"And the angel said unto them, Fear
not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings
of
great joy, which shall be to all people.
For
unto you is born this day, in the
city
of David, a Saviour, which is
Christ
the Lord."
(S.
Luke 2, v.10-11)
It is strange that words of faith will often come to you when all
else fails. The blows now didn't hurt. Anna saw them as in a film,
grainy and hard to see, in slow motion, but without physical pain,
just emotional anguish. She knew she was going to die here in the
snow, with her Christmas shopping, shattered around her, mixed with
her own blood. The only thing left was trying to protect what was
most important to her. Her eyes caught the twinkle of a broken tree
ornament reflected in a street light. It looked like a single star
in the cold blackness that was closing around her.
"When
they saw the star, they
rejoiced
with exceeding great joy."
"And
when they were come into the
house,
they saw the young child with
Mary
his mother, and fell down, and
worshipped
him:
"An
being warned of God in a dream
that
they should not return to Herod,
they
departed into their own country
another
way.
(S.
Matthew 2, v. 10,11,12)
Charlie watched from the shadows of an alley. The gang were kicking
the shit out of her. Her only crime was she was wearing the same coat
as Charlie. Hood up against the snow, they hadn't realized that for
the last few minutes they had been tailing the wrong person. Charlie
had thought herself out of options until she had seen the woman in
the same coat come out of a store and start down the street. All Charlie
had to do was pull her own hood up, get close to woman, and then disappear
into an alley. The street rats had fallen for the switch like the
dumb asses they were.
A police siren wailed in the distance, and like rats from a ship,
the dark figures ran, leaving a trodden scar in the snow. Charlie
waited to see if they would come back. Snow formed a new layer of
skin over the scar. Nothing. Charlie moved from the alleyway and crossed
the nearly empty parking lot. It wouldn't hurt to go through her purse
to see if she had any cash.
Charlie looked around, picked up the purse and turned to go. A muffled
wail froze her to the spot. She looked at the beaten woman, her blood
frozen to the side of her mouth. She looked dead. The faint wail came
again. Charlie frowned, looked around once more, and then knelt by
the body. She used her hands as a shovel to roll the woman over. Beneath
her was a baby. The damn woman hadn't fought back because she was
protecting her baby beneath her.
"And
when ye stand praying, forgive,
if
ye have ought against any; that your
Father
also which is in heaven may
forgive
you your trespasses."
(
S. Mark 11, v. 25)
Charlie poked the small bundle, and the faint wail came again. When
the woman moved slightly, her hand tightening around her baby, Charlie
jumped in surprise, and looked into a battered face. "P...Please,
save her. You can. Please," the woman whispered, through lips cracked
and bleeding.
Charlie stared. There was nothing to say. She'd saved her own hide
by going another way. She hadn't known about the baby. Bad things
happen. "Please," the woman begged again.
"That your car?" Charlie asked.
"Y...Yes, t...the Ford," the woman managed to say through chattering
teeth.
"Gimme the keys," Charlie demanded.
The woman tried to move, but pain lanced her face. "C...Can't move
my arm. T...There in my pocket. Please, please help. D...Don't let
her die! Her names C...Chelsey. C...Chelsey Hilman."
"Shut up," Charlie responded, digging in the woman's pocket. She pulled
out a small bible and tossed it aside, reached her hand in again,
and came out with the car keys. She picked up the purse and unlocked
the car, tossing the bag in on the passenger's seat.
Then she went back and bent to take the kid. The woman held on. "Let
go."
"W...Where are you t...taking her?" the woman asked, her voice wobbly
with the cold and shock. The figure leaning over her was blurred into
three. The street light, a yellow ball behind, cast the stranger's
features into darkness.
"I'll leave her at the hospital," Charlie snapped, pulling the child
from the battered woman, and carrying her at arms length to the car.
She placed her on the floor on the passenger's side so she didn't
fall off the seat. Charlie had a vague idea that kids could be squirmy.
She didn't want to be caught with no dead kid.
Charlie didn't have a license, but she had driven vehicles since she
was a teen, hot-wiring them, and driving them around to the nearest
chop shop to sell for parts. She got in, closed the door and turned
the key. The engine started right away. Cold air blasted from the
heater. The baby gave a little wail again. Charlie looked out the
window. The woman was lying still, her eyes open and staring back,
tears now frozen on her face. Charlie's breath frosted the window
over, and she turned away to put the car in gear. The car had barely
moved forward, when Charlie braked, put the car in park, and got out
to walk back to the figure in the snow.
"This
is my commandment,
That
ye love one another, as I have
loved
you."
(S.
John 15, v.12)
"Don't you fucking well die on me. You got that," Charlie ordered,
grabbing the woman under the shoulders and dragging her to the car.
The woman didn't answer, her scream of pain muffled by the bloodied
hood that had fallen over her face.
