Echoes (17 page)

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Authors: Robin Jones Gunn

BOOK: Echoes
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Lauren turned the pages past the first few letters from KC and stopped at one from late November:

D
EAR
W
REN
, I
MUST TELL YOU HOW MUCH YOUR CORRESPONDENCE HAS MEANT TO ME
. I’
VE KEPT MYSELF FROM ANY SERIOUS RELATIONSHIPS FOR QUITE SOME TIME
. M
Y JOB TAKES UP ALL MY ENERGY
. H
OWEVER
, I
WANT YOU TO KNOW THAT YOUR LETTERS ARE WHAT
I
LOOK FOR FIRST WHEN
I
COME HOME
. I
ENJOY SPENDING TIME WITH YOU
,
AS IT WERE
.

I
APPRECIATED YOUR ADVICE ABOUT VISITING THE
H
UNTINGTON
L
IBRARY WHEN
I
WAS IN SOUTHERN
C
ALIFORNIA LAST WEEK
. Y
OU WERE RIGHT
. T
HE
G
UTENBERG
B
IBLE HELD ME CAPTIVE FOR QUITE SOME TIME
. M
Y
,
HOW FAR WE

VE COME IN PRINTING TECHNOLOGY
. Y
ET HAVE WE LOST SOME OF THE BEAUTY OF THE

PREPARED

PAGE
? R
ED DYE FROM BERRIES TO STAIN THE PICTURES ON EACH PAGE
,
DID YOU SEE THAT
? A
ND IT HAS LASTED FOR CENTURIES
. B
EING IN THE PRINT MEDIA BUSINESS
, I
CAN

T HELP BUT WONDER HOW LONG SOME OF MY WORDS WILL LAST
.

P
EACE
, KC

Lauren smiled, thinking that if KC only knew how his words were bound in her notebook and carried around in her mind every day, he would know that his words, at least his words to her, had timeless value.

Skimming a few more letters, Lauren wondered if this could be considered an obsession. Would her friends and family urge her to get counseling if they knew how attached she had become to this nameless, faceless person? Was this the ultimate for Generation X: deeply emotional relationships carried on through electronic impulses that course through the computer rather than the body?

Perhaps the most appealing part was the lack of commitment necessary for such a relationship. This was non-threatening.

None of the irritable mannerisms of the other person came into play. The physical dimension wasn’t even an issue. Everything that happened between Lauren and KC went from heart to heart with no fleshly, physical complications. This was an appealing relationship for a Christian woman who desired to remain pure.

Yet it was so much more intense than anything she had ever experienced with any other man. KC had access to her soul, the place deep within her where she thought and mused and loved God and questioned life. And she had access to his innermost being as well.

How did that happen? It wasn’t simply because they corresponded. Was it the result of the course their communication had taken? The way they conversed about things that mattered the most to them, and on every score discovered commonality? These questions rolled through her mind with no one to discuss them with.

She turned to another letter in her notebook dated February 14, Valentine’s Day. Lauren remembered how she had carefully chosen some lines from Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s
Sonnets of the Portuguese
as her Valentine’s Day “gift” for KC. She had e-mailed his letter the night before so he would be sure to read it on the fourteenth:

D
EAR
KC,
I
WANTED TO SEND YOU SOMETHING FOR
V
ALENTINE

S
D
AY AND FOUND THESE WORDS FROM OUR FRIEND
EBB
ECHOED MY THOUGHTS NICELY
:
T
HE FACE OF ALL THE WORLD IS CHANGED
I
THINK
,
S
INCE FIRST
I
HEARD THE FOOTSTEPS OF THY SOUL
M
OVE STILL
,
OH STILL
,
BESIDE ME
 …
 … M
ET IN THEE
,
AND FROM OUT THEE OVERCAME
M
Y SOUL WITH SATISFACTION OF ALL WANTS
:
B
ECAUSE
G
OD

S GIFTS PUT MAN

S BEST DREAMS TO SHAME
.

Y
OUR FRIENDSHIP HAS BEEN A GIFT TO ME FROM
G
OD
, KC. Y
OU TIPTOED IN AT A TIME WHEN ALL MY DREAMS WERE BEING PUT TO SHAME
. I
LIKE THE WAY MY LIFE HAS CHANGED
,
AND YOU

VE HAD A PART IN THAT
. T
HANK YOU AND HAPPY
V
ALENTINE

S
D
AY
!

