Week 2: ~12,000 words
/From the back door of the diner, all you could see were two glowing orbs like pupil-less eyes. The sounds fed into the darker thoughts, the way dust funneled through the alley tearing air to a buzz, and don’t forget that growl of the engine. What great beast lurked in the dusty shroud?
It had a jaunty whistle, though.
“A radio? In a car?” Margaret asked for not the first time. “Don’t that distract you?”
The bootlegger sat in the cab without a word. All ready for the coming storm, he had on goggles pulled off the Red Baron’s body but the boy was too young for that. In nice clothes—nice and dirty—with a bandanna over his mouth and nose. Hard to say if he was enjoying the broadcast, but she wasn’t. She was busy sweating hefting a 5-gallon jug from the back. She paid $50 a jug, knowing half was water. It wouldn’t have been this heavy otherwise, heavy, but not this heavy, and a gentleman might’ve offered to unload it for her—heck even a good businessman would’ve offered, but this boy from Appleseed didn’t need to be a gentleman or a good businessman. He had a good business. Could charge what he wanted. Help how he wanted. Listen to whatever show he wanted.
She went back under the tarpaulin.
Box of tools.
A spare tire.
“There’s only one jug back here.” She went around the cab to knock on the door. “Hey, I paid for two and there’s only one back here.”
The boy looked down on her saying nothing.
“Now I’m a good customer but I won’t continue to be with this kind of service.”
“Tell the sheriff,” he said and the engine revved up to head out at speeds too dangerous for a town the size of Oskaloosa, Oklahoma.
Never heard of it?
Look on the map.
Still can’t find it?
What you need to do is get a map from 1862 before the Homestead Act then look at a map from anywhere in the 1920s and you see that little speck you thought was a printing error? That’s Oskaloosa.
But family, this story takes place in 1935 and don’t you dare look on a map after that because it won’t be there.
~
“Who’s winning?” Margaret asked as she came in the diner. Not a one in here offered assistance with the jug, either, but that was all the better. From the kitchen, hidden by a half wall and a curtain, she quietly turned on the tap, hoping their banter covered the sound.
“Shef,” one of the farmers said. “As usual.”
“Ah, you’re only here for the drink.”
“And the smile of Ms. Tully. But how’s it--” The farmer heard something.
“Just washing up.” She came out from the kitchen with a towel in hand. “Y’all may be cheats and scoundrels, but this here is a respectable establishment. Now who’s parched?”
The hands went up.
The glasses went round.
The faces got red.
The pot got bigger.
Margaret even won a hand, being the only clearheaded one. She wasn’t trying to peek but it was hard when the banker yawned with his Hearts over head.
The quarters and dimes got passed around, but one stack kept growing.
The farmer said, “Maybe you oughta come work the fields, Shef.”
The general store owner had a good hand coming up, he just felt it in his bones, like he knew the rain was coming any day. “I’ll knock a dollar off all y’all’s tabs. What do you say?”
The harbinger wind howled round and banged the Dutch shutters against the siding.
“You’re out,” the sheriff growled.
“Can be a dollar each and y’all just spot me a dollar collective.”
“Walk it off.”
“You’ll see! I just know I almost—”
“Go home, Willy!” he barked.
“Now wait just a damned second! I had the best hand last time but you just—you said—you—you!” He rose up out of his chair so quick the thing tipped back onto the hardwood with a thunderous clatter.
The men at the table went quiet. No running the tap at this juncture.
When Margaret came running out the kitchen, she witnessed the sheriff slowly rise up. He didn’t have his star on him tonight. Probably for the best because where the star went, the revolver followed.
A friendly game of Texas Hold’em was set to turn into a not so friendly game of fisticuffs.
Margaret said, “Now, Willy, why don’t you check your coat pocket? You’re always stuffing your winnings in there. And Sheff, what you doing bullying this boy? How about another drink? I was just turning the stove on, too, for a late night snack if y’all looking to soak up the gut rot.”
Willy desperately rummaged in his coat pockets at the rack, careful to take only his coat and take it far from the others, lest they think something untoward was happening.
A few hands went up for drinks and a few more for sandwiches.
Two hands went up in celebration. “You were right, Ms. Tully! I’m a darn fool. I always stuff my winnings or change in my pocket and play with it as I’m heading home. Lets me savor that victory. Watch me win back all I lost with just this lucky dollar. Sheff, a sandwich on me? No hard feelings. Two more sandwiches, Ms. Tully.”
The bacon and eggs joined the smoke in the air and then all the sandwiches came out toasted. Sheff took two and said, “Thank ya, Willy. No hard feelings.” There wasn’t another leftover for him.
“Fifty-one,” Margaret muttered into her accounting book, writing in red.
~
Margaret carried away the glasses and plates into the back.
“Can we help, Ms. Tully?” Willy asked with five dollars stuffed in his pockets and his hat in hand.
“Yes, Willy, you can help by going and getting.”
The glassy-eyed lot of them said their thank yous and goodbyes and Margaret Tully took to cleaning. First the dishes. Rinse, wash, dry, and place them in the cabinet and seal it.
As she turned away from the sink window, just a screen of dark dust out there that even the White Way couldn’t do more than cast silhouettes, one such silhouette approached the window.
The shadow watched through the glass as she cleared the table.
“Save all them crumbs for Abner,” she said in her mocking tone. She brushed them down into a sieve, knowing it unnecessary but still worrying what dust might do to her baby’s baby, and the dust that fell out—if it were sugar, it’d be enough for a cake. She worried what this dust might be doing to all them.
Then last and probably least, she grabbed her broom and dust pan.
No matter how she stuffed cloths and towels under the doors and around the windows, dust got in. Even the church with its vestibule entrance had a thick layer of dust whenever you opened the hymn book. No power greater than Gods’ but perhaps there were other matters to attend.
It’d all be back in the morning but there was some dignity in leaving a place tidy. She gathered up a nice little pile then listened for the wind. Today, the leeward side was the window above the sink.
She set the dust pan on the floor.
Then unlocked the window.
Then she bent down for her dust pan.
And when she rose to toss out the day’s filth…
She sneezed and it went all in the sink.
She just sort of stared a moment. “Messy Margaret strikes again.”
~
The window got closed and locked as did the door behind her and once outside with a scarf pulled over her mouth, she circled the building to latch the shutters. They did their part, however small, in keeping the dust out. And silhouettes.
If she were new in this one-horse town, it’d be easy to get lost on a night like now. The storm was in full force. Maybe she could’ve waited it out. They never lasted long. But it wasn’t the big one. And she liked getting home before the witching hour.
As she followed those too high orbs lighting a vague way down Main Street, she couldn’t hear herself think. A gale force wind sent nipping particulates across her cheeks and she turned away as she trudged on.
And at first, she thought her mind must be playing tricks on her. A bit of Midnight Madness striking a weary mind. But her eyes kept on it, trying to focus, trying to filter out the smokescreen, until she was certain:
Someone was following her.
“Howdy, neighbor!” she called.
But she did not stop.
