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Now he reached the most critical area: the monitors showed it; the technicians knew it. Jones paused again, and in that pause the nightmares kept coming, the horrific scenes of the accident flashing through his own brain just as his instruments penetrated hers, as he struggled to keep his hands still and his pounding heart steady. The memories came faster and faster, with more intensity.

He looked down at Lara. Not at her brain, but at her, her closed eyes, above the mask that held the tubes that fed oxygen into her lungs. Breath. Life.

In the monitoring cubicle next to the operating room, everyone was breathless; they knew he had stopped because he had reached the double aneurism and was at the point when he must perform the most critical movement, and do it now. “Make the clip,” Malcolm muttered under his breath. “Make the clip…”

Brenda and the technicians too began mouthing the words in a soundless chant.

Around the surgical table the other surgeons could do nothing; they knew this was it; they tried to will Jones forward. Merrill looked up from his readouts and said, “Her blood pressuring is falling. Dr. Jones? Her blood pressure…” After another moment he said, “Andrew…?”

Jones was motionless; his mind was flashing back to Faith, dangling upside down in the wreckage of their jeep, opening her eyes to look at him.

He fought to keep the image away.

It was a fight he could not win.

So he let the memories come. And in his flashback he saw something that did not happen in the actual event: he saw Faith smile at him.

Inside the central monitor room, the equipment emitted a high-pitched, steady sound. Jones heard the monitors shrieking and glanced up for the first time since the operation began; through the glass window he saw Malcolm, Brenda, and all the others, feeling the cold grip of Lara’s imminent death.

Jones made the clip, and just for a moment all the world went black.

27

The church in Charlottesville was quiet. Brenda sat with tears falling from her eyes, pressing a hand to her quivering lips to hold back her emotion. Malcolm, his face dead still, sat with eyes rimmed with tears. Nell had driven down from the mountains with the others from the clinic, and she sat crying in silence. Luca had flown all night from Rome and leaned forward in the pew, his head lowered, his heart to God.

Mavis was there, with her husband and their daughter, her face now beautiful, her eyes full of tears.

Lara stood there in her wedding dress, and Andrew Jones stood beside her as the minister said, “I now pronounce you man and wife!”

The congregation erupted, and the organist played Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy.”

* * *

Summer had settled fully on the Blue Ridge. The grass was lush and the clinic was blooming like the wildflowers on the mountainsides. Children cavorted on the swing sets and playground equipment around the barn. And in a rocking chair on the porch of the farmhouse, Lara finished nursing a baby. It was hard to tell which of them, mother or child, was more full of life. “There’s Daddy,” Lara said. “Let’s go say hello.”

Lara walked with the swaddled baby over to Jones, who was at the side of the barn, assisted by the surgical staff from the University Hospital, all of them in their work clothes, carefully painting the barn’s broadest wall. Jones saw them coming and moved to meet them. He watched Lara’s face as she took in the picture they’d been painting on the barn.

“There’s something I’ve meant to ask you,” he said. “When did you put the money into the poor box of the church down the street from your building?”

“What church?” Lara said without looking at him. She smiled and handed him the baby.

Andrew Jones looked down at his daughter. “Faith,” he said, “how do you like the artwork?” He turned the infant so that she could see, with her father and mother, what the clinic’s staff and the mountain people were painting on the side of the barn.

It was a copy of Michelangelo’s Creation. It was a crude replica, painted with the kind of brushes people use for barns and houses, not for masterpieces. But it was a masterpiece all the same.

In its center was The Touch between divinity and humanity, between God and His creation.

An Interview with the Author

You are probably best known for writing Braveheart. We understand that this screenplay came out of a low point in your life. Can you tell us about that?

By the mid-1980s, I felt like my life was really starting to go well. I’d gotten married, we had two beautiful sons, and I’d won a multiyear contract with a thriving television company. Not too long after my second son was born, we bought a new home, and then six months later, the Writers Guild went on strike, which caused the company I worked for to void its contract with me. The strike went on forever, and when it was over, the company was barely there anymore. I was out of work, my savings were gone, and no one would return my phone calls.

I kept trying, of course; I was always good at trying. But one day I was sitting at home, at my desk, staring at nothing, my stomach in a knot, my hands trembling, and I realized I was breaking down. I feared I was failing my family; my greatest fear was that I would fail my sons. I was afraid they would see me come apart, and it would be something they could never forget.

I got down on my knees; I had nowhere else to go. And I prayed a simple prayer. I said, “Lord, all I care about right now are those two boys. And maybe they don’t need to grow up in a house with a tennis court and a swimming pool. Maybe they need a little house with one bathroom—or no bathrooms at all. Maybe they need to see what a man does when he gets knocked down, the way my father showed me. But I pray, if I go down, let me go down not on my knees, but with my flag flying.”

And I got up, and I began to write the words that led me to Braveheart.

This book is very different from some of the screenplays you’ve written—Braveheart, We Were Soldiers. Are there certain themes that run through all your stories?

Above all, I think the central theme of all my stories is that hope matters, that courage works, that love prevails. All my life, I have been intrigued by the mechanism and the moment of transformation: What happens when what we call a miracle occurs? What happens when someone does something that no one else has ever done or that they themself have never done? What happens when someone stops doubting and starts believing?

Talk about the heroes in your stories.

The heroes in my stories are fighting monumental battles—the ones that are worth their blood—and we get to see what they’re willing to die for.

How does your Christian worldview impact the stories you tell?

I’m not trying to use my stories to convince someone else to share my understanding. My understanding is limited. What I want to share is my experience that hope matters, that courage works, that love prevails.

Being a Christian doesn’t tip the scales one way or the other; people want a good story. I’ve always said that my inspiration for Braveheart was the New Testament, but biblical parallels aside, it stands on its own as a story. So often the term “Christian film” is synonymous with mediocrity because people ignore the fact that a story needs to entertain, not preach. The Touch carries a message, not a dogma.