Spring 1892
San Francisco
The rat-a-tat-tat of knuckles against the ornate door of Joshua Stanhope’s study at Bayview Christian Church yanked him from his concentration. He flung down his fountain pen and muttered something more annoyed than elegant. Of all the rotten luck!
After struggling all morning with Sunday’s sermon, his train of thought had finally gotten on track. Why did he have to be derailed just when he was finally forging full steam ahead? The knocking came again. Louder, and not to be ignored.
Josh heaved a sigh. “Come in.”
The door swung open. “Hey Reverend, who do you know in Madera?” a laughing voice demanded.
Josh stared at his mirror image. Same six-foot height. Same lean build. Same gray eyes and short blond hair, except every hair on Edward’s head was in place. Josh grimaced, knowing his own locks must bear evidence of his running his fingers through them while trying to solve knotty problems.
“Well?” Edward persisted.
“No one. And don’t call me Reverend.”
Edward donned an innocent expression that didn’t fool Josh one bit. “You are a minister, remember?” He smirked. “Besides, doesn’t the Bible tell us to respect our elders? This means that since you’re five minutes older than I am, you’re the big brother.”
Josh winced. He loved his twin more than life itself but wished Edward wouldn’t take things so lightly. “Why the sudden interest in Madera?”
Edward handed him a letter. “Your secretary gave it to me when I told him I had to see you on a matter of life or death.”
“Life or death?” Josh raised a skeptical eyebrow. “You look pretty healthy to me.”
Edward slumped into the massive chair across from his brother. “Beryl will kill me if I’m late for lunch. That fiancée of mine is a stickler for being on time, so I dropped by to see if I could get a loan. Believe it or not, Dad’s playing the heavy-handed father. He wouldn’t give me an advance, and Mother’s off at some do-gooder meeting.” He scowled. “Why’d Grandpa have to tie up the principal of what he left us until we’re thirty? I could use the cash now, not three years from now.”
Josh gritted his teeth. “I manage all right.”
Edward hooted. “You have a fat salary. Even if you didn’t, don’t forget John the Baptist. Preachers aren’t supposed to have a lot of money. So…I’m here to relieve you of some of yours.”
Josh knew he shouldn’t encourage Edward by laughing, but he couldn’t help it. Indolent, always out for a good time, Edward Stanhope possessed a sunny personality few could resist. “Why can’t you take life seriously?”
“Moi?” Edward’s eyes twinkled. “No thanks.”
A familiar ache attacked Josh’s breastbone. Why, Lord? I’m giving my life to serving You, but I can’t show my own brother how much he needs You.
Edward stood and stretched like a lazy cat. “Aren’t you going to open your letter? On the other hand, why bother? It’s probably someone asking for money. Hey, while we’re on the subject, how about that loan?”
A strange reluctance to open the letter in Edward’s presence caused Josh to reach for his pocketbook and hand Edward a few crumpled bills.
“Thanks, old man. You’ll get it back the first of next month. Au revoir.” He sent Josh a brilliant smile and hurried out the door, closing it behind him.
The young minister dropped his head into his hands. Most encounters with Edward left him feeling frustrated and helpless to change his twin’s carefree ways. Five minutes in their birth order had made him the elder brother, but Josh’s relationship with the Lord cast him in a brother’s keeper role he often felt inadequate to play.
“It’s not that Edward doesn’t believe in You,” Josh prayed. “He does, but it isn’t enough to make a real difference in his life.” He sighed. “Once Edward marries Beryl Westfield, there’s even less chance of him ever having a real relationship with You.”
An image of the haughty, dark-haired woman flickered into Josh’s mind. Five years older than the twins and a self-proclaimed infidel, Beryl had unsuccessfully pursued Josh before turning her charms on Edward. Josh tolerated her for his brother’s sake but considered her a threat to his and Edward’s close relationship.
Feeling like Atlas forever trying to hold up the sky, Josh slid to his knees, one hand resting on his highly polished desk. “Lord, how many times have I given Edward over to You, then snatched him back? Help me remember that You love him even more than I do and are in control.” After a long time, he raised himself with one hand, feeling a measure of peace. The forgotten letter rustled, reminding him it needed to be read. Josh sat down again and opened it. His gray gaze riveted on the scrawled first line: You may not remember me, but you saved my life nine years ago.
Who on earth…? Josh quickly looked at the bottom of the page. The signature sent shock ripples through him—Red Fallon. The letter fell to the desk from nerveless fingers. Remember! How could he forget?