She released her clutch upon her scarf to wave. “We best be getting home before this really picks up.”
Her voice could be getting carried two towns over for all she knew. And perhaps the same was true for the silhouette.
She continued down the street, her pace a bit faster now.
“Gotta get out of this storm!” she tried again.
Faster still.
Losing her breath, catching a mouthful of dust instead.
Soon she was at her gate. It wasn’t more than a block away from the diner. Everyone knew her house. Everyone knew she had sugar or recipes or a hammer. Everyone knew, unlike everyone else, she kept her doors locked.
How many times had that saved her?
Not now.
She had her key in hand before she ever stepped on the wooden porch. It really needed replacing and she meant to last year before it got cold but maybe this year, maybe this summer, and the boards would sit tight together.
Her eyes never left the figure behind her. They were just across the street now. She hoped they’d pass.
Perhaps if she had prayed…
She fumbled for the lock but aiming without looking is bad business.
She felt the hole with her thumb but when she tried lining it up, her hands trembled too fiercely and she missed, lost her grip on the keys, and they fell.
Still her eyes stayed locked on the figure nearly at the gate. If he—and she was sure they were a he now--opened that gate, she’d scream. She’d scream the whole way. She’d scream whatever happened.
But like the lock, it’s bad business feeling for keys without looking. Especially on a deck with space between the boards. The moment she felt the metal of the key, she nudged it just enough to fall through to the dirt beneath.
She had to look.
The keys had disappeared into the abyss where no light reached tonight.
No more looking.
No more waiting.
Just screaming.
Bang, bang, bang!
“SARAH!” she screamed. “Uncle Pete! Unlock this right now.”
Bang, bang, bang!
A look back.
Where was he?
She heard a lock undo.
He was coming through the gate.
“Gonna wake the neighborhood like that.”
The front door opened and Margaret Tully charged in, knocking the book out of her teenage daughter’s hand.
“Who walked you ho—? Uncle Pete? He’s long…” At 17, Sarah was taller than her Mama and a good deal sturdier, too, but a mother on a mission can’t be stopped. Before Sarah could finish a thought, Mama disappeared into the kitchen, but she got her answers when Mama returned with Uncle Pete’s shotgun (Gods rest his soul).
She aimed at the door.
They waited several minutes. Long enough Sarah almost said something but thought better of it.
Then Mama lowered the gun.
She didn’t put it away, but she did remove her finger.
“No one came by tonight?” she asked.
“No, Mama.”
They waited several minutes more and this time Sarah did say something.
“My only suitor was Abner.” She waited for Mama’s response. “I didn’t let him in though.”
Mama breathed finally. “I brought him a present.”
“Any apple cores?”
“Two.”
“He’ll love them.”
Mama had come in charging but trembling. Now her nerves were still. Sarah had the opposite reaction. She was trembling as reality set in, her eyes scanning the window for anything but getting nothing. Mama put the gun back and instead put her arms around Sarah.
It was just them in this big house these days. Only a month since Gran passed and already a lot of things happened: the two had gotten closer, the schoolhouse closed, they started dragging themselves to church, and soon a lot more would.
Mama looked out the window a bit longer. Even a flashlight wouldn’t cut through. Best wait till morning to get the key she dropped. She felt braver with a babe to protect, but not to the point of foolishness.
“Now what are you doing up reading past midnight? That’s how your eyes fall out.”
“Waiting on you,” Sarah shot back. “The Board of Education sent a note. New teacher’s coming next week.”
“I guess we can take tomorrow to rest.”
“No church?”
“No church. But don’t go celebrating! Celebrating is a sin!”
Sarah stifled her smile until she was in Mama’s arms again and then let it spread wide. She hated that creepy old pastor.
~
In 1862, Congress passed what was known as the Homestead Act, signed by Lincoln on May 20. In 1863, the first settler took to living on and improving their land. Soon 3 million would follow with 1.6 million officially obtaining necessary documents for the 160 acres of nearly-free land. Nearly-free because there was a small registration fee, and the price of tools and materials to build a new house, and the fact that this was already Native land, some legally given to tribes after they’d been forced to move once before.
But to the ignorant, predominantly white settlers taking advantage of this, none of that mattered.
Do you know how long it takes to walk the length of 160 acres?
90 minutes without dillydallying.
Do you know how long it takes to tear up the grasslands, plow, plant, tend, and reap 160 acres?
A whole lot longer, family.
And these inexperienced farmers laid claims without a single thought to that and many found out a whole lot longer was in fact too long and parceled out acres here and there until the size was manageable and being neighborly with houses on either side was feasible after a hard day’s work.
With so many farmers, ranchers, miners, speculators, and the rest, they needed infrastructure. They cobbled it together like they cobbled together their houses. They weren’t the first to discover it but certainly they acted though they were.
For example, it didn’t make sense for so many farmers to head out to the City to sell their crops. That was time not spent growing their crop. So they set up somebody’s son to sell all the farmers’ crop in the City and then come back and pay them 90% of the earnings. And while he was out there, bring back some supplies for the farmers.
They later realized this was a store.
Then Farmer Fred started putting up fencing and his neighbor Farmed Ted argued Fred had intentionally lay claim to Ted’s land. Neither had any way to prove their stolen land was their own, but the collective commissioned the smith make a star and they pinned that to the ugliest, meanest man who wouldn’t hesitate to shoot someone. He locked up folks just for whistling at too high a pitch.
They called him Sheriff.
Then farmers started catching sick and a guy pretty good with a horse was put in charge of all hoarse throats. They wouldn’t be named such if they weren’t connected. They started calling him Doc and people thought he must be or they wouldn’t call him that. He did alright, as well as anyone should’ve expected, but eventually he got old and an apprentice replaced him who could actually read and the population boomed.
And with the farmers multiplying, there were a lot of children running around unable to read and that was no good because a church was coming next. So they set up the St. Thomas Aquinas church for the old pastor that seemed like he’d come as naturally as the town. He was ancient, as all pious folks were, and his long, gaunt fingers traced the words as he read them. His voice shivered and quake and he promised these wet years would continue so long as they kept up the intensive farmer.
“Rain follows the plow,” were his words and the words of old wisdom.
And 60 years later, 60 years after Oskaloosa was the official name for their little collective turned town, the curse came collecting.
It was, as many things are, the curse of ignorance.
Stolen land.
Poor farming.
The death of natural diversity.
All for a quick buck.
And little in Oskaloosa was set up in antagonism toward ignorance.
That little was Ms. Catherine Tully’s schoolhouse who passed 60 years later, a day short of 100, an age no one would question her fate, and soon a terrible dust storm five miles high would smite the folks for their ignorance.
~
The day had been pretty clear.
The coolness of March was giving way to April and little dust wafted through the air without a breeze so everyone could go about their business with their bandannas around their neck or perhaps stuffed in their pockets. Some of the ruder men used them in place of a handkerchief, but when the inevitable storm came, you knew they didn’t change them before putting them on.
