Sarah waited until she heard her husband’s deep snoring beside her. She carefully pulled back the covers and placed her bare feet on the floor. The bedframe groaned with the sudden shift in weight. Sarah froze in place.
She looked over at Jeff’s prone
silhouette in the darkened room. He hadn’t moved. She breathed a sigh of
relief. He wasn’t going to wake up anytime soon. Not with that much alcohol
sloshing around in his bloodstream. The longer he stayed passed out the better.
She had things to do.
As she padded down the short hallway
to check on her kids, she felt a sharp pain in her left foot. She hobbled to
the bathroom and shut the door behind her before flipping on the switch.
Bracing her foot against her knee, she discovered the reason for her pain.
Glass. A healthy shard of it, too.
Undoubtedly from the vase Jeff threw in her direction earlier. She bit down on
her bottom lip as she pulled it out. She tossed the piece of glass into the
sink with a clatter and looked at the damage to her face in the mirror.
The harsh fluorescent lighting
wasn’t kind. But even if the illumination in the room was softer, she still
couldn’t dismiss the battered image looking back at her.
Is
that really me?
Quick
tears filled her eyes, but she willed herself not to cry. Things hadn’t always
been this way. There was a time when the two of them were happy. Young and
naïve and without a dime to their name, they had tried to make a go of it. For
the baby’s sake. And she loved Jeff. Or at least she had back then.
Combing back her dirty blonde hair
with her fingers, she tried to look past the bruises and see the woman she once
was. She couldn’t find her.
She
would turn twenty-five next month. She felt much older.
Disheartened
by the stranger looking back at her, she opened the medicine cabinet to look
for some Tylenol and a Band-Aid. She thought about the chain of events that led
up to their latest fight.
It
started out routinely enough. Jeff was late – again – coming home from work.
And already drunk after spending several hours at the local watering hole. She held his dinner. Jeff took one look at
the food on his plate and griped, “Leftovers again?”
Sarah
started to reply, but Jeff cut her off. “Just get me the ketchup.”
She
brought him the bottle and he poured ketchup over his meatloaf, mashed
potatoes, and green beans. He wolfed down his dinner, then lay on the couch in
front of the TV and flipped through the channels with the remote. Long
accustomed to his volatile mood swings when he drank, Sarah steered herself and
the kids away from him.
After washing the dishes, she read
a story to their three year-old, Michael, and tucked him into bed. Then she
gave Matthew his bedtime bottle and laid him in his crib. She kissed his downy
forehead. “Sweet dreams, baby boy,” she said softly and turned out his
nightlight.
When she came back into the living
room, she was surprised to find Jeff still awake. She hoped he would pass out
on the couch and leave her in peace. Her nerves were frayed from walking on
eggshells around him.
“Nothing
good on tonight,” he muttered. Tossing the remote onto the floor, he got up
from the couch and made his way on unsteady feet to the kitchen. Moments later,
his booming voice resounded throughout the bungalow.
“Hey!
There’s no more beer!”
Jeff’s
large frame filled the space in front of the open refrigerator door. Sarah
didn’t know what to say. He slammed the door shut.
“I’m
sorry,” she said. “We needed diapers. I’ll go tomorrow, okay?”
He
started to reply, but his attention was drawn to the leaky faucet at the
kitchen sink. In the heavy silence, the steady dripping seemed overly loud.
Plop...
Plop...
Plop...
Jeff
cursed under his breath. “I thought you were going to get that fixed today!”
Sarah
could hear Michael stirring in his bed in the next room. “Jeff, you’re going to
wake up the babies,” she said. He ignored her.
“Why
didn’t you call a plumber like I told you to?” His face had turned an alarming
shade of crimson. “I swear... I can’t count on you to do anything around here!”
“But—I
did!” she stammered. Her stomach and mouth felt sour. She sensed the situation
was about to spiral out of control. “The plumber came this morning. I found one
who would do a free estimate, just like you said, and he took a look at it.”
She stopped.
“And?”
Matthew
started to whimper in his crib. “Jeff, please,” she whispered. “Keep your voice
down.” Again, he ignored
“So
why didn’t he fix it?” he demanded, as he took a step toward her. Sarah backed
away.
