
[Happy pre-Halloween! All week long the Mercury has been publishing classic tales of local Halloween horror from our archives, as well as brand spankin’ new (and creeeeepy) pieces… in this one, writer Santi Elijah Holley tags along on an actual local exorcism.โeds]
On an unseasonably warm Saturday morning, Archbishop James Cloud and I meet at a Starbucks in Bethany, a small suburb north of Beaverton. Bishop Cloud wears a clerical collar, with a crucifix hanging from a golden chain around his neck. He is in his mid-40s, has a playful smile, and could otherwise be mistaken for the dungeon master of a local D&D group. But weโre not here to play games. In less than an hour, Iโll be accompanying Bishop Cloud a half-mile down the road to watch him perform a home exorcism.
Finishing our coffee, I ask Bishop Cloud what to expect. Itโs my first exorcism, after all, and I donโt know the protocol.
โIf you have a faith, pray,โ he tells me. โGet yourself centered, ready to rock, because if you go in unarmored and without faith, you can be attacked, as retribution for what Iโm going to be doing. It can get scary.โ
I nod solemnly. I wonder if my faith is sufficient. I canโt remember the last time I attended church, and lately my faith has been more like acid refluxโstronger some days than others. Nevertheless, I do what I can to center myself, to get ready to rock. I ask Bishop Cloud if he expects much resistance or struggle during todayโs exorcism. He explains that the dark entities, such as the ones we might soon encounter, respond only to force. Occasionally they put up a hell of a fight.
โIโm not there as a negotiator,โ he says. โIโm not there as, ‘Hey, Iโm your buddy, letโs have a nice conversation.โ Iโm there to kick ass and take names. Iโm there as a soldier. Iโm going into battle. And, by God, I ainโt giving them any quarter.
โI like a good fight,โ he continues with a laugh. โBring it, son. Letโs do this. Letโs get it on like Donkey Kong.โ
