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Authors: Margaret Coel

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BOOK: The Spirit Woman
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Father John replaced the receiver and leaned back in the chair, lifting the front legs off the floor. He ran a hand over the dog's soft fur and sipped at the last of the coffee, trying to ignore the reminder always in the shadows of his mind.
This is not whiskey, not the same at all.
It was his decision, was it not? He was a free man, he'd taken the vows freely. For better or worse, he'd promised. I will trust in you, Lord, he'd promised.
The phone was jangling again. Perhaps someone needing a priest, he thought as he lifted the receiver. “Father O'Malley,” he said. Instantly he knew that Vicky was on the other end, even before he heard the sound of her voice.
It came like a sob. “I'm sorry. I don't know who else to call.”
“I'm on the way,” he said.
24
T
he Toyota skidded through the fresh snow on Rendezvous Road. There were no other vehicles in sight, only the pristine whiteness wrapping around the pickup and the tunnel of headlights ahead. He fought against the images crowding into his mind; he didn't want them. Vicky walking into the living room; Ben Holden waiting.
Dear Lord, don't let him have been drinking!
Vicky telling him it was over. She was so small and soft, and Ben Holden, my God
hat had he done to her?
He swung right onto the highway, sending the pickup skidding toward the ditch. He let up on the gas and turned in to the skid until the front end pointed west, then accelerated again. He had to think rationally. She had called. She was alive. Maybe Ben hadn't hurt her. But the pain in her voice! He would always hear the pain, he knew. In the middle of the night, in the midst of prayer and meetings and classes, the unexpected sound of her pain would come.
He banked south into Lander, the snow lighter now, faint traces of dark asphalt punctuating the whiteness. Another couple of turns and he was in front of the small house where she lived, slamming out the door and running up the snowy sidewalk. He pounded on the door, then opened it.
He saw her the instant he stepped inside—huddled on the floor beside the desk, as if she'd slid down the wall, the phone on the carpet beside her, crumpled tissues scattered about. He crossed the small room in a couple of steps and went down on one knee, his eyes running over her face—the hollow spaces beneath her cheekbones, the shape of her mouth and slant of her jaw. There were no bruises or cuts, as far as he could see, only a membrane of moisture clouding the coppery tones of her skin.
“What did he do to you?” he said. His voice was tight with anger.
She lifted both hands to her face, shreds of white tissue curling in her fingers. “I was so scared.” The words came in a whisper; he had to lean closer to catch them.
“Vicky, did he hurt you?” He placed his arms around her shoulders and reined her to him.
“I'm okay.” She was crying softly into the front of his jacket. “He's gone now, probably over at the Highway Lounge getting drunker.”
“You've got to tell me,” he said. “Did he hit you?”
He heard the effort for control in the sharp intakes of her breath. “I saw his fists.” Her voice was muffled against him, as if she were sheltering from some imaginary shadow of Ben Holden in the room. “He was so angry, and his fists came up. I could feel them pounding on me. I could taste the blood in my mouth. Everything was spinning around. I couldn't see in the blackness. It was just like before, back in that other time. Everything the same, except that, all of a sudden, he turned and stomped out.”
“Did he hit you?” White anger, like an electrical charge burned through him.
“No. No.” She was shivering, as if cold had become a permanent condition. “God, I don't know what made him stop. He never stopped before.”
Father John didn't say anything, aware of the slight weight of her leaning into his chest, the faint smell of sage in her hair. Finally he said, “You're all right, then? He didn't touch you?”
She pulled away and blew her nose into a tissue. There was a soft finality to the sound. Then she tugged at the neckline of her dark blue sweater until the rounded ridge of her shoulder was exposed. He stared in disbelief at the purplish marks—fingerprints—imprinted in her skin, the anger rising again, swift and certain as an arrow at his heart.
He grabbed the phone and started punching in 911.
“What are you doing?” Vicky pulled at the receiver in his hand. “You can't call anyone.”
“You've been assaulted. I'm calling the police.”
“The police!” She gave a shriek of pain and yanked hard on the receiver. “He grabbed me, John. That's all. He never hit me.”
“He grabbed you and threatened you, Vicky. There are bruises on your shoulder. You've been assaulted, and I'm going to call the police.” He took the receiver back and started jabbing again at the numbers.
“No, John. No, please no.” She slumped back against the wall, both hands covering her nose and mouth, so that her sobs came in staccato bursts, as if he had been the one who had just hurt her.
He replaced the receiver. The sobbing was less, barely audible above the sounds of a clock ticking somewhere and tires whining in the snow on the street.
“Leave me this, please, John,” she said finally. “A little dignity. I don't want it all over the newspaper. Local lawyer, Eagle Shelter board member, assaulted by ex-husband, foreman at the Arapaho ranch, well known and respected in the tribe.”
“You have to report this, Vicky.” Father John fought for a quiet, rational tone.
She shook her head so violently that her entire body was shuddering. “Somebody would send the paper to the kids, and I don't want them to know. They never knew, and they can't find out. I can't let them find out.”
“Look at me, Vicky.” He took her chin into his hand and pulled her face around until her eyes found his. “Don't fool yourself anymore. Your kids know. They've always known. I don't care what you wanted to think. You have to hold him responsible for their sake, if not your own.”