But all in all, today it was easy to forget about their troubles: the drought, the economy, all the goodbyes to folk chasing a better life in California. Those faded into the background like a cricket’s song and however briefly, the idyllic days had returned.
Then Willy came running into the diner.
“You forget your hat, Willy?” Margaret asked.
“You gotta come look!”
A Cadillac on an old country road in the days after a dust storm announces itself like a war.
The curious from the diner joined the curious already in the town square and soon a little crowd formed almost higher than Willy could count without pulling off his socks, all to peer down main street at the cloud forming the horizon.
It approached until the haze faded and the red dot at the center grew larger until you saw there was green trim and it was in fact a car growling down the road and not some Otherworldly beast that had its sights set on Oskaloosa. The folks there always were worrying about that.
“That’s a bootlegger’s car.”
“Think it’s the boy from Appleseed?”
“He drives a truck,” Margaret said. Then added, “Don’t he?”
Willy gulped. “What do they want with us?”
Sheff was the last to join the crowd, if you didn’t count Sarah who only peeked up from her book and out from her shed at the conversation around the vehicle.
But when the crowd moved to the parking spots the Cadillac occupied in front of the general store, Sarah stayed on the bench in her shed and closed the door.
“Howdy, sir,” the sheriff said as a man in black stepped out of the car.
This stranger was not aged, perhaps in his early 30s, but there was something old about the twinkle in his eyes. The way he took in the rapidly expanded landscape, building a mental map of the town, comparing it with one already in his mind, erasing the most modern buildings, and looking, scanning, searching for some landmark to orient himself. Even in this town with low-lying buildings and their wide yards, the skyline hindered his view.
Not once did his gaze dip to the man addressing him, nor the crowd surrounding him. He was unconcerned with these folks. But they were concerned with him.
His clothes were as nice as his car. Black with crimson and green trim, and trim those clothes were on his slender body. His head stuck out above the crowd and if any folks ran up at this moment, they’d know exactly who everyone was gawking at and why. While his tight buttoned collar did a good job of hiding, it didn’t do a perfect job and just below, there were deep scars.
When his eyes eventually did condescend to meet the crowd, he regarded them wordlessly. The sort of wisdom of a man that knew to think before he spoke, the sort of wisdom of a man to who you listened when he spoke, and if he didn’t speak and instead started doing something, it must be important. So when his eyes settled on the sheriff’s badge and suddenly he stooped to reach back inside for the passenger seat, the town collectively held their breath and the sheriff readied his anger in place of his revolver, but the stranger was just grabbing his wide brimmed hat.
The crowd breathed once more.
Finally, he said, “Which one of you local yokels want to show me to the schoolhouse?”
There was disdain in his voice.
“Yokels?”
“Calling us ignorant.”
“Ignorant?”
“Uneducated, Willy. Illiterate. Idiots. Bumpkins. Fools. Stupid, stupid!”
Two murmurs at opposite ends ran through the crowd.
“The new teacher?”
“In that car? No… What do they pay teachers elsewhere?”
“City fools think reading people superior to feeding people!”
Both conversations found their way to either ear of the sheriff.
“Pardon, friend, but might I ask your name and business? I seen this sort of transportation and I know what company it follows. And what company it attracts. This here is a Christian society and we don’t mind keeping the schoolhouse closed.”
“I’m sure you don’t,” he replied slowly. “But the board of education does. And I can already see I have a lot of work to do here. And a lot to undo. Don’t worry. The car won’t bite. If you’re understandably green, I’ll take you for a spin sometime, Sheriff.”
The sheriff didn’t much care for the accusations in that answer. “Your name, boy.”
“Call me Ishmael.”
Margaret could see the rising tension as red filled up the sheriff’s face. “That’s certainly a unique name, sir. You’ve had a long trip, I imagine. Perhaps someone could show you to the schoolhouse to get you acquainted.”
“I’d be touched if you did.”
She raised her hands to say not her, just now realizing she still held a pen and notepad with someone’s order half-written. “I’ve got my diner to tend to. But—SARAH!” she yelled suddenly.
Her eyes trained over his shoulder and it made him turn his head to see a tall, lean, slapped together, wooden shed with a pitched roof and occupancy for one. The door stayed shut a minute. As if the occupant, this Sarah, was finishing up her business. He raised an eyebrow at the thought of putting such infrastructure in the center of the town square.
Eventually, the door opened.
“My daughter is not otherwise occupied and she’ll be one of your students, one of the best and brightest you’ll ever see.”
He doubted that but did not say. “Thank you, ma’am. I’ll make introductions and y’all can return to your little lives.”
“Little lives?” someone muttered.
He marched across the brown grass to meet his star pupil. She had a book in hand. The Secret of the Old Clock Tower.
“I respect you rising above your environment and learning to read, but I cannot ignore the locale. A latrine?”
Sarah’s jaw dropped in confusion. Her eyes found the crowd still watching, though her mother had gone back inside. Perhaps if the windows had been cleaned, she’d see Mama watching through the window as well. But when she searched for answers over her shoulder, she realized. “You’re mistaken, sir. This is a reading shed. One of the farm boys put it up. There’s a door so it keeps the dust out and when the wind comes, it don’t turn the page on me.”
“It doesn’t.”
“I assure you it does!” she said, wondering how this newcomer could argue with her. Men in this town always thought they knew everything and apparently men in other towns thought the same.
“It looks like an outhouse.”
“No, it don’t!”
“Doesn’t.”
“Glad you see reason.”
“Your grammar. If you’re the exemplary student, I worry about the rest of the crop. How’d your poor, previous teacher survive so long?”
“Don’t speak ill of my gran.”
The stranger caught his tongue. And softened it.
“Your gran was the previous teacher? Ms. Tully? Making you Sarah Tully?”
“First true thing you said. And maybe I didn’t take to every lesson but she taught me just fine to not let myself be bullied by some--”
“By some fool from out of town. Let me start over. I apologize for my initial tone. My prejudice of country folk maybe extended unfairly onto you. I’m sorry, Sarah Tully.”
This wasn’t the first time she’d been insulted by an adult or by a boy or even by a man belittling her on purpose or because of how he was raised, but it might’ve been the first time she remembered one correcting himself.
“It won’t happen again. You have my word.”
“What’s your name, sir?”
“Call me Ishmael.”
She let out a laugh. “Ha! That for true? Or did your folks just fancy Moby Dick?”
“You’ve read it?”
“Gran made me.”
“My wife’s favorite book, even before it found its place in the canon.”
“Your wife don’t—doesn’t name you.”
“Maybe that’s why she liked me, though.”
“A flimsy foundation for a marriage.”
“Maybe that’s why she isn’t here.”
It was Sarah’s to soften her tone. “Sorry, sir, for whatever happened to her. My daddy’s gone, too. Sir… Ishmael, Mr. Ishmael? What did my mother send you to me for?”
He gathered himself with a big breath. “I want to see the schoolhouse and perhaps meet your classmates to arrange the start of classes once more. I’ll take you in my Cadillac.”
