Twang (34 page)

Read Twang Online

Authors: Julie L. Cannon

I frowned.

She paused to sneeze, and for a moment I relaxed, thinking she was going to hush about it. But in the next breath, she asked, “You hear what I’m saying? Praying, mixed with faith, is a mighty force.”

Tonilynn was getting a little too close for comfort, and I stood up to go back to my room. She grabbed my hand. “Doesn’t it feel good to have gotten that memory out, hon? That there’s no more hiding from the past? No more running from the pain? Now it’s time to go to the One who can totally set you free. Who’ll help you forgive your father.”

I wouldn’t even try to play along. Nothing, no one was powerful enough to help me forgive that man! Like she could read my mind, Tonilynn said, “Jennifer, to forgive him doesn’t mean you’re excusing what he did, or saying it didn’t matter. Because it did! He victimized you, and your anger is understandable! I promise you, God’s mad about it too. Your forgiving your father won’t exempt him from the just judgment
of God, doesn’t mean he won’t be held accountable for what he did to you.

“But if you keep living with such bitterness, you’re chaining yourself to your father
and
the hurt! I know some people who are so obsessed with revenge that their whole life revolves around it. They’re captive!

“Forgiveness is so liberating. Remember when we were talking earlier and I said that when you fantasize evil toward your father, you’re giving the enemy ground? Satan loves that! On the other hand, Satan trembles when we pray. So, please, hon, listen to Tonilynn—pray and ask God to help you get rid of the hate and the bitterness. If you don’t, it’ll destroy
you
!”

I focused on the rain pelting the window.

“Jennifer, look at me. If you really wanted to get even, you could do it easy enough. You could run his name through the mud. Everyone would hear what Jenny Cloud had to say! But would that erase what happened? What purpose would it serve? Knowing you, you’d probably feel even worse. You’ve got to think of forgiveness as
a powerful weapon
.”

Tonilynn reached for my hands, held them in hers, running her thumbs over the calluses on my fingers from years of playing guitar. A little thought snuck in. What if my heart had become calloused too? But just as quick I cast it out. It wasn’t that I didn’t think what Tonilynn had, her faith, was real. I believed that, for her, it was a very powerful solution, a healing to her wounded past. But I knew for me, someone whose innocence had been stolen, my anger was my soul’s way to reassert its worth. I had a lot invested in my bitterness. Without my fury, who would I be? a doormat like my mother? some weird, wacko religious nut? I didn’t see the benefit of all this self-denial, this “letting God redeem your past and use it for the glory of his kingdom.”

A wave of mental exhaustion hit me, and I almost said, “Okay, I forgive him, now will you drive me back to Harmony Hill?” But Tonilynn would know it was a lie. I picked up a corner piece of puzzle and turned it this way and that, pretending to consider where it fit. “Please drive me back to Harmony Hill?”

“Oh, Jennifer.” Tonilynn took the piece from me and fit it in its place precisely. “It’s not an experience that will bring us down or shatter us. It’s our
response
to that experience. You know who Fanny Crosby is?”

Reluctantly, I nodded.

“When she was six weeks old, the doctor seeing to her didn’t do right, he fouled up certain procedures, which caused her to be blind! Being blind was no picnic, but Fanny didn’t get bitter and all eaten up with mad. She forgave that doctor, and she wrote more than eight thousand hymns! She
used
her adversity.”

“What happened to her is totally different, Tonilynn.”

“Not really. You and Fanny were both given a gift—the gift of music. Gifts are easy—they’re given, after all. But forgiveness is a
choice
, a choice that can be very difficult. And she forgave, Jennifer.

“See? You can fill your heart with revenge or release, hate or hope, fear or faith. Bad stuff can have eternal value if you view it from God’s perspective. The things that hurt you can have a purpose. He’ll use them for your good, make you stronger, and you can use them to minister to others.

“Hey, I know!” Tonilynn slapped the table and the puzzle jumped. “Jennifer, you need to write a song about this topless dancing incident!”

