Before I Wake

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Before I Wake Page 32

by Robert J. Wiersema


  She nodded.

  “Very rarely.”

  “I didn’t think so,” she said.

  I shook my head. “No, it’s not like that. Most families, most people put into a situation like you’re in with Sherry, don’t handle it nearly so well. There’s an impulse to pull away, to run from what a lot of people consider such a huge responsibility, such an overwhelming obligation. Very few people open their lives to the needy. We wish more did.

  “And of course,” I continued. “The other Father Peter does everything in his power to encourage people to turn away. Or to run. Many times I’ve had reports of miracles—of healings or visitations—and by the time I arrive at the scene, the family has moved, leaving no forwarding address.”

  “I don’t think we could do that,” she said. “Just turn our backs.”

  “But you can see the temptation?”

  She hesitated for a moment, then nodded.

  “I still don’t like the word miracle, though,” she said. “It just smells to much like church to me. Too much incense and candle wax.”

  I was smiling at her, about to respond, when I noticed the figure in the doorway behind her. “Hello,” I said. I didn’t recognize him from the group of pilgrims we had escorted to the family room.

  “Did Simon send you in already?” Karen asked.

  The man stayed silent. He was in his mid-twenties, not overly tall, wearing faded, dirty jeans, battered sneakers and a burgundy sweatshirt. His face was mostly hidden in the shadow of the hood. His right hand was tucked into the front pocket of the sweatshirt, and he stood hunched over, as if in pain.

  “You can see me,” he finally said.

  Karen took a step toward him and I rose to my feet, setting my notebook and pen on the chair. “Did Simon get your information?” she asked.

  “No,” he said, his voice gruff, his tone like that of someone surprised at being spoken to. “I came to see Sherry.”

  “Well, you have to sign in…” Karen started.

  “I knocked at the door,” the man explained. “No one answered.”

  “I guess we didn’t hear,” Karen answered.

  He turned toward Sherry.

  Karen put herself between the man and her daughter.

  “Can I see her?” he asked. His voice had dropped to a whisper.

  With his left hand, he fumbled with his hood and pulled it off. He had the disheveled look of someone who had been living on the street for a while—tangled shoulder-length hair, uncombed for what looked like weeks, a long, tangled beard—but the right side of his face was a raw burn, fresh and oozing. His right eye was swollen shut from the wound, which extended down his neck.

  He was completely focused on Sherry, and he didn’t even seem to notice our attention. He looked at her with a deep anguish that radiated from him in waves.

  “You…You’re burned,” Karen said, her voice dropping. She stepped toward him, raising her hand.

  “Your arm too,” she said, not releasing his gaze. “And here.” She traced her fingers along the right side of her body, mirroring him. Her eyes were wide, and her face brightened, as if something suddenly made sense to her.

  He nodded, slowly.

  “You were here,” she whispered. “Two nights ago. You stopped the man with the bomb. You got burned.” She reached out, almost touching his face. “You saved us.”

  He turned back to Sherry on the bed.

  “Simon,” she called, not quite shouting, but loud enough to be heard.

  “I just want to see her,” he said quietly, stopping inches from Karen, craning his neck. “I need to see her.”

  “Simon,” she called again.

  I stepped forward. “Listen, if we can—”

  “What’s wrong?” All three of us turned to face Simon, outlined in the doorway.

  Her face was tight with uncertainty, and she didn’t move from her position between the man and her daughter. “This is…this is the man from the other night—”

  Simon was looking at the man. “It’s you,” he said, stepping toward him. His jaw was set, his face hard. The man seemed confused.

  “He wants—”

  “You don’t recognize him?”

  “What?”

  “I’m not,” he sputtered as Simon took hold of his left arm and turned him toward Karen. “I just came to see—”

  Karen looked at him, trying to see past the beard, the burns.

  “I’m sorry,” he said quietly. “I didn’t see your daughter.”

  He glanced between the two of them, then his gaze stopped on Karen. “I didn’t see Sherry,” he repeated. “I came, I came to say I’m—”

  “It is you, isn’t it?” Karen asked.

