As a Thief in the Night (13 page)

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Authors: Chuck Crabbe

BOOK: As a Thief in the Night
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Ezra, being a helpless extremist in thought but not in deed, felt, almost immediately, that he was on familiar ground.

He liked the young people that he had met there. Some had cars and they would pick him up when they went out to witness in the streets and malls and restaurants. They passed out little comic books called tracts that had cartoons about temptation and the apocalypse. Some of them left the little stories in public washrooms on urinals and the backs of toilets. Ezra participated when they prayed and sang and listened to the older ones talk about all the wonders Christ had performed in their lives. He struggled with the words they asked him to speak but often spoke them anyways. Then, after he had given one strained utterance or another, or after he had raised his hands with his friends, a dread washed over him that he had crossed some holy line and betrayed the God his mother and Elsie had raised him with.

But there was another part of him. It was the one that told him he had only turned to the question of God because the world had rejected him. He found comfort in turning his face away from it only because he knew
it
had first turned away from
him
. It was not some high virtue that had led him to the church and away from evil. If only evil had embraced him! God would have never heard his voice again. If only all those scantily clad girls had invited him into their pants instead of ignoring him. Had the thieves invited him out to pillage with them he would have never dropped a single coin in the collection plate. He knew this from the small tastes he'd had.  There were a few boys from the youth group who were thought to behave badly. After they had eaten with the others they would go off on their own and buy packs of matches, light them on fire, and leave them burning in rows in the middle of the street. Ezra had gone with them a few times. They bought spray paint and used it to write swear words on the brick walls of the plazas and schools. He hungered to do these things and worse. But then, when he had done them, he was struck with remorse so deep that he thought only suicide could heal his bleeding conscience. Returning home he would search Elsie's face for signs that she knew what he had done, but he found none. His unspoken lies stung him. Then, for days, he would wish she had found out, just to be relieved of his lonely burden. So he would repent, having found that perhaps he had no stomach for evil after all, and return to God and prayer, taking solace in what he had been told: That God forgave everything if only one came to him with an open heart.

 

 

 

 

 

 

MESSENGER

 

 

A
ll the odd and devout families that attended the Pentecostal church had children and young men and women that belonged to one of three groups: the moderate ones, to which the Bird Man and most of the others Ezra hung around with belonged to; the extremists like Alex DaLivre; and the lost sheep, which included four or five boys and one girl named Demi Cullen.

For most of the time he had known her, Demi Cullen was Tom Mason's girlfriend. Tom delivered the Windsor Star to Ezra's house every day except Sundays, when there was no paper.
  Demi's parents attended Calvary Pentecostal Assembly, and that is why she went. They were British immigrants and spoke with an accent. It was common knowledge that Demi and Tom Mason not only had sex, but that they had sex often. Because of her carnal activities she was generally looked down on, but charitably accepted by the older members of the youth group.  She didn't seem to care much either way, and when she was done with Tom Mason, her eye fell upon Ezra.

Without a pause she put the word out to his disapproving friends, and they, though they disapproved, put the word out to him. He'd heard about her and Tom Mason right? He knew what kind of girl she was, didn't he? He wouldn't, would he? Demi Cullen had young firm breasts, and of course he would...
  She'd invited him to come to the house where she was babysitting that weekend. Nick Carraway, who was a year younger than Ezra, agreed to bicycle there with him.

It was a long bike ride. But on that hot day in May Nick Carraway became Ezra's best friend. They rode together along the country roads outside of Belle River. As they road they talked about girls, and Ezra told him the story of his family and his mother.
 

Nick and Ezra stopped at a store that sold drinks. They bought cold root beer in bottles that looked like real beer bottles, and Nick entered into a conspiracy with his new friend about all the things they knew would happen with Demi Cullen.

The house was old and was on land that had once been a farm. Weeds grew up around the old barns and pieces of wood were missing from the roofs. He thought about how rain would have gotten in if animals had still lived there. Barns like these, even if he was just driving by one, had always made Ezra sad. As they rode up the long lane they saw old rusting farm equipment through the broken barn doors. 

They laid their bikes down at one side of the crumbling concrete steps that led up to the entrance and knocked on the front door. Demi Cullen answered in a spaghetti strap top. She had big clay looking clumps of cover-up over her pimples.

"Hey, hon," she said and hugged Ezra. "Hi Nicky."

Hon? The feeling ran through his body as she pressed her chest up against his. Do girls know? Yes.

