I'll probably already have clawed his face.”
Sully watched her wrap herself back up and pondered his options. He had to be quick, or this could be the shortest relationship in therapeutic history.
“Let's try this, then,” he said. He dug into his pocket and found the miniature hourglass he'd swiped from his Would You Rather . . . ? game and set it on the trunk. Sand began its slow trickle down.
“This is just a temporary tool,” Sully said.
“Let me guess. Every time I start to blow, you want me to turn this over and not do anything until it runs out, and by then I should be cooled off.” She gave him the squint and shook her head. “I don't think so.”
“No,” Sully said. “I suggest you just keep it in your pocket as a reminder that the control
we
have lasts about that long. If we don't bring God in, we got nothin'.”
She gave him a long look. “All right,” she said and snatched the plastic hourglass from the trunk and curled her fingers around it. “Soânext week? Same time?”
As he saw her out, Sully watched her stuff the hourglass into the pocket of her cargo pants. It wasn't going to work, and he knew it. But Ryan Alexander-Coe would have to figure that out for herself. As he pulled out the voice recorder to make his notes, that was the only thing he knew about her for sure.
I
walked out of the Healing Choice Clinic ready to throw the hourglass into the cactus garden.
I stopped at the car, hand still in my pocket fingering the plastic thing, and breathed in the breeze. I watched a few cars lazily turn the corner of Union and University, probably on their way to New Mexico State a block down.
Where Dan had a contract for six sculptures.
According to Ginger.
I yanked my hand out of my pocket before I could crunch Sullivan Crisp's little device. That would give him way too much satisfaction. I slid into the driver's seat, tossed it onto the dashboard, and squeezed the steering wheel instead. I was more ticked off now than I was when I walked in there.
I started the engine and got the air conditioner going, but I didn't pull out of the parking lot. Maybe I should go back in and tell him to give his three o'clock Tuesday appointment to somebody who
wanted
to talk about herself for an hour. I wanted
him
to talk, to give me some answers. And since that obviously wasn't the way it worked, he could have his little temporary tool and his buzzing and his chair that swallowed me up like Alice in Wonderland. Not to mention that wretched painting of White Sands. If the clients weren't nuts when they went in there, they were sure to be when they came out.
I turned up the fan and let the cold air blow my hair into spikes that I knew made me look even more like a maniac. One thing the crazy doctor and I did agree on: “letting it all out,” at least that way, was as worthless as breasts on a boarâas my New Jerseyâborn mother used to say. If I went back and threw his hourglass in his face, I'd want to squeal out of this parking lot and go finish off the job I'd almost started in Dan's studio.
So what
was
I going to do?
Drive to Alex's soccer practice. Put the hourglass in my purse. Turn it over before J.P. or Dan or my own thoughts about Jake had a chance to transform me into Attila the Hun. That was what I was going to do.
Because I couldn't think of anything else.
I tried over the next three days.
I wrapped my hand around the hourglass when J.P. stood in front of me and read, out loud, the nutrition information on the Goldfish crackers I brought for snacks.
I stared at it every time I listened to Uriel Cohen's voice mail tell me she wasn't available and would get back to me as soon as possible. Obviously she didn't have her ducks in a row yet. Besides, I didn't have anything more to tell her. That required more staring at the hourglass.
I actually turned it over and watched its sand trail merrily to the bottom when Dan informed me that Jake still didn't want to talk to me, that the mere mention of it only drove him further into his cave. At that point I wanted to call Dr. Crisp and tell him that the sand had run its course and God wasn't taking over. At all.
If anything, I felt further from God than I had since before Africa. No images came to meâno clear pictures of Jake's heart opening up and letting me in, no flashes of other hands reaching out to help him. I asked for them. I begged for them, until I heard the echoes of my own voice taunting me. I was more strung out than I ever dreamed of being.
But if one thing ruled me more than anger, it was flat-out stubbornness. “You don't take after anybody strange,” my mother would say to me under her breath and cast a furtive glance at my father. It was that paternally inherited trait that made me keep on with the hourglass and the prayersâat least until Tuesday, when I could storm into Sullivan Crisp's office and tell him to stop playing games and
help me.