“The
estimate was too high,” she answered. “Something about a gasket or something
that needs replaced. He said it would cost around seventy-five dollars.” She
paused. “We don’t have that kind of money.”
Jeff
glared at her. “What is that supposed
to mean? You’re saying I don’t make enough money! Isn’t that what you meant to
say?”
Sarah
knew it was a loaded question. She swallowed hard.
Sarah
shook her head. “I—I didn’t say that, Jeff.”
He
let out a string of expletives as he quickly walked toward her. Sarah pressed
her back against the wall. A surge of adrenaline coursed through her as he
closed the distance between them. But then he brushed past her through the
doorway and into the living room.
“I
get no respect from you,” he said. His tirade continued as he scattered the
evening newspaper across the floor and lifted up the sofa cushions in search of
the remote control.
“I
go to work every friggin’ day and bust my hump at the plant while you sit at
home with the kids doing nothing.” He turned to look at her. “I mean... what
kind of work is that?”
He found the remote next to the coffee table.
“Not that you could get a job. God
only knows you’re too stupid to get
anything that pays any real money. If you’re gonna sit at home on your butt all
day, the least you can do is keep this place clean and have a decent meal ready
when I come home at night!”
Sarah
pressed her lips together as a bubble of anger simmered inside her. She knew he
was grasping at anything to bait her with. Their tiny, two-bedroom bungalow was
spotless. As well as her kids.
Jeff
began his protests anew as he settled onto the couch to watch a football game,
but Sarah tuned him out. She leaned against the doorway and stared out at the
night through the living room window.
It was frigid cold outside. The bare
branches of an ancient oak tree in the side yard scratched its fingers against
the windowpane. A sliver of moon was captured in the upper left corner of the
window, stark white against a starless sky.
The forecast called for snow
tomorrow. Maybe she would bundle the kids up and build a snowman. Matthew had
never seen snow before. The scenario made her smile.
Her thought processes were
interrupted by the sound of the baby’s muffled crying. She turned on her heel
and started toward their bedroom.
A sudden explosion went off next to
her face. At first she thought a gun had been fired. But then a shower of
broken glass rained down on her, and she instinctively ducked her head and
covered her ears. She whirled around to find Jeff glaring at her from across
the room, his lips drawn back in an angry snarl.
“Don’t
you walk away from me when I’m talking to you!” he bellowed.
She
looked down to find the remaining pieces of the glass vase scattered across the
carpet at her feet. Behind her on the wall, the thin plaster was caved in where
the object had struck.
Her
heart pounded in her chest. Jeff had been aiming for her head. Her breath came
in ragged gasps as she turned to face him. “Have—have you lost your mind?”
Jeff’s
hands balled into fists at his sides.
Without
thinking, she picked up the jagged bottom of the vase and hurled it back at
him. It bounced off his meaty shoulder and landed on the floor. Sarah turned
and ran for the bedroom.
Sometime
later, Jeff stumbled out the front door and climbed into his truck, leaving
Sarah in a crumpled heap next to their bed. She could hear Matthew wailing in
his crib. She knew Michael had to be awake as well.
She
listened as Jeff revved the engine and drove away. Tears dripped off her chin
as she uttered every foul name and word she could think of. She slowly got to
her feet. On her bureau, a glass paperweight in the shape of a bird caught her
eye. Jeff had given her the trinket a long time ago, when his words and hands
were soft and never hurled at her in anger.
She picked it up and felt the
heaviness of it in her palm. Before she knew what she was doing, she threw it
across the room and shattered a hole in the window.
“I hope you die!” she screamed. “Just die! Die! Die!”
She stopped crying and wiped the
tears from her face. Her children needed her.
Lifting her youngest from his crib,
she gave him a bottle and crawled into bed beside Michael. While Matthew only
wanted to be fed and was too young to understand, it was obvious her older son
knew something wasn’t right. He wound a lock of her hair between his fingers
and nestled his head in the crook of her neck. It took him a long time to fall
back asleep.
Not knowing what else to do, Sarah
changed into her nightgown and stuffed a hand towel in the hole left by the
paperweight. She had no idea how she would explain it to Jeff. She was too
exhausted to think about anything more tonight. She went to bed, where she
willed herself to slip into that peaceful place where reality no longer exists.
