RECKLESS — Bad Boy Criminal Romance (14 page)

BOOK: RECKLESS — Bad Boy Criminal Romance
9.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“I can do it,” Ariel pleaded.  “I promise I’ll feed it, walk it, whatever I have to do.  I’ll take great care of it.”

“Where’s the money going to come from?” our mother asked.  “To buy the thing.  To get its shots.  To feed it.  To take it to the vet.  We don’t need another living thing in this house to be financially responsible for.”

Ariel let it go and became unusually distant for several days.  Supper at the kitchen table was strangely quiet.  Ariel, the usual catalyst of conversation, picked at her food.   My mother and I made no attempt to fill the gap in conversation.  So together we sat silently.  Then one night Ariel announced, “I want to get a job.”

“Doing what?” our mother asked.

              “I don’t know,” Ariel said.  “I was thinking about trying to get something at the mall.  I could work part-time after school.  And maybe on weekends too.”

              Our mother thought about it, then said, “Fine with me.  Just make sure it doesn’t interfere with your school work.  And you’ll have to find a way to get there.”

              “It won’t,” Ariel said.  “And I can take the bus.”

              Our mother nodded and said, “Put in some applications and see what happens.”

              After our meal Ariel and I washed the dishes. 

“Where did that come from?” I asked her.

              “What?”

              “Getting a job.”  I rinsed off a plate.  “You never mentioned anything about that before.”

              “I don’t know.  I figured I need to do something with my time.”

              “And what else?”

              “What do you mean?”

              “You’re never that simple.  There must be some other angle to it.”

              “I don’t know.  I was thinking of saving money to buy a car.”

“That’ll take a while.”

              “Yeah, but so what?  Mom can’t afford to buy me one.  I’ll save up and maybe find something used that’s cheap.  What else am I going to do?”

“You know, maybe I could go in with you and we could buy the car together.  That way we could both use it.  I was talking to a guy recently who might have me do so work for him.”

“Sure.”  Ariel placed a freshly-washed glass into the cupboard.  “The faster we can buy one, the better.  I don’t want to have to be stuck in this neighborhood all the time.  And when I graduate I want the freedom to just escape and travel a little.  We both could.”

I nodded, excited by the idea.  “Let’s do it.”

Chapter Nine

On a Sunday morning Angela and I sit at the kitchen bar.  I eat a buttered English muffin and read the Arkansas Democrat Gazette.  She pours syrup on a waffle.  My mother is still asleep.

“I like these pictures.”  Angela reaches into her purse and holds the photo strip we took together at a bar in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.  “We look like we’re having fun.”

I look at it.

“I need a thumbtack.  I want to pin this up on the wall where I’m sleeping.”

              I continue reading the newspaper.  Part of the Sunday paper is a four-page Religion section.  A headline on the front page reads: “College Teen Promotes Christianity on Campus”.  The article is accompanied by a picture of a pretty, girl-next-door type with a blond ponytail wearing a red and white floral sundress and sitting on a rock in front of a pond.  The article reads:

 

Most college students spend their freshman year just trying to keep up – staying on top of course work, making new friends and acclimating to campus life.  But for University of Arkansas freshman Britney Boyd, age 18, college offers much more.

“It’s a chance to spread the Word of God to my peers,” Boyd said.  “Before I even started college, I’d been taught university campuses are notoriously liberal and close-minded to the Bible’s truths.  However, I still felt the experience could be positive in that I could spread God’s message while broadening my own understanding of other people’s perspectives.”

Having gotten an early jumpstart by taking summer courses, Britney entered this fall semester already boasting a 4.0 GPA in her chosen major of Religious Studies.  She’s currently taking a full-course load of 18 hours while staying active in The Pinnacle Christian Church.

That mega-church is headed by her father Donald Boyd, who has become well-known in Northwest Arkansas as pastor of Pinnacle Christian for the past 22 years.  During his tenure, his message has been spread nationwide via telecasts, online videos, and his two books
Things That Make God Smile: How to Live Each Day for Christ
and
The Homosexual Conspiracy: How Gays Plan to Conquer America
.

