Authors: Andrew Neiderman
could, concentrating, searching, listening for the voices, reaching
deeply. There was nothing dark, nothing sinister.
The nurse set up the bed table.
Do you want me to feed you, Mrs. Overstreet? she asked.
No, no. I can feed myself. I'm not a helpless child, she snapped. A
thread of hope renewed her strength. She took a spoonful of oatmeal and
then sipped some tea.
That's a good girl, the nurse said. I'll be right outside, Father, if
you should need me.
We've got things under control here, Suzanne, he said. Mrs. Overstreet
is fine.
Jessie listened for the nurse's departing footsteps. The moment she was
gone, she dropped her spoon and turned to the priest.
Father, my husband is in great danger if he is not already lost, she
began. You must believe me. You're my last hope.
I'm here to help you, my dear, he said.
You believe in the devil, in Satan's existence, don't you, Father?
Yes, I do.
Can he be defeated? Is there anything we can do to overcome his hold on
us? she asked desperately.
Lead a good life, keep our fortress strong, love the Lord, and do His
bidding. The devil can't plant his seeds of evil in a garden of
goodness.
But we all sin, Father.
Alas, we do, but we must be remorseful and repent, and then the devil is
driven out of our hearts. I will pray with you, my dear, he said.
Together we will ask the Lord for forgiveness.
Father, I will do that, but we must do something to keep the devil away
from my husband now, and my The Lord understands that, my chi;d. We p y
for him, and I assure you, God will listen.
No, Father, Jessie insisted, it's too late for only prayer. We must do
more.
Do more?
Father, I beg you. Don't think I'm crazy.
You're not crazy. You're upset. I understand and- No, you don't,
Father. Let me tell you all of it, s said, and began with the first
night they had arrived and the voices she had heard wailing in the
cemetery.
I' m not sure I quite understand what you mean when you say the devil is
exchanging souls, Mrs Overstreet, Father Rush said after Jessie had
brought him up to date.
She had been encouraged by the way he sat quietly and listened, never
interrupting, never trying to tell her she was mistaken or
hallucinating. He sounded thoughtful, concerned, and nowhere near as
skeptical as she had feared He was especially attentive when she had
described the way Dr. Beezly had metamorphosed during his examination
of her, and how Satan had tried to rape her. Her description of the way
she envisioned Satan had apparently struck a note with the priest.
Furthermore he didn't challenge or express incredulity when she told -
him Dr. Beezly was evil.
Somehow he is replacing the souls of these people with souls from hell.
Maybe . . . maybe it's the way the devil rewards those who are most
loyal to him in hell. And that's why these people who have been close
to death or died are so different afterward. I certainly sensed it in
Marjorie Young and Tracy sensed it in her husband. I'm sure her time is
coming, too. I've been doing a lot of thinking about it ever since I
realized why Mr. Carter was out there digging up the graves and why I
heard the wall of the dead.
She reached out and found the priest's hand. Seizing it, she cried, I
don't know why, but God has given me this power.
Perhaps for this very thing, Father Rush said soft Then you do believe
me. You do. - Let me say that I have been disturbed by many things in
our community over the past year or so.
And Dr. Beezly?
Father Rush was quiet for a long moment. Jessie was afraid he wouldn't
respond.
Father?
I have had troubling feelings about him. Yes, he confessed.
Jesse breathed with relief. She had finally found an ally.
Oh Father. It's not too late. I know it. What can we do? How can we
keep the devil away from my husband and perhaps save those souls he has
taken'
I am not an expert in demonology, but I have some knowledge of it.
Perhaps holy water, he mused aloud.
Holy water'
Yes. The devil is not supposed to be able to abide it.
Then . . . if we put it around Lee's bed, we can keep the devil away
from him?
Perhaps.
Oh Father. Let's do it. Please, she begged. If Dr. Beezly is unable
to approach my husband, that will be proof, won't it'
To us certainly.
Father, will you help me? Will you do it?
I will try, he said. He stood up.. "I'll go to the church and get the
holy water and return. Until then don't say anything to anyone. Finish
your food and rest.
Will you hurry, Father? Will you?
I'll be back as quickly as I can, but remember, we don't want to attract
attention and warn the evil souls around us, he said. He patted her on
the hand. Pray, my child. Pray, he said, and left.
She ate a few more spoonfuls of oatmeal and drank some tea. Then she
lay back against the pillows. The nurse returned.
Oh, that's good. You've eaten some of it. Now you just rest, and
before long you will feel much better. Isn't Father Rush a nice man'
she said, taking the tray.
Yes. How old a man is he?
Oh . . . I'd say he's in his fifties.
How long has he been in this community?
Almost twenty years, I think, she said, and then she laughed.
What's funny'
Oh, it's just the way everyone in the parish puts it those who have
lived here for years and years, that is.
Puts what?
Father Rush's arrival. They came about the same time, you know.
They?
A doctor of the body and a doctor of the soul. That's the way the
parish puts it.
A doctor of the body and a doctor of the soul?
