Hanging the Chimney Hook
All Rights Reserved Β© 2020, Rick Haydn Horst
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author's imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
CHAPTER TWO
Neither of us had made a trip across the continent. We had premium economy seats, and while I hadn't expected first class, I wished it were. Some complimentary champagne wouldn't have gone amiss; after all, it was my 38th birthday again.
The plane sat three passengers on one side of the aisle and two on the other. We had the two together-seats; I got the far-right seat next to the window as Max sat on the aisle, and nuns filled the three additional seats in our row. We saw a couple of older sisters in the far seats who fell asleep once they buckled in, and one, closer to our age, sat on the aisle. The awake one across from Max struck up a conversation with us.
"I'm Sister Foustina, and these two are Sisters Sleepy and Grumpy." She laughed. "Please, forgive my little joke; we're returning from the Vatican, so we've flown quite far, with delays and layovers. I've never been able to sleep on planes without help, and like them, I'm exhausted. I can get a little silly the longer I stay awake. I have a pill to take with dinner; I hope it works."
"That's okay, I understand. I'm Max Roche, and this is my buddy Howard Millstone. So, where are you headed?"
"We're returning to Franklin, and you two?"
"We're going to Franklin as well," I said.
She looked us up and down. "You're visiting someone?"
"No, we're moving there," I said. "May I ask why you thought we were visiting someone?"
"To utilize their terminology," she said, "the norm population of Franklin is quite low. If you see someone who looks like a norm there, they're probably from the LGBT community, and I could be mistaken, but I hadn't gotten that impression from either of you."
"Norm? You mean 'normals,' like the three of us," I said, allowing her to make her assumptions.
"Oh no, if there were groups of people who belonged in Franklin, it's sisters and nuns." She smiled. "People who live outside of Franklin don't understand. They judge superficially. Without knowing them as individuals, they judge the goths, for example, by their appearance as objectionable, and they assume what's inside them is equally objectionable. They view them as freaks, but they merely express themselves in their appearance, as do nuns and sisters. They also view life and this world differently than most people, as do nuns and sisters. You've not been to Franklin, have you?"
"No, we haven't," said Max.
"But you're moving there."
"Yes," I said.
"Well, I admire your courage. It's not easy to move somewhere you haven't even visited, and that especially applies to Franklin."
"Have you any advice for novices like us?" I asked.
"Yes, I have. If you want the people who live in Franklin to accept you, accept them first. Years ago, some of our sisters decided to start an outreach in Franklin with the idea that they would minister to the people there and bring them to God, but they tried to change them. That's what much of the rest of the world wants to do to them. If urging them to change was acceptable to them, then Franklin wouldn't exist. The result was that those sisters eventually moved on, and we took over. We learned from the mistakes of the past, and so we listened to the people. The vast majority are good people, and what they needed wasn't what the Sisters were offering."
"What do you offer them?" I asked.
"Many younger people go to Franklin because their parents throw them out of their homes, or they leave home to escape rejection. They need support, love, and someone to talk to, and that's what we give them."
"That's very kind of you," I said.
"No, Mr. Millstone, that's my job, and I do it because I care. If you are kind, you will do things with kindness, but that's not motivation; beliefs are motivating. I believe in love and that lives have value, including those people whom the world rejects without just cause."
"Just cause," I said. "So, you would view a murderer differently?"
"For those people, that's between themselves and God. When it comes to the people like those in Franklin, if it must be me standing between them and the part of the world that might cause them harm, then so be it."
I had never spoken with a nun before, and I wasn't sure they were all like Sister Foustina, but she showed a fierce loyalty and a motherly conviction that surprised me.
"Thank you, sister. I wasn't sure about moving to Franklin, and I'm not sure how I feel about it now, but it sounds like there might be some light at the end of the tunnel."
After the in-flight meal, the lights dimmed, and everyone around us had fallen asleep, including Sister Foustina, whose pill had kicked-in well enough to knock her out.
Max whispered into my ear. "This airline fed us a decent meal here in Premium Economy, but I couldn't make myself eat that cheesecake. Care to feed me dessert?"
"Right now?"
"Why not? We have these complementary blankets, and everyone else is dead to the world."