The Frank Peretti Collection: The Oath, the Visitation, and Monster

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The Frank Peretti Collection: The Oath, the Visitation, and Monster Page 95

by Frank E. Peretti


  That did faze her. She placed her hand over her heart and I thought she’d stopped breathing. “Who are you?”

  “I’m Travis Jordan,” I repeated. “I’m a schoolteacher from Antioch, Washington. I was also a minister in the Pentecostal Mission church for over fifteen years.”

  “Have you seen my son?” she nearly whispered.

  “Yes, I have. He’s in Antioch. We’ve visited on many occasions.”

  She was obviously starving for news, any news. “Is he all right?

  What’s he doing?”

  “Hello!” With a booming, gravelly, slurred voice, the reverend rolled up. “Ernest Cantwell!” He offered his bent, half-limp hand.

  “And who might you be?”

  “Travis Jordan,” I said, knowing his toothy smile was going to vanish the moment I said more.

  Sister Cantwell said it first. “He knows our son.” The reverend seemed perplexed. She further clarified, “Justin.”

  The smile vanished and that glare intensified. “So what are you doing here?”

  With my eyes I indicated that other people were still around.

  “Is there someplace we could talk privately?”

  “What about?”

  “About Justin,” his wife whispered with a plea in her voice.

  “Conway!” the reverend hollered, and a man near the door immediately turned our way. He was big and had those cold, animal eyes required of any good tavern bouncer. Oh brother, I thought, I’m going to get thrown out of here.

  “Ernest . . .” Sister Cantwell pleaded.

  Reverend Cantwell spun his chair around and started wheeling toward the center aisle, zigzagging between folks visiting and praying. “Conway, open up the office. We have to meet with this, this, whatever he is.”

  I stood there. Sister Cantwell gave me a gentle touch on the arm, prodding me. “Please.”

  I weaved past the petitioning saints and down the center aisle with Sister Cantwell right behind me and Conway the bouncer dead ahead. He had opened a door on the left side of the foyer and now stood there while the reverend wheeled inside. I followed the reverend, and the reverend’s wife followed me.

  We were in the pastor’s office. He wheeled himself behind his desk and hollered to Conway from there, “You want to hang around, Conway? I might need you.”

  Conway nodded a slow, insider’s kind of smile, and closed the office door as a sheriff would close a jail cell.

  “Have a seat,” said Cantwell.

  His wife already occupied one of the two available chairs. I planted myself in the other, my Bible and valise in my lap.

  The reverend glared at me a moment, then at his wife, then snapped at me with a flicker of his hand, “So, speak!”

  I reached into my valise and pulled out the photos and news clippings again. This was getting to be a routine. I passed the photos to Mrs. Cantwell, explaining who I was, where I was from, and what was going on up there—and how a young man had come to town acting like some kind of new, improved messiah. At first sight of the photos, Mrs. Cantwell gasped, her hand over her mouth.

  Tears filled her eyes.

  “Conway!” the reverend yelled, and the door burst open. Conway looked ready to pummel me. “I want to see these pictures!”

  Conway walked right in front of me, grabbed the pictures from Mrs. Cantwell, and handed them over to the reverend.

  “Stick around,” the reverend ordered, and Conway took his place against the door like an obedient, 280-pound Doberman.

  Cantwell studied the photos one at a time, his hands inept and fumbling. Then he threw them spitefully on his desk. “So what?”

  My eyes drifted to a picture on the bookshelf: Reverend and Mrs.

  Cantwell in their earlier years. Reverend Cantwell was standing.

  Cantwell didn’t appreciate my looking at it. He reached over and tried to grab it, fumbling the picture frame so that it fell face down with a loud smack. The cuff of his shirt sleeve was unbuttoned. I saw a jagged scar on his forearm, but looked away before he knew it. Conway stepped in and positioned the picture safely on the shelf, face down.

  “Is this man your son?” I asked, indicating the photos.

  “Our son is dead.”

  Mrs. Cantwell groaned in anguish. “Ernest, don’t say that!”

  He only reaffirmed it. “Justin is dead as far as I’m concerned.

