The Immortal - Book 1 -- by Joseph John (JJ) Dewey
Elizabeth - Chapter 1
I have always wanted to be a writer, but never seemed to find
the time to carry out my dream. Ironically, this time in my life
is the most difficult of all to begin such a project as this,
but it is something I must do. I have a story to tell that is
difficult to believe so I am writing it as fiction. It is too
unbelievable to present as a true story. Nevertheless, I do maintain
that the principles taught herein are true and that many readers
will have this verified by their hearts and souls.
I'd like to start with John, but that probably wouldn't work.
I must tell you about Elizabeth and something about myself before
you can begin to understand.
There's not a lot to tell about me. I am average or below average
in a number of ways. If there is anything out of the ordinary
about me it's probably the fact that I am quite curious in nature.
I have thought quite a bit about why things are the way they are.
I've always asked myself a lot of unanswerable questions, like:
Who or what is God? Is there life after death? What will it be
like? What is the purpose of life? Questions - that seem to have
no answers.
I met Elizabeth about ten years ago. I was 43 years old and
Elizabeth was several years younger. I was just getting my feet
wet in real estate after failing in several business ventures.
Both Elizabeth and I had been previously married. But since we
got along great together after experiencing difficult relationships
with others we both felt like we had finally mastered the art
of marriage to the extent we half-heartedly considered giving
seminars on the subject.
Leaving my children with my previous wife was one of the most
difficult decisions of my life, but the situation was not one
of those win-win possibilities. It was lose-lose. The fact that
I lost so much in my relationship with my children and they lost
in their relationship with me made it all the more important to
me that my relationship with Elizabeth would somehow be worth
the great sacrifice.
Let's move on here. I know a lot of you have gone through difficult
marriages and wish you could have your life with your children
to live over again. But there is something else I also know. I
know that all of you have the desire within your hearts to meet
the love of your life and to fall in love and stay in love. I
know that few of you have found the quality of love you are looking
for.
Well, this is one area where my life was not exactly average.
I found the love of my life. I found even more than I was looking
for. I found Elizabeth.
After my divorce I started teaching several classes in the
local community adult education programs. It had long been a hobby
of mine to study graphology, or how character is revealed through
handwriting. Then, after years of dabbling, I became pretty good
at it so I volunteered my services.
I thank God every day that I studied handwriting analysis because
without it I may not have recognized Elizabeth.
At the end of my first class I had everyone in the class hand
in samples of his or her handwriting. Then I proceeded to demonstrate
that I was truly accurate by analyzing each of them. Now, this
has nothing to do with psychic powers. Instead, it is an analytical
way of discerning character.
There were about twenty in the class and I thought that I had
analyzed everyone when Elizabeth stood up.
"You haven't analyzed me yet," she said.
"I'm sorry," I said. "Did you hand in a sample?"
"Yes, I did."
I picked up the pile of samples and handed them to her and
said: "See if yours is one of these."
She looked through them. "Here it is," she said,
handing it to me. "It seemed to have been stuck to another
sample."
I looked at the handwriting. I did a double take. Through the
years I had not only formulated an image of what I was looking
for in the ideal mate, but I had also formulated what my ideal
mate's handwriting should look like. After many years and thousands
of handwriting samples I finally found one that looked like the
image I had conjectured.
I probably embarrassed Elizabeth when I blurted out her qualities.
Her handwriting showed that she was very intelligent, passionate:
objective, yet caring; focused, yet curious; loving, yet having
good common sense.
After telling her about a dozen positive characteristics I
put the sample down and took a good look at her. The first thing
I noticed was her very attractive almost sparkling face with darting
intelligent eyes that seemed to focus with great attention from
time to time. There was an honesty in her eyes that revealed her
mood at the moment. I have since come to call them smiling eyes
because when she is happy the sparkle in her eyes makes her feelings
so obvious.
Physically she was about 5'3", light brown hair, great
figure and with looks enough to generate an attractive pull in
any male.
I somehow felt deep within myself that I would marry her. I
tried to momentarily dismiss the feeling, but it stayed with me
throughout the week. Then, after the next class, I accosted her
and asked her to join me for coffee and the rest is history.
I could easily write a book about our relationship and how
it developed, but that is not the grand purpose of this book,
as you will soon see. What you need to understand at this time
is that we fell as much in love as is possible for us mortals
to do. Think of your favorite love story and multiply the emotions
times ten and that was us. I felt fulfilled and secure for the
first time in my life. It seemed that nothing could go wrong.
Until that fateful day...
I remember the day very clearly. I was in the family room reading
a book and Elizabeth was fixing us an evening cup of coffee. The
moment came as she was walking down the stairs, bringing my cup
to me just as she did each evening.
But this time she fell down the stairs, knocking herself into
a semi conscious state.
I ran to her, holding her as she revived and lifted her up.
"I can't stand up." she said.
"Sure you can, sweetheart. You just had a bad fall. Just
rest a minute."
