A fierce and unseasonably cold September wind blew chilly
rain against the windows. Preacher wiped down the bar and
while it was only seven-thirty, it was already dark. No one
in Virgin River would be out on a night like this. After
the dinner hour was past, people tended to stay in on cold,
wet nights. Those campers and fishermen in the area would
be locked down tight against the storm. It was bear and
deer hunting season, but it was unlikely any hunters would
pass en route to or from lodges and blinds at this hour, in
such weather. Jack, his partner and the owner of the bar
and grill, knowing there would be little if any business,
had gone for the night. Preacher had also sent home their
seventeen year old helper, Rick. As soon as the fire burned
down a little more, Preacher planned to switch off the OPEN
sign and lock the door.
He poured himself a shot of whiskey and took it over to the
table nearest the fire, then turned a chair toward the
hearth and propped up his feet. Quiet nights like this were
to his liking. He was a solitary kind of guy.
But the peace was not to be. Someone pulled on the door,
causing him to frown. It opened a little bit. The wind
caught the door and it flew open with a bang, bringing him
instantly to his feet. Entering and then struggling to
close the door was a young woman holding a child. The woman
wore a ball cap and had a heavy quilted bag slung over her
shoulder. Preacher went to get the door. She turned, looked
up at him and they both jumped back in surprise. She was
likely startled because Preacher looked intimidating – he
was six-foot-four, bald with bushy black eyebrows, a
diamond stud earring and shoulders about as broad as an ax
handle was long.
Under the bill of the baseball cap, Preacher saw a pretty
young woman’s face bearing a bruise on her cheek and a
split lower lip.
“I’m... I’m sorry. I saw the sign...”
“Yeah, come on in. I wasn’t expecting anyone to be out
tonight. I was about to close up.”
“Are you closing?” she asked, hoisting up her burden, a
little boy, not more than three or four years old. He was
asleep on her shoulder, his long legs dangling
limply. “Because I... Are you closing?”
“Come on,” he said, stepping back for her to pass. “It’s
okay. I don’t have anyplace better to go.” He extended an
arm toward a table. “Sit by the fire there. Warm up. Dry
off.”
“Thanks,” she said meekly. She went to the table by the
fire and when she saw the drink, said, “Is this where
you’re sitting?”
“Go ahead. Take it,” he said. “I was just having a shot
before calling it a night. But there’s no hurry. We don’t
usually close this early anyway, but with the rain...”
“Did you want to get home?” she asked him.
He smiled at her. “I live here. Makes me real flexible on
the hours.”
“If you’re sure...”
“I’m sure,” he said. “If the weather’s decent, we usually
stay open till at least nine.”
She took the chair facing the fire, the boy’s gangly legs
straddling her lap. She let her quilted shoulder bag drop
to the floor and pulled the child closer, hugging him
tight, stroking his back.
Preacher disappeared into the back, leaving her to warm
herself for a minute. He came back with a couple of pillows
from his bed and the throw from his couch. He put the
pillows on the table next to her and said, “Here. Lay the
kid down. He’s probably heavy.”
She looked up at him with eyes that seemed to want to cry.
Oh, he hoped she wouldn’t do that. He hated when women
cried. He had no idea what to do. Jack – he could handle
it. He was chivalrous; he knew exactly what to do with a
woman under any circumstance. Preacher was uncomfortable
around women until he got to know them. When you got down
to it, he was inexperienced. Although it wasn’t
intentional, he tended to scare women and children simply
because of how he looked. But they didn’t know that
underneath that sometimes grim countenance he was shy.
“Thanks,” she said again. She transferred the child to the
pillows on the table. He immediately curled up small and
put a thumb in his mouth. Preacher stood there, lamely
holding the throw. She didn’t take it from him so he put it
over the boy and tucked it around him. He noticed the boy’s
cheeks were real rosy; his lips bright pink.
When she reclaimed her chair, she looked around. She saw
the stag’s head over the front door and flinched. She
turned full circle, noting the bear skin on the wall, the
sturgeon over the bar. “Is this some kind of hunting
place?” she asked.
“Not really, but a lot of hunters and fishermen pass this
way,” he said. “My partner shot the bear in self-defense,
but he caught the fish on purpose. One of the biggest
sturgeons on the river. I got the buck, but I’d rather fish
than hunt. I like the quiet.” He shrugged. “I’m the cook
here. If I kill it, we eat it.”
