โMadeline,โ the city librarian said. โWhat can I help you with today?โ โI need to find an address for a place in Iowa.โ
โFollow me.โ
The librarian led Madeline through the warren of the library, pausing briefly to chastise a reader for turning down corners of pages to mark places and another for propping his legs up on an adjacent chair. โThis is the Carnegie Library,โ she whispered angrily. โI can bar you for life.โ
โUp here, Madeline,โ she said, leading her to a shelf of phone books. โYou said Iowa, correct?โ She reached up and pulled down three thick volumes. โAny town in particular?โ
โIโm looking for a boys home,โ Madeline said, โbut with a girlโs name.
Thatโs all I know.โ
โWeโll need more information than that,โ the librarian said. โIowa isnโt small.โ
โIโd put my money on Sioux City,โ came a voice from behind.
โSioux isnโt a girlโs name,โ the librarian said, turning. โItโs an Indian nameโoh, Reverend, hello. Iโm so sorryโ I forgot to find that book you wanted. Iโll do it now.โ
โBut it could be mistaken as a girlโs name, couldnโt it?โ the man in the dark robes continued. โSue versus Sioux? A child might make that mistake.โ
โNot this child,โ the librarian said.
โ
โItโs not here,โ Madeline said fifteen minutes later as her finger trailed down the โBโ column. No Boys Home.โ
โOh,โ the reverend said from across the library table, โI should have mentionedโsometimes those places are named after saints.โ
โWhy?โ
โBecause people who take care of other peopleโs children are saints.โ โWhy?โ
โBecause taking care of children is hard.โ Madeline rolled her eyes.
โTry Saint Vincent,โ he said, running his finger just beneath his clerical collar to let some air in.
โWhat are you reading?โ Madeline asked as she flipped to the Sโs in the phone book.
โReligious things,โ he said. โIโm a minister.โ
โNo, I meant the other thingโthat thing,โ she said, pointing to a magazine heโd tucked between the pages of scripture.
โOh,โ he said embarrassed. โThatโs justโfor fun.โ
โMadย magazine,โ she read aloud as she yanked it out of hiding. โItโs humor,โ the reverend explained, quickly taking it back.
โCan I see it?โ
โI donโt think your mother would approve.โ โBecause there are naked pictures?โ
โNo!โ he said. โNo, noโitโs nothing like that. Itโs just that sometimes I need a laugh. Thereโs not much humor in my job.โ
โWhy?โ
The reverend hesitated. โBecause God isnโt very funny, I guess. Why are you searching for a boys home?โ
โItโs where my dad grew up. Iโm doing a family tree.โ
โI see,โ he said, smiling. โWell, a family tree sounds like a lot of fun.โ โThatโs debatable.โ
โDebatable?โ
โIt means arguable,โ Mad said.
โSo it does,โ he said, surprised. โDo you mind me asking? How old are you?โ
โIโm not allowed to give out private information.โ
โOh,โ he said, red-faced. โOf course not. Good for you.โ Madeline chewed on the end of her eraser.
โAnyway,โ he said, โitโs fun to learn about oneโs ancestors, isnโt it? I think so. What have you got so far?โ
โWell,โ Mad said, swinging her legs under the table, โon my momโs side, her dad is in jail for burning some people up, her mom is in Brazil because of taxes, and her brother is dead.โ
โOhโโ
โI donโt have anything on my dadโs side yet. But Iโm thinking the people at the boys home are sort of like family.โ
โIn what way?โ
โBecause they took care of him.โ
The reverend rubbed the back of his neck. In his experience, these homes were staffed with pedophiles.
โSaints,ย you called them,โ she reminded him.
He sighed inwardly. The problem with being a minister was how many times a day he had to lie. This was because people needed constant reassurance that things were okay or were going to be okay instead of the more obvious reality that things were bad and were only going to get worse. Heโd been officiating a funeral just last weekโone of his congregants had died of lung cancerโand his message to the family, all of whom also smoked like chimneys, was that the man had died, not because of his four-pack-a-day habit, but because God needed him. The family, each inhaling deeply, thanked him for his wisdom.
โBut why write to the boys home?โ he asked. โWhy not just ask your dad?โ
โBecause heโs dead, too.โ She sighed.