She rested a while, but still could not stand.
I rushed her to the emergency room. The doctor told me that
they needed to run some tests.
Finally, after three weeks of testing, we discovered the problem.
She had multiple sclerosis. My heart sunk as I asked the doctor
how serious it was and how long she had to live.
"It varies with each person," he said. "Some
go quickly, other hang on for years. I must warn you, however,
it appears that the disease is progressing quickly with your wife.
I would guess that she has somewhere around a year or two to live.
You never know, though. She could linger on for ten years or more,
but you must prepare yourself for the worst.
"Right now she can't even walk. She may get some of her
strength back, but then will probably lose it again. It's like
moving one step forward and two steps back. Sooner or later the
disease gets you.
"The problem now is with her legs, but later it will be
other parts of her body. Near the end she'll probably lose her
sight, and even her ability to speak and feed herself. I hope
you love her a lot because she's going to be very dependent on
you."
"I'll be there for her," I said with tears in my
eyes. "We'll do whatever it takes. Somehow we'll beat it."
"Just be prepared to deal with it. Don't get your hopes
too high. It can be frustrating for both of you. Just be thankful
that you have a year or two of sharing left. Many people I deal
with have their loved ones taken suddenly and wish they could
just have five minutes with them to say good-bye. You have time
for a long loving good-bye. I would advise you to make the most
of it."
"I appreciate the advice doctor, but don't take our hope
away. There has to be a way to beat this."
"I understand your feelings," he said patiently.
"But my experience tells me that I must do what I can to
prepare you for the real world."
"I see your point," I said, "but I refuse to
give up hope no matter what the odds are. I've always believed
that all things are possible.
"I'm here to help however I can," the doctor said
quietly.
The next year was rather discouraging. The doctor was proven
to be entirely correct. Elizabeth got one step better and two
steps worse. She got some strength back in her legs but later
lost all strength in her legs plus some of her vision. During
that year we tried every medicine, every health food, every herb
that had any chance of working, but her health seemed unrelated
to anything that we tried. She finally reached a point where she
was confined to a wheelchair and was barely able to feed herself
because of her shaking limbs. Fortunately, she still had her mental
capacities, but the doctor warned me that even that could go next.
At this point he told me that she seemed to be deteriorating and
could go fairly quickly. She could go in six months or possibly
linger on for years.
One night, as we lay in bed together and I held her in my arms,
I thought of the years we spent together. In my mind's eye I visualized
her being vibrant as she was when we first met and as she is now.
I felt very sad. Why did this have to happen to the most wonderful
woman I have ever met?
As I contemplated the situation I said a prayer from deep within
my heart.
"Why God does something like this happen to such a wonderful
person as my wife? You would think you'd have to be a serial killer
to deserve such punishment, but Elizabeth has never hurt anyone.
Maybe some very minor things, but nothing to deserve such pain.
If this is a punishment it seems unjust and out of proportion.
"Even ministers these days are saying that life is unfair.
If You are truly God, then one of Your main attributes should
be fairness and justice. Where is fairness and justice in this
situation? I ask not for myself, but for the woman I love. Surely
there is an answer somewhere, somehow, someplace..."
This was a sort of basic prayer I thought within my heart several
times daily ever since Elizabeth became ill. However, on this
particular night I said it with great emotion and cried myself
to sleep with my thoughts.
That night I fell into a very sound, profound yet peaceful
sleep. Then in the morning something quite unusual happened. I
was at that point where you are between being asleep and awake.
I know there have been several times when I have been at this
stage that I was not sure if I was dreaming or not. This was one
of those times.
This was the first time I heard the bells; gentle, penetrating,
familiar, soft, yet very real bells.
At the time I heard them I was sure I was hearing real bells,
perhaps ringing somewhere outside my bedroom window, but then
I roused myself and rose up in my bed and the sound disappeared.
I was not sure if I really heard them or if I was dreaming. Then
I settled back into sleep and I heard the bells again. I roused
myself and the sound again went silent. Then this process was
repeated for a third time.
One experience like this I could have shrugged off, but a three-time
repetition got me thinking that there was some significance here.
Then the next morning I heard the bells again.
And again the next morning.
Finally, I felt I had to mention it to Elizabeth. I told her
the story and she said, "The only thing I can suggest is
that it must be some type of message or sign intended just for
you. I was sleeping next to you each of these past three mornings
and I heard no bells."
"But if it is some type of message intended just for me,
what good is it? I've thought and thought about it and I can't
see any hidden meaning in bells ringing."
"Have you heard bells in real life that sound anything
like these?" she asked.
"Well, they sound something like Christmas bells and they
seem very familiar. Christmas is just a few weeks away. Could
it have something to do with that?"
"Who knows?" she shrugged. "Maybe you're just
thinking too much about Christmas. How about taking your mind
off the bells by doing some grocery shopping for me. Get a pen
and I'll give you the list"
-- End Of Chapter --
Copyright © 1997 - 2008 by J J Dewey
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