Chapter One
This was the last place she expected to spend
Christmas.
Angela Jensen fought back a sigh. As
if sensing her thoughts, Ron leaned over until his lips brushed her ear. “This
environment, this setting—it must be strange to you. More than strange.
Foreign.”
Nodding, she turned to catch his
gaze. “Yes.” She wasn’t about to give him more. Not here. Not now.
His brows drew together. “Do you
want to leave?”
“No, I’m fine. Really.” She was
fine, just not comfortable, not at ease.
Besides, damned if she’d get up and walk
the wrong way down that long, long aisle, crowded with processing choirs, with all
these people watching.
Life as an atheist wasn’t easy,
especially during America’s annual homage to over-indulgence known as “The
Holidays.” Even harder when it was your birthday, and your mother had lost her
life while giving you yours.
Friends who thought it was a double
day for celebration were wrong. For her and her dad, it was a day of mourning.
So around age ten she convinced her father to let her celebrate her birthday in
July so she didn’t have to compete for attention with the Baby Jesus, or a dead
mother.
In his logical, engineering-minded
way, he’d agreed. It made it easier for him, after all. He didn’t want that
memory any more than she did. Sometimes she wondered if either of them remembered
her true birth date.
But avoiding Christmas, that was
impossible. It followed her wherever she went, jingle-belling and ho-ho-ho-ing
and “Merry Christmas”-ing at every corner until she wanted to scream at the top
of her lungs that yes, Jesus was a nice man, a good teacher. As for being the
son of god…since there was no god, no all-knowing higher power who would make
right all the wrongs in life, Jesus’ divinity, or not, was moot. Just get over
it.
Usually she kept her thoughts and
her beliefs—really, her UNbeliefs—to herself.
Americans were all about freedom of
religion. They’d accept worship of animals and snakes, even sports teams. But
tell them you believed in nothingness, and stares of contempt, or pity, quickly
followed. Getting close to people was…difficult.
Until she’d met Ron. He’d been
different right from the start, sneaking into her heart like he’d crept through
a back door on ninja feet. He’d hooked her first with steady hazel-brown eyes
that crinkled at the corners when he laughed. Charmed her with that easy grin
that creased a dimple down the middle of his cheek, inviting her lips to
follow. Even that awful flat Midwestern accent that sounded so out of place in rural
Virginia intrigued her.
Of course, she’d kept her feelings of
UN-faith from him for the longest time, evading questions about her upbringing,
her personal habits, until they’d grown close. Until they’d begun to spend nights
together, and on rare occasions, weekends.
Then one morning, not too long ago,
when they finished making love, he lay over her, braced on his elbows and staring
at her with an expression of such adoration, her throat had tightened, and
she’d had to blink back tears.
“What?” she’d asked, prompting him
to speak.
“I was just thinking.”
“Of?”
“You.”
“What about me?”
“I love you, Angela. And I think
you love me, too.”
She’d nodded, her heart beginning
to thud in big timpani booms. And she knew why. For the first time she feared
the consequences of her UNbelief. Because Ron was what she’d call “a believer,”
and for believers, belief was a biggie.
He didn’t spout scripture, or spend
endless hours at church. But he had a Bible on his desk and had dropped enough
hints about growing up in that culture.
So she told him. “There’s something
you need to know, about me.”
“This sounds serious,” he said.
Then he rolled over and settled against the headboard, dragging her next to him
with an arm around her waist. “Let me guess. You’re actually a CIA operative,
working under cover, literally, to wring from me all the secrets I’ve been
harboring about my plans to discover and clone the twerking gene.”
“No.” She’d tried to laugh, but it
had come out sounding strained. “It’s just that I’m not what you’d call a
religious person.”
“So?”
“You don’t understand. I’m—” For
the first time since identifying her feelings, she had difficulty spitting the
label from her mouth. “I’m an atheist.”
“Okay.” Typical guy answer that
meant nothing. Not affirmation. Not condemnation. Just nothing. But he’d nestled
her closer, wrapped both arms around her and began to rock her, as if trying to
comfort. She didn’t want comforting. She wanted understanding, and acceptance.
“What, aren’t you going to try to
convince me how wrong I am? Aren’t you going to try to save me?” She lifted her arms and made jazz hands.
He chuckled, began to nibble on her
ear. “Why would I do that?”
She twisted to face him. “Isn’t
that what religious people do? Try to make believers, or followers, out of us
sinners?”
The smile slipped from his face.
“That’s not my job, no. That’s God’s job. My job, my beautiful Angela, is to
try in my all-too-human way to see you as God sees you, to love you as God
loves you.”
“And how does your god see me?”
“As His child, of course, crafted
in His image, designed to some day live with Him in perfect love, beyond the
bounds of the earthly body.”
“Huh.” She’d narrowed her gaze,
trying to pierce through the words to an underlying deception, but found none.
When several days passed without a
follow-up, she began to take him at his word. She began to let down her guard.
That’s how he’d suckered her into
going with him to the Christmas Eve midnight service. They’d been at work at
the county hospital, way out in the boonies, at the same time for once. She’d
just come out of surgery and had plopped down at the computer in the nurses’
station to write her notes. He was in the next chair over, reviewing a patient’s
records in preparation for a C-section.
“Hey,” he’d said, “I know it’s not
your thing, but how about coming to the midnight Christmas service with me at
the church down the road?”
