Hidden Hand
Home The Abyss

 

 

THE HIDDEN HAND OF GOD

CHAPTER one:

SENIOR YEAR CRISIS

Written by Rick Archer 

 

 
 

Miracle

  •   A surprising and quite welcome event that is not explicable by natural or scientific laws.  It is therefore considered to be the work of a divine agency.
     
  •   A highly improbable or extraordinary event that brings very welcome consequences.

Rick Archer's Note:

The Hidden Hand of God tells the story of how my life was dramatically enhanced by unexpected Acts of Kindness.  What is curious about these Acts of Kindness is that they were accompanied by unusual coincidences that challenged my sense of Reality. 

Please be aware this book addresses the issues of Fate and Divine Intervention.  Since the Existence of God is an area of doubt for many people, I do not wish to insult anyone's intelligence by claiming to possess special insight.  Nor do I expect the Reader to agree with every conclusion I make.  All I ask is for you to allow me to share the events that led to my unusual belief system, then decide for yourself what to think.

 

Crisis

Our first chapter covers the worst crisis of my life. 

The time is my Senior year of high school, 1967-1968.  Following two extremely bad decisions on my part compounded by several tough breaks, I have just seen my dreams to attend college go up in smoke.  Adding to my misery, my mistakes were responsible for my cruel setback.  Filled with rage towards myself for sabotaging my future, I became mired in depression and helplessness.  Thoughts of suicide shadowed me like the grim reaper night and day.  How was I ever going to escape the trap I was in?

Our story concludes with a dramatic event that changed the course of my life.  To me, it was a Miracle.  However, in these sorts of matters, certainty is impossible.

Let me tell my story and let you be the judge.

Rick Archer

 
 
 
 

ST JOHNS SCHOOL

 

The crisis I refer to took place at St. John's, a private school in Houston, Texas.

Considered the top academic school in Houston as well as Texas, St. John's is annually ranked as one of the top 20 private schools in America. 

I attended St. John's for 9 years, 1959-1968.  In addition to receiving the finest education imaginable, quite frankly St. John's is the only reason I made it past childhood relatively intact. 

 
 



1959, Age 9, 4th Grade

blackmail
 

 

To better understand this story, let's begin in 1959, the start of my nine year career at St. John's School. 

To be quite frank, I had no business being at this school.  My admittance was what most people would call a fluke.  Due to its lofty reputation, SJS has long been exceptionally difficult to get into.  The school is also very expensive.  Given there was no possible way my father could afford this place on his middle-class income, what was I doing here? 

Ironically, I owed my elite education to my father's mistress. 

Should I thank her?  No, probably not.  The Mistress came very close to ruining my life.  As we shall see, her vindictiveness will play a direct role in my Senior year Crisis.

My life had been good until the Mistress came along.  I was 8 when her presence began unraveling my parents' marriage.  Did I know about the mistress?  No.  Did my mother know about the Mistress?  No evidence, but she was suspicious.  Something was definitely wrong.  The arguing started when my father asked for a divorce without divulging the real reason (take a guess).  When my mother said no, my father decided to make her acutely miserable.  For the past year, my mother and father had fought like cats and dogs virtually every night of the week. 

My father's tactic was to criticize my mother in every way possible.  He called her a lousy mother and a lazy housekeeper.  Not a day passed when he did not criticize her, pointing out her life of comfort while he worked himself to exhaustion.  Hopefully his ceaseless harping would force her to give in.

 

My parents were a terrible mismatch from the start.  My mother was a plain, unattractive woman who did not watch her weight.  In addition, Mom had a smart mouth she used to needle my father.    

My father was a handsome man who came from poverty.  My mother came from a wealthy home.  Seeing my mother as meal ticket to a college education, he offered to marry her.  She dropped out of college to pay the bill while he got his degree.  My father began as a salesman for electrical equipment.  Later he designed electrical systems for giant cranes.  It did not take long for management to realize Dad was a genius.  As his career took off, Dad got cocky and cast the roving eye.  His sexy secretary answered the call.  Once things got hot and heavy, my father decided he wanted a divorce.

Age 9, I was really struggling in school due to the tension at home.  I was the worst behaved kid in my Third Grade class.  I constantly acted out and talked back to my teacher.  I made at best average grades because I rarely paid attention.  At least once a day I fought war battles on scratch paper.  Sometimes it was tanks and jet fighters.  The next day it was flying saucers.  Then came the dinosaurs locked in fierce combat. 

To the exasperation of my teacher, I would sit at the back of the room making muffled sound effects.  I assumed no one could hear me, but I was wrong.  I was a giant nuisance.  Finally my teacher laid down the law.  Any more noise and she would call my parents for a visit to the principal.  After her warning, I brought books on Greek Mythology to class and spent my time in the back reading.  My teacher didn't care because at least it shut me up. 

