Gregory pulled into the empty church parking
lot just as it was getting dark. He passed the black windows, shining
and clean, perfect mirrors and perfect abysses at the same time, and
made his way to the double glass doors. There is a distinctive smell
that all LDS meetinghouses share and, for some reason, Gregory was
particularly impressed by it as he entered the deserted hallway on
this evening.
As he walked past the bishop's office and into the foyer he noticed a different smell. Flowers. Across the
lobby there were two easels with wreaths flanking the double door
entrance to the chapel.
There must be a funeral tomorrow.
On the table next to the entrance lay a
stack of folded tan papers.
They even printed the programs already.
Gregory got this assignment more than
anyone else in the Elder's Quorum. But he wasn't going to murmur
about it tonight. He just wanted to get done quickly. Something about
the empty chapel gave him the creeps.
He was always a little high strung as
he walked through the mostly dark halls and classrooms by himself.
The giant black and white portraits of the past presidents of the
church that hung in the main hall seemed to be looking down on him.
Following him with their condemning eyes. Eyes that held a knowing
menace of who he really was and what he had done.
At the end of the opposite hall was a
life sized statue of Joseph Smith. Several times while doing lock up
before, he had been startled by its dark silhouette as he turned the
corner, forgetting for a moment that it was there and thinking that
it was an intruder. Gregory was often impressed when he saw the
statue by how tall the prophet was, how broad his shoulders were, how
masculine his form was, how “large in stature” he was. Joseph
Smith was a big man, in more ways than one. He would hate to run into
a guy built like that alone in the chapel at night.
Knowing that “Joseph Smith” was in
the building with Gregory was at the same time both reassuring and a
little creepy. Then there was the noose. When Gregory was fourteen,
he and a few of the other teachers would often sneak away from mutual
to climb up into the attic space above the chapel. There was a whole
unseen world of rooms and corridors up there to explore. One time,
they made their way all the way over to the interior of the steeple.
They followed a narrow crawl space that opened up into a 12 by 12
foot room where the interior steeple walls towered above them. There
was a ladder on the far side that they used to climb fifteen feet up
to a foot and a half ledge about a third the way up the
steeple, forming a ring around the dark abyss below. The three of
them spread out around the ledge, careful not to drop their flash
lights. Something in the void caught Gregory’s eye. Not far above
their heads a beam spanned from one side of the steeple to another.
Something dangled from it at eye level. A noose. It just hung there
all by itself, gathering dust in the darkness.
The three of them joked about how weird it was
to find an noose up there and who could have put it there. But the
sight of it profoundly disturbed Gregory. He did not know why. It was
just the image.
Even though he had never been back up
there since, he could feel its presence taunting him, sometimes even
when the church was full of people and daylight, as he sat in
sacrament meeting or bored in Gospel Doctrine. All the more when he
patrolled the empty corridors alone in the twilight.
He still wondered how it got there, and
why, as he checked the windows down the next hall. There was this one story that went around about some
guy that committed suicide and whose ghost haunted the basement of
the building. But that all happened in the boiler room-not the
steeple-according to the stories.
Besides, the story wasn't true. Even
if it was, there was no connection.
He always tried not to think of that
noose as he made his rounds through the unlit chapel, which, of
course, meant that he always did think about it. Singing hymns never
seemed to work. He tried to force his mind to wander somewhere else.
But tonight his mind was set on reenacting the time that they
discovered it. Jason and Mark had had moved out of the ward a few
years after their missions, married, had kids, and were successful.
They were probably bishops or something. The other young men, usually
led by Jason, used to tease Gregory for how good he was. How he didn't skip Sunday school to hide out in the bathroom with them.
How he never got their frequent jokes about drugs and sex and stuff.
Sure, it was ironic that other Mormons teased him for being too good
while at church, and tormented him on scout campouts for being
“righteous,” but the fact was, Gregory was not good, even back
then. He wasn't really righteous. Sure he stayed away from drugs, didn't get into trouble with girls, and everyone always talked
about how worthy he was. Only Gregory knew his secret. He was the
most unworthy of them all.
Gregory started making his way through
the classrooms of the side hall, making sure each of the windows were
closed and locked shut. He made his way room by room around the
outside of the building until he rounded the corner into the far
hall. There, silhouetted against the blue light, translucent through
the curtains, stood the dark imposing figure of Joseph Smith.
