A newborn father wears a path to heaven in polished holy marble 'neath the pedestal of stoney saints. Deific overseers cast artificial glory incandescently. A slice of dimly lit hospital heaven is framed with two candles and the incense of Betadine. Saint John's shadow shares confessions and supplications over a once-immortal man now unashamedly broken, bartering trade with God - his life for his son's.
This shoebox chapel is starking cold. Cold enough to preserve meat, and doubts which mock peace against nun-hardened walls echoing Satan's laugh. Hope drowns in the ripples of a basin filled with water to wash our sins but not our fear.
In the air hangs the promise of eternity (which is spiritual code for "death", but no one says "death" outloud. The more they don't say it, the more it sounds like "WE AREN'T GOING TO SAY "DEATH", WE CAN'T POSSIBLY SAY "DEATH", UNTIL IT IS SO UNCOMFORTABLE THAT WE MIGHT AS WELL BE SAYING "DEATH, DEAD, DIE, DIE, DIE, DIE, DEATH AND TO TOP IT OFF...ON YOUR MOTHER'S GRAVE"). Yet piercing through the promise of eternity is the frail wail of his baby's voice.
Legacy lingers in a plastic manger down the hall. Resurrection is more than a prayer, it is his spirit rising for one more miracle. Faith is summoned like a woozy fighter demanding his will to go on, beaten, half-concious on the mat refusing to lay down for the count. "God, I believe. Help my unbelief."
The weeping man stares into a statue's eyes for salvation.