 

My father's nasty tactics made me crazy.  Listening to my parents argue each night, I turned into a sullen, deeply insecure kid.  As an only child with no family friends or nearby relatives, I had no one to turn to.  Forced to live alone in this house of horrors, I became very disturbed.  I disrupted class so often that finally my parents were called in to hear the riot act. 

Upset over my poor grades and severe discipline problems, my parents sent me to their psychiatrist.  After testing me, the doctor had a surprising solution.  What I needed was a stiff challenge.  Send me to St. John's and let the competition work its trick.  That is where his two boys went and they thrived. 

Mom was for it, but Dad was against it.  Given my father's low opinion of my intelligence, he was stunned when I managed to pass the SJS entrance exam and receive an invitation to attend.  The thing to understand is that admittance to this school was highly coveted.  Even back in those days the waiting list was out the door.  But that meant nothing to my father.  Dad said forget it, there was no way on earth he could afford the tuition.  Let the kid stick to public school where he belongs.

Mom was fed up.  They had been arguing for a year and getting nowhere.  Sick and tired of the impasse, Mom stunned my father with an ultimatum.  "Pay Richard's tuition for three years and you can have your divorce.

Dad immediately balked.  He would have to go deep into debt to pay for this.  Which was true.  The St. John's tuition was way beyond his pay grade.  Mom countered with blackmail. 

 

"Jim, I know about your mistress.  I will take you to the cleaners and ruin your life unless you cooperate.  Do the right thing for a change and let's put an end to this bickering."

My mother later confessed she was bluffing.  Mom had her suspicions, but no proof.  She just "knew" in that instinctive way women sense things.  However, till now she had said nothing.  Convinced my mother had the goods on him, my father turned ashen.  Unwilling to defy her threat to go scorched earth, my father caved in.  That is how St. John's School became the center of my life.

 

 



MIDDLE SCHOOL

1962, Age 12, 6th Grade

CONSEQUENCES
 

 

My father was bitter over being forced into debt.  He saw it as a disgusting waste of money despite the fact that the psychiatrist's prediction came true.  I made the Honor Roll for nine straight years and finished in the top 5 of my class.  However my father never said a word of praise.  Not once. 

In fact, my father turned his back on me.  Why?  I blame the Mistress.  Unwilling to forgive my father for making a bad deal, the Mistress badgered my father incessantly for making such a bad deal.  Considering he married her as promised, what was her problem?  The Mistress was unhappy because St. John's threw a serious monkey wrench into her Devil's Bargain.  The shrew did not anticipate she would be forced to keep working in order to help my father pay the costly tuition.  It galled her no end to realize every cent she earned was spent on my behalf.  Her honeymoon was budgeted, there was no money to buy a house and they had to delay starting a family. 

Infuriated, the Mistress took it out on me.  Lacking a backbone, Dad decided it was easier to abandon me than stand up to his domineering wife.  The wedge caused by her relentless bickering caused my father to limit our interaction to lunch four times a year. 

Although the divorce cost me a father, at least I gained an exceptional school.  For the next nine years, my gifted teachers kept me glued together while my mother fell to pieces.  After the divorced, she quickly remarried, a huge mistake.  The new husband was an ex-con with a fondness for excessive drinking and passing hot checks.  He beat my mother several times when he had been drinking.  One night in desperation, Mom called to my dog Terry for help.  One snarl from Terry put a quick stop to the violence.  As for the man's parenting skills, he tried to get me hooked on cigarettes and stole my silver dollar collection to buy booze.  One night the cops came looking for him.  Good riddance.  Unfortunately the misery continued due to my mother's penchant for collecting losers in bars and bringing them home to live with us.  Do you think I'm kidding?  Guess again.  I can remember six live-in boyfriends.  There were probably more.

In addition to my mother's bad habit of picking up strays, she had trouble holding a job longer than a year.  When my parents married, my mother dropped out of college to support my father while he got his degree.  Her lack of credentials cost her dearly in the job market.  So did her smart mouth.  Due to her frequent unemployment, the bills mounted.  One way to solve the problem was to skip out whenever the unpaid rent grew too high.  We moved 11 times in 9 years.  The problems did not stop there.  Every three months or so I would come home to find the electricity turned off.  Or the water.  Or the gas.  I am fairly certain I was poorest kid to ever attend St. John's. 

 

Given my mother's emotional problems, she did not have much energy left over for me.  With many nights devoted to cruising the bars for strays, I was left alone to take care of myself starting at age 10.  Abandoned by one parent, neglected by the other, I had no one to offer common sense advice on how cope with my underdog status at the rich kids school.  I was consumed with envy at the privileged lives of my classmates.  It would have been nice to have a parent to remind me to look on the bright side.  Unlike a lot of kids in this world, I never went hungry and I always had a roof over my head.  Plus I was getting a great education.  Rather than appreciate what I did have, I grew bitter from daily reminders of how much better my classmates had it than me. 