She was awakened by the sound of
Jeff as he stumbled into their bedroom. He reeked of cigarette smoke. Mumbling under
his breath, he fumbled to remove his shoes and pants by the side of the bed.
Sarah lay still, praying he would
fall into bed and pass out. Please, God... please. Don’t... let... him... touch me.
She imagined his rough hands pawing
at her, his kiss sloppy and tasting of stale beer. He had done it before,
coming to her after they had fought, oblivious to her battered physical and
emotional state. Slurring his apologies, telling her it would never happen
again. Breaking her resolve until she felt obligated to give him what he
wanted, feeling utterly empty inside even as Jeff’s body filled her own.
Thankfully, Jeff fell into bed
beside her and passed out almost as soon as his head hit the pillow. Her mind a
jumbled weave of emotions and thoughts, Sarah felt a spark ignite within her.
Her heartbeat quickened as the spark grew into an ember, then a fiery flame.
A part of her truly hated him now.
She listened to his noisy snoring, smelled the cloying stench of liquor coming
off his body. The walls pressed in on her, squeezing the air from her lungs
until she could no longer draw a breath. The thought occurred to her, not for
the first time, that one of these days he wouldn’t stop punching.
And
then this man will be raising your children.
The ice in her stomach turned to
steel. And it was at that moment Sarah knew she had to leave, this time for
good.
Brought back to the present by the
sound of Matthew stirring in his crib, she closed the medicine cabinet door and
went back to her bedroom, favoring her left heel as she moved quietly about the
house.
Taking an overnight bag and an old
suitcase from the closet, she emptied out her clothing drawers. She packed
Matthew’s diaper bag, then crept into the children’s bedroom, where she filled
a large laundry bag with clothing and shoes and a few favorite toys and books.
She wanted to take more but knew she had to travel light.
Money, she thought. I need money.
She found Jeff’s work pants in a
tangled ball on the floor. She found his cell phone in one pocket and his keys
and wallet in another. She opened his billfold. Not much cash. But his credit cards
and ATM card would come in handy tonight. She put the items in her purse. Then
she went to her bureau and eased the bottom drawer open. Tossing aside their wedding
album, she pulled out her Michael and Matthew’s baby scrapbooks and put them in
the laundry bag.
Dressing quickly in jeans and a
sweater, she pulled on her coat and gloves and quietly opened the front door. A
blast of frigid winter air stung her face and cut lip. As she walked toward the
old station wagon beneath the carport, she glanced over at Jeff’s truck, parked
at a sharp angle across the curb. Sarah marveled he had made it home.
Charged with adrenaline, she looked
over her shoulder as she carried items to the car, certain she would suddenly
find Jeff’s hulking form standing over her, demanding what she was doing and
where did she think she was going.
After several trips, she was
finished. She then bundled the kids in blankets and took them to the car.
Michael woke up as she was carrying him down the front porch steps.
“Shhhh... it’s okay, big man,” she
said. “We’re going for a ride.” He fell back asleep.
She harnessed Matthew into his
carrier and buckled Michael into his car seat next to him. She carefully closed
the car door. Then she turned to face the small clapboard house she and Jeff
had shared. Not a home in any sense of the word; just a wood and concrete
structure where four people had once lived together.
Looking up at the night sky, she
searched for that same slice of moon she had seen earlier through the living
room window. She found it high above her, hidden amongst the feathery foliage
of a towering evergreen. She watched the plume of her breath materialize in the
cold air as quick clouds skirted past. Within seconds, the moon was gone.
Sliding into the driver’s seat,
Sarah prayed the car would start. Then she prayed the sound of the engine
turning over wouldn’t wake Jeff. The carport was right next to their bedroom
window. She turned the key. It started. She backed out of the driveway, keeping
an eye on the front door of the house, her heartbeat pulsing in her throat.
No sign of Jeff. She put the car
into gear and pressed the gas pedal.
She drove into town and pulled into
an all-night convenience store. She started to get out but stopped short when
she caught her reflection in the rearview mirror. She fumbled through her purse
and put on a pair of sunglasses to conceal the swollen, purple flesh
surrounding her eyes.
Inside the store, she quickly went
down the aisles, filling her buggy to the brim with formula, diapers, bottled
water, and snacks. At the checkout counter, the cashier looked at the contents
of her cart, then took her credit card without comment and ran it through.
