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Credo
Bridget Brewer
2nd
place prizewinner
I.
The former Father Peter acts the same as always, from what
we can see. He still washes his laundry with Tide for Bright
Colors. We know because we watch him, from behind the blinds
in the library, when he slinks from his station wagon into
the Coin Laundry on Mondays. Always Mondays. He stays for
the entire cycle. For a long time, we thought he read the
Bible while he washed his three pairs of khakis, until
Jeremy snuck across the pot-holed parking lot to look
closer. When he peeked through the muck on the window, he
says he saw Father Peter just sitting in a scuffed orange
bucket seat, holding a Bible in front of himself.
He eats the same food he’s always eaten. Oatmeal. Whole
milk, a half gallon. Baby carrots. A gallon of dark, generic
soda pop. Always paper, never plastic. Kenny Jenks, the bag
boy at Albertson’s, gave us his receipts. He also told us
that he never touches Father Peter’s groceries without
wearing transparent, waxy gloves he stole from the meat
section. It’s because when the photo of Father Peter first
appeared in The Oregonian, he’d been bagging the
priest’s groceries and couldn’t stand to touch the items
that would soon be in his home. Now Kenny does it out of
habit. He never looks at Father Peter’s face.
The rest, we have to guess. If he’s any kind of normal, we
figure he does things like our fathers. He must use the same
brush to spread shaving cream along his jaw line twice a
day—he always had a five o’clock shadow that deepened when
he stood under the spotlights during evening Masses. He
probably still gets pimples on his back where, because of
aching joints, no grown man has the hands to scrub. He
definitely doesn’t use swear words, like our fathers when
they can’t find the remote or when the Blazers lose
again—those sick fucks, goddamn it, son, I’ve never seen
anything like this fucking disgraceful display, if only
they’d stop pedaling drugs and get down to goddamn
fucking business, I mean Jesus. Father Peter
would never say things like that. Even if he did laugh that
one time we told him our way of remembering how to make the
Sign of the Cross: “spectacles, testicles, wallet, watch.”
II.
Peter mostly acts the same as always. So when a former
parishioner leaves a message on his machine, or yet another
segment on the evening news uses the same badly lit
photograph from the parish directory, Peter repeats a creed
of these mundane, normal tasks. Creeds, after all, mean
consistency: he has always done these things, and always
will do these things, until his life drifts to a stop.
His list includes the following. He washes his few items of
layman’s clothing with Tide for Bright Colors, at the Coin
Laundry on Mondays. He brushes his teeth twice a day with
the same blue anti-cavity toothpaste. He eats the oatmeal
he’s always eaten, with whole milk and nutmeg. Sometimes in
the shower, or curled against the wall in his bed, he
presses uncertain fingers to his testicles in search of
anything threatening. He uses the same brush to spread
shaving cream along his jaw line twice a day. Pimples still
swell on his back. He continues to stack his dishes on the
right side of his graying sink.
But Peter knows this creed sounds pathetic when compared
with the things in his life that are so, so different. He
doesn’t wake at dawn for vespers. He can no longer see a
cathedral in a red pepper when he slices the waxy, hollow
body. He knows the boys, and the whole community, watch
him—Jeremy was hardly subtle at the Coin Laundry, his body
looming behind the glass when he wiped a hole in the grime
to spy. He dreams of moving away, something he never
considered before. He’s heard of a Benedictine abbey two
hours away from Cedar Mill called Mount Angel. It sits on
the top of a hill and cultivates a biblical garden so
verdant, so devastatingly beautiful and lush, that every
other garden feels like its weak imitation. Maybe this
garden is just a myth, but he dreams of it anyway. He can
smell the heather when he sleeps.
Peter no longer wears his robes and collar. They belong to
St. Claire’s, so he left them there. It occurs to him, as
the glow of the television bathes his hands in a dead sort
of light, that he never once washed his own collar. That he
always left it in the rectory and returned to find it clean,
fresh, and starched. This means, he reasons, that the collar
was never actually his, and so should not count as a loss.
Still, he finds himself feeling at his neck, trying to
adjust a collar that isn’t there and feeling a sharp prick
in his chest when he remembers why it’s gone.
And his gardening. His favorite prayer, the Salve Regina,
with its longing sort of birdsong. The trill of repentant
Latin from behind gritted teeth while he dug out celery or
worked fingers deep into the heady mulch. So certain, then,
that the Virgin was listening. These days the prayer of
habit starts his hands running over the taut skin of a
tomato when: stop. He looks up at the sky, a sky so
white with low-slung clouds that it blinds him, and a cold
feeling creeps through his arms. He presses his lips
together. No, these days he does not sing to her, and she
will not sing to him.