A
LWAYS
, W
REN

His Valentine’s Day response had been as specifically affectionate for her as hers had been for him. She ran her hand over the next page where the printed characters looked as ordinary as any other arrangement of the alphabet, only this was far different. Hope sprang from these words. They were KC’s words, and they had melded themselves into her heart:

D
EAR
W
REN
,

Y
OUR VALENTINE THOUGHTS FROM
EBB
WARMED ME THIS MORNING
. I
HAVE A HUGE ASSIGNMENT TO GET AT
. T
HE DEADLINE IS TOMORROW
,
AND
I
KNOW
I’
LL SPEND HALF THE DAY ON THE PHONE
. S
O BEFORE THE SWEET GLOW OF YOUR LETTER FADES
,
LET ME SEND TO YOU MY VALENTINE WISH
. I
RESPECTFULLY ECHO THE POETIC SENTIMENT OF OUR FRIEND
, R
OBERT
B
ROWNING
:

T
HEN WE BEGAN TO RIDE
. M
Y SOUL
S
MOOTHED ITSELF OUT
,
A LONG
-
CRAMPED SCROLL
F
RESHENING AND FLUTTERING IN THE WIND
 …
W
HAT IF WE STILL RIDE ON
,
WE TWO
,
W
ITH LIFE FOREVER OLD YET NEW
,
C
HANGED NOT IN KIND BUT IN DEGREE
,

T
HE INSTANT MADE ETERNITY
.

I,
TOO
,
HAVE BENEFITED GREATLY FROM OUR

RIDE

TOGETHER ON THE
N
ET
. Y
OU

VE PROVIDED A PLACE FOR THE REAL ME TO FRESHEN AND FLUTTER IN THE WIND
. T
HANK YOU
, W
REN
. I
FIND
I
MUST BE HONEST AND SIGN THIS
,

Y
OURS
, KC

From that day on, she had begun to believe that he was hers. Next she turned to the letter he wrote in April after his trip to England when she had waited nine days for his response:

D
EAR
W
REN
,

I
CAN

T BELIEVE HOW MUCH
I’
VE MISSED YOU
. A
LTHOUGH
I
SHOULDN

T BE SURPRISED
. Y
OU

VE BECOME SO MUCH A PART OF MY EVERYDAY LIFE
. I
SUPPOSE WE SHOULD BE ALARMED AT OUR CONNECTEDNESS
. W
HAT WOULD
I
EVER DO IF
P
RINCE
C
HARMING WALKED INTO YOUR LIFE AND TOOK YOU AWAY FROM ME
?

I
MUST TELL YOU ABOUT MY TRIP
. H
AVE YOU EVER BEEN TO
L
ONDON IN THE SPRING
? T
O QUOTE OUR MAN
, R
OBERT
: O
H TO BE IN
E
NGLAND
, N
OW THAT
A
PRIL

S THERE
, A
ND WHOEVER WAKES IN
E
NGLAND SEES
,
SOME MORNING
,
UNAWARE
 …

I
CAN

T REMEMBER THE REST
. B
UT
I
CERTAINLY SAW THE REST LAST WEEK
. I
HIT A PARTICULARLY WARM SPELL MY LAST TWO DAYS THERE
,
AND THE GARDENS WERE BURSTING WITH LIFE AND COLOR
. W
ONDERFUL
!

I
STOPPED FOR TEA IN THE
C
HELSEA
D
ISTRICT AND THEN WALKED FOR BLOCKS IN THE FRESH SUNSHINE
. I
FOUND A CHAPEL
—S
T
. L
UKE

S
, I
BELIEVE
. T
HE GARDEN THERE WAS LAUGHING IN RED TULIPS
. Y
OU SHOULD HAVE SEEN THEM
,
ROLLING WITH HILARITY IN THAT DEEP GREEN GRASS
.