“Uhhh... this one’s maxed out,” he
told her.
Undeterred, Sarah pulled out
another card from Jeff’s wallet and handed it to him. “Try this one.”
The transaction went through, and
Sarah loaded her purchases into the car and filled the tank with gas. Then she
found an ATM and emptied out their checking account. It wasn’t much, but it
would have to do.
Heading west out of town, she stopped
at the first bridge she came to. She took Jeff’s cell phone and wallet from her
purse and went over to the railing, where she hurled the items across the dark
expanse of water.
“That should slow you down for a while,”
she said.
Back on the freeway, she decided
she would drive a few hours and then find someplace to stop for the night. She
wanted to get as many miles as possible between herself and Jeff before he woke
up and realized what she had done.
She had no idea where she was
going. She had purposely gone in the opposite direction of her mother’s house
in Pittsburg, because that was the first place Jeff would look for her. He had
tracked her down twice before. The first time, her mother told her that surely
it wouldn’t happen again, and Sarah gave Jeff another chance. The second time,
after he broke her nose and two of her ribs, they were pulling weeds in the
vegetable garden when Jeff suddenly appeared on her mother’s back porch,
looking contrite and holding an enormous bouquet of flowers.
“You know, honey,” her mother
whispered, “sometimes a woman’s gotta take the bad with the good.”
“Sorry, Mama,” Sarah said softly
now as she drove through the night. “I’m not you.”
As the miles wore on, the landscape
changed from rolling hills and rural countryside to industrial factories and
paper mills, their massive smokestacks stretching giant fingers toward the sky.
In front of her, an endless ribbon of gray highway rolled out toward the
horizon.
Afraid she would fall asleep at the
wheel if she drove any further, Sarah took the next exit and searched for a
motel. She found a Ho-Jo’s and a Holiday Inn, but they were too expensive. Several
exits later, she drove into another industrial district, passing one city block
after another lined with warehouses and factories, with an occasional diner or
drugstore tucked in.
She was about to retrace her steps
back to the freeway when she spotted a lit sign for what appeared to be a
motel. Pulling into the parking lot, she peered through the windshield. The
lobby windows were frosted over. She couldn’t see much except for a faint glow
of yellow light. She glanced at her watch. Nearly three a.m. She decided to
give it a try.
Inside the cramped lobby, she came
to a thick acrylic partition, scratched and yellowed with age, with a circular
hole in the middle for the exchange of keys and currency. She wondered if it
was bulletproof.
No one was behind the desk. Looking
around, she took in the water-stained ceiling tiles and scuffed linoleum floor.
In the corner, a lifeless philodendron sat in a stand, its limp leaves turned a
sickly yellow-green from lack of water and light.
The place was a dive. But she was
too tired to care.
Not wanting to leave her kids
outside in the car any longer than she had to, she knocked loudly on the partition. “Hey! Is anybody working here?”
She brought her face as close to the
filthy partition as she dared. Through a narrow doorway, she saw a pair of
blue-jeaned legs propped up on a table and a black-and-white portable
television. A male voice floated back to her.
“What?” she said.
Finally, the night clerk pushed back
his chair and ambled over to the window. If he thought it odd to see a woman
standing in front of him wearing dark sunglasses at three a.m. in the morning,
he didn’t show it.
“Yeah?” he muttered.
Sarah cleared her throat. “How much
are your rooms?”
The answer was thirty-five dollars a
night, plus tax. Sarah passed two twenties through the circle. The clerk handed
her a single key and her change.
“Any chance breakfast is included
with the room? Donuts or something?”
The clerk sneered. “For thirty-five
bucks a night, lady? I don’t think so.” He shut the cash register drawer and
went back to his television.
Sarah carted Michael and Matthew to
the motel elevator, and the ancient contraption slowly groaned its way to the
second floor. When she came to room 212, she inserted the key and opened the
door. The smell of cigarette smoke and sour laundry hit her first. Her nose
crinkled as she flipped on the light. She was greeted by drab plaster walls and
threadbare carpet so stained it was hard to determine the original color. To
her left in the tiny bathroom, dark rust streaks stained the sink and toilet.
There was a single towel and washcloth on the towel rack.
“It’s
not the Ritz, but it’ll have to do,” she muttered.
