The Last Sin Eater

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by Francine Rivers

“Oh, Miz Elda, Miz Elda—”

  “Leave go, I say!” She pushed me away and rose from her chair unsteadily, her eyes bright. “Now come on into the house and get those clothes off. Get a blanket around ye before ye catch yer death and end up in heaven before I do. Ye can tell me everything when ye’re bundled up.”

  “Everything’s all right now, Miz Elda. Everything’s going to be fine.”

  But it wasn’t fine. Not right away, anyhow. I’d run off so fast, I hadn’t heard everything the man of God had tried to tell me, and I wasn’t prepared for what was to come.

  I didn’t realize I was entering a battle—one I could win only by trusting in the Lord. And trust, for me, ain’t easy to do. It’s a learned thing, comin’ one step at a time. I knew nothin’ of the world and who’d been let loose upon it. But I had been so desperate for help, filled with sorrow, drowning in guilt.

  I never once figured on God using me the way he did.

  TH I R T E E N

  Fagan came by Miz Elda's cabin the next morning. "What happened? You look different.”

  “How so?” I couldn’t help wondering if I looked as good on the outside as I felt on the inside. I stood on the porch, balancing a basket of dirty laundry on my hip the way Mama sometimes did.

  “You’re smiling. Ain’t seen you smile much. You look pretty.”

  I felt shy of a sudden, wondering if I looked foolish to him with the heat coming up in my face. I was mortified, especially after what I’d told Iwan.

  “What ye turning all red for?”

  I might have gained some semblance of calm if he hadn’t gone and said that! “Nothing.” The shine clouded over. “What’re ye doing here so early?” I said, wishing he’d stop looking at me like I was some new bug he’d found.

  He held up a string of trout I hadn’t noticed. “Thought Miz Elda might like some fresh fish. She up and about yet?”

  “Nope.”

  “Late for her. She’s an early riser.”

  “We talked near all night.”

  “About what?”

  “As if it’s any of your business.” I came down the steps.

  “Why’re ye so het up of a sudden? What’d I do?”

  “If ye gotta know, I went down and heard the man of God last night. That’s what we talked about.”

  Fagan’s face tensed up, and he gave a quick look around. “Ye shouldn’t talk about him so open like. Ye can’t know who’s around to hear ye. Do ye want these or not?” He held out the fish.

  “She’ll be much obliged, I’m sure.” I set the basket down and took the fish. “I’ll put them in some water.” I went back up the steps and inside, not reckoning on Fagan following. He stopped just inside the doorway and looked around. It was a dank-smelling, small, mean cabin, but some improved from my sweeping and washing the table and dishes and opening the shutters to let some air in. I ladled water into a bowl and laid the fish in it.

  “Your folks know ye went down there?” he said in a whisper.

  “Nope. If it weren’t for Miz Elda, I wouldn’t have been able to go. She’s helping me out.”

  “How so?”

  “I couldn’t go nowhere without Pa asking where I went and what I was doing. And then Mama started asking questions. So Miz Elda said she was feeling poorly and wanted me to stay with her awhile and help her out. So here I am.”

  He glanced toward the bed where Miz Elda was sleeping. “She sounds pretty bad.”

  “She always sounds that way when she’s sleeping.”We stood a moment and listened to her snore and wheeze and whistle. I giggled. “She makes more noise than Papa and Iwan put together.”

  “Don’t reckon you’ll be getting much sleep as long as ye’re staying here,” Fagan whispered, grinning.

  “Don’t matter.” I headed for the door. I wanted to talk more to Fagan and dinna want to wake Miz Elda. “I was doing some chores for her,” I said when we were on the porch. I went down the steps and picked up the basket. “I already swept out the house and washed the table and dishes. Her clothes ain’t been washed in a week of Sundays and neither has her bedding. I figured on doing that and restuffing her mattress as soon as she gets off it. There’s hay and dried clover in the barn.”

  “What’s got into you?”

  “I gotta do summat until nightfall. Makes the time pass quicker to be busy, and it’ll help Miz Elda. She ain’t been up to it in a long time. You want to help? Her vegetable garden needs weeding and watering.”