They returned to the crowd. It had dispersed enough to perhaps be called a company instead, but the sheriff watched with a suspicious eye. He could love and accept all, as the Good Book told him, but he didn’t have to trust them.
When the new teacher pulled out of the parking spaces, before he put the car in drive, he had to ask his burning question.
“So your mother owns the diner?”
She nodded.
He had to be sure.
“And her name’s Tully, too.”
“’Course.”
“Margaret Tully?”
“You got a good memory, sir.”
“I do now. I do.”
He drove off down the street, following her guidance. Sarah assumed he wasn’t used to the dust yet, heck even she wasn’t, because as a smile crept over his face, a tear formed in his eye.
~
In 1967, our nation closed its last one-room schoolhouse, but in 1930s rural America, they ruled America. The Church of St. Thomas Aquinas set up Oskaloosa’s to give children and adults the opportunity of reading the Good Book themselves. Did that violate a separation of church and state? No, because in those early barbaric days, the state had no involvement in the schools and it wasn’t until 1909 that Boards of Education were nationally instituted.
By then, Ms. Tully Sr. had already separated church and school.
~
Sarah was meant to be directing her new teacher to the schoolhouse, but she got lost in the leather seats and knobs. Instinct told her to play with them all and he didn’t say nothing when she did. He kind of watched. Not supervised. Not cautioning. Observed. That sort of look like at Christmas time when you’re trying to memorize the look on Mama’s face as she opens your gift.
Sarah stopped playing. But didn’t stop thinking about playing. She had never been in a car like this before. A few pick-up trucks and farm equipment, of course, but nothing that reeked of luxury. She didn’t like it.
But when they arrived at the schoolhouse, she hesitated to step out.
Maybe she liked that it was different.
“How did you know where—?”
He cut her off. “It has a recognizable shape. Clearly not a house or business. Clearly not the church. I got lucky.”
“Unlucky if you wound up in Oskaloosa.”
The teacher went to inspect his workplace. He’d be spending a lot of time in here, except in summers, of course, and it was almost summer. An odd time for the Board to send a new teacher, if you asked her, but adults rarely did. Regulations are regulations, however nonsense.
The walls were painted white last summer. Sarah had helped. Gran had supervised. Some desks dated back to before she was born, but whenever one broke, it got replaced, and since they didn’t all break on the same day, an array of history was on display. Various names carved into the desks, some with hearts round them. Rude words. Crude pictures. The roof was all new as a tornado came by and ripped it off three years back—a scary time in Oskaloosa but now, the folks might welcome a tornado if it took all the dust with it and dumped it on Appleseed.
When Sarah chased him in, she heard escape from his lips, “It’s not the same.”
“Same? Same as what?”
“Not as I expected.”
“Reading too much Little House on the Prairie?” Sarah had a gnawing suspicion inside her.
The newcomer rifled through the desk drawers, but though he found names, notes, and even drafts of letters for parents that got a second, gentler attempt, nothing seemed to satisfy his curious itch. “There must be something,” he muttered.
“What’s it you’re searching for?”
He ignored her because one drawer was locked.
It did not open with a jiggle and he went once more through the drawers looking for its key.
She would not help him until he proved himself. “Say, Mister, where are you from?”
He moved onto the library, a single bookcase in the corner with texts on all manner of subjects: math, grammar, history, geography, a dictionary, and the rest novels of varying quality.
“Paris.”
“France? You don’t got no accent like them.”
“Illinois.”
Paris at that time would’ve been close to 10,000 folks. 10,000 folks don’t get you taught in Geography class.
Sarah grabbed her grandmother’s—well, his pointing stick and slapped the map. “Point to it on the map, Ishmael.” Then she dropped her impression and added, “Sir.”
Without so much as looking up, he jabbed empty green land. Without a label and without knowing better, Sarah doubted he’d be anywhere in the right vicinity of Paris, Illinois, but with a bit more insight, her jaw would’ve dropped.
Instead she shrugged.
His investigation turned up nothing, but frustration.
“Tell me about your gran.”
~
The pastor arrived in time to see the schoolhouse be assembled.
“You gathered some fine workers, Father,” Ms. Catherine said.
She’d seen him creep toward them since the roof started being patched and it took his ancient legs a long while to carry him. He might’ve once been a tall man, but he had since curled over with age and his features existed behind a thick white beard and even thicker eyebrows. What was lost on his head seemed glued to his face.
“They’re proud folks, but they know to submit.”
“Soon they’ll be reading all the verses on their own,” she said.
It wasn’t long before the children had their letters memorized and some of the youngest picked up words quickest and helped their elder kin to sound out each word and after no more than six months, every child had a book in hand and affection in heart.
The men, on the other hand, arrived before dusk and left before dark and six months in, they had affection in their heart but Trent Walker led the way on pride in stupidity.
Ms. Catherine asked him to come to the board and spell his name.
“X,” he scrawled in chalk.
He turned to the class. “It’s good enough for any contract!”
The class knew his daddy was the sheriff.
The class knew to laugh.
Ms. Catherine knew, too, but didn’t. “I don’t mind a learner needing extra time, but I do mind folks who squander my time. What are you here for if not to learn?”
“I’m sorry, Ms. Catherine, I am. I’m here to learn.”
“Are you?”
“Yes, yes, of course. Cross my heart.”
“Then I’m sorry for doubting—”
“Here to learn about you!” He clapped and had a good guffaw that the class knew to join in.
After class, Trent tried to apologize without an audience. “Let me make it up to you. I’ll show you I can be an ass, but that deep down I am trying, and maybe you’ll see something special in me too, like I see in you.”
“I have no romantic interests, Trent. Please ask your son for help on those ABCs.”
There was one man, Herman Bartleby, that did not attend classes, but he was in the church after service running his finger over words, repeating what the pastor had said. The words the pastor had said and the words Herman touched were not the same words but an illiterate man had no concept of that.
“Herman, my roof is leaking something awful since the last storm. Could you—?”
“Of course, Ms. Catherine. Today?”
“It’s a day of rest,” she said.
“But tomorrow the children will be in. And there’s rain a-coming.”
“You raise a good point. Shall we head there together?”
And as he fixed the roof, she’d read for him stories. He liked stories. Who doesn’t like stories? Even Trent liked stories, so long as they were his or he could see himself as the hero in them.
But as she read, as she often had to, she stopped to cough. Herman hopped off the roof without even using the ladder and ran inside to catch her as she collapsed to her knees, trying to extricate the phlegm with only her lungs. He patted her back, a little roughly, to help and eventually she recovered but the reading finished for the day.
Soon the roof was fixed, but she’d enjoyed his company so she asked for help with the windows. They didn’t open. He’d work during morning classes and listen in. The man was simple and unassuming and he took to learning the stories quickly as many do when given opportunity and patience.
“The Bible is a bit unfriendly to beginners. Heck, it’s unfriendly for even me. This one is a bit better,” she said after class.
And with what he picked up both listening and watching, he read better than Trent within a week. But within a week, the windows all opened to let in a breeze for summer and he’d finished another book, twice actually to really understand it.
