Games of the Heart (Crimson Romance) (11 page)

Read Games of the Heart (Crimson Romance) Online

Authors: Eva Shaw

Tags: #romance, #contemporary

BOOK: Games of the Heart (Crimson Romance)
9.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She placed the cookie in the center of the paper napkin, taking each corner, folding it toward the cookie. “I am, what is the word, retarded. That is it. I couldn’t move or sit up like the other babies. No one wanted to adopt a baby who was not healthy.”

Unless there was something terribly amiss under that postage-stamp-white T-shirt that exposed her middle, or the hip-hugging Capri pants, with a neon green and navy sash tied around itty-bitty hips, I couldn’t imagine this woman to be disabled. I’d seen her dance like a feather, too.

“You look normal to me.”

“I have a terrible secret.” She inhaled deeply.

Oh, now, Lord, here it comes. What could be worse than pornography or gambling? Murder.
She’s killed someone and is asking for forgiveness. No wonder she’s pale, no wonder she was crying last evening.
I held the edge of the table.

“The nuns sent me, when I was a baby, to a special place for stupid and sick little ones. I was not good enough for Polish couples to adopt. Everyone wants fat and healthy babies. They want rosy cheeks and plump arms. I was undersized and I cried much.”

“You were filled with hate from so much sadness. I see. You were hurt and sick and you retaliated? Did you murder a nun?” I gulped, but someone had to say it.

“Killed a nun? No, Jane. I’ve killed no one. May I continue?” Her blue eyes widened but she didn’t stop.

Have you ever wanted to pick up your hand, make a fist, and hit yourself in the nose? No, I hadn’t, either, until that very second. Lord knows why she tolerated my false accusations, but the only reason had to be the blessed language barrier. I sighed and swore to keep my lips zipped until she finished her story.

Since Petra didn’t have to interrupt me again, she continued, “I know now that the institution kept me in a crib, and it was from there that I was sold to another organization.”

“Sold. You were sold?” She had to mean something else. Her English, she’d said, wasn’t good. “I’m confused. Didn’t you just get transferred, perhaps to a special school?”

“I know what that means. I was sold. Like a car or a dog. Please, I do not want to be disrespectful to Americans, Jane. If you do not want me to say this, if you feel I am wicked, please stop me.”

A vein pulsated in her swanish neck, her lips trembled, and it was clear from the pain in her eyes that whatever she was thinking, it broke her heart. I’d been with troubled people but she was a poster girl for desperation. Besides, whatever she was about to say could not be that bad. Come on. This was America.

I’d been a preacher for six years and before that taught at a university. If there was anything appalling or ghastly bad in life that I had not heard, it would have been news to me. “Go on,” I said, because if I went on, the Lord only knew where the conversation would head, most likely to a place called Dead Wrong.

“I think you know these people, awful organization they come from but look good. Las Vegas thinks they’re a good company.”

“Who are they? What does this have to do with you? Tell me why you said you were sold.”

Once more, she squished her lips into a thin line. Her cookie sat there untouched until she unfolded the corners of the napkin and nibbled one tiny chocolate chip in the time I would have gobbled the entire thing plus a half dozen more. “When the government doctor said I would always be sick, and the orphanage closed, I went to another institution. In English, it is called Child’s Play Baby Home. I do not know why I lived. Now is the bad part. I have some bad things to say about Americans.”

I can only claim that the coffee and sugar finally kicked in because my vow of not jumping to any more conclusions worked. “What does this have to do with Las Vegas?”

“In America, everything can be bought for a price.”

“Yes?”

“Here in America, here in Las Vegas, is the company that buys and sells babies and children.”

“Buying and selling children?” I pushed my backside against the back of the chair, lest I fall off with whatever the explanation was to be.

“Yes, they buy children and sell them. It is not adoption. This is a business. Like selling cattle. Or here in America, like fancy show dog or even furniture. You see, Child’s Play Baby Home does not have doctors or nurses to care for infants. The company buys the babies and brings them to the United States of America. This is good, right? No, this is not good. It is bad.” When she said “bad,” it looked like she was going to spit, and I ducked to the side.

Okay, I was lost. It was sorrowful that the Child’s Play Baby Home didn’t have care for special-needs children, but around the world in developing nations and those with limited medical care, these things happened. From what I’d just heard, the Child’s Play Baby Home creating adoption arrangements with couples here in the United States seemed to be a good thing. “How can this be bad if there are shortages of qualified medical people?”

