The Monkeyface Chronicles (5 page)

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Authors: Richard Scarsbrook

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BOOK: The Monkeyface Chronicles
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I've made it all the way to the West End now. Almost home, now. Almost gone.

Here's the other town sign.

Come on back to
FAIREVILLE
“Where you're only a stranger once!”

Even though it hurts my battered face, I have to laugh at that. I've lived in Faireville for my whole life, and I'm still a stranger. I will leave as a stranger. The town council is going to have to pass a motion to change the population on the front of the sign from 2849 to 2848, because I do not plan to ever “come on back.”

From here I can see the tallest turret of our house sticking out through the trees at the top of the hill. Yes, our house has turrets. It was built in the style of a medieval castle by an eccentric gas speculator during the boom days. It had been unoccupied for decades when Dad and Mom bought it, and it took them another decade to renovate the interior to look like any other modern home. Since we rarely have guests other than my grandfather and my father's scientific associates, all anyone sees is the exterior of our house; living in a miniature stone castle at the top of a secluded hill doesn't subtract much from the local perception that my father is a “Mad Scientist.”

I can tell it's getting colder by the way the snow crunches and squeaks under my feet. Where our gravel driveway meets the road stands the newest and plainest building in Faireville: the windowless, spireless, poured-concrete monolith that is the Tabernacle of God's Will. Members of the congregation simply call it The Tabernacle; non-members have other names for it.

God's Will, according to the Tabernacle “Elders” (none of whom are particularly elderly), is that only sworn members of the Tabernacle congregation will avoid spending the rest of eternity after death sizzling on the charcoal broiler of Hell. The congregation is encouraged to help save everyone else from this grisly fate. They pay uninvited recruiting visits to the homes of the “unsaved” at dinner time. They stand outside the entrance doors of the King George Theatre and the Faireville Memorial Arena handing out colourful pamphlets with helpful titles like Music, Movies and Sports — The DEVIL'S DISTRACTIONS! They gather around the condom display at Anderson's Hometown Apothecary and chant, “Sex for pleasure equals HELL for ETERNITY!”

The Tabernacle Elders have parked a huge white semitrailer next to the Tabernacle, with the artfully painted slogan, “TAKE BACK THE RAINBOW!” in primary colours. Underneath are the words:
Homosexuality is an AFFRONT to
GOD's NATURAL LAWS! Sign this trailer to show your support
for the REPEAL of all laws that allow this ABOMINATION to
continue!
The elders plan to tow the trailer to Ottawa and park it in front of the Parliament Buildings, just as soon as they can wrangle up a truck. At last count, over five hundred people had signed the trailer, which is about five times the number of actual Tabernacle congregants. As I turn the corner into our laneway, I read the trailer's
real
message, at least as I see it:
Don't be different in Faireville. Difference is not welcome here.

Goodbye and God Bless, Tabernacle of God's Will. I hope you are all rewarded in the afterlife for your pains, because it will be an eternal bummer if you get to Heaven and discover that the people who were different from you were allowed in anyway.

Do
I
believe in Heaven or Hell? Do
I
believe in God? Right now I honestly don't know. Every evening when Michael and I were little, while Mom stood in our bedroom doorway and listened, we would kneel beside our beds and close our eyes and list everything we were supposed to feel thankful for: each other, our house, our toys, the food we ate, the air we breathed, and so on. Then one evening, our father strode into our room in the middle of our prayers and told us we didn't have to do it anymore. So we stopped.

In my father's own words, he is “a man of science, a man of rational thought,” which I suppose means that he doesn't believe in God or Heaven or Hell or anything else that can't be proven with a calculation or experiment.

My mother, on the other hand, walks into town every Sunday to the Church of St. Thaddeus, on the Catholic corner of Church Square. Michael and I used to go to Sunday school there until dad told us we didn't have to.

My grandfather, as the former mayor of Faireville, makes regular appearances inside all three houses of worship at Church Square, delivering eulogies at funerals, giving readings at weddings, attending Christenings and First Communions and so on. Yet, I don't have any idea what he thinks about God.

It would be nice to know for sure that, if I don't complain or hurt others, if I try to be polite and kind, maybe I'll get to go to Heaven at the end of all of this. It would be nice to know that God is watching over my shoulder, keeping me safe as I escape Faireville to begin again. It would be nice to know for sure.

Stainless Steel

I
've reached the top of the long laneway that leads to our house when Mom comes running through the front door and out into the snow, still wearing her house slippers. “Oh, Philip, sweetie! I was so worried!”

She holds me tightly, as if my body is sublimating into gas and she's trying to hold my molecules together.

So much for my escape plan.

“The school called,” she says. “Nobody knew where you were.”

Of course the school called. Why didn't I think of that! I thought I had considered my escape plan from every angle. I guess I wouldn't make a very good fugitive.

Mom steps back from me. Her fingers jump up to her open lips. “Philip, Philip, what have they done to you?”

“It's okay, Mom,” I say. “It's no big deal.”

Her lips tighten and quiver, and tears spill out over her cheeks. She pulls me so close that some of the congealed blood from my face rubs off onto the white collar of her blouse.

“It's okay, Mom,” I repeat. “It looks worse than it is.”

