Maybe space is a window,
leading down from Heaven to earth. Pitch black, streaked with swirls of purple
and blue, the cosmos dancing around bright stars flickering their timeless
message, dazzling. Brilliant white. Like the eyes of God watching over the
earth through a blanket of night.
…
I was in my garden when I
heard the scream—the horrible, blood-curdling, soul-piercing scream of fate
recognized without the opportunity to avert it, only to meet it head-on in a
split second of final clarity. I turned just in time, rising from my
earth-stained knees sunk into the damp garden, wiping my hands on the front of
my shirt, my eyes scanning, searching the horizon for the source of the cry,
still ringing so clearly in my ears, reverberating. Looked just in time to see
the collision, the meeting of the truck as it crested the hill, with the small
motorcycle. The collision sending the young riders into the air, a cartoonish
image in the slowing of time, each movement exaggerated, like falling through
puddles of gelatinous air.
They landed and bounced, skidding across the road,
the girl tumbling and rolling farther than the man. Still screaming. Or maybe
by then it existed only in my mind, ringing in my ears in perpetuity.
…
But if those are the eyes
of God, where are the hands? Where do they reach, scooping, cradling? The feet,
carrying Him to and fro? What else exists in that great expanse of nothingness?
Nothing more than planets? Stars? Dust? Whole galaxies just reaching endlessly
as they go nowhere?
…
I was standing under the
bright filling station lights, mindlessly pumping gas, just casually watching
the numbers roll higher and higher. A generic pop song, all bleeps and
computer-generated rhythms— and for the life of me I can no longer recall what
song it was, though it keeps playing over and over in my mind in short clips,
each measure just looping— broke the monotonous whir of distant cars on the
highway just a mile away.
I jumped, startled, when I heard the squealing of
tires and the nauseating heavy crunch of metal on metal. It was near, sounded
like it was on top of me, and I looked around frantically, scanning the surrounding
area, my mindless reverie snapped into focused attention. All of this under the
soul-shattering scream that filled the night, swirling, enveloping me,
threading between the trees of the surrounding woods. My eyes scanned the
surrounding area—no sign of a crash. No black tire marks. No dented hulking
masses of metal. Nothing to indicate the source of the scream. Nothing out of
the ordinary on the late summer night as I stood pumping my gas. Nothing except
some child’s doll someone had thrown up the road. I stood watching as it
tumbled and rolled, wondering why a child would be out playing this late, and
in the middle of the road.
…
And if God isn’t up
there, out in space or above it, looking down through infinite darkness, then
where is He? And how long has He been gone? Coming back anytime soon? Maybe.
Maybe he just ran out on an errand, ran to the store for a loaf of bread and a
quart of milk. Perhaps to the deli for a bite to eat. Maybe the sign on His
door reads Be Back Soon. Maybe. Maybe
not.
…
But it wasn’t a cartoon,
I realized. My instincts took over, adrenaline coursing through my veins, as I
dropped my gardening tools, wiping my hands on my shirt, streaking it with
smears of dirt. I sprinted without thinking. Step after step across the lawn,
through my gate, out toward the road, digging up small bits of newly grassed
earth with each step as I crossed the threshold between burgeoning lawn and
broken blacktop, never looking for oncoming cars as I crossed. The scenery
blurred as I ran, my mind numb, out-of-shape lungs burning, telling my
middle-aged body to stop. I turned up the road, the night silent and calm,
sprinting until I saw the scene: a pickup, old and square-bodied, rested atop a
small motorcycle, barely big enough for the two people who had been on it; the
driver was out of the truck, holding his head and frantically walking back and
forth, muttering something to himself, though I heard nothing, could only see
his lips moving up and down; from under his hands rivulets of blood trickled, dark
and thick; the man on the motorcycle lay a few feet from his bike, rolling
slightly on the ground, groaning. I searched for the girl, whose cartoonish
flight I was still replaying in my mind. Finally I saw her, probably ten feet
from the scene, patches of red leading the way to her. I made my way up the
road, following the spotted trail with bits of gravel-emblazoned skin stuck to
the road. Her hollowing eyes were wide. A puddle of black was pooling around
her, stemming from the gash in the back of her auburn hair. I knew there was
nothing I could do, it was too late for her, and could only watch the eyes grow
vaguer and vaguer. She tried lifting her hand, to in those last few second look
for the man, rolling her eyes slowly around. But nothing, I knew, would help.