“You can't call the police.” He could sense the firmness in the set of her jaw. “I won't have it. You just can't, John.”
He saw it in an instant. It wasn't the kids she was protecting, it wasn't even her own sense of herself. It was Ben Holden. He let go of her chin. For a moment he didn't say anything, not trusting himself. “What do you want of me, Vicky?” he said finally. “What exactly do you expect?”
She blinked at the harshness in his tone.
He stood up. “You knew the kind of man Ben Holden is. You knew what he'd done to you before, and you knew what was going to happen, but you went back to him anyway. What if he walked in right now? Would you go back to him?”
“You don't understand.” She started to get to her feet, a slow, weary movement.
“You're right. I don't understand my role in all of this.” He had a sense of being outside of himself, lashing out at her. He kept on: “What do you want me to do? Watch you fall into his arms again, lie awake nights worrying about you, waiting for him to kill you or just hurt you enough to put you in the hospital? And then come running when you call? What is it, Vicky? I can't make you forget about Ben Holden. I can't take you away from him. I can't save you.”
“Don't do this, John.” The pleading note made his heart turn over. She was leaning against the wall.
He took his eyes from her, whirled around, and crossed the room.
“Where are you going?” he heard her say as he slammed out the door.
 
He drove south on Highway 287, peering through the half-moons carved out by the windshield wipers. Ahead the red-and-blue neon sign, HIGHWAY LOUNGE, blazed through the falling snow like a beacon. Cutting in front of a semi—the blaring horn—he skidded into the parking lot, barely missing two pickups parked in front of the log building. He let up on the gas, slowed the Toyota past a row of pickups and trucks, and stopped next to Ben Holden's truck. The muffled beat of country music pounded through the log walls as he headed back to the entrance.
The air inside was foggy with smoke. Conversations buzzed beneath the music thumping out of speakers in the far corners. The stale odors of whiskey and beer penetrated the fog, stinging his nose and mouth, his lungs. He scanned the clots of people huddled in the booths along the sidewalls. A man and woman were moving across the bare wood floor, holding each other up in a drunken pastiche of a dance. Across the lounge, cowboys ranged along the bar, gripping beer bottles. COORS DRAFT blinked in the mirror overhead. Ben Holden was alone at the far end of the bar.
Father John walked past the swaying, lurching couple, the thud of his boots against the floor out of sync with the music's rhythm. Ben Holden turned slightly as he approached—was he expecting him?—and Father John reached out and took a fistful of the man's plaid shirt. He shoved him backward, pushing him into the wall, bracing himself for the fists sure to lash out in defense.
“You want a piece of somebody, Holden? How about somebody your own size?” He tightened his hold on the shirt, leaning his fist into the man's chest.
“Vicky's okay, isn't she?” The man's voice was sharp with panic. “Tell me she's okay. I didn't want to hit her. I didn't hit her, did I? Oh, God, tell me I didn't hurt her.”
“You hurt her, all right.”
The other man's face began to crumble—a slow breaking into sobs. Father John felt him buckling beneath his grip, muscles and tendons and joints collapsing like those of a marionette. He grabbed him under both arms, holding him upright against the wall, steadying him.
“I never meant to hurt her.” The sobs were loud and uncontrollable, bursting from a deep, hidden place—the remorse-laden sobs of the confessional. Father John had heard them before. “I wanted her to come back to me. I wanted us to be together like a real family, the way we used to be. Just Vicky and me and the kids, that's how it was supposed to be, but I let her down again. I hurt her. I didn't wanna do that.”
Father John stepped back, his gaze fixed on the man leaning on the bar now, hands flat, a half-filled glass of whiskey at his fingertips. The sounds of a country band crashed around them. We've both let her down, he thought. We've both hurt her. A couple of alcoholics, battling their own demons. And he more at fault than Ben Holden. A priest. How could he have ever allowed her any hope that he could be the man she needed?
“Any trouble between you and Ben, Father?” A burly man was beside him, thumbs linked in the side pockets of his blue jeans. He looked like a breed, black, straight hair slicked back, a light-complected, pockmarked face.
“Ben's gonna need a ride back to the Arapaho ranch,” Father John said.
“Hey, Buster.” The man shouted past him at an Indian halfway down the bar, his arm around the waist of a thin girl with long black hair and a tight blue sweater that draped partway off one shoulder. “You goin' back to the ranch tonight?” A glance at Father John: “Buster works up there.”
The Indian drew the girl closer and kissed the bare shoulder. “Sure ain't plannin' on it, Wily,” he said. “Besides I just got here.”
“Plans just changed.” This from the burly man. “Ben here needs a ride.” He turned to Ben. “Let's have the keys. Don't want anybody suing the place 'cause you run 'em down.”
Ben fumbled in his jeans pocket and set a ring of keys on the bar, which the man tossed along the polished wood to the other Indian. “Okay, Father,” the burly man said. “I'll make sure ol' Ben here gets home safe and sound.”
“Thanks.” Father John said.
The music was still pounding, the couple still clinging together on the dance floor, when he stepped back outside into the snow.
BOOK: The Spirit Woman
4.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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