  Their eyes locked. “Yes,” he whispered.

  Before she could speak, he stepped forward again. “I’ve been…I wanted to come. I wanted to see Sherry. I came to say I was sorry.”

  Simon shook his head. “You can’t just—”

  “I’m glad you came, Henry,” came a voice from behind us.

  The tiny, high voice seemed to echo through the room, and we all turned to face the small bed where Sherilyn Barrett had spoken.

  She was sitting up, staring at us. Her eyes were curiously dark against her pale skin.

  “Oh, God, Sherry,” Karen gasped, stumbling toward the bed.

  Everything seemed to slow down in the moment that Karen pulled her daughter into her arms, squeezing her and rocking gently in place. Sherry’s arms were around her neck, and after a moment her fingers began to toy with her mother’s hair.

  “Oh, Sherry.” Karen couldn’t stop her tears, but the sob, when it bubbled up, sounded like laughter. “Sherry.”

  “Don’t cry, Mommy,” Sherry whispered into her neck. “It’s all right.”

  Karen pulled away from her a little so she could make eye contact when she told her, “No, honey, it’s just…Mommy’s so happy.” She cradled one of her daughter’s cheeks, letting her fingers linger.

  “I know,” Sherry said, touching her mother’s cheek in return. Her fingers came away wet with tears.

  Simon stared, his eyes wide, mouth gaping before his hand covered the lower half of his face, hiding a sob. He fell toward the bed, taking his family into his arms.

  His eyes met Karen’s as he buried his face in Sherry’s hair, breathing her in. Both of their smiles seemed caught somewhere between ecstasy and despair.

  “I love you, baby,” he whispered into his daughter’s ear.

  She squirmed at the tickle of his breath.

  “I love you too, Daddy,” she said. “Can you sing me a song?”

  “Anything,” he said, meeting Karen’s eyes again. Her hand found his on Sherry’s lap, and they clutched at one another. “Anything you want.”

  “I like that one about the mockingbird.”

  As the Barretts huddled together, Henry Denton took several halting steps to the edge of the bed and crouched there, clutching the covers in his hands.

  Sherry looked down at him, and her parents exchanged a glance over her head.

  The tiny girl, pale and small, lifted her gaze from the broken man before her and turned back to her parents. “Call her Lily,” she said. “I’d like it if you called her Lily.”

  Karen made a sound that was somewhere between a sharp laugh and a sob, and tightened her hand around Simon’s.

  “Henry,” Sherry said, as though he and she were the only people in the room. She leaned toward him.

  He lifted his head. “I’m sorry,” he said to Sherry, not flinching from her wide, dark gaze. “I came to ask your…” His face was streaked and stained with tears, his open eye filled with confusion and fear that seemed to melt away as she raised her hand to him.

  With the lightest of touches, she drew her fingertips across the twisted red flesh on his face. She smiled. “No more ouches.”

  The wound seemed to recede as she drew her hand away. At first, her fingers left faint streaks of unblemished skin behind them, but the wh
iteness spread quickly, the livid red skin healing at her touch. Within seconds, there was no trace of the burn on Denton’s face, and I imagined the cool balm of her touch traveling down his arm and chest, leaving new, clear skin behind.

  “I knew you’d come,” she said softly. “I was waiting for you.” He smiled gratefully before bowing his head to her, almost touching his forehead to the white sheet.

  She took a long look around the room, her gaze lingering on her parents. It was impossible to read her expression: I want to call it beatific, but there was a hint of resolve there, as well as a touch of sadness.

  She knew.

  Sherry lowered her hand gently to the crown of Henry Denton’s head, slowly enough that we could watch his tangled hair give under its weight.

  I think that we all realized what was happening at the same moment. Karen gasped, “Sherry?” as Simon raised his hand as if trying to stop her, but none of us were able to interfere, none of us knowing, or even able to guess at, the consequences of what we were witnessing.

