Guarding the Church

For flofx‘s commissioned prompt, a continuation of Re-blessing the Church


Father Nehemiah wasn’t entirely comfortable in the new church.

He had been told, by the kindly woman that cleaned the building, Mrs. Bao, that most priests didn’t last long in her city (and that was how she put it: “You priests, you usually can’t make it too long in my city. Don’t worry your head about it when you find yourself having to leave.”) As such, he was determined to, as the vernacular went, hack it.

The corpse-lamb was his first challenge, although not the strongest or worst he would face. The spirit of what he was told was a kirkevaren was quite visible to the naked eye, hovering around the freshly-blessed churchyard, apparently waiting for someone to die so it had something to protect once again.

While it waited, the kirkevaren had decided to guard everything else. The pews. The baptismal. The children in the nursery on Sunday. Sometimes it inserted itself into the stained glass window patterns for a while, another lamb in the wide field of them. It was, Father Nehemiah thought, bored.

It was tied to the land, Mrs. Bao and her husband, Bao-Bao, told him; it could not go very far from it. So Father Nehemiah pondered things that the spirit could do to keep it out of trouble.

Much, he pondered, the way he did with troubled teens in other cities. Much as he was soon to find he would need to with the fairies here.

The fairies. He’d thought the kirkevaren was strange – no other church he’d ever served in had had anything similar – but the fairies, they were downright malicious.

He found the first one pretending to be a corpse, hanging itself from the iron fence posts at the front gate, eyes bugging, tongue sticking out. “This place kills us,” the thing told him.

“Now don’t you be silly,” Mrs. Bao told the thing over Nehemiah’s shoulder. “It’s a place of love and faith, and if it harms you, that’s your own silly fault.”

That one had moved on, shamed into stopping its protest, but they kept coming. They would catcall the congregation as they came for Sunday services, shout obscenities at funeral-goers and wedding guests alike. If Mrs. Bao was around, she would shoo them off with her broom, but she was not always around, and they would not listen to Father Nehemiah.

“I don’t understand,” he asked the cheerful cleaning woman. “What is it they have against our Church?”

“They have a very long memory, these creatures,” she told him, “a reborn memory, in some cases. And some just take any chance they get to complain.”

“Much like every other person I know,” he sighed. “What can I do?”

“What can you do?” she echoed back at him, with a shrug. “They are faeries. They do not follow human rules.”

“Hrrm.” Father Nehemiah had the glimmerings of an idea. He lit some incense, murmured a few prayers, and went to speak to the kirkevaren.

The next time the faries came to protest the church, the kirkevaren was there, fending them off, defending the church from their complaints. Mrs. Bao smiled at Nehemiah.

“You’ll do okay. You’ll do just fine.”

This entry was originally posted at http://aldersprig.dreamwidth.org/289421.html. You can comment here or there.

15 thoughts on “Guarding the Church

  1. Some years ago, one of the churches in my neighborhood had on its sign (the weekly message), “The strength of the church is not in its walls but in its people.” When I told ysabetwordsmith about it, she said (paraphrased from memory), “Well, THAT’S stupid. What good is a holy building if its walls won’t keep out the bad guys?” Your story seems to address both aspects. Well done!

  2. My warped little brain is trying to assemble Mrs. Bao, Father Nehemiah, and the kirkevaren into a Charlies’ Angels / action hero team pose, but I can’t decide how to arrange it. Mrs. Bao on one side wielding her broom, Father Nehemiah on other swinging a censor of incense trailing smoke, and the kirkvaren leaping between them, hooves forward and ready to strike?

      • Both, I think? That gives the trio a background halo, and the kirkvaren can be overlapping the other two without blocking details. But this is all assuming that the kirkvaren should be the one in the middle, which I’m not sure of. How would you arrange them?

        • If you will forgive me for joining in the conversation: I’d support the notion that the kirkevare should be in the middle. I think there’ll be a balance in the image if Father Nehemiah and Mrs. Bao are on the left and right which won’t be there if the kirkevare replaces one of them. The kirkevare is presumably shorter than both, so there would be white space and a risk that one side would seem “heavier” than the other. What should their team name be?

          • Please do! Silly ideas are more fun with company. I’ve no idea. Defenders of the Church seems pretty humdrum. The church doesn’t have a name yet, I think. Something about lambs? Any suggestions?

      • Oooh. Maybe this should be in a stained-glass style, like the kirkvaren hanging out with the lambs in the window.

  3. That is awesome. I am thrilled that the kirkevaren has a purpose. This has grown really well out of that dark little piece about its burial. I like Mrs. Bao a lot.

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