The Good Shepherd Pt.3

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Welcome to the continuation of Jerome’s story. If you missed parts one or two they can be found here:

             http://wp.me/p39vIx-7m

             http://wp.me/p39vIx-9d

The Good Shepherd Pt. 3

     The spring has come at last. The snows have melted and I have been able to turn the ground and sow the cold weather vegetables into the garden. It’s amazing how what I always thought would be just a hobby has become a life-saving necessity. Mother, Anna and I have been living off of our stockpiled dry goods and freezer meats packed in the remnants of winter snow for the last three months. We are the lucky ones.

     Once the initial shock of the black out wore off, Anna wanted to go back home fearing burglars would steal her mother’s Hummel collection. I didn’t want to tell her Hummels were not going to be on the top of any cat burglar’s list but having a pantry full of food might just get her killed. Instead I told her that mom and I needed her to combine her food with ours if we were all to survive. At eighty-seven she’s not going down into our cellar to see that our pantry will hold us a good year with or without her help. Thinking she had to help her impoverished neighbors she agreed and let me empty out her pantry and freezers. It wasn’t much. Anna would have starved after the first month.

     Word came from Boston by the first of February that the black out was at least nation wide. It was a truth we had already guessed at, but the confirmation darkened the town ethos like a total eclipse of the sun. By week’s end we heard reports of homes being broken into in the outlying areas of town. It was in the second week of February that Roy, the owner of  Central Supermarket, was beaten to death by a gang of kids while he was loading  free groceries into a wheel barrow for an elderly man. When the police arrived they found the old man clutching a box of cereal over Roy’s dead  body.

   “It’s all they would let me keep.” Was all the old man could say when questioned.

   The store had been spray painted with a skull and cross-bones underscored with the words “The Bone Brothers”

    Winchendon has been under martial law since. The Bone Brothers have broken the law like clock work on Friday nights. each time they move into town from a different direction. Each time they lose a member. Once I was asked to come to the station because the boy who had been shot was asking for a pastor. When I got there the waif was breaths away from eternity. I prayed. He gulped down his last feeble mouthfuls of oxygen and was gone. A thin line of peach fuzz  coated in spittle and blood lay across his top lip like a squashed caterpillar. He couldn’t have been more than fifteen.

The officer next to me swore softly. “They’re like a pack of wolves testing the edges of a camp for weakness. They’re gonna find it soon enough. What’ll we do then? We can’t kill ’em all.”

“We shouldn’t be killing them at all!” I countered. “They’re just kids and they’re hungry.”

“They’re animals Pastor and make no mistake about it. They’d eat your mother if you left her on the front step overnight.”

Dear Lord how could we have lost so much humanity in just a month? Is this all it takes for us to forget who we are?

When I got home that morning a midnight mare stood in the front yard  tied to the tree growing in front of the stone porch. The beast didn’t even acknowledge my presence as it munched the sweet grass poking up through the melting snow.  I  trudged up the steps wondering which parishioner I would be consoling next.  My daughter Renee threw open the stormer and flung herself into my arms.

“Daddy!” She wept.

Hot rivers ran down my cheeks. Hope I had buried burst forth like a geyser too long plugged.

“I sent a messenger for you after the first week.” I said between my tears.

“I got the message. But I knew I would make it  back here before he would.”

” Where is Sara? How did you get a hold of a horse? Have you gotten word to your mother?” The questions tumbled out of me like an avalanche touched of by the vibrations of relief.

“Come inside,” my mother hissed from the doorway. The initial geniality she had held in the first days of the black-out had been melted by a hot paranoia since Roy’s death.

 We went inside and sat around the dinner table as mother brewed herbal tea on the wood stove. Renee’ was thinner than the last time I had seen her. Her eyes were ringed by black circles and her thick curly hair was pulled back in a tight unwashed bun. It was evident she had been some days without changing clothes.

“I am so glad you’re home safe sweetheart,” I said laying my hand over hers.

“I can’t stay Dad.” She said.

“What? Why?” I asked.

“I have a job to do. When the lights went out we all thought it would be for just a few days but after a week passed and word started reaching us from Boston that it was all of the Eastern seaboard and then all of America, maybe the world we knew we had to get ready. Dean Lexington organized us into work committees to get the school ready for survival and to help the community. Sara has been sent to the North Shore with a team to help the rural communities there cope with the effects of the black out. She’s working with Pastor Carpenter from Seacoast Church.” Renee’ said.

“And you?”

“Those horseback riding lessons have turned out to be useful after all Dad. My job is to take messages to all the families of the students telling them about what the college is doing to minister.”

“You have to stop this Renee’. You can’t go back out on the road. It’s dangerous out there people are dying.” I countered.

“More people are going to die Dad unless we do something to stop it. It’s why we went to Bible college.”

I looked at her dubiously.

She sighed then smiled slightly, “Do you remember when I asked you why God was having us go through all this training if He was just going to come and rapture us all in the next few years?”

I nodded and frowned. I remembered the conversation and saw that my own words were about to snare me.

