Tears of a Soul Catcher
By S.S. Simpson
()
About this ebook
A very faint voice whispered, “He isn’t going to be able to help you. No one can.”
S.S. Simpson
A transplant from Connecticut, S. S. Simpson found herself living in South Texas and returned to school to complete classes toward her teaching degree. A chance meeting turned into a commitment when four years later she stood beside her proud Mexican-American Ph.D and became his wife.
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Tears of a Soul Catcher - S.S. Simpson
© 2019 S. S. Simpson. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
Published by AuthorHouse 12/19/2019
ISBN: 978-1-7283-4044-9 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-7283-4043-2 (e)
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Getty Images are models,
and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Getty Images.
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
To my beloved Lord
who has called me
CONTENTS
40819.pngThe Departure
Las Vegas
The Choir
Blunt and Abrupt
The River
Smelly Sulfur
The Battle
The Aftermath
Indians and Painted Ponies
Percy’s Vision
Alpine Villages and Arches
The Cliff Dwellings
The Indian Reservation
The Grand Canyon
Unexpected
Broken Chains
Not Back Yet
The Return
The Storm
Detective Joseph
The Priest
The Piano Stool and Spachey
Prayer, Fasting and Church
Changes
Soul Catcher
THE DEPARTURE
40819.pngMY FINGERS COULDN’T TEAR THE package open quickly enough. Capturing all of my excitement, Rocky National Park Tour dazzled me. It was the itinerary for the long-awaited trip, a two-week bus tour highlighting the Rocky Mountain National Parks. A single pang of guilt rushed through me. Originally, the trip was planned for two. There was only one name on the reservation. My husband Leon fell and twisted his only leg. Even with the help of his prosthesis, he wasn’t able to climb up any stairs or even walk for any amount of time. He wasn’t meant to go.
Since we lived in Texas, I hadn’t seen anything that wasn’t flat for a very long time. To see trees, all together in a forest, would be a sight for my palm-laden eyes. I almost forgot what rocks looked like, let alone a cliff. The attached travel guide gushed of nature and its splendor. I was selfish. Any other person, I was told, would have canceled the trip and waited for a better time when both could go. I couldn’t wait. I had to go. Leon couldn’t understand why watching the national parks on television wasn’t enough. I wanted to see my own country’s wonders before the treasures of other countries. Nonchalantly I placed the manila envelope under the other letters. Leon’s passion was the mail.
Is this what I think it is? What you have been waiting for? You aren’t really going to go on this trip by yourself are you?
Hoping he wouldn’t challenge me, Leon peered at me with questioning eyes. Sara, I really don’t feel good about you going alone. I mean I know you, how you like to wander and explore and often forget about the time. On a trip like this, you have to stay with the group. If you are late, they will just leave you. Then you will have to figure out how you will get back by yourself.
I know that you don’t think that I should go alone, but this is a much needed trip. The nature, the beauty calls out to me. For many reasons, this year at school was more than challenging. What was drained out of me needs to be replenished.
Seventh grade was not the easiest grade to teach, but I chose it because it was my worst year of school. Back then because I didn’t know who I was, I didn’t like myself or hardly anyone else. Those same uncertainties were in my students. They longed for a sense of stability and some certainty.
Sara, I just don’t want anything to happen to you. It is still difficult for me to believe that your overprotective mother, who calls me non-stop when she can’t find you, has agreed to let you go. If I need help, your parents will be there. But no one will there for you.
Leon always made me feel that I violated every written and unwritten rule for a loving marriage. His middle name was worry. It wasn’t mine. I knew that I could take care of myself. This thought haunted me for my entire trip.
I handed him the brochure. Look, this is the itinerary.
By the look on my face, Leon knew that I was already there. If only he could anticipate and get excited about traveling. But he never did. Leon didn’t really care if he ever left the house. To him, a trip was just a diversion, another way to spend money, wait on people and practice patience which he didn’t have. But to me just mention the word trip, and my eyes popped and my mind raced.
Preparing for the trip consumed me. It was such a different kind of trip. Usually when we traveled, we stayed at fancy hotels with fancy pools and fancy restaurants. There was nothing fancy about nature and the wilderness. It wasn’t there to entertain you. It was there for you to admire. Lodges and inns tucked in the woods were our sleeping accommodations. Some of the places were so remote that they didn’t even have phone access. My phone charger would become my lifeline. Ordinarily I disliked the phone, but this trip would alter that perception forever.
As my departure neared, Leon’s apprehension grew like an unwanted weed. Daily he would think of things for me to be concerned about from mosquitoes carrying Bengay Fever to severe leg cramps from too much walking. Nature was foreign to Leon, not to me. Being from New England, I was raised in it, understood it, and knew its obstacles.
