Authors: Frank Peretti
She tried to compose herself. “Um, who was it you were here to see?”
“Norm Corrigan.”
She tapped the photo lying on her desk. “Were you seeing him about this?”
“I sure was.”
She made a little
o
with her mouth and nodded to herself. Then she picked up her telephone. “Could you . . . excuse me? Please, have a seat on the couch?”
“Sure thing.”
I took back the photograph and walked slowly, hoping, even praying, I’d be able to overhear what she said into the telephone. All I could make out was “Tammy . . . talk to Norm . . . we need Miles . . .”
I sat down on the couch and watched the little stir my photograph and questions caused. One of the six secretaries at this end—her name card said Tammy Orenfeldt—was stealing little sidelong glances at me as she and Mrs. Fontinelli spoke in hushed tones. “Yes,” I heard Tammy say, “for ten o’clock. All right, I’ll ask him.” Both secretaries hung up at the same time. Tammy punched in another number and said, “I need to interrupt you.” Mrs. Fontinelli made a quick call herself and then ducked into Miles Newberry’s office while Tammy hurried down the hall and ducked into Norm Corrigan’s.
I knew Brandon Nichols was the kind of man who would not allow himself to be lost in the crowd. One way or another, he would make himself known, especially to the leadership—especially to the pastor he could describe so well and seemed so bitter against.
Now a man who had to be Norm Corrigan came out of his office and crossed to Miles Newberry’s as Tammy came back to her desk acting like she wasn’t watching me. There was a three-person conference going on in Newberry’s office. I checked my watch. My appointment with Corrigan was coming up. I wondered what their line would be.
The door opened. Norm Corrigan hurried back to his office, Mrs. Fontinelli hurried back to her desk, and Miles Newberry came strolling down the hall toward me. He was graying nicely and had put on a little more weight. He looked good for being twenty years older. I knew he wouldn’t notice whether I looked different.
“Hi,” he said, extending his hand. “Miles Newberry. And you are . . . ?”
I stood, shaking his hand. “Travis Jordan. I have an appointment with Norm Corrigan—” I looked at my watch. “Right now.”
“Norm’s had something come up. May
we
talk?”
It felt funny to be standing eye to eye with this man, having his undivided attention. Twenty years ago, he promised we’d do this. “Okay.”
We went into his office and he closed the door. Rather than sit behind his desk, he sat in one chair facing me as I sat in another. It didn’t exactly make me feel more comfortable, but I appreciated the protocol.
“Now, what can we do for you?” he asked.
“I imagine you’ve heard from Mrs. Fontinelli,” I said. “I’m here trying to find out anything you can tell me about this man.” I gave him the same explanation I gave Mrs. Fontinelli and showed him the same photograph.
He was not at all happy to see it. He scowled, drew a deep breath, sighed it out, then asked me, “What do you intend to do with this?”
“I need to know who he is, who he
really
is, and how I can deal with him. I need to know his background and what would motivate him to get into this false christ routine. If you can tell me anything you know about him, I’d greatly appreciate it.”
He ignored my question. “What makes you think he was here at this church?”
“He talks like he was here, and he’s very bitter.” Oops. That sounded unkind, but then again, it was true.
Miles Newberry chuckled—to shed my unintentional stab, I thought. “Well, this is a big church and we get all kinds. Not everyone who comes through here is going to be happy with us.”
I wanted an answer to my first line of questions. “Do you know this man?”
“Not personally, no.”
I noticed his body language. We were in
his
office, but he was the one acting cornered. “But you know who he is?”
I could sense reluctance in his answer. “Yes. We know who he is.”
“So he did attend this church for a time?”
“I already told you that.”
“Actually, no. You didn’t.”
“Well, he did.”
“And when was that?”
He looked at the ceiling. He took another breath. He was clearly not comfortable. “I would guess two or three years ago.”
“Did he have a name?” He looked at me curiously. I explained, “He’s used two different names that I know of and I’m suspecting a third.”
He whistled his amazement, but said nothing further.
This guy was not a bubbling spring of information. “Is there a problem here? I feel like you don’t want to talk about this.”
“You have to understand that we do a lot of counseling here and that we hold a lot of information in confidence.”
