Then the world would sink into chaos and Jonah would receive his reward.
He shook off dreams of the future and brought his thoughts to bear on the here and now.
The One had been in mortal danger.
The woman's womb had almost expelled his developing form two days ago. Jonah had been at work at the time. He had sensed the sudden weakness, the impending catastrophe, but had not understood the nature of the threat. Now he knew. The One had been near death then, clinging to physical life by the flimsiest thread.
Now, however, all seemed well. The One's strength was growing again. Jonah could sit here in the same room with the woman and bask in the power seeping through her from the One.
"Doesn't that sundress look wonderful on her, Jonah?" Emma said.
It was long, a blue flowered print, exposing her shoulders. Sunlight outlined her long, slim legs through the fabric.
"Very nice," he said.
"She just seems to glow!"
Jonah smiled. "Yes, she does."
"And she's coming home to our place when she's released this afternoon, aren't you, dear?"
Carol shook her head. "No. I'm going back to the mansion. It will be months before the house is rebuilt, so I think I'd better get used to the place."
"But you can't! Dr. Gallen told you to rest!"
"I'll be fine," Carol said. "I've put you out enough already. I won't impose on you anymore."
"Don't be silly! You—"
"Emma, I've made up my mind."
Jonah was aware of the determination in her eyes. So, apparently, was Emma.
"Well, then. If Muhammad can't move the mountain, I suppose I'll just have to keep stopping by that awful old house to keep an eye on you."
Although she said nothing further, Jonah saw Carol roll her eyes toward the ceiling.
It was good to have Emma here. She obviously was thrilled to have a grandchild on the way. She would make an excellent midwife during the journey toward birth, a scrupulous, conscientious guardian who was completely ignorant of what she was guarding.
Just as well.
Besides, it would be good for her as well. Her spirits had been down so since the death of the Vessel, her Jimmy. But there had been new light in her eyes and new life in her step since she had heard the news of the pregnancy. Jonah wanted Emma to be happy and alert. She was more useful that way. He would need her vigilance.
For the threat to the One was not past. The One was most vulnerable now. There were forces still at large that would oppose the One and try to end his reign before it could begin. Jonah had guarded the Vessel for twenty-six years. Now he must protect the woman and her precious burden.
The priest entered then, and Jonah immediately sensed a disturbance in the glow from the One. A ripple of hate and… fear.
The reaction was so unexpected, so uncharacteristic. It startled Jonah. And puzzled him.
Why should the One react so to this young priest? He represented nothing that could threaten the One. And yet… he had been with the woman when she had begun to miscarry. Had he somehow caused it?
"What do you want?" Jonah said, standing and placing himself between Carol and the priest.
"I'm here to visit Carol, just as you are, Mr. Stevens."
His tone was polite but his expression said, Back off.
"Hi, Bill," the woman said from her bed. "They're letting me go today."
"Great." The priest brushed past Jonah and stepped to her bedside. "Need a lift?"
"We'll drive her," Jonah said quickly.
"That's okay, Jonah," she said. "I'd already asked Father Bill."
Jonah doubted that was true but didn't know what he could do about it. He would have to be watchful. If this priest was a threat to the One, then he was a threat to Jonah as well.
"Very well. Emma will go ahead of you and fix you something for dinner."
"Good idea, Jonah!" Emma said, beaming. "I'll have a nice lunch waiting for you!"
As Carol opened her mouth to protest the priest said, "I think that's for the best, don't you?"
Jonah wondered at the look that passed between them at that moment.
"Maybe so," Carol said, and looked away.
There's a secret between those two.
What could it be? Did he lust after Carol? Had he attempted to seduce this rich young widow, perhaps even try to rape her?
But no. That would not have weakened the One. It would have strengthened him. He would have glowed brighter from such an encounter. Instead, the One's light had almost been extinguished.
Did the priest know about the One?
That didn't seem to be the case. He showed nothing but warm friendship for Carol. He acted anything but intimate with her. In fact, for such an old friend, he seemed almost afraid to get too close to her.
Yet Jonah could not escape the conviction that this priest had somehow hurt the One. Whether by accident or by design, it marked him as a potential danger. He would have to be watched.
There was danger all around. Now, at least, Jonah had identified one threat. He would watch for others.
Do not worry, he told the One. I shall protect you.
He did not intend to be very far from the woman at any time during the next eight months.
2
During the ride from the hospital Carol noticed how Bill kept the conversation light. As they listened to the static-charged radio in St. Francis's battered old Ford station wagon, he commented on the music, on the unseasonably warm weather, and told her how it took every bit of his automotive know-how to keep this old crate running. But his face darkened when the newsman told of Bobby Kennedy's announcement that he intended to seek the Democratic presidential nomination.
"That gutless opportunist! What a creep! McCarthy takes all the risks, wounds the dragon, and then Kennedy steps in!"
Carol had to smile. She could not remember seeing Bill really angry before. She knew what Jim would say. That's politics, Bill.
"Makes me sick!"
They were pulling into the mansion's driveway then, and Carol spotted Emma's car.
"She's already here!"
"I think you could use the help," Bill said as he brought the station wagon to a stop before the front doors. "Don't you?"
Carol shrugged, not wanting to admit that he was right. She was feeling well now—so much better than she had even yesterday—but she was still weak. Dr. Gallen had said she'd lost a fair amount of blood but not enough to make a transfusion absolutely necessary. He'd said he preferred to let her bone marrow make up the deficit. So maybe she did need someone around to lean on now and again. But Emma…
"She's sweet," she said, "and her heart's in the right place, but she never stops talking! Sometimes I think I'll go mad from her incessant chatter!"
"Just a nervous habit, I gather. And don't forget—she's lost somebody too. Maybe she needs to feel needed."
"I guess so," Carol said around the lump in her throat. "But that's another part of the problem. She reminds me of Jim."
Bill sighed. "Yeah, well, she can't help that. Put up with it for a few days. 'Offer it up,' as the nuns used to tell us. It will be good for both of you. And I'll feel better knowing you're not out here alone."
"Thanks for caring," Carol said, meaning it. "It must be hard after that stunt I pulled Friday."
"Already forgotten," he said with a smile.
But the hint of uneasiness in his smile told her that it hadn't been forgotten. How could anyone forget something like that? She had stripped herself naked in front of this old friend of hers, this priest, and had thrown herself at him. Had actually been trying to unzip his fly! She shook her head at the memory.