The day arrived. On the way to the airport, there were things I know I should have said. I was too excited about what lay ahead of me to remember what I was leaving behind. If only I took more time to assure Leon how much I would miss him, how much I loved him. I would give anything to be back in that car. Before I knew it, good-byes were said, and I got through the winding check-in line without losing anything. On my first try, I discovered that my liquid cleansing products had to be separated in baggies because of the new recent rules regarding flammable fluids on the airplane. In other words, anything that a terrorist might make a makeshift bomb with had to be identified and cleared. But I didn’t think my makeup, my mascara, and my lip gloss fell into that category. It did. As I was instructed to go through the line a second time I didn’t even know if I would have enough time to make it to my terminal. It was too close. I almost missed my plane. I should have. Circumstance was doing its best to slow me down. I didn’t listen closely enough.
Starring out the small window, I focused on what lay below me––tiny rectangular blocks dotted between open gaps of green then everything blurred and swirled away. A window seat calmed me knowing that I could redirect my eyes in something other than a book or a stranger’s face. Forced conversation about the weather or the food didn’t interest me. I missed Leon already. Flying wasn’t my favorite thing to do, but it was necessary for any distant adventure. The very first thing that I did was to make sure that there was an available empty air bag tucked in the seat pocket directly in front of me. I wanted to be prepared. I never ate before a flight or on a flight. I remember once when horrified passengers on both sides of me watched as I heaved only gasps of air. The stares said it all. I felt like a leper out of my colony. Hearing childish voices from the back of the plane, I was thankful they were not next to me. As the plane ascended higher and higher cries vibrated down the aisle. I was not surprised. My Kleenex-stuffed ears blocked it out.
The flight attendants did their best to calm and satisfy. One passenger always wanted more. He sat right next to me. The stewardess certainly got her exercise walking back and forth with his requested drinks. I couldn’t help but notice how he inhaled them like water. He felt compelled to tell me why. Ordinarily, I might not have listened but there was nowhere to go.
His pain consumed him. He had been on a grueling business trip and was just fired for no apparent reason. Devastated, he couldn’t go home. He couldn’t tell his wife. Listening put everything in perspective for me. I felt thankful that I had a job, even though at times it tested every bit of patience in me. It was a smooth descent, but my ears blocked up even with the wads of Kleenex. After the plane halted, the grief-stricken stranger helped me yank down my carry-on luggage from the stuffed cubicle. It was a humbling flight. Thanking the pilot for his expertise, I couldn’t help but notice his youthful beaming face. Did they hire twenty-year olds to pilot planes? Had I really aged that much? I quickly dismissed the thought.
LAS VEGAS
40819.pngTHE LIGHTS OF VEGAS HYPNOTIZED, captured, and refused to release you. The airport was so huge; many people were in such a hurry. Until I saw his face, I felt insignificant. There was just something about a brother who cared. I couldn’t believe Mark had really taken the time to meet me. It was just so unexpected. He was supposed to meet me later at the hotel. He must have called Leon for my flight arrival.
Here let me take that.
Mark had always looked out for me and time only cemented our relationship. We seemed to grow closer even though the absence tried to pull us apart. Not wanting to live with the rest of the clan in Texas, Mark opted for Las Vegas. The 110-degree desert was his choice. It didn’t matter to him if he lived alone. It mattered to me.
Mark, how can you stand this heat?
I asked breathlessly.
Heat, and you are from Texas? At least there is no humidity.
Mark grinned from ear to ear.
That was Mark. He never told you what you wanted to hear but what he thought. That is why I respected him. I could count on him. Before I could even think of having a margarita with olives there was one in my hand. Sizzling shrimp and lobster followed, clarifying my thoughts. I didn’t know how hungry I was. Piano music wafted around us as the waitress checked on us three or four times. Mark was the attraction. Fascinated, I wondered how Mark had escaped the clutches of marriage. Wanting to know if things had changed, I sounded like a mother.
Have you spent any significant amount of time with anyone lately?
I quipped, anxious to hear about a new romance. Mark just laughed. He knew how desperately I wanted him to meet someone.
The work, the job there really isn’t any time for anything else.
Mark was his job, a natural-born sales man who could sell anything to anyone at any time. I wished I had his charisma, his easy manner. Strangers flocked to Mark. Like insecticide, I repelled strangers. Maybe this trip would change that. It did in ways that I never would imagine.