  Sherry knew.

  “It’s all right, Henry.” As her fingers touched his head, her eyelids slowly lowered.

  It was like an electrical current passed through them both, as if when she touched him, when she told him it was all right, a circuit was completed.

  A single spasm passed first through Henry Denton, who crumpled to the carpet.

  Then the girl’s back arched, and a force seemed to push her parents away from her. At that moment, I felt a pulse thrum through me, the pressure of a sound too low to hear. The light dimmed as the breath rushed out of me and the force brought me to my knees. I struggled for a moment, but the next breath I drew was as sweet as the air after a summer storm.

  The light grew bright again, and Sherry sagged, motionless, onto her bed.

  For a moment, the silence seemed deeper than that of an empty church. I felt connected to the world. I could feel Simon and Karen on the bed, and I knew that the pilgrims down the hall were on their knees with me. I could hear the falling of the snowflakes in the cold white light outside the window. It sounded like the dryness of wings, the gentle pressure of a final breath. The air filled with the smell of lilies.

  “Sherry?” Karen choked, her voice raw and desperate, struggling toward her daughter.

  Before I even touched the cool skin of Sherry’s throat, I knew it was too late. Her chest wasn’t rising; there was no pulse under my fingers.

  “Sherry?” Karen whispered, her voice breaking into sobs as she pulled her daughter into her arms. She slumped onto the bed holding the girl close, pressing her face into her hair, cradling her head as she wept. Simon took them both into his arms, and they held one another in the white glow of the room, their daughter still between them.

  Neither of them seemed to notice the expression of peace and serenity—of release and comfort—the little girl wore. Nor did they notice, then, that the body of Henry Daniel Denton had disappeared from the room, leaving no trace. It was as if he had never even crossed the threshold.

  File # 5485.2

  Barrett, Sherilyn Amber

  —Final Report (excerpt)—

  Father Peter Shaughnessy

  April 24, 1997

  …It is appropriate that I am completing and submitting this report today, a year to the day since the accident that injured three-year-old Sherilyn Amber Barrett and initiated the strange series of events in Victoria, British Columbia, that culminated with her death on the morning of December 27, 1996.

  I have spent the four months since her death both working on this investigation and assisting the Barrett family, and their friends, in dealing with Sherilyn’s death.

  You will find, attached, testimony from more than 150 people who witnessed Sherilyn Barrett’s healing powers, including petitioners and their medical practitioners, who testify to the complete recovery and remission of those who came in contact with Sherilyn. I will solicit further testimony from these witnesses at the first and fifth anniversaries of their contact, as is the norm in these cases.

  Of the twelve people waiting in the Barrett home that morning, we have received reports of seven full recoveries; I am awaiting replies from the remaining petitioners. By mid-January, the Barretts were receiving letters and reports of recoveries from as far away as Toronto, Halifax and the American South. These people had all written to Sherilyn; their letters of petition were found at her bedside, still sealed.

  Pilgrims continue to wait at the Barrett home even now, months later, their numbers having increased after Sherilyn’s death. Some of them also report spontaneous recoveries, although such incidents are less common.

  I do not know how to make sense of the things I have seen, nor what meaning to ascribe to those events in which I was a participant, however minor.

  I have delayed completing this report, hoping that time would provide me with the clarity and distance to help me to understand the events I witnessed and to recount them objectively. Time has not, however, accorded me understanding or distance. I find that I cannot be objective where Sherilyn Barrett is concerned: I owe her too much.

  I would like to attach to this report a more personal concern. I have discussed this with my confessor, and have decided that, although personal of nature, this note should form part of the official record.

  In August of 1996, I was diagnosed with prostate cancer, which had metastasized. The doctors informed me that it would likely be terminal within a year, and I determined that I would resign my position on December 31, 1996. The inquiry into the miracles attributed to Sherilyn Barrett was to be my last.

  Following the events of December 27, however, the cancer disappeared. As of last week, I have been in complete remission for four months. My doctors are “cautiously optimistic,” and will monitor my situation. I, however, am certain: I was cured by Sherilyn Barrett on the morning of December 27.