She
locked the door behind her and carried Michael to the nearest bed, where she
turned back the thin chenille bedspread and tucked him in. Then she laid
Matthew down on the other bed and surrounded him with pillows so he wouldn’t
roll over onto the floor.
She
rubbed her arms. The room was freezing. She went over to the radiator below the
single window and turned it up as high as it would go, but it gave off only a
meager amount of lukewarm heat. When she pulled the sheer drapes aside, a
graffiti-filled brick wall stared back at her. She turned around and stood in
silence as she took in the sparse contents of the room.
So this is what my life
has been reduced to. Two twin beds and a coffee pot.
The
first threads of fear and doubt began to weave their way through her mind.
“What am I going to do?” she murmured. “How am I going to take care of my
kids?”
Her
entire body began to tremble and she burst into tears. Her knees gave out and
she fell to the floor, racked by sobs. “Please, God. If you’re real, please
keep my children safe. Please show me what to do. Please!”
Physically
and emotionally drained, she didn’t bother changing out of her clothes. She
climbed into bed next to Michael and pulled the covers up to her chin. She had
just fallen asleep when she was jarred awake by the sound of a phone ringing.
She
sat up in the bed. The sound had stopped. It couldn’t have been Jeff’s cell
phone. It was lying on the bottom of the river. And she didn’t have one. She
looked over at the phone on the bedside table. Had Jeff found her somehow?
But... that was impossible!
She
turned on the bedside lamp and dialed the operator. After five rings, the same
detached voice as the man in the lobby came on the line.
“Did you just forward a call to this room?” she asked.
“Did you just forward a call to this room?” she asked.
“No
calls,” he mumbled, and started to hang up.
“Wait!”
she said, as she thought of another possibility. “Did a man come into the lobby
after I checked in? Tall, big shoulders, with short dark hair?”
“Look,
lady. I don’t want any trouble, okay? If your old man’s after you, you need to
get yourself someplace else. Find one of those hideout places for women or
something.”
“You
mean... like a shelter? But... I don’t even know which town I’m in! I don’t
know where to go!”
“It
ain’t rocket science,” he told her. “Look in the phone book.”
Her
hands shaking, Sarah hung up the phone and took a wooden chair from the corner
and braced it under the doorknob. She checked the lock again.
In
the bottom drawer of the nightstand, she found a tattered Yellow Pages
directory. She had no idea how current it was. Flipping through the pages, she
looked under the S’s for Shelters but didn’t find what she was looking for.
Next, she tried the W’s for Women’s Services. Nothing.
Then
the directory fell open to the C’s, and her eye caught an ad for a local church
that sponsored a women’s shelter and soup kitchen. In bold print was a number
for a twenty-four hour crisis hotline.
She
hoped it was still in service. After a few rings, a woman’s voice came on the
line. She said her name was Ruth.
Sarah
fumbled through the conversation and soon found herself pouring out her heart
to this complete stranger. The woman didn’t interrupt her. She waited for her
crying to slow down before she asked Sarah where she was.
“I—I’m
not exactly sure of the name of this place,” she said. “I think it’s on
Beaumont Street.”
“Oh,
that’s not far from us at all,” the woman told her. “Why don’t I give you
directions and you can come by in the morning after you’ve gotten some rest. Do
you have a car?”
“Yes,
I do. But... my kids. I have to keep my children with me. Will that be a
problem?”
“Not
at all, honey. Be glad to have ‘em. One of our mothers moved out yesterday. She
had the largest room. Plenty of space for the three of you.”
The
woman then gave Sarah directions to the shelter and she scribbled them down.
She thanked the woman and crawled back into bed next to Michael and closed her
eyes.
Matthew
was up before the sun, wanting a bottle. Sarah fed and changed him and took a
quick shower while Michael was still asleep. Then she packed the kids in the
car and followed the directions the woman on the phone had given her.
Three
exits up from the motel, she found the address. It was a church. She pulled
into the small parking lot.
“This
can’t be right,” Sarah mumbled. The church was in a rural area, surrounded by a
few farms and fields. Behind the white clapboard building was a modest
ranch-style house with a towering oak tree in the front yard. A detached garage
sat behind it, with a staircase on the right side.
She
checked the address again and sighed. There was a dark sedan parked in front of
the church. “Maybe someone here knows where this place is.”
