“The Mass is ended, go in peace.” the aged cleric said. “Thanks be to God” said some dozen odd parishioners who then fled.
The Priest dismissed his server. and had turned himself to go when he noticed still one worshiper kneeling in the seventh row. She was an older woman, her head swathed in a blue scarf. She was obviously in devotion before the Sacred Heart.
He thought: “There is no need to rush” He shuffled towards the chair. which is where the Bishop sits when attending service there.
The aging cleric said a prayer for the gracious soul’s repose whose generosity provided his vestments and his robes.
He next prayed for his friend, a priest, who’d grown too fond of wine. He’s consecrating grape juice now the non alcoholic kind.
He thought: “it now is getting well past time I need to lock the doors.” His urban church had been vandalized a scant few months before.
He rose up on his arthritic hip and didn’t cry in pain He accepted this, his suffering, in Jesus’ holy name.
As he approached the woman, Her head bowed as before He had a vague uneasiness He experienced fear and awe She looked up then and he said “Mother!” and fell, senseless, on the floor.
His housekeeper found his body on the floor of fitted stone. The police found no evidence of foul play, The priest had died alone. The M.E. said the heart had failed Though not from shock or rage The Lord had called his servant home to grace a grander stage.