“You can eat deer,” she said.
“And we did. We had a great winter of venison. Maybe you
should have a drink,” he said, trying to keep his voice
soft and nonthreatening.
“I have to find a place to stay. Where am I, anyway?”
“Virgin River. Kind of out of the way. How’d you find us?”
“I...” She shook her head and a small laugh escaped. “I got
off the highway, looking for a town with a hotel...”
“You got off the highway a while ago.”
“There aren’t many places wide enough to turn around,” she
said. “Then I saw this place, your sign. My son... I think
he has a fever... We shouldn’t drive anymore.”
Preacher knew there wasn’t any place to get a room nearby.
This was a woman in trouble; it didn’t take a genius to
figure that out. “I’ll fix you up with something,” he
said. “But first – you want something to drink? Eat? I’ve
got a good soup tonight. Bean and ham. And bread. I made
bread today. I like to do that when it’s cold and rainy.
How about a brandy to warm you up first?”
“Brandy?”
“Or whatever you feel like...”
“That would be good. Soup would be good, too. I haven’t
eaten in hours. Thanks.”
“Sit tight.”
He went to the bar and poured a Remy into a snifter – fancy
stuff for this place. He hardly ever used the snifters on
the usual crowd – but he wanted to do something special for
the girl. For sure she was down on her luck. He took her
the brandy and then went back to the kitchen.
The soup was put away for the night, but he took it out of
the refrigerator, ladled out a scoop and put it in the
microwave. While it warmed, he took her a napkin and some
utensils. By the time he got back to the kitchen, the soup
was ready and he got out the bread – some of his best;
soft, sweet and hearty – and nuked it for a few seconds. He
put that and some butter on a plate. When he came out of
the kitchen he saw her struggling out of her jacket, like
maybe she was stiff or sore. The sight of it stopped him
briefly and made him frown. She threw a look over her
shoulder, as if she was caught doing something bad.
Preacher took the food to her and put it in front of her,
his mind spinning. She was maybe five-foot-five and slight.
She wore jeans and her curly brown hair was tucked through
the back of the ball cap like a pony tail. She looked like
a girl, but he guessed she was at least in her twenties.
Maybe she’d been in a car accident, but it was more likely
someone had smacked her around. The thought alone got him a
little hot inside.
“That looks great,” she said, accepting the soup.
He went back behind the bar while she ate. She shoveled the
soup in, smeared the bread with butter and at it
ravenously. Halfway through with she gave him a sheepish,
almost apologetic smile. It tore through him, that bruised
face, split lip. Her hunger.
When she’d sopped up the last of her soup with the last of
her bread, he returned to her table. “I’ll get you some
more.”
“No. No, it’s okay. I think I’ll just have some of this
brandy now. I sure appreciate it. I’ll be on my way in a– “
”Relax,” he said, and hoped he didn’t sound harsh. It took
a while for people to warm up to him. He transferred her
dishes to the bar, clearing her place. “There isn’t
anywhere around here to get a room,” he said when he
returned to the table. He sat down across from her, leaned
toward her. “The roads aren’t so good out this way,
especially in the rain. Really, you don’t want to head back
out there. You’re kinda stuck.”
“Oh no! Listen, if you’ll just tell me the closest place...
I have to find something...”
“Take it easy,” he said. “I got an extra room. No problem.
It’s a bad night.” Predictably, her eyes widened. “It’s
okay. It’s got a lock.”
“I didn’t mean...”
“It’s okay. I’m kind of scary looking. I know it.”
“No. It’s just–“
”Don’t worry about it. I know how I look. Works great on
guys. They back right off.” And then he gave her a small
smile, not showing any teeth.
“You don’t have to do this,” she said. “I have a car...”
“Jesus, I couldn’t stand to think of you sleeping in a
car!” he said. “Sorry. Sometimes I sound as bad as I look.
But no kidding – if the kid’s not feeling so good.”
“I can’t,” she said. “I don’t know you...”
“Yeah, I know. Probably makes you wonder, huh? But I’m way
safer than I look. You’d be okay here. Better here than at
some hotel on the freeway, guaranteed. A whole lot more
okay than out in that storm, trying to deal with those
mountain roads.”
She looked at him hard for a minute. Then she said, “No.
I’m just going to press on. If you’ll tell me how much--”
“Pretty rough looking bruise you have there,” Preacher
said. “Can I get you anything for that lip? I have a first
aid kit in the kitchen.”
