Authors: Weston Ochse
Tags: #Horror, #Good and Evil, #Disabled Veterans, #Fiction
It was a crack-up how Marlin Perkins always seemed to be standing behind a bush or a tree or a vehicle as his trusty side-kick Bob castrated wild water buffalo, tagged the ear of cheetah or helped whelp a hippo. It never failed—when there was an animal involved, Bob was always the bait. And whether it was due to the miracle of modern television or the fact that Bob had a hundred clones, the man seemed to have an almost miraculous ability to remain unscathed.
Maxom, on the other hand, was the poster child for what could happen.
Castrated by a wild water buffalo.
De-legged by a hungry cheetah.
De-armed by the savageness of a momma hippo.
“I’ll pass, Momma.”
“Maxom! You don’t like doin’ nuthin’ no more.”
“Guess not, Momma.”
“You know, there’s gonna be a time when you’ll need to take care of yourself. A time when you’re gonna need to stop feelin’ sorry for yourself and get up and do things.”
“Right, Momma. Will you close the door please? I don’t think I can take listening to Mr. Welk right now.”
The next morning, after an hour of calling her to help him to the bathroom, he finally broke down and did it himself. When he’d finished, he flushed and dropped back to the ground. Grabbing fistfuls of carpet and pushing with the nubs of his legs, he propelled himself into the living room. One Life To Live or As The World Turns or some other crazy daytime drama mumbled from the television. Gripping a leg of the coffee table, he pulled himself farther into the room.
His mother’s feet, encased in black therapeutic shoes, came into view. Her legs were bent at the knees.
“Momma? Didn’t you hear me calling you?”
No answer.
He gripped the couch with his hand, flexed his arm and jerked his body up until his chin rested on the worn fabric of the cushions.
She looked like she’d fallen asleep. Her chin rested on her chest. Her hands were on her lap, clasping the slim remote control. Her coke-bottle glasses had slid to the tip of her nose and threatened to fall. Maxom opened his mouth as his eyes filled with tears. He tried to speak but all that came out was a long low croak.
Then she moved. It was miniscule, almost entirely invisible, but Maxom was sure she’d moved. As he tracked the trickle of blood that had seeped from her right ear, he could have sworn he saw her throat pulse. He stared at his mother’s chest, willing it to move. That great billowy chest that had both fed him life and pillowed his tears. He willed it to move. Once. Just once.
And it did.
Dread was replaced by elation. She was alive. He could still save her. In a tantrum of anguish, Maxom rolled and pulled and jerked until his prosthetics were securely in place. With the impossible strength that allowed mothers to lift refrigerators and small cars in order to save a son, the son maneuvered his mother to the front seat of the pick up. He wedged her in place, belted her in, and stalked around the front of the old Ford. It wasn’t until he was accelerating down the dirt road that the old fear returned.
Of its own accord, his foot slipped off the gas pedal. His hand began to shake. Sweat burst upon his brow. His sight narrowed as darkness moved in until the road was only a pinpoint of light.
Still, even without peripheral vision, even without seeing them with perfect clarity, he knew they were there. Everywhere.
Instruments of torture.
Symbols of hope.
Creators of God.
He was surrounded. As surely as Custer had no exit, neither did he.
Everywhere, their succession assured by the need to communicate, telephone poles chased him. Huge cruciform edifices stationed uniformly along the road ripped by his vision, reminding him of the torture. Dogs chewing. Soldiers sawing. Bugs burrowing. Bernie begging to die as he pretended to be the Jesus he never wanted to be. Nails through his hands. The piercing pain of iron through the meat of each shoulder. Maggots dripping from the wounds. The stench of dead skin, offal and the cauterization of tissue that would never find its original form.
Maxom’s vision contracted to a millimeter gaze. Like a magician, he made the poles disappear. He was his mother’s only hope. He must continue. What he needed was a doctor and a miracle, but to get the latter, she needed the former and the truck was the only way to get there. Even with the imperative to save, his internal engine refused to respond. His foot failed to answer. Maxom begged his limbs to react. He pleaded with his body to cooperate.
The truck finally coasted to a halt at the
T
intersection that marked the end of his road. To the left was the road to the lake and the chicken plant. To the right was the road to Chattanooga and a hospital. And in front of him, no road that he would ever take—in front of him was a shrine to the dead. Three large white crosses surrounded by flowers stood in the grassed area before a great scarred tree.
He was unable to take his gaze from them, trapped by all that was left of the vibrancy of teenagers after alcohol, speed, the prom, and the immovable hundred year old tree that had severed their link to the living. Trapped by three sets of eyes that stared at him from the pictures nailed to the base of each wooden cross—eyes, accusing, just as Bernie’s had been in those last awful hours before his death.
They found him three hours later, sobbing, his head slamming repeatedly against the old rubber of the steering wheel, his mother stiff with death.
It had taken awhile, but the slow repetitive words of the coroner had finally sunk in and helped him through it. His mother had had a massive stroke. Several in fact, the first creating the impetus for the others as the build-up in her arteries avalanched towards heart and brain. One by one the centers of her brain had been destroyed. Speech. Sight. Hearing. Memory. Movement. All gone in a gerontological maelstrom of misfiring synapses.
“There was nothing you could’ve done,” said the man. “She died immediately, only her body didn’t know it.”
The words didn’t cure, but they were a salve upon a thousand self-mutilations caused by a thousand
what-ifs
. The coroner had been right, of course. Maxom understood it perfectly. Months in the hospital had made him familiar with all the terms and doctorly devices. But it still hurt. As much as he was a son, as much as he was a man, as much as intellectual reasoning separated him from the animals, he would still carry to his death the belief that
If Only.