It was obvious from my ragged appearance that I came from a different walk of life.  Although we all wore the same uniform at St. John's, one look at my shoes was usually enough.  My chipped tooth removed any remaining doubt.  Given that my mother was too broke to have the tooth fixed for two years, it sent a clear message that money was scarce in my home.  By definition, every child at my school (but me) was well cared for.  Best clothes, impeccable social skills, contact lens, braces, the latest haircut, dermatologist, etc.  And here I go with the chipped tooth, hair that sticks up straight, cheap clothes, thick glasses, plus two eyes that don't match due to my blind left eye. 

Once my classmates pegged my impoverished status, I became low man on the totem pole.  Fortunately I was never bullied.  Nor was I insulted to my face.  But I was ignored.  The moment my privileged classmates realized I wasn't one of them, it became tough to turn casual acquaintances into close friends.  Academically I belonged at SJS, but socially I was out of my league.  Although I appreciated my education, I hated my loneliness.  Unable to play sports due to my blind left eye and untrained in the social graces due to my deplorable parents, I will be the first to admit I did not fit in at this school.  Over the course of nine years I developed a severe sense of social inferiority. 

Six years prior to my Senior Year Crisis, a key event took place at the end of the 6th Grade.  Dad's three year tuition ordeal was over.  No longer legally obligated to pay, my father told me his money was better off placed in a college fund.  Referring to this as his "College Pledge", my father promised the money saved would be waiting for me when the time came.  Broken-hearted at being forced leave SJS, I begged him to change his mind, but got nowhere.  Fortunately I caught a last-minute lucky break.  Informed of my father's decision, Mr. Chidsey, the Headmaster, took note of my good grades and offered a scholarship.  This explains how I was able to attend St. John's for six more years.

 
 



SENIOR YEAR CRISIS

September 1967, Age 17, 12th Grade

MISTAKE ONE: THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS
 

 
My Senior year Crisis was not the product of one particular event, but rather a complicated series of problems that snowballed.  The first problem occurred in September 1967.  Mr. Salls was the new Headmaster, taking the place of Mr. Chidsey.  We knew each other well.  Mr. Salls had been my German instructor for three years prior to his promotion.  Although we never spoke on a personal basis, I could tell he appreciated how hard I worked in his class. 

Mr. Salls made it a point to meet with each senior early in the school year to discuss college preferences.  I had my heart set on Georgetown University in Washington, DC.  My beloved Aunt Lynn and Uncle Dick lived just across the Potomac River in McLean, Virginia.  I wanted to be close to them.  I had been working as a grocery sacker after school for the past two years.  By the end of my Senior year, I estimated I would have $2,000 at my disposal.  That was a lot of money back in those days.  That plus six years of savings in my father's College Fund should be enough to pay for Georgetown.  Or so I assumed.

For some mysterious reason, during our meeting Mr. Salls completely ignored Georgetown despite my explanation why this school was my one and only choice.  He insisted I also apply to Johns Hopkins, a college I had never heard of.  The moment I discovered it was a men's-only school, there was no way I was interested.  Due to my sense of inferiority, I had yet to work up the courage to ask one of my lovely classmates for a date.  A serious case of teenage acne put a swift end to any chance of changing my mind.  Given that I never had a single date in high school, the thought of going to a men's school was out of the question.  Sensing my reluctance, Mr. Salls took the extraordinary step of asking me to apply to Hopkins anyway as a favor to him.  I agreed to do so, but why did he bully me?

I was very angry when I left his office.  Mr. Salls had made me promise to apply to a college I had no interest in.  The thought of wasting $75... two weeks of work at the grocery store... on a senseless application fee made me sick to my stomach.  It was standard procedure for my classmates to apply to ten schools, maybe more if they felt like it, but that was Daddy's Money.  This $75 was coming out of my own thin pocket.  I was so bitter that I unwittingly made a serious mistake.  I had intended to apply to the University of Texas as a backup option.  But why waste money?  With my grades, I was a shoo-in for Georgetown.  So decided to forget UT.  Using the money to apply to Johns Hopkins instead of UT, the day would come when I deeply regretted this decision.

 
 



SENIOR YEAR CRISIS

NOVEMBER 1967, Age 18, 12th Grade

little Mexico
 

 

My failure to apply to the University of Texas was my first mistake.  That led to a second mistake in the coming Spring (we will get to that shortly).  The second mistake was so costly, I could not understand why I had taken leave of my better judgment.  Perplexed by my extraordinary stupidity, I asked myself what went wrong.  The best explanation was extreme stress related to an idiotic move on my mother's part.  This is the story of 'Little Mexico'.

Late in my Junior year, my mother finally found steady employment in Houston's famed Medical Center.  She decided to buy a ramshackle house in a largely Hispanic part of town.  Mom wanted to make her live-in Mexican boyfriend Ramon more comfortable.  Given her shabby credit history, I have no idea how she persuaded a bank to loan her the money.

