Read Ten Thousand Charms Online

Authors: Allison Pittman

Tags: #West (U.S.), #Christian, #Prostitutes, #Prostitutes - West (U.S.), #Western Stories, #General, #Christian Fiction, #Western, #Historical, #Fiction, #Religious

Ten Thousand Charms (38 page)

BOOK: Ten Thousand Charms
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“Shoulda known not to bet against me.” John William offered a feeble smile, then turned to raise the newly repaired flail high and resume threshing the wheat. When he tried to bring it down,
however, he could not. Big Phil stood behind him, his hand gripping the handle. John William released his own grip, and Phil held on to the stick, holding it close to John William's face in a manner that, had Phil not shown himself to be a friend, could have been seen as a threat.

“I was standing,” Phil said, “right at your elbow when you lifted that drink. You had money pouring out of your pockets. And blood crusted in your knuckles.”

“Why didn't you mention this when I first met you here?”

“Because," Phil said, taking a few steps back, “you didn't introduce yourself to me as Killer MacGregan. I looked at you, your family, and decided it was something you'd put behind you. You seemed happy—more than I can say about you when I saw you drinking that night.”

“Why are you tellin’ me all of this now?”

“Let me ask you a question. What would it take to get you back in that ring?”

The memory of what he used to do—what he used to be— filled him with such distaste that he hearkened back to the taste of his own blood in his mouth and was overcome with the desire to spit it out, which he did, causing Phil to take yet another step backward.

“I could never go back,” he said, staring at his boots. “I made a promise to myself. To God. 1 paid my price for what I did. For the men 1 hurt. Killed.”

“Maybe so,” Phil said, holding the flail out to John William, “but you got to remember that you didn't kill that little girl of yours. And neither did Gloria. You don't have to pay any price for that.”

John William looked into Big Phil's bright blue eyes and realized he'd never seen such wisdom and compassion in a man.

“Now I don't claim to know the details of Gloria's past,” Phil continued, “but I can make a pretty good guess at it. And don't you think she's made a few promises of her own?”

“I don't know. I suppose she has.”

“Sending her away'd be like putting yourself back in that
ring,” Phil said, picking up the pitchfork and preparing to sift the straw on the canvas. “And it won't bring your baby girl back.”

Gloria threw out the last of the wash water and dropped the soiled rags inside.

“Neat as a pin, now, isn't it?” Maureen's cheerful voice hadn't lost its spirit or cadence despite the long afternoon's work.

“It's perfect.” Gloria set down the bucket and, with her hands pressed to the small of her back, stretched back.

The handcart Maureen had brought from the house held a wealth of treasures beyond the cleaning supplies, including a bright blue cloth for the table.

“When John William goes to Centerville for the milling, he can look for some matching fabric to make cushions for the benches,” Maureen said as she lofted the tablecloth over the slab of wood. From her own home she donated a matching butter dish, creamer, and sugar bowl to sit in the middle of the table.

The shelves above the little workspace held the few dishes Gloria and John William had in their wagon. The frying pan hung on a hook in the wall; the cooking pot stood ready in the fireplace.

“And of course,” Maureen said, “you can borrow from me anything that you need.”

Crisp, starched white curtains hung at the newly clean window, and the narrow shelf below it housed a pretty collection of glass jars.

“For herbs,” she'd said. “The light here is perfect for them.”

Gloria had simply followed behind her, running her fingers over each item.

“I think I'll have you take the rocking chair from the parlor— you have so much more need of it than I do,” Maureen said, her hands on her hips as she surveyed the room.

Then she walked into the little bedroom at the back. “I still
have the old ticking for this bed.” Her voice carried from the room. “Hopefully by tomorrow John William will have threshed enough to have some good, fresh straw to stuff it with. Ed never did like sleeping on ropes—always wanted a firm foundation to sleep on—so you'll need plenty of cushioning because that slab of wood is woefully uncomfortable.” Her head appeared from behind the wall just long enough to treat Gloria to a wink. “But I guess you already know that.”