After dinner, we sauntered around the casinos and saw heightened, swaying water spouts from across the street. Hurrying, strains of Mozart filled our ears as we watched the water ballet at the prestigious Bellagio Hotel. Excited foreign phrases filled the air as tourists from all over the world oozed and awed. Romance penetrated me. I reached for Leon’s hand. It wasn’t there. An unaccustomed coldness numbed me. I forced myself to concentrate on the riveting water.
It’s getting late. Sis, you still need to check in, get settled, and meet your tour director. You wouldn’t want to miss anything, would you?
I already did. Tonight the designated tour group was supposed to meet and introduce themselves at a buffet provided by the tour. I couldn’t think of anything I would rather miss. Tomorrow would be soon enough to meet forty strangers by myself.
Mark, are you sure that a two-week bus tour to the national parks with some elderly retirees doesn’t interest you?
Knowing what he would say, I still asked him.
I still haven’t figured out why you want to subject yourself to eight hours a day on a bus when you hate buses. Also considering how much you enjoy mingling with strangers, and older ones at that. It is not something that I would even give a second thought.
I knew that it didn’t make sense, not even to me, but it was the easiest way to see the national parks.
I would see Mark again in two weeks. Checking in was easier than I expected. All I needed was the password, the name of the tour. Hurrying, I still needed to meet the tour director in another part of the hotel. The front desk gave me general directions, but there were six lobbies before I reached the welcoming booth. I was in a maze––all had the same identical elevator in the same spot in every hallway. Just when I gave up, I saw the welcome sign, the table with name tags, and the pensive tour director. Introducing myself, I watched as a short, thin, pale man weakly shook my hand. This couldn’t be the tour director. It was. Envisioning a husky outdoor nature type, I hoped I didn’t look too startled. Mr. Hudson didn’t seem concerned about my excuses for missing the buffet. He was glad that I arrived, and that tomorrow morning my bags would be packed, out in the hallway, and ready to be picked up by six-thirty. Since I was by myself, I even got my own seat and didn’t have to share with a complete stranger. Thank you, Mr. Hudson. Relieved, I was in my adventure.
Waking up at five-thirty was easy. It was the same time that I got up on a school day. My bags cooperated. I placed them outside the door, which was a luggage runway. Mr. Hudson cautioned me that if anybody missed the luggage pickup, they carried their own luggage to the bus. Everyone listened.
The coffee bean aroma saturated my senses as I slowly inhaled a cup of strong coffee. Mingling through the lobby were expectant bus tourists who waited for Mr. Hudson. It seemed strange to me that he wasn’t on time, and it was only the first day. You could tell who was in the group by the name tags. I didn’t put mine on so no one gave me a second look. It was an older group and almost everyone was part of a pair. Pairs rarely mingled with singles. I felt contagious. The megaphone sounded through the lobby Mr. Hudson emerged and quickly made up for any lost time. Before I knew it, I was seated towards the back of the bus. No one balked at the assigned seating arrangement. It was just like school. Clutching his paperwork in one hand and his microphone in the other, Mr. Hudson began lecturing about our first stop, Zion National Park in southwestern Utah. Listening was usually difficult for me, but I found the park’s history interesting.
Eight thousand years ago,
Mr. Hudson started, the Anasazi Indian tribe, also known as the basket weavers inhabited the area. With time, other tribes moved in, The Parowan Fremont, the Parrusits, and other Paiute subtribes.
I had never heard of these Indian tribes and decided it would make a great lesson for my curious seventh graders. In 1858, the Mormons discovered the land. And in 1909, President William Taft designated the canyon a national monument to protect it. The original name was changed to Zion National Park in 1918 by Congress.
It had never occurred to me that a park could have its own separate history. The park is located where the Colorado Plateaus, the Great Basin, and the Mojave Desert meet. Kolob Canyons is the northern part of the park. One of our steepest rivers, the Virgin River flows through the park. There is a six-mile road that leads to The Temple of Sinawava built for the Coyote God of the Paiute Indians.
I wondered if I would be able to see the temple. Six miles was a long walk. Mr. Hudson read my mind. There is a tram along the way for those of you who would rather ride. The canyon narrows at the temple and a foot trail leads to the mouth of the gorge which was twenty feet wide and two thousand feet tall. Keep your eyes peeled for golden eagles, red-tailed hawks, peregrine falcons, and white-throated swifts.
This was going to be quite a hike. Most of the older tourists didn’t look like hikers, but looks were deceiving. You will have three hours to explore this park. It tends to be hot out there, so pace yourself and watch your watches.
I couldn’t wait until we arrived at the park. The lengthy bus ride nagged at me. I was once again a kid, back at elementary school on the bus. Taking the bus to school made me dizzy and sick but complaining didn’t work then and wouldn’t work now. At least I didn’t have to wait for someone