Read The Tent Online

Authors: Gary Paulsen

The Tent

BOOK: The Tent
5.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
The Tent
A Parable in One Sitting
Gary Paulsen

Harcourt, Inc.
Orlando Austin New York
San Diego Toronto London

Copyright © 1995 by Gary Paulsen
Reader's Guide copyright © 2006 by Harcourt, Inc.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or
transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical,
including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and
retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work
should be submitted online at
www.harcourt.com/contact
or mailed
to the following address: Permissions Department, Harcourt, Inc.,
6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777.

www.HarcourtBooks.com

First Harcourt paperback edition 2006

Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Paulsen, Gary.
The tent: a parable in one sitting/Gary Paulsen,
p. cm.
Summary: Although dismayed and embarrassed when his father
takes him on the road to get rich preaching the word of God,
fourteen-year-old Steven finds himself caught up in the money
and the things it can buy.
[1. Evangelists—Fiction. 2. Conduct of life—Fiction.
3. Fathers and sons—Fiction. 4. Money—Fiction.] I.Title.
PZ7.P2843Te 2006
[Fic]—dc22 2006041186
ISBN-13: 978-0-15-205833-3 ISBN-10: 0-15-205833-8

Text set in Perpetua
Designed by Lisa Peters

H G F E D C B A
Printed in the United States of America

In the eighth century
B.C.E.
in what is now Israel/Palestine, the birthplace and stipulations of a religious leader were prophesied. He was to be born in the village called Bethlehem, of a virgin.

In the small town of Nazareth, a pregnant teenage girl was engaged to a carpenter. During this time the Romans called for a census, and because the carpenter was from the house of David, he took
his fiancée to the town of Bethlehem to register. All of the inns were full due to the increased number of people in town, but he was able to obtain lodging in a stable, and it was there the baby was born.

From Bethlehem the family moved to Egypt for a short time and then back to the district of Galilee to Nazareth. This was where the baby grew up as the eldest son of the carpenter.

He began teaching at the age of thirty, choosing his first followers from the area of Galilee. He taught among the poor and the sick, explaining to people how to love God in truth and not just for appearance, and to love their neighbors as much as themselves.

His most radical teaching was that man was sinful and in need of salvation (saving) and that just doing good things was not enough to justify man before a holy God.

The people had expected a different sort of messiah, one who would save them from Roman
oppression, and this man didn't fit that description. He spent his time telling stories, not raising an army. Still the leaders were concerned about the large crowds that he attracted and the things he had to say about the religious leaders of the day.

Within three short years, by the age of thirty-three, the young man had enraged the religious community to the point that the religious leaders had him arrested and brought before the high priest on charges of blasphemy—a crime punishable by death. The chief priests did not have the power to execute the death penalty so they handed him over to the Roman governor, saying the man and his followers were political subversives. The sentence handed down was death, to be carried out by the then normal official mode of execution, death by crucifixion.

Even though he had predicted his own death, his followers were downhearted and most were in hiding, fearing for their own lives. Then news came
that their leader had been laid to rest in the tomb of a friend and that when women went to attend the body it was gone. This strange event prompted still more powerful belief in the teacher, and his followers carried on his teachings. Almost all were killed because of their intense belief in him.

For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.

"I figure it this way," his father said one evening. "I'm thirty-four years old and we don't have a pot to pee in or a window to throw it out of to call our own. How do you see it?"

Steven shrugged. "I don't think it's that bad."

"We live in a ten-year-old rented trailer in a trailer park," his father, who was named Corey, cut in. "We're driving a nineteen sixty-seven Chevy
half-ton with salt rot so bad you can read through it. We don't have any money—and I mean
any
—your mother has gone off with a ... well ... a friend, and you just got a pair of Salvation Army tennis shoes for your fourteenth birthday, and you don't think it's
bad
?"

"You've got a job."

"At minimum wage. I can't even pay the rent on this trailer without working two full-time basewage jobs."