“What?!” I felt like running outside in the pouring rain. “That’d be the
worst
thing to do! Believe me, I know!”

“Jennifer, Jennifer. First, forgive your father, and then you can use the energy of your anger in a positive way. I’m
convinced your own healing is through your music. It’ll be cathartic to write a song about it. You know how powerful music is. Think of the words on that poster at Flint Recording! ‘Music can transport, transcend, and transform.’ ”

I didn’t answer.

“Your song can be somebody’s therapy.” Tonilynn was standing now. “There’s a lot of hurting, vulnerable people out there. What if you knew there was some young girl experiencing the same kind of thing you did, but she’s afraid to speak up? You could speak up for girls who have no voice, or don’t know how to use it. You could help some young girl find her own strength. Wouldn’t that be reason enough to brave the heartbreak?”

Tonilynn hit a nerve. I recalled the heart-stopping terror of opening my mouth about what my father had done—to anybody except my mother that one time. I was scared people would be disgusted with
me
, or judge
me
if they knew what had happened. Afraid they’d think I’d somehow invited it. It really was some heavy baggage to lug around. Guilt and shame are powerful emotions, even if they’re unwarranted. But did they excuse me from caring about all the young girls out there being abused, victimized by men in their families? Girls who were scared to speak up?

Wasn’t that just like Tonilynn to pack my bags for a big guilt trip! Saying a star like me could speak out and do wonders! I turned away from her, mad. There was only so much one singer could do. In a way I was outraged that Tonilynn wanted me to throw myself on the altar! Into my mind’s eye came Roy Durden, saying,
If you need that kind of stuff, a crutch to lean on
. Did I not realize on the day I first sat in the proverbial Hair Chair that Tonilynn was simple? That Tonilynn wasn’t dealing with reality?

I was ready to lash out at her, though that very next instant I also felt an enormous compassion expanding inside me. I remembered how Tonilynn had drawn me under her wing from the start, showering me with her friendship, restoring my dignity when it came to Holt Cantrell. She’d made me laugh with her Aunt Gomer stories, accepted me into her family, held me in her arms, and cried right along with me, saying, “I know it hurts, hon.” All this shot through me like a current, shorting out my superior airs. If I had anything good, any friend on this earth, it was Tonilynn. She knew the entire me, and she loved me. And here I was acting like an ungrateful snot! A snob.

The rain came down in sheets, and I swallowed my argumentative words. Later, there would be a time to tell her just the way it was going to be. First I needed to get myself to the Cumberland and organize my thoughts. I reached across the table, took Tonilynn’s hand in mine, and said, “Let’s get this puzzle finished.”

Tonilynn shook me. “Huh?” I said, in a fog of confusion.

“Wake up, hon. I need to tell you something.”

The serious note in Tonilynn’s voice made pin pricks on my skin. I opened my eyes. I was in the guest room at Cagle Mountain. The room was murky, and I heard the steady drum of rain on the tin roof. Tonilynn looked bad: deep circles of exhaustion beneath eyes wide with fear. I was scared to ask what, but I didn’t have to.

“Aunt Gomer’s had another stroke. She can’t move a muscle, can’t say a word. I called and an ambulance is coming to fetch her. Bobby Lee’s going to ride with me to the hospital. Help yourself to anything in the kitchen. I’ll call you.”

I heard her talking to Bobby Lee in the hall, her voice panicky, a far cry from the sure and sassy Tonilynn I was used
to. When they were gone, I lay still. The clock said it was a little past two p.m.

Perhaps it was from sleeping odd hours in an unfamiliar place, the shock of being wakened with bad news, or fear of what might happen to Aunt Gomer, but I was feeling unreal. It was all too much on this first day of May, after everything I’d been through. Plus, my feelings were hurt at the way Tonilynn had rushed around without even inviting me to go with them to the hospital. Did she truly think I was family?

