originally published in BloodMoon January 2002 issue
“You look lost.”
Her head snaps around, away from the seething cul-de-sac down the street. Lank blonde hair that might be pretty--if washed and combed--slithers across her wind chapped face. Dark blue eyes widen as if with faint recognition. He’s not surprised. He’s been watching as she’s wandered the neighborhood, most recently that afternoon when she stumbled away from the street mission door, cheeks flaming and eyes streaming.
Her eyes drop to the clerical collar about his throat. He sidles in front of her, a buoy bobbing between the shallows of Old Towne and the deep end of “the Zone” where prostitutes ply their trade in symbiosis with strip joints, sex clubs and other adult entertainment establishments.
“Easy to do, here in Old Towne,” he continues, “ I suspect whoever planned these streets must’ve let their kids use the blueprints for scratch paper.”
Cracked, though wide and generous, lips hesitantly smile.
“Doing some last minute Christmas shopping? So was I.” He gestures at the curio and antique stores around them. The garish holiday decorations and tinny stream of festive music seem somehow strangely akin to the everyday displays just two blocks further east.
“I was about to warm myself with a little coffee,” he says, nodding to a small café nearby. “Would you care to join me?”
She hunches down into a grimy gray coat too light for protection against a sharp bite of wind worrying the first flakes of a coming storm. He waits with patient regard until she nods her head once, sharply.
Taking her arm, he tells her, “My name is Charles, most folks just call me Brother Chuck. And you are?”
“Mel--Melanie.”
“Melanie,” Brother Chuck repeats, “a lovely name.”
She clings to his arm with the tenacity of someone drowning. They turn their backs on the seductive invitation of neon lights and heavy bass music seeping from the Zone.
Despite the Friday night crowd, twenty bucks slipped to the headwaiter quickly finds them a table. Melanie glances furtively at people laughing, talking, eating. Her eyes almost close as if the clink of silverware were some nearly celestial music. Brother Chuck’s stomach faintly rumbles; he can imagine how Melanie must feel.
“Late as it is, you know, I do believe I’m ready for dinner,” Brother Chuck says as he picks up a menu. “Please, feel free to order something. My treat,” he smiles, “a small recompense for your charming company.”
Melanie all but snatches up the extra menu, then hesitates. She raises her eyes with a ghost of a smile. “Thank you.”
As her eyes devour the menu, Brother Chuck studies the young woman. Despite ragged clothes and evident weariness, she possesses an almost ethereal loveliness. Skin, apart from the effects of the winter, is clear and pale. The chin of her heart shaped face arches into a jaw line showing little softness but detracting nothing from her appeal. Lashes almost too long to be real hide her haunting indigo blue eyes.
Without looking up from the menu, Melanie slips off the jacket. Her movements are fluid, befitting a body lithe rather than thin. Well formed if medium size breasts—sans bra, Brother Chuck notes almost absently--press against her thin sweater.
He guesses she’s a cheerleader or, with that feline grace, involved in some sort of gymnastics.
Suddenly, he realizes Melanie is looking at him, blushing slightly at his concentration. Brother Chuck smiles harmlessly and beckons the waiter. The young woman orders hamburger and fries as Brother Chuck expected she would. He chooses a roast beef with side salad for himself.
The waiter leaves. Brother Chuck leans forward. He knows she’ll find it harder to flee while anticipating the food than when it actually arrives.
“Melanie, you weren’t really Christmas shopping, were you?”
She bites her lip so hard, Brother Chuck wonders that it doesn’t bleed. After a moment’s trembling, Melanie shakes her head.
“How old are you, Melanie?”
She replies almost inaudibly, “Eighteen.” Into the dubious silence, she adds, “As of,” she hesitates, “a week ago.”
Then come the tears and an all too familiar story. A small town princess discovering the looks and charm that eased her way through high school meant very little in the larger realm of a city university. Falling in with the wrong crowd, grades slipping as she cut classes until suspended. And, of course, there was a boy…Brother Chuck believes he can guess the end of that story. Still, he listens with the grave, kindly air of someone who has heard it all before, but is never unmoved until Melanie’s shrinking spirit seems squeezed dry of words.
“You haven’t told your folks yet, have you?”
“I, I can’t. Not after all the sacrifices they’ve made, all they’ve hoped for me…,” She looks at Brother Chuck helplessly. “I don’t know what to do.”
Their food arrives. The waiter raises an eyebrow at Melanie’s evident distress and then at Brother Chuck. Five bucks finds its way into the waiter’s green vest. He nods and disappears.
“Well,” Brother Chuck says, “first thing we can do is eat.”
“I don’t think I can,” Melanie says in a low voice.
He shrugs. “Would be a pity to let the chef’s hard work go to waste, don’t you think?” He inhales deeply. “And it all smells so good.”
Leaning forward again, Brother Chuck says softly, “Child, you are not without friends. The One who knows when even the least sparrow falls has not forgotten you.” His smile hints at some hidden humor; it’s one of his favorite lines.
Melanie looks up at him, eyes brimming around what appears to be a faint strand of hope.
“I’ve little doubt our meeting today was any accident,” he tells her with confident veracity.
“You’ll help me?” Melanie asks, hesitantly
“Yes, child. I will help you. First,” Brother Chuck adds, reaching for the condiments, “by handing you the ketchup.”
Melanie begins to pick at her food, though soon she’s shoveling it in as if the meal might escape in the shadow of the fork. Brother Chuck chatters with deliberate inanity while silently approving of her resilience. She’ll need it for what lies ahead. Yet, Brother Chuck knows that, with his guidance, she’ll be just fine. After all, it’s what he does best.
After they finish their meal, with a huge chocolate sundae for the girl, Brother Chuck pays up, tips generously and escorts Melanie outside.
“Do you have a place to stay this evening?” he asks as snow dances about them, melting upon Melanie’s cheek like tears of the night.
She looks down. “No,” she says at last. “The shelter--“