M E R I D I A N M A G A Z I N E
No Room
at the Inn
By
Marvin Payne
I’m a lousy salesman (“short and stout – this is my handle,
this is ...” No, there’s no song, but still it’s a refrain I
can’t seem to escape. I’ve begged Michael McLean to tell me
his secret, but he just looks blankly at me as though he’s forgotten
it, along with his carols ((now here’s a guy whose salesmanship
is truly awe-inspiring. Every year he draws standing-room-only
crowds into these theatres all over the place to watch choirs
do what? I mean, what can they do? Tell jokes? Apologize? I
thought, “Hey, if Michael can do this, why can’t I?” and I rented
out the Springville Art Museum for a month and was nearly ready
to run my ads in Meridian when the Museum canceled the whole
thing in what can only be described as a “huff.” They found
out I was calling the show “Invisible Paintings.” Michael could
have sold them on it.)) ). (Note to the editors: This is the
correct punctuation. Trust me.)
I’m just a few nights from opening as the dark, mysterious,
enigmatic, chimerical, tortured, labyrinthian,
(did I say “dark” already?) love interest in “Jane Eyre.” I
want very badly to succeed. (See "Now Playing" at
www.marvinpayne.com
for a commercial message at this point. Please.)
[Special Note to Meridian Readers who have Come Here to Complete
a Voluntary Extra-credit Homework Assignment as Part of their
ESL Curriculum:
Word order in English is much more important than in some other
languages it is. For example, it would be syntactically (and
semantically) inappropriate to read the preceding (skip parentheses)
sentence “I want to succeed very badly.” This is a grammatical
construction the use of which is restricted to Theatre Critics,
who write things like "succeeded very badly." (In
excerpting from critical reviews for promotional purposes, however,
it is permitted to take certain liberties with word order –
see www.marvinpayne.com/reviewdisclaimer.html
. Really.)]
[Special Note to Teachers of English as a Second Language Generally:
It may be prudent to discourage extra-credit work in this column
until next semester, when your students have moved on from ESL
to BGTL (“Backstage Graffiti as a Third Language”). Just a friendly
academic-to-academic heads-up.]
Succeeding in roles that are dark, mysterious, enigmatic, chimerical,
tortured, labyrinthian, and dark requires
an actor to be vulnerable. So, in brave pursuit of vulnerability,
I tell you (again) “I’m a lousy salesman.” But audiences love
to see characters battle against their vulnerabilities, so here
goes. I’m going to say something here so bold and truly salesman-like
that even the Meridian Editors (who could sell saxophones to
Harold Hill, bless their hearts) dare not say: You need Meridian
Magazine. I didn’t say “want,” I didn’t say “could really use,”
I didn’t say “might benefit enormously from,” I didn’t say “could
supplement your study of official church stuff with.” I said
“need.”
And this is why: Here you receive permissions you will not receive
through church correlated channels! I have one particular permission
in mind (it might be the only one): I, a Meridian Columnist
of some Considerable Standing, grant you what your Gospel Doctrine
Teacher, Ward Choir Leader, and Visiting High Council Speaker
will (appropriately) withhold: Permission, for yet another year,
to keep celebrating, despite the constraints of curriculum,
correlation, commerce, or community coercion, Christmas. For
as long as you want. There.
At my house, we are. In this column, we will.
So:
On Christmas Eve, we gathered at the church for something that’s
been done in Alpine for well over a hundred years: little children
acting out the Nativity, and the Bishop handing out bags of
peanuts and candy. Every Christmas Eve. This year the Pattersons
saved me a seat on the front row (my wife was helping to herd
shepherds ((making her, I suppose, a “shepherdherdess”)) ) and watched Joseph and Mary, each very
round-cheeked, round-eyed, and solemnly three years old, sitting
in a splintery old stable framed under the red and yellow floodlights
by my excellent neighbor Tom Bench. And I suddenly wondered,
for the first time in a half-century of Christmases, if Joseph
and Mary were the only ones in Bethlehem that night who got
there after the “no vacancy” signs went up.
An Idea For a Story
(Christmas Eve, 2004, between 6:20 and 7:00 PM)
A little boy, Joshua, travels with his grandmother the long
road from Jericho to the tiny town where her ancestors were
born. They’d rather not have made this journey, but a mysterious
emperor in some fabled city impossibly distant has commanded
them to gather, because he wants to count them and tax them
– and since his imperial armies run the country now, they have
obeyed.
The journey has been long and boring. They’ve even been denied
the excitement of avoiding robbers, or even the excitement of
some interesting weather. The robbers aren’t waylaying lonely
travelers, because the whole country is on the move and there
aren’t any lonely travelers. And it’s mid-spring and boringly
mild.
They arrive after dark in the tiny town, now bursting at the
seams with the remote relations of the few folks who still live
there. And there is, as ought to have been expected, no room
at the inn. The innkeeper, however, has cleaned his large stables,
hung blankets between its various stalls and lofts and recesses,
letting the animals wander in the mild night, so there are makeshift
rooms to rent to weary travelers.
As Joshua lies down next to his grandmother on some straw they’ve
spread out evenly on the rutted dirt floor, he hears a young
couple quarreling in the loft overhead. Off in the other end
of the stable somewhere a toddler whines, and against the boards
separating Joshua from the next stall an old man is muttering
in his sleep. Still, the boy is so tired that he only narrowly
hears the new urgent whispering as another young family has
just arrived. The husband is sweeping straw together into a
pile. He eases his wife stiffly down against it. She hurts.
Something is wrong. Joshua is tired.
Among the few cows shifting and clumping outside in the starlight,
just one, from her incessant moaning, seems offended at having
to have surrendered her home to a dirty-faced runt of another
species.
The dirty-faced runt finally descends into sleep through the
unrelenting din.
Some hours later he awakens with a start. Is it the silence
that has surprised him into wakefulness? But it’s not entirely
silent. Is it the strange light? Joshua leans up on an elbow
and peers between the boards, over the wheezing form of his
slumbering old neighbor. Just beyond lies a young woman, a girl
really, her hair hanging damp and her face pale – but oh, so
lovely as she gazes on a gurgling infant, minutes old. Her husband
is farther off, kicking straw out into the night and gathering
more from a manger.
Joshua drifts again into sleep, imagining the most amazing music
on the wind.
(Merry Christmas. All year. To people I like more than you know.)
--------------------------------------
Visit marvinpayne.com!
"...come unto Christ, and lay hold upon every good gift..." (from the last page of the Book of Mormon)

Click here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2005 Meridian Magazine. All Rights Reserved.