One other thing differs from before.
The first time he passed a playground, two young boys raced
each other down the slides. He saw flashes of blue tennis
shoes and sunlight glimmering on their downy legs. They
clambered up the stairs, shot down the tin chute, and raced
to the top once more. Their faces looked familiar: Weren’t
they from the family that always sat in the front pew? The
ones who snored softly against each other while he delivered
a homily on awakening to God’s will? He remembered laughing
about it afterwards, in the rectory, while the altar
ministers scrubbed diligently at the chalice. Now when he
passes by, their tiny, chirping voices claw at his eardrums.
Tide. Toothpaste. Oatmeal,
he thinks, and avoids that playground, that street, and that
neighborhood altogether.
III.
We don’t know each other by choice. We didn’t decide to be
friends. When you go to school and youth group and Boy
Scouts with the same fifteen boys, you can really only sit
with the ones who look the least like they’re going to lick
their fingers and jam them in your ear. Then you quit Boy
Scouts because it’s for nerds, and you start sneaking into
high school parties where older kids hand you sweating,
patriotic cans of PBR without even asking if you want it.
And while you’re watching your neighbor’s older brother suck
beer straight from the keg, you see that same group you sat
with in youth group and Boy Scouts, sweat glistening on
their faces and their eyes glued to the froth bursting forth
from the tap. After that, things just kind of fall into
place.
At St. Claire’s during recess, while the girls move in packs
of plaid jumpers, we vault rocks at the gym’s tin roof to
see who can make the biggest dents. We hide behind the
dumpsters and cough through packs of metallic-tasting
cigarettes, purchased from Jeremy’s older brother Brad. We
take over the top of the jungle gym by the tire swing and
play Marry, Fuck, Kill. Clearly, marry Mrs. Kelly, Social
Studies; fuck Mrs. Binghamson, Language Arts; and kill Ms.
Jenson, Science. Once you play Marry, Fuck, Kill with
someone, you’re friends for life. Or at least until the end
of seventh grade, which is the same thing. No additions, no
exceptions.
Then there was that time Ms. Jenson put Kyle Freeman in our
group for Dissection Day.
There are only thirty kids in the seventh grade class at St.
Claire’s, and all of us stayed away from Kyle, even before
the whole Father Peter thing. When we change for P.E., he
hides in the bathroom stall as we yell and whip each other
with our towels and try to bore peepholes through the
plaster into the girls’ bathroom. He always has half-moons
of dirt under his fingernails, which are too long to be
normal. During class, he spits on his arm, scoops the goop
into a pen cap, eats it, and spits it out again. White
flecks fall from his black hair to his shoulders, making
snowdrifts of dandruff on his uniform. The worst part about
Kyle, though, is those far-away eyes, set so wide apart.
They hide on opposite sides of his face, his pale skin
stretched tight, and they never blink. Even the Filipino
kid, Efren, takes one look at Kyle and sits on the other
side of the room by the radiator. If forced to hang out with
either Kyle or that ginger nerd Tommy, whose hair looks like
a spongy red afro and who picks his nose behind cupped hands
and pretends he’s just itching the top of his nose… if we
had to pick between Kyle and Tommy, we’d pick Tommy. Every
time.
Dissection Day came. Ms. Jenson sent Kyle shuffling to our
table. We moved back before we could help it.
Jeremy had been pissing Ms. Jenson off all week, begging to
be the one to distribute the trays of baby pigs to each lab
group, so when she finally, wearily nodded, he was up on his
feet and sprinting to the transparent, plastic body bags
stacked on the radiator, leaving us with Kyle. She cut open
the first body bag, releasing a dull, sour, sweaty stink. We
choked. Then Kyle started pretending to vomit on Hilary
Walsh, which made her scrunch her face and squeal, “OhmyGod
you are so gross.” Shocked, we stared at Kyle
with open admiration, unaware until now that he could be
funny. His eyes suddenly seemed comical, frog-like, and not
remotely frightening. He grinned and fake-vomited some more,
pretending it spilled all the way down the back of her
jumper. We sniggered.
Jeremy dumped a tray on our table. Peering inside, we saw a
pink, rubbery pig the length of our forearms, floating in a
pool of yellow formaldehyde. Its snout curled up, the tiny
tongue frozen between two slivers of incisors.