“I’m fine,” she said, shaking her head. “How about if we
settle up and–“
”I don’t have anything for a kid’s fever. Except a room.
With a lock on the door so you feel safe. You don’t want to
pass up an offer like that in this weather, with a kid who
might be coming down with something. I look big and mean,
but I’m about as safe as you get. Unless you’re wildlife.”
He grinned at her.
“You don’t look mean,” she said timidly.
“It can make women and little kids real nervous – and I
hate that part. You on the run?” he asked her.
She lowered her eyes.
“What d’you think? I’m gonna call the cops? Who did that to
you?”
She immediately started to cry.
“Aw. Hey. Don’t.”
She put her head down on folded arms on the table top and
sobbed.
“Aw. Come on. Don’t do that. I never know what to do.”
Hesitatingly, squeamishly, he touched her back and she
jumped. He touched one of her hands, very lightly. “Come
on, don’t cry. Maybe I can help.”
“No. You can’t.”
“Never know,” he said, lightly patting her hand.
She lifted her head. “Sorry,” she said, wiping her
eyes. “I’m exhausted, I guess. It was an accident. It was
really stupid, but I was struggling with Chris–“ She
stopped suddenly and looked around nervously, as though
worried about being overheard. She licked her lower lip. “I
was trying to get Christopher in the car, hanging onto
stuff, and I opened the door right into my face. Hard. You
shouldn’t be in a hurry, you know? It was just a little
accident. It’s fine.” She lifted the napkin to her nose.
“Right,” Preacher said. “Sure. Too bad about that. Looks
sore.”
“It’ll be fine.”
“Sure it will. So – what’s your name?” When she didn’t
answer for a long moment, he said, “It’s okay. I’m not
going to repeat it. If anyone came looking for you, I’d
never mention seeing you.” Her eyes grew round and her
mouth stood open slightly. “Oh, damn, that was the wrong
thing to say, wasn’t it?” he said. “All I mean is, if
you’re hiding or running, it’s okay. You can hide or run
here. I won’t give you up. What’s your name?”
She reached out and ran her fingers gently through the
boy’s hair. Silent.
Preacher got up and flipped off the OPEN sign and threw the
latch on the door. “There,” he said, sitting down with her
again, the little boy taking up much of the table beside
them. “Try to take it easy,” he said softly. “No one here’s
gonna hurt you. I can be a friend. I’m sure not scared of
the weak dick who’d do that to a woman. Sorry.”
She looked down to avoid eye contact. “It was the car
door...”
“Not afraid of any mean old car door either,” he said.
She gave a little huff of laughter, but had trouble looking
him in the eye. She picked up her brandy with a slightly
trembling hand and lifted it to her mouth.
“Yeah, there you go,” Preacher said. “If you think the boy
needs a doctor tonight, there’s one right across the
street. I could go get him. Or take you over.”
“I think he’s just coming down with a cold. I’m keeping a
close eye on him.”
“If he needs medicine or something...”
“I think he’s okay...”
“We have a nurse in town, a midwife. She can give medicine,
see patients... She takes real good care of the women
around here. She’d come in ten minutes if I called her. If
a woman makes a difference, under the circumstances.”
“Circumstances?” she asked, a panicked look floating across
her features.
“Car door, and all that...”
“No. Really. It’s just been a long day. You know.”
“Yeah, must’ve been. And the last hour or so off the
freeway, that must’ve been pretty awful. If you’re not used
to those roads.”
“A little scary,” she admitted softly. “And not having any
idea where I am...”
“You’re in Virgin River now, that’s what matters. It’s just
a little crimp in the road, but the people are good. Help
out where they can. You know?”
She gave him a small, shy smile, but her eyes were downcast
again.
“What’s your name?” he asked again. She pursed her lips
tight, shaking her head. Her eyes welled up again. “It’s
okay,” he said softly. “Really.”
“Paige,” she whispered, a tear running down her
cheek. “Paige,” she repeated in a small voice.
“Yeah, that’s good. That’s a pretty name. You can say your
names around here without being afraid.”
“Your name?”
“John,” he said, then wondered why he had done that.
Something about her, he guessed. “John Middleton. No one
calls me John, though. I’m known as Preacher.”
“You’re a preacher?”
“No,” he said with a short laugh. “Way far from it. The
only one ever to call me John was my mother.”
“What did your father call you?” she asked him.