You didn't get me this time.
He made his way past the kitchen,
towards the statue, and around the next corner. He tried not to think
of that stupid noose.
It's probably not even there anymore.
Gregory went down the stairs into the
basement. This was always the part that he dreaded most. This was the area of the church that was the darkest, except for the windowless
cultural hall, but he didn't need to go in there. The few windows
that were down in the basement were only along the top of the scout
room walls. And he still felt a rush of fear, for some reason, when
he passed by the boiler room door.
Gregory's thoughts wandered from that
trip up to the steeple and how the other boys treated him. He though
of the campouts they went on together, the time one of them got lost,
the time that they put dry ice bombs in the latrines at scout camp.
And Havusapai.
Why, tonight, am I thinking about
Havasupai?
On the second day of the campout, the
troop hiked down to Beaver Falls. The whole way down the other scouts
talked about how awesome the cliff jumping was going to be. Every
time this was mentioned, Gregory felt a rush of dread.
Everyone is going to do it. Am I really
going to be the only one to wimp out?
Gregory checked the door that led to
the outside stairwell to make sure that it was locked and made his
way back down the hall.
By the time they reached the falls the
day was hot. At least 90 degrees. Gregory wanted to swim in the
blue-green water so bad. Perhaps if I just swim in it, no will will
notice that I never actually jumped.
He was disappointed. Once they got to
the top of the falls, it soon became clear that the only way down to
the water-besides jumping-was a precarious and conspicuous
down-climb. It was probably more dangerous than jumping and there was
no way to climb down there without drawing attention to the fact that
he was doing it.
Mark jumped first, speeding down the 60
foot drop into the churning water at the base of the falls. Jason followed with a back flip.
“Dude, that was so bad!” Everyone
was laughing.
Before long, everyone had jumped and
climbed back up, some two or three times.
Gregory just needed to do it. Not think
about it and do it.
The basement was done. Now he just
needed to make his way back towards the stairs. Once he got up to the
main floor, there was only one side of the building left. Then he
could go home.
The glare of the desert sun was
blinding as Gregory peered over the cliff to the churning water
below. The Arizona air almost burned his lung as he inhaled
nervously.
Ok, not yet.
His fear was actually causing Gregory
to laugh.
Didn't even know that was possible.
Another deep breath.
He took two large steeps to the edge
and then he was falling. He was so surprised and disoriented as he
plummeted that he didn't even think to keep his arms tight against
his body. They hung out like wings as he crashed into the water. It didn't even hurt. The foam of the bubbles pushed him back up to the
surface almost instantly.
Gregory swam to the sandstone shore and
climbed up out of the water. All the other scouts were back up at the
top of the cliff. Gregory started to make his way back up to the top.
The climb was surprisingly difficult. His legs shook as he made a few
of the moves. About 40 feet up there was a crude ladder, fashioned
from a log. The rungs were wet and slippery from the boys who just
climbed up.
Gregory clasped the third rung from the
bottom and carefully balanced both feet on the bottom board. His leg
started to shake.
Sewing machine leg.
I need to get off this fast.
He stretched out his right arm,
reaching desperately for the rock above. He was too far over. The
little log ladder slipped out from under him.
Nothing to grab.
He fell at least 20 feet until he
smacked shoulder first into the ledge below, rolling on to the side
of his face and grinding it into the sandstone. His legs flailed above
him in the air, hanging over the ledge. His high center of
gravity pulled Gregory away from the ledge and he fell the rest of
the way, crashing into the water.
Gregory had no clue which way was up.
His arms instinctively reached to fight against the current. The pain
was instant and and shot from his shoulder down his right side. He
tried to move his arm again. The same pain.
I can't move my arm!
Gregory still did not know up and down.
He tried a third time. He wanted to scream out in pain, but his lungs
were completely empty.
I can't move my arm!
I'm going to die.
In the basement, Gregory approached the
dark stairs and made his way up to the landing. Turned and walked up
to the main floor. He sprinted up the last few steps, as he always
did, as if some unseen being was following him.
In the water, Gregory kicked his legs
and flailed his left arm in frantic desperation. He didn't know
which direction he needed to go.