“It looks like it’s screaming,” Ricky muttered.
“You’re stupid.” Kevin grabbed a pink hoof and waggled it at
Ricky.
“Isn’t it gross?” said Jeremy, leaning over the tin tray. He
grabbed one of the scalpels and nicked the pig’s nose.
Yellow formaldehyde seeped out. We gasped, pleased and
disgusted at the new smell in the room.
Suddenly Kyle thrust his hand into the tray and held the cut
together.
“Whoa,” said Jeremy, “what are you doing, freak?”
His whole body tensed, white flakes falling into the
formaldehyde pool. He blinked. For a brief moment, his skin
looked like rubber.
“Whoa,” we said. “Chill out, it’s okay, it’s already dead.”
We inched towards him until our lab group made a half-circle
around Kyle and the dead pig on the table. Then we grabbed
his arm.
Kyle screamed.
“Kyle, Kyle, ease up, kiddo, what’s happening over here?”
Ms. Jenson came running across the room. “Boys, let go,
that’s enough!”
Ms. Jenson placed a hand on his shoulder, meaning to comfort
him. But Kyle saw another threat and ripped his arm out of
her grasp. The movement tore the rubber skin on the snout,
exposing opaque, glistening cartilage and tiny rows of
teeth. Hillary Walsh turned green and put her head between
her legs.
The entire class was watching.
“Easy, Kyle,” murmured Ms. Jenson. “Just give me the pig.”
“Come on,” we urged. We were impatient with his game.
We wanted to cut the pig open and see the miniature twisted
organs, the white slivers of ribs, and—best of all—the tiny
brown heart.
Kyle’s wide eyes flickered from all of us to the pig, a bead
of sweat on his forehead, licking his lips. We moved back,
Jeremy grabbing the scalpel.
“Not this one,” said Kyle, his voice a rasp.
Ms. Jenson sent him to the principal’s office, the pig
clutched firmly in his fist. The way he rubbed at its belly
made it seem, for a moment, like his touch would bring it
back to life.
IV.
Peter moves around Cedar Mill in the same patterns: Coin
Laundry on Mondays, Albertson’s on Saturdays, the library
and Yung’s take-out providing occasional diversions, the
same slick sky sputtering indignantly and spattering his
coat. The movement of his congregation, however, is another
matter.
They keep a wide berth, careful not to touch him or
acknowledge him. Many of the women have started scrambling
for their cell phones when he approaches, hurrying to fake a
conversation so deep they cannot possibly have seen him. The
men duck their heads and move past. Cowards, he
thinks, even as his eyes smart. He bites down on his tongue
so often, a divot forms in its tip.
And still, Kenny the bag boy won’t touch his groceries.
Everything comes down to the
mothers,
he thinks. Mothers have a gift for specific cruelty.
Weekend after weekend of Masses once brought him their
gossip as they polished the dishes, took his robe and collar
for pressing, and emptied the extra wine into a sink that
leads straight to the ground. (God’s blood can never touch
the earth.) The mothers told him everything about each other
without a second thought. He was informed when the Barry
twins, who attend Findley Elementary, were sent to Girl
Scout camp after Mrs. Barry found a package of
blueberry-flavored condoms in their underwear drawer; when
Mrs. Thompson was going to have another baby; when
the parents were positive that Miss Henley, the kindergarten
teacher, and Mr. Holiday, the gym teacher, were secretly
dating.
Peter can feel what they think of him undulate silently
across town. The shake of the head. The crease forming
between the freshly plucked eyebrows. The snap of sugarless
gum between white, shining teeth.
And when their children forget or don’t know any better and
reach out, smiling, saying, “Father Peter,” about to tell
him they won their soccer game or to ask him if God watches
Saturday cartoons, their mothers pull them away. Hissing.
Glaring at him until he feels as though he’s swallowed
broken glass, each swallow carving a mark into his throat.
Peter is shopping for pork loin at Albertson’s when he
almost walks into Nancy Burnside, the principal of St.
Claire’s, who is perusing the chicken sausage links. Panic
spreads across her sallow face. Her heels click on the
concrete floor as she takes a step backward.
“Ah,” she says. “Father. Ah. I.”
“Nancy.” He nods, impassive, though his knuckles tighten on
his blue shopping basket. “How are you?”
“Oh. Well. You know. School is… Hmm.” Nancy swings her short
gray hair out of her face, already trying to end the
conversation. But Peter hasn’t spoken to another person in
weeks, beyond thanking Kenny the bag boy. He presses on.