“Child’s Play Baby Home sells babies to a company. These are sick babies. Hopeless babies, some without arms and legs, too. This company sells them to mothers and fathers who think they are paying for perfect, fat babies with fat cheeks and blond hair.”

“It’s unfair, Petra, but it’s true. Most adoptive parents want perfect babies.” I thought of how Gramps had told me that when he found my father, an emaciated ten-year-old, he grilled everyone connected with the Army barracks, but no one would take claim to the child. Until the US soldiers came to Vietnam, bi-racial kids like Dad survived by feeding with the neighborhood dogs, running drugs, or prostitution.

“That I do understand, but from Child’s Play Baby Home they pay for perfect and get sick ones. Most babies cannot sit up, or move, or crawl, or speak. They break the hearts of mommies and daddies and those of the babies, too.”

“What happens? Surely something can be done about this company?” I felt a bitter taste in my mouth now, and my stomach squeezed a queasy feeling into my throat. It definitely was not from the coffee; I don’t have any problem with multiple cups of Starbucks.

“You have not heard the whole bad story. This buyer and seller of babies is smart, Jane. They tell people that God is on their side. They say God is directing them to give special babies to the people who pay money. All lies. When the parents don’t want a child who will only live shortly, they pay to have the company take the baby back. All the time the company knows this will happen since the babies are severely handicapped.”

“It’s a conditional adoption?” I wouldn’t have left my chair for anything. How in the world could this company do that with human lives, knowing the babies were unsuitable for adoption?

“Then they sell the same baby again. Sometimes again and again, all the time the baby is getting sicker. Some die.” She looked down into her lap and as if on cue, a solitary tear dropped from her eye and straight into the middle of the cookie.

Petra Stanislaw had been one of these babies, sold time and again.

“What happens if the baby, who may now be a toddler or young child, never finds adoptive parents willing to take on a special needs child?”

“Deserted. The frail die. Some starve on the streets. Others do terrible things to survive. Most learn quickly to steal food.”

I didn’t expect her to cry. I knew the Polish determination well, and from my endearing buscia, who was soft on the outside and solid steel inside. I had an inkling of what Petra was made of, so when she did, I blubbered myself. She even made crying look like fine art.

She dabbed the single tear spot, dotted her eyes, touched her nose with a tissue, and said, “I was left alone when I couldn’t be sold again, watching the car drive off. I sat on a park bench. I was too frightened to cry. I was returned five times. Each time, the adoptive parents would take me on a conditional lease, but the new parents always thought I was too difficult to handle. The company dumped me one summer evening. I got a new pair of shoes and a few American dollars. It was on Ellis Island. So you know the place? Many Polish immigrants know it. I was eight. No adoptive parents would ever want me. That I was told.”

We sat in silence. My perfect plan to have Petra lend a hand and her feet with the dance and fundraiser, once I got her into a twelve-step recovery program, evaporated. I’ve been accused more than once of finding silver linings where none exist, but this time, I couldn’t even see where a silver-plated one might be.

“A police officer came toward me. I cowered. I thought he’d hit me. I must have said something in my language because he spoke to me in Polish.” She exhaled and continued, “They sent me to a children’s jail at first, then a home for runaways. Finally Immigration and Naturalization sent me back to Poland, to an orphanage.”

Years ago, I’d been on a mission to Warsaw. It was one of those college trips; a group of us were going to help rebuild a church. On the off days, two others and I went to visit orphanages. Think of a scene from a Dickens novel. Orphans were warehoused, huddled around bowls of oatmeal. That’s what we saw. That’s what still haunted me. That’s why I couldn’t let this lie. Here was Petra, alive and educated, somehow having managed to survive the dismal terrors that still troubled my heart.

She dusted a nonexistent crumb from her lip. “I was lucky. The orphanage where I grew up was sponsored by a foreign lady. She made sure I learned and had physical therapy. She gave money for many of to get university degrees. I never found my birth family; records were destroyed. I believe the company wanted to hide all the evidence. I am learning international law at UNLV. But I cannot forget.” She straightened her spine. “I will not.”

“You shouldn’t, Petra. This is abominable, um, awful. Tell me this company was brought to justice. This makes my skin crawl. Drat, if I don’t stop the slang, those worry lines on your forehead will need Botox. Skin doesn’t crawl, like babies crawl — oh, never mind. We must do something.” Um, notice the ‘we’?