  April 24, 1997

  I go with them to visit the grave. They can’t see me. They have no idea I’m here. But I want to be with them. It’s been one year since the accident, and I want to be with them, today of all days.

  I follow behind them through the parking lot, through the gate and along the winding pathways.

  They’re holding hands, and they walk slowly, not saying anything.

  They stop at the side of the grave, and he hugs her to his shoulder. They still don’t speak. They just look at the grave with its small white stone, and the pile of flowers and letters and stuffed animals that people have left.

  Sherilyn Amber Barrett

  Beloved daughter, beloved friend

  August 1, 1992–December 27, 1996

  I can’t look at it for too long. It makes me too sad. Too sad for them.

  It’s a beautiful spring day. In this place of death, the world is full of life. You can almost hear it singing, all around. The daffodils are waking up after their long winter naps, and their yellow and white heads dance between the rows of gravestones. The grass is green and bright and damp. Mr. Squirrel will be taking off his winter coat.

  It rained last night, but this morning it’s warm and the sky is clear and blue and beautiful.

  I’m wearing my sky-blue dress, because it matches the sky.

  Without letting go of Mommy’s hand, Daddy crouches beside the flowers and teddy bears. “Baby,” he chokes, tears running down his cheeks. His hand shakes as he reaches into his jacket pocket and carefully puts a stone atop the grave marker. “Oh, baby…”

  After Daddy stands back up, Mommy crouches carefully. She uses Daddy for balance as she puts a stone of her own on my grave, near a picture of me, gently brushing the white marker with her fingertips the same way she used to tickle my cheeks. As she stands up, her hand goes to the small swelling of her belly, and she turns herself into Daddy’s arms.

  There were three stones I gave to Mommy before the accident. There were three stones in Mommy’s pocket when the truck hit me, three stones on the windowsill of the winter room where the people came to see me,
the room where I died. The last stone, I know, is in her pocket again, near her heart, near the heart of their unborn child, the girl they will call Lily.

  My sister.

  Lily.

  For peace.

  Acknowledgments

  No novel is born in a vacuum, and while Before I Wake is the result of a lot of pre-dawn mornings in a cold study, it also owes much to many people, some over the course of a lifetime. If there is credit to be had, I share it with the following. Blame, though, I’m hoarding for myself.

  First, to my family, by birth, divorce, re-marriage and my own marriage. If we are the sum of our earliest experiences, and of those closest to us, I owe much of what I am to you. There are far too many of you to single everyone out; I love you all, and I’ll try to thank you all in person.

  Considering the nature of this book, however, four women bear special mention: my mother, Helen Eddy, who has been there from the beginning, who bought me my typewriter ribbons and fought battles at my side. Fearsome and proud—just like a mother bear. My stepmother, Sue Wiersema, who has always dreamed the best for me. My mother-in-law, June Dusmann, whose kindness and support gives lie to every bad in-law joke. And Phyllis Eddy, my grandmother, around whom an amazing family, and a grateful community, revolve.

  For Mrs. Winstanley, Mrs. Hepnar and Miss Guthrie, as promised all those years ago. And for Ellen Scarff—I wish you were here to see it.

  For Peter and Greg, my oldest friends, who were there at the very beginning of what turned into a dream, and then a life—the cigars are waiting. The good ones.

  Special thanks to the early readers of this book: your interest and support saw me through some rough times, while your advice helped this book in immeasurable ways. I made friends through this book (including people I have yet to meet in person). Thanks, then, to Ruth, Matthias, Nathalie, Peter, Mary, Lee, Mel, Samantha, Nikki and everyone else who had an eye out and a hand in.

  Thanks to Kevin Patterson for his advice and his medical expertise. Any medical mistakes here are mine; Kevin deserves the credit for anything I got right. If you’re experiencing trauma, please call him, not me. I’m not a doctor, and I don’t play one on TV.

 

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