Although my father had little to do with me, he deserved credit for his reliability on child support.  Not once did he miss his $100 per month payment.  My mother and I were extremely dependent on this money.  The check's appearance would allow us to get the lights turned back on or make a much-needed visit to the grocery store.  Then came the bad news.  In November 1967, for the first time since the divorce eight years ago, Dad's monthly check failed to appear.  This was serious.  Without my father's child support check, my mother could not afford to pay her house note. 

My mother was completely blind-sided.  It took her two days to realize my father had not sent a November check because he was no longer legally obligated to pay child support after my 18th birthday.  Oops.  When she bought the house, my mother had assumed the child support would continue until I finished high school seven months down the road.  My mother was panic-stricken.  How would she ever make up the difference?

 

I stared at her in utter astonishment.  Well aware she had purchased this house with no margin for error, my mother should have had the sense to anticipate her child support problem.  Too late now.  I offered to make up the difference with my grocery store money, but my mother said no.  Without telling me, she had already cooked up a wild scheme.  My mother's solution was to invite Ramon's younger sisters, Janie, 18, and Linda, 21, to come up from Mexico.  They were expected to get jobs as waitresses in one of the nearby cantinas and pay rent. 

I had no idea what was going on.  I came home one night after work at the grocery store to find the two sisters had moved into bedrooms next to mine.  Within two weeks, Janie and Linda had boyfriends.  My mother gave their boyfriends permission to come live with us as well, a decision that included Enrique's 2-year old son Manolo.  I was never consulted about the additions, probably because my mother knew I would scream bloody murder.

The ensuing culture shock flipped my world upside down.  I had grown up as an only child accustomed to silence.  Suddenly there seven other people in this house besides me.  This included my mother and six Mexican immigrants, none of whom who spoke much English.  Given their fondness for loud Mariachi records, the place was a madhouse at night.  Given how hard the racket made it to study, College could not come soon enough.

 
 



SENIOR YEAR CRISIS

JANUARY 1968, Age 18, 12th Grade

the Jones scholarship
 

 

At the turn of the 20th Century, a visionary named Jesse H. Jones proposed turning Houston's slow-moving Buffalo Bayou into a world-class ship channel.  It was a brilliant move.  The widening process was completed in time to allow ships from the new Panama Canal to visit.  Shortly after that came World War I with a massive demand for oil.  Thanks to the Texas Oil Boom, the Houston Ship Channel exported tons of barrels overseas.  This is how Houston became the Energy Capital of the world. 

Now a very rich man, Jesse Jones looked to his legacy by creating a scholarship fund.  Every year one graduating Senior from each Houston high school would receive a $4,000 stipend.  I counted heavily on winning this award.  In addition to my good grades, I assumed my status as the poorest kid to ever attend SJS guaranteed I was a shoo-in.  However, something was wrong.  It was January and so far no one had mentioned a word about this scholarship to me.  The winners would be announced in March, so I was troubled by the lack of contact.  I should have asked someone, but I was too acutely introverted to speak up.  Left completely in the dark, I worried constantly.

 

I was also worried about my father's College Pledge.  According to him, for the past six years he had placed money equivalent to the annual SJS tuition in a college fund.  If he had done what he promised, there should be about $10,000 waiting for me.  However, when I saw my father for lunch shortly before Christmas, he did not say a word.  Considering college was just around the corner, why had he avoided the important subject of college finance?  I did not trust him.  This is why I had gotten my grocery store job two years ago.

When I substituted Johns Hopkins for the University of Texas in September, I was unaware that state tuition at UT was dramatically lower than private college tuition.  I admit this level of naivete is tough to believe, but who was going to tell me?  My non-existent Padre?  Yeah, right.  Or Mariachi Madre?  I was so angry at my mother over "Little Mexico" that we were no longer speaking.  Adding to my problems, I was what you would call a loner.  An only child stuck with an erratic mother, keeping to myself was second nature.  Due to my limited social skills and tendency towards introversion, friends were few and far between.  Although I was pretty good at book learning, things most kids my age understood like college tuition fell by the wayside.  Due to my ignorance, as of January 1968 I was stuck with only two options.  One was the prohibitively expensive Georgetown and the other was Johns Hopkins, equally expensive.  I focused on Georgetown.  Including room and board, it would cost between $20,000-$24,000 to attend Georgetown over a four year period.  This was such a staggering amount, I worried day and night if my father would come through as promised.

 

As it turned out, I did have one friend at St. John's.  David and I liked to play chess at lunch.  One day I got into a discussion with David about college finance.  I stopped breathing when David told me his brother's tuition at the University of Texas was $1,000 per year.

$1,000 per year at the University of Texas?  Georgetown was $5,000 a year!! 