“Maureen, please,” Gloria said. She'd been tapping the broom against the open doorway to shake off the last of the dirt and gave a resounding
smack
as the woman's cheerful chatter went beyond the point of bearing. “How can you talk like that after Kate.

“Oh, now dear,” Maureen said, leaning against the dividing wall, “you and John William shared Kate's life. And you shared her death. But your life—yours and his together—it isn't over.”

“I don't know that we ever had a life together. Not like you and Ed had, anyway. You started together with nothing. You built this place together. But John and I…”

The fatigue of the day's labor took its toll and Gloria sank onto the bench at the table.

“You and John what?” Maureen asked.

“Do you know what I am? I'm King David's woman. Bathsheba. Bringing the great man down to sin.”

“Well, I'm sure it wasn't anything…
completely
improper. After all, I believe John William to be a man of great restraint.”

“Of course you do,” Gloria said, her voice full of disgust.

“Now wait a minute,” Maureen said, walking into the room and sitting on the bench opposite Gloria. “Are you telling me that he tried to force—”

“Nothing like that. He would never, never force himself. In fact, when he first touched me, I was perfectly willing…but after a while, well, it just seemed…wrong.”

“Ah.”

“It was just awkward and…humiliating. And it's the reason God took Kate away”

Maureen took Gloria's hand in her own tiny one. “Now child, is that what you really believe?”

“It's what John believes.”

“You know he's out of his head right now.”

“You know what I wish?” Gloria said, surveying the room. “I wish the same thing could happen to me as what we did to this little house.”.

“What do you mean?”

“It was just so easy. A few hours’ work, some soap and water, and just like you said—spankin’ new.” She adopted Maureen's characteristic singing tone. “Fresh as a daisy.”

Maureen laughed at the imitation.

“I wish there was just some way to do that to me. To my life. Because that's why I couldn't stand for him to touch me. I just felt…dirty And I know that's what he—”

“Now, Gloria, darling—”

“He—and you—always talking about God and forgiveness. Is that what happens? Is that how it feels?”

“Yes, child, it is.”

“How? How do you know?”

“Just think about King David. He committed a great sin, arranging the death of a woman's husband so that he could have her as his own. Even though he was God's own, he was not protected from sin.”

“God's own,” Gloria said, whispering.

“Yes. And because he did have a heart for God, he recognized that what he had done was terrible, and he cried out for God's forgiveness. Wait here, I have one more thing for you.”

Maureen got up from the table and left the cabin, returning within minutes with a package wrapped in clean white paper.

“I was going to save this as a wedding gift,” she said, “but I think we need it now. Open it.”

Gloria took the package and untied the pretty blue ribbon wrapped around it. Carefully—savoring the rare occasion of
opening a gift—she unfolded the paper to reveal the present within. A Bible.

“Every home needs God's Word,” Maureen said.

“John has a Bible.”

“You need your own.”

“I can't read,” Gloria said, handing the Bible over to Maureen.

“You'll learn. For now, just listen.”

“Are you going to read the same story Reverend Fuller read at the funeral?”

“Not quite.”

Gloria watched with envy as Maureen flitted through the gilt-edged pages. She leaned forward, breathing in the smell of a new book, preparing herself to understand the words that were often so confusing.

“Here it is,” Maureen said. “Psalm 51. This is what David wrote just after that great sin of his. ‘Have mercy upon me, O God, according to thy lovingkindness: according unto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions.'”

“Transgressions?”

“Sins," Maureen said, looking straight into Gloria's eyes. “All those mistakes we've made. Now, he goes on, ‘Wash me thoroughly from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin.’ See? Just like you were saying. He's asking God to wash it all away”

“Show me," Gloria said, suddenly greedy to see the words for herself.

“Of course, dear.” Maureen turned the Bible toward Gloria, her finger leading her eyes to the place on the page where she had been reading. “Here.”

Gloria's eyes raked the page, the print largely meaningless. But the odd moments spent looking over John William's shoulder brought a few words to clarity, and she struggled to bring them to life.