She’d lifted an eyebrow, snickered,
then gone back to reviewing the chart of the man whose heart was now pumping
much more efficiently, and hopefully would for the next twenty years.
“I mean it, Angie,” he’d said,
persisting. “I’d like you to come with me. It’s mostly singing.”
“Ron, I thought I explained. Church
isn’t—”
“I know, I know.” He’d rushed the
words, cutting her off. “I know all about your UNbelief. You’ve told me, and I
respect your choice. I realize I’m asking a lot, but this is my first year
here. My family is nine hundred miles away in Chicago. It won’t be Christmas
for me if I just sit home. I have to be with people, hear the stories—“
“Yeah, yeah, I know. ‘For unto you
this day is born in the City of Bethlehem, a Savior, which is Christ the Lord.’”
She’d recited the words by rote.
Ron didn’t seem to notice her emotionless
delivery. “You know the verse,” he said, and his voice held a pleased but questioning
tone that caused her stomach to flip-flop. So she snapped.
“Of course I know it. What American
child didn’t grow up watching ‘A Charlie Brown Christmas’? Can’t you just rent
the DVD to get your fix?”
“I understand. Really. It’s okay. ”
He hadn’t exactly pouted, but his shoulders had dropped, and his expression had
turned noticeably expressionless. She’d disappointed him, and it mattered.
She closed the patient’s file, logged
off the computer, and swiveled from the desk. “Okay, I’ll go and keep you
company. We’re both working tomorrow anyway. We can start the day together.”
“Thank you, Angie. I owe you.”
“Don’t get excited. I’ll go and sit
with you, but don’t expect any great transformation. I’m not interested. In
fact, I’ll meet you there in case I want to make a quick getaway.”
She’d been fine with her decision
until she got there, saw the big white church with the lit-up steeple that served
as a beacon for fools. She forced herself to the entrance and found him, and at
seeing his mouth-stretching grin, hoped his excitement, his pleasure, would see
her through the ordeal.
But now, stuffed shoulder-to-shoulder
amongst the chattering throngs, she began to sweat.
She should have said no. She should
have insisted on staying home, resting for what was sure to be a long Christmas
day at the hospital. She and Ron had both volunteered to be on duty, and
holidays always brought out the crazies.
Yet, here she sat in this massive
church, complete with candle-carrying choristers of all ages heralding the
birth of a very mortal baby boy two millennia earlier.
Glory hallelujah.
Ron squeezed her hand, drawing her
attention from her misery and reminding her just why she’d decided to accompany
him. He was a good man, a loving man who deserved to be with someone who shared
his beliefs.
The thought brought tears, and she
blinked rapidly to halt their flow. Thankfully, he seemed too caught up in the
music, the ritual, to notice.
Then the music ended and the
preacher began his spiel. He talked about his “God of the Universe” that could
somehow know each person’s soul.
He told the story of a teenaged
virgin who was visited by an angel, then gave birth to a fully human boy who
would later perform miracles and teach the world how to live.
He spoke of the supernatural nature
of the event, how people aren’t supposed to understand and it’s okay to feel
confused, conflicted. Jesus’ birth, after all, was about hope when logically
there should be none. When he ended, for the first time in over an hour the
pressure in Angela’s chest eased.
As the church emptied, Ron stopped
to shake hands with strangers while she stood at his side, nodding and smiling
at the “Merry Christmas” greetings that rang through the chilly midnight air. All
the while a slow certainty burned in her belly that she and Ron weren’t meant
to be together.
After an eternity, he walked her to
her car, gripping her hand like a child would. When they stopped, she said,
“I’m glad I came. It was enlightening, on many levels.”
He made a humming noise, then tipped
her face up to press a chaste kiss to her lips. It felt like good-bye.
“See you later?”
“Yes. Three p.m. shift. Maybe we’ll
have a chance to talk.”
“Maybe.”
He waited while she started the
car, and as she pulled from the curb and headed for home, he shouted, “Be
careful. The holidays always bring out the crazies.”
***
Please check back tomorrow for Chapter Two!
9 comments:
Great start to your story. Again I can't wait for tomorrow.
I love how we've all gone off in different directions with the same opening line from jail to horse shit to church. LOL Only at The Roses of Prose. Great first chapter, Leah. Well done! And will she run into some crazies?
You have drawn such an emotional picture of Angela, I feel as if I know her. Very, very well done, Leah!
As always, Leah, your writing captivates me. Love this story, and I love that you've taken it in an unexpected direction. Will Angie's atheist heart start to believe? Or will the two lovers with different views learn to co-exist? Something's gotta change for one of them...can't wait to see how this develops.
Beautifully written, Leah. There's a certain wistful magic here.
wonderful chapter. Great study of a difficult subject.
Being a spiritual, not religious, person, I'm connecting to Angela in a very personal way. Great job!
Thanks so much, ladies, for your kind words and for taking your time to stop by and read my chapter. I don't think she'll run into "crazies" the next day, Vonnie, but she'll certainly have an adventure. :-) Also, sorry it took me so long to respond. I've been away from a computer all day!
Finally took the time to read your story, Leah. What an interesting beginning. I can't see how Ron & Angela will make their romance work. God works in mysterious ways. :) So glad I don't have to wait to read the rest of the story.
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