โGood lord!โ the reverend said, shaking his head. โIโm very sorry.โ
โThank you,โ Madeline said in a serious way. โSome people think you canโt miss what you never had, but I think you can. Do you?โ
โAbsolutely,โ he said, touching the back of his neck until he located the small chunk of hair that was slightly too long. When he went to visit a friend in Liverpool, theyโd gone to see a brand-new musical group called the Beatles. They were British and they had bangs. It was nearly unheard of for men to have bangs, but he found he liked their look almost as much as he liked their music.
โWhat are you looking for in there?โ she asked him, pointing to his book.
โInspiration,โ he said. โSomething to move the spirit for Sundayโs sermon.โ
โWhat about fairy godmothers?โ she asked. โFairyโโ
โMy dadโs home had a fairy godmother. She gave the home money.โ
โOh,โ he said. โI think you mean a donor. The home may have had several. It takes a lot of money to run those places.โ
โNo,โ she said. โI mean a fairy godmother. I think you have to be a bit magical to give money to people you donโt even know.โ
The reverend felt another jolt of surprise. โTrue,โ he admitted.
โBut Harriet says earning a paycheck is better. She doesnโt like magic.โ โWhoโs Harriet?โ
โMy neighbor. Sheโs Catholic. She canโt get divorced. Harriet thinks I should fill the family tree with hodgepodge, but I donโt want to. It makes me feel like thereโs something wrong with my family.โ
โWell,โ the reverend said carefully, thinking it did very much sound like there was something wrong with the childโs family, โHarriet probably only means some things are private.โ
โYou mean secret.โ
โNo, I mean private. For instance, I asked you how old you were and you correctly answered that it was private information. Itโs not secret; itโs just that you donโt know me well enough to tell me. But a secret is something we keep because thereโs a chance that if someone knew our
secret, they would use it against us or make us feel bad. Secrets usually involve things weโre ashamed of.โ
โDo you keep secrets?โ
โYes,โ he admitted. โHow about you?โ โMe too,โ she said.
โIโm pretty sure everyone does,โ he said. โEspecially the people who say they donโt. Thereโs no way you go through life without being embarrassed or ashamed about something.โ
Madeline nodded.
โAnyway, people think they know more about themselves based on these silly branches full of names of people theyโve never met. For instance, I know someone whoโs very proud to be a direct descendant of Galileo, and another who can trace her roots back to theย Mayflower.ย They both talk about their lineage as if they have a pedigree, but they donโt. Your relatives canโt make you important or smart. They canโt make youย you.โ
โWhat makes meย me,ย then?โ
โWhat you choose to do. How you live your life.โ
โBut lots of people donโt get to choose how they get to live. Like slaves.โ
โWell,โ the reverend said, chagrined by her simple wisdom. โThatโs true, too.โ
They sat quietly for a few moments, Madeline skimming her finger down the phone book pages, the reverend considering the purchase of a guitar. โAnyway,โ he added, โI think family trees arenโt a very intelligent way to understand oneโs roots.โ
Madeline looked up at him. โA minute ago you said it would be fun to learn about my ancestors.โ
โYes,โ he confessed, โbut I was lying,โ which made both of them laugh.
From across the way, the librarian raised her head in warning.
โIโm Reverend Wakely,โ he whispered, nodding an apology to the frowning librarian. โFrom First Presbyterian.โ
โMad Zott,โ Madeline said. โMadโlike your magazine.โ
โWell, Mad,โ he said carefully, thinking โMadโ must be French for something. โIf itโs not under Saint Vincent, try Saint Elmo. Or waitโtry All Saints. Thatโs what they call places when they canโt decide on a single saint.โ
โAll Saints,โ she said, flipping to the Aโs. โAll, All, All. Wait. Here it is. All Saints Boys Home!โ But her excitement was short-lived. โBut thereโs no address. Just a phone number.โ
โIs that a problem?โ
โMy mom says you only call long distance if someone dies.โ
โWell, maybe I could call for you from my office. I have to call long distance all the time. I could say I was helping a member of my congregation.โ
โYouโd be lying again. Do you do that a lot?โ
โIt would be aย whiteย lie, Mad,โ he said, slightly irritated. Would no one ever understand the contradictions of his job? โOr,โ he said more pointedly, โyou could follow Harrietโs advice and fill the tree with hodgepodgeโ which isnโt such a bad idea. Because quite often the past belongs only in the past.โ
โWhy?โ
โBecause the past is the only place it makes sense.โ โBut my dad isnโt in the past. Heโs still my dad.โ
โOf course he is,โ the reverend said, softening. โI just meantโin terms of me calling All Saintsโthat they might feel more comfortable talking with me because weโre both in religion. Like you probably feel more comfortable talking to the kids at school about school things.โ
Madeline looked surprised. Sheโd never once felt comfortable talking to the kids at school.