“Ag—in—st thee on—lee have I s—sin—sind…”

“'Against thee, thee only, have I sinned,'” Maureen said,
sending Gloria a proud smile. “That means that yes, we have all sinned. But it's God and God alone that we sin against. You see? Not against each other. Not against our children. I know your heart is badly broken now, my dear, and there's nothing we can say to make any of that hurt go away. Not really. Only God can do that for you.”

Gloria slid the book across the table to her friend.

“Read it to me,” she said. “All of it.”

“All right.” Maureen began reading again at the beginning of the psalm.

Much of it, still, was lost to Gloria's comprehension. She remembered the night of Danny's birth, and how the rush of blood in her ears blocked so many of the words Sadie spoke, but bits and pieces of the ancient writing of a sin-ridden king fell upon her heart.

“For I acknowledge my transgressions: and my sin is ever before me…”

With every waking breath. In every dream.

“In sin did my mother conceive me…”

Mother What if you had a chance to hear these words? How would
your life have been different? And mine?

“Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow…”

White. Pure. Virgin. Can it be?

“Create in me a clean heart, O God…”

Because now, I feel I have no heart at all.

“Cast me not away from thy presence.

So many others have thrown me away Left me alone. If I become
Yours, will You keep me?

“For thou desirest not sacrifice; else would I give it…”

I
would. 1 would give anything.

“The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit…”

Broken.

“A broken and a contrite heart.

Broken.

“O God, thou wilt not despise…”

How could You not despise me? When I so despise myself.

'Then shall they offer bullocks upon thine altar.”

Maureen stopped reading, letting the final phrase hang in the air. So many thoughts and questions fought against each other in Gloria's mind, but she couldn't share them now. They were too new. Too raw. But the last words of the Scripture begged an answer.

“Bullock?”

“It's an animal. A bull used as a sacrifice to God.”

“But he just said that God wants no sacrifice.”

Maureen smiled warmly “You have a quick mind, Gloria. Yes, God requires only that we offer the sacrifice of our hearts, ourselves. But King David lived in a time when God still required a blood sacrifice—the killing of an animal. But when Jesus Christ, God's Son, died on the cross, He became the final sacrifice. No man would ever again need to shed blood in order to seek forgiveness from God.”

“His Son.”

“You know the pain of losing a child, Gloria. Imagine if the only way to save the life of someone was to take away the life of your son. Sweet little Danny. Imagine how much God must love you that He did that for you.”

“Tor God so loved the world…'” John William's words from so long ago crept through her memory.

“The world, yes. But you, too, dear. God loved
you
that much.”

“It's not believable.”

Maureen giggled and gave Glorias hand a squeeze across the table. “It seems that way, doesn't it? But, dearie, all He asks is that you
do
believe. Believe that Jesus died for you and that He will forgive you, and He will.”

The little cabin was growing darker with the afternoon waning. Maureen had been holding the Bible closer and closer to her face with each verse, and now there was not enough light to continue reading, even if Glorias head and heart had the stamina to go on. The effort of the day's labor infused her entire body, her head throbbed with questions, her stomach felt tight with
hunger and something else she couldn't quite identify. It was long past time to nurse Danny.

But she didn't want to leave this place. There was magic here at this little table, two friends talking, words of Scripture lacing their conversation. A longing had been satisfied here in this cozy little room. Everything she had ever been seeking—peace, a home, a mother—all of it was wrapped up in these solid four walls, simple and new and given so freely

“Thank you, Maureen,” Gloria said softly, her voice barely a whisper. “1 never expected when John—when he brought Kate to me, when he asked me to—1 never thought I would have so much. I can't bear the thought of losing it all now.”

“Let me tell you one more thing, dear, before we head back.” Maureen's tone was serious. Imperative. “You could have all of this—a home, a man who adores you, beautiful children. But unless you pray, my child, until you free yourself from this burden you have, you'll never really enjoy it. You cannot truly love or
feel
truly loved without giving yourself over to God and
His
love.”

Gloria loved this woman—loved her to bursting. She looked at the soft, warm face—-just on the verge of wrinkles—and wished she had grown up in her loving care and wisdom.

BOOK: Ten Thousand Charms
11.78Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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