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    Letter of Revised Discontentment

    Peter stepped out into the biting, stiff air that morning, his letter home ominous in hispocket. The sun was just peeking over the tin roofs of the other hovels that surrounded his. Thesmell of rot sweltered up into his nostrils, still numb from the moment he had awoken that morning.No heat. He loathed the fact that he had no heat in his shack to keep himself and his companions

    warm. Frozen fingers werent in the brochure, he thought cynically to himself.They had only the tattered and aged wool blankets that at one point had been new and

    acceptable, now a thorn in his side. He once had a pillow but lost it to an infestation of some type ofbeetle that had been foreign to him until then. The town people called them burrowers. His wornbedspread now doubled as both a blanket and a knob to rest his head. His neck was taut. Rigid. Hisback still ached from sleeping on the cot, or rather, scarcely sleeping on it.

    I abhor this place. I barely sleep. The food is nearly intolerable. I only eat when Imust. I fear I am beginning to look as sickly and frightful as those I am caring for.

    The door squeaked shut behind him. He tugged, forcing it into the door jam. Leaning down,he tucked the towel back under the door, attempting to keep what little heat there was in thehouse to wait there for his return. His first step fell on the dirt road. Tire tracks lay petrified in thesolid mud from last months storm. He started his one-mile hike into town. Peter thought of his firstfew months here. He remembered the eagerness of the young pastors he was training and the joyin the eyes of the villagers that he prayed over and provided medicinal support to. He felt God inhim then. He had known peace. It seemed only the sting of death could embitter that.Unfortunately he now resided in a living graveyard, the dead already assigned their time, justignorant of it. He gazed around and saw only walking corpses, sapped of all hope and refilled withdesperation. Thin. Pale. They hardly had the strength to carry themselves. Their country seemed tocare nothing for them. All too quickly Peters convictions faded and faith no longer felt sufficient.Each dawning day increasingly appeared worthless and lost to him. His heart ached at times buthad become all too desensitized by the horrors he had witnessed in his three years there in thevillage.

    The sick come to me for help. Some crying out in pain, some with no more tears tocry. They look to me as their savior. And I have begun to loathe them for putting meon that pedestal.

    He had heard that there were riots, revolution and insurrection running rampant before hedecided to come. His heart staggered when he first knew the Lord was calling him to minister to thepoor in such a violent and unsure corner of the world. He had often wondered why God couldnt callhim to emulate major champions of faith. A position as executive pastor for a predominate nationalchurch would not have been so unpleasant.

    Peter kicked a pebble along as he walked. A poignant, distant smile began to creep onto hisface, followed shortly by misty tears clotting up in his eyes. His mind drifted to his first day inmissionary training. That was when he first met her. She sat two seats over from the chalkboardand only one row up from him. He waited through the short and informal roll call to hear the nameshe responded to. Rebecca. Nowhere had he ever seen a more beautiful seraph and the name

    suited her. She looked like a Rebecca. She looked like a girl he could no longer live a normal lifewithout. He wondered which program she was in. His mind, a skipping stone, jumped over waves ofthought, from question to question. Is she going to the same country as me? Where is shefrom? And of course, Is she single? Nowhere in time had someone fallen in love so quickly asPeter did for Rebecca. She, in an instant, was his everything.

    Machine gun fire bawled out through his thoughts. His senses returned and now, almostinstinctively, he dropped into the mud. Bullets flickered over his head, scattering terror across thehillside beside him. He waited in silent despondency for the ringing of gunfire to conclude. Adesperate prayer whispered on His tongue. Simple.

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    Please God words ceased and the Spirit within him spoke the rest, frantically praying forsafekeeping.

    Daily there are gunfights. I feel trapped. Like my life will be lost at any moment, withonly my small Gideons bible and three years of heartache and poverty as mymemento. Where was our God then?

    His mind digressed to the small, green bible in his pocket, side by side with his letter home.He often mused, in an ironic manner, how of all the locations he could have been called to, hechose one where his devotions could be his demise. He kicked his heart every time he got word ofhis family back home and their ministry efforts to the poor and illiterate. If only he had stayedHewondered if he would still carry his faith like a banner instead of the band-aid it was to him now;patching up the occasional scrape but leaving the gaping wound of doubt exposed for this villageand its vicious country to prod.

    With his nose now buried in a small, solemn patch of crab grass, his thoughts fell to her oncemore. He remembered how her lips, a soft pink, tasted on his. A sweet taste. A comfortablesensation.

    If only you could have seen her. You would have known in an instant why I lovedherstill love her. She couldnt hide anything behind her hazel eyes, but I knew shehad nothing to hide. The first time we kissed, I could see her contentment.