There were two little girls there. One was seven or eight and the other was just over a year and stumbled and fell through the huge mess of toys all over the living room floor. Ezra and Nick sat down on the couch, and she sat sideways on the chair at the other side of the room and pulled her legs up to her chest. The inside of the house smelled like cat piss. They talked about people at the youth group and she told him about some of the bad and awful things some of them had done. Ezra didn't believe her but when he looked at Nick he was smiling and nodding his head in agreement with her.  Nick would never have said those things himself but he didn't see anything wrong with confirming them.

"Please... Half those guys there have tried to get in my pants at one time or another.
  Mostly when they were backsliding, but they still did it."

"Backsliding?" Ezra asked.

"Backsliding is a word we use when someone has lost track of Jesus in his heart," she said. "For a long time I was backsliding, and so was my brother, but not anymore."

"I see."

"Alex has probably been the worst," she continued.

"Really?
  Alex?"

"Alex has been into a lot of shit. Drinking and drugs and he used to get into a lot of fights."

"What kind of fights?"

"In ninth grade Mike Shoe wanted to fight him and waited for him in the park near the school with a whole crowd of other kids to back him up. Alex walked right into the park after school. It was only him and Sam Redyard, and Alex walked right up through the crowd and got in Mike Shoe's face. Mike asked him if he wanted to fight and pushed him, and Alex hit him so hard in the face, and so fast, that Mike's blood exploded all over Alex's t-shirt. He probably hit him fifteen or twenty times before Mike could even breathe."

"Really?" Ezra smiled.

"Believe me when I tell you that Alex has been into a lot of shit."

"Didn't he and Mike Shoe fight again?" Nick asked. "My sister said something."

"Yup. And Alex kicked his ass again. But it wasn't as bad this time because Mr. Staley broke it up."

Ezra was interested. "So Alex is really tough?"

"Really tough," Demi answered. "Tom and him had a problem one summer and I told Tom to stay the hell away from him. And Tom's no wimp."

"You probably didn't know that Alex got arrested for dealing acid either."

"Nah!
  Come on."

"Ask Nicky. His parents kicked him out of the house for it."

Nick Carraway looked back from trying to fix one of the little girl's broken toys for her.

"Uh huh," he concurred.

"But he isn't like that now," Ezra said. "Kev was telling me that he's always standing on the cafeteria tables and preaching at lunchtime, and that he's always handing out those little cartoon tracts."

"He does.
Now
, at least...  He's not backsliding anymore."

The image of a man falling helplessly down a slippery slope popped into Ezra's mind.
  Then he saw another one of a young man plunging into the sea from a great height.

"Have you ever seen the tracks the Bird Man draws?"

"Why do you hang around with him?" she asked, sneering a little.

"I like the Bird Man," Ezra said, defending him.

She raised her eyebrows and looked away. There was an awkward silence and Nick, wanting to move things along for his new friend, changed the subject.

"So, what happened with Tom?" he asked.

"I told you. He and Alex had some sort of problem and I—"

"I meant between Tom and you."

"Oh, we broke up. He cheated on me."

Ezra and Nick both laughed out loud.

"It wasn't funny," she protested. She got up and pulled the toddler off the wooden staircase. "Anyway, they've probably been telling you, Ezra..."

"Telling me what?"

"That I like
you
now."

There it was. He sat still, attacked and happily embraced by what she had said. "Well, I heard that. I just wasn't sure if it was true."

"Well, it is."

"Oh."

"Do you think I'm pretty?"

"Yes."

"Good." She thought a little to herself.  She turned toward him. "Do you think I have nice tits?"

His head spun and a wide embarrassed grin broke across his face.

"Come on," she prodded, "do you?"

Ezra looked over at Nick, who was hiding his face in his hands.

"Yeah," he said tentatively, "I do."

"I'm glad," she answered. Demi smiled, but then the look on her face changed as something else occurred to her. "Will you say it out loud?"

"Say what?"

"That I have nice tits."

Nick flopped faced down on the couch and laughed out loud.

"You're not serious?" Ezra said.

"I am. I'm being really serious. I want you to say it."

"There's little kids here."

"The older one is watching TV in her parents' room, and the baby won't understand anyway. Come on..." she whined. "Please?"

"You have nice tits."

She squirmed happily and smiled. "Thank you," she beamed. "That made me happy."

The three of them sat around and talked for a while longer. She brought out a bag of cookies and they ate them all. Then they had to go because the people she was babysitting for would be home soon and she wasn't allowed to have anyone over. She hugged him again when they were leaving. "I'll see you on Friday," she said.