“My dad is hugely inspirational to me and he’s always encouraged me to take a very active role in the church,” Britney said.  “I’ve done everything from leading youth groups to helping with Sunday services to helping collect donations.  You’d think all my responsibilities would tire me out, but God gives me the strength to carry on and I’m always looking for new ways to glorify Him.”

Her newest endeavor involves an attempt to establish roots on the University of Arkansas campus.  This week Britney, along with other young Pinnacle Christian volunteers, will set up a booth in the student union to recruit followers to Jesus. 

The program, called the Pinnacle Faith Outreach, will target Christians who’ve lapsed in their faiths and haven’t been to church recently.  It will also target nonbelievers and those unfamiliar with the Bible, providing them opportunities to learn more.

The ultimate goal, Britney said, is to get everyone who visits the booth to attend at least one service at Pinnacle Christian.

“If we can get them to come to church and feel the power of the Lord, that’ll be a perfect starting point for them to begin developing a strong relationship with Jesus,” Britney said.  “I just know if they come and see, they’ll realize what they’ve been missing and know how much better their lives could be.”

Britney said her involvement in church programs coupled with school currently makes for a very fulfilling life.  However, her busy schedule does affect her social life, she admitted.  Meeting others with her same strong convictions is not always easy.

“It’s sometimes hard to find people who are as devoted to God as I am,” Britney said.  “But really what I hope for is to meet someone who is willing to learn and open their heart to God, so that he and I could grow in Christ together.  In the future, I can definitely see myself married with a big family, all of us being totally devoted to Christ.”

Until then, Britney plans to remain on her current track and pray vigorously that God gives her whatever she needs to perform His will.

“In youth groups we talk about our problems.  And when someone needs something to happen in their life, there’s an acronym I always remind them of,” she said.  “I remind them to PUSH: Pray Until Something Happens.”

 

“Hey, read this.”  I give the newspaper to Angela.

She reads the article.  “Interesting,” she remarks apathetically.

“I think I should go to the campus and meet her.”

Angela hands me back the paper.  “Seriously?”

“Sure, why not?”

“What’s the point?”

“What organization generates more money than a church?  Especially a big mega-church like this seems to be.  All those people handing over their cash, dropping all those dollar bills into the donation box.  This girl seems to have a hand in everything the church does.  Her dad’s in charge of it all.  Maybe I could get close to her.”

Angela giggles.  “I don’t think you’re her type.”

“I can be anyone’s type.”

“I think she’d want someone more Christ-y than you.  A good shepherd of sorts.”

“Someone to comfort her with his rod and staff?”

“You’re more like the antichrist.  She would never fall for you.”

“Can’t hurt to try.”

 

In the morning, I drive to a nearby Wal-Mart and purchase a backpack.  I put some newspapers inside to create the illusion of books.  At around noon I drive to the University of Arkansas and find a space in the parking deck next to the student union.  On the third floor, past the bookstore, is a space with a couple booths before entering the cafeteria.  I spot the Pinnacle Faith Outreach booth.  Two volunteers work the table, two females, neither of them Britney Boyd.

I continue into the cafeteria and buy a slice of pizza and a coke.  I sit at a small two-seat table in a location where I can keep an eye on the Pinnacle Christians.  Their booth attracts a modest crowd.  Every few minutes a person or two stops to talk or take a pamphlet.

I eat my pizza and take today’s newspaper from my backpack and read it and sip my coke.  I casually look up to check on the booth every couple minutes.  About two hours later I have read the entire paper, most articles twice, and I decide to leave.  I throw my paper plate and cup of coke into the trash and I rack my lunch trey.

As I pick up my backpack to leave I notice Britney and a young man walk into the union and go to the booth.  They relieve the two current volunteers who grab their backpacks and exit.  Someone approaches the booth and talks with the young man.  Britney sits behind the booth and waits.