His instinct took him to prayer.
I'm not even worthy to ask for help.
His lungs were crying for air. Inhale!
INHALE!
Gregory fought the urge but he was
loosing the will power.
Heavenly Father, I know I'm not worthy
of your help, but if I can just live, I promise I will change. I will
repent for real this time.
Change seemed so easy at that moment.
Of course he would change.
I promise I will change!
Please God. Please! I WILL be better!
He could tell he would not be able to
hold back the urge to breath much longer.
PLEASE! I WILL CHANGE!
It just happened. His mouth opened and
he sucked the water into his lungs. His entire body convulsed with
excruciating pain. Gregory could actually feel himself slip away. It
was over.
Suddenly, Gregory's entire
consciousness was filled with the most searing brilliant light he had
ever seen. Someone was calling his name. No, they were shouting it.
The light began to gradually come into
focus as the brilliant blue high desert sky. The voice was his
Priest Quorum adviser. “Gregory! ANSWER ME!”
Another voice shouted, “he's alive!”
Everything started to come into focus.
He lay on wet warm sandstone. The pain in his lungs. He could barely
breath. But, he could breath. Next he felt the pain in his shoulder.
Blood poured from his head and mixed into the puddle of water around
his body.
“Freak dude! Are you ok?”
He tried to speak, couldn't, just
felt the pain as he tried to draw the breath into his lungs.
I'm OK.
He really didn't remember much of the
aftermath. It seemed like they waited there a long time for the
helicopter. And he remembered waking up in the hospital in Kingman.
One thing that Gregory could clearly remember was that the first
thing that he thought of when he woke up in that hospital bed was his
promise and how he was so certain that he would keep it.
That was my chance.
Gregory reached the top of the stairs,
turned, and started making his way back along the hall.
I'm almost done.
Suddenly, he was overcome by an eerie
sense of unease. Something about the hall felt different. It dawned
on him. The statute of Joseph Smith was missing. It just wasn't there.
Someone else must be in the building.
Thieves? Someone pulling a prank?
It's not funny.
He rushed towards the lobby to the
nearest door.
The doorway was not there. The long
curtains that normally flanked the sides covered the entire entry
way.
Forget that. That's probably where they
are. There's another door on the other side of the chapel.
He rushed though the double doors to
the chapel, not even noticing the programs and flower displays that
stood by the chapel entrance, and started running along side the tall
green felt curtains that separated the chapel from the cultural hall.
towards the opposite pair of double doors.
For some reason he felt the need to
look to his left in the direction of the pulpit as he cut accords the
room. His eyes were immediately drawn to it. A coffin right up there
in front.
They already left the body in here!?
Gregory quickened his pace as he pushed
through the other set of double doors and into the opposite lobby. He
banked left to the set of glass doors. Same thing. Just more
curtains. This time he decided to just push them aside and get out of
there. He would feel safer outside, thieves or no thieves. He parted
the curtains, but could not see the door. Gregory moved his arms back
and forth through the curtains, but all that he could feel was
carpeted wall.
I must have gotten turned around. I
must be in the wrong hall. I'm just really, really disoriented.
He made his way back down the all
towards the cultural hall. No, he was in the right place. He was sure
of it. Turning around, he made his way back to the doors. They were
definitely not there.
He though of cutting back through the
cultural hall to the other side of the building but there were no
windows or doors in there. It would be too dark to see.
He was right next to the
Relief Society Room. Gregory ran though the door and approached the
window. He tried the metal latch on the first window. It was stuck.
I'm not turning around. I'm not going
back in there.
They will think it was so silly that I
broke a window.
What will tell them? I got spooked?
Who cares? I've gotta get out.
He thought of that corpse lying there
in the same building.
All along the wall, stacks of metal
folding chairs leaned against the wall. “LDS torture devices.” He
picked one up, holding it by the pairs of cold metal legs with his
his trembling hands.
Alright.
He swung it with a steady arc right at
the bumpy opaque glass window. The frosted glass shattered leaving a
dark whole in its place. He used the rounded top of the chair to
break off the remaining shards that protruded from the bottom of the
frame.
Once he got out of the hospital it was
only a matter of weeks before that new sense of purpose that he
committed to so strongly as he struggled in the river began to wane.