Josh closed his eyes. In a heartbeat, he was eighteen again, hurrying through a dark alley on one of San Francisco’s meanest streets—a place he’d been strictly forbidden to go. He could see the expensively furnished drawing room in the Stanhope Nob Hill mansion and his mother’s face a few hours earlier….
Jewels sparkled on Mother’s hands, and she held them up in shocked protest. “No son of mine is going to be part of some so-called rescue mission! It doesn’t matter that your uncle runs it. It isn’t fitting. No gentleman would be caught dead down there with a bunch of criminals and the scum of the earth! That’s what you’ll be if you try to follow in Marvin’s footsteps—dead.”
Josh didn’t argue. He just waited until the mansion lay silent and sneaked out. Guilt dogged every step of the way to the mission, but something greater than the “honour thy father and mother” commandment he’d learned as a child compelled him to continue. He reached his destination without mishap and decided to enter through the door behind the mission. If a Stanhope servant had seen Josh slip out and reported him, Mother would already have sent a carriage to “rescue” him.
He held his breath and groped his way down the dark alley. A short way from the mission door, he stumbled and nearly fell. His hands shot down to regain his balance—and encountered rough material.
Horrified at the contact, Josh forced himself not to run. “God, help me!” he whispered. Strength beyond description surged through him. He gritted his teeth, picked up the inert body that lay at his feet, and stumbled his way to the mission door. He gave it a hard kick and cried, “Uncle Marvin! Help!”
The door swung out and back. A tall man pulled Josh inside. He slammed and bolted the door, then relieved Josh of his burden. He laid the lifeless body on a nearby cot and bent over to examine it. “What are you doing here, Joshua?”
The stiffening in Josh’s knees gave way. He sank into a chair. “I don’t know. I just felt I had to come.” He peered at the man on the cot. Dark stains matted the red hair, and dried blood nearly covered the craggy face. “Is he”—Josh choked—“is he dead?”
“Almost. Son, if you hadn’t found him when you did, this man—whoever he is—would be a goner.” Marvin shook his head. “He still may not make it….”
Josh wiped a hand across his eyes and erased the scene from his past. It did not erase the hard beating of his heart. Or the memory of what followed that terrible night at the mission. God had once again been merciful to a sinner: a wild cowboy who had been beaten almost to death. Josh thought of how he’d sneaked away from home as often as he could without being detected. He’d hated deceiving his parents but had recognized much more than obedience to his parents hung on what was happening at the mission.
Now he bowed his head. Gratitude raced through him. “Lord, ‘soup, soap, and salvation’ healed Red Fallon’s body, mind, and soul.” A lump rose to Josh’s throat. That fateful night had also irrevocably changed his own life. Watching God work through Uncle Marvin as he cared for Red Fallon had set a blaze burning in Josh’s soul that had never died.
He picked up the letter again. Except for a few sporadic notes from Red over the years, they’d lost touch. Why was he writing now? The further Josh read, the more he marveled. Red wrote:
It took a heap of time for folks here in Madera—especially Abby Sheridan, the prettiest little filly in the valley—to believe I’d really changed. They finally did. So did Abby. Now we’re married with a couple of little cowpunchers.
I been tryin to tell others about Jesus. There’s a lot of cowhands just like me who oughta grab hold of Him. A few are willin to listen. I guess they figger if God could forgive the likes of me after all the bad I did, He could save most anybody.
The minister here’s leavin in a few months. I hear tell you’re some punkins at that big city church, but it don’t cost nothin to ask: Will you come to Madera? We need you. Bad.
Josh stared at the final words until they blurred, then looked around the tastefully decorated study and out the window that overlooked San Francisco Bay. Lazy, white waves ruffled the shore. A horse-drawn carriage rumbled over the cobblestone street. The mournful cry of a ferryboat in the distance slowly dwindled into silence.
Josh took in a long breath, held it, then slowly released it. He’d come a long way since that night in the alley. Not just blocks away from the mission, but to Bayview Christian. High atop a hill with an incomparable view, the church was one of the most imposing and respected in the city. Filling the pulpit meant the height of San Francisco success for any minister, especially one as young as Josh.
Why then should Red’s letter fill him with emotions he couldn’t understand? What had a plea from a rescued cowboy who was “tryin to tell others about Jesus” and needed help “bad ” to do with Joshua Stanhope?