Jim Rubart Trilogy
Page 87
Corin glanced around the room as if he could find something that would tell him how to react, what to say next, but there was nothing to save him. “Shasta, I—”
“Good-bye, Corin. Don’t call me again.”
Corin watched the display on his cell phone hibernate into darkness.
He slipped his phone into his jeans, then picked up the chair and moved it to the hidden bunker he’d constructed, which sat in the woods behind his home. Corin spent the rest of the day at his store trying to push his way through the haze of disappointment and trying to figure out what to do next.
He drove home that evening wanting only one thing. A night without having to think about anything other than if The Avengers movie next summer would be any good. But a nagging voice inside said he was about to be given a lot more to consider.
CHAPTER 38
Corin pulled into his driveway that night at seven thirty wanting to escape the pain of Shasta’s reaction but refusing to give in. He thought his brother hated him all these years. But it wasn’t hate. It was regret and longing mixed into an emotional Molotov cocktail Shasta refused to drink.
He sighed as he slid his satchel onto the kitchen counter and stared at Outside magazine sitting next to his espresso maker. It sat further forward than he remembered leaving it. The mind was already going and he was still six years away from forty.
Given the stress he’d been under lately, he was surprised he remembered anything.
He stopped in the bathroom, doused his face with cold water, slicked his hair back, and walked back to the kitchen. After grabbing two hard-boiled eggs out of the refrigerator, he trudged toward his dark living room, flopped onto his couch, grabbed the remote, and flicked on the TV.
Wait.
Movement. His heart pounded.
Something in the corner of the room had moved. Heat filled his body as he stared at the outline of a figure sitting in the chair in the far corner of the room to his right. A second later the lamp next to the chair snapped on and bathed Mark Jefferies in a soft gold light.
“Hello, Corin.”
“What are you doing in my house!” He leaped up and backed up toward his kitchen.
“Trying to get your attention.” Mark smiled, his ultrawhite teeth shouting confidence along with a dash of desperation at the same time. “I think it worked.”
“What do you want?”
“Just to talk.”
Corin waited for his heart rate to ease back toward normal. “Looks like you’re flying solo tonight.” Corin glanced around the room. “Where are your thugs?”
“They don’t like being called thugs. I don’t either. Don’t do it again.”
“But isn’t that what they are?”
Mark drilled Corin with his green eyes. “You want to die on this hill?”
“No worries about guilt by association?”
“I only have one person I’m worried about appearances for.”
“And that would be?”
“Christ.”
Unbelievable. If this guy was a representative of Jesus to the world, then the future of Christianity was in ocean-deep trouble. “I see.”
“No, I don’t think you do see.” Mark waved his hand around Corin’s living room. “I’m not interested in houses or cars or boats or vacation homes or fame. I’m interested in the truth. And speaking the truth makes some people mad.”
“And that’s why you have your, uh, bodyguards?”
Mark stretched his neck. “When I talk about the gay agenda and rights for the unborn, death threats fly at me like a hive of mad hornets. So I make the target on my back as hard to hit as possible.” Mark crossed his leg and beat out a rhythm on it with his hands.
“What do you want?”
“Like I’ve said from the start, I want to help you. You need someone on your side.”
“No thanks.”
“Why?”
“I didn’t sign up for this mission. If I could make the chair disappear tomorrow I would. The only reason I’ve hidden it is because of people like you.”
“Really?” Mark uncrossed his leg and leaned forward. “You would walk away? I don’t think so. If that were true, you would have jumped at my offer to buy the chair. I think you want answers.”
“Not interested.”
“I believe I have something that will persuade you to think differently.”
Corin strode to his front door and held it open. “Time to go, Jefferies.”
“No problem.” Mark raised his hands, then stood and lumbered toward the front door. Just before he got to Corin, he took a small dark book out of his coat and smacked Corin’s shoulder with it. “I came by because I thought you might want to take a look at this.” Mark held the book with his fingers on the edge as if displaying a framed photo. “Definitely interesting reading. It might enlighten you considerably.”
The cover read, The Chair of Christ: The Reality Among the Legends.
Adrenaline surged through Corin.
“I take it from the look on your face you haven’t read this.”
“Can I see it?” Why hadn’t Tesser talked about this book? Maybe he didn’t know about it. Or maybe he had the entire text memorized, but it wasn’t worth bringing up because Tesser considered it—in his words—“bunkum.”
Or was it a fake?
“Of course. But I’d want something in exchange.” As he passed Corin he held the book out just beyond reach. “Why don’t we plan on talking about this more tomorrow morning? Let’s say ten o’clock at Forest Lawn Park? I’ll bring a football and we’ll toss a few while we talk, all right?”
Football? This guy was swimming in the deep end without a paddle. “I need to think about that.”
“You need someone on your side, Corin. And you need to see this book.”