I gasped.  This was Unbelievable!  I was so upset I nearly had a heart attack.  Why didn't anyone tell me this back in September?  Considering how worried I was about paying for college, this bad news was more than I could handle.  If I had applied to the University of Texas as my backup option, I already had enough grocery store money to pay for the first year at UT out of my own pocket.  Even better, if I won the Jones Scholarship and got a part-time job, I would have enough money to attend UT for four years without depending on my father to come through for me.  Only one problem. 

It was too late to apply to the University of Texas for next school year.

David's revelation sent me reeling.  If someone had told me that state tuition was dramatically lower than private school tuition, my college finance problems would be gone and I could relax.  Instead, due to my glaring ignorance, I was facing a monumental task.  Oh gosh, why did I ever apply to Johns Hopkins when I should have applied to the University of Texas like I wanted to?  If Mr. Salls had not bullied me to apply for Johns Hopkins, I would not be in this fix.  I was so upset.

As things stood, unless I could find a way to pay for Georgetown, I would be forced to miss an entire year of college. 

 

My misery did not stop there.  When I suggested I could probably get a scholarship to Georgetown, David threw a wicked curve ball.  To my alarm, David warned me not to get my hopes up.  David informed me that scholarship money was based on NEED. 

"Yeah, so what?" I said.  "My father doesn't know I exist and my mother is dead broke.  I definitely qualify."

"Rick, I hate to be the one to tell you, but your father makes too much money.  His substantial salary will be a deal breaker."

My mouth dropped open.  The recent years had been good to my father.  He was now one of the top electrical engineers in the country.  He designed electrical systems for giant cranes such as the one used by the Space Center at Cape Canaveral to launch rockets.  He made so much money now that he could afford to send his two children by the Mistress to private school.  The irony was not lost on me.

"I don't understand, David.  I don't live with my father and he no longer pays child support." 

"Georgetown still expects him to be responsible.  They will take one look at your father's salary and expect him to pay.

"But what if he refuses to pay?"

"Why would your father do that?"

"Lots of reasons.  My stepmother hates my guts.  She would murder him if he spent one extra dime on me.  Besides, all he ever does is complain about how broke he is.  That is because he sends my half-brother and half-sister to private schools that are just as expensive as St. John's and pays full tuition.  He claims paying for them is why money is tight.  That's his way of saying don't expect any further generosity beyond the College Pledge savings.  I assume I will get whatever is in the College Pledge and that's it.  Furthermore, I can't imagine my father would cooperate in filling out financial aid forms.  How do I explain to Georgetown that my father refuses to help?"

"I don't know, Rick.  But I know Georgetown won't give you a scholarship if your father doesn't play ball.  Why should they take your word for it?  They hear sob stories all the time, so they expect parents will fill out financial forms to corroborate.  It sounds to me like you better hope your father was serious about that College Pledge."

 
 



SENIOR YEAR CRISIS

february 1968, Age 18, 12th Grade

MY FATHER'S college pledge
 

 

Following my conversation with David concerning financial aid, I was filled with overwhelming anxiety over my father's promise to pay for college.  Not a day passed without that awful feeling that I might miss out on college next year.  It all boiled down to my father keeping a promise made six years ago. 

One day in late February the school receptionist gave me a message to meet my father at the coffee shop tomorrow (my father never called me at home).  I was on pins and needles as I drove my car (bought with grocery store money).  Surely Dad was good for his word.  Why else would he set up today's meeting?  This was the moment I had spent the last six years waiting for.  Today I would learn the truth about my father's College Pledge.  I was skeptical and hopeful at the same time.  Over the past nine years, Dad had disappeared from my life.  Although his office was only one mile from my school, Dad preferred not to make time for the forgotten child.  Dad's idea of fatherhood was "Don't call me, I'll call you."  I had been told never to call unless it was an emergency.  At best I saw him for lunch a few times a year.  I was no fool.  Deep down I knew he didn't care.  However, all would be forgiven if he would just come through for me today. 

As I walked into the coffee shop, my heart was pounding.  I prayed Dad had put that money into a savings account as promised.  If so, the nightmare of how to pay my Georgetown tuition would be over and I could finally calm down.   The phrase 'hoping against hope' was coined for this situation.  Would the father I had always hoped for show up today or would the father he had turned into appear instead?  I expected the worst, but you never know, maybe the man was good for his word.  I recalled his solemn promise from six years ago.

"Rick, I know how much St. John's means to you, but paying for college is so much more important.  This money will be there for you when it is time."

Dad was waiting for me in the reception area at the coffee shop.  He stood up and greeted me with the biggest smile on his face.  He shook my hand and gave me a big hug.  Hmm.  When was the last time my father hugged me?  This was a good sign.  Maybe there was hope after all.

A waitress escorted us to a booth and we sat across from one another.  As our eyes locked, I could barely breathe.  Six years I had waited for this moment.  The tension was unbearable.  When I saw him start to fish around inside his coat, I froze.  This was it.

 

Dad found what he was looking for.  He placed four $100 bills on the table. 

My eyes bulged.  Staring in horror, did this mean what I thought it meant?