“You said that we couldn’t be sure when the rapture was coming and that we didn’t know what was coming before that. You said in times of trouble it’s  the minister’s job to release the blessing and the peace of God over a community. You also said that if God was calling us to train then there must be a reason.”

I sighed as she sat staring at me, “I guess we know the reason now, don’t we ?”

She nodded. She stayed two more days then rode out on the fifth of March headed for Connecticut, New York and Pennsylvania. I only know that she made it safely out-of-town because I pressed one of the police officers to see her safely to the border crossing into Templeton.

It was shortly after Renee left that the town council asked all the churches to pool their emergency food rations together at the town food pantry to protect them from the Bone Brothers. Guards are now posted at the Community Action Building around the clock. The wolves haven’t stopped their circling. Captain Tyson’s officers killed five more, but reports from town citizens indicate that the Bone Brothers aren’t wanting for lack of members. With each raid they seem to become larger.

We stand on the brink of war and my daughter’s words keep ringing in my ears.”In times of trouble it’s the minister’s job to release the blessing and the peace of God over a community.”

Is that really my job? I  struggled with those words until last night.

It was midnight when the officer came knocking at my door. Another boy was asking for a pastor. I dressed and went down to the station expecting to pray a  prayer over some half dead Bone Brother. I was tired and prepared only to usher some starving waste of food into a cold eternity. The cell was filled with the smell of released bowels and urine emanating from a pile of wet blankets arranged in a heap on the palate by the wall. I knew the boy was already dead but pushed the blankets aside prepared to pray some religious nonsense over the dead body. The lump gagged in my throat and exploded into a cry that shattered me against the back wall of the cell as I recognized the body of Teddy. The Bone Brother Tyson’s boys had shot was eleven, the son of one of my deacons.

As I write my daughter’s words have become an accusation. How is it that she was so ready to fulfill a role that’s not even officially granted to her yet while I hold back afraid to keep the commitment I made what seems like a thousand years ago? The world has changed but my calling has not.

I am packed. When I put down this pen I will set off towards Sandy Hollow. Someone told me that’s where the Bone Brothers live.

The Good Shepherd Pt. 2

   This is the continuation of Jerome’s story. If you missed Pt.1 of  “The Good Shepherd” you can read it here:  https://josephelonlillie.com/2013/03/01/the-good-shepherd-pt-1/

The Good Shepherd  Pt 2

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      Silhouette stood at the door stamping the cold out of her feet. As I ushered our church “prepper” into the wood stove warmth I was caught by the irony of her visit. She had never been to my home before. Our interactions had been limited to conversations before or after church. Yet here we were at Doomsday and she was the first guest to come knocking.

     “Pastor! Thank God you are still here.” She said.

      “Where else would I be Sil?”

      “Well since the power went out and the cars are all dead, I thought maybe we’d hit the rapture but if you’re still here, well then I guess we can rule that out. That just means everything I’ve been talking about for the last few years is coming to pass.”

       “So  you don’t think the power is coming back on?” I asked.

       “If this was tied to some storm maybe but Pastor you know as well as I do that this is something else.” She returned.

       “How’d you get here, Sil?”

       “My horse. I put her out back to keep her from prying eyes if you don’t mind.”

       I took her into the dining room. With the blackout curtains pulled back to let in the late winter sun and the help of an antique foot warmer the room  was almost sixty, passable for warm. I thought for a moment, as I placed the steaming cup of coffee in front of Silhouette, how quickly I had adapted to the expectation of cold.

      “Am I the first to come?” She asked.

      I nodded.

     “There will be more. They’ll want to know if you’re still here. There will be questions about being left behind, the tribulation. There’s going to be trouble Pastor, panic and the bad’s going to come out of people. Are you ready for it?”

    I was taken aback. I had been so busy thinking about how to keep warm I hadn’t thought about what the long-term effect would be on the population around me.

   “You have to be ready. If Christ hasn’t come He soon will. That makes this the great falling away. How bad it is will depend largely on you.” She took a long sip of her coffee and stared hard into my eyes over the rim.

   That visit was two months ago. The power didn’t come back on by Sunday; But well over a hundred people showed up for church layered and bundled against the cold that seeped through every crack in the old white building. As Silhouette had predicted they came to make sure that I was still feet firm on planet earth and they hadn’t missed out on the blessed hope. Once that issue was settled they wanted to know what God was doing and what they were supposed to do next. By that time I had already framed my thoughts from twenty  conversations with people who, like Sil, had shown up at my door for comfort.

    The points of my sermon that morning were: This is not the rapture. This is not the tribulation. The rapture is coming. The tribulation is coming. Guard your hearts and stay ready. God is with us.

     I’ve wondered since then if my theology was off.  The hospital ten miles away started losing patients the day Silhouette arrived. Without the help of a back-up generator oxygen tanks stopped working. Bathrooms backed up and were overflowing within a few days.

Funeral parlors were among the first to contract with the local horse farms for wagons to move the dead. I have performed thirty funerals in sixty days and I know this is just the beginning. The frailest among us have shuffled off their mortal coils. In the first month sickness was our enemy. In the second it has been famine.