“I have plenty of people on my side.”
“Who? Your mysterious lady friend? Tesser?”
“Yes.”
“They’re not on your side.”
“Why do you say that?” Corin leaned against his front door and stopped a few feet from Jefferies.
“What do you really know about Tesser? You took some classes from him? You went on some trips together? And what do you know about Nicole?”
“I know enough.”
Mark waved his hand. “Yes, of course, you know her name. Her first name. What else? I haven’t been able to find anything on her.” Mark squinted. “We’re coming up blank. Which means unless she’s spilled her life story to you, you don’t know any more than I do.” Mark cocked his head. “Am I right?”
Heat rose to Corin’s face. Mark was right. Tesser he knew. But Nicole? He knew nothing about her. Only what she’d told him. And why had he taken that as truth? True, his gut told him he could trust her. An extraordinary lady. Wise. Caring. But he’d believed his ex-wife was telling the truth the whole time she was having an affair with his cousin. Ex-cousin if that was possible.
“How do I know you’re worthy of my trust? That you’re telling the truth?”
“You don’t.”
“But you’re still asking me to trust you, just like Nicole.”
“Yes.”
“I let you see the chair, you let me see your book.”
“Exactly.” Mark licked his lips. “Plus I want to meet Nicole.”
“I don’t think that’s going to happen.”
“You can at least ask her.”
Corin looked at the book and at Mark. Then he dropped his arm and took a step back. “I’ll think about it.” Corin motioned for Jefferies to leave. “I’ll let you know in twenty-four hours.”
Mark stared at him for ten seconds before turning and walking out the door.
Corin settled onto his couch, flicked on the TV, pulled up Ir
on Man on Netflix, and watched it for an hour. An hour in which he wrestled with the possibility of Nicole having fooled his gut into trusting her when her trust wasn’t warranted.
As his clock struck midnight, he still hadn’t reached a conclusion.
Time to go wrestle his dreams.
Just like Shasta. Like brother, like brother.
Mark had planted a seed of doubt, and Corin wasn’t sure if that seed was a flower to be watered, or if he should take weed killer to the idea and scorch the life out of it.
Tomorrow after he closed the store, he’d try to get an answer straight from the gardener.
CHAPTER 39
Corin watched Nicole sit as if carved in stone on a park bench too close to the waters of Woodmoor Lake. Only ten yards between her and the lapping waves. Had she sat that close to the lake with intent?
The sun lit her hair and turned its white shades whiter in spots and made her profile stand out in stark contrast to the gold and red shades of a November afternoon behind her. It looked like her eyes were closed.
As he stared at her all doubts Mark Jefferies had stirred the night before were swept away by the breeze meandering off the lake.
He was still staring at her three minutes later when she turned and spied him. She smiled, blinked, then closed her eyes again and resumed her imitation of Lady Liberty.
As Corin approached Nicole, he studied the undulations in his nemesis and for the millionth time tried to make peace. You survived. You were a kid. Let the fear go! But the roar of his heart said never.
“We have to stop meeting like this. People will start to talk,” Corin said when he reached Nicole and sat beside her.
“Let them.” Nicole turned and rested her elbow on the back of the bench. “How have you been, Corin?”
“The chair continues to make life interesting.”
“That I don’t doubt.” She smiled. “Did you keep your commitment? Did you call your brother?”
“Yes.”
“And?”
“We had the longest conversation we’ve had since the accident.”
“Did he give an answer to your invitation?”
“Yes.” Corin leaned forward, elbows on his knees, fingers intertwined. “He will never sit in the chair. And probably will never speak to me again. I took my shot.”
“So what do you do now?”
“You don’t have that answer for me?” Corin tried to smile, sat back, and folded his arms. The sun spread diamonds across the surface of the lake, which made him squint against their power. But their power was nothing compared to the hold the water held over him. It squeezed him in the middle of the night when the nightmares came and he drowned again and again. It pummeled his mind as if he were in a washing machine.
Why hadn’t the chair healed him of that fear?
“And what about you, Corin. Did you sit in the chair again?”
“Yes.”
“And?”
“It healed me.”
“Of what?”
“My claustrophobia.”
“I’m glad.” Nicole nodded as if she had been expecting him to tell her that. “Do you believe now?”
“It’s crazy to say this, but I’m still not sure, even after being healed. Maybe Tori is right and all the healings came from our minds.” Corin kicked at the stones at his feet. “Do you really believe this chair was made by the Son of God?”
“I’m not sure it matters what I believe as much as what you believe.”
“I believe there’s some type of power attached to it.”
“Then you have your answer.”
“But it’s not the way you would answer the question.”
Nicole shook her head. “No.”
“Then what type of power do you think is in the chair?”
“Not yet.”
“Not yet, what?”
“It’s not time to answer.” Nicole reached in her pocket, took out a handful of seeds, and tossed them toward a sparrow that flitted on the grass on the other side of the path.
