Part 17 (2/2)

On Every Side Karen Kingsbury 111690K 2022-07-22

”I know,” Jordan finished for her. Their voices were quiet, like the night around them. Even the breeze had stilled, and time seemed strangely suspended. ”Since that night at the diner.”

Faith nodded. ”She loved you very much, Jordan.”

He sighed and narrowed his eyes. ”It was my fault what hap-pened. I let her down.”

Faith shook her head. ”None of it was your fault. The state took you to separate homes and even if you'd--”

”No.” His tone was gentle but insistent. ”You don't know the whole story”

Faith thought about that for a moment and angled her head, trying to understand. For all the success Jordan had managed to achieve professionally, she suddenly knew he had no one to talk to, no friend like she'd been to him that year before he was taken from his home. She thought of a hundred things she could say. Talk to me, Jordan. Share your heart with me. So what if we're ene-mies in the morning? Right now we're thirteen again, and you can tell me whatevers on your heart She swallowed hard and let her thoughts fade. ”Tell me, Jordan. I have all night.”

And to her surprise, he did.

Drawing a slow breath he stared straight ahead and talked as though the events were only just now happening, as though he could see them unfolding before his eyes the way they had that terrible year. ”They put me in a foster home, and every hour I asked about Heidi. Two days pa.s.sed, and then three, and I over-heard the lady on the phone. I don't know who she was talking to, but she said she didn't think they could find a place for Heidi and me, for both of us. She said it could be weeks before I saw my sister again.”

Jordan paused, and Faith allowed the silence. He closed his eyes as though the events of the past were settling into their proper order. Finally he looked at her and exhaled, his breath hanging in the air. ”On the third day I set out on my own. The man of the house had told me where Heidi was staying-with a family on Birch Street. I figured I knew my way to Birch Street and even if I had to knock on every door I'd find her eventually.” He released a frustrated huff. ”I should have known better. One call to my social worker, and I might have had a visit with her that night. Maybe they didn't know how badly I needed to see her.”

Without thinking, Faith reached out and took Jordan's hand in hers, wrapping her gloved fingers around his.” That's why you got sent to the boys' camp?”

Jordan gripped her hand, his gaze still straight ahead. ”I wasn't gone an hour when the police came cruising up behind me. I'd almost made it to Birch; I was so close I could practically see Heidi waiting for me, calling my name. When the police asked me to get in the car, I ran the other direction.” He released a sad laugh. ”I was thirteen. What chance did I have at outrun-ning two police officers? They caught me, cuffed me, and tossed me in the squad car. That afternoon I was s.h.i.+pped thirty minutes away to the Southridge Boys' Camp.”

Faith felt suddenly awkward holding Jordan's hand and she quietly pulled it back. ”You can't blame yourself for that, Jordan. You were doing what you thought was best.”

”I should have been patient. Who knows?” He turned and locked eyes with her. ”Everything might have been different.” He paused, his eyes more intense than they'd been all night. ”Absolutely everything.”

Faith thought she understood what he was saying. If he'd had the chance to grow up alongside Heidi he would not have held the anger he held today. He might not have become a human rights attorney, and perhaps...perhaps she and Jordan might even have stayed friends or... She refused to dwell on the possi-bilities. ”Did you... at the camp, did they tell you anything about Heidi?”

”Not a thing.” The muscles in Jordan's jaw flexed and he fell silent. He turned his attention to the spread of gra.s.s in front of him. ”The camp was like a prison. Up at seven, ch.o.r.es till nine. A bowl of slop for breakfast each morning, lessons through the early afternoon, and four hours of hard labor before dinner.”

Faith felt tears in her eyes. That was the type of life he'd been forced to live in the months after losing his mother? After losing Heidi? After losing his home and Faith's family and everything that had mattered to him? The reality of it tore at her heart, and she pictured Rosa Lee... stranded in the system, without a family Where would she wind up when she got old enough to have a bad att.i.tude? At a similar camp, fighting for her place among a houseful of angry young women? The thought made her shud-der. ”Oh, Jordan... I had no idea.”

He nodded, his expression unchanged.” The boys at the camp were tougher than I was-serious hard-core kids. Most of them were drug addicts or thieves, guys destined for prison. I thought about Mom and Heidi-” he looked at her- ”and you...every day, every hour. But there was nothing I could do about it. It took all my strength just to survive.”

She always believed he'd remembered her, that he thought of her in those days after he was taken from his home. But this was the first time he'd said so, and a warmth made its way from Faith's heart out across her body. ”You thought of me, Jordan? Really?”

He stared at her, and there were tears in his eyes. ”Every day, Faith. I kept thinking...” He swallowed hard. ”I kept thinking you and your parents would show up at the camp and take me home, rescue me from that awful place and help me find Heidi.”

”We wanted to...” Her voice drifted. ”I talked to my mom... she's in Chicago helping my aunt. She said they hadn't called social services because they were afraid once the state got involved it would be impossible to adopt you.” She looked at the tops of the distant trees. ”I guess my dad wanted to talk to an attorney friend of his about adopting both of you privately. But the state stepped in before he could do anything.”

Jordan shook his head. ”It doesn't matter. Things happened the way they did for a reason, right?”

Again she wanted to take him in her arms and hold him until the hurt faded from his heart. But she had a feeling it would take a lifetime, and they didn't have that. Morning was fast approaching. In six hours this strange time between them borrowed from a place where yesterday lived would be all but forgotten.

Come morning, they'd take up their places on opposite sides of the battle once more.

She decided to be honest with him. ”Jordan...”