“Anything new?”
“Nothing to note in particular,” she says briskly. Then,
with a tightening in the corner of her mouth, “The community
garden is well cared for, no need to worry. Kyle gardens
beautifully.”
Kyle. His jaw tightens.
“Well, Father,” says Nancy, looking at the silver watch on
her pale wrist.
Suddenly, Peter feels the urge to slam his fist into
something. He stares at her, his head pounding at the way
she mocks him: the impatient hair toss, the grim set of her
mouth, the way she and everyone else continue to call him
“Father,” as though his entire vocation is now a cruel and
sarcastic joke to tell between mouthfuls of chicken sausage
links. And the mention of Kyle, so unnecessary, and now he
pictures the wide eyes, the milky skin, the face turned to
him above the basil. Peter shakes, shivers. Around them, a
steady river of people swirls around the meat section and
through the bread aisle, eddying between the fruits and
vegetables before dumping into the row of registers. Peter
watches the tide of humans, smells their wet hair still
soaked from the downpour outside, imagines their hands as
claws that click against plastic wrapping and bottles. I
know what you’re thinking. The rage makes his knees
lock.
Tide, he thinks,
breathing deep. Toothpaste. Oatmeal.
“Be seeing you, Nancy.”
He watches the muscles in her jaw tighten.
V.
One night, we tell our mothers we’re going to Tommy’s house
while Tommy tells his mother he’s going to youth group.
He’ll lie to her about anything for us. He’s just excited to
be going somewhere with someone who at least pretends to be
his friend for a while. And anyway, it’s not like our
mothers wouldn’t be proud of us for this. They won’t care
later about the lies we tell now.
We walk past the Dairy Queen along Saltzman Road, where
there isn’t any sidewalk, and the sudden lights of cars make
us teeter off the pavement and into a ditch. Using a parish
directory we borrowed from Nancy the secretary, we find his
house down a gravel road off Saltzman. It’s tiny, shrinking
behind an immense, twisting oak, and we almost miss it at
first. Rows and rows of vegetables in a neat garden out
front. No chipping paint, like at our houses. A tiny path to
the door. A single window. The red Station Wagon parked in
the driveway.
Silently, Jeremy and Ricky creep up the path and slide a
letter under his door before dashing back to the rest of us,
red-faced from holding in laughter. We’ve crafted a note
using letter cutouts from magazines. “Jesus Hates You, You
Kid Dick Grabber, Go Die.” It’s genius, and he’ll never find
out who wrote it. Could be from Kyle, for all he knows. In a
way, we think to ourselves, it is, and should be.
The sun dies suddenly, the shapes and the air around us cast
into cold, blue shadows. The light in Father Peter’s front
window comes on. We jostle each other, breathing into our
hands to warm them and whispering to be quiet, you buncha
fucks, be quiet. Tommy, who never jostles or whispers
covertly with anyone, squeaks with joy.
“Aw you fucktard, keep it down!” hisses Jeremy. “I mean
Jesus, you might as well ring the fucking doorbell.”
We hunch lower around the trunk of the oak tree, our faces
bathed in the buttery light leaking out of his house.
Father Peter walks into the room. He’s carrying a plate with
a tiny heap of spaghetti in the center, a red bathrobe
hanging off his sharp-edged frame and his dark curls
plastered to his skull. He sinks into the only chair in the
room and clicks on the television. The blue glow from the
screen makes his cheeks look hollow. He presses buttons on
the remote again and again.
“God does he look pathetic,” says Jeremy.
“When’s he gonna check his door?” Ricky breathes.
As if on cue, Father Peter rises. Maybe he decided he needs
salt, or parmesan cheese, or his Bible to stare at. He takes
a couple of steps, glances down, and stops.
We hold our breaths.
Father Peter bends slowly, then straightens with the white
envelope clutched in his hand. He looks out the window. We
stuff Tommy’s face in the mulch to shut him up. Father Peter
can’t see us, though, there’s no way, there are bushes in
front of us and everything.
He tears it open and gingerly removes the letter, unfolding
it at the creases. His eyes rove over the cutout letters.
Suddenly he bends over and shakes.
“Jeremy,” breathes Kevin. Jeremy watches wordlessly, panic
scrawled across his face. We instantly know the same thing:
inexplicably, we feel our stomachs roiling, our chests
seizing. We begin to crawl away.
