Jilo (Witching Savannah #4)(64)



She smoothed down her skirt, managing to dry her palms with the same effort, and adjusted her blouse, making sure it was well buttoned. She curled her hand into a fist and rapped on the door. There didn’t seem to be any movement within, so she knocked again, louder. She leaned over to her right to try to catch a glimpse of any life showing through the lace curtain. A shadow moved in the hall.

“Jilo,” Mrs. Jones said as she swung the door open. “My dear girl, how I have missed you.”

Jilo was both taken aback and shamed by the sincerity in the woman’s voice. “I . . . I’ve missed you, you and the pastor, as well.” Mrs. Jones’s eyes drifted down to the case by her side. “It’s only, I’m hoping that you and the pastor might allow me to come back. Not permanently. Just for a day or so.” She lowered her eyes, not wanting to see the woman’s reaction. An eternity of awkward silence passed between them. “I know,” Jilo began, “I know I disappointed the pastor . . .”

“Of course you can stay,” Mrs. Jones interrupted her. “As long as you want”—then, seeming to read something in Jilo’s expression, she added—“or need.” She stepped back, making room for both Jilo and her case. Jilo moved quickly over the threshold, almost as if she feared the pastor’s wife might change her mind. “You can have your old room back, if you’d like,” Mrs. Jones said. “It’s empty.” To Jilo’s surprise, tears brimmed in the woman’s eyes. “They all are. The girls, their parents took them out of here.”

Jilo stopped, confused. She realized quickly that the house was far more quiet than she’d ever experienced during her years there. Even though late afternoon was giving way to dusk, not a single light was burning. There were no smells of cooking from the kitchen. She reached out and grasped Mrs. Jones’s hand. “What’s wrong? What’s happened here?” She thought again of the boarded-up windows and padlock at Five Points Baptist. “And why is the church all locked up?”

“The church is closed,” Mrs. Jones said, her voice quavering as she spoke. “When Robert”—Jilo had never heard anyone refer to the pastor by his Christian name before—“began speaking publicly about the angels, the congregation turned against him. Some thought he’d gone mad. Others thought the devil had gotten in him. But they all thought he was blaspheming.” She wrapped her arms around herself. “I know you know about the angels. He told me he shared his experiences with you . . .”

“Well, no, ma’am,” Jilo began, “not really. He said he’d been ‘taken up’ by them when he was a child, and maybe . . .”

“It wasn’t only as a child.” Mrs. Jones cut her off. “They’ve been visiting him all his life. All his life,” she said with emphasis. “He shielded me from the truth, but I knew I had married a special man. A holy man.” She raised her chin, and Jilo could see the pride glowing in her eyes. “It was right after you left. He started seeing them all over. All the time. He couldn’t protect me from the truth any longer.”

“Where is the pastor?” Jilo asked.

Mrs. Jones didn’t reply, she simply tightened her grasp on Jilo’s hand and led her deeper into the house and down the hall leading to the pastor’s study. When they reached the room, Mrs. Jones released her and crossed to the pastor’s desk, where she turned on the green-shaded brass lamp that sat there. The older woman stood there trembling as she stared down at her husband’s desk. She stifled a sob, raising her right hand to her mouth, then pointed at the wall. Stepping around the desk, she walked toward the defaced wall.

Jilo saw that “GEN 5:24” was scratched into the wall’s plaster in characters five or six inches long.

“He took a knife from the kitchen. Cut this into the plaster.” Mrs. Jones traced her finger along the jagged grooves. “The next day,” she said, turning back to Jilo, “he was gone. Just gone.” She crossed back to the desk and turned the opened Bible there around so that Jilo could read its words. “And Enoch walked with God: and he was not; for God took him.”





NINE


Savannah, Georgia—May 1954



“I want you to understand there are good men in this world, Jilo,” Nana said. “My Reuben, your grum’pa, he was a right good man. He took good care of me and his family. He bought your nana this here house. Your daddy, my Jesse, he was a good man, too.” A bright smile broke out on her aged face. “He sure loved his girls, he did,” she said and stroked the back of Jilo’s hand. “All three of you. He’d be proud of all his girls, he would.” She nodded. “Especially you.”

Jilo had to wonder if that were true, if her father would be proud of her now, with her dress tight around her breasts and middle. And without a man to claim the baby that was making it so.

Nana’s chair made a scuffing nose as she pushed it back. The table squeaked a bit as she leaned into it to help push herself up. “Pastor Jones, I think he’s a good man, too. Made a mistake here and there, and I sure got no idea what he’s gotten himself up to now, but at his root, I believe he is an honorable man.” She walked across the room, the floor creaking with each heavy step. Jilo noticed she was moving slower than she used to, her right hip seeming to catch every other step or so.

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