“I am doing things and I am not afraid. I will revenge the evil that has been done.”

The knuckles on her fists were white. I was certain she was up to whatever retribution would stop the horror. While I’m not big on taking over God’s duty when he said, “Revenge is mine,” I could see her point. Payoff is so bloomin’ tempting, even for pastors. “Have you contacted the authorities? The police or the Center for Missing and Exploited Children? The Polish Consulate?”

I thought she’d found a rotten chocolate chip in the nibble of cookie her mouth was so pinched. “They do nothing.” She placed her delicate fingers in her lap and locked her jaw.

“Tell me. Who are these criminals?”

“They work for the Philemon Society of America, and the worst is Mrs. Cheney.”


The
Philemon Society of America? PSA? As in Delta Cheney?”

“They are wicked, Jane. You are shocked because I say cruel things about Americans. These are bad Americans. They hurt children. I will stop them from hurting more.”

The ability to delude one’s self might be a survival tool, but the view from my mind’s eye pointed to something very rotten with the PSA.

• • •

The morning coffee crowd was replaced by the lunch bunch and then replaced by the after-lunch-grabba-club clan. Near one o’clock we hugged good-bye, and yes, I’d given my word to help. I’m horrified to tell you that I don’t remember the drive back to church, but I got there. I didn’t realize how shaken I was until I went to the refrigerator in the church kitchen, pulled out a bottle of water and stood there with the door wide open. I thought of Petra’s words as she revealed even more details, the starvation, the deprivation and, oh, non-existent sanitation. It was done in a whisper, and the truths poured out of illegal adoptions and human trafficking.

Here’s the
Reader’s Digest
version of what I learned between my first struggle-for-breath revelation that I’d been small taking with the ring leader all the way to the Eastern European kiss on each cheek when Petra and I parted.

Petra was a sickly child. The reason for her delayed growth was never identified but she did have dyslexia. She graduated with honors from
Uniwersytet Warszawski
, the University of Warsaw. She attempted to stop the PSA in Poland, and when that became impossible, she applied for a master’s program in Las Vegas.

“I am here to crumple PSA,” she whispered in my ear, and there was no doubt that meant hunting down and stopping Delta Cheney in whatever way it took. If you’d seen her eyes, you’d know it didn’t matter whether this was within or outside of the law.

What could I do? Two hours later, in front of an open refrigerator, which was constantly running and no longer cooling, I was clueless. Petra needed a champion. I couldn’t even muster closing that heavy white refrigerator door.

So what if the Philemon Society of America was behind immoral orphanages and adoption? But if PSA disposed of kids who weren’t adoptable like last year’s must-have jeans, that was wrong. A few survived, I had to believe that, but the others? What happened to the ones left to fend for themselves and forced into things I couldn’t even mouth the words for? Were the children brought here by PSA and tossed out any better off than those scuttled from the system in Poland when they reached sixteen and no longer thought necessary to protect? Any way I looked at this, it was illegal and immoral. Throw in sinful, too. Visions of starving, half-frozen urchins limped through my mind, pleading for a morsel of food. This stayed in my brain for a nanosecond, and then I imagined the PSA discards found dead with no ID, buried in an unmarked grave, in a city where they’d been deserted.

If the authorities wouldn’t listen to Petra, I could ask some questions and maybe get attention for the orphans who were here in the States. I had a contact with the local press, in the cute body of one Carl Lipca, who I’d been in firm and cozy contact with as I’d sat squarely on his middle just hours earlier.

Agreed, I am no stranger to stirring things up, some of them things that hit the front page of the newspaper. But the big pothole of this solution was just down the hall from me, in the senior pastor’s office, sitting at the walnut desk, and drinking out of the coffee mug with
I’m the Man’s man
emblazoned on it. He and Delta had been chummy and clingy. Now, I’m not one to jump to overly nasty conclusions, just regular ones, but there was
that
look in her eyes telling me to keep my mitts off Pastor Bob if I knew what was good for me. She never had to worry about that. Talk about ick.

Other books

Together We Heal by Chelsea M. Cameron
Whatever Love Is by Rosie Ruston
Burning Up Flint by Laurann Dohner
When You're With Me by Wendi Zwaduk
Green Calder Grass by Janet Dailey
Touching the Sky by Tracie Peterson
Getting Pregnant Naturally by Winifred Conkling
Guard My Heart by Aj Summer