I just had to get through Saturday first.
Alex's team had their first game that day in Alamogordo. I didn't ask why we had to travel an hour when there must be other teams they could play right in Las Cruces. Poco invited Alex and me to ride with her and Felipe in her van, and when I saw that Victoria and J.P. were also piling in with their boys, I vowed not to even bring it up. That, or the fact that none of the boys' dads seemed to support their sons' soccer, which made it impossible to hang out with anyone
but
women. I was glad I'd decided to carry my camera. That would give me something to fool around with en route, so I wouldn't be so likely to let them get to me.
The vehicle was a nine-passenger van, which required tiny Poco's full attention to drive. I was surprised she could see over the steering wheel. J.P. sat up front with her, not surprisingly, so that she could co-pilot.
How
does
Poco get anywhere without you acting as her GPS?
I wanted to ask. Only fear that I would upset Poco and have us all plunging off San Augustin Pass kept me quiet. Victoria sat beside me, gazing out at the toasted desert as if there were actually something to see, and humming to herself. J.P. saved me the trouble of telling her she was driving us nuts.
“Was I humming?” Victoria looked straight at me with her pale blue eyes.
I so wanted to say no, just to tick J.P. off. I twisted in my seat and pointed the camera at the four boys in the back two rows. Tongues immediately came out. Eyes were crossed. Alex made devil horns with his fingers at the back of Bryan's head. I took a few shots, which incited more misshapen mouths and thumbs in ears.
“Do something original,” I said.
They hesitated only slightly before Alex hooked his arm around Felipe's neck and pulled him into a half nelson. I shot that.
“What are you trying to do, Ryan?” J.P. said. “Start a brawl?”
“Hey, get this!” Cade said and made a pig nose at Bryan with his fingers.
Bryan retaliated with his knuckles in his nostrils, all of which I captured as unexpected laughter gurgled up my throat.
Until J.P. snapped her fingers in front of my lens.
“Enoughâall of you,” she said. “We don't fool around like that in the car. Do you want Mrs. Dagosto to have an accident?”
I'd always thought that was a stupid kind of question to ask a kid. Did she expect him to say, “Sureâwhy not?” I was tempted to say it myself. Where was that hourglass?
“We'll be there in ten minutes,” Poco said. “You guys need to get your game faces on. Isn't that what Coach Dan says?”
I heard boy-giggling behind me, a sure sign that they were making game faces worthy of Halloween.
“I don't think that's what he means,” J.P. said.
When she turned back to the traffic to advise Poco that her turn was coming up in ten miles, a stubby finger poked me in the back. “Hey, Mrs. Coe,” Cade said, “are you gonna take pictures of us during the game?”
“That would be cool!”
“Mom, will ya?”
J.P. stared at me as if I were supposed to read the appropriate answer in her eyes.
“You bet I will,” I said. “I'll take a whole slide show of you guys.”
“But you have to focus on the game,” J.P. said, wagging a finger at them. “No mugging for the camera.”
“You want the real thing, right, guys?” Poco said.
Cade snorted. “Like I'm so gonna be posing while we're out there playing.”
That was my thought, as well. J.P. shot him a look that could have withered a houseplant.
After we arrived at the First Street Soccer Complex and sorted out the shin guards and cleats and sent the boys off to join Dan and the others, J.P. wasted no time planting herself in front of me. Tendrils of hair had already straggled out of the ponytail protruding from the back of her ball cap and flailed frantically in the wind like they, too, wanted to get away from her.
“They have enough trouble staying focused out there without you bringing in this distraction.” She pointed at my camera as if it were an AK-47.
“They're so jazzed about this game,” I said. “They're going to forget all about me when they start playing.”
“And you know this how? Have you ever even been to a youth soccer game before?”
“Sunscreen?” Poco said and nudged a tube into my hand.
I shook my head and handed it to the translucent Victoria without taking my eyes off of J.P.
“No, I haven't,” I said. “This is a first for me, and I'm going to make pictures to share with my son.”
“Just try to keep it as unobtrusive as you can, then. Don't be running down the sideline.”