“Payday is coming!
It’s at the door already. These
evil Sixties have debauched our
nation. The whole West Coast is
tainted with the sex and moral decay of Sodom.
Soon it’s coming to a screeching halt.
Payday is just around the corner.”
The sermon thunderstormed out of Brother Saul’s sweat-beaded
face, heading for an audience with faces filled with wonderment. The forty-two of them soaked up his
frenzy--all except the children sleeping on their quilts down on the hard plank
floor, and the one willow-slim young blonde with blueberry eyes that glanced
with agitated indecision toward the doorway.
“Mikele!” Aloma
Powers shot a scathing whisper at her, but she wasn’t listening. Instead, she slid out of the school desk
that enclosed her like a barely-open trap.
Not stopping, she half-tiptoed and half-ran from the sultry school room
out into the freshness of the night.
She had heard her mother’s blaring whisper. Everybody always heard her mother.
The girl’s pursed lips whistled with relief as soon as she
was out the door. Out there, her
frustrated sigh could blend into the blackness blanketing the pickups and old
cars parked beside the school. In that
darkness lay the dusty two-mile road to the edge of Powell’s main-street drag.
As she rushed past the crossroads corner where the school
house stood, she glanced back at the building’s wall with light from three long
windows outlining tree trunks standing guard around the children’s swings and
slides. “Oh, God in Heaven, are you out
here? I’m asking you again if you’re
ever gonna hear my prayers. Please
don’t listen to my preacher dad in
there--unless you’re listening to me, too.
Even though you know I’m in an awful battle with him.”
Consternation tightened in her as two bouncing headlights
appeared on the road in front of her, with dust clouds dimming them. She turned her head sideways from the light
and walked in the weedy grass above the ditch that cut its dark way down beside
the narrow road. “Please, Father,” her
prayer persisted, “help me get away from him before my life is ruined. But maybe it already is.”
She felt her face flush hot with panic as she saw the car
slowing down. Her steps edged closer to
the ditch as she kept hurrying. The car
stopped in the road beside her. Dusty
weeds scratched at her legs beneath the gathered skirt as she walked faster,
almost stumbling, and not looking at the car.
“Hey, Kelly--” A
male voice called from the open window on the driver’s side. ‘It’s me, Paul Teller. I’ve been helping out at the mailing office,
you know.”
She halted, bending to slap her lower legs free from the
crawly, itchy things that seemed to be all over them.
“You recognize me, don’t you?” he asked, opening the door
and taking three steps toward her, while the motor droned and headlights beamed
through a fog of dust. “Can I take you where you’re going? I hate to see you
walking out here at night.”
“Thanks, Father,” her lips said silently in the direction of
the stars. “Just help me. Don’t forget me.”