“Herman, you tricked me!” she declared.
“I haven’t! See?” He demonstrated how easy it was to open each window.
“You’ve been here spending time with me pretending you can’t read just so I’ll read them to you. That’s your dirty trick.”
“No, no, I just know the sounds you taught me, and I don’t have much else to do when sleep won’t come so I just light a candle and practice.”
Then the door didn’t hang even. So he took to that, but he was too good with his hands and that took only a day to look at it and a day to get proper parts made. And in that time he finished another book.
“You’re always welcome at classes, Herman.”
“You’d welcome a wolf, but Trent wouldn’t welcome a sheep unless he planned on eating it.”
It didn’t matter how she persisted, what she promised, even kicking Trent out, an empty threat since Sheriff Walker would not accept that—Herman wouldn’t attend.
But she had nothing else for him.
Four weeks of tasks and he’d done such a good job that nothing new needed fixing. Sure, she’d see him around and maybe in church, but it wasn’t the same as everyday and in the privacy before students arrived or after they left. It wasn’t the quiet moments when it was just them.
“I could teach you!” she said. “You helped me so much.”
“But Ms. Catherine, you have classes in the morning till afternoon and then the grown-ups come after supper. When would you fit me in?”
“Come by place at night, Herman. I’ll fit you in.”
Friday night, Herman arrived at the Tully house in his Sunday best with a book she loaned him from the library. Ms. Catherine’s plan was that they’d head out to church in his Sunday best, slightly wrinkled.
However, she had to turn him away. “I’m sorry, Herman. I promise next time.”
From the porch, he saw the pastor seated in her parlor before she closed the curtains with a somber expression.
~
The sudden request caught her off guard. But Sarah prided herself on being quick on her feet. “I don’t what you want to know but everyone liked her. Sometime around January, a boy was giving her lip because he didn’t want to chop wood but it was his turn! I did it just the day before. Gran did it on the weekend! But you know how boys are, thinking they’re already grown, and so he shoots up cussing out of his chair and grabs the ax and says, ‘You wanna see how good I am at chopping?’ It all happened so fast all we could do was stare. We all knew he wasn’t talking about wood at that point. Gran asked, ‘What do you want to happen next?’ and he took a second to think before settling down and going to chop wood.” Sarah took a second to settle herself. “I think if you locked a lion in with her, she’d come out queen of the jungle.”
“Tigers live in the jungle. Lions are the savanna.”
She doubted very much Georgia had an lions but sometimes it was best not to argue with a teacher.
“Chopping wood at her age? No one ever thought to let the old gal retire?”
“They don’t exactly ask my opinions on such things.”
“Tell them anyway.”
“Gran said the same…”
He’d spent that whole story searching with no fruits. Nothing on the door frame. Nothing under the Gran’s desk or the students’. When he opened the sash window, he frowned deeper than elsewhere, testing its smooth track and finding trouble in its fresh coat of paint.
His goal was clear when he returned to the desk.
He gave it so violent a tug the whole thing moved and white scratched appeared near the feet.
Gone or not, his or not, this was her Gran’s desk that he abused. “Sir, please just the littlest of respect for her property.”
“I’m sorry, Sarah. I need in that drawer. Where’s the ax?”
Her eyes went wide and she held her breath with an internal struggle, before she stepped outside to the chopping stump. The ax was locked away in a shed. But she reached under the stump and came back in with a handful of dirt that held a dull, golden prize: the key.
It fit perfectly in the locked drawer.
With trepidation, Sarah watched him pull it open, not sure why, not sure what inside her gave her these shivers, but certain she could trust them.
Inside was a Bible.
“That’s it?” he said.
“No…” Sarah couldn’t put her astonishment into words. Parents often came by asking why their child didn’t have more verses memorized and Gran would tell them they were at the wrong place. Whatever the old ways were, Gran had shirked them. She didn’t attend church. She didn’t keep a Bible. She said she feared but did not love.
“Gran was not a pious woman. She kept us out of church each Sunday.”
“As she should. The best defense against sin is education. Immorality and ignorance go hand-in-hand.”
Sarah bit her lip. Was that a common saying? How else could he quote Gran?
~
The teacher drove at speeds faster than any of the Gods’ creations past the farmland in a man-made machine, but began to coast with his eyes in the sky as he saw a bird dropping dust upon the crops. A loud, noisy bird. It had an unsettling rhythm. The chop of air. The buzz of wings. Like a bug too big.
His fascination almost laid his goals to rest then and there till Sarah screamed and he jerked the car before finding the ditch.
“What do you think you’re doing?”
“It’s been a long day’s drive. Perhaps this should be our last stop.”
Sarah’s curious itch kept getting the better of her. The teacher had stuffed Gran’s Bible into his Gladstone bag. She tried to peer inside. That bag might be her biggest clue to who this newcomer was and how he seemed aware of things he should not be aware of. But when he set it in the back with her, when his eyes weren’t on her, she found the bag locked with no means of opening. The combination could’ve been hundreds of possibilities, she reckoned, and there was no point raising his suspicion of her at this point.
They ventured out to the Bertrand farm. A rarity in the town because the 160 acres had not been parceled off. The Bertrands, dating back to 1880, had been good upstanding folk coming from a farm in Iowa to farm in Oklahoma. It was like they spoke to the land. And the land spoke back.
Just a decade prior to the Dust Bowl, other farmers scented their town like bread and popcorn as they burnt surplus hoping to drive up the prices, but the country had too much in store to care. At least they were warm without needing expensive coal. There was even talk of joining the Farm Strike until the National Guard began rounding up mob leaders who threatened the judges evicting farmers and the dairy trucks trying to deliver farm products.
Meanwhile, Bertrand Sr. did his part to support this town’s finances and bellies.
So Sarah directed the teacher there. “Several classmates work the farms with their parents. A good place to spread the word.”
Now that they approached, she added a caveat. “Remember, these folks value respect. They know they’ve earned theirs, but they don’t know if you’ve earned yours.”
“How do I know they’ve earned theirs?” he asked.
They arrived without an answer.
The workers played poker on their breaks. This wasn’t the high stakes game at the diner where a week’s wages might be on the table. This was a game of pennies and you knew someone meant business if a nickel got thrown in. Just something to pass the quiet time while eating a sandwich.
As the Cadillac pulled up, they regarded it as they might any other car then returned to their game. Once the teacher stepped out, alone, suddenly break time was over and it was back to work.
“What’s on the agenda for today, folks?”
The five here had not more than a quality shared among them: Young, old, black, white, male, female. Two exceptions: place of employ and disinterest in strangers.
“How old might you two be?” he asked the youngest.
“Whatever you’re selling, we ain’t buying so skedaddle before you look a fool,” said an older woman named Adelaide while another grabbed a wooden maul.
“I do not fear looking a fool, I do not fear not fitting in, I do not fear the violence of the ignorant. I only fear that such a cycle will repeat itself once more,” the teacher said. “School starts once more tomorrow.”
