* * *
“Good morning, Betty.” Father McMillan took the old woman's hands in his. She smiled up at him.
“Thank you, Father,” she whispered, “for not falling in with all these crazies telling us the world is coming to an end. Just a little rain storm and everyone's shouting about doomsday.”
“These are always questionable months for weather in New England, Betty. We should be thankful for the warm sun this morning. After all,” he raised a palm skyward, “it's not raining now.”
She smiled. “Thank God for that.”
“But it will rain,” a teenage boy said behind her. “That's what they're saying. How come you didn't talk about it?”
McMillan didn't recognize him. This was often the case lately. People who did not frequent church were now attending in droves. This morning Holy Trinity had twice the usual attendees. He forced himself to smile, stay calm.
“It's not my place to spread unauthenticated rumors, as so many others are doing.”
“Unauthenticated? But you saw the weather. That rain -”
“Stopped,” McMillan interrupted. “If there was to be a flood, I would think it would have continued on for a while longer, don't you?”
“But they said it was a warning. That it wasn't the final storm!”
McMillan wasn’t deaf to his undertone of pleading. Parishioners continued out of the church. Some heard and nodded in agreement; others showed exasperation with a dismissive wave or rolled eyes, and continued down the steps. Some of the first group looked ready for a fight, so hung back. The priest's heart began beating faster. A situation might develop. He prayed for his self-restraint to calm the others.
“I'm not saying one way or the other. The Holy Father in Rome is convening now with the Cardinals. I think we should wait for them to - “
“But they didn't get the visions! What would they know?”
“Young man,” snapped Betty. “You show some respect for the Holy Father!” She counted her next points on each gnarled finger. “The Pope is infallible, and like Father McMillan here, he is not going to rush to judgment over a few loose cannons! He’s - “
“Loose cannons? Have you listened to them? I don't mean that nut-job at Faneuil Hall. I mean everyone else.”
The crowd closed in. The air grew thick with tension. McMillan interrupted the boy with a wave of his hand and as stern a voice as he could manage. “This is not the place to discuss this. People are trying to leave the church.”
“People should be going to church, every day. Not leaving!”
“I repeat, this is not the place to discuss this.”
“Then where?”
“Do like the priest says and shut your mouth!” Elmer Brevan was an old, old man who’d been an usher in the church as long as McMillan could remember. He broke ranks and leaned over the boy. His hands were raised into fists. McMillan moved between them.
“I won't have this sort of -”
Elmer shoved him aside, not realizing what he was doing in his anger, then stepped towards the teenager. The boy hesitated, uncertain whether he should fighting such an old man. Elmer had no such qualms. He opened his hands and shoved. The kid stumbled backwards and waved his arms to regain balance. He managed to grab the iron railing at the top of the stairs. Someone held the old man by the shoulders. The boy took advantage and lunged forward, throwing awkward punches into Elmer’s face. A women pulled him back by digging her fingernails into his cheeks and yanking sideways. He screamed then toppled sideways down the old brick steps. Father McMillan recovered from his shock enough to look for help, saw only a fist as it slammed into his left eye. In the flash of pain, he saw more people stepping over the boy and running up the stairs to join the fray.
The police officer on traffic duty knelt beside the teenager at the bottom of the stairs and shouted into his shoulder-mounted microphone. The kid waved him away, embarrassed but bleeding from small cuts in his face. McMillan turned to see who had struck him but was suddenly disoriented… too many people behind him, some running down the second staircase, some with wide-eyed children in tow.
Behind the priest someone shouted, “She's got a gun!”
McMillan turned around, the words registering as he stared into the face of a young woman glaring back up at him from the sidewalk. Under her sweatshirt’s hood, her greasy blonde hair framed the rage which twisted her face and froze the man's heart. That, and the pistol held in front her.
Everything fell into slow motion. The front of the gun flashed silently. Someone fell sideways against his shoulder, an older woman, Gina Hamer, he thought automatically. Her black hair tumbled forward, obscuring his view of a police officer tackling the hooded shooter onto the ground. Gina’s weight pulled McMillan down to his knees. He rolled her sideways, and only then realized half of her face had been shot away.
* * *
By the time Nick's sermon was finished and he’d gone through the motions of the rest of Mass, nearly half of the congregation had walked out. Not all because of anger or disbelief, but because their sons and daughters were crying, sometimes screaming in terror.
Praise God for your mercy and love , Nick thought as he and the lay-minister distributed Communion. In your mercy save these children. Save their parents, for through the mother and father are the little ones saved.
He prayed Margaret and the girls were OK.
From the looks he’d received during Eucharist, some frightened, others angry, Nick decided to break with tradition. When the service ended, instead of leading the processional down the aisle and out the front door where he could greet everyone as they went home, he stepped from the altar, turned right, and proceeded directly into the Sacristy.
The murmurs grew louder as he did this. Nick hoped the people would understand. Those who needed counsel knew where to find him.
* * *
“Pancakes this morning, Dora. And some sausage if it’s not from last year’s kill.”
“Don’t let Grim hear you say that, Hon. Good to see you ordering real food. Haven’t seen you much for a couple of days, and when I did, you left most of your food on the plate. Shouldn’t waste like that, even if you did pay for it. You been sneaking into that hotel’s cafeteria?”
“I’d never cheat on you, D. Just celebrating a return to normalcy. How’s the TV?”
“It’s wonderful! You do something to fix it?”
“Nope. Mother Earth fixed your reception, not me.”
“That doesn’t sound too scientific... more coffee? You need to drink slower or you’ll burn your throat clean out of your body, what with the way I make this stuff.”
“Heh, sorry. Please... thanks. I told you things would go back to normal, didn’t I?”
“Yes, you did. You just didn’t sound too convincing yesterday. Your little North pole go back home where it belonged?”
“Yes, ma’am. Declination’s still a bit further south-west than a couple of years back, but that’s to be expected.”
“My Lord, I should be on Jeopardy with all the hundred dollar words you people teach me. Heading home soon?”
“I... well, no, not quite yet. They want me to stay... for a while longer. Take daily measurements, see if anything changes. Too soon to assume things have righted themselves permanently; too expensive to keep coming back when things get weird. I’ll be here a few more weeks. Sick of me already?”