part 2 chapter
38
a fter my prison release, i had been stone-deaf to my mother’s constant pleas to join
the church. but then she proposed something that changed my mind.
the mill was closed for the winter season, and farm work was reduced to scattering hay twice
a day for mr. beard’s cow. sunny days were in short supply, and i fell into a deepening gloom.
long, constitutional hikes were my way to escape the women’s hovering concern. i stalked the
upper fields, counting footsteps on the butter-tinted hills and pacing off the bristling tree line.
but as days shortened and the anniversary of bibb’s killing approached, even that practice
wasn’t enough.
dressed warmly for the weather in shawls knotted tightly around her woolen cape, ma found
me one afternoon again in a blanket on the porch. full of righteous purpose, she pulled up a
chair next to me. there was a hint of her old self in her assertive tone. “son, i worry day and
night about what ails you. i lose sleep over it.”
refusing to meet her probing eyes, i looked across the porch railing as if there was
something of extreme interest tacked to the tree by the road. “ah, ma, i just wish you and the
girls would leave me be. can’t a man even find peace in his own home? sometimes i long for
the war again—to get away from all this prying and picking.” as soon as i saw her wounded
expression, i regretted those spiteful words. she was so fragile these days.
unexpectedly, she persevered. “you may be as rude as you like, but i’m going to get to the
bottom of this moping about.” she then went on to address her theory for my melancholy. a
lack of devotion caused my low spirits, and the only solution was to get myself to new
jerusalem church to pray for forgiveness. she told me how she was distraught when i was in
prison. “but i turned to the lord for salvation, and we were blessed with your homecoming.
you should praise your maker for bringing you safely back to us.” she continued on in this
vein, and eventually veered into some nonsense about a coming apocalypse. i ceased to pay
attention and fell back into my own musings, her irrational conversation deepening my solitary
misery.
but then ma said something that sparked my interest. “there are so few who are able-bodied
in the neighborhood these days. reverend brown says he’d welcome your assistance keeping
the church account books when you aren’t busy at the mill. you are a good man, but you need to
get busy before the devil discovers you.”
something shifted in me that day. an idea began to grow. my greatest dread was to be found
out by my family; i needed to do something to redeem myself, something that might tip the
scales more in my favor than against. an adult life of charity and church involvement might do
it. people would say, “yes, as a young man he behaved recklessly, but what an upright person
he’s become—always constant in his faith and helping others.” obituaries in the spectator
consistently cite regular church membership as proof of a life well lived.
but pride kept me from relenting in that moment. believing her argument had been in vain,
ma arose with a heavy sigh and went back inside, leaving me to my doldrums. and yet, to her
immense surprise, on sunday i awakened with the rest of the family, donned a pair of brown
canvas pants and a homespun linen shirt from before the war, and joined them in a pew at new
jerusalem, toting bibb along with me. if ma wanted to believe that by some miracle i’d been
called, i wouldn’t dissuade her. i belted out the words of hymns as though i meant them, and i
even allowed myself to become her attentive student, studying the bible chapter and verse every
afternoon in this very library. gradually, my show of interest seemed to bring her out of the
shadows, and, i hoped, made up for my surliness.
my habits changed, but not my lack of faith in a benevolent god. every sunday i endured
sermons that warned of wrathful old testament fire and brimstone. preachers invoked a harsh
paternal god, and i rejected him before he could reject me. but there were other consolations.
the greatest was meeting my dear ellen that long-ago day in church. the second was that the
presbyterian church required its members to live by the ten commandments’ rules and then
those made by the presbytery, the church’s governing body. if you were guilty of murder,
fornication, failure to tithe, adultery, drinking alcohol, and fighting, you were banned from the
church. i felt i needed rules. for four years, i’d lived by the only rule that mattered: kill or be
killed. during that time, my own choices were often flawed. i no longer trusted my judgment. in
the church, rules were crystal clear. boundaries were unconditionally drawn in black and white.
i wholeheartedly embraced that system and worked my way through it. the first step was to
become a sunday school teacher; then i was promoted to superintendent, overseeing four
hundred students and their teachers. by the time my moustache was white, i was elected an
elder sitting judgment on others. my veneer of goodness was irrefutable, bolstered by my fellow
congregants who voted me into office year after year. the die was cast, and the obituary’s
favorable text assured. i would be lauded as an admirable man in everyone’s opinion but my
own.