“Even his name?”
“Well . . . please don’t take offense, but we don’t know who you are. We don’t know what you’re going to do with the information. We have relationships and confidences we have to protect. I’m sure you understand.”
“Perhaps I should tell you what this man is doing to our town.” I recapped Nichols/Johnson’s career, showing Miles Newberry some news articles from the local paper as well as from the bigger papers in Seattle and Spokane. “I can understand your wanting to protect whomever he may have hurt, but given the circumstances, I’m not so sure you’d be wise to protect
him
.”
Newberry studied the articles. “So now he’s healing people?”
“I’ve seen him do it.”
His pain was showing as he handed back the articles. “When he was here, he went by the name Justin Cantwell.” Then he conceded, “And he was trouble.” I waited for him to elaborate, but he didn’t.
“What kind of trouble?”
“I can’t go into that.”
“Justin Cantwell.” I wrote it down. “Any idea where he was from? Any background?”
He sighed. “I need to talk to some people before I can give out any more information. Will you be around tomorrow?”
This was a major frustration and I didn’t try to hide it. “I have to fly back tonight. It’s one of those round-trip discount things.”
“Well, leave us a number and we’ll call you.”
Now where had I heard
that
line before? “What about Pastor Harris? Does he know anything about Cantwell?”
“I’ll have to ask him.”
“Let’s ask him now.”
“He’s unavailable right now.”
“Is he here on the premises?”
“He’s unavailable.”
I tried to control the emotion in my voice. “He’s always unavailable. What about Norm Corrigan?”
Miles Newberry shrugged. “He wouldn’t know anything about this.”
“He’s new on staff?”
“That’s right.”
“But Mrs. Fontinelli’s run into this guy. The photograph really upset her.”
He nodded. “She was here then.”
“So it makes sense that Pastor Harris knew him.”
He got tense. “Are you digging for something?”
“Only because it’s buried. Please don’t take offense, but I have a very dangerous man deceiving my town according to an agenda, my friends and I spent a good deal of money getting me down here, and when you stonewall on behalf of Pastor Harris, I get uncomfortable. If you know about Cantwell and Mrs. Fontinelli knows about Cantwell, it’s inconceivable that this hasn’t somehow touched Pastor Harris. I’d like to talk with him.”
His eyes narrowed. “Before we go any further, I need to warn you about something.”
I was listening.
“This church has been appointed by God as a light in this city. It has his blessing and his mandate to spread the gospel and make disciples.” He indicated my valise. “If you try to cause this church any harm with this information, you’ll be opposing God, and that’s never advisable.”
I stopped. Twenty years ago, his warning would have scared me. Today, I felt vindicated. “Reverend Newberry, when I attended this church, I always sensed that kind of attitude trickling down from the leadership. I never thought I’d hear anyone verbalize it.” He gave me a curious look. He was about to ask me, so I told him, “Yeah, my wife and I attended this church about twenty years ago.
I don’t expect you to remember me because you never knew me in the first place, and it’s obvious you don’t know me now, or you wouldn’t have said what you just said to me. But I thank you for your candor, and I’m sure I can count on your help.”
I leaned toward him, eye to eye. He was going to regret not sitting behind his desk. “I need to hear from anyone who has had direct dealings with Justin Cantwell, and if that includes Pastor Harris, I need to hear from him, not you on behalf of him. No more running interference, okay? No more putting me off. The devil’s at work in Antioch and we don’t have time for that.”
He returned my gaze for a moment, and then nodded as if in agreement. “Leave me your number.”
BRANDON NICHOLS
chuckled and lovingly petted Matt Kiley on his bowed head. “Get up, Matt. No need to grovel.”
Matt Kiley was on his knees in the straw before the Messiah of Antioch, ready to plead, bargain, cajole, do anything to get his strength back. The moment the Boss touched him, he felt it coursing through him. His arms, his back, his legs were strong again, maybe even stronger. He leaped quickly to his feet, flexing and stretching.
“All there again?” the Boss asked, holding Matt at arm’s length and inspecting him.
Matt was about to answer, but his throat choked with emotion. He nodded instead. They were standing in the barn at the Macon ranch. The Boss was supervising as two new followers unloaded a truckload of oats, stacking the sacks on a pallet.