  He’s dead to this house, dead to this church, dead to this town. We don’t want to see him again.” He used both hands to gather up the pictures. “And we don’t appreciate your bringing him back!” He handed the photos to Conway, who handed them back to me.

  “Sir, I’m not so sure I want him in my town either. I’m not here to defend him or meddle with the past—”

  “Then don’t!”

  Mrs. Cantwell pleaded, “Ernest—”

  He pointed a jagged finger at her. “And you be still! I’ve said all I’m going to say about this. Conway, show this man to the door!”

  Conway opened the office door and, valuing my life, I took my cue. I packed up my photos and clippings and got out of there. I could hear Mrs. Cantwell sobbing as I left, and her husband barking at her, “Stop that! Just stop that right now! He’s dead! He’s dead! ”

  Conway not only showed me to the door, he accompanied me clear across the street to my car. I scanned the surrounding street and sidewalks. Some people were still around, meaning there would be witnesses if this guy clobbered me. Unfortunately, they seemed to be making it a point not to look in our direction. We reached the car and I pulled the keys from my coat pocket.

  “Uh, listen, Conway, I’m not trying to stir up trouble. I have trouble and I’m trying to get some help. If you know anything—”

  “Let me give you some advice.” These were the first words I’d heard Conway speak. “Go home and take care of your own problems, and don’t bring ’em back here again.” He lowered his voice but didn’t sound any kinder. “Justin Cantwell is pure poison.

  That’s all you need to know. I ran him in several times and I never saw anybody come closer to being the devil than that kid.”

  “You ran him in?”

  “I’m the cop around here.”

  “Oh.” That did not make me feel safer.

  “He’s probably told you some really juicy tales about us, but he’s a liar. He’ll lie to you like you wouldn’t believe. Everything he says is a lie.”

  I thought of the scars on Cantwell’s arms and asked, “How did Pastor Cantwell end up in a wheelchair?”

  “Car wreck, six years ago.” He jerked his thumb toward my car door. I unlocked the door and climbed in. Conway held the door open so he could deliver his final message. “Get out of town, Mr.

  Jordan. Get out fast, and don’t come back, you got it?”

  I nodded and started my engine. “Got it.”

  So ended my visit to the Nechville Church of the True Gospel.

  BUT MY VISIT to the town of Nechville was not about to end so abruptly. Morgan, Kyle, and I had assumed I would actually be able to talk with someone and would need the time, so we included one night’s stay at a motel in the budget. I’d flown all night and driven all morning and I was tired. I was going to spend that money. I found a little motel at the far end of town and got a room. It was cheap but it was clean, and the bed was more than adequate for a man whose eyes were burning for sleep and whose heart was pained with frustration.

  I lay there on top of the bedspread, my wrist on my forehead, my eyes closed. The glaring expression and harsh voice of Reverend Cantwell kept replaying in my mind, as well as the tears and timid pleadings of Justin Cantwell’s mother. If “Justin Cantwell” was the question, the answer was sealed behind her tears and her husband’s defiance. I saw in her a mother mourning for a wayward son; I saw in him a dog growling, barking, and lathering from inside a parked car.

  “Precious Lord,” I prayed, “there’s got to be a way.”

  After fifteen minutes of stewing and praying, I opened m
y eyes. I was in Justin Cantwell’s hometown. Until Cantwell himself had an overwhelming change of heart—something on the order of getting saved—I would never be closer to the truth than I was right now. I was nearly exhausted but could not sleep because I had to know.

  And I would know. God help me, before I left this town, I would know.

  I knelt by the bed and, in prayer, grabbed the hem of Jesus’ garment. “Dear Lord, You’ve brought me this far. Please open the door.”

  “HI. I’m sorry to disturb you again, but if we could just talk—”

  The doctor’s wife didn’t wait for me to finish pleading. The moment she saw me, she swung the door open and invited me inside.

  Dr. Sullivan was sitting in a comfortable chair across from the sofa, still wearing his work jeans and tee shirt. He acknowledged me with his eyes and a warm smile but didn’t say anything. I gathered he was waiting to get a reaction from me.