This just makes her cry harder, and she hugs me tighter.

“This isn't your fault, Philip,” she says, “this isn't your fault.”

I hear the unmistakable sound of my grandfather's car rumbling up the graveled laneway toward us. My grandfather's car is unique in Faireville, a black 1940 Ford Deluxe sedan. He bought it brand new the year it was built. It is one of the few cars in which a man of six-foot-four can sit up straight and tall, so my grandfather has never replaced it. Instead, he pays regularly and dearly for its complicated maintenance.

“When I saw you coming up the lane,” Mom says to me, “I called your grandfather right away. We are going to talk to Mr. Packer, the vice-principal now. Enough is enough.”

The car rolls up beside us, its flathead V-8 engine gurgling reassuringly, its black paint and chrome shimmering despite the grey sky. My grandfather cranks down the small rounded window of the driver's side door. “June,” he says, “go inside and get your shoes and coat on.”

Mom finally lets go of me, sniffles, smoothes the front of her blouse, then rushes into the house.

“Philip,” my grandfather says evenly, his rumbling voice sounding much like the old V-8 idling, “get in the car. I'm driving you and your mother to the school to get this straightened out.”

“I'm not going back there,” I tell him. “Just come sit in the front seat with me,” my grandfather says. “Let's talk.”

I feel every ache in my body as I walk around the tall black car and slide tentatively onto the bench seat beside him.

“I'm not going back there,” I repeat.

“Philip,” he says, placing his large hand firmly on my shoulder, “in difficult times like this, I always remember one of my favourite quotes from Winston Churchill:
‘When you're
going through Hell, keep going.'

That's exactly what I want to do, keep going. I want to keep walking until Faireville is just a distant memory.

“‘
Do not fear the winds of adversity,'
” he continues. “‘
Remember: A kite rises against the wind rather than with it.'
Hamilton Wright Mabie.”

If Dennis were here, he would snort and call my grandfather
Captain Quote
, but I don't say anything. I just sit here on the bench seat and stare at my knees.

“Or, to quote Thomas Carlyle, ‘
The block of granite, which
was an obstacle in the path of the weak, becomes a stepping stone
in the path of the strong
.'”

“I liked it better when I was home schooled,” I say.

“To paraphrase C.S. Lewis,” my grandfather says, “it's
difficult
for an egg to turn into a bird, but it's
impossibl
e to learn to fly while remaining an egg. While you were being schooled at home, you were merely an egg. But the time has come now when you must be hatched, or go rotten.” He clears his throat. “The jackknife I gave you this morning — do you have it with you?”

I reach into my pocket and take it out. It's still my thirteenth birthday. I had forgotten about that.

“Do you remember what I told you when I gave it to you?”

I remember. “You said that the tools we need are almost always within our reach, that a man is always equipped to handle what comes his way.”

“Do you think I would have given you this gift if I didn't believe those words to be true?”

I'm not sure what to say to this.

“Unfold the blade, Philip. What does it say?”

“Stainless Steel.”

“Yes. Stainless Steel. Not only can it not be stained, but it can't be bent or broken, either. And neither can you. Do you know how I know this for certain?” He looks right into me with those fierce eyes of his. “Because my own Grandfather could not be bent or broken, and neither could my father. And, so far, nor can I. And you are made from the same material as the men who came before you.”

I close the blade and slip the jackknife back into my pocket. My mother opens the back door of the car, and slides onto the back seat.

“I am not a deeply religious man, Philip,” my grandfather says, “but there is one saying I learned back in Sunday school that has always stuck with me:
God helps those who help
themselves
. Your situation will not change unless you stand up and do something about it. Are you ready to stand up?”

“Will you come to the school with Mom and me?” I ask him.

“Yes. I will.”

“Do you think they'll punish Graham and Grant for what they did to me?”

“There is no insurance in life, Philip. There are no guarantees. You can only do what you have to do, and hope that things go your way.”

I turn and look through the oval windshield, past the glimmering chrome ornament on the nose of the car, down the lane where it meets with the road, and I draw a long breath. “Let's go, then,” I say.

My Grandfather pushes down on the clutch pedal, and we glide downhill, the engine of the old Ford throbbing reassuringly, snowflakes streaming over the car's black hood like shooting stars.

After escaping all the way home from the school in that bitter wind, the vice principal's hardwood-paneled office feels like a steam-filled sauna. My pants are damp from melted snow, and my bruises have thawed also, reminding me of each punch and kick. I feel sore, hot and itchy. Not only am I stained, I am bent and broken, too.

Mr. Packer is wearing his usual size-too-small beige tweed jacket with the brown elbow patches, slightly-too-short pants and a patterned tie that hangs three inches above his belt. When he's standing behind the bench at the Faireville Memorial Arena wearing his coach's leather jacket, Mr. Packer looks confident and proud, but inside his Vice Principal's office he seems uncomfortable and out of place, a prisoner of his own suit.

“Nice to see you again, June,” Mr. Packer says to my mother, smiling with chemically whitened teeth. “And hello, Former Mayor Skyler,” he says with less enthusiasm, not quite meeting my grandfather's eyes. “Thank you for bringing June and Philip here, sir.”

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