Abbott

The Abbott’s Reckoning

For one hour, he believed it. And that was enough. abbott

Then the chapel bell rang—once, twice, three times—and he straightened his back. He walked down the winding stairs, his sandals slapping the worn granite. When he pushed open the heavy oak door, sixty faces turned toward him, expectant. He stepped to the lectern, opened the worn leather psalter, and began to read in a voice that did not waver. The Abbott’s Reckoning For one hour, he believed it

" The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. " He walked down the winding stairs, his sandals

Brother Pius had been found weeping in the herb garden again, whispering the name of a woman he’d left behind in Lyon. Young Brother Thomas had hidden a flint and steel in his mattress, a small rebellion against the rule of perpetual prayer. And the abbott himself, their shepherd, their father in God, had just dreamed of riding a stolen horse across a green meadow, laughing.

He pressed his thumb to the cold glass. What kind of abbott am I , he thought, if I cannot even master my own longing?