I knew where she was when it happened and if I'd known what was going to happen I would have been there. Instead I was busy satisfying my curiosity of the ignorant humans. I was again at the Church of Cross and Crown where Father Jayes was giving a special Friday night sermon. I never miss one of his sermons and with both Sean and Arcot hunting after Sara I thought it was well in hand.
"I know it is unusual for us to be gathered together on a Friday evening. I know that many of you feel there are better ways to spend a Friday evening. Out at the movies, on a date, sleeping but let me tell you tell you that there is no better place for you than here tonight. I'm only asking for a half hour of your time. A half hour of your life. If you think of your life as a hundred miles long I'm only asking for a quarter inch."
I had to give it to Nigel he was an impressive speaker. If I didn't know that the things he was saying were the half-truths of ignorant humans I would be impressed. Honestly I still am, there are moments like now where I stop to wonder if I really could ask for forgiveness. If Jehovah or whomever is in charge these days would really give me forgiveness. He probably would but only at the price of my freedom, and my loyalty. I'd have to go around telling everybody He was better than me. I think I'd rather go on as is.
"I'm glad that you have taken the time out of your lives to be here. Thank you." Father Jayes had already abandoned his pulpit to walk amongst us, his flock. I know that he really believed the things that he said. I didn't understand that humans were a lost cause when I sat in his church. Misguided, ignorant but not hopeless. I didn't realize that until much later. Even now as I look back I can't say if I was right. It might be unfair to pit a creation against its creator no matter what the circumstances.
He paused over me and met my gaze evenly before continuing past me. He never speaks to me when he can avoid it but the fear he once held of me is gone. He hates me now but he doesn't fear me. He starts speaking to each person one at a time, a few people confess to him publicly. It isn't his preference to take confessions though, he believes a man's sins are between the man and God and there is no need for a middleman.
I felt it during that sermon though it had happened only twice before. A sudden presence in the room. To distant to communicate with but close enough that there was no denying that if not God himself at the least a representative had been sent. In all my years I'd never felt a single presence, not even a hint that God was listening to the pathetic humans. I tried to hone on it, find the source but as suddenly as it had came it left again.
I paid my usual half attention to his sermon letting my mind wander as I did. It wasn't his words that fascinated me anyway; it was the fact that he truly believed. I came to study that; I could have heard a sermon just like his at thousands of churches around the world or even over the television. When it was over I watched the crowd thin out, one by one they exited the church but I remained behind staring up at the Crucifix.
"Asylum." I pretended not to hear the minister as I rose to my feet and moved around him closer to the cross. "Asylum!"
"You're doing something right." I muttered without turning. I stared at the Crucifix for a moment longer almost reaching out for it when I remembered Jayes. "Something was here." I turned and stepped past him.
"Wait."
I didn't turn to face him but I did stop in place. "What is it?"
"Why do you come here?"
"You know the answer to that." I started walking again. Tonight I had just come to watch him. He had become my human and I rarely traveled far from him. I listened to his surface thoughts almost continually trying to discern his dreams, his prayers. "Do you have something important to ask me?" I turned toward him tossing my hair as I did.
Asylum?
What?
Why are we in church? You just tempting fate today? Trying to see if He really will strike us with lightning?
It's important.
Fine.
"Stop you?"