  “That’s woman’s work.”

  “Well, then, I guess ye can’t be bothered hanging around here, can ye? I’ll tell her ye brought the little fish.”

  “Cool down.” He followed me. “If ye tell me what that preacher said to you last night, I’ll chop wood to last a week.”

  I told him, leaving not the smallest detail out. I knew by the look on his face that I’d have company that night.

  Miz Elda came out past noon, a ragged blanket wrapped around her, her gray hair sticking up all over her head. “Cadi Forbes! Where in blazes are my clothes?!”

  I ran and took her dress and undergarments off the line and ran to her with them. “I washed ’em, ma’am. I’ve been so busy, I forgot to put ’em back inside for ye.”

  “Busy doing what?”

  “Weeding and watering your garden.” She was staring across at Fagan stacking firewood. “He brought some trout for ye this morning. They’re in a pan of water on your table.”

  “Too small for Brogan most likely.”

  I took offense for his sake. “Fagan cares about you, Miz Elda. Else he wouldn’t go against his father and come see ye at all.” I nodded toward him. “He’s chopping ye firewood.”

  “I can see that. I ain’t blind yet.” She eyed me dolefully. “Pretty quick to his defense, ain’t ye? How long’s he been here?”

  “Since just after sunup.”

  “That long? I suppose ye spilled the beans to him about last night.”

  “Fagan’s going with me soon as he can sneak out.”

  She frowned. “Think what ye’re doing, Cadi Forbes.”

  “It was his own idea to go, Miz Elda. I dinna ask him.”

  “Ye’re fanning a fire in that boy that could burn him up and send him straight to kingdom come.”

  “Maybe he’ll get saved just like me.”

  “That’s fine for the hereafter, but as for now he’s still got to live with his pa.”

  “He might get a tanning for going down there, but once they hear—”

  “Maybe ye’re the one who needs eyes to see, Cadi, girl. Have ye never noticed the marks that boy bears or asked yerself why he’s away from home from dawn to dark? Brogan’s beaten the spirit out of his mama and brothers, but there’s summat in Fagan that won’t be conquered.”

  There was an odd look in Miz Elda’s eyes when she spoke of Fagan—part pride, part despair. She stood watching him a moment and then looked at me again. “Go careful or reap the whirlwind!”

  Fagan came back shortly after dark. His father and older brothers had said they were going coon hunting. “Thought he’d leave Douglas home, he was so mad.”

  “Why?”

  “Douglas put too much powder in his gun again. Pa said he’s going to blow himself to kingdom come yet if he don’t pay more mind to what he’s doing. Ma went to bed.”

  “She sick?” Miz Elda wanted to know.

  “Just tired.” He looked away. “She gets real sad sometimes.

  Don’t say why.”

  The old woman stared off into the darkness. “Comes of getting what you thought you wanted and finding out it ain’t what you thought it would be.”

  Fagan looked at her, something flickering across his face.

  Miz Elda seemed more troubled as time went on. “I’ve been remembering things from long past. I dreamed about my mother last night,” she said. “She was sitting before the hearth looking so young. She was sewing and I was a little girl again.

  She said, ‘The eyes of the Lord are in every pla
ce, Elda, watching the evil and the good.’ And I asked her why he dinna do nothing to make things right.”

  I leaned forward. “What did she say?”

  “She said he was waiting.”

  “Waiting for what, ma’am?”

  “Well, now, if I knew that I wouldn’t be so troubled by the dream, would I?”

  “She was just asking, Miz Elda.”

  “Always asking questions,” Miz Elda said. “Always looking into what’s none of her business and going where she shouldn’t ought to go. That’s her trouble, and now she’s gone and got us both doing it and no telling where it’ll end!”

  “You’re just afeared for us, Miz Elda, and ye don’t gotta be.” I was too eager to hear more from the man of God to be upset or dampened by her misgivings. “I’m going before it gets any darker.”

  Fagan got up, as ready as I was.

  “God help ye both,” Miz Elda said, hands tight folded in her lap. “God help ye.”