โOr, I know,โ he said, now wanting to extricate himself from the whole thing. โAsk your mother to call. Itโs her husband; Iโm sure theyโd help. They might need proof of the marriage before theyโd be willing to give her anything significantโ a certificate, something like thatโbut that should be easy enough.โ
Madeline froze.
โOn second thought,โ Madeline said, quickly writing two words on a scrap of paper, โhereโs my dadโs name.โ Then she added her phone number and handed it to him. โHow soon can you call?โ
The minister glanced down at the name.
โCalvin Evans?โย he said, drawing back in surprise.
โ
Back when heโd been at Harvard Divinity School, Wakely audited a chemistry course. His goal: to learn how the enemy camp explained creation so he could refute it. But after a year of chemistry, he found himself in deep water. Thanks to his newly acquired understanding of atoms, matter, elements, and molecules, he now struggled to believe God had created anything. Not heaven, not earth. Not even pizza.
As a fifth-generation minister attending one of the most prestigious divinity schools in the world, this was a huge problem. It wasnโt just the familial expectations; it was also science itself. Science insisted on something he rarely encountered in his future line of work: evidence. And in the middle of this evidence was a young man. His name was Calvin Evans.
Evans had come to Harvard to sit on a panel made up of RNA researchers, and Wakely, having nothing better to do on a Saturday night, attended. Evans, who was by far the youngest on the panel, barely said anything. There was a lot of shop talk from the others about how chemical bonds were formed, broken, then re-formed following something called an โeffective collision.โ Frankly, the whole thing was a little boring. Still, one of the panelists continued to drone on about how real change only ever arose through the application of kinetic energy. Thatโs when someone in the audience asked for an example of an ineffective collisionโsomething that lacked energy and never changed, but still had a big effect. Evans had leaned into his microphone. โReligion,โ he said. Then he got up and left.
โ
The religion comment ate at him so he decided to write to Evans and say so. Much to his surprise, Evans wrote backโand then he wrote back to Evans, and then Evans wrote back to him, and so on. Even though they disagreed, it was clear they liked each other. Which is why, once theyโd cleared the hurdles of religion and science, their letters turned personal. It was then they discovered that they were not only the same age but shared two things in commonโan almost fanatical love for water-based sports (Calvin was a rower; he was a surfer) and an obsession for sunny weather. In addition, neither had a girlfriend. Neither enjoyed graduate school. Neither was sure what life held after graduation.
But then Wakely had ruined the whole thing by mentioning something about how he was following in his fatherโs footsteps. He wondered if Evans was doing the same. In response, Calvin wrote back in all caps saying that he hated his father and hoped he was dead.
Wakely was shocked. It was obvious that Evans had been badly hurt by his father and, knowing Evans, that his hatred had to be based on the most heartless thing of all. Evidence.
Heโd started to write back to Evans several times but couldnโt figure out what to say. Him.ย The minister. The guy currently writing a theology thesis titled โThe Need for Consolation in Modern Society.โ No words.
Their pen-pal relationship ended.
Just after graduation, his father died unexpectedly. He returned to Commons for the funeral and decided to stay. He found a small place by the beach, took over his fatherโs congregation, got out his surfboard.
Heโd been there a few years when he finally learned that Evans was also in Commons. He couldnโt believe it. What were the odds? But before he could get up the nerve to reconnect with his famous friend, Evans was killed in a freak accident.