But Father Peter crumples the letter, opens the door, and we
throw ourselves to the ground as he storms past us to his
garden by the gravel road. He drops, shoving his hands into
the ground and burying the letter with dirt again and again,
moving his mouth in words we can’t understand with our ears
pressed so hard into the dirt, until we lift our heads and
realize he’s whispering.
“Tide,” he says brokenly, raggedly. “Toothpaste. Oatmeal.”
The things about him that we know to be true spill into the
bruised, blue air as he hits his hands against the earth. He
slams his face against the wide, thick basil, their smashed
leaves sticking to his forehead. Then he turns to the
tomatoes. He rips them from their stalks, and we watch,
horrified, waiting for him to throw them or smash them or
tear at them with his teeth, but instead he just holds them.
He cups their red bodies in his hands and weeps, his
shoulders quaking violently.
VI.
This is what Kyle remembers.
He wouldn’t give up the pig. No one—not Those Boys, not Ms.
Jenson, not even Principal Burnside—could make him give up
the pig. At home his brothers and sisters always make him
give things up, because they’re mean and know they can make
him do it, even with the tiny locket Mommy gave him before
she left, or the snail’s shell he found while digging in the
community garden with Father Peter. And then, when he won’t
give up the things he loves, Kyle’s dad hits his backside
with the big, metal clip on his leather belt. “Share,” he
yells, even though he knows Kyle hates yelling.
That day, Kyle was tired of sharing. He loved the pig. It
was his.
He sat alone in Principal Burnside’s office, where he’d been
exiled, looking down at the pink toy in his lap and sighing
with relief. The skin felt surprisingly smooth. He’d thought
pig skins were bumpy, like they had a million chill bumps
all the time, but this skin felt slick. Like it had been
dipped in butter. He liked that.
Kyle tried, again, to pinch together the rip in the pig’s
nose and lip, ignoring the formaldehyde puddle on his
khakis. The baby pig wept, its beady white eyes leaking each
time he jerked the snout. He felt the same swooping
sensation as when Jeremy dragged the scalpel through the
skin. Why’d he do that, he thought, swallowing
hard. He liked Those Boys, watched them on the jungle gym,
had his answers ready for Marry, Fuck, Kill if they ever
asked him to play, could recite their version of the Sign of
the Cross like it was a password: spectacles, testicles,
wallet, watch. But they never asked him, maybe because
of that thing he did with his spit. He only did it because
he was so bored all the time, and because spit tasted
different when it came out of a pen cap. Tommy picked his
nose. Kevin stuck his hand in his pocket to secretly scratch
his balls. Even Jeremy, so cool, looked at his snot after he
blew his nose into a tissue. Why was the spit any different?
But it was different. They’d made that clear. Today in
Science had been the first day they’d seemed to like him,
and he’d blown it in the end. “They don’t like me, either,”
he reassured the curled body in his arms. It seemed to
snuggle up against him.
“Kyle?”
Instinctively, Kyle hunched over the pig’s body, but then
relaxed: it was only Father Peter. Father Peter, who always
asked him to help in the garden with the basil, which was
the best plant with the best, peppery, sugary smell; who
hugged him and put his arm around his shoulders like they
were friends; who rubbed his hands when he cut them on a
spade or got a sliver from the wood stakes holding up the
tomatoes. Father Peter, who winked at him during homily when
his dad made him serve as an altar boy. Father Peter: okay.
“Hi, Father Peter.”
But Father Peter frowned. “What do you have there, Kyle?”
“I saved it,” he sighed. “Want to pet it?”
He held out the pig, the same pig Jeremy tried to cut up but
he, Kyle, put a stop to that. Who wouldn’t want to
hold this pink, buttery pig? Who couldn’t love it? And who
wouldn’t try to stop a bunch of boys—even Those Boys—from
cutting it up like a pork dinner? Father Peter took the pig
from Kyle’s hands, and Kyle flushed with pleasure.
“You can’t keep this, Kyle.”
For a moment, Kyle stared, slack-jawed. “But I love it,” he
said. “I saved it. It’s mine.”
Father Peter shook his head. “Kyle, this pig does not belong
to you. I’m sorry, but you can’t keep this.”
Kyle’s legs began to jump up and down against the floor. He
watched the skin glimmer under the fluorescent lights, the
legs tiny against Father Peter’s thick fingers, the hooves
smaller than a fingernail.
“But,” he stammered, reaching to rub the skin, needing a
touch, wishing desperately he’d never handed it over,
wishing he’d hid the baby pig up his shirt so that it could
curl against his chest, safe, warm.