"Dad, what is this money for?"

My father beamed with pride. 

"Look, Rick, it's Four Hundred Dollars! 

This is the money I've been saving for your college tuition!  I promised you long ago I would help.  I told you I would help you pay for college and I meant what I said.  This money will help you go to college!"

I was stunned.  Staring at the money in disbelief, Dad's $400 would barely put a dent in Georgetown's $20,000 price tag.  Oh my God, my worst nightmare had just come true.  This was the father I had expected all along.  I turned white as my chances of going to college next year seemed ever so remote.  Even if I won the Jones Scholarship, the annual $1,000 stipend did not come close to make up the difference.  Stunned by the realization I would probably not be going to college in the Fall, I could not breathe. 

 

If my father saw how upset I was, he did not show it.  In fact, my father was grinning like the Cheshire Cat.  I was bewildered.  What in the hell is my father so damn happy about?  There he was, sitting across the table beaming with triumph.  Dad was so pumped over his good deed, he looked ready to don an Indian war bonnet and start dancing in the aisle, piercing war whoops and all.  What is wrong with this man?  Grinning from ear to ear, you would think Dad had just won the goddamn Father of the Year award.

I shook my head in disbelief.  What could this man be thinking?  I knew my father was a born salesman, but even Dad had to know he was stretching things here.  Oh lord, just look at him!  My father was overcome with pride thanks to his amazing 2% contribution to my college fund.  I could not believe my father was doing a victory celebration over $400.  You want to know something really sad?  My father never even asked where I wanted to go college.  This was not a normal man.  Charles Dickens would have been hard-pressed to come up with a parent more pathetic than him.

Just then I wondered if Dad was playing a joke.  Maybe he was pulling my leg.  Was he hiding more money in an attempt to build the suspense?  If so, it was working.  I was so tense I was ready to burst.  Suddenly hopeful, I peered at him for clues.  But then I remembered this was not my father's way.  Dad did not have a sense of humor.  Sure enough, the moment he noticed my frown, he replaced his Happy Face with his Let's Get Down to Business Face.  I had my answer.  This was it.  Sick beyond sick, I stared long and hard at my father.  They say moments from your life pass through your mind in times of crisis.  The image that came to me was the vision of my mother and father arguing over sending me to St. John's during their divorce process.  I remembered what my father had said on the day I was accepted at St. John's.  Hiding behind a doorway, I listened as my father said he was totally against it. 

"Jesus Christ, Mary, that psychiatrist is an idiot.  What makes him think a boy who made D's on his last report card can handle academics at the toughest school in the city?   Our son can barely hack it in public school, so why should I spend all this money when we both know he will be demolished at St. John's?"

My father had good reason to feel that way.  After my lackluster performance in public school, Dad assumed competing head to head with the best and brightest would be too much for me.  However, just the opposite had happened.  As the psychiatrist had predicted, the academic challenge was exactly what I needed.  Although I had to study my butt off to keep up, I thrived on the challenge of proving I could hang with all these smart kids.  If ever there was money that was well spent, this was it.  What a remarkable difference St. John's had made!  My school had brought out the very best in me.  From an underachieving child in public school, I had been encouraged to reach my potential.  I would have never made it through the past nine years without the support I got from my gifted teachers.  Indeed, my education was the one bright spot in an otherwise miserable childhood.  From my point of view, St. John's had worked a small miracle.

For that reason, one would think my father would be thrilled at how well things had turned out for his son.  But apparently not.  Not once in nine years had my father ever acknowledged the value of my school.  Too dumbfounded to speak, I gazed in shock at the money laying on the table.  I had planned on getting nasty with him if he disappointed me, but here at crunch time I was far too introverted to confront him.  Even though physically I towered over my soft, pudgy father, psychologically I was a dwarf in his presence.  I hated myself because I didn't have the guts to chew him out.  For six years, I had vowed to speak up if he stiffed me.  So much for false bravado.  Seeing me dumbfounded, my father took advantage of my silence to drive another nail into the coffin. 

"I'm sorry, son, but right now my money is tied up with sending Joy and Charlie to private school.  Unless I get a raise and things dramatically improve in my finances, this $400 will be my only contribution towards your college education."

No surprise there.  I was already so numb, this news didn't affect me all that much.  I guess I had already anticipated he would say something like that.  The disgust I felt was overpowering.  In addition, I was paralyzed with disbelief.  How was it possible to have the lowest expectation for my father yet have him out-perform the worst thing I could imagine?  The thought that my father was proud over $400 infuriated me.  Is that the best he could do after six years?  The sad thing is I was pretty sure what was going here. 

There had never been a College Fund.  My father had just made that up to get me off his back when he stopped paying for St. John's six years.  But why did my father hand me cash?  It had to be related to the shrew.  My father was terrified of letting the Mistress know he had helped me.  One glance at the checkbook would have convicted him.  So when Dad stopped paying child support in November, he had not told his vindictive wife.  Why risk a new riot act?  Instead he pretended to keep paying child support.  November.  December.  January.  February.  The checkbook said he wrote $100 checks to my mother, but in reality the checks had been written for cash.  This allowed him to systematically pocket the four $100 bill and use them for today. 