Steven stopped. He'd heard some of this before but never as far down as his father sounded now. Not even when his mother had gone. They were close, he and his father—somehow being poor had brought them closer.

His father had not always been this poor. They had lived in Kansas City, and for as long as Steven could remember—until he was twelve—his father had worked at a factory that made doors. Then the factory had closed down and gone to another country—Steven thought Mexico—and even his father, who had been a foreman of a whole shift, was terminated. That had been two years earlier when Steven was twelve. And for a time his father had been positive. He'd taken schooling, learned a new job—in, of all things, shoe repair—and started a new life. They had moved to Texas and settled in to find work. But there were no good jobs. Nobody was hiring people to repair shoes, and there was no decent work anywhere. None.

And it had stayed bad until this evening, when he listened to his father go further down than he'd ever heard.

"I can work," Steven said. "I'll get a job."

His father nodded. "I figured you'd say that. So I kind of thought you wouldn't mind helping me."

Steven had been half watching the television with the sound on mute. But there was a new note in his father's voice—something that sounded soft, almost not there. Like he had a secret.

"What are you talking about?" Steven asked.

"I'm sick of being poor," his father said. "Aren't you?"

A new feeling—cold, chill. Steven turned the set off. An old one, so old it was only black-and-white, seven inches diagonally, so old it made a bright spot in the middle when it went off. The set was suddenly very important. He remembered when they got it. Twelve dollars. At a pawn shop.

"Are you talking about something illegal?"
There
, he thought—
I asked it.
It had to be asked. "Like stealing or something...?"

And his father had smiled. "No. Not illegal at all. We're going to help people."

"Help them?"

A nod, very slowly. "Yes. We're going to help them find God."

"God?" Steven stared at his father. In fourteen years Steven had never heard his father mention God—not counting the time he'd slammed his thumb with a framing hammer. They had never
been to church, never studied the Bible, never spoken of anything even remotely religious. Steven didn't know what else to say. Just that, the question—
God
?

"Sure. Look, there's people out there by the thousands who are having trouble finding God. I'm just saying we help them."

"But how ... I mean why ... no, what? Yes, that's it—what are you going to do?"

"I," his father said, raising his voice, "am going to preach."

"Preach?"

"The Word of God." His father's voice rose higher, louder, bounced off the walls of the trailer. "I aim to preach the Word of God—the
Word
of God, the Word of
God!
" He stopped suddenly and then smiled, lowered his voice to a conversational tone. "And I want you to help me."

"Me?" Steven's head was reeling. He was convinced his father was insane. "You want me to help preach?"

His father laughed. "Not exactly. Look now—I mean listen. When I got out of the army I had a friend named Farnham. He was sick of being poor, and he told me he was going to find an old tent and go around preaching in small towns. He wanted me to go with him, and I came very close—even listened to him talk about how he would do his spiel, bark the Word, as they used to say in the old carny days. I was even packed. But I met your mother and got married and we had you, and I never saw Farnham again."

"Well, then how—"

"But I
heard
from him. About a year later he sent me a picture of himself. He was wearing a powder blue linen suit, standing next to a powder blue new Cadillac. On the back he wrote just one sentence, 'I'm rich!' and that was all I ever heard from him...."

A million questions roared through Steven's head, but before he could form any of them into words, his father was off again.

"I've got it all worked out," he said, leaning forward on the table. "That roofer O'Malley owes me three hundred for helping him four weekends. He doesn't have the money but he
does
have an old army tent he got from a guy for work. It's not huge—thirty by forty—but that's big enough for a start. And it comes with a string of lights to hang on the inside. I'll make a plywood pulpit and a little stand to make me higher—you've got to be higher than your flock to force them to look up—and we're in business."

"We are?"

"Yup. I'll get a white collar, and I've got that old dark sports jacket and those pants I never wear. Slick back my hair and grab the Bible—where
is
the Bible, by the way?"

"We don't have one."