Father Peter moved the pig away. “No,” he said softly, and
placed a hand on Kyle’s neck.
Kyle was sent out to recess, pigless. Those Boys saw him and
edged over to where he’d thrown himself onto the
yellow-painted curb. They looked uneasy to Kyle, as though
waiting for him to lodge a hatchet into their ankles.
“We saw you and Father Peter come out,” they said. “What
happened?”
Kyle saw Father Peter stalking across the dark blue parking
lot and saw the cruel, curious faces of Those Boys. He
thought of the way Father Peter had tricked him, just like
everyone else, into giving up the thing he had loved more
than anything he’d ever owned. A sentence unfurled in his
head.
“He just,” Kyle began, and his shoulders shivered.
VII.
“I’m very grateful to you, Brother Arnold.”
“Ah, all right, then, Peter, that’s enough. It’s you who’s
doing us the favor, believe you me.”
The singing of monks extolling the Liturgy of the Hours
creeps out from the wet stone of the abbey like a soft,
euphonious mist. The bell tower bellows twelve chimes.
Brother Arnold, his black robes brushing the heather
dripping in the afternoon rain, reminds Peter of a shining
wet statue. The garden stretches to the bushy blue forest
beyond, swollen with flowers. Peter breathes. There: the
smell of wet earth and plants raising their heads to drink.
He feels his head swimming with the music and the bells and
the rain like beads scattering on the stone path before him.
“What do you think?” asks Brother Arnold, watching him.
“I can stay here?” he stammers.
Peter feels Brother Arnold’s eyes search his face, green and
piercing. He saw the advertisement in the parish newsletter
that morning: “Knowledgeable Gardener Needed for Benedictine
Garden, Mount Angel Abbey.” He left thirty minutes after.
Brother Arnold found him in the parking lot, gazing up at
the golden bell tower, his hands shaking. They discussed
Peter’s experience with biblical gardens at St. Claire’s.
Then they discussed everything else.
Peter’s heart thuds dully. Please, he prays.
“We have a shed,” Brother Arnold says finally. “You aren’t a
part of the Order, so this is all we can give you, but it
should suffice.”
“Thank you, so much…”
“Good. I’ll come back for you after the Liturgy so we can
get you registered, Gardener.”
Brother Arnold turns and leaves down the dim hallway behind
them. Gardener. The way he said the word makes
something in Peter flutter. A truth. A new creed. Leeks,
he begins, figs, sage, barley, juniper, flax, olives,
wheat, the mustard seed. Then he remembers the passage
from Luke: for figs are not gathered from thorns, nor
grapes picked from a bramble bush. The good man out of the
good treasure of his heart produces good, and the evil man,
evil.
Leeks, he begins again.
Figs, sage, barley.
He kneels to brush the heather with his fingers, the bell
tolls again, and from the schoolyard in the valley below are
the voices of children, at play.
VIII.
One by one, they all moved away: Jeremy. Kevin. Ricky.
Tommy. I don’t remember much about what happened to them.
That’s the thing about seventh grade friends. You mean
forever, you spit and swap blood to ensure it, you do
terrible things and wonderful things that you’ll remember
for the rest of your life, but most times “friendship
forever” really does only mean until the end of seventh
grade.
Jeremy was the first to go. I lost touch with him the
easiest, even though—or maybe because—I clung to him the
hardest. I’m sure he got through high school and college
just fine, fucking and grinning and leading his teammates to
triumph. My mother said she heard a rumor that he was living
with his boyfriend in a studio apartment in Los Angeles, but
my mother died a year ago of Alzheimer’s. Maybe she confused
him with someone else.
Tommy must be making millions somewhere. There’s no doubt:
ginger nerds have all the luck when they graduate from
throwing rocks at gym roofs.
I knew Ricky for a while longer, although after seventh
grade our friendship became a system of rolling joints and
lighting them down by the creek that ran behind our
neighborhood. Right now, I imagine Ricky could be a poet.
Ricky could also be dealing pot out of a tin trailer in New
Mexico. He always seemed like one of those guys who saw both
paths as viable options.
Kyle moved away too. How could he stay? His complete mental
breakdown while he was at Sunset High, when he stabbed a kid
with a protractor and ended up missing the lung by inches…
and then his admittance to the Mental Learning Clinic, which
everyone calls Moron’s Last Chance because it really is the
pits for messed up kids…. Who would stay in Cedar Mill after
that? Who could face them?