    His thoughts of her had traveled too deep to notice that the insurrectionists had passed himby, mistaking him for a simple townsman. They saw no need to stop for this lump of cowardice lyingin the mud.

    He picked himself up, his clothes now heavy in front from the mire, a tugging reminder tohim all day of the mornings events. He took out a small cloth from his breast pocket to wipe themuck from his eyes then pulled it away to replace it in his pocket. Red. Its glaring contrast to thedrab gray of the handkerchief is what caught his attention. Again his eyes became doleful. Hisstrength to hold the tears in regressed.

    I too am a man of sorrows. He muttered to himself. So why is it I get spat on? Why wasshe taken?

    His hand melded with hers. Lifeless. The crimson of her blood pouring into his lap from thewound on her back. His denim jeans soaked in her blood. He wore them for three days. No strengthto stand. No strength to bat a single eyelid. Peters eyes burned through the night. Insomnia is forthe rich. He had hollowness to keep him up at night.

    He felt like a fraud. She had died for her faith. The faith he had once also. They had torturedher. They had put her to death, and all he could do was struggle with the men who forced him towatch. They marred him far more by allowing him to live. When they loosed their grip on him, Peterplummeted to the soil, now ignorant of the bodily damage he had endured. They were limptogether. Lifeless. He crawled to her body, finding her with his palms and fingertips. Salty, warmtears blinded him.

    Her blood was warmer than my skin at that moment. Life ripped away from her justmoments before. She had only been dead an instant but I suffered as if an eternitywithout her had just passed all bundled up in that one second. My only reaction was

    to cocoon her. Cover her lifeless body with my arms. I clasped her to me tighter thanI ever had before. I whisked the hair away from her forehead as I had done when sheslept in my arms many cold nights before. I pressed my lips to hers, insanelyexpecting them to kiss me back. They were dormant. I tasted blood. My blood? Herblood? Mixing to be the blood of our covenant Till death we did part.

    The sound of distant battle aroused Peter to the place where he was standing on theroad. The mercenaries were still close and might be back soon. He wiped his eyes once more and

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    took one step toward the town. Slowly he made his way down the broken pathway. A gushing senseof loneliness surrounded him as he walked down the side paths toward the village.

    While he walked down the erupted paths, the carcasses of dead beasts, halfputrefied, reeking of brutal fatality, dotted the fringe of the road. He seized the letter in his pocket,making sure no harm had befallen it during his swim in the mud. Dry. He was unsure of the impacthis correspondence might have with his parents. He imagined his mother. She would be sad but

    supportive. She often wrote to let him know that whenever his missionary work was over he couldcome home. Frank, Peters father missed him as well. Both longed for him to be home, but neitherat such a cost. Faith sold upstream. His mom would smile, uneasy, hiding her hurt. Frank would tryto veil it for a while. It would take him a week or so to bring it up. And even then would theconversation be so convoluted and awkward that it would only result in an invitation for Peter toattend a church service again. The old man would have a glossy look, his teeth grit shut, tightlyholding the tears behind his eyes.

    Im sorry for any hurt that my loss of faith may cause. Dad, you have always beensupportive and loving and I feel as if I am letting you down in some way. Like I amwalking out on a family tradition. Maybe one day the Lord will call on me again, butuntil then I have to live in the valley of death. My heart hates it but my soul has madequite a home here.

    His foot caught on a rut in the trail. It was just enough to bring him out of his haze. He wasalmost in town. His stomach turned. Panicky expectation slowed his walk. It was worse than invitingsomeone on a date for the first time, or anticipating that initial kiss. However, this was his family.His flesh. And he tortured himself at the notion that he in some way was betraying them.

    I find myself singing worship at night. Hoping it will help me sleep. I dont know mom,if it is the nostalgia or the Spirit, but either way it helps. Many times has My SoulKnows Very Well lulled me to sleep. But I feel like the words are hollow

    Just a few days over fifteen months ago was the last day he and Rebecca had walkedthat path. It was on that day that she was ripped from his life. His bride to be. They had beentalking of a certain scripture when three patrolling soldiers stopped them. She had this versememorized. He had recently lost a string of interns to famine, disease, torture and expulsion. Hisflesh wailed for revenge and revolution. She knew better. Her loving wit could always calm his rage.

    She told it to me ten minutes before she died and I committed it to memory to keepthe last cheerful moment of my life alive. She told me to calm my soul, my unrest.To this very hour we go hungry and thirsty, we are in rags, we are brutally treated,we are homeless. We work hard with our own hand. When we are cursed, we bless;when we are persecuted, we endure it; when we are slandered, we answer kindly. Upto this moment we have become the scum of the Earth, the refuse of the world.