So I turned my attention back to the man I’d passed, kneeling by his side, my
responders training from when I was younger coming back in waves.
I barely noticed the man jogging down the road,
curiously at first, as if unsure what he was looking for or at, quickening his
pace as the reality of the scene bore down on him.
…
It’s not that I wasn’t
paying attention— I was, there was just nothing I could do. I had been watching
the road, hadn’t been drinking, texting, talking on my cell phone; hadn’t even
been changing the radio station, for Crissakes. I was careful. I was aware. I
was a good driver. The night was peaceful, a late summer night, with crickets.
I can clearly remember the crickets, invisibly chirping all around me as I
turned off the highway. Crickets and the soft whir of the tires over the road.
Some song on the radio, some pop song, the catchy kind that latches on and
won’t let go, persisting in the memory for days of all who hear it. On and on
and on. And then there they were, out of nowhere. Not nowhere, exactly, not as if they materialized out of thin air, were
created in that instant to dart their bike out in front of my truck; but they
may as well have been. Because I was on them before it could even register that
they were there. Pulled out from a side road. Maybe they didn’t see me. Maybe
they thought I was slower than I was, that they could make it. Whatever they
thought, they were wrong. Or maybe they didn’t think anything at all. Perhaps
to them I didn’t even exist. Not that it matters, I guess, in the long run,
because by the time I saw them, the only thing I could do was hammer my feet on
the break, gripping the steering wheel with white knuckles, and start to slide
until something quickened my stop.
…
I left behind the gas station
lights, so bright against the fading purple night, and strolled down the road,
looking for the doll. Except that I wasn’t. I knew, of course, that it was no
doll, but I didn’t want to; I didn’t want to know it, so I kept looking for
bits of string hair, plastic chunked and sticking to the coarse pavement. It
looked like one of those water-babies my daughter had played with as a child,
the kind that is squishy when held, had burst. That’s what I told myself—tried to
convince myself of—as I got closer, but I knew I was wrong. I knew when I saw
here that no child had been playing with a doll, that the girl who’d been
thrown was not much more than a child herself, and all I could think in those
first few moments was of my daughter, and how I hoped it wasn’t her lying
before me, even though I know this was a useless worry as she lived so far
away, would not be here, could not be on this road on this night in late
summer, but as a father this was all I could think. I even started to call her
name—to call Katie—until I saw
another man moving away from her. I got closer.
He was focusing his attention now on a second body, a man, mangled,
crumpled under the dented, distorted mass of what had just moments before been
a motorcycle.
…
Maybe God never asked for
the job, taking on the responsibility only when no one else would. No way; not me. I don’t want it. Perhaps
He stood around, eyeing the competition as they made excuses for why they
weren’t fit. You want me to take on that
kinda pressure? No way. I can’t think
fast enough. I have other plans.
Excuse after excuse until he was the last one left, the potential masses
dwindling with each passing moment. Come
on, someone’s gotta do it.
Okay.
…
We were thinking of
nothing, really; nothing except milk and diapers for Lucinda. Feeling nothing
but the soft vibrations of the bike under us. My husband’s hands on the
handlebars, mine clutching fistfuls of his leather jacket. We rode feeling
nothing but the soft wind through our hair in the late summer night. We were
unencumbered, free, on a quick run to the filling station. No purse, no
wallets, just the cash in our pockets. Not even a cell phone. Free and alive.
We never saw it coming until it was upon us, and the last thing I remember is
the scream that escaped my lips. It was a scream of fate accepted without even
the chance for refusal. Free and alive and together—until we weren’t.
