I know I'm going to hell for what I tried to do and what I did.
I've learned to live with the guilt just as I live with the sad, sweet, depraved and glorious memories.
I don't figure I'm ever going to get over either. And maybe that's my real hell.
A few years ago I set my sights on Jasmine Pilcher, a most ordinary woman who came to my attention in a most unusual way. She was walking up to the choir loft at the Sunday 11 o'clock service offered by Pastor Ryan. She and I sing together – or used to sing together – every Sunday and sometimes at special Wednesday services too.
You couldn't meet a sweeter woman than Jasmine or a better friend. Although she had little money herself, she was always eager to help out a friend in need of a little extra cash, or a last-minute babysitter or to cook a pie at the last minute if needed for a church social.
Jasmine used to be a really fine singer in her youth and now she was just okay. Although Jasmine was a friendly, outgoing person, when she sang she was all earnest intensity. No smiles and no joking. She had a cute little way of clearing her throat in a barely audible way when she finished a song. I liked that.
She was divorced from her first and only husband more than 12 years ago and now lived in a small home not too far from the church. She grew roses in the backyard, talked a lot with the neighbors and sometimes laughed in a way that was positively heart warming. Jasmine had two children and four grandchildren who lived about an hour away. She worked at a nearby production line assembling small wooden furniture pieces.
Despite her friendliness and great laugh, there was a real air of sadness about Jasmine. I don't think she ever got over her divorce and it was pretty much understood by everyone who knew her that she had nothing to do with men ever since the divorce.
And that seemed to be okay with her. I don't think the sadness I saw in her was due to loneliness. I think it was sadness at a life that had gone astray.
Jasmine was a heavy woman. Okay, she was fat. It's hard even now to write this because I like her so much and "fat" seems as much an insult as a description. But she was a heavy woman. She was only about 5-3 but she was big. She had puffy cheeks even when far thinner but now her heaviness seemed to accent them so that they almost looked like they were closing in around her eyes. They were pretty eyes but I've got to tell you: there were times when I looked into them and wondered if her face cheeks would close up over them and she would be sightless.
Good old Jasmine. Oh, yeah. I didn't say how old. She was about 57 or 58 at the time of my – how should I say it? – revelation.
You're probably wondering a little about me. Believe me, you'll be wondering a lot more before this story is over. My name is . . . let's just call me Fred. I'm in my early 30s and I'm vice president of a small company that produces specialized medical equipment used in large X-Ray machines. My father is the president and, some day, the good Lord willing and the creek don't rise, I'll be the boss. For now, I'm making some decent money but keep a pretty low profile.
I have girlfriends but none at the time this story begins. I'm pretty active in the church, was defeated in a run for the local town council last year and am active in the local chamber of commerce and a few civic organizations. It's fair to say that everyone likes me but no one is overly impressed with me. I wish it were different, but that the way it is.
There is a dark side to me, however. I used to convince myself that it was just "my way" and that I was eccentric but now I'm pretty sure it's just a darkness.
I'm well versed in these things, you see, and when I say darkness I'm simply talking about selfish disinterest in others. I hope you don't think I'm talking about being in league with the devil or murder or anything like that. I had to laugh out loud as I wrote that. That's far too ambitious a darkness for me. Heck, once when I was ticketed for driving 15 miles over the speed limit, I had to take the afternoon off I was so upset.
But the darkness is there. Lurking.
Frankly, I'm far too cautious to let it boil over. I mean, who knows what might happen? I keep a pretty tight rein on this "my way" thing. It bubbles and whistles and makes noise but I would never let it boil over. Not ever.