1
Glorious Way Evangelical is the center of my mommaās life. She looks forward to church worship like an alcoholic looks forward to happy hour at Woodyās Watering Hole.
Sundays are the Lordās day, and Iāve spent most of mine praising God and singing in the Glorious Way choir, listening to Reverend Johnny J. Jackson, and wishing my behind wasnāt getting numb.
If I was any good at figuring sums in my head, Iād add up how much of my life has been spent sitting on hard pews. I mostly rely on the calculator on my phone, but if I had to take a guess at the number⦠thereās four Sundays in a month, multiplied by twelve months in a year, times twenty-five years⦠subtract the times I faked a head cold or period cramps, and that equals⦠a whole heck of a lot.
The phone in my dress pocket lights up and I slide it out far enough to see whoās texting. I glance up at Johnny J. preaching his usual fire and brimstone, then open the text from HotGuyNate. I bite my lower lip to keep from grinning like a cat full of canary. I type Yes and hit send. Iāve never driven more than twenty miles for a hookup or a coffee date, but Nate is the kind of guy worth driving two hundred miles to meet. āBrittany Lynn!ā Momma says under her breath. āJesus is watchinā you.ā
I try not to roll my eyes as I slide the phone back into my pocket. If thatās true, Jesus is interfering in my love life. Donāt get me wrong: I love Jesusābut Iāve spent so much time in devotion, I reckon Iāve earned bonus points that I can use here on earth or in heaven.
āEvil demons whisper temptations into the ears of man. These demons are liars! Do not listen or you will burn in hell when our Lord returns!ā Johnny J. is yelling about Satan and scaring the sinners clear in the back row. āLord, deliver us from wickedness!ā
āLord, deliver us from wickedness,ā Momma repeats, clutching a Bible to her big breasts. When it comes to the good book, I donāt know anyone who knows more than Momma. You could say sheās an expert on the rapture, and she dreams of the day that she floats to heaven on a fluffy cloud and gets to wave goodbye to the sinners left behind. In particular, Daddy and his second wife, āFloozy Face.ā
Iāve never liked Floozy, and sheās never liked me. She thinks constructive criticism is her way of being helpful. I think constructive criticism is her way of being a bitch. She says I need to grow up. I say, āYou need Jesus.ā She tells Daddy Iām immature for my age. I tell her sheās vertically challenged. It goes without saying that weāre never in the same place for long.
I was ten when Daddy moved out of our house and in with Floozy Face, aka Mona Lisa Calhoun, and Momma has hardly spoken to him since. At my high school graduation Momma refused to be in the same picture with Daddy and me no matter how much I begged.
After all these years sheās still as bitter as ever. I tell her that good Christians donāt dream of riding off on a big, fluffy cloud, hooting and hollering and acting holier-than-thou. I tell her to get bigger dreams for herself, but Momma never listens to one thing that she doesnāt want to hear. I inherited that from her, Iām told.
I glance at my phone twice more, and by the time Johnny J. is done sermonizing, my behind is so numb that I have a hard time standing up. Momma has a harder time than me, but she walks with me out to our old minivan. Momma is staying for Bible study, and someone in the group will give her a ride home afterward. She has plans to quote scripture, and I have plans of my own.
āWhy are you drivinā all the way to Alpine to see Lida Haynes?ā
Lida has been my best friend since second grade at Marfa Elementary, but I quit speaking to her last week when she said some very hurtful things. āAlpine is only twenty-six miles from here,ā I tell Momma, even though she knows this. āSee you later. Iāll call if Iām spendinā the night.ā I give her a hug, then hop in the van and head out of the church parking lot. I sing along with Jason Aldean on the radio and stick my arm out of the window to wave goodbye. Singing has always played a part in my life. When I was young, I dreamed of being a country-and-western singer. Momma used to drive me to competitions when we could afford it. I even won first place a time or two.
I drive past the turn to Alpine and head in the opposite direction toward El Paso, two hundred miles northwest of Marfa. Momma used to make my outfits. The best was a leopard-print coat made so I could look like Shania Twain at the Texas Shooting Stars singing competition. I was nine and belted out āThat Donāt Impress Me Much.ā Momma still has the video. The next year I became obsessed with Hannah Montana and changed my stage name to Wittany so that when I got famous I could switch back to Brittany and not get mobbed by fans. When I was seventeen I tried out for American Idol in Austin. I thought for sure the panel would love āWittany,ā but Simon said I should come back after I lost weight. Paula agreedāand she was supposed to be the nice one. Wittany died that day, and the only singing I do these days is at church.