I
STROLLED THROUGH THE MIDDLE OF THEIR PARTY
,
NODDING TO EACH ONE AS
I
PASSED
,
AND THEN
I
ENTERED THE CHAPEL WHERE ALL WAS QUIET
. I
N THAT HOLY PLACE
I
FELT THE PRESENCE OF CHRIST
,
WHICH WAS A GREAT COMFORT TO ME THAT DAY
.

N
O ANGELS DANCED BEFORE ME
. N
O BELLS CHIMED
. I
T WAS JUST HIS PRESENCE
,
HIS UNMISTAKABLE PRESENCE IN THAT CHAPEL AND IN MY LIFE
. I
KNEW
I
COULD TRUST HIM FOR ALL
,
INCLUDING THE FUTURE OF

US
.” H
AVE YOU FELT THAT SAME PEACE
? A
QUIET CONFIDENCE THAT FOR RIGHT NOW
,
THIS IS ALL WE NEED
. A
SHARING OF OUR SOULS
. “I
N QUIETNESS AND CONFIDENCE SHALL BE YOUR PEACE
.”

I’
D LIKE TO HEAR YOUR THOUGHTS
.

Y
OURS
, KC

Lauren had written back that she felt comfortable with where things were right then, even though she couldn’t say she had ever felt a special peace or presence of the Lord regarding this. However, she wondered if they needed to spend some time trying to evaluate where they were going and what they should expect from the other.

KC’s one-line response the next day was:

W
REN
: L
ET IT BE
. L
OVE
, KC

She decided she was smitten. How could she help but fall in love with a man who could quote Robert Browning, Isaiah, and the Beatles with such eloquence?

Chapter Eighteen

L
auren didn’t hear back from KC after her July “anniversary” letter for two full days. She came home from work on Tuesday evening, ready for a glass of iced tea and a nap on the couch. Outside, the summer weather was cranking up. Inside, Hawthorne greeted her with a plea for food and a look that said he didn’t know what day of the week it was or what month of the year. He lived in a climate-controlled environment in which all his meals were delivered at the drop of a “meow.” What did he have to worry about?

“You know, you’re costing me money, big boy. My electric bill is going to be gigantic this month. What if I leave the air conditioning off tomorrow and open the window?” She knew she couldn’t do that to the pampered baby.

“You need a life, Hawthorne. I’m going to start taking you for walks. Look how flabby you’re getting.”

“Meow,” said Hawthorne, which meant,
Your threats are always empty ones, my dear
.

“Then I’ll get you a kitten to look after. How would you like that?”

Disinterested in any of her suggestions, Hawthorne stuck up his tail at her as he began to consume his dinner.

Lauren poured herself a tall glass of iced Irish Breakfast tea, which was waiting for her in a pitcher in the refrigerator. She settled in by the computer, delighted to find the number “2” in her e-mail letter box.

She opened Brad’s letter first. He didn’t have much to say. His summer school courses were boring, and he was thinking about going on an outreach to Mexico in August with a bunch of guys from his Sunday school class. He asked her to send him the dates she would be in California for her friend’s wedding.

Lauren replied:

I
BOUGHT MY PLANE TICKETS YESTERDAY
. T
ERI

S WEDDING IS IN
E
SCONDIDO ON
S
ATURDAY
, A
UGUST
3.

She felt a twinge in her heart, remembering that her wedding date had been set for February 3. Six months ago. So much had happened since. She had changed dramatically. At this moment, Lauren couldn’t imagine herself married to Jeff. How different a person she would have become. Not necessarily bad, just vastly different. She liked who she was now and where her life was going.

I’
LL FLY INTO
B
URBANK ON
F
RIDAY NIGHT AND PICK UP A RENTAL CAR
. I
SHOULD REACH YOUR PLACE BEFORE NINE
. C
AN
I
STAY WITH YOU THAT NIGHT
? I
NEED TO LEAVE AROUND NINE IN THE MORNING
;
THEN
I’
LL BE BACK AGAIN LATE
S
ATURDAY NIGHT
. I
F YOU

RE REAL NICE
, I’
LL LET YOU TAKE ME TO BRUNCH AFTER CHURCH ON
S
UNDAY
. M
Y PLANE
LEAVES AT THREE THAT AFTERNOON
. P
LEASE TELL ME THIS FITS INTO YOUR DEMANDING SCHEDULE
.

L
AUREN

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