You just can't keep up that kind of
intensity forever.
Pretty soon he was his same old self.
When he looked back at the at moment,
that was really his one best chance. Never had his desire to change
been so sincere. He was convinced that he would repent. He had known
it with a certainty. He would never be so motivated, never have such
a clear chance to change again.
If I couldn't change my life after
that, after I wanted to so badly, after I was so sure that I could,
then I will never change.
Sure, Christ will forgive all sins. But
what good will that do me if I can't ever even make the changes
myself in the first place? Part of repenting is turning away. And I
just can't turn away.
Gregory felt a little silly as he
finished breaking off the shards that protruded from the bottom of
the window.
I must be confused about the doors. I'm
clearly not thinking straight.
But at least I can get out now.
He crawled, arms and head first, into
the darkness outside. He could not see if there were hedges under the
window. Most of the building had hedges around it, if he was
remembering correctly. His hands touched the solid bottom and the
rest of his body followed, sliding to the solid ground in an awkward
collapse.
Gregory stood up and walked out into
the parking lot. His eyes had still not adjusted. It was pitch black.
He had to get his bearings.
Based on where I came out, the car must
be on the far side of the building.
He turned perpendicular to the building
and started making his way east through the parking lot.
My eyes will adjust soon.
Why is it so dark out here? Was I
really in there that long? And why aren't the parking lot lights
on?
His eyes still would not adjust.
It must be pitch black out here.
He had no frame of reference to
determine were he was going.
The Priests' Quorum adviser that saved his life that day was the bishop now. It had been over ten years since he
made that promise. Too many years of breaking it.
As he groped around in total darkness,
Gregory thought of the weeks and months and years following the
incident.
I really became pathetic. It didn't
take long.
Sometimes over the intervening years,
he had thought about that noose, when he contemplated ways to end it.
He could climb up there and hang himself and no one would ever find
him. People would just think he disappeared. They would never know
what a pathetic coward he was. They would never know what he had
done. But he would never really do it. Gregory knew exactly what it
was like not to breathe. He would never put himself through that
again. Never.
Gregory’s eyes still had not adjusted
to the darkness outside. He wondered if he should turn back, so that
he could at least feel the side of the building and get his bearings.
As he considered it, something caught
his attention. The sound of his own footsteps. They didn't sound
right. There was a strange empty echo to them. He stopped and began
to pay attention to the surface of the ground for the first time. It
was hard and smooth. Like a basketball court.
I'm in the cultural hall.
It was impossible, but he was sure of
it. The smell, the feel the, way the sound echoed.
He walked forward until his hands
reached out and touched the fabric wall of the curtains that
partitioned off the chapel. When he was a kid, Gregory and his
brothers would chase each other and hide between the two layers. He
felt his way following the curtains until he came to the seam and
passed though the two halves into the chapel.
Gregory froze. He directly faced the
coffin, lying there on the far side of the pews. He turned right and
ran to the double doors, frantically passing through them and fell to the side knocking over a table.
A stack of folded papers fell to the
floor, scattering all around him. As he scrambled to get back up on
his feet, he looked down at the mess of programs between is hands. There was
a dark oval shaped portrait in the center with his own face staring
up at him at him.
Gregory spread the program open. He didn't notice the speakers or musical number or who gave the
invocation. His eyes were drawn to the very bottom right-hand side.
“In lieu of flowers please send
donations to The American Society for Suicide Prevention.”
Gregory scrambled frantically on all
fours, his hands and feet slipping on the scattered programs.
I have to get out of here now!
He regained his balance, his fluttering
feet finally finding purchase on the solid carpet, and he sprinted down the
hall towards the bishop's office.
He remembered. There's another exit
down that hall.
Gregory stopped as he came up to the
door a the end of the hall. The solid black pane made a perfect
mirror. He tried to avoid looking at his pathetic, desperate image,
tried to not to look at his reflected face. This is something that he
usually did when looking at mirrors. Gregory had a habit of avoiding
eye contact with himself.
Gregory reached down for the push bar.
His reflection reached down, as if to stop him. Gregory stepped back
and, without thinking, looked up to his mirrored face. His eyes
stared back with an independent menace of their own. The reflection
lifted its arm and gestured back towards the inside of the building.