Demi Cullen was the first girl he ever kissed. He kissed her in the back of her parents' van with her father driving and her mother sitting in the passenger seat. A group of kids including Demi's brother Michael, Alex DaLivre, and Nick Carraway had been at Calvary for a youth rally with music and prayer. He was worried that her parents might see them but Demi said they wouldn't mind. She leaned over on him and put her hand on his leg. Ezra felt like a boy his age already should have kissed several girls but he had never kissed even one. He didn't want her to know so he decided that it was better to go right into the French kiss, which he knew nothing about except from description. He tilted her chin up towards him and went right into it. It was a bit awkward and their teeth hit once but it was warm and wet and he wanted more. They made out in the back of the van right in front of Nick Carraway and the others.

Ezra stopped to look at her mother and father in the front seats. They must have seen them kissing, he thought, but they just continued on driving and talking. Demi again squeezed his leg where she had laid her hand.
  Her father stopped at each of their houses to drop them off.  After they had brought Nick home, Ezra kissed her one more time and then moved up to the seat beside the sliding door. He put his hand on the handle as they pulled up in front of his driveway. 

"Is this where you live?" her father asked, apparently a little surprised that the house was on the lakeshore.

"Yeah."

"Do your parents own this house?" Mrs. Cullen asked.

"No. They're renting it until we go back home."

"And where is it again that you've come from?"

"We're from Walpurgis."

"And where's that now?"

"It's near Cambridge and Waterloo."

"Demi's grandparents live in Waterloo," her father chimed in.

Ezra looked back at Demi. She looked warm and vulnerable in the dark and he wanted to climb back into the rear seat with her. Instead, he said, "Bye, Demi."

She twinkled her fingers at him lightly. "Bye, Ezra."

After that he often went to visit her at the farmhouse where she babysat. Sometimes he would ask Elsie to drop him off there, and other times he would lie to her about where he was going and ride his bike. He felt like Elsie was more or less on to the whole thing. She had seen Demi Cullen wearing her tight shirts and too much mascara and had not approved. Two or three times Ezra was convinced that Elsie had dropped him off and then parked and snuck back to spy on him through some window (which she had). But Elsie had every reason to worry.

Demi would send the seven-year-old upstairs to watch television, or fabricate some reason for punishing her and send her to her room. Then she would kiss him, and he would lie on top of her on the couch, and they would grind against each other. He would feel her breasts through her top, but whenever she tried to undo his belt or put her hand down the front of his pants he would stop her. He didn't know why he stopped her, but he just couldn't seem to allow her to do that. Not yet.

 

That year Ezra Mignon grew five inches and put on forty pounds. The transition was a welcome one and he made it without the awkwardness that many adolescents struggle with. He would have to play high school football the next year, but he did not want to do it at St. Anne's.
  He didn't like the catholic school and asked Gord and Elsie if he could transfer to the Public High School in Belle River where his new friends went. His aunt and uncle decided it was probably for the best: he would finish the year at St. Anne's, but he could begin the eleventh grade at Belle River. So he waited, and got bigger.

Mass at St. Anne's had just finished, and they had to walk back to the school. During the service he had waited in line and received communion, but of course he had not swallowed the wafer.
  Instead, he had stuffed it into the pocket of his uniform pants. Students broke off into groups and began to lazily make their way back to school in the warm sun. Ezra thought about the wafer as he came down the church steps. He had just begun to agonize about whether or not he had committed some irreversible sin when he heard his name being called. "Mr. Mignon!"   The church's front lawn and sidewalk were crowded with hundreds of students. One group of boys near the street pushed each other around playfully. Girls lit cigarettes for the walk back.  Ezra looked around. "Mr. Mignon!" the voice came loud and sure of itself.

Ezra spun round as the last of the students passed through the church's heavy double doors. As he did, his eyes fell upon a beautiful, dark haired girl with a kilt that definitely did not meet code requirements. Slowly, his eyes wandered up her shapely legs to where her skirt moved in and out of place as she walked. As it moved he could see a bit further up. "Mr. Mignon!" He raised his eyes, and just past her, leaning with his back against a tree, was the man who was calling him. It was one of the teachers from the school. Ezra was not in any of his classes, so he wasn't sure how the man had come to know his name. He had come across him in the hallways a few times, mostly during the lunch hours, and in fact, if it hadn't been for the way the man dressed, he probably wouldn't have recognized him at all. He had the look of what Elsie would have called a "scholar". In front of him he held the old but tasteful briefcase he always carried, his pants were checkered and threadbare, and on his head of neat dark hair he wore a black bowler hat. Several times Ezra had prepared himself to be questioned by the man as to why he was in the halls when he shouldn't be, had set his excuse on the tip of his tongue, but had never needed to employ it, because the teacher had always walked past him with an easy, permissive smile. Ezra wondered why the "scholar" was calling him now.

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