When my mood darkens I take to the cellar and sit among the shelves of dry goods I stockpiled over the last few years. The last outsider to be in this cellar was Silhouette. She was gratified that I had at least listened to her words and was prepared.

Her advice that day was, “You are one of the few who ever took me seriously. Don’t let anyone know about this  if you want to live.”

The Good Shepherd Pt. 1

The idea for this story was birthed from a writing prompt in The Daily Post’s Weekly Writing Challenge: Dystopia http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2013/02/25/writing-challenge-dystopia/

Write a short story or piece of descriptive faux-journalism describing your personal idea of a dystopia — a dark future when everything you hold dear is on the chopping block.

The Good Shepherd

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      The power has been out for two days. I haven’t told Mother but I don’t think it’s coming back on. Somewhere inside I think she knows but she keeps encouraging herself with the thought of cooking in the microwave again once the lights return. Maybe she’s doing it to comfort Anna who has spent the last day skirting the edges of utter despair on the edge of her cot by the wood stove. The old lady hasn’t moved since we brought her in from the cold yesterday.

    Sunday night was the last of our normal times, if I’m right. I was agitated because altar call went long. A new lady was weeping over a tough break up and kept our prayer counselors until almost ten thirty. Now I wish we had prayed all night.

   I got to bed about midnight and when I awoke the alarm was black, the sun was bright and the house was cold. Mother had already been down to check the furnace to make sure it wasn’t out of water. She had to check it by candle light because the flash light batteries were dead. Go figure, an eighty year old lady crawling around in a dark dirty cellar by candle light. Thinking it was just a black out she had already started the wood stove  to keep the living room warm.

      “Coffee’s on the stove.” She chirped motioning to the kettle. She seemed almost happy. Troubles like this always bring out the best in her at least initially.

     “Phone’s dead.” I replied pouring myself a cup from the pot while checking my cell. I added sugar and cream to the steaming liquid and went to the dining room where I’d left my computer bag. I knew something was up when all I got from the PC was a black screen.

      None of the clocks worked but I am guessing it was about eleven when  Anna showed up.

     “Jerome can you be a good kid and give me a jump-start? The car battery’s dead.”  Her voice always reminded me of something between a growl and a sour burp.

      “Call me Jerry Anna please. Are you sure it’s the battery?”

      “I’m 87 Jerome. Most days I’m not sure of my own name. All I know’s the key won’t start the *&*!^!* thing.” She said.

        I ushered the old woman into the living room and gave her a seat by the fire which she seemed to appreciate though she would never admit it because that would ruin her reputation as the nightmare crab of the neighborhood. I left her slumped in the seat chatting with my mom about an old obituary she had found in a newspaper squirreled away in the drawer of her curio cabinet.

       My car wouldn’t start either. When I knocked across the street at Nikki’s house he  told me their three cars were also dead.

        “Well I have got to get my milk!” Was all Anna could say when I told her that all the cars in the neighborhood were incapacitated. “It’s not like I can walk down street!”

         Mother saved the day, “Jerry, dear, why don’t you walk down to the grocery for Anna and pick up the milk. We’ll stay here and enjoy another cup of coffee.”

       As I left I heard her throw the dead bolt on the great oak front door. She hadn’t locked that door in over 25 years. She knew there was trouble. Down street was only a block away but as I came around the corner my whole world changed. Central  street was  a ghost town. Winter wind was the only sound on the deserted roadway. None of the stores including the grocery were opened. Duray’s tow truck was  in the middle of the  road, hood up with a  green Subaru hanging off the back. The driver had long since given up on the machine and moved on.

      I stopped at the police station to inquire about what was going on. Twenty other citizens had gathered there as well to hear the police chief read an official statement drafted by the town selectmen.

     “At three fifteen A.M. this morning the power in Winchendon went out. Nothing either electric or battery powered operates within the borders of the town as far as we can tell. We don’t know if this phenomenon goes beyond our borders or not. The town council is sending a committee to neighboring towns to investigate. As we get more information we will make it available to the public. Don’t panic.  Do your best to keep warm. Emergency shelter is available at the Whitcomb house where a wood furnace will be kept burning throughout the day.”

     When he finished reading the notice, he tacked it to the front door and exited  through to the  security locked offices, his world of safety. I went home and shared the news with Mother and Anna.

      I haven’t been able to reach any of my children or their mother since Sunday. The girls as far as I know are in Haverhill and my son is in Pennsylvania. Their mother I am hoping is  safe in her home in Gardner. But the world has changed. Yesterday I had four ways of knowing where they all were in a moments notice. Today I am cut off from everyone. Yesterday I could have flown across the ocean to see my sister in eight hours.  Today twelve miles might as well be Mars.

     I keep reminding myself that no matter what God is with us. That’s His promise and that, at least, doesn’t rely on electricity. The church survived the Middle Ages. We will survive  this, whatever this is. I just wonder how it fits into the prophetic world picture….Someone’s at the door.

Next week Pt. 2