“Violence?” That got them all in good spirits at his expense. “A maul ain’t made for violence, friend. It’s made for service. And we got fence posts to replace. Come back tomorrow and maybe they’ll be free.”
“Hand it over.”
He waited for the maul.
“I’ll assist so no one’s too tired for reading tomorrow. Everyone’s welcome but it’s mandatory for minors.”
“Only farmers here.”
This crew saw little in the teacher to respect but if he was offering his services, maybe they’d find a place for him. After all, he wouldn’t be teaching much without any students so it was good to have a fall back.
Adelaide spat. “You can hold the posts.”
Sarah watched from the car, deafened by the distance and the windows, as to exactly what was transpiring but her new teacher lugging a cart full of fence posts while marching beside a boy and an armed woman did not sit right with her.
Still, were he to survive in this county, he needed to prove himself to its people.
And to Sarah.
~
Tall though he was, to steady it in place he needed to hug the post as a worker swung the maul near his head to drive it in. The older workers offered up Junior, the boy, about Sarah’s age, perhaps younger or perhaps just a bit thinner, to stand on the cart full of posts and swing with the brunt of his power but when he hesitated, that Adelaide took over to show him how it was done. She swung and if the teacher got hit, he shouldn’t have been there. But he did not get hit, though it came near, and he did not flinch.
Instead, he spoke up after the second post. “Perhaps work would go quicker if we switched spots.”
“I been doing this half my years, and you think you can do better than me?”
“No disrespect intended, but I’ve seen how you can do it. You haven’t seen how I can.”
She burned her gaze into his eyes but if the threat of a crushed skull couldn’t do it, why did she think a stare would faze him? Begrudgingly, she handed off the maul.
With a deep breath, the teacher watched the crop duster from before as it landed down the way on a dirt strip. The plane seemed to be the first thing to unsettle him today. But who wasn’t afraid of flying just a little?
He draped his coat over the side of the cart. Then without the button on his sleeve, he rolled them up fine. And lastly, his undone collar revealed pinched, glossy skin running down his collarbone and deeper into his shirt. Where the scars stopped was impossible to say.
Crack
The worker’s eyes went big as she pulled further away. Just an extra inch to save her.
The teacher’s arc had violence within it but following the first swing came an identical second. A third. A fourth. Power surged from his astride position up through the hips into the shoulder and at the crest, his hand slid down the shaft.
Crack!
For the next post, the trajectory did not change but the speed did. He’d found his rhythm. Nothing would stop him but completion. His eyes trained on that post as if he was not seeing a wood as his target but some vendetta.
CRACK!
Deeper the fence post sank into the dirt.
“HEY!” Adelaide’s anger rolled over itself in her voice.
The teacher stopped his swing.
“You did that on purpose!”
“I did.”
The admission flabbergasted her. In all her days, never did she expect someone to admit it!
“You’re an insightful one. I hit that fence post on purpose.”
“You know what a caved skull does to a smart mouth?”
“You there, boy,” he called to the thin lad from before. He’d been watching as wide-eyed as her. “Was that last swing any different?”
Junior started to stammer before coming to grips. “No, sir. I mean, I didn’t notice anything off about it.”
“You weren’t worried until someone shouted?”
“No, sir.”
“Was it me shouting when that hammer came near my ear?”
“No, sir…” Guilt seeped into his voice and he averted his eye from her.
If her death stare didn’t work on the teacher, it’d work on the boy whether he looked or not. She scrambled up the cart to snatch that maul from the man. Her huffing and puffing and the wild look in her eyes—he knew what the thought bouncing around that head of hers.
“Consider your first strike because retaliation requires no hesitation.”
Before this came to a head, an older man hobbled toward them from the barn. The cane he used for support was enough but just the same, the boy went running.
“Dad! We saw you up there.” There was an uncanny likeness. Needing a few more inches and a few more pounds, surely, but the strong nose was the same. “One day, you’ll show me a roll, won’t you?”
“At dinner, sure. We get a new hand?”
“A teacher,” Adelaide scoffed.
“And why’s there derision in your voice?” Bertrand Sr. was a stout man, even being over six-foot. The wiry graying hair in his beard held all manner of dust but it didn’t bother him.
“Is this green bean what we want the next generation turning into?”
“Separating our farmers from our scholars got us into this drought. We need farmers teaching and we need learners plowing.”
“The babes can’t plow if they’re locked in school.”
“Yes, I understand, this farm certainly can’t survive without babes, can it, Adelaide?” He regarded her with a cold tone. Then he turned his attention to the teacher finally. “Sir, the name’s Russel Bertrand Sr. And this here’s Junior or Russ if you take to him. He’s got 15 years in him and he knows his reading fine, but his arithmetic could use work. Do you know much about the agricultural sciences?”
The teacher began buttoning up his collar and sleeves once more, but left the coat folded over his arm. It was too warm for such dressings after exertion.
“I’ll help him.”
“And what should he call you?”
“Ishmael will do. ‘Sir’ if it’s too odd.”
“Ishmael will do. A name should command the full usage of the tongue if it’s to be worthy of respect.”
~
About this time, Sarah had some business to attend to.
She crept out of the car, keeping a watchful eye on the folks arguing. The maul seemed no longer a concern with Mr. Bertrand in control. But she required the smallest amount of discretion here and when no one was looking, she went around the barn.
There was a sweaty farmhand on the other side. Certainly it was getting warm, yes, he hammered away at the new strip of siding with nails in his mouth, but the sweat pouring from him seemed in excess to her.
Whatever his particular ailment was, it was none of her business. She was only thankful that she could slink by with heavy footfalls without drawing his attention but when he stopped pounding, she stopped walking.
He muttered something to himself as he took a new nail.
Sarah’s eyebrow cocked.
Family, that wasn’t English. Nor Spanish. Nor any other language she’d heard here or there. But the world was large and she tried not to think it strange enough to stop her mission.
It’d been a long day and how much longer was untold. She knew the Bertrand farm. She knew Russ. She knew where the outhouse was, though she much preferred to go in-house.
And as she exited, she heard a scream unlike any she thought possible by a human.
The agony seemed to ferment in his belly before erupting out in boiling, gaseous pleas for Grace but those prayers fell on deafened ears and Sarah was the first on the scene.
She did not see what happened first to split his leg in uneven twain but the man already had the jean scrunched up revealing a foot hanging on by one flap of ankle skin. At first, she looked away, repulsed as any might by the bone and the gore and things only doctor’s should know exist, but it was her duty to help this man how she might.
She began screaming to as she raced to him.
Then stopped racing but kept screaming.
The teacher was the next on the scene, his pace quickened further by Sarah’s distress. He brandished the maul and did not drop it.
“Snakes!” she repeated from the ground.
His eyes scanned for any near but he saw none.
Another farmhand took over handling the injured, but Junior left his father’s side to take to Sarah with more care than the teacher. “What do you mean, Sarah Tully? Did you get bit by a snake? You didn’t hear a rattler, did you?” He yanked at her shoe to see her leg.
“No! Snakes!” and she hissed the final letter like one herself.