I knew my imagination was going wild, and I got mad at myself because I also knew in my gut that this was not about me. It was only concern for Aunt Gomer that was in Tonilynn’s mind now. And the idea of what Aunt Gomer was going through was horrific. What if she had to go in an old folks’ home? What if she died? Feeling panicky, I wrapped myself up tight in the quilt and concentrated on the drumming rain. When I heard Erastus’s muffled sigh as he poked his head into my room, I was overjoyed. “C’mere, sweetie!” I called, hugging his ribs when he sidled up next to the bed. When he decided to head out, I swung my bare feet to the pine floor and followed him to the kitchen.

The Eiffel Tower in springtime covered half the table. I got one of Bobby Lee’s Pepsis out of the refrigerator and turned to Erastus. “You need some water?” I filled his bowl at the kitchen sink and slumped down in a chair at the table. After lots of lapping, Erastus plopped down at my feet. A quarter ’til four and the afternoon sky was so overcast it seemed like night.

“How about let’s see what’s on television,” I said after a good quarter hour of watching my cell phone.

“. . . record-breaking torrential downpours are causing flooding in parts of Nashville . . . thus far, the southeast side of town has been hit the worst . . . many streams and creeks, normally slow trickles are now raging torrents, and there
are reports of trucks submerged on the highway, residents chased from their homes by rapidly rising waters . . .” The weatherman’s face had a look of seriousness like it was carved from granite as flood advisory warnings scrolled across the bottom of the television screen in bold letters.

I stood stock-still, my head spinning and my heart pounding as the cameras panned the dark brown waters of many swollen creeks and tiny streams now turned to raging torrents. There was the Cumberland, big drops of rain hitting the surface hard enough to splash up and bounce before they melded in with the rest of their kind. Overhead the clouds gathered and roiled, like froth on cappuccino, so thick you couldn’t even see the city skyline.

I couldn’t watch anymore. I turned the television off and dialed Tonilynn’s cell phone. No answer. I stepped over to the window at the kitchen sink and looked at my reflection in the window glass. Could things get any worse? It made me feel dizzy, like I needed something to grab hold of and hang onto for dear life. Erastus pressed his nose to my hand and I sat down on the floor and hugged him. For a while, we stayed like that, staring wide-eyed at nothing.

A half hour later, there was still no word from Tonilynn. I stepped outside and Erastus watched me from the porch. Rain hit my hair and trickled down to my scalp, ran down my forehead, my neck, and soaked my chest. Hard drops hit the dirt yard, making a giant puddle, flattening Aunt Gomer’s irises. I kept seeing the Cumberland in my mind’s eye, the television images of those people evacuating their homes.

It was around five o’clock when I went back in, dried myself on a kitchen towel, and hesitantly turned the television back on. It seemed the water had stopped rising. I wept in relief and released a breath I hadn’t known I was holding. “Oh, thank
God! I cried out, and in the next instant wondered where in the world
that
had come from. I sure wasn’t in the habit of communicating with
him
.

“Well, buddy,” I said to Erastus, “looks like we can breathe easier now. About the flood anyway.”

I dug around in the refrigerator and made a bologna and mustard sandwich on white bread, then poured some dog chow into Erastus’s bowl, and we ate supper together. At last, a little after seven, my phone rang.

“Aunt Gomer’s suffered a major stroke,” Tonilynn said wearily. “She’s in ICU.”

I swallowed. “She’s a tough old bird. I’m sure she’ll be fine.”

The line was quiet for a moment, then Tonilynn said, “Doctor says to prepare for the worst.”

Seized by fear, I stammered, “She made it through the last one.”

“She still can’t move a muscle, can’t utter a word. I can just tell she’s not in there.”

“What do you mean she’s not in there?” I clutched my phone.

“She’s gone on to wherever saints go when the spirit leaves the body.”

I didn’t know what to say. “Well . . . you never know. Miracles happen. Hey, did you hear about the flooding?”

“Some.”

“Well, thank goodness that’s over. Looks like dear Nashville’s safe now.”

It seemed Tonilynn was too distracted to pay attention to what I’d said. “We’re staying here at the hospital tonight.”

My heart sank.

“Would you mind staying there to keep an eye on the place? Look after Erastus?”

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