"Oh. Well, no matter. We can get one in the first motel we stay at. Every room has one of those Gideon Bibles. We'll take one of those."

And that was, exactly, how it all started, with a Bible stolen from a cheap motel room.

Ye cannot serve God and mammon (money).

IT DID NOT
initially go well.

"Man, there's a lot of stuff in here."

They were in the kitchen area of the small trailer—a table that was bolted to the wall and folded down when they wanted more room. Steven was sitting, still in a kind of stunned wonder, staring at the table. There was a road map of Texas spread out, a small pad of paper and a pen, and his father had the Bible, which he had opened on top of the map. He was looking at the Bible, frowning.

"It's packed with things—how is a man supposed to find something to preach about?"

Steven coughed. "You can't be serious about all this."

"About what?"

"Doing this preaching thing. I thought you were kidding."

"I got the Bible, didn't I?"

Steven nodded. "Yes..."

"And I didn't even have to pay for the room. I told them I wanted to check the room out for friends who were coming, and the Bible was lying right there, and we saved nearly thirty dollars because we didn't need to rent the room."

"Well..."

"And we got the tent, didn't we?"

Steven nodded again. They
had
gotten the tent, although it was somewhat the worse for wear. It had been an army tent used for assembling missiles in some forgotten day and had holes in the top and two round openings, one at either end, for the missile to stick out. "It will leak," Steven pointed out. "Top, sides, and ends. You could throw a basketball through the walls."

"That doesn't matter," his father said. "We have the tent. We have the Bible. We're serious. We're going to do this thing and get rich."

The truth was, at that stage, Steven was horrified. He was not good around people, almost shy, knew nothing of religion, and still thought there was a good chance his father had gone completely mad. He'd heard about it on the news. Stress did it. They talked about it all the time. He needed to learn stress management.
Maybe,
Steven thought,
I can get him involved in one of those classes....

"I think we're going to have to pick one subject and stick to it." His father nodded to himself. "At least until we get a handle on this thing. What's a good subject?"

"Pardon?"

"To preach—give me a subject. We need something to talk about."

Steven stared at him. "How about lying?"

"Lying..."

"Or stealing. You know, like where you steal a Bible and lie about being a preacher."

"Oh. You feel that way about it?"

Steven looked out the small window of the trailer. In the trailer next to theirs the couple—he never knew their names—who drank cheap beer and fought all the time were drinking cheap beer and fighting. The woman finished a bottle of beer and threw the empty bottle at her husband, who swore and emptied his own and threw it at her. Luckily they were both so drunk they missed. "I don't know how to feel. This is all too new for me to feel anything."

"Look, I've been watching these guys on television. Do you think they're all sincere?"

"I've never watched them. Well, once, when the guy cried all the time. I don't know what they think."

"They do it for the money. But that doesn't mean it's all bad. If we do it for the money but we
say good things, what's wrong with that? We get money, they get something. We all come out ahead."

"But we don't know anything, we don't believe all that stuff, and we've never even been to church." The couple next door opened new beers. They kissed. They were hugging now. "It's all a lie."

"But a good lie. We're doing it for good reasons, right?"

Steven didn't say anything, shrugged.

"Right. We get some money, they get some preaching. Perfect. The thing is, I can't do it all alone. There's too much going on. I need you to help me—so will you?"

Another long pause. "Well, I guess so...."

"So give me a subject. A good one, one I can really get my teeth into and preach the hell out of."

Steven smiled. "So what's wrong with lying and stealing? Like I said?"

BOOK: The Tent
5.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Necessary Evil by Killarney Traynor
Command Decision by Haines, William Wister
The Same River Twice by Chris Offutt
Brawl by Kylie Hillman
We All Fall Down: The True Story of the 9/11 Surfer by Buzzelli, Pasquale, Bittick, Joseph M., Buzzelli, Louise
Encompassing Love by Richard Lord
Hey Nostradamus! by Douglas Coupland
Hardest by Jorja Tabu
Between Sundays by Karen Kingsbury