“You got bit by multiple?” When he revealed her leg, not a mark was found.
“Not me!”
The boy looked perplexed at the scene, at the blood, at the man in the distance that had little hope for his life, let alone for his leg. “I don’t think a snake bite or even many could do that.”
Mr. Bertrand, however, pieced together an account of the events. “That fool Harry probably stepped into a nest and when he felt one climb up pant-leg, he took to striking his own foot. Junior, how do we protect our legs?”
“Pants in boots,” the boy said, checking his own.
“No, that…” Sarah started to stammer. She stood of her own accord, shaking off her friend. That was nonsense. Illogical. It wasn’t what she saw. It was wrong!
“Y’all should head out,” Mr. Bertrand said. “Take the boy with you. Work is done for the day while we tend to the injured. I’ll tell the other workers to send their kids tomorrow.”
“That’s not what—!” Sarah yelled but her teacher cut her off.
“Thank you, sir. I’ll take good care of them.”
She kept fighting to say her piece as the teacher ushered her away. Mr. Bertrand had no interest in changing his mind and Russ thought she’d caught madness from the situation, giving her little mind but much sympathy.
She did not quiet until the teacher looked her in the eye and said, “I believe you.”
They marched to the car and in the backseat, she felt her own legs. She had never seen inside a leg before, but she had legs. There were no vacant pockets in her flesh. The fool Harry, as Mr. Bertrand had put it, hadn’t stepped in a nest of snakes. The nest of snakes had been inside him.
She tucked her pants into her boots.
“Russ, how bad is it to get bit?” she whispered.
“Not too bad if it’s not a rattler. You hardly feel the bite until later, but the bite ain’t the problem. The infection is.”
She pulled her sleeve down. She’d had a fever before. No problem.
“They say if you get bit, always keep the snake.”
We put our dogs down for the same offense, but you keep the snake? she thought. Too late anyway.
~
On occasion, the teacher glanced in his rear-view mirror to catch the girl’s eyes but her thoughts were out the window miles away. She had more to say, certainly, but she wasn’t saying it.
Junior, on the other hand, wouldn’t quit yammering. “I ain’t never seen an accident like that.”
“And I hope we never have to again,” Sarah muttered.
“Even when my pa got his leg crushed by a horse, it certainly didn’t cleave off like that. You ever see the insides of a person, Sarah Tully?”
“I have now!” The teacher’s eyes darted to the mirror as her voice rose a little.
“What was it like?”
“Junior, I don’t particular like the memory nor dwelling in it.”
He grabbed at his leg, flexing his foot to see how the muscles moved and digging his fingers in deep to get a sense how big the bone was within his calf. “I can certainly feel there’s meat inside and surely we’re not so different from beasts, but—”
The car skidded to a stop so suddenly there was impact against the seat behind the teacher. He whipped around with impatient fury in his eyes. “Boy! Do you not hear what’s she saying? She’s asking you ever so politely, ‘Enough!’”
Sarah rubbed her head. “Sir, what in tarnation was that? Do you want to send me home bruised? Gran tolerated no whooping and neither will Mama.”
The air was thick and uncomfortable and it wasn’t just the dust. He searched for an apology but then his eyes locked on where Divine chance had set to place this disagreement.
Just down the way was the largest building in town. A few modern businesses had been constructed of brick, but wood houses ruled this land. Brick? Wood? This was made of neither for this was no house. This was no modern business. This here with the two spires was the Church of St. Thomas Aquinas.
Each spire was like some terrible and ancient creature had hammered a spike from under the crust, then liked it so much they did again. Folks here saw the stain glass with its 12 symmetrical circles and reckoned it a clock though there were no hands and no numbers. The actual clocks on all four sides were wrong. Wrong in different ways, mind you. One read 6:10, the next 3:11, the next 1:15, and finally 10:14. None moved. The clock never once corrected itself or stubbornly continued on its path. They simply sat as a reminder. Something to set your eyes upon and forever keep in your heart.
To an outsider, it must’ve been odd having a Gothic cathedral in town large enough to hide the population during a storm, but for those raised here, it was no different than being born with webbed fingers. If it didn’t cause problems, it was just how it always was and an assault on it was as an assault on the town.
After enough silence, Junior found his words again. “I just pray Mr. Styles will make it.”
“Enough!”
“Don’t yell at him.”
Junior’s eyes fell to the floor. Just rolled into town and already dusty. But what stuck out as odd to him was the Gladstone. The bag certainly wasn’t big enough to fit all his belongings unless very little belonged to him. Junior thought about stuffing his entire life into this and maybe, if he only needed a single spare set of clothes and the Bible, then maybe it’d all fit. But when he found the bag locked, and with the teacher already angered, he set it down.
“Say, Mr. Ishmael, what might you want us for today? I understand Sarah was showing you around, but surely I’m—”
The car roared to life, cutting the boy short, only to slow as they approached the church’s lot.
There was a girl holding a ball.
“Who is she?” the teacher asked Sarah.
“Never seen her to my knowledge.”
Her penetrating eyes met the teacher’s and soon the two were locked on one another.
Junior spoke up. “Maybe if you attended church every so often. That’s the vicar’s daughter.”
“Don’t get all high and mighty, Russ.”
“Tell me about the vicar.”
“A rough fellow, but the path to salvation is a windy one, they say, so I know it’s not my place to judge. He blew into town just this year with just a bindle and his daughter, but the pastor welcomed him in to his legion.”
“Then why don’t she come to class?”
Junior shrugged suddenly out of answers. “Maybe the church is all she needs to be one of them acolytes like her daddy. He moved up the ranks so quick you’d think he’d been born in that church.”
“You’re right, Sarah. Why doesn’t she? Let’s offer our invitation.”
His words were hospitable enough, but his tone—she knew a lie when she heard it and as the car revved up once more with awesome power just to go several feet, she kept her eyes on the girl who had never once looked away. A steady gaze like that… What had she seen?
~
“Hello, girl. What’s your name?”
Junior hadn’t known that either.
And after some waiting, neither did the teacher.
Certainly she was younger than the others, perhaps 10 if his estimation was generous, and the sort of rail thin of a picky child with unaccommodating parents. Her hair cut was rough. Definitely her daddy’s doing. But the feature that would forever stick in the teacher’s minds was those eyes. Hypnotically wide, dark, and unblinking.
Sarah and Junior stepped out to try their hand. Every child knew the silence adults expected when they were near, so perhaps some words from an older sibling type might coax her into speaking.
“You can call me Sarah if you like. That’s a nice ball you got.”
Nothing.
“They call me Junior, but I hate it. Sins of the father, right? What should we call you, honeybunch?”
A stare.
The two companions turned toward one another but the teacher could not look away from this porcelain doll. No child should be in such clean clothes, not even at a church.
“Can I help you, neighbors?” a voice called from the door. The vicar wore a white dalmatic trimmed with gold that matched his tooth as he smiled.