  Sister Lois Cantwell was sitting on their couch, clutching a crumpled, wet handkerchief in her hands and weeping. The moment our eyes met, her sobs broke forth again and she covered her face. “Oh, praise God, praise God!”

  “I would say so,” said Dr. Sullivan. He extended his hand toward another chair. “Have a seat. It’s good to see you again.”

  “Really good,” his wife agreed.

  I sat across from Sister Cantwell. Mrs. Sullivan sat beside her, her hand on Sister Cantwell’s, and softly explained, “Lois told us about your visit at the church this morning.”

  I had to ask, “So where is Reverend Cantwell?”

  “He’s home taking a nap,” Lois answered. “I told him I was going to go see Laurie for a while.”

  “I’m Laurie,” Mrs. Sullivan explained.

  “And now here you are,” said the doctor. “We thought you’d left town.”

  I was stunned and afraid to presume what would happen next.

  “How is my son?” Lois asked.

  Now, that was a tough question. I tried to consider how I would answer, and it took time. “He’s . . . he’s all right physically, as far as I can tell.”

  “And what is he doing? Tell me again.”

  I took it slow, but didn’t try to soften it. “He’s allowing himself to be regarded as a new, improved version of Jesus. He’s performing miracles, healing the sick, the lame, and the blind. He’s preaching a new, superpotent religion that helps people have faith in themselves and what they can do. He’s set up headquarters at a ranch near town, and pilgrims are coming to Antioch from all over the country. The local economy is booming and people are excited.”

  It was interesting how news that sounded so good could produce such horrified reactions.

  “My God,” said the doctor.

  Lois silently shook her head in horror, then said in a barely audible, trembling voice, “I’m so sorry.”

  I added, “I believe he’s out to prove he can be a better Jesus because he’s quite unhappy with the real one—or at least his idea of the real one.”

  Lois absorbed that for a moment and then replied, “How could he feel otherwise?”

  Dr. Sullivan leaned forward and asked her, “Are we going to tell him?”

  She nodded emphatically, without hesitation.

  The doctor was at a loss. “Where do I start?”

  Lois started, straightening a little, looking directly at me. “Justin is my son, but I have to tell you, his miracles are from the devil. All his power comes from Satan. If he has touched or healed anyone, those people are in desperate trouble. Desperate trouble!”

  She looked at Dr. Sullivan as if needing his help.

  Dr. Sullivan began, “The, uh, the accident—”

  Lois jumped in again. “He was . . . he was just so angry at our church, at everything we were doing. He hated going, he hated our religion. He went the other way. Clear the other way. He . . .”

  She looked at the doctor again.

  “He’s a ticking time bomb,” he said, “and when he explodes, there are terrible results.” He kept looking at Lois as if to get her okay to proceed. “I don’t know what I believe about the devil, but something is driving him. There’s more there than just an angry young man. A severe psychosis, perhaps, or—”

  “He prayed to the devil. He told me that.”

  “Or indeed, something diabolical, something more than human, more than evil.”

  “We had to send him away. He couldn’t be around his father anymore.”

  “The accident. Let’s get that out.”

  Lois fell silent, her eyes closed in pain, her fist holding the wadded handkerchief over her mouth.

  Dr. Sullivan directed all his attention toward me. “You met Ernest Cantwell?”

  “Yes.”

  “So you understand he was severely injured some time ago.

  He has only partial use of his lower body and impaired use of his hands. His speech is affected, as well as some of his memory.

  Now—” he met the eyes of the others—“the rest of the town has been told he was in a car wreck, and that’s been the popular belief for over six years.” He looked at me again. “But there was no car wreck. No one has ever seen a wrecked car. The local police never looked into it, never investigated, never reported anything—”

  “Excuse me. Would that be Conway?”

  They all nodded knowingly.

  Dr. Sullivan said, “I understand you met him as well. Conway Gallipo is our chief of police and he’s also head deacon at the church.” He looked at Lois as he told me, “I guess we could say he’s Ernest Cantwell’s right-hand man.” Lois nodded in agreement.

