At
the door to the loft, I watched him take a final look at what had been his home
for almost two years. Correction: their home. His family’s home. First he and
Jim, and then Sarah, then Jason, and finally Hank, the baby. Most likely, he
would never see it again. And he knew that. He’d asked to do a final check,
which all of us knew was unnecessary. Including him.
He
turned to the Black Watch guardsman and the FBI agent by the doorway and
nodded. The four of us moved to the elevator and then to the street, where the
family waited in the four black SUVs. A crowd of onlookers stood watching,
breaking into applause as he left the building. He smiled and waved. The crowd
looked friendly, and included many of his neighbors in the loft building. But
he didn’t know for certain. He’d likely never know for certain, with any crowd.
Not anymore. Not since The Violence of October. Not since he almost died from
gunshot wounds.
I’d
spent seven weeks with this family, and most of those seven with him. My life
would never be the same. Everything had changed; everything I believed,
understood, and accepted no longer made any sense. And it was because of this
27-year-old man, this young man who had not yet recovered from his wounds, the
injuries that had almost killed him.
Michael
Kent-Hughes stepped into the waiting SUV, joining his wife Sarah and their son,
six-week-old Henry, called Hank. I sat in the jump seat facing them. In the
first vehicle ahead of us sat Jason and Jim Kent-Hughes, Michael and Sarah’s
two adopted sons. Black Watch guardsmen and FBI agents were grouped in all four
vehicles, but most of them in the third vehicle behind us, already trained to
respond if something happened on the way to the airport. Our luggage was in the
fourth.
Sarah
helped him buckle his seat belt. His left arm remained in a sling, the pain
dulled but not eliminated by the prescribed meds. He had begun physical therapy
a few hours after awakening in the hospital. His most serious wound, near the
heart, the wound he had almost died from on the operating table, was healing
better than expected. The second and less serious wound, at the junction of his
left shoulder and arm, was not. Therapy would resume in London. More surgery
was possible.
“They
say pain is really a blessing,” Michael had told me one morning, in the middle
of a discussion on finances. “I don’t mean to sound ungrateful, but it’s a
blessing I’d gladly forego.” Then he apologized for complaining. “It just hurts
sometimes, Joshua. Well, it hurts some times more than others.”
The
four vehicles pulled away from the front of the loft building, across the plaza
from St. Anselm’s Church near downtown San Francisco, Michael’s first assigned
parish and now also his last. As we left the plaza, Michael saw Father John
Stevens and the church secretary Eileen waving from the steps. Michael lowered
the tinted window and waved back.
“Sir,”
said the FBI agent sitting behind us, “I’m sorry, but I have to ask you to
leave the window up.”
Michael
nodded, “Sorry.” He raised the window.
Life
had changed forever for Father Michael, former assistant pastor at St.
Anselm’s.
Life
would be radically different for King Michael I of Great Britain, his wife,
Queen Sarah, the baby Hank, now Prince of Wales, and their two adopted sons.
How
did I come to be sitting with Britain’s new royal family, in a car headed for
the San Francisco airport and a flight to London?
My
name is Josh Gittings. I am 41. I studied political science and then law at the
University of Birmingham. I am special assistant to Prime Minister Peter
Bolting. My duties are unspecified, but it’s generally known, especially by me,
that I am the PM’s chief political operative, and have been since his first
election to Parliament 17 years ago, on the Labour ticket.
When
The Violence erupted in Britain, the PM had dispatched me with Ian and Iris
McLaren, Michael’s parents, or guardians, to be legally precise, the couple
who’d raised him, to San Francisco to help Sarah Kent-Hughes. Her husband was
possibly dying on the operating table, and I had my instructions: what to do if
Michael survived the surgery, and what to do if he didn’t.
This
young woman, this young queen with a new baby sitting across from me in the
SUV, had been the pivotal player. The PM knew that. I knew that. And I had had
to insert myself into her fear, confusion and shock. I didn’t expect to be
inserted into the middle of her faith. And her husband’s faith.
My
friends call me the PM’s special assistant. The British news media call me
Svengali. My enemies call me Rasputin. All three have been true.
Until
this trip to San Francisco. Then I met Michael Kent-Hughes.
Before,
I’d had no real friends. Then I met Michael Kent-Hughes.
Five
days earlier, Michael had preached his last sermon as assistant pastor of St.
Anselm’s, broadcast by the BBC and heard live by more than 250 million people
in Britain and North America alone. Surprising everyone, and saying nothing
about The Violence or his new position, Michael had preached a sermon that had
touched more hearts than was imaginable.
I
know; it had touched mine. But it was only part of what had been happening to
me since I’d arrived in San Francisco seven weeks ago.
A
lifetime ago.
Top photograph by Michael Spizak via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
Does this mean the next chapter is almost complete?!? :)
ReplyDeleteTo quote a phrase from "Grease", tell me more!
ReplyDeleteYes! Yes!!! More of Michael Kent-Hughes and family! So glad there will be another book in the series, Glynn. I was just today thinking about rereading the first two this month.
ReplyDeleteBlessings!
Oo, how nice to hear more from this story!
ReplyDelete