“Kid,” he said, and smiled. “Hey, kid,” he emphasized.
“Why do they call you Preacher?”
“Aw,” he said, ducking shyly. “I don’t know. I got the
nickname way back, when I was just a kid in the Marine
Corps. The boys said I was kinda straight-laced and up
tight.”
“Really? Are you?”
“Nah, not really,” he said. “I never used to curse at all.
I used to go to mass, when there was a mass. I grew up
around priests and nuns – my mother was real devout. None
of them ever went to mass, that I remember. And I kind of
hung back when the boys went out to get drunk and look for
women. I don’t know... I never felt like doing that. I’m
not good with women.” He smiled suddenly. “That should be
obvious right away, huh? And getting drunk never really
appealed to me.”
“But you have a bar?” she asked.
“It’s Jack’s bar. He watches over people real good. We
don’t let anybody out of here if they’re not safe, you
know? I like a shot at the end of the day, but no reason to
get a headache over it, right?” He grinned at her.
“Should I call you John?” she asked him. “Or Preacher?”
“Whatever you want.”
“John,” she said. “Okay?”
“If you want. Yeah,” he said. “Yeah, I like that. Been
awhile since anyone called me that.”
She lowered her eyes for a moment, then raised them
again. “I really appreciate this, John. You staying open
and everything.”
“It’s not a big deal. Most nights we’re open later than
this.” Preacher inclined his head toward the boy. “He going
to wake up hungry?”
“Maybe,” she said. “I had some peanut butter and jelly in
the car, and he went through that pretty fast.”
“Okay, there’s an extra room upstairs, right above the
kitchen. You help yourself in the kitchen – I’ll leave a
light on for you. Anything you want. There’s milk in the
refrigerator. And orange juice. Cereal, bread, peanut
butter, more of that soup in the fridge and a microwave.
Okay?”
“That’s very nice of you, but–“
”Paige, you look like you could use some rest, and if the
boy’s coming down with something, you don’t want to take
him out in that cold, wet mess.”
She thought about it for a second and then said, “How
much?”
He laughed in spite of himself, then sobered
quickly. “Sorry, I didn’t mean to laugh. It’s just that –
it’s my old room. It’s not a hotel room or anything. I
lived up there for two years, but then Jack moved out and I
got his apartment out back. That room over the kitchen –
smells a little like bacon and coffee in the morning, but
it’s a good size, with a big bathroom. It would do for a
night.” He shrugged. “Just being a good neighbor. Okay?”
“That’s generous,” she said.
“I’m not putting myself out any – it’s just an empty room.
Glad to help out.” He cleared his throat. “Got a suitcase I
can get for you or anything?”
“Only one, in the back seat.”
“I’ll get it for you. You get your brandy there,” he
said. “Give yourself another shot if you need it. If I were
you, I’d need it, after driving through these hills in the
rain.” He stood up. “Bring it with you and I’ll show you
the room. Upstairs. Um – you want me to carry the kid up
for you?”
She stood as well. “Thanks.” She stretched her shoulders –
as if stiff from a long drive. “If you don’t mind.”
“Not a problem,” he said. “Listen, so you don’t worry, your
room and my apartment aren’t even connected – we’re
separated by the kitchen and stairs. You just lock your
door and rest easy.” He gently and clumsily lifted the
little boy into his arms. His head went onto Preacher’s
shoulder and it felt odd. Preacher didn’t have a lot of
experience with carrying around children, but he liked the
way it felt. He gave the boy’s back a few long, slow
strokes. “This way.”
He led the way through the kitchen and up the back
staircase. He opened the door and said, “Sorry. It’s kind
of a mess. I left some things up here, like my weights. But
the sheets are clean.”
“It looks fine,” she said. “I’ll get out first thing in the
morning.”
“Don’t worry about it. If you need a couple of days, we can
work it out. Like I said, it’s not exactly for rent or
anything. Just sits empty. I mean, if the kid’s got a
little bug or something...”
He lay the boy gently on the bed, strangely reluctant to
put him down. The warmth of the child against his chest was
comforting. He couldn’t resist touching his floppy blond
hair. Beautiful little kid. “How about some car keys? Might
as well go get that suitcase...”
She dug around in her quilted bag, which looked kind of
like a diaper bag, although the boy was too big for
diapers. She passed him the keys.
“Just be a minute,” he said.