  “His muscles, his bodyguard.” Lois nodded again. The doctor looked at me. “Anyway, he was helpful in spreading the myth that Ernest was in a car wreck. The Cantwells—mostly Ernest—didn’t want anyone to know that it was actually . . . that it was Justin.”

  I vividly recalled the pitiful wreck of a man in a wheelchair.

  “What are you saying?”

  “It’s, uh, it’s the time bomb I told you about. Justin and his father did not get along—”

  “We had to send Justin up to Illinois to live with my sister,”

  Lois blurted. “We told people it was just so he could get to know the rest of the family.”

  “I don’t think that story worked very well,” said Laurie.

  “No,” said Lois. “People weren’t blind.”

  “Well, let’s not get things all confused,” the doctor cautioned.

  He turned back to me, “Justin was fifteen when they sent him to Illinois.”

  “It was to save him from his father,” Lois blurted out, “and maybe, just maybe help him get away from all the anger and the hate.” Then she added, “And it was also to protect my husband’s ministry. I knew he couldn’t continue the Lord’s work with such a terrible problem at home.” She dabbed her eyes and continued.

  “Justin stayed with my sister until he was eighteen, and then we brought him back. Everything seemed all right for three years. He acted different, like he’d met the Lord at my sister’s church, like he really wanted to serve the Lord. He got active in our church, he sang in the choir, he led us in prayer and prophesied. People thought he’d changed. Somehow, he got along with Ernest.”

  She stopped. I could see the pain of the memory flashing through her eyes. “But he was waiting, just waiting for the right time, the right moment. He bought a gym and set it up in the basement—he was still living with us—and he kept working out, getting strong, really developing his body. And then, it wasn’t too long after his birthday—he’d just turned twenty-two—he found that moment.”

  Laurie interjected, “But weren’t there some woman problems in all this?”

  Lois nodded, obviously sad to be reminded. “He was sleeping around. One of the girls was the daughter of a deacon. And that’s what set it off. Ernest found out about it and came after him, and—”

  She stopped abruptly, her face and hands quivering. “Justin was at home, waiting for him. I just
thank God I wasn’t there to see it. I was at a women’s meeting. I think that was part of Justin’s plan too, to even the score with his father when I wouldn’t be there to see it.”

  Dr. Sullivan picked up the narrative. “I don’t think there were any witnesses to the actual beating, but when Lois came home . . .”

  Lois broke down again, sobbing as Laurie put an arm around her.

  The doctor took a ragged breath and continued, “Ernest was in the back yard. He’d been . . .” Now he was having trouble telling it. “He’d been beaten repeatedly with a baseball bat. Nine of his ribs were broken. His skull was fractured. He was bleeding from head wounds and unconscious. And . . .” He held out an arm and indicated the forearm just above the wrist. “He was nailed—literally nailed, like a crucifixion—to the apple tree in the back yard with spikes about—” he held his index fingers apart about eight inches— “that long. The spikes were still in his arms when the ambulance brought him into the clinic. I had to remove them surgically.

  “Some of the tendons were severed. He had several operations, but never fully recovered the use of his hands. There were spinal injuries that partially paralyzed him from the waist down. It’s a wonder he’s alive at all, hanging from his arms with broken ribs.

  He would have suffocated if Lois hadn’t found him.”

  I was horrified and incredulous. “And people think this was a car wreck?”

  The doctor allowed himself a slight, cynical smile. “That’s what you’ll hear on the street. But there are police and paramedics and medical personnel—and this doctor right here—who know otherwise. Up to this point, none of us has said anything. Ernest came to this town first and he still holds the high ground. He can make things difficult for anyone who invites trouble.”

  “He has that kind of power?”

  The doctor cocked an eyebrow. “The power over heaven and hell and who goes where, to put it simply.”

  He looked at Lois, but she declined to look back.

  “He’s still my husband,” she said in a whisper.

  “Religion misused,” the doctor continued. “It’s not uncommon.

  He has the personality—and the followers, the chief of police being among them.” With an arched eyebrow he added, “Chief Gallipo has his own nasty part in this.”

 

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