Charlie read about her in the paper the next day. How she and the
baby were found in a car outside the Emergency door. Charlie had painstakingly
read the words one by one, moving her finger along and sounding the
words with her lips, as she sat over a coffee in a cafe. The two of
them were in bad shape, but they were going to make it. Good. Charlie
turned to the racing results.
"Ye
are they which justify
yourselves
before men; but
God
knoweth your hearts;"
(S.
Luke 17, v. 15)
It was several days later, when Charlie showed up at the hospital.
She had bought some cut flowers and carried them carefully on the
subway to the hospital. Charlie didn't like hospitals, and she wasn't
sure why she had come other than she hadn't known the woman had a
baby. That bothered her. Adults took their chances in life. Sometimes
bad things happen, but she didn't pick on kids. She went over to the
old woman who was a volunteer at the information desk. "What room
is Anna Hilman in?
"Reverend Hilman? Wasn't that awful what happened to her? Room 486,
dear," the woman said, after consulting her computer screen for sometime.
"Yeah, a real shame," Charlie responded, without any emotion. She
took the elevator up, nervously swaying back and forth on her heels.
She didn't like to feel closed in. Once on the right floor, Charlie
worked her way down the hall until she found the room. There were
four beds inside, but only two were occupied. The first held an old
woman sleeping. Her head was back and her mouth open, and Charlie
could see she didn't have any teeth in. Her cheeks flapped each time
she exhaled in a gruff snore.
The next bed seemed to be wired for sound. Bottles hung from poles
and monitors bleeped. Charlie went over and stood at the foot of the
bed, surprised to see dark green eyes fixed on her through swollen
slits of eyes. "Don't that snoring bother you?" Charlie asked.
"It would bother me a lot more if she suddenly stopped," Anna responded,
her words not too clear for her jaw was stiff and swollen. "You are
the woman who saved Chelsey and me."
Charlie frowned. "Brought you some flowers," she answered, tossing
the boutique on the bed.
"Thanks. Thanks for everything. You saved..."
"I set you up. They were after me," Charlie cut in abruptly. "We got
the same coat, you and me.
I watched them kick the shit out of you. The paper said you are only
alive 'cause the coat protected you. I just wanted you to know, I
didn't see that you had that kid with you." That said, and off her
conscience, Charlie turned to leave.
"Wait!" Anna called.
Charlie turned.
"You owe me. That was a really rotten thing you did," Anna managed
to get out with as much of a growl as she could muster.
"Bad things happen, lady. Get used to it," Charlie shot back.
"You owe me," Anna repeated stubbornly.
Charlie came back and stood by the bed. "So what do you want from
me?" she asked angrily.
Anna had no idea what she wanted. She just knew that there was something
about this woman that was important to her life. It was a feeling.
She looked at the lean, tall figure standing by her bed. She was not
so much beautiful as she was handsome, with strong classic bones,
and a well toned body. She was also trouble. That was written all
over her.
"Then
said Jesus unto him,
Except
ye see signs and wonders,
ye
will not believe."
(S.
John 4, v. 48)
"I'm new in this city and don't know anyone. I've been in Africa working.
I came back last month because my brother and his wife had been killed
in a car crash, and there was no one to take care of my niece." Anna
explained, fighting to keep her emotions under control. "This is going
to be Chelsey's first Christmas, and you are going to help me make
it special."
"Are you crazy? She's a baby! She's not going to remember!" Charlie
snorted in anger.
"I'll remember!" Anna responded stubbornly. "You owe me."
"I owe you shit!" Charlie snarled, but she didn't storm out like she
knew she should have. This Anna was alright. She hadn't judged or
got angry, she had just stood her ground, and demanded compensation
for a wrong. The lady had guts.
"I haven't got no place for you two. Besides I'm bad news. You don't
know me," Charlie stated, honestly, but mostly in the hopes of getting
the woman to change her mind.
"I have my sister and husband's house until Chelsey turns twenty-one.
You can stay with us, and help me make it a good Christmas for her,"
Anna argued.
"I'm bad news, lady!" Charlie explained again, slowly so the woman
would get it.
"You're a gang leader, I imagine. While you are staying at our house
, you will not break any laws or see your gang members."
"What?! You're nuts! And I wouldn't be helping you, I'd have to take
care of both of you!"
"Yes."
"No!"
"Yes. You owe me," Anna stated, drawing the line in the sand. Her
eyes closed for a second against the pain. Give me strength, Father.
"For
the son of man is come to seek and
to
save that which was lost."
(S.
Luke 19, v.10)
"Just 'til Christmas is over, and no trying to change me or nothin'!"
Charlie argued, a bit confused as to just how she had ended up accepting
this arrangement.
Anna smiled, too tired now, to answer or even keep her eyes open.
She opened her hand and the dark stranger hesitated, then took the
smaller hand in her own. It was a new beginning.
"Glory
to God in the highest, and on
earth
peace, good will towards all."
(S.
Luke 2, v. 14