I stayed. Having done nothing interesting other than dating
one of the choirgirls for a brief year, I saw no
alternative. I went to college twenty minutes away, bagged
groceries at Albertson’s, got promoted to the cash register.
Principal Burnside bought garbanzo beans from me once, and
while I was ringing up the till, she said she remembered me
as particularly strong in English. She was looking for a
substitute on Thursday, never mind that I didn’t have a
teaching license, could I do it just this once, for the old
alma mater? I needed money, so I said, Fine. One Masters in
Education later, I was the English teacher for St. Claire’s
middle school. Now I’m the principal. It’s a terrible job. I
have to discipline kids for things I did once, and for
things I never imagined kids would ever figure out how to
do—like hacking into systems, setting fire to the class
hamster, wiring a porn video to start up every time someone
opens the Internet browser on one of the school computers.
Meanwhile, I have to discipline teachers for things I
expect from the kids. Only last week I caught Mrs. Bracko
chucking a box of tissues at Jason Larson’s head in Religion
class for answering, “The Angel Gabriel put the Baby Jesus
into Mary like a tampon” during a pop quiz. And I hate
spreadsheets, and budget management, and dealing with
parents. But these are the things I repeat to myself over
and over again, and no matter how much I wish for it, they
never alter, never transform into something more exciting.
This is what life looks like.
Last Monday I was reading through the parish bulletin,
staring absently at the crucifix on the wall in front of me.
Our latest priest-in-residence is a Jesuit, and he likes
showy crucifixes to be in every room of his campus.
Personally, I’ve never liked the crucifix much. The stringy
body stretched and sad on planks of wood. I stared at the
extended tendons until I could see twin Jesuses hanging on
two crosses next to two potted ficus plants. My head began
to pound, and I looked back down to finish the boring
process of reading the parish bulletin. There was a homily
from the Jesuit, some announcements about activities, a page
of advertisements for local businesses, the weekly Prayers
of the Faithful for anyone ailing in our parish. I watch
this last section the closest: I look for friends of my
mother’s, parents of my old friends. People linking me to
this place, dying off one by one.
When I looked, I saw his name.
“We pray for Peter Howard, former priest in residence at St.
Claire’s Parish and current gardener at Mt. Angel Abbey,
that his final days on this earth be blessed with peace and
serenity.”
Without asking for it, without knowing that I wanted to, I
found him. Just like that.
. . .
It wasn’t hard to find the hospital where he was admitted;
all I did was say I was once a member of Father Peter’s
congregation, and the monks of Mt. Angel gave me all the
information I needed. I told my secretary I was taking the
day off for personal business and ambled my car down the
back roads to the Woodburn Hospital.
The building loomed gray against a sky pregnant with rain.
There were no plants anywhere, not even trees with skeletal
winter arms or sparse-looking bushes. Why had I thought the
hospital he would die in would have enough flowers to be the
Garden of Eden? I threw open the door, clutching the
drooping potted daffodil I’d picked up at a grocery store as
a present. It looked so inadequate for what I was about to
do that I laughed humorlessly. A few startled grackles near
my car fluttered away. Clearing my throat, I entered through
the sliding doors.
I don’t remember walking down the hallways, or asking for
his room number, or whatever I did to calm myself. I
might’ve snuck a cigarette. I might’ve used the bathroom, or
just sat in the lobby staring unseeingly at kids’ magazines
with names like Jump! and Junior Adventures. I
can’t remember anything about how I prepared for this new
act of cruelty. I guess it doesn’t really matter. Whatever
else I did, I eventually walked into his room.
He looked small. A few strands of hair hung in a white halo
around his pink skull. Tubes trailed everywhere, machines
beeped in a steady rhythm, and the dull light leaking
through the one window in the back was kept from reaching
his face by a ridiculously pink curtain separating him from
two other patients. He reminded me of the stringy Jesus on
the crucifix in my office: stretched too thin, face too
long, eyes too sad. Only the hands looked just as I
remembered them: dirt under the fingernails that clutched at
the thin sheet covering his bird legs.
“Peter,” I said.
He looked up. “Can I help you?” he croaked uncertainly.
“I…know you.” Great. I wanted to slap myself.
Father Peter frowned. “Do you work at the abbey?”
I swallowed. “I went to St. Claire’s. You… you were my
priest.”
The air in the room felt thinner. His heart monitor picked
up its rhythm.
“Yes,” he said. “You were friends with Kyle.”