Even though Iāve given up on that dream, I do write lyrics. My most creative time is when Iām in bed at night. I have notebooks full of songs and my latest is called āBig Dreams in a Small Town.ā I keep the notebooks under my mattress and Iāve never shown them to anyone.
I pull my phone out of my pocket and slide it into the holder next to Mommaās dashboard Jesus. I have a text message from my Visa but nothing from HotGuyNate since he texted me in church.
I met Nate on Tinder this past Thursday. Heās driving from somewhere in New Mexico and weāre meeting at the Kitty Cat Lounge. If we like each other and things are looking good, I plan to pounce on him like heās a bag of catnip.
Nate isnāt my first Tinder date. Iāve been on the site for a few years. Iām also on Match.com, OkCupid, and Plenty of Fish. I want to fall in love and get married, but the closest Iāve ever come to it was a six-month relationship with Ricky Nunez when I was twenty-two. Ricky had a snaggletooth and acne and lived in a beat-down double-wide.
He broke my heart.
Nate is a lot better looking than Ricky, and thatās an understatement. Heās the kind of good-looking that Iāve always dreamed of finding. He has dark hair and blue eyes and a flashy white smile, and he swiped right when he saw me. Iāve been walking around for days feeling sassy and filled with glow. Lida is the only person I told about Nate, but she wasnāt supportive at all. Instead she reminded me of Pete Parras, a superhot guy who used to hook up with me until he found a superhot girlfriend. Lida said she could tell by Nateās bio and photos that he was a user like Pete and she couldnāt be happy for me. I had to remind her that she moved to Alpine for smooth-talking Bubba Crum and lived with him for a year before she found out that he had a wife in Van Horn and a baby momma in Fort Davis. She said she learned from Bubba how to spot a liar but that I didnāt learn anything from Pete. I got aggravated with Lida and said some things I shouldnāt have. She got aggravated with me and said things she shouldnāt have, and we havenāt spoken since. Weāve never gone this long without talking, and I donāt know if we can ever get back to the way things were before we got ugly with each other.
An hour outside El Paso, I pull into a truck stop for gas, grab my suitcase from the back seat, and head for the bathroom. I change out of my church clothes and into a pair of jeans and a āDonāt Mess with a Texas Girlā T-shirt with rhinestone embellishments, of course.
Right after I graduated from beauty school, I took professional online cosmetics courses. Since then, I take refresher classes to keep up on the latest trends and techniques. I might not be the thinnest or best-looking girl around, but I do the best I can with what Iāve got.
I open my cosmetics bag and apply makeup to complement my latest look. Last week I covered my brown hair with a dark blue balayage. I did it all by myself and Iām really happy with how it turned out. I coordinated the color with my nails and had Lorna give me a deluxe pedicure.
Lorna is the owner of the Do or Dye, where Momma and me work five days a week, back-combing hair halfway to heaven and spraying it down with enough extreme hold to survive a cat-five hurricane. Itās okay for now, but I donāt want to work there all my life like Momma.
I find my teasing comb, lift the hair on the crown of my head with one hand, and shake a can of Helmet Head with the other. Most people make the mistake of spraying the hair directly, but the trick is to create a nice fog and let it settle.
I brush my teeth real quick, pay for my gas, then hit the road again.
Blake Shelton is on the radio and I crank it up to sing along with him and Gwen. Out of all the men singing country these days, Iād have to say that Trace Adkins still has the best voice (sorry, Blake), but Sam Hunt is smoking hot. If I ever saw him in person, I donāt know if I could control myself.
My phone dings with a text, but I canāt see it for the sun pouring through the windshield. I pull it from the holder and put it in the shade of my lap. I glance from the highway to the message, then back again.
Itās from HotGuyNate: Are you there?
I push the talk-to-text icon and say, āIām about sixty miles away,ā then tap send. The closer I get to El Paso, the more my nerves tingle and my stomach gets tight.
The text dings. I pull it up. HotGuyNate: I canāt make it.
I blink several times and read it ten more. I canāt believe it and I glance back and forth from the highway to the text. My heart drops and pounds at the same time. āIs this a joke?ā I say, and tap send.
He came up with the plan to meet in El Paso and picked out the Kitty Cat Lounge. I jumped at the chance, but it wasnāt my idea.
HotGuyNate: Sorry.
Sorry? Thatās it? I lied to Momma, fought with Lida, and wasted my time, effort, and gas money. Worse than all of that, a manās let me downāagain.
I raise my phone and ask, āWhy?ā then hit send. I blink back tears of hurt and disappointment. Why canāt anything ever work out for me?