Preacher went to her car, a little Honda, and got in. He
had to put the seat all the way back and his knees still
rubbed against the steering wheel. He pulled it around to
the back of the building and parked it beside his truck
where it couldn’t be seen from the main street in case
someone was looking for her. He wasn’t sure how he’d
explain that – he wouldn’t want her to be afraid.
He plucked the suitcase out of the back; it was way too
small for someone who was taking a trip. It was the right
size for someone getting out with the clothes on her back.
When he was back in the upstairs room, she was sitting
tensely on the edge of the bed, her son behind her. He put
down the suitcase, placed the keys on the bureau right
inside the door, and shuffled a little in the doorway. She
stood up and faced him. “Look. Ah. I moved your car – put
it right out back by my truck. Off the street. It’s out of
sight from the road now. So if you get up or look out,
you’re not confused about that – it’s right out back. I
recommend you sit tight, wait out this rain, travel in dry
daylight. But if you get – you know – nervous, the bar only
locks on the inside and here are your keys. It’s no big
deal if you... Like if you can’t relax and have to leave,
it’s no big deal if the bar door’s left unlocked – this is
a real quiet, safe place. Sometimes we forget to lock up,
anyway. I’ll get it locked for sure tonight, you and the
kid being here. Um... Paige... you don’t have to be worried
or anything. I’m a pretty reliable guy. Or else Jack
wouldn’t leave me with the bar. Okay? Just get some rest.”
“Thank you,” she said, and it was barely a sound.
He pulled the door closed. He heard her move the dead bolt,
protecting herself. For the first time since coming to this
little town, he wondered why that dead bolt had ever been
installed.
He stood there a minute. It had taken him about five
seconds to conclude someone – ninety-eight percent chance a
boyfriend or husband – had belted her in the face and she
was on the run with her kid. It wasn’t like he didn’t know
that stuff happened. It happened all the time. He just
never understood what satisfaction a man could get out of
hitting a woman. It made no sense to him. If you have a
pretty young woman like that, you treat her right. Hold her
safe against you and protect her.
He went to the bar, turned off the lights, checked the
kitchen, leaving a light on in case she came downstairs,
then went to his apartment behind the kitchen. He was only
there a few minutes when it occurred to him that there were
no longer clean towels up there – he’d emptied the bathroom
and moved all his downstairs. He went to the bathroom,
gathered up a stack of clean white towels and went back
upstairs.
The door was open a crack, like maybe she’d already been
down to the kitchen. He could see a glass of orange juice
sitting on the bureau inside the door and it pleased him
that she’d helped herself. Through that space of an inch,
he saw her reflection in the bureau mirror. Her back faced
the mirror and she had pulled her bulky sweatshirt up over
her head and shoulders, trying to get a glimpse of her back
and upper arms in the mirror. And she was covered with
bruises. Lots of big bruises on her back, one shoulder and
upper arms.
Preacher was mesmerized. For a moment his eyes were locked
on those purple splotches. “Aw, Jesus,” he whispered in a
breath.
He quickly backed away from the slit in the door and got up
against the wall outside, out of sight. It took him a
moment to collect himself; he was stricken. Horrified. All
he could think was, what kind of animal does something like
that? His mouth hung open because he couldn’t imagine this.
He was a warrior, a trained fighter, and he was pretty sure
he hadn’t done that much damage to a man equal to him in
size, in a fair fight.
Some instinct kicked in that told him he shouldn’t let on
that he’d seen. She was already afraid of everything,
including him. But there was also the reality – that this
wasn’t a woman who’d been smacked. She’d been pummeled. He
didn’t even know the girl, yet all he wanted was to kill
the son of a bitch who’d done that to her. Kill him. After
five or eleven months of beatings, then death for the sorry
bastard.
She shouldn’t know he was feeling that; it would scare her
to death. He took a few deep breaths. Composed himself.
Then he tapped lightly on the door.
“Huh?” he head her say, sounding startled.
“Just some towels,” he said.
“One second, okay?”
“Take your time.”
Momentarily she opened the door just a tiny bit further,
her sweatshirt back in place.
“I forgot, I took all the bathroom stuff out,” he
said. “You’ll need some towels. I’ll leave you alone now.
Won’t bother you again.”
“Thank you. John.”
“No problem. Paige. Get some good rest.”