The word went out: someone was needed to officiate the scientistโs funeral. Wakely volunteered. He felt compelled to pay his respects to one of the few people he admired; to help in whatever way he could to guide Evansโs spirit to a place of peace. Plus, he was curious. Who would be there? Who would grieve the loss of this brilliant man?
The answer: a woman and a dog.
โ
โIn case it helps,โ Madeline added, โtell them my dad was a rower.โ
โ
Wakely paused, remembering the extra-long casket.
He tried to reconstruct exactly what heโd said to the young woman who stood by the graveside:ย Iโm sorry for your loss? Probably. Heโd planned to speak with her after the service, but before heโd even finished the closing prayer, sheโd walked away, the dog at her heels. He told himself heโd go see her, but he didnโt know her name or where she lived, and while it wouldnโt have been that difficult to find out, he didnโt pursue it. There was something about her that made him feel talking about Evansโs soul might just make matters worse.
After the serviceโfor months afterโhe couldnโt get the brevity of Evansโs life out of his head. There were so few people who actually did things in the world that matteredโwho made discoveries that changed things. Evans had slipped between the cracks of the unknown and explored the universe in a way that theology completely avoided. And for a very short period of time, he felt like heโd been part of it.
Still, that was then and this was now. He was a minister; he didnโt need science. What heย didย need were more inventive ways to tell his flock to act like decent people, to stop being so mean to one another, to behave. So, in the end, despite his doubts, he became a reverend, but he continued to think of the remarkable Evans. And now, here was this little girl claiming to be his daughter. God really did move in mysterious ways.
โJust to be clear,โ he said, โweโre talking about Calvin Evans. The one who was killed in a car accident about five years ago.โ
โIt was a leash, but yes.โ
โAh,โ he said. โBut hereโs the tricky part. Calvin Evans didnโt have children. In fact, he wasnโtโโ He hesitated.
โWhat?โ
โNothing,โ he said quickly. Obviously, the little girl was illegitimate on top of everything else. โAnd whatโs that there?โ he asked, pointing to a yellowed newspaper clipping sticking out from her notebook. โMore of the assignment?โ
โI have to bring in a family photo,โ she said, retrieving a clipping still damp with dog saliva. She held it out gingerly, the way one might an irreplaceable treasure. โItโs the only one weโre all in.โ
He unfolded it carefully. It was an article about Calvin Evansโs funeral, and in it was a photograph of the same woman and the dog, their backs to the camera but their devastation clear, watching as the earth swallowed the very casket he had blessed. A wave of depression swept over him.
โBut, Mad, how in the world is this a family picture?โ
โWell thatโs my mom,โ Madeline said, pointing to Elizabethโs back, โand Six-Thirty,โ she said, pointing at the dog. โAnd Iโm inside my mom, just there,โ she said, pointing at Elizabeth again, โand my dad is in the box.โ
Wakely had spent the last seven years of his life consoling people, but there was something about the way this child spoke so matter-of-factly about her loss that depleted him.
โMad, I need you to understand something,โ he said, noting, with shock, that his own hands were in the photograph. โFamilies arenโt meant to fit on trees. Maybe because people arenโt part of the plant kingdomโweโre part of the animal kingdom.โ
โExactly,โ Madeline gasped. โThatโsย exactlyย what I was trying to tell Mrs. Mudford.โ
โIf we were trees,โ he added, worrying about how much grief this child was going to endure explaining her origins, โwe might be a bit wiser. Long life and all that.โ
And then he realized Calvin Evans hadnโt had a very long life and heโd just implied that it was probably because Evans hadnโt been very smart. Honestly, he was a terrible ministerโthe worst.
Madeline seemed to consider this answer, then leaned way across the table. โWakely,โ she said in a low voice, โI have to go watch my mom now, but I was wondering. Can you keep a secret?โ
โI can,โ he said, wondering what she meant by watching her mom. Was her mom sick?
She looked at him closely as if trying to determine if he was lying again, then got up from her chair and went to his side and whispered something so vigorously in his ear, his eyes grew wide in wonder. Before he could stop himself, he cupped his hand around her ear and did the same thing. Then they both leaned away from each other in surprise.
โThatโs not so bad, Wakely,โ Madeline said. โReally.โ But about hers, he couldnโt find the words.