She had no good reason to head toward Maine. Yet, when Maggie pulled out of her Massachusetts driveway, the steering wheel turned right. It just sort of happened, without her thinking too much about it.
True, she wanted to avoid crowds, and on some level, knew that she had a better chance at that if she turned north. True, she was a Stephen King junkie, so while she didn’t consciously choose to turn toward the mastermind of horror, her subconscious may have felt the call of the familiar. She had been mentally escaping to the Stephen King universe for years. Now that it was time to physically escape, it seemed only logical to turn toward Castle Rock.
The trouble was, she hadn’t checked the weather report. The trouble was always that Maggie didn’t have a pragmatic bone in her body. She had always operated solely on her emotions, though, lately, she had been working on that. So, several hours into her trek, at about two o’clock on a Saturday afternoon, Maggie found herself in the only car on I-95, with the needle hovering over the E mark, and the windshield wipers slapping frantically back and forth to little avail.
All she saw was white.
Eddie, her rat terrier-ish best friend, was curled up on the seat beside her, and she marveled at how calm he was. He certainly wasn’t panicking. He was just trusting her completely to guide him through this storm.
Trying to mimic his unquestioning confidence, she prayed again, “Please, God, fix this.” She had been praying that same prayer since she’d left home. She had strongly felt God telling her to leave—it wasn’t much of a home anyway—so she had gotten into the car with confidence, but since then, God had been pretty quiet.
Not a peep.
Maggie looked at the gas gauge and contemplated filling up, but she didn’t want Kirk to know where she was, and she didn’t have any money of her own, only his plastic. It was bad enough that her Camry was titled, registered, and insured in his name.
But the snow showed no signs of letting up. She had to do something. Trying to keep one eye on the road, she opened the weather app on her phone. No signal. She scanned the radio channels, and there were precious few of them in the middle of Maine. She found no savvy weather forecaster to guide her to safety, so she switched back to her Chris Tomlin CD.
Singing along to “White Flag,” making up the words she didn’t yet know, she saw a green exit sign up ahead. “God, should I take that exit? Please tell me!” she pleaded, taking her foot off the gas pedal. She had pretty much decided to take the exit whether or not God piped up, but then she saw an actual white flag hanging off the exit sign and knew. There was her sign. Feeling enormous comfort, she signaled to the right and then giggled at herself for bothering to signal at all. What was she afraid of, getting rear-ended by a snowmobile?
It looked like she was driving straight into a white wall, but she was undeterred. Her tires slid a little under her, but she calmly gained control on the unnecessarily curvy exit ramp. She would be OK. She had seen a white flag.
She crawled off the interstate and smirked at a sign that read, “Welcome to Mattawooptock.” Mattawhat? She searched both sides of the road for a safe place to pull over. She was tempted by the Mattawooptock Motor Inn, but that would require plastic. She drove on, wondering exactly what it was she was looking for; then she saw it.
The sign read “Open Door Church,” and Maggie reasoned it couldn’t get much more obvious than that. She pulled her car into a large parking lot and wondered why there were so many other cars in the lot on a snowy Saturday.
Wondering if she had stumbled onto a Christmas craft fair, she unbuckled her seatbelt and shut off her thirsty engine. Eddie looked up at her sleepily and cocked his head to one side as if to ask, “Are we home?”
Maggie rubbed his head and promised, “Be back in a flash,” before she stepped out into the cold. A man was shoveling a path to the church, and Maggie panicked at the thought of human interaction. But then he smiled at her, and her heart rate slowed to a more reasonable pace.
“Nice day out!” he said.
“Sure,” she said, trying to think of something cleverer to say. She didn’t. So she asked, “Why are there so many people here?”
He looked confused. He scanned the parking lot as if to confirm that there were in fact a lot of people there. Then he looked back at her. “Oh, I think this is about normal.”
It was her turn to be confused. “Do you have a Saturday service?”
He leaned on his shovel as if it were a cane. “Not till tonight,” he said, looking at her as if she was the one not making much sense.
His expression made her defensive. “Then why are all these cars here?”
“Ah!” he said as if he finally understood her question. “Those are our guests. A lot of them have cars.”
He may have understood her question, but she didn’t understand his answer.
“I’m Galen,” he said, taking off his glove and holding out his hand toward her, “but most people call me G.”
“Maggie,” she said, taking his hand in her now frozen, ungloved hand. His hand felt huge as it closed around hers, and warm. “Guests?”
He shook his head. “Sorry, I’m not being a very good welcome wagon. Come on inside where it’s warm, and I’ll explain.”
She followed him up a few snowy steps and into the warmth—a welcoming and well-lit lobby. Maggie shook the snow out of her hair. Galen pointed toward one of the few empty coat hooks on the wall and held his hand out for her coat. She gave it to him. He hung it up and then spread his arms out, “Welcome to Open Door Church. We operate a sort of homeless shelter here. Most of those cars belong to people who are staying here.”
“Oh.” Of all the emotions that could have popped up right then—gratitude, relief, even fear—nope, it was pride that reared its ugly head. God had led her to a homeless shelter? Seriously, God?
Galen looked as if he was trying to read her. “I saw your Massachusetts plates. Are you just passing through?”
She stared at him for an awkward several seconds, and then said, “No, actually. I’m pretty homeless myself.”
He nodded as if he had known this, and then acting as if he was putting his left hand to the small of her back, but without actually touching her, he motioned down a hallway with his right hand, “Let me introduce you to Cari then. She’ll get you set right up.”
Maggie followed Galen a short distance to the doorway of a cluttered office. Behind a big desk that was absolutely buried in stacks of paper sat a petite woman with a pencil behind each ear.
“Cari! This is Maggie. She needs a place to stay. Maggie, this is Cari.”
Cari looked up from her computer monitor and offered Maggie a sincere but tired smile. “Hi, Maggie. Welcome to Open Door. We’re glad you’re here. Have a seat,” she said, pointing toward the only empty chair in the room.
“I’ll get back to my shoveling, then,” Galen said and gave a little wave on his way out.
“Thanks, G,” Cari called after him, and reached for something in an open filing cabinet drawer.
She found what she was looking for and handed Maggie a short form to fill out. What was her name and social security number, did she have a vehicle, did she have any food allergies or dietary restrictions, was she a sex offender …
“Sex offender?” Maggie asked, a little panicky.
“Yes,” Cari said, seemingly unsurprised at the question. “We have children staying with us, so we can’t allow anyone who has been convicted of a sex crime to stay here. However, if you have been convicted of one, we don’t just throw you out in the cold. We help you find your way to someplace that can help you.”
“Oh, no, I haven’t been convicted … of anything … I was just … I don’t know …”
“It’s OK.” Cari smiled. “Everyone asks about that question.”
Maggie half-smiled back, and then filled out the form as Cari went back to stabbing at her keyboard. When Maggie finished, she handed her the form. She wasn’t even sure she wanted to stay there, but she couldn’t think of any other options at the moment. She vowed she would just stay for one night. She would come up with a plan tomorrow. There must be a pastor around here to help her come up with a plan, right?
“OK, great,” Cari said. “We have Bible study every night at six in the sanctuary, and we ask all our guests to attend.”
“OK, no prob,” Maggie said, a little surprised at how excited she felt about that idea.