~~~~~~
Paige pulled the bureau carefully, as quietly as possible,
in front of the door. She really hoped John hadn’t heard
that, but as close as she could figure out, the kitchen was
right beneath this room. And – if the man meant her or
Christopher any harm, he could have already delivered it,
not to mention the fact that a locked door and empty
bedroom dresser couldn’t possibly keep him out.
As much as she’d have liked a hot soak in a tub, she felt
too vulnerable to get naked. She couldn’t talk herself into
the shower either, she might not hear the door knob rattle
or Christopher call out to her – so she washed up in the
sink and put on clean clothes. Then, leaving the bathroom
light on, she lay carefully on the bed, on top of the
covers. She knew she wouldn’t sleep, but after a little
while she calmed down. She stared at the ceiling, the wood
slates forming a perfect V over her head. What came to mind
was that this was the third time in her life she’d lain in
bed looking at such a ceiling.
The first time was in the house she grew up in – and the
beams were bare, unfinished, pink insulation puffing out
between them. The house was small, only two bedrooms, and
already old when her parents moved in, but the neighborhood
had been clean and quiet then, twenty years ago. Her mother
moved her into the attic when she was nine; she shared her
space with boxes of stored household goods pushed back
against one wall. But it was her space, and she escaped to
it whenever she could. From her bed she could hear her
mother and father arguing. After her father’s death when
she was eleven, she could hear her older brother Bud argue
with their mother.
From what she had learned about domestic battery in the
last few years, she should have expected to end up with an
abuser, even though her father never hit her or her mother,
and the worst she ever got from Bud was a shove or slug in
the arm. But man, could the men in her family yell. So
loud, so mad, she wondered why the windows didn’t crack.
Demand, belittle, insult, accuse, sulk, punish with the
meanest words. It was just a matter of degrees; abuse is
abuse.
The next time she had found herself staring at a ceiling
like this one was after she left home. She’d gone to beauty
school after high school and stayed home with her mother,
paying rent, until she was twenty-one. Then she and two
girlfriends – also beauticians – rented half an old house.
Paige had happily taken the attic bedroom, though it wasn’t
even as large as her childhood room and most of the time
she had to crouch to keep from hitting her head on the
slanted walls.
Tears came to her eyes because she remembered those two
years with Pat and Jeannie as the happiest in her life.
Sometimes she missed them so much it made her ache. Three
hairdressers – mostly broke after rent, food and clothes –
it had seemed like heaven. When they couldn’t afford to go
out, they’d buy popcorn and cheap wine and make a party of
it at home, gossiping about women whose hair they cut and
frosted, about boyfriends and sex, laughing till they
couldn’t sit up straight.
Then Wes came into her life, a successful businessman six
years older. With a shock she realized he’d been the age
she was now – twenty-nine. Yet he’d seemed so worldly,
mature. She’d been styling his hair for only a couple of
months when he asked her out and took her to a restaurant
so fine, the hostesses were better dressed than she was. He
drove a brand new Grand Prix with cushy leather seats,
darkly tinted windows. And he drove too fast, which at
twenty-three didn’t seem dangerous. It was thrilling. Even
though he yelled at and flipped off other drivers, it
seemed his right – he was powerful. By her standards, rich.
He had a house already, which he didn’t even have to share
with roommates. His career was trading stocks and
commodities; an exhausting job that required brilliance and
high energy. He wanted to go out every night, bought her
things, pulled his wallet out of his pocket and said, “I
don’t know what you really want, what little thing would
just make you cry it’s so perfect, so I want you to shop
for yourself. Because you being happy is the only thing
that matters to me in the world.” He’d peeled off a couple
of bills and handed her two hundred dollars, a veritable
fortune.
Pat and Jeannie didn’t like him, but there was hardly a
mystery in that. He wasn’t all that nice to them. He
treated them like wallpaper, furniture. Answered their
questions with one word when he could. In fact, she
couldn’t remember what they said about him when they tried
to warn her off.
Then came the insanity of her life spiraling out of control
that to this day seemed impossible: He’d hit her before
they married, and she married him anyway. They’d been in
his fancy car, parked, having an argument about where she
was living – he thought she’d be better off at home with
her mother rather than that old half a house in a
questionable neighborhood with a couple of dykes. It got
pretty nasty; she’d said her share of ugly things to him.
He said something like, I want you with your mother, not in
some little whorehouse in the ghetto.
Just who the fuck do you think you are, calling where I
live a whorehouse?
How do you use that language with me?
You called my best friends dykes and whores and it’s my
language you criticize?