He turned to her and smiled sadly.” I'm sorry. It's late and cold. I'm sure you don't want to hear all this.”

”No, I do... I just...” He was looking at her, waiting for her to finish. ”I thought about you, too. Every day”

He searched her eyes. ”I always wondered if you heard about the accident. For a month after it happened I expected to see you and your family.” He smiled and gazed up at the midnight sky.” I pictured your dad striding up to the front office, demanding they let me go, insisting that the camp wasn't a safe place for kids like me.” He shook his head. ”But the truth is you probably never even heard about it.”

Faith's eyes grew wide. An accident? At the camp? ”Wait a minute, I do remember something about it.”

Jordan lowered his eyebrows and bit his lower lip, stuffing his hands deep into the pockets of his parka. ”It was awful, Faith.” Even in the shadows she could see heartache settle over his face. ”There was a cave built into the side of a ravine, maybe a hun-dred yards from the main camp. Over the years people used it as a trash dump.” He paused and released a long breath, gritting his teeth in a way that made his jaw more p.r.o.nounced. ”That after-noon... the owners of the camp decided it was time to clean it out.”

Faith racked her brain, trying to remember where she'd heard these details before. She waited while Jordan found the strength to continue. ”The cave was more of a tunnel...I don't know, maybe twenty feet straight into the side of the ravine. Trouble was it'd been raining for three weeks before they ordered the cleanup. We were an hour into the job when dirt began falling from the ceiling.”

Jordan shook his head, and his features looked chalky white, even in the shadows. ”I remember every horrifying detail.” He paused and looked at her again. ”Another boy and I were near the entrance. We barely got out. I mean, we had dirt on our backs and our legs were buried as the cave collapsed.” He stared at the ground near his feet. ”They used shovels and got me and the boy next to me out first. Then they started digging for the others. Seventeen boys. All of them trapped beneath tons of dirt.”

He was silent for a moment, lost in the memory, and Faith barely noticed the tears that trickled onto her cheeks. No wonder Jordan's so angry... She wanted to ask the Lord why-why had He allowed the string of tragedies to happen to a boy so young, one so new in his belief? But something deep inside her lacked the confidence to even approach G.o.d with the issue. She s.h.i.+fted her attention back to Jordan. ”I can't imagine.”

Jordan nodded slowly, thoughtfully and brought his eyes back up to hers. ”For ten minutes we could hear the faint, m.u.f.fled cries of the trapped boys. The camp owner dug as fast as he could, and after a few minutes firemen arrived and joined the effort.” He shook his head, his eyes flat. ”There was nothing they could do; it was too late.”

Suddenly she could see the headlines, hear her parents talk-ing about the accident. As she drifted back to that year, she gasped and her hand flew across her mouth. ”I remember it now! The newspaper said you died!” She stared straight ahead, digging her fingers into the roots of her hair, searching her mind for details she hadn't remembered until now. Her eyes flew back to his. ”My parents read the article and told me that night. They said they weren't sure it was true and the next day they made some calls and found out you were okay.”

”The paper said I died?” Jordan's eyebrows lifted. ”You're kid-ding?” He bit the inside of his lip and his eyes grew even wider. ”Hey, what if Heidi heard the same thing?”

Faith caught his enthusiasm. ”You know, you might be right. Maybe she thinks you're dead, and that's why she hasn't tried to find you.”

”I've looked up her records, but never mine. What if some-how they got it mixed up and-” He stopped, and his shoulders slumped as he leaned back against the bench once more. Faith watched the despair settle over his face.” They wouldn't have got-ten a thing like that wrong. The papers might have made a mis-take, but not the state.”

He looked at his hands. ”I spent a night in the hospital while they looked me over. The next day I was moved to a boys' camp in New Jersey.” He leaned his head back some and looked at Faith again. ”I asked about Heidi every day for three months until finally the camp warden told me not to ask anymore.” Jordan huffed, and Faith could see the bitterness in his tensed features. ”He threatened to send me to a camp in Montana if I spoke her name again.”

Faith pictured him, only months after losing his mother and sister, stuck at a camp so far from home with people who neither knew nor loved him. ”I wish... I wish we could have found you, Jordan.”

He shrugged, and she knew he was letting her see into the very depths of his heart. ”I kept thinking they'd bring Heidi to me, find us a home together. But one year led to the next, and in no time I was finished with high school and playing college base-ball. By that point I think I figured no one wanted to find me. I sort of had to let the old Jordan Riley die...” He studied Faith's eyes. ”Know what I mean?”

She shook her head and felt her heart sink. This was his way of telling her he'd changed, at least from his perspective. But it wasn't true; the old Jordan hadn't died. She'd sat right next to him for the past half hour.

Jordan's heart raced deep within him at Faith's nearness, at the desire he felt for her. How had he gotten in this position? How had things gotten so mixed up, so far from what he wanted?

He wanted to pull her close and tell her the way he was feeling, but how could he? Nothing lasting could ever come from a relations.h.i.+p between them. They were complete opposites.

But, oh! What she did to him, sitting so close he could smell the subtle sweetness of her skin.

”What are you thinking?”

Jordan looked at her, and a flash of anger pierced his soul. What was he doing here, anyway? This was all about the court case. Faith didn't have feelings for him. ”I know what you're trying to do.”

She jerked back an inch or two and knit her eyebrows together as though he'd suddenly switched languages on her.” What's that supposed to mean?”

He expelled the air in his lungs and dug his elbows into his thighs. ”I'm sorry I'm not making sense.”

<script>