“Right.” The way he’d said Kyle was so hauntingly
empty, I stuck my hands in my pockets to hide their shaking.
“I can’t remember your name, though,” said Father Peter,
struggling to sit up. “I remember Jeremy… Kenny… or was it
Kevin? And the redhead…. Which were you?”
“Joe,” I answered as I fiddled with the keys in my pocket.
“Joe.” Father Peter nodded. “Yes. You were quiet. Would you
mind passing me that cup of water on the counter over
there?”
“Oh. Yeah. I mean, no, I wouldn’t mind,” I stammered and
rushed to get the cup. I could feel my face flushing.
You’re not twelve, I thought. Stop being such an
idiot. I handed the cup to him and hoped he wouldn’t
notice my trembling.
“Thank you.” He drained the cup and sighed, leaning back on
his thin pillow. His eyes were piercingly blue, and the way
he fixed them on me made my armpits begin to sweat. “So,” he
said. “Joe. What have you been up to these years?”
I stared at him, trying to drink him in, trying to
understand what I was seeing and what I was doing. “I’m
Principal at St. Claire’s,” I answered blankly.
Father Peter chuckled. “Ah. And?”
“It’s the worst job I’ve ever had in my life.”
“You weren’t the one who spied on me at the Laundromat, were
you?”
“Uh, no. That was Jeremy. Jesus, I didn’t know you knew we
did that—oh, ack, sorry, I mean, I didn’t mean to say
‘Jesus’ like that, sorry….”
“Joe,” said Father Peter, placing a kind hand on my arm.
“I’m not a priest anymore, remember? Swear away.”
“Right.” I looked around the room. Not much there, just the
garish pink curtains. “What… do you have?” I asked,
awkwardly twisting my feet the way I used to when I was a
kid.
“Pancreatic cancer.” He leaned back. “It’s not that
interesting, I promise you. I’m old enough for it.” He
looked at me expectantly.
It was the strangest thing: I suddenly felt my legs
shrinking and my scruff disappearing, the hair on my head
growing, until suddenly I was a seventh grader again, every
last inch of me, my head barely able to reach the metal
armrest on his hospital bed. I was afraid to speak and hear
my voice crack.
“Fa- Peter. Um. There was. A letter. We sent you a. Letter.”
Father Peter frowned. “What’s that?”
I could feel every hair on my body standing straight up,
could feel every drop of sweat dribble down my rib cage,
soak my white shirt. “Jeremy,” I tried again. “Kevin. All of
us. We sent you a letter, back when things were…. ”
“Ah.” Father Peter shook his head, the blue mounds of skin
under his eyes making him look devastatingly fragile. “It’s
all right. I knew. I could always figure out you kids. The
adults were the ones I could never get right.”
“No,” I said, “but, the thing is.”
He was dying. My life was set in its route. Understand: I
wasn’t trying to make things right. I don’t believe in
redemption or the power of confession or anything so
pathetically hopeless. This should’ve been Jeremy, I
thought desperately. This should’ve been anyone but me.
It was just that I needed him to know. We left him
the letter without thinking. No, worse: we left him
the letter, and we thought about every step. We knew exactly
what we were doing. None of us really believed Kyle, but
we’d backed him up anyway, because Father Peter had seemed
so, so weak to us. An easy target. We’d supported Kyle all
the way to that meeting with the archdiocese and then with
the archbishop, who’d looked terrifying in his white angular
hat, and even to court. Even then. People everywhere,
cameras, shaking in that box in front of everyone, other
things I can’t remember because I blacked out that day from
my memory, and still we stuck to it because of the way
Father Peter shivered when we looked at him; because of the
way he’d liked Kyle better than us in school; because of so
many arbitrary things that had seemed important and that I
can no longer remember. How could we have been so cruel?
“Joe?” he asked quietly.
I looked at him, clothed in a paper gown, lying between
rough, bleached sheets. The fluorescent lights above his bed
were an X-ray: I could see every vein in his body, every
flap of skin hanging limply off his bones, every wrinkle
that looked so deep, it seemed as though he had canyons on
his forehead and cracks down his neck.
“Here,” I said instead, and I handed him the daffodil.
As I was turning to leave, he asked, “What was that thing
you boys used to repeat to each other? For the Sign of the
Cross?”
I grinned. “Spectacles, testicles, wallet, watch.”
“That’s it,” he laughed. “You really got me with that one.”
“Yeah,” I replied.
When I left, he was still laughing. I could hear it echo
down the cold white hall.

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