Becoming Mrs. Lewis(116)



Plaster held my leg in place and my foot was propped high in traction, metal poles overhead, pulleys and gears, as I lay supine in the bed. Pillows were stuffed behind my back and shoulders to prop me. A clean white blanket was tented over my raised leg. My hair, brushed and clean with the help of the orderly, fell over my shoulders. From the wife of a patient down the hall, I’d borrowed a tube of red lipstick and swiped it across my lips.

Warnie came to my bedside first. “Joy, I have loved you like a sister, and now you will be my sister.” His sober eyes were clear and yet filled with tears. “I have never loved you more.”

“Warnie, look at us, loving each other and loving the same man.”

He placed his hand in mine. “I pray for you every day.”

Warnie moved away as Jack leaned close so only I could hear him, his lips soft against my ear, his voice filling me. “You have allowed me to become my true self with you. I hide nothing. Now let us become as one.”

I took Jack’s face in mine and kissed him, not as ardently as I’d have liked, for next to me stood the priest, Peter Bide, a former student of Jack’s, his white collar a comma against his throat and his black robes swishing like smoke with every move.

“Are you ready, Joy?” Peter asked in such a serious tone that I wondered if he’d practiced.

“I believe I’ve been ready for this moment all my life,” I said.

Jack squeezed my hand. “How is it that my heart is breaking and yet I’ve never been so happy?”

A ward sister in a prim habit stood with Warnie, who wore a suit pressed so straight he looked frightened to move. He smiled at me and held his hands clasped behind his back as if hiding something. Sober, his cheeks red with health, he stated to all present, “I love Joy as a sister, and now we will make it official.”

Jack entwined his fingers in mine. He was handsome in his black suit and knotted blue tie, his hair slicked back. Without a cigarette or pipe, his mouth held only a shy grin. A great wash of love and admiration, and the realization of miracles, filled me with a swelling ecstasy that surged inside me like a sacred sea.

“Can I ask you something before we start, Father Bide?” I asked.

“Of course.”

“How did you finally decide that this was sanctioned? That the Church of England would give permission? We’ve asked everyone we know, even the bishop.”

“I asked the only source that mattered.” Father Bide paused and closed his hands around the black prayer book in his hand. “The only court of appeal I thought had the final argument—and that was God himself. What would he do in this case? And the answer was clear.”

“Then let’s get married,” I said and turned my face to Jack.

He squeezed my hand. “Yes, then let’s be married.”

So it came that on March 21, 1957, while I lay in bed in a nightgown with my left leg lifted high on ropes and pulleys, I finally married the love of my life.

Father Bide began to speak the words of the ceremony, and I listened to the melody of the Church of England’s holy matrimony litany.

In the presence of God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit

We have come together

To witness the marriage of Helen Joy Davidman and Clive Staples Lewis

To pray for God’s blessing on them

To share their joy

And to celebrate their love . . .

Peter continued in the most serious voice, as if we were standing at the altar of Westminster Abbey and the queen herself was in the congregation—the hospital room no deterrence to solemnity.

“Jack,” he finally said, “will you take Joy to be your wife? Will you love her, comfort her, honor and protect her, forsaking all others, and be faithful to her as long as you both shall live?”

“I will,” he said, and then again for emphasis, “I will.”

“Joy,” Peter asked, “will you take Jack to be your husband? Will you love him, comfort him, honor and protect him, forsaking all others, and be faithful to him as long as you both shall live?”

“I will.” Tears rolled from my eyes and down my face where Jack kissed them away, the wetness of them on his lips.

Warnie and the ward sister, whose name I never learned, also cried silently. Maybe it was the line “as long as you both shall live,” or the boundless love that filled that room, I didn’t know. Peter finished the ceremony—vows, rings, and declaration.

It wasn’t the wedding a small girl dreams of—the white lace dress and a flowing veil. There were no bridesmaids or a symphony orchestra or long trails of white roses. But what does a small girl know of real love? I hadn’t ever known how to dream. I hadn’t known that love would arrive in the most unlikely of places—a hospital room where fear and despair usually reigned. I hadn’t known that love could not be earned or bought or manipulated; it was just this—complete peace in the other’s presence.

All the years wasted believing that love meant owning or possessing, and now the greatest love had arrived in my greatest weakness. In my supreme defeat came my grandest victory. God’s paradoxes had no end.

Peter ended the ceremony with the final prayer. We closed our eyes, Jack’s hands in mine.

“The Holy Trinity make you strong in faith and love, defend you on every side, and guide you in truth and peace; and the blessing of God Almighty, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit be among you and remain with you always.”

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