So there he was standing in the center of his kitchen staring at a particular door, anticipating an encounter. An encounter that would result in the saving of a small hurt boy, or in another
If Only
to cast upon soul. Maxom gritted his teeth and chewed the inside of his lip until it bled.
You need to face your problems
, said every therapist he’d ever been assigned.
By God, if he was going to help the boy he needed to change. There was no waiting until nightfall. The house had never had telephone service. He was the boy’s single hope. He stalked across the small space and grasped the door knob.
There was a cross that he desperately needed to bear.
CHAPTER 7
Thursday—June 14th
The Alexian Brother’s Retreat House
Simon squinted as he stared up at the great cross. Three stories tall, it advertised its Celtic ancestry with recurving arms, the architectural softening almost allowing one to forget that it was upon a simpler, starker version that his God had been crucified.
Following the gravel path, he crossed the small creek that ran from the San Pedro River into a pond they used to help cultivate the grapes. Not only was there plenty of water in this part of the valley, but the lushness of the vegetation belied the fact that this was truly desert. Not ten miles from where he walked, a blade of grass was diamond-rare. Tombstone was a dust town and if Bisbee and Sierra Vista hadn’t been huddled against the base of mountains, they would have blown away long ago. So lush was the ground around the Retreat House the only cacti located on the property were those sold at the visitor’s center for $9.95.
Pecan trees bordered this section of the walk. Here and there people could be seen gathering the nuts into white wicker baskets. Some were volunteers, others were on paid Hermitages. On occasion, a tour group would come and stay for a few days, usually a dozen or so older people who wished they’d saved enough money for the Holy Land and were trying really hard not to look disappointed.
Still, there were always enough people to manage the hundred and fifty acres of property, and this above all else, allowed him to get out and help people in the community. He came to a branching of paths and took the right track which would eventually lead him to the vineyard. Initially the path ran along the small two-lane highway. Instead of interrupting thoughts, the occasional growl of a passing vehicle stimulated him.
In the Gulf War there’d never really been any silence. Always there were the far away thumps of artillery, the droning of aircraft, and the squeaking of tank tracks upon the sand. He’d grown used to noise and found it far more friendlier than silence.
Silence had as much to do with death as the coiled and charred corpses in the bunker.
He came to the Northern edge of the property where the path turned away from the road. Instead of continuing, he paused. Two thin white crosses marked the spot where a young boy and girl had died in a car accident.
The Native Americans had a different spin on the roadside cross. Their belief was similar to Christians’. All along the roads of the Southwest, whether hidden in a forgotten grotto or prominent at a major intersection, were symbols of this belief. White crosses serving as symbols of love, loss and hope, planted and revered by a definitely pagan belief in
place
. On the surface, the belief that a person’s soul resided at the place of death was simple and quaint, but if one were to dig deeper, it was soon realized that the empty cruciforms indicated a dedication to a belief that neither Heaven nor Hell existed.
Which was a definitively un-Christian belief.
So different from what they professed in public—these private tribal beliefs. Simon wondered how many people from Iowa or Kansas or Maine drove through the Southwestern deserts saw the forlorn crosses beside the side of the road and thought they meant the same thing as the ones back in their own hometowns.
As if the symbol of a cross was universal.
Pulling out his rosary, Simon knelt and prayed for two souls. When he stood half an hour later, there were tears in his eyes. He turned away from the road and headed into the vineyard. Why was it that whenever he saw a cross outside of a church, it was almost always due to tragedy? Why wasn’t it because of love? Why couldn’t the symbol of his religion be one that engendered hope instead of carrying memories of murder and desecration? It was almost as if the sign of the cross was meant to scare people away rather than draw them in.
Simon found himself thinking of Billy Bones and the Dirty Bird’s giant circle of cross-like saguaro and how they’d reminded him of scarecrows. Scarecrow Gods, he’d called them. He smiled to himself.
No, certainly not Gods
. He’d just been caught up in the moment, impressed with their grandeur and Billy Bones’ ingenuity in making them speak.
In a church the cross was benign. There was something about the hallowed walls and the sanctity of the interior that made one forget the malice and the agony inherent in the symbol. Outside, without the warm enamel of civilization, the story was completely different. A person would think that the mere presence of a cross in the wild would be enough to make oneself turn and flee. The symbol had never been able to live down its terrible origins. Like scarecrows, the crucified stood as a warning to others of what could be. Harbingers of terror, Christians fled as fast as crows in a Midwestern corn field at the site of a person nailed to wood.
And to think it was the symbol of a loving God.
Simon shook his head and continued on.
* * *
Sierra Vista, Arizona
Billy stalked the side of the road daring the metal monsters to stop him. Dragons each, he knew their weak spots and was willing to fight them in order to complete his mission. He was undefeatable, a warrior of the dead, champion of the forgotten.
They called him crazy, but that’s only because they didn’t understand. They feared for their safety, but that’s only because of his disguise.
Billy Bones was the great pretender. He’d fooled the world. With his Don Quixote camouflage, he stumbled and rambled and mumbled so even the most discerning expert thought of padded cells and extra-long-sleeve jackets. More importantly, he was fooling the voices. For it was the voices that presented the most danger. That is if he listened to them—if he couldn’t drown out their noise.
A tractor-trailer thundered by. Billy spun and growled.
Don’t give them an inch.
Don’t let them see you coming.
Don’t let them see the whites of your eyes.