…
There was nothing we
could do. In today’s world where everyone has a cell phone glued to their ear,
we had nothing between the two of us. His was back in his car under the filling
station lights; mine was back on the railing of my porch, sitting idle by the
sweating beer I had left. I check the motorcyclist’s pockets—nothing. No cars,
no headlights, just the five of us on the quiet road. The filling-station man ran
back to get his phone as I started CPR on the crumpled man. The driver is
kneeling on the ground, holding his head, but there’s nothing I can do for him
except tell him to lie down. He keeps looking around, asking what happened. I
try to get him to calm down, but I’m only one man, the only one there for these
three, and the odds are so dour. I need to wrap the man’s head; his hands are
soaked and the blood is still coming in spurts and rivulets that stream down
into his graying beard. But I continue CPR, cursing my forgetting my cell
phone.
…
By the time the
paramedics arrive, it’s too late for the woman, her eyes blank and gray. Her
husband is questionable, and the truck driver is lying on the ground, finally
not moving, my shirt now wrapped around his gaping head. But the ambulance had
come from the hospital just a few minutes away, and all the while, we two
worked, the filling-station man and I, and neighbors came out to their yards,
many just stopping and staring, but the feeling of helplessness was persistent.
The ambulance was followed shortly by a string of cars, no doubt coming from the local football game; since the accident, we’d seen none, when usually the road was so busy we feared allowing our kids to play in front yards for fear of them running toward this very road, as heavily congested it was. Someone had called the paramedics from a cell phone, one of many people who stood in their yards so as to not get too close. We don’t know how long it took the ambulance to arrive, or how long it took to load up the people and cart them off for better help than we could provide, a white sheet covering the young woman. In my mind, it was years, each second ticking by like the changing of weeks, and no one will ever tell me differently.
The ambulance was followed shortly by a string of cars, no doubt coming from the local football game; since the accident, we’d seen none, when usually the road was so busy we feared allowing our kids to play in front yards for fear of them running toward this very road, as heavily congested it was. Someone had called the paramedics from a cell phone, one of many people who stood in their yards so as to not get too close. We don’t know how long it took the ambulance to arrive, or how long it took to load up the people and cart them off for better help than we could provide, a white sheet covering the young woman. In my mind, it was years, each second ticking by like the changing of weeks, and no one will ever tell me differently.
And after it was over, we just stood there, those who
helped looking around at those who watched, who in turned looked around at
everyone else.
…
We were there that night,
all of us around, in some capacity. Observer. Victim. Layman saint. Helper. But
I can’t help wondering where God was as the truck struck the two on the
motorcycle. Was He in the cab with the driver? On the bike with the husband and
wife of only two years? Or maybe He was home with their one-year-old little
girl, cradling her, as she sat on her grandmother’s lap, drifting in and out of
sleep, waiting for her parents to come home. Was he in the ambulance with the
paramedics? Maybe He stood in one of the yards, watching, whispering, trying to
understand what had happened, trying to get a glimpse. Maybe He was in
everything that happened that night, in and around the whole scene. Maybe He
was everywhere yet nowhere, all at once. Maybe He was in one of the passing
cars. Perhaps it was the one who slowed almost to a crawl, the woman in the
front passenger seat leaning out her window, her entire torso extended, phone
in hand, snapping pictures, hatefully urging me to move as I attempted to block
her shots with my body, my hands, any means necessary. Or maybe He looked down
with a hint of sadness, His hands tied in the name of fate, just a casual
observer to all that happened. Maybe it
wasn’t who God failed to show up that night, maybe it was all part of a bigger
plan, something so grand I can’t understand it. Maybe the truck hit that motorcycle
to keep from hitting someone else further down the road, someone whose death
would be more impactful to more people. Someone younger. But what kind of
tradeoff is that? One life over another—one more precious than the one lost. And
how awful to have to make that call. Maybe that’s what God was doing, weighing His
options. Maybe. Maybe not. But if that’s
God’s job, He can keep it.
…
I’ve spend many restless hours since that night,
those images dancing in my mind, wondering about what happened, why it happened.
Maybe it was a test and most of us failed. Maybe it was nothing, just
happenstance. Where was God that night? Wherever He was, I wish I had been
there too.
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