As the spirit drained out of me, I was upset beyond comprehension.  Feeling my rage grow to Vesuvius proportions, I was fearful of an explosion.  Rather than scream, I picked up the $400.  It made me sick to touch the money, but despite my wounded pride, I needed whatever I could get.  Feeling myself on the verge of losing control, I stood up and said, "Thanks, Dad, but I've got a test to study for."

I stormed out of the building and threw the money on the passenger seat in disgust.  I seethed over my father's brutal insult as I drove away in my used VW Beetle.  Without warning, my anger suddenly vanished.  It was replaced by grief.  My father's broken promise was more than I could take.  Beneath the anger and disappointment, I was incredibly hurt.  In that moment, any remaining illusion as to my father's concern for my welfare died. 

 

The sad thing is I half-expected something like this would happen.  Some sort of eerie premonition had warned me about today.  I didn't see this dread as a psychic foretelling, but rather that my subconscious knew my father better than my conscious mind wanted to admit.  Well, not any more. 

The problem was that my father was deceptive.  He had his "Caring Act" down to a pat.  Over the past nine years I had met with him for lunch three or four times a year.  Dad was always friendly, always affable, always glad to see me.  However, today's cheap trick had opened my eyes.  It was all a disguise.  Before he began designing electrical systems, Dad had been an excellent salesman.  I suppose Dad's sales training paid off.  When you only see your kid three times a year for one hour, Dad could fake sincerity to perfection.

My father had once loved me.  I knew this for a fact.  But ever since he met the Mistress, his love mysteriously evaporated.  Did I do anything to deserve this?  No.  For the past nine years I had been unfailingly polite and respectful.  Grateful for any attention he was willing to share, I never gave my father a bit of trouble.  Now after six years of uncertainty, today's betrayal had revealed for certain what kind of man my father really was. 

 
 



SENIOR YEAR CRISIS

FEBRUARY 1968, Age 18, 12th Grade

ME AGAINST THE WORLD
 

 
As I drove back to school, I could not stop glancing at the $400 on the passenger seat.  Those four bills stared at me like a Betrayed Kingdom.  I felt so worthless.  Most fathers would be proud of a boy who got straight A's, bought a car with his own money, worked 20 hours a week after school and never got into trouble.  My father was the exception.  Six years ago he stopped paying for St. John's because it was a waste of good money.  Now he claimed there was no money for me because his abundant salary was better spent sending Charlie and Joy to private school.  Hey Dad, do you want to explain why private schools are okay for them, but not for me?  Seriously, my father had to be the biggest hypocrite to ever walk the earth.  A liar too.  This was the day my father broke my heart.

Prior to my Senior year, St. John's had been my sanctuary.  For the past eight and a half years, my school was the only thing I had going for me.  However, when I returned to St. John's after my father's betrayal, I hated my school with a passion.  It was a classic case of misplaced anger. 

The moment I walked into my next class, the phrase 'everyone but me' starting playing in my brain.  Without a scholarship, I had absolutely no way to pay for Georgetown.  Unless I caught some sort of break, next year every classmate BUT ME would attend college.  The more I thought about it, the more upset I became.  Dating back to the school's founding in 1946, only four graduating SJS Seniors had failed to go to college, all girls.  Legend had it they were getting married, so why bother?  Easy to say when you're rich, but what about me?  As things stood, I was in line to become Number Five, a dubious distinction indeed. 

Taking a desk in the back of the room, I was so upset I was in tears.  Mrs. Anderson, my teacher, asked us to translate a long paragraph of German into English.  Since German was my best subject, as usual I finished first.  However, it was for the wrong reason.  My heart wasn't in it, so I gave a brief effort and quit.  Since I wasn't going to college next year, what was the point of trying? 

 
 



KATINA BALLANTYNE
 

 

Following my lukewarm stab at the assignment, I sat there feeling utterly hopeless.  With nothing to do, I surveyed my twelve classmates and wondered what college they would attend.  I started with Katina Ballantyne.  I had heard a rumor she was headed to Vanderbilt.  Lucky her.  Katina was fortunate to be the daughter of Maria Ballantyne, probably the best mother in the entire school.

Katina was one of seven Ballantyne children who attended St. John's.  Every sibling was a credit to their gifted parents.  They were all smart, athletic, and outgoing.  Katina was the perfect example.  A cursory glance at the 1968 yearbook said it all.  Katina was all-conference in field hockey.  She was captain of the volleyball team.  She played lead in The Music Man, she was a Prefect, she was in the choir, she was editor of the yearbook, she was an honor student. 