“Why not?” Corin gritted his teeth. All she ever seemed to give was nonanswers or cryptic replies that only led to more questions.
She smiled at Corin but didn’t answer.
“Tell me!” He leaned toward her. “If I’d convinced Shasta to sit in the chair, would it have healed him?”
She patted his hand in the same way Tesser often did. “I do not know. I am not God.” She threw more seeds for another sparrow that had joined the first. “I listen to His voice. I follow where He leads me. I hope I am listening with ears to hear.”
“What does that mean?”
“That’s it’s not yet time to tell you what I believe to be true about the chair.”
“When will it be time?”
“When it’s time.”
Corin let his gaze follow the shoreline from the far left of the lake to the far right. There was beauty in the water. Part of him could reach back to a time where he loved the water, when he longed for summer afternoons full of cascading down a river in inner tubes too big for him or any of his friends, of finding tree branches over the water strong enough to handle a rope and a swinging boy. And of racing through the water in swim meets, pinning another blue ribbon to the wall of his room.
“The chair didn’t heal me of my fear of the water.”
“No.” Nicole clasped and unclasped her hands.
“Why not?”
“I don’t know.” She glanced at him with her piercing blue eyes. “He knows.”
The look in her eyes unnerved him. So confident. So knowing. So . . . “Who are you?”
“A friend.”
“You’re more than that.”
“Do you think Tesser believes the chair holds the power of God?”
“How do you know I’ve been talking to Tesser? Have you been spying on me?”
“Most assuredly. We’ve already talked about this.” She laughed like liquid light. “That chair is too much of a lightning rod not to keep tabs on the person it’s been given to.”
“What about the chair itself? Aren’t you worried about it?”
“Not as much. It doesn’t match my concern for you.”
Corin turned to her with a question she might not answer, but he’d be able to learn something from how she responded. “Are you a descendant of the order that swore to protect the chair?”
Nicole smiled and slid her eyeteeth over her lower lip. “It sounds like your studies with the professor have enlightened you.”
“True.”
“And have you enjoyed what you’ve learned?”
“You’re not avoiding the question, are you?”
“Most assuredly.”
“But if you were to answer the question, how would you respond?”
Nicole smoothed the nonexistent wrinkles in her pleated slacks. “I would tell you if the fantastical legends purported in Tesser’s book were true, that yes, I would likely fit the profile.”
“Mark Jefferies wants to meet the legend.”
“He does, hmm?”
“Badly.”
“That’s interesting.”
“Why?”
Nicole didn’t answer.
Two boys, eight, maybe nine years old, stumbled past them, one with an old NFL Junior Football grasped in his arms, the other tugging on it with his arms and the full weight of his body.
“Give it up!” The boy without yanked hard on the ball.
“Make me!” the other said, twisting to pull away.
“I will!”
Corin grimaced as the war raged between the two boys. Had he and Shasta fought the same war thousands of times as they’d grown up? Or was it ten thousand? He smiled. Their fights alwa
ys ended in them making up and building a jump for their bicycles or climbing the tallest tree in the woods across the street from their house.
But their war ended ten years ago, after he’d made his brother ski off a ledge into a world where one side had retreated beyond the battlefield to a realm Corin couldn’t reach.
The pain of yesterday’s conversation continued to echo in his mind as loud as summer thunder. Corin gave a quick shake of his head, as if to purge his mind, and then turned to Nicole. “Are you the lady from the legend?”
“Corin, you don’t need to ask me that question again. You know who I am. You need to choose to believe or not believe. In me. In the chair. In yourself.”
“Me?”
“Yes. Choose to believe you are the one the chair is to go to. That you will write the next chapter in the legend, because I think deep inside, you believe fully in the chair and are coming to believe in its Maker.”
She was right; he had taken the idea of the chair deep into his heart. Strongly. It gave him a purpose. Something of lore, of legend. Not a comic book, but real life.
“But you were supposed to give the chair to a daughter, a direct descendant, not some stranger.” Corin hesitated and rubbed the bench with the palms of his hands. “Did you never marry? Didn’t you have a daughter to pass the chair to?”
“Yes, I married.” Nicole pursed her lips and stared at the lake.
“And?”
“And yes, I had a daughter.”
Corin wasn’t sure how to ask the next question so he simply stated it. “And is she alive?”
“She is not.”
“I’m sorry.”
“As am I.” She patted his hand then. “Thank you, Corin.”
For the first time, Nicole’s eyes clouded and moisture filled them. She tried to laugh as she wiped her cheek with the back of her fingers. “It was a long time ago.”
“What was?”
“Nothing.” Nicole blinked back more tears.
“I didn’t mean to pry.”
She smoothed back her hair and didn’t speak till at least a minute had passed. “I didn’t get to say good-bye.”