I’m just thinking about your safety. You said you wanted to
marry me someday, and I’d like you to still be around when
that happens!
Well up yours, because I love living there and you can’t
tell me what to do! And I’m not marrying anyone who can
talk about my best friends like that!
There was more. More. She vaguely remembered calling him a
bad name, like prick or asshole. He called her a bitch, a
difficult bitch. In any case, they both contributed, she
was sure of that.
He’d slapped her, open palm. Then he immediately broke
down, collapsed, cried like a baby, said he wasn’t sure
what had happened to him, but maybe it was because he’d
never been in love like this before. It was wrong, he knew
it was wrong to overreact that way, he was crazy, he was
ashamed. But... he wanted to hold her in his arms every
night, take care of her for the rest of her life, never
lose her. He apologized for what he’d said about the
roommates – maybe he was just jealous of how loyal she was
toward them. In his mind he just couldn’t see past her;
there was no one in his life he valued like he valued her.
He loved her so much it made him nuts, he said. She was the
first person he’d ever felt that way about. Without her, he
was nothing!
She believed him. But she never used profanity around him
again.
She hadn’t told Pat and Jeannie because even though she was
stupid about what was happening, she knew better than to
risk their further disapproval. It only took her a couple
of days and his pitiful regret to get over that slap. It
wasn’t that much of a slap. It didn’t take more than a
month for her to almost forget it happened and trust him
again; she thought him handsome, exciting, sexy. He was
edgy and confident. Smart. Passive men couldn’t get the
kind of success he had. She wasn’t attracted to passive
men.
Then he said, “Paige, I don’t want to wait. I want us to
get married as soon as you’re ready. A nice wedding – screw
the cost, I can afford whatever you want. Ask Pat and
Jeannie to stand up for us. And you can quit your job – you
don’t have to work anymore.”
Her legs hurt; she was getting bunions. Fixing hair six
days a week was no easy job, even though she had liked it.
She’d often thought how much more she’d like it if she only
had to do it about six hours a day, four days a week, but
that seemed an impossible dream. She could barely make ends
meet as it was and her mother had been working two jobs
since her father died. In her mother, she saw her future –
alone, weak and worked to death. A picture of her surly
roommates wearing pretty satin at her wedding, smiling,
envious of her good fortune and the cushy life she’d have.
And she’d said yes.
He hit her again on the honeymoon.
Over the next six years she’d tried everything –
counseling, police, running away. He got out of jail right
away, if they even bothered to take him in; he found her in
hiding, and it just got worse. Even her pregnancy and
Christopher’s arrival hadn’t stopped the abuse. She
discovered by accident that there might be a little more to
this equation – a certain chemistry that gave him such
energy to work those long hours and wear himself out
keeping track of her, the fits of euphoria, the skull
splitting temper – some white powder in a small vial.
Cocaine? And he took something his personal trainer gave
him, though he swore it wasn’t steroids. A lot of traders
used amphetamines to keep up with the demands of the job.
Cocaine users tended to be reed thin, but Wes was proud of
his body, his build, and worked hard on his muscles. A coke
and steroid regimen, she realized, could make his temper
hair-trigger short. She had no idea how much, how long. But
she knew he was crazy.
This was her last chance. Through a shelter she’d met a
woman who said she could help her get away, change her
identity and flee. There was an underground for battered
women and children in hopeless situations. If she and
Christopher could just get to the first contact, they would
be passed along from place to place, collecting new ID,
names, histories and lives along the way. The upside was –
it worked a lot. It was nearly foolproof when the woman
followed instructions and the children were young enough.
The downside was, it was illegal, and for life. Life like
this, covered in bruises, afraid I’ll be killed everyday –
or a life of being someone else, someone who isn’t hit?
She started squirreling away money from her grocery
allowance and packed a bag that she hid with a contact from
a shelter. She managed almost five hundred dollars and
fully intended to get herself and Christopher out before
another bad episode occurred. With the last beating, she
knew she was nearly too late.
And here she was, looking at her third V-shaped ceiling.
She knew she wouldn’t sleep; she’d hardly slept in six
years. No worries about the drive – with so much adrenalin
going on, she’d make it.
But then, she woke up to sunlight and a regular thwacking
noise outside. Someone was chopping wood. She sat up
cautiously and smelled coffee. She had slept after all. And
so had Christopher.
The dresser was still pushed against the door.