I approach her.  “Hey.”

“Hey,” Britney says, standing up.  “If you died right now, do you think you would go to heaven?”

Surprised by the question I say, “Uh, I really don’t know.”

“Have you been born again?”

I shake my head.  “No, I haven’t.  I always thought I got it right the first time.”

Britney giggles and says, “No, I mean born again in Christ.”

“Hey, can I be honest with you?”

“Sure.”

“I actually didn’t come over here to talk about the religious stuff.  I’m heading to class right now, but I just noticed you over here wanted to meet you.”

“Oh … Why?”

“Well, not to make you feel awkward, but I thought you were cute.  I’d like to talk to you more.  You should give me your number.”

“Um.  I don’t know.”

“Why not?”

“Do you have a relationship with Jesus Christ?”

“Really, I don’t know a whole lot about that stuff.  We could talk about it though.  Maybe you could teach me something.  I think it’s cool you’re so passionate about it.  I think passion like that makes life worth living.”

She nods and says, “Yeah, me too.”

“Maybe it’s God’s will that we meet like this.  You never know, right?”

Britney smiles and says, “Yeah, maybe.”  She thinks a moment and says, “Sure, why not?”  She takes a sheet of paper and writes her cell number on it and hands it to me.

“Great.  I need to get to class but I’ll give you a call.  Good luck saving souls.”

She cocks her head, still smiling, and says, “Thanks.”

 

“If you’re smart and have your shit planned out, I think anything can be accomplished,” Terrell told me.  “Intelligence can set you apart from everyone else.”

When I arrived at his house, Terrell introduced me to his grandmother.  She sat at the kitchen table wearing thick large-framed glasses, a long blue dress, a sweater, and nondescript white tennis shoes.  She drank a cup of tea and ate pecan sandies.

I sat with her while Terrell took a quick shower.

“You’re a friend of Terrell’s?” she said.  “What’s your name?”

“Brandon.”

“Would you like anything to eat?”

“No thanks.”

She asked me about the weather.  She said it looked terribly cold outside and that she wanted to stay in and watch her programs on television.  Then she asked, “What’s your name again?”

“Brandon.”

“Your Terrell’s friend, right?  Do you want anything to eat?”

Within ten minutes we repeated that conversation four times.

Terrell returned from his shower.  “Me and Brandon are going back to my room to talk a little,” he told his grandmother.  “Just holler if you need me.”  He patted her shoulder and left her to finish her tea and cookies.

“Most people believe in the system,” Terrell told me.  “They finish school – or not – and get a job and live paycheck to paycheck.  They may have dreams.  They think someday they’ll own their own business or be famous or somehow they’ll get rich.  But that shit is nothing but a pipedream.  They’re not smart enough and don’t have the vision.  So instead, they keep working and then they get married because that’s the system.  They find someone, decide that’s the best they can do, and have the wedding and then some kids.  They struggle to get by, all the while thinking the American Dream is going to happen for them sooner or later if they just keep trucking along.  They never set themselves apart.  I don’t care about those people.  And I have no desire to follow the system and play by the rules they do.”

              I listened intently.

              “Many of the people who don’t follow society’s rules end up in prison because they’re the dumbest of all.  These people know the American Dream has passed them by.  So on a whim, they stick up a gas station or mug an old lady or something else stupid.  Sure enough, they do set themselves apart.  They end up being set apart in a cell block.  If they get released, they go do it again.  They have no brains and they have no plan.  And without that, you’re never going to beat the system.”

BOOK: RECKLESS — Bad Boy Criminal Romance
9.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Dogfight by Calvin Trillin
That Special Smile/Whittenburg by Karen Toller Whittenburg
My Lady Vampire by Sahara Kelly
The Alpha's Mate by Jacqueline Rhoades
Nobody's Angel by Mcguane, Thomas
Midwinter Sacrifice by Mons Kallentoft
Killer Heat by Linda Fairstein