Dr. Beezly and Father Rush. One day one was here the next day the
other. Now you just lie back and rest. I'll be right outside if you
need anything. Here's the buzzer, she said, putting the button in
Jesse's hand But Jessie didn't feel it; she didn't feel anything.
Weak with disappointment and still strapped firmly in the hospital bed,
Jessie lay there as still as a corpse.
For all the good she was able to do Lee and herself, she might as well
be dead, she thought. Why was the devil so powerful? Why could he
reach almost anywhere he wanted in order to get his way? Where was God?
Father Rush had told her that God permitted the devil to exist so that
man could make moral choices. In rejecting evil, man became good and
was embraced by God.
But after what the nurse had told her, Jessie thought the priest was
simply justifying the existence of evil.
And yet she had to wonder why she had been given this power, this
ability to see and hear beyond. Was it meant to be some exquisite
torment? What were her great sins? Why was she being punished so? She
knew that Lee believed he was being punished for his sins when they had
had their accident and she had been hurt so seriously. It was part of
the reason why she had accepted her fate so stoically: she knew how much
he blamed himself and how the weight of that guilt could destroy him.
Now he was being destroyed by the Prince of Evil himself and there was
nothing anyone could do. May be it was best she died with him, she
thought. Leave this world, a world Satan was claiming. If she were to
believe tradition, Satan had tried to claim the world after God had
first created it and had created Paradise and Adam and Eve. The devil
had been defeated, but not before he had corrupted Adam and Eve and had
left enough of himself behind to set the stage for his second attempt.
This was the beginning of that new attempt, and Lee, she, and the others
were the first to fall victim.
She was too weak and frustrated to cry, almost too weak to care. Let
sleep come. Let it all end, she thought.
She wasn't sure how much time had passed, but suddenly she felt someone
unfastening the belts that strapped her into the bed. In moments her
thighs and legs were free. She sat up quickly, about to scream. Father
Rush put his hand over her mouth.
Shh, he said. We don't want anyone to hear or know what we are about to
do.
Her heart pounded. The evil ones were going to make sure she presented
no more danger to them. Surely that was their purpose now.
Father Rush took his hand from her mouth and pulled back her blanket so
she would be able to get out of bed.
Then he went to the closet and got her clothes.
I'll watch at the door while you get dressed, he said, setting the
clothing on the bed. 'hurry. The nurses are taking a break.
Jessie said nothing; she hadn't moved.
You've known Dr. Beezly ever since he arrived here, haven't you' she
asked quickly.
Yes My nurse told me you both arrived around the same time, she said in
an accusatory tone.
Yes, we did, and for a long time--actually until up to a year or so
ago--Dr. Beezly and I were very good friends. We often dined together,
and he was a member of my church. He was a warm person, compassionate
and very intelligent. We had many philosophical and theological
discussions.
Then why are you doing this? she demanded. Dr. Beezly is highly
respected in this community. Aren't you afraid you will get into
trouble or look foolish?
Those who do the work of God can never look foolish, he replied. I know
there are many who don't believe the devil exists the way we believe he
exists there are even many in the Mother Church who don't but I have
reason to know it is so, he added softly.
What reason? My story?
No. He returned to the side of the bed and took her hand into his. I
myself have been tempted by Satan, he confessed.
How? she asked. The priest was quiet for a long moment.
All of us, being mortal, have our weaknesses, even priests.
And even Dr. Beezly?
Oh yes. He was a man who had his own weaknesses and sins, some more
serious than others, perhaps. Perhaps there were sins he didn't want to
confess, sins he hadn't repented.
Suddenly he stopped coming to church, and in fact, those whom he had
treated for serious injuries or illnesses stopped coming as well. I
found him a changed man yet a man who still had a major influence on
others even me.
How? Jessie asked.
Dr. Beezly developed an uncanny knack for knowing what our weaknesses
were and finding ways to tempt us to damnation through those weaknesses.
That's what I meant when I told you I've had troubling feelings about
him, especially during the past year.
Jessie still didn't move.
You don't trust me, I see. I can't blame you. Under the circumstances,
if I were you, I would probably be the same way. Is there anything I
can do to convince you that I have reason to believe your story?
Jessie thought.
What was your weakness, the weakness Dr. Beezly appealed to and almost
caused you to damn your soul?
Father Rush hesitated.
I should confess only to another ordained priest, he said. And then,
after a moment, in a low voice, he added, There was . . . is . . .
a married woman in town. I have always had strong romantic desires for
her. Of course I told no one, least of all Dr. Beezly. But one night
he invited me to his home for dinner. He hadn't been coming to church
and we hadn't seen each other for so long that I readily accepted the
invitation. She was there without her husband, and never did she look
more beautiful}, more enticing.
I drank some wine . . . too much wine, and suddenly she became
amorous and Beezly left us alone. Only my faith gave me the strength to
resist.
If you hadn't, Jessie said, you would probably have become a candidate
for a deadly resurrection your self and been a victim of an accident or
some serious illness.
Yes, Father Rush said. Now, because of you and the things you have told
me, I believe that. Up to now my own failures, weaknesses, have
prevented me from helping the people I should have helped. I was
blinded by my own sinfulness. I have not been a good soldier of the