The teacher tore his focus from the girl. Then to Sarah’s surprise, his words were coated in honey. “Well hello! Don’t know if word reached you, but you got a new teacher in town. We’ll be opening up tomorrow. This your daughter? You can send her round 9:00 or earlier if you got other business.”
Was this his first time cracking a smile? Sarah did not like it.
“She’s learning her verses fine here, but it’s been a pleasure, sir.”
On either of them really.
“We’re happy to accommodate all subjects. Mr. Bertrand asked that his boy be taught the Earth sciences. We can certainly round that out with Heavenly scripture, too.”
“You think you’re more insightful than the Church?”
“I do.”
“Excuse you?”
While children scrapped with tooth and nail and all manner of tugging on hair, Junior had heard his parents argue enough in front of him to know these were fighting words. “Perhaps we should wait in the car, Sarah.”
“Perhaps you all should,” the vicar declared. “We’ll see you again sooner or later.”
Junior already had his hand on the door and Sarah was reaching for the teacher’s suspenders when an ancient voice bellowed from the back of the cathedral.
“Wait,” it croaked.
The vicar’s gold—toothed smile twitched as he steadied his breathing.
“Bring them to me.”
~
Baited breath bellowed from the ribbed vaulted ceilings as the party followed their chaperon past kaleidoscope stained glass windows. Wide though the structure was, it felt claustrophobic with tall candelabras dotted by the the pier-raised pointed arches, and the vicar caught Junior staring instead of watching where he wandered.
“I know the artwork’s morbidly fascinating, but be assured that they are cautionary tales of sin and little more.”
Certainly the windows were a sight, but no story jumped out of the broken rainbow in its glassy prison to catch the boy’s attention. He’d seen them before. He’d seen them just yesterday.
But what he hadn’t noticed was the sound.
Perhaps it was the organ music playing, the bustle of neighbors congregating with one purpose, the holy hum of hymns, or the pastor’s raspy sermons, but he had not heard this sound yesterday.
The buzzing.
The clerestory windows were large and clear and sunlight filtered through best it could.
However, the triforium windows were much smaller with tight artwork full of nooks for critters to build nests. But those nests didn’t appear without material. Wasps for example went skittering to the nearest tree, or wood, to chew up the wood and build a pulpy nest. Bees used wax made of oils from pollen. It might be noticed if wasps came chewing on the pews. And bees had no interest in dead, pale flowers that decorated the crimson carpet running the length of the aisle.
“Need help with the cleaning?” Junior yelled, digging a pinky in his ear.
The vicar whipped around at the implication. “I tend to it myself.”
As a holy man, his patience was short.
The 2nd floor walkway approached the windows enough that surely he would’ve seen any nests in there, so it must simply be the distance and the detail playing tricks on Junior. As a kid, he always dreamed of watching a sermon from there. And maybe continuing on to the spires on either side to ring the bell. But for not the first time, he failed to find the tucked away stairs.
He led them to the raised pulpit. Each Sunday, Junior and most of the town gathered in, finding seats with family and friends, murmuring polite talk about the weather and the week before silence snatched the crowd and everyone rose to watch the ancient pastor hobble up the steps. The youngest became antsy midway. Mothers mouthed to their babes, “It’s all right, it’s all right,” but they dared not speak it. Even the elderly, though not the same ancient, found their legs incapable of enduring the anticipation and they’d take the arm of someone near because at this moment, to sit was to sin. The vicar always offered an arm to the pastor but was always refused.
Today, it was empty.
The five of them.
Given the pastor’s speed up the stairs, Junior tried to imagine where the leader called from so loudly.
Rather than lead them to the antechambers on either side, the vicar ascended the steps. Sarah, with her upbringing, saw nothing sacred in these steps, but Junior hesitated.
There was a room behind the pulpit, but what lay beyond was shrouded in teenage mystery. There was no Earthly way of knowing without taking up the cloth.
“Come now, you two,” the vicar called.
Behind Junior, he now noticed, the teacher too hesitated, but his reverence was not toward the stairs.
Instead, the stranger stared at the shadows on the 2nd floor walkway.
Perhaps he, too, fancied ringing the bells, and a brief bit of imagination had Junior swinging from the rope of one and the teacher swinging from the other and outside, Sarah listening, and on all three faces were toothy smiles. And as he painted each smile in his mind, Sarah’s, then his own, he shuddered at the toothy maw that might appear if stranger’s somber expression broke.
The teacher ushered him up the stairs with blasphemous disregard.
What had he seen? Junior wondered.
~
The light of the windows did not reach the hunched pastor standing before a large wooden double doors. Oil lamps provided a dim view of the uneven walls. No decoration. No beauty. Just imperfect human craftsmanship for the House of Gods. Brazen youth with fleet feet might stumble on the floor. That was not why Sarah walked slowly.
The others had lagged behind.
She did not feel comfortable before the pastor.
“An unfamiliar face,” he groaned. “Girl, why have we not met before?”
The teacher fell in behind her. “Nice to see you, Pastor.”
See? Sarah thought. Not meet or make his acquaintance or—
“Your father?” the pastor asked and the absurdity caused a chuckle that raised to a laugh and she could not stop herself for some time, cackling in hysteria between these two men.
“Sorry, your holiness, sir, my father long left this town. I’m Catherine Tully’s granddaughter.”
“Ahh, the Tullies. You do not attend at her guidance.”
“Well ever since…” She trailed off. Of course he knew of her passing. “My mother’s been making an effort, but we sit in back.”
“Seems your mother is not all fool then.”
He left Sarah’s mouth a gape as though she’d been slapped.
“That leaves you, boy. What is your business here?”
Sarah listened keenly as well.
The teacher eyed the old man. His liturgical clothes were as pale as his skin. However many hairs he had as a lad, he had equal number of wrinkles. His eyes were glass beads of cataract beneath sinking bald brows. The cloth hung on him like he had an older brother.
“Why did you call us here?” the teacher asked. His polite tone was back but it was cracking with this feverish energy tossing in its cage, eager to free itself to the chaos of the world.
The doors, the wooden double doors with studded with iron and a black band running horizontally, towered above even the teacher. The Cadillac could’ve fit through. And how many labored to carry these massive creations in here?
But the pastor reached back with a single hand and the door swung open, dragging along the stone.
Sarah took a breath.
Clear air.
Another. She could breathe!
No dust getting swept by the perfectly fit doors.
The tears in her eyes were not speckled with microscopic flecks.
What an awesome miracle, she thought.
“Join me for an early supper,” he told them as the air cleared of creaking, too.
“Russ,” the teacher said. “That bag you were playing with in the car? Fetch it for me. Now.”
Before the boy could jump at the chance to help, the pastor said, “It can wait.”
“Go on, Junior.” His voice quivered.
“Emile, the doors.”
“Russel!”
And at the pastor’s command, the doors they’d unknowingly passed through to this chamber were sealed and with the gust of wind that followed, the torches went out, leaving the hall in darkness but for the dim candle light upon a table set for a feast.
“I guess it can wait, sir. Is it some remedy you needed or…?”
The teacher, a fiery silhouette now, passed by the children into the dark room.