The Boss nodded toward the feed sacks. “Let’s try those arms out.”
Matt put up his dukes and gave the sacks a few solid punches. His legs felt like powerful springs under him. He danced, bobbed, weaved like a boxer.
WHAM! WHAM!
He pounded dents in the sacks. It felt great.
“Yeah!” he hollered, then threw his arms around the Boss. He’d never been a hugger before this.
The Boss was pleased. “All right, then. You have your strength. But remember, Matt: Your strength comes from
me
. It’s mine, for my use. No more wasting it in foolish brawling!”
“Okay. You got it. Oh!” He remembered something, and reached into his pocket. “The other merchants asked me to give you these gift cards. You can use them to get discounts on lodging, meals, just about anything in town. Pass them out to the pilgrims.
It’s our way of saying thanks.”
“Tell them thanks for me.”
“My Lord!” called Michael the Prophet, hurrying into the barn.
“Armond Harrison is here!”
Nichols’s eyes brightened as he turned to see Armond Harrison and a lovely young lady walking in with Michael. “Hello and welcome!”
Harrison shook hands with Antioch’s Messiah, then introduced the young lady. “This is Gail, the one we talked about.” The Messiah was delighted. Gail was in awe. Harrison told her, “He’ll take good care of you, and trust me: You’ll be a different woman when you leave here.”
“Michael, take her to her room in the guest house. I’ll be along shortly.”
Michael gave a little bow and then led Gail along with a touch of his hand.
“Her husband’s gone,” Armond explained. “In the navy. She’s had some real problems with that.”
Nichols gave a wise and understanding nod. “She needs comfort. Fulfillment.” He smiled. “Don’t worry.”
Armond smiled. “I won’t.”
“Cindy, the young woman I spoke to you about, is a gentle sort and reasonably well-adjusted. But I’ve told her she could benefit from the communal environment you have with your group—and, of course, your wisdom regarding . . .”
“Of course.”
As they left the barn, chatting enthusiastically about their ministry relationship, Matt only sighed with envy. The Boss always got what he wanted.
DON ANDERSON
was turning around repair jobs so quickly people were starting to comment on his speedy service. He was careful never to let visitors see him using his special gift, and often he’d tinker away with his tools just for show. But in the week that followed that special touch from Brandon Nichols, he had cleared almost every item to be repaired from the shelves of his workroom. Now he was actually getting a little bored, and started tinkering just for the fun of it.
Some more repair jobs came in today. The Steens’ VCR wouldn’t rewind—until he touched it. He made out a bill for how much time it
would
have taken him to fix it.
It would have taken him three hours . . . well, more like four . . . to fix Lonny Thompson’s tape deck that wouldn’t go around. With one touch that took less than a second, he made it go around. Lonny was still going to be billed for four hours.
An electric mixer came to life again, as did a wireless doorbell. Don spent most of his man hours just writing up the bills.
Then there was the Boresons’ CD player—a nice one with a rotating deck that held five CDs at once. The rotating deck didn’t rotate. He hit the open button and it slid open. Hm. Kenny Boreson left a heavy metal CD in this thing. No wonder the deck was malfunctioning.
Then the craziest notion came over Don, and he ran his finger in a circle around the face of the CD as if he could actually read the digital recording through his fingertip. It was just a silly whim, but still he wondered— Somewhere in his head he could hear some raging, wailing, wildfire guitar work, every blasting, distorted note like a toothache set to music. It was giving him a toothache.
He removed his finger. The sound stopped.
He looked at his fingertip.
Nawww
, he thought.
Don, now you’re leaping a little too high.
Well . . . there were other CDs in the store. A little experiment would settle any doubts. He found one of Mozart and no sooner picked it up than he heard the opening strains of Symphony No. 40 in G Minor. He shifted his gentle hold on the CD so that his fingers rested in another spot. Symphony No. 39 in E-flat.
Man oh man
, he thought,
what else can I do?
WHEN JIM BAYLOR
came home from work, the house was quiet. In this household, such quiet was seldom a normal or good thing, and it made him uncomfortable.