01-20-2014, 08:49 PM
20 january 2014
Before the sun did Pan rose. He used the telephone in the kitchen to call the church and leave a message on its answering machine bidding Rosa call him at this number. He did not tell her what the number was nor did it register on the telephone in the office but she knew the number anyway. Wrote it down before he went away from them and claimed to keep it locked up. She knew herself to be a liability and did not want to be a liability and so she kept it safe.
He had few things to pack. Everything he brought with him still fit into the duffel bag and everything others gave to him he found room alongside everything else. He washed the bedding from the room where he'd slept the last two months and put it back where he found it. Dusted down the furniture and cleaned the carpet with the carpet sweeper. By the time the sky lightened with winter sun he had moved to the kitchen to read. These things killed time until the phone rang.
"Are you coming back?" Rosa asked.
"Yeah," he said.
"When should I tell Manuel you're coming back?"
"Today."
"Are you joking? That's not enough time!"
"La rectoría tiene dos pisos, ¿no? Me alojaré en el piso de arriba hasta él sale."
Rosa sighed a deep and weary sigh.
"¿De acuerdo?" he asked.
"Whatever you want, Francisco," she said. "I'll tell him when he gets here."
"Thank you."
---
By the time the others in the house awaken from their nightmares and their parrying of nightmares the Chorister has left the place. His room is always clean when he is not in it but it has an empty cleanliness today. Shoshannah may be the first to find the note but even if she isn't it stays on the refrigerator for a time. The writing is tall and thin and born of a pen that did not shake in the owner's hand.
Gone back to the church, it says.
Thank you for the tea & hospitality.
Call if you have trouble.
-- Fr. Echeverría
---
Mid-morning saw the street where La Iglesia del Buen Pastor stood hemmed in by cars parked on either side. The only empty space was a 15-meter no-fly zone around a yellow fire hydrant. Someone chained a bicycle to the NO STANDING sign at the corner of the street. The children were back in school and the daycare center playground at the back of the property rang with the sound of the little kids chasing each other around while the aides stood watching them.
Amanda and Claudia were out front. Claudia, in her forties, was smoking a cigarette and Amanda, nineteen years old, wore the bruises of sleep deprivation like a second skin. She was not smoking but she wanted to stand and talk to Claudia anyway. They were the first to see a familiar red Toyota Tacoma pull into the church driveway.
"Santo cielo," said Claudia.
"Hi Father Francisco!" Amanda called out after he closed the driver's side door.
He lifted a hand to wave and walked down the sidewalk and past the front door of the church. Bypassed it to greet the women. He hugged Claudia first and then hugged Amanda. He and Claudia spoke in brief Spanish about the daycare center staffing and when she inquired after his health he did not lie. He said he was feeling better.
"Tan flaco está," said Claudia.
"Sí," said Pan, "pero cuando las Marianas descubran que yo he regresado, voy a aumentar."
Claudia laughed. Amanda shuffled her weight between her feet and looked up at the priest's face.
"I know you just got back," she said. "But if you have a minute, can I talk to you? Now?"
"Of course."
They waved goodbye to Claudia and started towards the breezeway between the daycare and the church.
"Besides," he said, "if you're with me when I go in the office, maybe Rosa won't yell quite so much."
Before the sun did Pan rose. He used the telephone in the kitchen to call the church and leave a message on its answering machine bidding Rosa call him at this number. He did not tell her what the number was nor did it register on the telephone in the office but she knew the number anyway. Wrote it down before he went away from them and claimed to keep it locked up. She knew herself to be a liability and did not want to be a liability and so she kept it safe.
He had few things to pack. Everything he brought with him still fit into the duffel bag and everything others gave to him he found room alongside everything else. He washed the bedding from the room where he'd slept the last two months and put it back where he found it. Dusted down the furniture and cleaned the carpet with the carpet sweeper. By the time the sky lightened with winter sun he had moved to the kitchen to read. These things killed time until the phone rang.
"Are you coming back?" Rosa asked.
"Yeah," he said.
"When should I tell Manuel you're coming back?"
"Today."
"Are you joking? That's not enough time!"
"La rectoría tiene dos pisos, ¿no? Me alojaré en el piso de arriba hasta él sale."
Rosa sighed a deep and weary sigh.
"¿De acuerdo?" he asked.
"Whatever you want, Francisco," she said. "I'll tell him when he gets here."
"Thank you."
---
By the time the others in the house awaken from their nightmares and their parrying of nightmares the Chorister has left the place. His room is always clean when he is not in it but it has an empty cleanliness today. Shoshannah may be the first to find the note but even if she isn't it stays on the refrigerator for a time. The writing is tall and thin and born of a pen that did not shake in the owner's hand.
Gone back to the church, it says.
Thank you for the tea & hospitality.
Call if you have trouble.
-- Fr. Echeverría
---
Mid-morning saw the street where La Iglesia del Buen Pastor stood hemmed in by cars parked on either side. The only empty space was a 15-meter no-fly zone around a yellow fire hydrant. Someone chained a bicycle to the NO STANDING sign at the corner of the street. The children were back in school and the daycare center playground at the back of the property rang with the sound of the little kids chasing each other around while the aides stood watching them.
Amanda and Claudia were out front. Claudia, in her forties, was smoking a cigarette and Amanda, nineteen years old, wore the bruises of sleep deprivation like a second skin. She was not smoking but she wanted to stand and talk to Claudia anyway. They were the first to see a familiar red Toyota Tacoma pull into the church driveway.
"Santo cielo," said Claudia.
"Hi Father Francisco!" Amanda called out after he closed the driver's side door.
He lifted a hand to wave and walked down the sidewalk and past the front door of the church. Bypassed it to greet the women. He hugged Claudia first and then hugged Amanda. He and Claudia spoke in brief Spanish about the daycare center staffing and when she inquired after his health he did not lie. He said he was feeling better.
"Tan flaco está," said Claudia.
"Sí," said Pan, "pero cuando las Marianas descubran que yo he regresado, voy a aumentar."
Claudia laughed. Amanda shuffled her weight between her feet and looked up at the priest's face.
"I know you just got back," she said. "But if you have a minute, can I talk to you? Now?"
"Of course."
They waved goodbye to Claudia and started towards the breezeway between the daycare and the church.
"Besides," he said, "if you're with me when I go in the office, maybe Rosa won't yell quite so much."
Look. I have school. And RP. And all my other time is taken up by sheer, unreasoning panic. I don't have time for Reddit.
-- ixphaelaeon
-- ixphaelaeon