HotGuyNate: My wife found out.
Wife? He has a wife? My phone slips from my hand and disappears between the seats. Heās married? His Tinder profile says heās single and the only pictures are of him. Lida was right and I told her she wasnāt a good friend.
Now Iām aggravated and shove my hand between the seats. Tears burn my eyes and roll down my cheeks. I feel around and touch a corner of my phone. Momma says I have a quick temper. I say sheās right. She says I need to control it. I say not right now. Iām going to give HotGuyNate a hot piece of my mind first.
I lean toward the passenger side for a better grip on my phone, but I keep my eyes on the highway. I donāt have a lot of rules when it comes to dating. You could say I have low standards, but I do draw the line at married men. I know firsthand what cheating does to a family.
I inch my phone toward me with my fingers and peer between the seats. My daddy cheated and none of our lives were ever the same. I love him, but he was a skirt-chasing liar.
A loud scrape drowns out Blake and Gwen on the radio. The van leans sideways and I sit all the way up. Dirt and scrub hit the windshield and I slam on the brakes. More dirt. More scrub. I canāt see a thing. Everything is happening fast and my brain canāt keep up. The van tips this way and that. Iām upside down and right-side up. Iām rolling. Mommaās dashboard Jesus flies past my head. Everything goes black.
2
I always heard that when itās your time to die, thereās a warm light that leads you straight up to heaven. Youāre surrounded by so much beauty, it hurts your eyes. Your dead relatives are there and yāall fall on each otherās neck and weep. Angels sing and blow trumpets, and youāre filled with so much love that you just know youāve landed smack-dab in heaven.
Itās not like that. At least, not for me. Thereās no warm light and certainly no beauty. Thereās blood everywhere and Iām assuming itās mine. I donāt know a single soul in the room, and instead of singing angels I just hear the solid beeeep of a heart monitor. A doctor stands on a little step stool and pumps up and down on my chest with the palms of his hands. I only know thatās my body on that gurney because thereās no mistaking my blue balayage. A steady red stream runs down my arm thatās hanging off the bed and blood drips from my middle finger to a puddle on the floor.
Wait, if thatās me on the bedāwho am I? Are there two of me? Am I going to die?
People rush past, tying yellow surgical scrubs behind their backs and white masks around their heads. They snap on gloves and shout to each other. Someone cuts the jeans and the āDonāt Mess with a Texas Girlā T-shirt from my body while someone wheels in one of those defibrillators like on TV. I look down, but my clothes arenāt bloody or cut.
The doctor puts two paddles on my chest and everyone backs away and lifts their faces to the flat screen above the bed. The doctor shocks my heart and my body jerks so hard I raise a hand to my chest, but I feel nothing. No jolt of pain or fluttering heartbeat, but the green line on the monitor bounces and beeps across the screen. I reckon thatās good.
No one sees me standing at the foot of the gurney, but I donāt think Iām dead. Not yet, anyway. I should be freaking out right about now, but Iām not. Mostly Iām just confused about what in the heck is going on. I figure that Iām outside my body, watching someone shove a tube down my throat. I figure Iām in a hospital emergency room, but I canāt figure out how I got here or why Iām such a mess. The last thing I remember is sitting in church and something about Mommaās dashboard Jesus.
I look around. Is my momma here, too?
My heart monitor flatlines again, filling the room with the steady beeep, and a blinding flash draws my attention to the ceiling. I look up at a bolt of brilliant lightning above me. It wavers and flickers like itās made of pieces of shattered mirror. One of my arms lifts as some unseen force pulls the rest of me upward. I guess this is the light everyone talks about. The one that will take me to the family reunion in the sky. I am sucked through the ceiling and placed on a white circle of light. Iām by myself but I donāt feel alone. I donāt have time to sort things out in my brain before flashes of silver and blue soar past my head and the circle beneath my feet stretches in both directions and forms a path that looks like itās been bedazzled with pink rhinestones just for me. It sparkles and glows and fills me with warmth from the inside out. At the end thereās brilliant gold light that Iām assuming leads to God, not the Wizard of Oz.
My pathway to heaven is in front of me, and my life is behind. Iām not overcome with joy like the Reverend Johnny J. preaches. Iām not angry, but I am not exactly thrilled, either. I have plans for my life. I want to get married and have children. I want to go to a RaeLynn concert and belt out āQueens Donātā at the top of my lungs. I want to go to Paris and see the Eiffel Tower and eat macarons at LadurĆ©e.
None of those things will happen now. It doesnāt seem fair. I want to go back home. The backs of my eyes s...