In my opinion, Katina was the most respected young lady in our class.  Extremely popular, I never once saw a streak of meanness or pettiness.  Katina remained level-headed and even-tempered at all times.  Unlike some, there were no airs or snobbery emanating from this attractive young lady.  Katina's brothers and sisters were the same way... talented, generous, humble, no hint of arrogance. 

I watched Katina for the same reason I watched her mother... I admired both of them.  Unfortunately, following my father's snub, today I caught myself staring at Katina with bitterness for the first time.  I did not want to dislike Katina; she was a sweetheart.  But I could not help myself.  Katina's father was a prominent physican.  He was the first person hired when famed cancer research center M.D. Anderson opened its doors.  At the moment I resented Katina because she had come to school today secure in the knowledge her father's lucrative profession would send her to the college of her choice.  Katina had nothing to worry about.

 

The same was true for the other German students.  My classmates did not give college finance a second thought.  But what about me?  My father's broken promise meant there was a good chance I would not be going to college next year.  Even if I won the Jones Scholarship, what good would it do me next fall?  The stipend was $1,000 per year.  Add that to my father's $400 and my $2,000 in grocery savings.  Tuition, room and board at Georgetown was $6,000.  Given my father's salary and unwillingness to fill out financial forms, I had no chance of a scholarship.  Unable to make up the difference, I now expected to be forced to sit out a year.  I was incensed over the injustice.  Who at this school has worked harder than me?  Who needs college more than me?  The thought of being trapped at Little Mexico for another year was more than I could handle.  Given the unfairness of it all, my father's snub sent me reeling. 

Everyone but me... 

 
 



MARIA BALLANTYNE
 

 

Lost in a whirlpool of despair, my mind returned to Katina.  I was embarrassed that I had felt angry at her for a moment.  Katina, bless her heart, was one of the few St. John's girls who actually spoke to me now and then.  With her locker next to mine due to alphabetical proximity, Katina never failed to say good morning.  That said, I never thought about dating her.  Why not?  I thought Katina was wonderful.  Unfortunately, my mind was completely shut to the thought of asking any St. John's girl for a date.  They were all so perfect, so rich, so important, why would any of them be interested in a nobody like me? 

That said, I admired Katina so much that I wished I could be like her.  You know what I mean.  I wished I could have friends, gain respect, feel like I was part of the in-crowd, not be such a loner.  If I had any confidence, I probably would have fit in.  I was certainly one of the brightest.  I was also one of the top athletes.  What a shame my blind eye kept me from participating.  But why let that stop me?  I could have auditioned for a play like Katina.  I could have worked on the yearbook.  There were a lot of things I could have done to fit in.  However I had a job practically every day after school.  It just wasn't meant to be. 

But what if I had parents like Katina's?  Who knows what I could have accomplished.  In my opinion, Katina had the best mother in the school.  Over the past nine years, I had watched Mrs. Ballantyne mentor her children in the hallways countless times.  Like Katina, every child was a star athlete, a leader and top scholar.  I was convinced the success of the fabled Ballantyne clan was directly related to their mother's brilliance. 

 

I watched how Mrs. Ballantyne dominated the afternoon Mother's Guild conversations.  The Mother's Guild was a group of SJS mothers who met several times a week to plan dance parties, proms, book fairs, alumni receptions and fund raisers.  After their meetings, the various mothers stuck around for coffee and tea.  Conducting their chats in an open area, I noticed how Maria Ballantyne was invariably a fixture in the center.  Based on years of observation, I considered her the most influential parent in the school. 

My hero worship began in the 4th Grade, my first year.  I was incredibly insecure following the divorce.  My mother's insane marriage to the abusive alcoholic caused me great anguish.  So did her manic-depressive behavior.  Seeing her racked with sobs, there were times I actually worried she might kill herself.  My biggest fear was seeing her wind up in the loony bin and be unable to care for me.  Just the thought of being forced to live with the hateful Mistress would be enough to scare the wits out of any kid.  Due to an increasing loss of confidence in my own mother, I wondered what other mothers were like.  Enter Maria Ballantyne.  I noticed her poise.  I saw the respect given by her peers.  I watched with envy how her seven children gravitated to her.  I was a near-orphan.  How could I not be attracted to this caring, charismatic mother?

Given my troubled home, I saw no reason to apologize for my adulation.  I was a sad, unhappy little boy who meant no harm.  Respectful of her privacy, I would not dream of bothering her.  Indeed, during my nine years at SJS, we had never spoken.  All I did was study her from afar.  I would stand unnoticed in a corner and wonder what I could have accomplished if I had someone like Mrs. Ballantyne for a mother.  The thought of having an effective mother to love and encourage me was a tempting fantasy to be sure. 

But I had no choice but to play the cards dealt me.  Right now I had a bad feeling I was headed for a world of trouble.  Unfortunately, my foreboding would soon come true.

 

 


THE HIDDEN HAND OF GOD

Chapter two: 

THE ABYSS 
 

 

 
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