It then brought its left arm to its neck and raised the other arm
above its head, making a gesture simulation hanging.
Gregory screamed out and kicked at his
refection. The glass shattered, giving way to an opaque blackness. He
cautiously stepped though the frame, careful not to cut himself on
any lingering shards.
As he passed through, he caught himself
with a sudden start. Even though he could not see it, Gregory could
sense the presence of a void. He could sense the ledge at his feet.
The air was stale and dusty. Straight in front, he could just make
out the shape in the darkness. The noose hung in perfect solitude,
just within his reach.
This is how it is supposed to end,
isn't it?
He had the strongest urge to get away.
Before he could even think about it, Gregory jumped out into the
darkness, brushing the noose as he passed by. He crashed into the
floor, which instantly gave way in a torrent of sheet-rock and foam.
He was falling sideways, looking down he could make out the shape of
pews far bellow him.
Gregory crashed into a pew landing on
his face and shoulder. The pain of his old wounds came screaming back
at him as they were torn open anew. He lay there dazed for a moment
before propping himself up within the shattered pew. His right
shoulder had re-dislocated and he could feel the warm blood pouring
down his face and down the side of his neck.
There in front of him lay the coffin.
He had to do it. He had to finally face it. If this was real, or hell, or
spirit prison, or outer darkness, or whatever, he had to know. He
stood up, limped towards the box and ran his left hand along it,
finding the seam beneath the mahogany lid. It was heavy, but he was
able to lift it with one arm.
His pale white likeness lay inside,
eyes closed, in an almost peaceful repose. He looked happy, content,
satisfied; a stark contrast to his malicious reflection.
Suddenly, the eyes opened. It turned
its head to directly face him.
The eyes looked at him with the same
menace of his reflection. Two arms shot out, grabbed Gregory, and
pulled him into the coffin. It held him backwards against its cold
stiff body. The lid shut with a gentle thud above him.
The corpse held him tightly in the
coffin. Its cold smooth hands grasped his neck. The dry brittle
fingers had the feel of stiff coarse rope. Gregory struggled
instinctively to free himself for just one breath. As he struggled, a
sensation came over him; like he was sinking down. The coffin was
being lowered, slowly lowered down. He could faintly hear
speaking outside the coffin. It was the voice of his bishop. The
voice was too muffled to make out anything beyond a few bits:
“...plot as the resting... hallowed and protected... the
Resurrection.”
The coffin roof jolted with a fistful
of falling dirt. Gregory's clawing at the coffin lid automatically
became more frantic. The corpse calmly released on hand from his heck
and confidently wrapped it arm around Gregory's arms to hold him
back. He could feel the air becoming heavy and oppressive. His
oxygen starved brain sent him into a dizzy confusion.
“...bless his loved one's with
reassurance...”
His lungs screamed for air.
“...name of Jesus Christ....”
Jesus. Gregory could not think clearly,
but his brain was fixated on that one word.
“Why do you not have faith that I can
change you?”
Gregory could finally see just how
inconsequential his shortcomings, flaws, and sins were. Christ
overcame them all.
Jesus is my Savior. It is not about me
changing. It is not about me doing
better. It is about Jesus changing me.
He knew this was it. There was no more
time to repent. The Lord would not prolong the days of his probation.
He'd had his chance. But, it didn't matter. There was no more time.
It was the darkness when no man could work and it was too late. Still
Gregory felt a calm and a peace knowing that if he could have more
time, if he could do it all again, Christ would give him the power to
change.
Or rather, Christ would change me.
It is not up to me.
As he thought this last proposition, he
felt himself begin to die.
…
Suddenly he was pierced with a blinding
light. The brightness was completely overwhelming.
“Gregory”
“Gregory.”
The voice kept calling out. Gregory
could not speak. He coughed up what felt like water. His lungs
instantly sucked in a deep breath. The air was sharp and dry. It
stung in a million places all at once as it filled his throat and
lungs. Out of the blinding light an intense pure blue gradually came
into focus. He was soaking wet.
“Gregory! Answer me!”
“Dude, you ok, man?”
He lay on the flat red rock beside the
churning water, the familiar walls of Havasupi Canyon towering above
him.
Yeah... I'm ok.