Thinking
she would run in for just a minute, she locked the doors and told Matthew she
would be right back. She hurried over to the door and went inside. The hallway
was dark and she didn’t hear anyone bustling about.
“Hello?”
she called out. “Is anyone here?”
A
door opened to her left and a slice of light lit the hallway. A woman in a
cranberry knit dress greeted her. “I’m sorry,” she said. “I didn’t know anyone
was here.”
Sarah
hooked a thumb behind her and said, “My kids... they’re in the car. I just need
directions.”
She
showed the woman the address and told her about her call to the hotline.
“Hotline?”
the woman asked. “What hotline?”
“I,
um... I’m looking for the women’s shelter.”
The
woman appeared flustered. “I’m the new church secretary. I’ve only been here a
few weeks. I don’t know of any hotline or a shelter. Let me give Pastor Dave a
call.”
Sarah
waited in the office doorway, where she could see her car through the glass
exit door. The secretary’s cramped space was a mess, with piles of papers and
books and sticky notes tacked everywhere.
The
woman hung up the phone. “He’ll meet us in the parking lot. He lives in the
parsonage next door.”
“I
don’t want to be a bother,” said Sarah.
“No
bother. My name is Margaret, by the way. Pastor Dave is such a kind soul. He
won’t mind.” She prattled on as they walked down the hallway. “I’ve been trying
to put things in order back there. Lord knows it’s a mess. Pastor Dave’s wife
died a few months ago. She was the church secretary.”
A
man was waiting for them in the parking lot, dressed in jeans and a heavy
winter coat. He extended his hand and
smiled. “I’m Pastor David Williams, but you can call me Dave.”
Sarah
shook his hand. He was a tall man, with salt-and-pepper hair and kind eyes. She
noticed he kept looking at her swollen bottom lip and sunglasses.
“You
said you called the hotline?”
Sarah
nodded. “The ad was in the phone book for a women’s shelter and soup kitchen. A
woman answered and gave me these directions. She said her name was Ruth.”
Pastor
Dave’s face turned ashen and his mouth went slack. Margaret stared at her with
a look of bewilderment. “We haven’t had a shelter or soup kitchen in a while,”
he said in a thin voice. “We used to run one in the city. My wife ran the
hotline. But it was disconnected over a year ago.”
Sarah’s heart sank. “Must have been a mix-up.
Sorry to have bothered you.” She turned back toward her car.
“What
else did this woman say?” he asked.
Sarah
didn’t want to waste any more time here. “Uh... just that I told her I have
children and she said another woman with kids had moved out yesterday so there
was a large room available.”
A
look passed between the pastor and Margaret. “Thanks anyways,” said Sarah. She
went to her car and unlocked the door.
“Wait,”
he said. “I have a place you and your kids can stay.”
Sarah
looked at him.
“Come,”
he said, beckoning with his hand. “Get
your children and I’ll show you the apartment over the garage. My daughter and
grandchildren left yesterday to go back to Florida. It’s empty now.”
Sarah
didn’t know what to do. Margaret came over to the car and offered to help her
with Michael and Matthew. Sarah noticed the woman’s eyes were brimming with
tears. “Ruth sent you here,” she said. “I don’t know how, but she did.”
“What
are you talking about?” Sarah asked.
“Pastor
Dave’s late wife – her name was Ruth.”
Sarah
felt strangely numb as she followed them up the stairs to the large room over
the garage. The space was clean and furnished, with a crib and two small beds
made up with quilts against the far wall, a separate bathroom, and a kitchen
just big enough for a refrigerator and stove. A coffee maker sat on the
counter.
Two twin beds and a
coffee pot.
A
wave of peace washed over then, like nothing she had ever felt before. She knew
this was from God and that right here, right now, He was with her. Not within
the walls of a stained-glass cathedral or the hushed halls of some ancient place
of worship, but here in this humble efficiency apartment on the outskirts of
rural Pennsylvania.
Michael
ran over to the nearest bed and climbed onto it. “Can I have this bed, Mommy?”
Sarah
smiled.
The author would like to extend a special thanks goes out to Darlene Perkins for her assistance with this beautiful story!
The author would like to extend a special thanks goes out to Darlene Perkins for her assistance with this beautiful story!
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