  “Hold up,” Fagan said as I ran ahead. He could not keep up with me for I fair flew o’er the ground. I had waited all day to run down the mountainside, across the meadow to the river. I waded in without hesitation, arms outstretched to keep my balance. On the far shore, the man of God arose, ready to speak.

  “Fagan’s come with me, sir. He wants to hear what God has to say, too.”

  The man stood his ground, a black shadow against a starlit sky. “Have you heard the name of Jesus Christ, boy?”

  “Only in a curse, sir.” Fagan’s voice shook.

  Heat poured into my cheeks. “Not from me, sir,” I said quickly.

  “Not from her.” Fagan took my hand. His palm was sweating, and he was trembling.

  “Be still,” the man said softly. He stretched out his hands in welcome. “Sit and I will tell you of the coming of the Lord.”

  He had lit no fire, and as he spoke night wrapped us in a protective blanket. We paid heed to nothing but the sound of his deep voice as he took us back to the creation of the world and the fall of man, the law brought by the prophet Moses, who talked with the Lord face-to-face, and then on through the prophets who called for repentance and were killed for their faith.

  “And then, in the days of Herod, the king of Judea, a far-off country, lived a priest of the Jews named Zechariah and his wife Elisabeth. And they were both righteous before God, walking blameless in the commandments and ordinances of the Lord. And they had no child . . .”

  I listened intently, drinking in his words. The angel Gabriel had appeared to the priest as he served before the Lord, telling him his wife would have a son named John. When he didn’t believe the angel, he was struck mute until the child was born. God also sent the angel Gabriel to a city of Galilee named Nazareth, to a virgin named Mary espoused to Joseph, a good and humble carpenter. Both were descended from the house of David, from which all knew the Anointed One of God would come forth.

  “And the angel said unto her, ‘Fear not, Mary: for thou hast found favor with God. And behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name Jesus, God is salvation! He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David; and he shall reign over the house of Jacob forever; and of his kingdom there shall be no end.’

  “When Mary was great with child, a decree went out from Caesar Augustus that all the world should be taxed. Joseph took Mary to Bethlehem. When her labor pangs began, there was no place for them to stay, so Joseph found shelter for them in a stable. Mary gave birth to Jesus, the Messiah, the Son of God, God the Son Almighty. She wrapped the babe in swaddling clothes and laid him in a manger. The angel of the Lord appeared to the shepherds and told them of Jesus’ birth, and the heavenly host praised God.

  “The angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream and told him to take the young child and his mother and flee to Egypt, for King Herod wanted to kill the child. Determined to kill the Messiah, Herod sent forth men and slew all the children two years old and younger who were in Bethlehem and in all the cities and towns.

  “In time, Herod died, and an angel of the Lord appeared again to Joseph in a dream and told him to take the child and his mother and return to the land of Israel. So Joseph took Jesus and Mary to Galilee and lived in a city called Nazareth. There, God the Son grew and walked among men. God, the Creator of all the universe, led the life of a common carpenter until he was thirty years old.

  “Then came John the Baptist, preaching in the wilderness of Judea and calling people to repent, saying the kingdom of heaven was at hand.”

  Fagan and I sat transfixed, envisioning all as the man of God’s voice rose.

  “And Jesus, when he was baptized, went up straightway out of the water: and, lo, the heavens were opened unto him, and John saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and lighting upon him. And lo a voice from heaven, saying, ‘This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.’”

  The man bowed his head and fell quiet so long, Fagan and I looked at one another. It was Fagan who spoke. “What happened then, sir?”

  “Then was Jesus led by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil.” He raised his head, and I knew he was looking at us. I could feel his intensity. “The same devil who holds this valley prisoner and wants to keep it in darkness; the same devil who will come against you.”

  The hair on the back of my neck stood up. I’d known all my life of the existence of evil. I wanted to forget it existed in the world.

  “The same devil dared test the LordGod, Jesus Christ, our Savior and Lord. Satan is his name, and he is the great deceiver, full of pride, a murderer, and the father of lies. He tried to deceive Jesus, but the Lord prevailed against him. Only the Lord prevails.