    1 Corinthians 4:11-13.

    He entered the wooded archway that lead to the main sliver of the small village.Everyone knew him by name. The last he had seen of another American was five weeks previous,so by his best count it was Thursday. Neither of his housemates spoke English very well. One was

    from a small country in eastern Europe that Peter dared not attempt to pronounce and the otherwas from another small village just thirty miles from this one. An easy walk home in comparison.

    On this particular day the agency mailman was supposed to be arriving at 3 o clock. Peterdetested these days. He only got the occasional letter from home telling him of lavish feasts,running water, and smiling friends. They endorsed his homesickness. Just once he wanted bad newsfrom home, something to draw him back. Just a single funeral to give him a valid excuse toabandon this crypt. Pot roast. Last month was pot roast and a friends wedding. The wedding stung.

    Rebecca

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    His fingers danced over the envelope. His concentration raced. How would his family react?He fiddled with it. It actually felt restless in his hands.

    Across the street a little boy played in a muddy puddle. He knelt before it, splashed hishands around, causing ripples to collide and crash into each other, to swallow each other. Thebigger consumed the smaller. He thought of what Jesus had said about children. The Kingdom ofHeaven belongs to such as these. He smiled. Sanctity. Only a small reassurance. Peter whistled.

    The little boy looked up from his amusement and saw Peter kneeling across the street. They bothsmiled. Peter had always wanted children.

    What now? Now that she is gone, I will never know the joy you had in fatherhood.

    Peters eyes glazed over; a glossy distancing from perception. His lips, cracked andblistered, now barren of the earlier smile. Just then a woman entered his view. She whisperedsomething in the little boys ear. He abruptly ceased his wallowing, waved to Peter, then, as if shehad told him a great secret, took off down the ally toward his familys home. The woman looked tohim. She grinned. Peters heart descended deep into his stomach. Her familiar chocolate eyesglimmered.

    I knew her. Her name was Maria. It took me seven breaths to recognize her. She hadcome into the clinic. She was malnourished, abused downtrodden. Her face wasspiritless and her eyes were so empty I could see the back of her skull. She came afew times and seemed to be healing nicely, physically and spiritually. She wasintrigued by what the gospels had to say. Then she stopped showing up. It did notsurprise me. I wrote her off as a casualty in my mind. Most ended abruptly in thisarea of the world.

    She stood there. Uneasy. Fidgeting nervously. She stepped one foot out toward him,unsure if she should approach. Peter sat in simple wonderment. He must have appeared beautifulto her. Her eyes swelled, red with joy. Her palms shielded her lips, her knuckles white.

    The afternoon haze split the reflected light. Peter shielded his eyes. His stomach hurt.She walked to his side. Her lips quaked. Two fingers danced over a small wooden cross she worearound her neck. She dribbled out six small wordsThank youyou saved my life Her stepshurried away, leaving him alone in the solitude of thought. The smell of astonishment andperplexity wafted in through all his pores. His joints hurt. He wept. Salty, clear tears. Purity. Petersheart felt tugged at, ripped apart, left asunder but strangely finally felt freed.

    I sat there on that dusty bench and stared at the sky; stared at myself. How could Ihave been so ignorant? How could I have been such a hypocrite? I preached the goodnews but my heart sat empty. I taught on being filled with the Spirit but my heart hadshut Him out long before. But now I saw it, now I knew what part I had been missing.Obedience; Obedience in the face of tribulation. Jesus never once promised a life freeof trials. He told us over and over that we would be tested, hated, spat on and put todeath. But our treasure awaits us when we join the Father in heaven. Obedience isthe key. Rebecca knew that. She died for that. She told me once that if she would diehere in this place, then all she would need to know was that God had used her to helpone person; just one person. I never understood that. Not until that moment when I

    sat face to face with Maria did I understand that. Rebecca had helped me Rebeccadied to help me She helped me save that woman. She had saved me.

    A mist of dust trailed near as Peter sat on his bench now clenching the letter, rollingit up tightly in between his finger tips. An old, filthy station wagon stopped in front of where Peterwas sitting. The man rolled his window down and waited for the envelope to be passed over to him.Peter beamed. He looked to the clouds and his heart spoke to him. It uttered unknown chants. Peterreplaced the letter to his pocket then lifted his hand and simply waived the man on. He had no mailto send out that day.

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    Peters family would receive a letter from him but it was not the one that had been inhis pocket while he lay face down in the mud. It would be a new letter. One telling of his fall fromfaith and restoration to grace. They would receive Peters letter but never would again receivePeter in their arms. He would be buried in a small unmarked grave beside Rebecca. Only thevillagers would know where it is and who he was. They would remember the couple for years tocome and even their grandchildren would know their names.

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