  “When Jesus returned from the wilderness, he dwelt in Ca-pernaum by the Sea of Galilee and there began to choose his disciples among the simple, hardworking fishermen. Twelve men he called, common men all, with nothing to hold them together but the Lord.

  “And God the Son, Jesus Christ, made the blind see, the deaf hear, the crippled walk, the dumb speak. He cast out demons and cleansed lepers. He stilled a storm and walked on water and brought the dead back to life.

  “And then the powers of darkness gathered. Men plotted against him, and one of his own betrayed him. He was taken while in prayer, tried in the middle of the night, spit upon, beaten, scourged, and mocked.

  “And then Jesus was crucified.”

  The darkness around us was so quiet, my ears rang. “Crucified?” I whispered. “What does it mean, sir?”

  He stretched his arms out wide. “They nailed his hands and feet to a cross and stood it up before the people where all could see his shame. And they left him there between two thieves to die a slow and agonizing death.”

  “But why?” Fagan said, his voice choked with emotion. “He dinna do anything wrong!”

  “He was despised and forsaken of men, a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief. He was pierced through for our transgressions, crushed for our iniquities. The chastening that should fall upon us fell upon him, and by his scourging we are healed. We are all of us like sheep that have gone astray. Each of us has turned his own way, but the Lord has caused the iniquity of us all to fall upon him. Jesus rendered himself the guilt offering for our sins. He poured out himself to death, numbering himself with the transgressors, bearing our sins so that we might be saved.”

  “Is that the way of it then?” Fagan said grievously. “Must we suffer for the sins of others?” He put his head down and wept.

  I had never seen him cry before and didn’t know what to do. The sound of his brokenness made me ache for him.

  “They took him down from the cross, and a rich man laid the Lord in a tomb hewn out of a rock. A great stone was rolled over the doorway, and Roman guards stood guard round about so that the seal might not be broken and the body stolen away.”

  The man of God stood, his arms held up exultantly as dawn’s first
light edged over the mountains to the east. “And an angel of the Lord came! And the Roman guards fell upon the ground in a faint. The angel rolled away the stone, and Jesus arose. He arose! Death could not hold him in the grave!”

  Fagan fell forward on his face.

  The man of God paced, the excitement spilling from him as the words of the Lord spilled forth from his lips.

  “Jesus appeared first to Mary of Magdala and then to his dis- ciples and to hundreds afterward. He walked upon the earth for forty days and then ascended into heaven to take his place at the throne of God.”

  Goosebumps rose all over my body. My hair stood on end. Trembling, I found myself clambering forward to my knees, murmuring praises to the Lord and weeping.

  “The Lord God, Jehovah Roi, reigns forevermore!”

  My heart swelled within me until I thought it would burst. “He reigns.” Morning light pushed back the darkness. “He reigns!” My mind did not fully grasp it all, but my heart responded along with the Spirit dwelling within me.

  The man stood arms held high, head thrown back, his face alight, his eyes closed. Fagan drew back, sitting on his heels and gazed up at him, watchful, waiting, face pale and wet.

  My trembling ceased and I sat back upon my heels, feeling content and peaceful. I never wanted to leave this place. The man of God lowered his arms to his sides and looked down at us. He smiled tenderly at Fagan. “Do you believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the Living God?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  The man held out his hand to him. Clasping my hands together, I followed them to the river. I was filled with joy as I watched Fagan be baptized. There were two of us now—two who had heard the word of the Lord and believed. When Fagan came up out of the water, I knew he’d been washed clean of sins and he wouldn’t have to worry anymore about bearing those of his father.

  And then I saw his eyes as he came toward me. They burned with an inner light not so different from the man who walked beside him—and sudden fear pricked my soul.

  Oh, what would happen to us now with Fagan looking the way he did? He looked near aglow, on fire inside. Two of us had been buried and raised in Christ, two out of a hundred souls in our highland valley. What would Brogan Kai do when he found out what his son had done?

 

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